Read Easy Kill Online

Authors: Lin Anderson

Tags: #Fiction, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #General

Easy Kill

LIN ANDERSON

Easy Kill

www.hodder.co.uk

Contents

Title

Copyright

Dedication

Also by Lin Anderson

Acknowledgements

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Chapter 67

Chapter 68

Chapter 69

Chapter 70

Chapter 71

Chapter 72

Chapter 73

Chapter 74

Chapter 75

Chapter 76

Chapter 77

Chapter 78

About the Author

First published in Great Britain in 2008 by Hodder & Stoughton
An Hachette UK company

Copyright © Lin Anderson 2008

The right of Lin Anderson to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

All character in this publicaiton are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.

A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library

Epub ISBN: 9781848945395
Book ISBN: 9780340922439

Hodder & Stoughton Ltd
An Hachette UK Company
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH

www.hodder.co.uk

To Detective Inspector Bill Mitchell

Easy Kill

Eventually an object distinguishable as a finger began to emerge from the damp soil, swiftly followed by another. From nowhere, the first fly appeared and made an attempt to land. Rhona swatted it away.

Gradually the full hand lay exposed. It was badly decomposed but recognisable as female, a small gold ring biting into the rotting flesh of the middle finger.

Also by Lin Anderson:

Driftnet

Torch

Deadly Code

Dark Flight

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to Dr Jennifer Miller of GUARD and Derek Scott (Training Manager, Scottish Ambulance College), and to David Robertson (Development and Regeneration Services, Glasgow City Council) for sharing his expertise on the Molendinar Burn.

1

THE CAR WAS
flash, and looked brand new. As it pulled up, the nearside window whirred down.

‘Hey you!’

The vehicle had drawn up in the darkest part of the street, avoiding the improved visibility of the safe zone. Better lighting and multiple cameras made the punters nervous.

A hand appeared, waving money at her. Still Terri hesitated.

‘Are you fucking working or not?’

Terri took her time approaching, trying to get a look at the man before she committed. She preferred regulars. She knew what they wanted. She knew they would pay.

She was near the car now. Terri stumbled, her ankle going over on one high heel.

‘Careful,’ he called, suddenly solicitous.

Terri bent to look in. The guy’s face was in shadow but he looked harmless enough. Three twenty-pound notes sat on the passenger seat. When she opened the door he scooped up the money, freeing the seat for her.

‘There’s an alley further along,’ said Terri, indicating an opening a few yards ahead.

The man pulled away from the kerb, swiftly and purposefully, throwing a quick glance at a nearby camera.

‘Not around here. I like my privacy.’

He dropped the money in her lap.

‘What does that buy?’

Terri told him, keeping to the normal rates, not telling any lies in case he was testing her. If he was a regular punter, he would know anyway.

He nodded, seemingly satisfied.

The city lights flowed past in a blood-streaked blur. They were heading out of the centre. Despite her misgivings at leaving the zone Terri felt her body relax, soothed by the combination of Valium she’d taken before coming out and the stuffy heat inside the car.

‘You’ll have to take me back afterwards,’ she said.

He didn’t react, his profile impassive.

‘I have to get back,’ Terri insisted, imagining being thrown out miles away.

‘One fuck a night not enough for you?’ He smiled, but not at her. ‘You need how many? Six? Ten fucks a night?

Terri tensed. Talking dirty was sometimes the fore-play. For those who could not perform it was often the whole play.

‘How many?’ he insisted.

‘I have six regulars on a Wednesday night.’

‘Six fucks,’ he nodded to himself. ‘Not a problem.’

They were approaching traffic lights. Terri decided if they changed to red, she would get out of the car.

He zoomed through on amber.

‘Look,’ she said. ‘We don’t have to go any further. There’s plenty of places around here.’

The punch, when it came, knocked the air out of her. He put his hand back on the wheel as though nothing had happened.

Terri tried to draw breath into her lungs, gasping and wheezing. ‘Please.’ She whimpered, retreating as far as she could.

He glanced in his rear-view mirror. ‘Say, “I need six fucks a night”.’

Now his left hand was gripping her exposed thigh. She yelped.

‘Say, “I need six fucks a night”.’

She said it quietly.

‘Louder.’

Terri repeated it, louder this time.

They were on the Kingston Bridge crossing the River Clyde, going west. A sudden thought struck her, she was heading towards home. She’d told her mum she would visit this weekend, and she wanted to keep her word.

He had fallen silent, intent on the road. Terri slid her hand into her bag and felt for her phone. A spasm of fury crossed his face as a sudden drilling noise indicated an incoming text. Reaching across her, he tore the bag from her hand, lowered the window and threw it out.

