Read Buried Slaughter Online

Authors: Ryan Casey

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Mystery & Detective, #Private Investigators, #General, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Mystery, #Crime, #private investigator, #Detective, #Police Procedural, #Series, #British, #brian mcdone

Buried Slaughter (19 page)

BOOK: Buried Slaughter
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“Holy shit,” David said. Brian could tell from the traffic sounds in the background that he was somewhere busy. “So he sent something to you? Personally?”

“Well, it looks that way. We’ll speak more later, but the main reason I’m calling is because I want you to do a bit of research. The poem talks about eleven rats being slaughtered, but one getting away. I wanted you to maybe take a look into the possibility that one of Harold Harvey’s 17
th
Century victims might have hopped execution?”

“Wait, wait‌—‌this is all so fucking much to take in. So you think…‌you think there is some kind of link and that the killer’s trying to reach out to you about it?”

The cafeteria door flew open. Brian jolted around again, but again, nothing but young officers, laughing and jibing as they made their way towards the drinks machines. “I don’t know. I really don’t. But there’s a real chance that the killer might’ve given their identity up by sending this to me. Which seems sloppy. Unusually sloppy. Anyway, I’m just waiting until I hear something, but please, if you could contact somebody or find anything out about a potential escape of that twelfth executed witch, please let me know. I think it could be the key to this whole case, I really do. I’m just not sure where the door is yet.”

“Leave it with me,” David said. “I know a guy who works in the media. Cody Ballenthine. You might’ve seen him on the news. Geeky-looking chap. If there’s something you want digging up in history, he’s the man.”

“Have you just given your source away to me?”

David hesitated. “This isn’t journalism. As much as I want it to be, it isn’t. It’s personal. This one’s on the house. I’ll be in touch with him and see what he can find.”

Brian paused. Right now, this was the best he could hope for. It was likely the police would find something before David did, anyway. But it helped. Couldn’t hurt to try. “I appreciate it, Wallson. I don’t trust you, but I appreciate it.”

“Whatever,” David said. “I’ll, er…‌I’ll see what I can do about the Luther stuff too. I haven’t bailed on all that, I promise you, if you’re still interested in having your name and reputation cleared, that is.”

Brian was about to respond when he saw Scott heading in his direction, fully kitted out in his PCSO gear. He had a wide grin, his head freshly shaven. He still had a scratch on his cheeks where Mr. Tibbles the cat had fallen onto his face over two weeks ago. Shit. It seemed forever ago now. So much had happened since. They had a lot to catch up on.

“Listen, David‌—‌I’ve got to shoot. Be in touch.”

“See you‌—‌”

“Well, who’s been a badass old git?” Scott said, punching Brian on the arm playfully. Then, his face took a turn for the serious all of a sudden. “Hey, I’m sorry about your sister-in-law, mate. I really am.”

Brian shrugged. “Thanks. Just good to be back out of the house again. I think it’ll do Hannah and me good. We’re engaged now, y’know? Every cloud has a silver lining, and all that. Or platinum and fucking diamond, in Hannah’s case.”

Scott smiled a genuine, warm smile. He patted Brian on his shoulder again. “I’m pleased to hear that. I really am. And it’s good to have you back, anyway. Dealing with homeless people flapping their cocks about really isn’t as fun when I’m doing it on my own.”

Brian laughed. “Oh, the crap I’ve missed.”

“Anyway, drink up. You might’ve had two weeks off but you can’t start slacking off like the rest of these layabouts in here. We’ve got…‌well, cats to save from trees, and the like.”

Brian gulped down the last of his cool coffee and stood up. The door barged open again. And again, no sign of DI Marlow or anybody else on the investigation.

Then again, why would they come looking for him? What was he to the investigation other than a member of the supporting cast?

“Ready to rock and roll?” Scott said, grinning.

Brian smacked him on the arm in as masculine a manner as possible. “Lead the way, old dog.”

“Cheeky bastard,” Scott said, before opening the cafeteria door, the pair of them disappearing outside, onto the street, back to reality and normality.

“Bet you’ve really missed this shit, haven’t you?”

Brian plucked a chip from his carton. It was so soaked with vinegar that it stung his eyes; just how he liked it. Scott and he sat on a Moor Park bench eating their lunch. In the distance, a group of teenage skivers kicked a ball around. Taking a day off school, clearly, but they could let it go as long as they weren’t making any trouble. What good was school, anyway?

