Alec sat in his car at the Oguzhan home and closed his eyes for five minutes. His exhausted mind shut down and he fell into a troubled sleep. He was in bed with Gail, cosy and warm, until the alarm disturbed their sleep.
“Turn it off,” Alec grumbled to his sleeping wife, but she wasn’t there. He woke with a stiff neck and a cramp in his leg. The car was cold and he shivered as he looked around for his phone. There was a message alert on his Blackberry. He took the phone from his pocket and pressed
Retrieve
. He noticed that his trousers looked creased and scruffy.
“That’s what you get for sleeping in your car or on the settee in the office,” he heard Gail’s voice in his imagination. “Why didn’t you come home and sleep in your own bed?” She continued in his mind. As his wife’s imaginary voice pecked his head, he read the message on his phone. It was an urgent message telling him to contact Graham Libby at the forensic labs. He decided to go straight there instead of calling the doctor. Alec turned the radio off and travelled to the station in silence. The roads were quiet.He went through the drive-thru of a twenty-four hour McDonalds for a sausage muffin and a strong black coffee. He left the hash brown because they gave him heartburn. Alec screwed up the wrappers and stuffed them into the brown paper carryout bag he’d received his breakfast in, and then tossed it into the backseat foot well with a half a dozen others.
When he arrived at the station, he took the lift to the forensic labs, rubbing his fingers across his wrinkled forehead and his tired eyes as the doors closed. The lift juddered to a halt a few seconds later and as he stepped out of the elevator, he could feel a buzz of excitement in the air.
“Superintendent,” Libby greeted him enthusiastically. “Just the man I am looking for. We have had a productive night while you have been slumbering.”
“Slumbering?” Alec said grumpily.
“I saw you in your car, sleeping on the job, but don’t worry, your secret is safe with me.”
“Doc, I don’t know how to thank you,” Alec responded sarcastically. “You have the look of a man who knows something that I don’t.”
“Absolutely correct, Detective Ramsay,” the doctor said solemnly. “Dreadful business at the Oguzhan house, Alec, the bodies are on their way here now. It is one of the worst that I have seen.” He took off his glasses while he thought about it. “I am right. I have seen the worst murder scene in my career tonight. Any sign of the other child?”
“No, not yet,” Alec shook his head. “At least we have some idea who the child at Jamaica Street is.”
“The missing child is a boy?”
“Yes,” Alec frowned. “He had two sons, one ten and one six. We’re guessing from the size of the body in the house that the six year old is missing. That would fit, right?”
“Fit with the size of the footprints at Jamaica Street?” the doctor asked. “Yes, probably, do you know if the boy was at the house at the time of the murders?”
“There are three sets of kids’ clothes, so we think he was, but we can’t be sure.”
“Let’s hope we find him alive and well. My preliminary findings are in your e-mail.” The doctor took his glasses from the pocket of his lab coat and wiped the lenses on his tie. “You look tired.”
“Thanks, I’m fine,” Alec forced a smile. He was tired and numb. Gail was on his mind. Maybe he should have thought about her this much before she left. How many times must she have thought about leaving? How many times had he ignored the warning signs?
“I have some very interesting results from some of the samples we collected at Jamaica Street, inspector,” the doctor explained as he pushed his glasses onto his nose. Every result was interesting to him, especially when he was the only one who knew the results. “I know we will have a lot to work on from the Oguzhan house, but let’s take one result at a time, shall we?”
“It’s about time we had some results, Dr. Libby,” Alec returned the mock formality. “Pray spill the beans.” He could feel the tension in his stomach, like butterflies taking off inside him. Perhaps some of the pieces of the puzzle would be revealed at last. He needed the images of the Oguzhan family pushed to the back of his mind. He needed a break in the case, just one piece of evidence that would make the rest of it fit together and lead them to the killer.
“Ah, not so fast, inspector.” The doctor wagged his finger in Alec’s face. “Will is on his way up. He said he would be two minutes. We may as well make it a ‘ménage a three’, as people who didn’t pass their French exams may say.”
