Blood Money

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Authors: Chris Collett

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BOOK: Blood Money
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Blood Money
Tom Mariner [4]
Chris Collett
UK (2007)

DI Tom Mariner is about to take a well-earned break when six-week-old
Jessica Klinnemann is abducted from the cr che at a local day nursery.
His leave cancelled, Mariner becomes the lead on the highly public case.
But what at first appears to be a random kidnap gradually begins to
look like a meticulously planned operation. The motive remains unclear,
until Mariner discovers that the baby's father works for a scientific
research company that has long been the target of animal rights
activists.

Two days later when the incident comes to an astonishing conclusion, a
crude note seems to confirm that that animal rights protesters were
behind the scare. But when one of the cr che workers is killed in a hit
and run, the case is blown wide open...

 
 
 
 
Blood Money
 
 
CHRIS COLLETT
 
 
Hachette Digital
Table of Contents
 
Chris Collett was born in East Anglia and graduated in Liverpool, before moving to Birmingham to teach both children and adults with varying degrees of learning disability. Chris is married with two teenage children.
 
She is the author of
The Worm in the Bud
,
Blood of the Innocents
and
Written in Blood
, also available from Piatkus.
Also by Chris Collett
The Worm in the Bud
Blood of the Innocents
Written in Blood
 
 
 
 
Blood Money
 
 
CHRIS COLLETT
 
 
Hachette Digital
 
 
Published by Hachette Digital 2009
 
Copyright © 2007 by Chris Collett
 
 
The moral right of the author has been asserted
 
 
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 permission in writing 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 including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
 
 
All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental
 
 
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
 
eISBN : 978 0 7481 1270 8
 
 
This ebook produced by JOUVE, FRANCE
 
 
Hachette Digital
An imprint of
Little, Brown Book Group
100 Victoria Embankment
London EC4Y 0DY
 
 
An Hachette Livre UK Company
This book would not have been written without the unstinting support of my agent Juliet Burton, who always manages to say exactly the right thing at times of stress, and the invaluable input of my editor at Piatkus, Gillian Green.
 
I’d also like to thank retired DI Alan Crouch for generously sharing with me his unique insights and extensive knowledge of police work. Finally I am indebted to my husband, children and close friends, all of whom help to keep me sane and unfailingly forgive me for not being as attentive to them as I should.
Chapter One
Mariner was already awake when the digital alarm flipped over to three thirty am, a murmur of anticipation rippling around his stomach that was reminiscent of childhood, when getting up at this hour, when the sky outside was inky black, meant it was either Christmas or the start of a long journey. He slid out of bed, careful not to tug the duvet and disturb Anna, only switching on a light when he was safely out of the bedroom. His clothes were where he’d left them last night, folded over the banister. Eyes grainy from the lack of sleep, he stood under the shower and let his thoughts focus and sharpen into preparation for what lay ahead.
The wet spell they’d been having had temporarily abated, and outside it was still and dry, though he felt an autumnal nip in the air as he crept from the house. Noticing that the
For Sale
sign positioned by the fence, and now pleasingly covered with the word
Sold
, had fallen sideways, Mariner straightened it up before getting into his car. Five minutes later he drew up outside Tony Knox’s house. His DS was looking out for him and appeared immediately. ‘Good day for it, boss,’ Knox said, climbing in beside Mariner and fastening his seat belt.
‘Any day’s a good day for this,’ said Mariner, ‘though the code name has to be someone’s idea of a joke. Ocean Blue? Operation Open Sewer would be more accurate.’
‘Won’t you miss all this, boss?’
‘I’m only on leave for a week. I think I’ll manage.’
‘No, I mean when your transfer comes through.’
‘I’m sure they have their share of excitement in Herefordshire. If what you read in the press is accurate, rural towns are worse than anywhere for drugs and vice these days.’
‘Won’t be the same though, will it?’
‘No, but I think that’s the point, at least it is where Anna’s concerned.’
‘You’ve got the whole of next week off too?’
‘All seven days of it. The christening isn’t until next Sunday.’
‘The Godfather eh?’ Knox couldn’t resist breaking into the opening bars of the Coppola film.
‘Only nominally. I think Anna and I would have to be married to get the official title. But it’ll do me. It feels like enough of a responsibility as it is.’
Up until now, and unsurprisingly at this hour, traffic was light. But passing the arts centre and turning into the outward bound Pershore Road, they joined a steady queue of cars all going into Tally Ho, the police training centre. They must have all looked like the arrivals at some bizarrely timed party, but on the walk across the car park the mood was sombre, with just a few of the younger lads larking about as if they were going on a school trip. Around one hundred and fifty officers gathered from all over the West Midlands in the main conference hall. Chief Superintendent Marston kept it simple. Covert operation Ocean Blue had been months in the planning and anyone who wasn’t clear on their role by now would face a disciplinary for sleeping on the job. ‘Let’s keep it swift and clean. Good luck.’
 