He chewed his chip as the wind picked up, the cold of November growing chillier by the day.

“I heard, by the way. About you and that Wallson prick running your own little side investigation.”

Brian stopped chewing. He stared at Preston North End’s metallic football stadium, looming over the park. Although it was cold, he felt a sudden warmth come over him. His only real mate in the police was pulling him up for his allegiance with a journalist‌—‌a cardinal sin for a police officer. He wasn’t sure what to say to absolve himself.

“Before you start digging yourself an even bigger hole, I get it. I think. I mean, you used to be a detective. You used to solve mysteries like the Pendle Hill and Longridge stuff from the front line, not from the background. And damn‌—‌even I found that case interesting, and usually I couldn’t give a shit about current events. Give me a box set of ‘Breaking Bad’ or ‘The Walking Dead’ any day over that real-life shite.

“I guess what I’m trying to say is, I can see why you’d get involved. And then when…‌when it got personal. I can see why you might’ve wanted to try and go it alone. So yeah. Fuck the other officers if they think you’re a traitor, or whatever. I get it, bud.”

Brian felt cold again all of a sudden, but it wasn’t unpleasant. He picked up another chip and dipped it in his soggy side serving of mushy peas, also drenched with vinegar.

“Cheers, Scott,” he said. “Truth is, David Wallson offered me something that I wanted very much. It’s…‌It doesn’t matter, actually.”

“Don’t have to talk if you don’t want to,” Scott said, crunching a crispy chip. “Don’t need to explain owt to me. Those journos can be as tempting as the Sirens.”

The wind picked up. The kids playing football were forcing one kid to stand against the goalposts while the others smacked the ball at his arse. A situation that would no doubt need diffusing in a short while.

“I mean, we all have stuff we‌—‌”

“When I woke up in that hospital bed, burnt all across my legs, I’d just found out that Robert Luther had murdered Nicola Watson. He’d murdered her‌—‌flat out admitted it to me. Tied me up, drenched the place in petrol, struck a match. Luckily I had Location Services on, which is how Cassy‌—‌erm, Cassandra Emerson, you know‌—‌that’s how she found me.

“And then the next thing I know I’m being told by…‌by an old Detective Inspector that Robert Luther did not kill Nicola Watson. I’m being told that it was that nonce Michael Walters‌—‌like everybody else believes‌—‌and that Luther burned himself and his offices in shame. I’m being told to accept that story because it’s what the people want to hear. I’m being told to accept that…‌that Cassy saving my life…‌losing her own life, was all just because I was a clumsy, curious old fuck.”

Scott dangled a piece of half-eaten chip in front of his mouth. His eyes had widened behind his glasses. “I…‌I had no idea. I had‌—‌”

“David Wallson gave me the opportunity to make that knowledge public. Says one of his ‘sources’ got hold of some of Luther’s documents that absolutely proved for definite that he was the perpetrator. Held off going to press with it because again, the ‘interests of the public’, media dealings, all that. But he told me that if I worked with him to try and learn as much about these recent killings as possible, then he’d go to press. That’s why I did it.”

Scott was silent. He placed the chip in his mouth, but he didn’t chew. After a few moments, he swallowed it whole, then spoke. “Do you think that’s…‌Well, with them targeting your sister-in-law. Do you think it was some sort of revenge thing? Lashing out to put you off the trail?”

Brian stared into the distance. Autumn leaves and discarded cans of old booze rustled across the pavement in front. “I don’t know. Sometimes, I think so. But deep down, I get the impression that the killer had some sort of interest in me long before the killings started.” He felt his phone vibrating in his pocket. “Sorry, I’ll just…‌”

Scott nodded and returned to his remaining chips, his eyes wandering, clearly deep in thought with what he’d been told.

An unknown number was calling Brian. He held his breath as he answered. It could be anybody. Nothing was beyond the realms of possibility anymore.

“Hello?”

“Brian, it’s Marlow. I, er…‌Molfer gave me your photograph and little poem. Interesting indeed.”

Brian’s heart skipped a beat. He hopped from the park bench to his feet. “What do you think? There’s evidence in there, isn’t there? Tons of it, surely?”

DI Marlow didn’t respond for a few seconds. There were a few other voices around him. “Look,” he said, his voice lowered. “I’m not even supposed to be telling you this, but fuck it‌—‌you’re a good cop, whether you have the badge or not. And this has affected you personally, so you deserve to know. But we’ve got a match on the weapon in the image. It’s a cut-down executioners’ sword, which was likely used in the 17
th
Century for all sorts of executions.”