“I sent him home to get some rest,” Alec smiled politely, but he felt like poking the forensic doctor in the eye with his pen. They had a close working relationship, which was fine, but the doctor wasn’t the type of person Alec would have socialised with. Not that Alec socialised often, but if he did, it wouldn’t be with Dr. Libby. His sense of humour was almost juvenile at times, especially when he had discovered vital evidence in a case. He revelled in knowing. Alec heard the lift arrive and he hoped it would be Will to step out. It was. He had changed his clothes and shaved. He looked fresh and smart in a silver grey suit and pale blue tie. The lab technician he was chatting to was getting his best Hollywood smile, and from the gleam in her eyes, she was loving every second of it. They stepped out of the lift and continued their chitchat.
“When you are ready, Detective,” the doctor’s tone turned sour. The jesting was over. Picking up on his tone, everyone within earshot stopped talking.
“Calm down,” Alec said beneath his breath. “Don’t make a big scene in front of everyone. We’re all tired, Doc.”
“I am not tired, inspector,” Libby hissed. “Your DI was the cause of one of my best technicians leaving her post.”
“She was a grown woman, Doctor.” Alec was curt and to the point. He didn’t have time for this. “Granted, their affair was less than discreet and her husband found out, but it was her own doing, nobody twisted her arm.”
“That’s rubbish!” Graham Libby would never forgive Will for his unprofessionalism. “He crossed the line at work.”
“Fine.” Alec looked at the scientists watching their conversation. “Bring it up when you’re asked to contribute to his annual review. Not here in the middle of the lab while your team have front row seats.”
The doctor looked up at his staff. He coughed embarrassed and lowered his voice. “Well, he makes my blood boil, and seeing him flirting with another employee is like rubbing salt in the wounds.” The doctor turned and walked toward his desk. He couldn’t warm to the detective at all.
“Morning, guv, you look tired.” Will was blushing. He realised why the doctor was angry with him. The affair was public knowledge across the force and throughout the support departments, and Will had tried hard to curb his philandering ways. He did try to be subtle if he was chatting a female colleague up, but he wasn’t good at subtle. “Is the doctor taking the moral high ground again?” Will whispered, trying to make light of the situation.
“He may be, but then again you could be taking the piss,” Alec replied quietly. He kept his face straight. This wasn’t the time or the place to be taking sides. He slapped Will between the shoulder blades a little too hard, and they followed the doctor.
“Right you are, guv.” Will stopped smiling and put his professional face on. He wished he could repair the damage he had done to his reputation, but mud stuck.
Dr. Libby picked up a brown envelope from his desk as they approached, removing a still and an autopsy report. He cleared his throat and talked directly to Alec, ignoring his colleague. Will was still in the doghouse.
“Louise Parker’s injuries were so bad, we couldn’t determine the cause of death at first.” The doctor waved a finger. “Then we checked the x-rays of her body and we found this.”
He placed an x-ray over an illuminator and pointed to the neck area of the spine. “If you look here, you can see that the neck was snapped cleanly, probably caused by a single quick twist of the head.”
“That’s not something your average Joe could do,” Alec said. He studied the break. “This is something that someone with a military background or a serious martial arts exponent could execute.”
“I agree,” the doctor nodded. “It is impossible to get such a clean break unless done by an expert.”
“In contrast to the other murders, this was kind,” Alec said. “It put her out of her misery.”
“Absolutely,” the doctor agreed enthusiastically. Spittle escaped his lips as he spoke. “It is totally out of context with her other injuries. The other injuries were inflicted to cause her as much pain as possible, but this break was meant to kill her quickly.”
“That’s strange,” Alec said. “Maybe the killer had finished with her?”
“I don’t think so, Alec.” The doctor was adamant. “The two mindsets are poles apart. One intended to cause terrible pain over a prolonged period. The other meant to end the torment.”
“Maybe,” Will agreed. “That doesn’t help us much.”
“Finding the cause of death in a murder investigation is critical, Detective.” The doctor looked irritated.
“Not on its own, Doctor,” Will came back at him. “What else have you got?”
“Could you two please remember why we’re here,” Alec spoke quietly. “Get on with the brief.” There was a look on his face which dared them to challenge him.