Curled in a foetal position on her grubby bed, Katarina lay with her hands locked together between her thighs where her body was sore. She should feel grateful. The night was over and she could relax, if that was what this state could be called. Waves of exhaustion lapped over her, if only she could stop shivering for long enough to drift away into blissful oblivion. But through the flimsy net curtains the light from the outside streetlamp lit up the condensation that crept down the window pane, collecting at the bottom in the rotting wooden frame. And despite the portable electric radiator, her shallow breaths steamed the air and the end of her nose tingled with cold as she huddled in the blankets still in her clothes.
In search of some comfort, she reached out into the chill air and opened the drawer of the cheap bedside cabinet taking out her most precious possession, a much-handled photograph, one of the few possessions she’d retained from what seemed now like a whole other life. After everything she endured night after night, this was the most exquisite torture of all, as she considered what might have been, but for her own naiveté. With a will of their own her thoughts ranged over her home and parents, her brother and sisters, as her chest contracted, forcing out a sob. She wondered if Alana in the room next to hers was tormented by the same demons. It was impossible to tell if her friend was awake at this time of night when the house fell silent. The last of the clients had been and gone and, but for the occasional passing of a distant car, the rest of the world seemed deceptively at peace.
Katarina must have dozed off because she was woken by a terrifying bang, shouting, and heavy footsteps stomping up the stairs. Scrambling to the end of her bed, she pressed herself against the cold wall in an attempt to make herself invisible, praying that this time she’d be left alone. After several seconds the door burst open and a man, a stranger, was framed in the doorway. Different from the others, clean and well-dressed, he spoke in soothing tones, but in her panic she couldn’t untangle the words to understand what he was saying. She saw his gaze take in the room and the bed and she closed her eyes to hide from the shame.
As the ram hit the door, bursting it open, it was the smell that hit them first; a combination of rising damp and the stale feral stench of sex mixed with cheap perfume. Mariner, Knox and two uniformed officers stampeded up the stairs, flinging open doors as they went. In the first three rooms the occupants, two women and a man respectively, were roused from their sleep, blinking uncertainly in the sudden glare of the bare light bulbs.
At the top of the house, Mariner thought at first that the fourth room was empty. But as his eyes adjusted to the gloom he saw the bundle at the far end of the bed, eyes wide and terrified. ‘It’s all right,’ he said. ‘You’re safe.’ He held out his warrant card. ‘I’m with the police. Polizei.’ She shrank back further from him. Advancing slowly, Mariner saw some kind of jacket slung over the chair, matted fur fringing the hood. He picked it up and held it up to her. ‘You have to come with me.’ When he was close enough he gently lifted the thin grimy blanket from her and took her bony arm.
Down on the street in the chilly dawn it was the freak show. Curtains twitched aside in the houses around them as the girls were bundled as quickly as possible into the waiting cars, one car containing two arrested males sped away. Ocean Blue, for them, accomplished.
 
Emma O’Brien chuckled at a joke made by the radio presenter. ‘What a silly man,’ she said, gazing down at her baby daughter in the car seat beside her. Jessica rewarded her with a gummy grin, kicking her legs vigorously, and yet again Emma marvelled at the physical reaction that beautiful smile could evoke. The traffic ahead inched forward and she eased her foot off the clutch. Eight thirty. God, fancy having to do this journey every day. She’d known it would be slow getting into the city, so she’d allowed plenty of time, in fact she surprised herself at how relaxed she was. It was down to motherhood, no doubt about it. Everyone had commented on the change. Six months ago she’d have been in the lecture theatre at the crack of dawn checking her presentation, making sure that all the AV technology was functioning and mentally rehearsing her opening remarks. ‘Your mummy is a changed woman,’ she told Jessica with another indulgent smile.
‘Ghee,’ Jessica said, grinning.
As Emma neared the nursery the first twinge of nervous apprehension kicked in. She tried to tell herself it was because she’d be standing up in front of a full lecture hall for the first time in six months, but part of her acknowledged that the unease was also about the prospect of leaving her seven-week-old daughter in the hands of what were essentially strangers. Terrible things happened with tiny babies. Only recently she’d read in the paper about a nanny convicted of manslaughter for shaking a baby to death. ‘Don’t be ridiculous,’ she said out loud. The crèche had been running for years, the staff fully vetted by the hospital. They were professionals. If there was any malpractice going on the place would have been closed down long ago. Too late to back out now and, in any case, the one-off lecture paid so obscenely well that she’d have been out of her tiny mind to turn it down. It was only one day. The crèche arrangement would be just fine.

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