Brian’s heart raced. He walked up the footpath, away from Scott, away from the park bench. “17
th
Century. That can’t be a coincidence. It just can’t be.”

“There’s more. The description of the blade matches the decapitation wounds on both the torsos and decapitated heads of all eleven victims. We ran an enquiry on distribution of these blades and we managed to find out from a local weapon buff that these particular 17
th
Century executioner’s swords are impossible to get hold of these days. They’re rare, even in museums. But Leeds Royal Armouries reported one missing four weeks ago.”

“Fuck,” Brian said, pacing up and down the path. “Don’t tell me that’s a coincidence. It can’t be.”

“There’s, um…‌something else, too.”

“Fingerprints? Handwriting? What else has the fucker given away? Have you had CCTV checked?”

“Slow down,” DI Marlow said. “It’s still to do with the sword. Couple of years back, completely unrelated case, we have record of theft and illegal possession of weaponry. Did a little digging and it turns out this particular nut job is an avid weapon collector. Had hundreds of the things stashed in the cellar of his pub.”

Brian’s mouth went dry. “Are you…‌Wait, pub?”

“Not only that, but looking back at the Royal Armouries CCTV, the suspected thief is wearing a familiar red hoodie from another crime scene. It can’t be a coincidence. We matched the handwriting, too. Turns out we’ve got loads similar to this from times this crook’s been locked up in the past. Brian, a certain Phil Mcphee is our crook. He’s the sword collector and his handwriting is a near-identical match to that of the poem. I just…‌I thought you should know.”

The phone cut to silence. Brian lowered it from his ear. He was staring into the distance, looking at the trees as they blew in the breeze, looking at the cars as they drove past, but it all seemed so distant. So far away.

“You okay, Brian?” It was Scott’s voice. That too seemed so far away.

Phil Mcphee. The fucker who, together with his brother, Tony, had locked him in the cellar of the Grey Goose pub with David Wallson.

Those high cheekbones.

Those yellowing teeth.

Those shifty eyes.

It was him. All along, it was him.

Chapter Twenty One

Brian stared at the Grey Goose pub. Through the leaded windows, it seemed relatively quiet inside. There was a slight flicker of the open log fire emitting an orange glow. He tapped his fingers against the steering wheel of the car as traffic thickened on Berry Lane. He had to get in there and find out what was going on before the police got here.

He took a few steadying breaths. His hands were shaking. Really, he should just wait for the police to get on with things. But he sensed that DI Marlow had thrown him a line. And shit‌—‌he might be slacking off another afternoon of work, which could result in even greater repercussions than his mere two-week suspension last time out.

But he needed to confront Phil Mcphee first-hand. He’d killed his sister-in-law. Made his fiancé’s life a misery. Brian was solving this. It was personal now.

He opened the car door and slammed it shut, keeping his head low as he approached the front door of the Grey Goose pub. Women pushed prams up and down the pavement. Hooded kids who should’ve been at school jogged past, punching one another when they caught up. A tingling sensation worked its way up Brian’s arms with every step he took towards the Grey Goose pub and its flaky white painting. What was he going to do? Say? He was being foolish. Acting like a frigging idiot.

But he needed to do this his way.

He opened the door to the pub. The locals turned around‌—‌old men with pints stacking up beside them, red-cheeked and whiskey-nosed. Behind the bar, a young bartender with his hair shaven at the sides but long on top. Brian chewed his lip and walked towards him.

“What can I get you, mate?”

“Actually, I was hoping I could speak to the landlord.”

The bartender’s forehead wrinkled up. “Is he expectin’ you?”

Brian smiled. He was easing into this now. “He’s an old friend. Tell him Brian’s here, and he’ll know the name.”

The bartender stepped away from the bar and walked through the door leading to the kitchens, his dark eyes still focused on Brian. “Give us a sec.”

Brian nodded. He looked around the pub. One old local with a fat red face burst into drunken laughter as his little bald mate cracked a joke. A woman with dark, scraggy hair supped on a vodka coke in the corner. All old people in here, always. What a tomb. But something else caught his eye too‌—‌the paintings of the medieval battlefields. How the fuck they’d let that one slip them by the last time they’d been in here, Brian had no idea. Phil was a war buff. Probably the only thing he was a buff at, other than theft.

BOOK: Buried Slaughter
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