Graham Libby was livid, and he took a deep breath before continuing. “We have matched the blood type samples from Jamaica Street to one of your suspects.” He kept his opening pitch as vague as possible. It was all part of the fun of knowing. “We do not have all the results back yet, but these tests are conclusive.”
“What have you got?” Alec repeated Will’s question. He pushed his fingers through his tousled sandy hair, lifting it off his face. The doctor was becoming annoying, more annoying than usual.
“We tested blood, urine and excrement samples collected from the chair at the Parker scene.” The doctor looked over his glasses as he spoke. “We tested them, and they matched with samples taken from the home of…?” he paused for the officers to guess.
“Who?” Will shrugged. He didn’t want to wait or play the doctor’s game.
“Get on with it,” Alec smiled.
“Salim Oguzhan.” The doctor handed over two sets of results, one for each of the detectives. “It is too early to match the DNA, but the blood type is a match to his children.”
Alec and Will looked at each other for a moment, digesting the information. Alec knew Salim was either on the run or dead. Now dead seemed more likely.
“So Salim Oguzhan was strapped in that chair and tortured?” Will mused.
“I am guessing he was made to watch what happened to Louise Parker, too,” Alec added. “This is our link to the nightclub, Will.”
“What about the boy?” Will gasped.
“The man who killed the Oguzhan family wouldn’t give two hoots about making the boy watch.” The doctor looked over his glasses patronisingly.
“You think the robbers extracted the safe code from Salim?” Will asked. “Making him watch what he they to Louise Parker and having his son in the chair next to him?” It made sense, but the method seemed extreme. “Would they need to go to that extreme?”
“It depends, Will.” Alec stroked the greying stubble on his chin.
“On what?”
“What they knew already,” Alec replied.
“I don’t get it.”
“Let’s say you’re the killer, and you know that Salim Oguzhan is a gangster, but that’s all you know.”
“Okay, I’m with you.”
“To go from nothing to extracting the whereabouts of a large amount of cash and drugs and a safe code would take some doing.”
“So he could have gone all around the houses before he got anything useful.”
“Exactly, plus he enjoys doing this,” Alec added.
“So we think whoever robbed the nightclub did this?”
“I think they tied up Louise Parker, tied up Salim Oguzhan and his son and started asking questions. They ended up with a safe code and the location of the safes, and the whereabouts of five kilos of cocaine,” Alec thought aloud.
“He never gave up the second safe code,” Will grimaced.
“Obviously not,” Alec agreed.
“We have to assume he’s dead.”
“Agreed.”
“The killer could have taken them to Jamaica Street in the Porsche and driven the car inside,” Will surmised. “There was plenty of room and the streets are quiet at night.”
“Correct, and he would have had all the time in the world to extract the information he wanted,” Alec added.
“He or they?” the doctor asked, removing his glasses. “Remember there were two sets of footprints in the Parker blood pool. We are still running tests on the older bloodstain, but I have my reservations, Alec.”
“Let’s hear them,” Alec smiled thinly.
“The victims at the Oguzhan residence were subjected to a frenzied attack.” The doctor shook his head as he spoke. He looked troubled. “The killer chased and attacked the woman and her children, but from the evidence at the scene, I would say that they were badly injured by the first attack and then killed sometime later. There are crawl marks near each body.”
“Okay, I’m with you so far,” Alec agreed.
“If I combine that with the detailed and torturous injuries to the Parker woman, then I believe that we are looking for a killer who works alone. He is indulgent, and indulgence is a solo affair. He enjoys things that he alone can stomach.”
“Maybe he has a weaker accomplice. It has to be ‘they’. There were two gunmen at the nightclub,” Alec disagreed.
“The other gunman may not be aware of where the information came from or how it was obtained,” Will guessed.
“You may be right,” Alec said.
“If we find one of them, we’ll get them both, won’t we?” Will asked.
“We need to find Salim Oguzhan,” Alec said. “We’ve been looking for Salim Oguzhan and his Porsche all over the country, but he was right under our noses the entire time.”
“We’ve been looking in the wrong place so far,” Will smiled.
“Where would you hide a body and a Porsche if you had killed the owner?” Alec smiled.
“Especially if you killed them a few hundred yards from the river,” Will returned the smile. They were finally getting somewhere. “I’ll call out the divers.”