Vanishing Point. Danielle Ramsay

Vanishing Point - Danielle  Ramsay


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on finding anything we can connect to our murder victim being dumped on the beach directly opposite the Blue Lagoon. Do you?’

      ‘But wasn’t she washed up? Dumped at sea?’

      ‘Says who? As far as I’m concerned I need Daniels and Kenny looking at that CCTV footage for any unusual activity.’

      Brady’s mind was on the anonymous 999 caller. He desperately needed to know if the man had been caught on CCTV footage. Only then would he know if his fear about the caller’s identity was true.

      ‘Sir?’ Conrad said tentatively. ‘Tell me this isn’t connected to Simone Henderson. Because we’ve already got our hands full with our own investigation.’

      He had been worried that this would happen. That as soon as his boss heard about what had happened to Simone Henderson that he would go all out to apprehend whoever had done this to her. Regardless of the consequences.

      Brady looked at Conrad’s worried expression.

      ‘No, like I said, I want to cover all possibilities with our case,’ calmly reassured Brady. ‘Now we’ve got that sorted, get your jacket. We need to be somewhere, which means rescheduling the briefing for 2pm.’

      Conrad didn’t move.

      ‘Come on, Conrad. We haven’t got all day,’ stated Brady as he stood up.

      ‘Sir? I’m sorry … about Simone.’

      Brady nodded.

      ‘I know you are,’ he answered. ‘So am I.’

       Chapter Ten

      ‘Left here.’ The sudden instruction from Brady came halfway through a conversation on his BlackBerry. ‘No, not you!’ His attention returned to the person on the other end of the line. ‘I’m talking to Conrad. Listen, I’ll call you later. Alright?’

      ‘Bloody hell, Jack!’ replied Rubenfeld. ‘This won’t wait.’

      ‘That’s the same line you’ve been threatening me for years. Give me a couple of hours and I’ll get back to you and then we’ll meet? Call you later,’ concluded Brady, not giving the hardened hack a chance to argue.

      ‘I said left,’ repeated Brady, relighting his cigarette.

      ‘Sir?’ Conrad asked as he turned to Brady.

      ‘What?’ asked Brady as he dragged on his cigarette.

      ‘Do you think this is a good idea?’

      ‘It is if I want to find out what’s happened to our murder victim.’

      ‘As long as you remember that’s why we’re here, sir,’ warned Conrad as he pulled into Rake Lane Hospital.

      ‘Drop me off at the emergency entrance. Then meet me at the morgue,’ Brady instructed, ignoring Conrad’s comment.

      Conrad didn’t reply.

      Instead, his steel-grey eyes looked straight ahead as he did as he was told and parked by the emergency entrance. His strong jaw remained firmly set as he watched Brady get out, throwing what was left of his cigarette butt to the ground.

      Conrad noticed that the ground was covered in cigarette butts. Smoked by either patients driven to distraction by their prognosis, or their equally worried relatives.

      He watched Brady stride towards the entrance. He knew exactly where he was heading. And that was straight for trouble. He didn’t trust Brady to let it go. He decided to park the car and then follow him. The problem was, he knew exactly where he would go – and it wouldn’t be the morgue.

      Without looking back at Conrad or the car, Brady made his way through the addicts who were standing, regardless of the smoking ban now in place on the hospital grounds, shivering in dressing gowns and slippers, with tubes attached to their arms and portable oxygen tanks or morphine drips.

      Desperate wasn’t the word.

      Brady walked straight over to the reception desk and flashed his ID badge at the receptionist.

      ‘Here to see Simone Henderson,’ Brady said.

      The receptionist nodded at Brady before keying the name into the hospital’s database.

      ‘ICU, Ward 7, Room 2,’ she replied when she found her.

      Grateful, Brady nodded.

      Before he turned away the receptionist stopped him.

      She conspiratorially bent forward.

      ‘I think you should know that two men were in first thing this morning asking if they could see her. I thought it was suspicious at the time since she’s under police protection and they obviously weren’t officers.’

      ‘What did they look like? The two men?’ Brady asked.

      ‘Maybe late twenties, early thirties? Dark, good-looking. Well-built. And they had a funny accent like they were foreign. Definitely not from around here.’

      Brady accepted that anyone who didn’t have a Geordie accent was seen as being foreign in North Tyneside.

      ‘I thought they were lawyers or something … you know? Both wearing suits. Expensive-looking. Looked like they had money.’

      He nodded, thinking back to the two men he had seen talking to Simone in the Blue Lagoon. They could easily have fitted the receptionist’s description. But as for their accent, Brady didn’t get close enough to hear whether they were locals, or to clearly see their features.

      ‘Was there anything about them that stood out? Something they said, maybe? Or even a distinguishing mark?’

      ‘There was something that struck me as odd …’

      Brady nodded for her to elaborate.

      ‘One of them had a large platinum signet ring on the third finger of his right hand.’

      ‘Why did that strike you as odd?’ quizzed Brady.

      ‘Because when they turned to leave I realised that they were both wearing them. One of them had his hand in his pocket you see. Then his phone rang. And when he took it out I saw that he was wearing an identical ring. And on the same finger.’

      ‘What did the rings look like?’

      ‘It was the letter “N”. But it was all fancy, inset with diamonds. And the backdrop to the letter had what looked like Latin writing on it. They looked expensive, you know?’

      ‘You’ve got a good eye,’ Brady said. ‘Ever thought about becoming a copper?’

      She laughed. ‘Divorced and single,’ she explained. ‘Force of habit, checking out whether a man’s married or not. First thing I look for now is a wedding ring, or the tell-tale sign that it’s been temporarily removed. Been stung in the past you see.’

      Brady shoved his hand in his pocket and gripped the silver wedding ring he kept on him at all times. He couldn’t manage to let go of it, despite the undeniable fact that Claudia had taken up with another man. DCI James M. Davidson was a muscle-bound, ex-military Ross Kemp look-alike, who had swaggered into the Armed Response Unit on the back of his hands-on combat experience in Iraq and Afghanistan.

      Not that Brady would take that away from him. It took balls to risk your life in a war reminiscent of Vietnam. In other words, a war against fundamentalist insurgents who used dirty, guerrilla warfare against the enemy. But, regardless of his heroism, Davidson was still an arrogant, tall, good-looking, dangerously charming player, who had war stories that mere mortal men would kill for.

      And that was Brady’s problem. He didn’t want Claudia to be played. But he wasn’t in a position to say anything, given his own history with her.

      ‘Thanks for your help,’ Brady said.

      He


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