18

Karen Shields was less than happy. Ferreting for a lost spoon that morning, she'd discovered a patch of damp the size of two large dinner plates on the wall between the cooker and the sink. Several shades of mottled grey, bubbling out from the plaster like an infection on the lungs. Then, when she'd poured milk from the carton into her coffee, instead of merging, it had floated in sour globules on the surface. And as if to cap it all, someone, using either a coin or a key, had scraped a wavering line along the near side of her car, where it was parked at the kerb outside. All this before eight o'clock.

It only needed the assistant commissioner, of all people, to summon her to his office, which, of course, within fifteen minutes of her arrival, he did. Only to keep her waiting for another five minutes outside. Karen standing there in a blue-black trouser suit, the toes of her boots pinching slightly, one heel starting to rub. If she ever got as much as an hour to herself, there was a pair of red leather Camper boots she was longing to try and bugger the expense.

'Karen. Excellent, excellent.' When Harkin finally ushered her in, he was in one of his annoyingly affable moods, all smiles and clichй. 'Just wanted to check, you know, how things were going?'

Patronising was another word for it. She preferred him when he was in a temper; she found it easier then to respond.

'Yourself and Elder, everything sorting itself out?'

Karen undid the centre button of her jacket and did it up again.

'No friction?'

She thought she'd better say something. 'No, sir. None.'

'You're sure? Because if -'

'To tell the truth, sir, we've hardly noticed he's here.'

'Stepping quietly at first, I expect. Tactful.'

'Yes, sir.'

'Because if there is anything, I expect you to bring it in here. Nip it in the bud before it takes hold.'

Gardeners' bloody Question Time, Karen thought. 'Yes, sir,' she said. 'Though I'm sure there'll be no need.'

She could just see herself running into the AC's office, like some snot-nosed kid, the kind that was always telling tales. Please, sir, Billy Bang's stolen my pencil case. Please, sir, Frank Elder's stolen my murder investigation. Don't even think about it. Anything that wanted sorting out, she'd sort it out herself.


***

Mike Ramsden was at his desk, chair hiked back on to its rear legs, using the end of an unravelled paper clip to clean his nails.

'Any sign of him?' Karen asked.

'Who's that?' Ramsden said.

'Mike, don't play silly buggers. I'm not in the mood.'

When are you ever? Ramsden thought. 'Okay, okay,' he said. 'He rang in, left a message. Wants us to get together this afternoon.'

'What time this afternoon?'

Ramsden shrugged his shoulders. 'Didn't say.'

Karen swore and looked at the ceiling. What did Elder think? She was going to sit around cooling her heels till he condescended to grace them with his company?

'Where the hell are Furness and Denison?' she asked.

'Chasing down one of that last set of possibles the computer spewed out. Ealing somewhere. Some poor sod living in a bloody hostel. Waste of time, if you ask me.'

'One of the last. How many does that leave?'

Ramsden leaned across far enough to snag a sheet of paper. 'Two to go. Cricklewood and Dalston.'

'Okay.' She tossed him the keys to her car. 'You can drive. We'll do Cricklewood first.'


***

Change at Camden and go back on the Edgware branch to Belsize Park and walk. The hospital was up the hill and then down again at the end of a roughly cobbled lane. Elder remembered these things without being able to recall precisely when he'd been there before or why. Not his part of London, after all.

The pub on the corner was advertising its New Year's Eve party. Tickets in advance, only a few remaining.

Inside the hospital the corridors were broad, the ceilings low, posters warning of the dangers of smoking and obesity hung on the walls, along with artwork, bright and gestural, from a local primary school.

The pathologist was suitably cadaverous, with slender, reedy fingers and bifocals perched on the bridge of his nose; not for the first time, Elder wondered whether we chose our professions or whether, genetically marked, they chose us.

'It's Maddy Birch you're interested in?' He spoke a precise, educated Scots that Elder associated, perhaps wrongly, with Edinburgh.

'It is.'

'You know the body's been released for burial?'

Elder nodded. 'Like I said on the phone, I'm reviewing the investigation. I thought if you could spare me some minutes of your time…'

'Fire away.'

'You didn't find a trace of the attacker anywhere. No stray hairs, no skin, saliva, blood, nothing. That's right?'

'Absolutely.'

'How usual is that?'

'What's usual?'

'In your experience, then.'

'In my experience, it's surprising. Unexpected.'

'And does it suggest anything? About the attacker, I mean?'

'Aside from the fact that he was scrupulous, meticulously careful?'

'Aside from that.'

One of the overhead lights was buzzing slightly; barely diluted, the smell of chemicals permeated the room.

'Anything I say would be purely speculation. If anything, this sort of conjecture is far more your field than mine.'

'Feel free to speculate away.'

'Very well. It might suggest someone who, by instinct or by training, is highly methodical. Who, even though capable of great anger, is, nonetheless, able to exert an unusual degree of self-control.'

'You're thinking of the rape, the nature of the wounds?'

'Indeed.'

'The rape itself, it took place while the victim was still alive?'

'I've no reason to believe otherwise. All the signs of non-consensual intercourse were present – bruising, tearing. No semen, of course. Presumably a condom.'

'And the weapon that killed her?'

'Let's just take a look.' He reached for a set of photographs from a drawer. 'Some of the wounds, here on the arm, for instance, are slash wounds. Quite long, you see, but not so deep. Look at the tail there, indicating the angle of the blow, from above.'

'Tall, then? Whoever this was? Taller than her.'

'It's possible. But far from certain. She could have been falling, have been on her knees, he could have been standing above her. A host of permutations, I'm afraid.'

'And these?' Elder asked, pointing to the torso.

'Stab wounds. Quite different, almost certainly fatal. Both of them deep. And see here, where the opening of the wound is wider than the blade, the knife has been levered forward and back before being withdrawn.'

'What about the knife itself?'

'The blade was single-edged, you can tell from the square termination on the underside of the wound. To achieve this degree of penetration, almost certainly sharp at the tip. I should say a minimum of twenty centimetres in length, a good couple of centimetres across at the widest point.'

'A butcher's knife?'

'That sort of thing.'

Elder looked at the photographs. Extreme anger and control. The ability to switch between the two. Facility, maybe that was a better word. He talked with the pathologist for perhaps ten minutes more, without anything new surfacing.

'Good luck, Mr Elder.' When he bade him goodbye, the pathologist's hand was smooth and cold like porcelain.

On his way back down the hill, Elder stopped outside one of several charity shops and browsed through two boxes of books. Tom Clancy. Jeffrey Archer. Several women called Maeve. No matter, he still had another hundred or so pages of his Patrick O'Brian to go.

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