He took the next exit without indicating, doubling back towards the city centre. Terri kept thinking that as long as he was driving he couldn’t hurt her. She tried to compose herself and plan how to get away. She had been in difficult situations before and survived.

2

THE HOTTEST AND
wettest July so far on record had turned Glasgow into a warm bath. Had the skies been blue and the sun shining down on the sandstone city, its citizens would have relished this evidence of global warming. After all, it would save a trip to Spain to top up their tans. For the last week, the skies had been perpetually dark and grey, rain a semi-permanent feature, in all its west coast forms; smirr, Scotch mist (an understated steady drizzle) and full-blown tropical downpour, known locally as stair rods.

This morning it was Scotch mist that clothed the eastern side of the city, its magnificent cathedral and neighbouring graveyard – the Necropolis, affectionately known in Glasgow as the City of the Dead.

Two mounted arc lights brought occasional glimpses of a forensic team moving among the mausoleums and ornate graves of Glasgow’s rich departed. In their white suits they could have been spectres, or some alien species looking for evidence of human habitation among the tombstones.

The corpse that had brought them there was once a young woman. Sniffed at by a fox on its night-time forage, nosed by one of the roe deer that grazed the
luscious grass, it had finally been found by a shocked jogger, who made a point of running to the top of the Necropolis every morning before breakfast. That was something he wouldn’t be doing again in a hurry. The flies had got there before him, lifting in a black cloud on his approach. Flesh flies and bluebottles had arrived minutes after death, to deposit their maggots or eggs in all the natural orifices. A little later, standard houseflies had joined the party.

Dr Rhona MacLeod, chief forensic for the Strath-clyde Force, crouched next to the body, her white-suited figure indistinguishable from the other members of the forensic team. Above her, a pinnacle-shaped gravestone declared this to be the last resting place of one
Edwin Aitken, a merchant of the city, respected father and citizen
, whose family sorely missed him.

The young woman usurping Edwin’s grave had no name as yet, and apparently no means of identification. Her clothes suggested prostitution, but there were plenty of girls out clubbing in Glasgow wearing even less.

A skirt of flimsy plastic masquerading as leather was drawn up around her waist, a striped top pulled up to expose her breasts. A black nylon bra, knotted around her neck as a ligature, was the probable cause of death, but there were also six bloody puncture wounds clustered in the shaved genital area. The violence hadn’t ended there. The stiletto heel of the red sandal, missing from her right foot, had been inserted in her vagina.

The body had lain in this spot since the early hours of the morning. It had been discovered at eight-thirty
and by then patches of lividity, caused as the blood sank to the lower parts, had fused together into larger purplish areas that still blanched under pressure. There was no exact science that could establish the time of death, as there were too many parameters affecting the state of the body. Lividity offered some indication, as did infestation. True flies were holome-tabolous, metamorphosing through four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa and adult. Left in the open like this for a couple of weeks, infestation would have reduced the corpse to skin, bone and cartilage.

The area was already cordoned off, the incident tent in the process of being raised, which would stop the inevitable rain from washing away the evidence and hopefully keep any more flies at bay.

DS Michael McNab was Scene of Crime Manager, his dark auburn head visible now alongside that of DI Bill Wilson, Rhona’s friend and mentor. Bill’s face looked as grey as the neighbouring granite headstones. Michael, in contrast, looked like a man who had just been for an invigorating run.

Rhona glanced up as the nearby bushes parted to reveal another forensic suit, filled out a little more than her own. Chrissy McInsh, Rhona’s assistant, looked down at the violated corpse. Compassion clouded her eyes.

‘Poor cow.’

‘Did you find her pants?’

Chrissy shook her head. ‘Probably not wearing any.’

‘Or he took them as a trophy.’

There had been eight murders of Glasgow prostitutes in the last ten years, with only one conviction. None had occurred since the safe area had been established. Until now. Three of the previous victims had been found without underwear. One had been dumped naked. Extensive police enquiries had led nowhere, except to establish that the unsolved murders were not likely to have been committed by the same man. Which meant there were eight uncaught murderers walking the streets of Glasgow.

‘They are shite, killed by shite; who gives a shite?’

‘Chrissy!’ said Rhona, shocked by her assistant’s bluntness.

‘Not my opinion. A quote from one of our police colleagues a few years back.’

‘Who?’

‘Press didn’t say, but I have my suspicions.’

If the victim turned out to be a prostitute, which looked likely, they would have a hard job finding her killer. When a prostitute was murdered, it was nearly always by someone she didn’t know. No relationship between the murderer and victim meant the circle of potential suspects was limitless. Men using the services of prostitutes didn’t volunteer information, since many had girlfriends, wives and families who didn’t know about their little hobby. The public weren’t interested, unless the death involved an ‘innocent’ young woman out jogging or walking her dog.

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