Windchill

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Authors: Ed James

BOOK: Windchill
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Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Other Books by Ed James

Part 1 - Christmas Steps

Monday, 23rd December 2013

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Christmas Eve, Tuesday 24th December 2013

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Christmas Day, Wednesday 25th December 2013

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Part 2 - Windchill

Hogmanay, Tuesday 31st December, 2013

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Thursday 8th January, 2014

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Chapter 67

Chapter 68

Chapter 69

Chapter 70

Chapter 71

Chapter 72

Chapter 73

Chapter 74

Chapter 75

Chapter 76

Friday 9th January, 2014

Chapter 77

Chapter 78

Chapter 79

Chapter 80

Chapter 81

Chapter 82

Chapter 83

Chapter 84

Chapter 85

Chapter 86

Chapter 87

Chapter 88

Chapter 89

Chapter 90

Chapter 91

Chapter 92

Chapter 93

Chapter 94

Next Book

Afterword

Other Books by Ed James

About Ed James

WINDCHILL

Ed James

Part 1 - Christmas Steps

Part 2 - Windchill

Copyright © 2014 Ed James

All rights reserved.

To Rhona - sincere thanks for being both a brutal editor and a friend.

OTHER BOOKS BY ED JAMES

THE SCOTT CULLEN SERIES

1
GHOST IN THE MACHINE

2
DEVIL IN THE DETAIL

3
FIRE IN THE BLOOD

4
DYED IN THE WOOL

5
BOTTLENECK

6
WINDCHILL

Writing as Edwin James -

SHOT THROUGH THE HEART, a standalone supernatural thriller

Part 1 -

"Christmas Steps"

Monday

23rd December 2013

Chapter 1

He tried to keep in the shadows as Steven opened the front door. Blinking, he stepped back as the taxi swept past the house before it trundled up the hill, headlights illuminating the wet street. He waited for it to pass and the dim glow of the street lights to return. "Can you not hurry up?"

A man passed them on the opposite side of the street, coat tucked tight against the rain, looking overweight. Had he seen them? His breath quickened.

"Got it." Steven fumbled with the front door, finally nudging it open. "Sorry about that. Too much to drink, obviously. Come on in."

"Thought you'd never ask."

Steven looked down at the cream carpet in the long hall. "Can you at least take off your shoes?"

"No." He smiled before walking through to the living room, flicking on the mother and child light by the sofa, but remained standing. "I'm fine as I am."

Still standing in the hall, Steven reached down to untie his own laces. "Can I get you a drink?"

"Now that would be good."

Steven marched across the wide room, switching a side light on. He paused in front of an oak cabinet behind a leather recliner, like he was going to say something, before pulling down the horizontal cabinet door, revealing a sizeable collection of spirits bottles. His hand hovered over them before settling on a whisky, black label embossed with silver. He sniffed it then poured healthy measures into a pair of glasses. "Here you go. Hope it's still to your taste."

"Dunpender, right?"

Steven took a sip and nodded, eyes staring into space. "Right."

He took the glass and wandered over to stand just to the left of the window, before sniffing the drink. Pure darkness. "Still think it's the best whisky in Scotland, Steven?"

"I like it. Get through a bottle every month."

"That's a lot of drinking."

"Helps with the stress. You know how it is."

"Don't I just." He finished the whisky in one, the liquid burning his tongue and throat. Sucking in a mouthful of air, letting it dampen the heat. Bliss. He held the glass up to the light and inspected the lines of the crystal.

Steven finished his dram and put his own glass down, hand shaking. "What is it you want?"

"A chat. One that can't wait. It's important."

"Why?"

"It just is."

"Come on. You dragged me from the pub to hear whatever it is."

"You'll want another drink."

"Do I?"

"Aye, I think so."

"I've had a skinful already." Steven turned his back and poured out another measure of Dunpender, his head bowed. "Fine."

He spotted a crystal quaich,
Dunpender 100
etched into it, next to another tall bottle matching the design but gold replacing silver. "Nice little trinket you've got there."

Steven ran a finger over it and nodded. "Cost me a pretty penny."

"Disappointed you're not opening that one for me."

Steven sighed as he looked down at his glass. "Like I've got anything to celebrate."

"Quite." Taking a deep breath, he set the empty glass down on the dark brown window sill. He lashed out, connecting the base of his hand with the back of Steven's neck, forcing him against the cabinet, fingers clutching at the glass doors. Steven fell forwards, grasping for the hinge as he sprawled across the machined wood flooring, the bottle of Dunpender tumbling and smashing, a pool of gold liquid forming around his prone body.

Stepping forward, he followed through with kicks to Steven's stomach, head, balls. He kicked the head again. And again.

He knelt down, breathing heavily, fingers crawling up Steven's throat, clasping the pulse point. His heartbeat was faint.

Still alive. Good.

He dropped the toolbox in the middle of the living room, the trail of oil muddying the bleached wood of the floor, before sifting through the tools inside.

Pliers. Excellent.

Hammers. Two of them. Which one? The ball-peen for definite, its small head giving precision. The claw hammer was all about brute force. Maybe he'd need both.

He rummaged through the second layer of tools, finding a long cord, the sort used on a drying green. That's the ticket.

He got to his feet and untied the kitchen cloths on Steven's wrists, replacing them with the cord, the solid knot at the back of the chair just out of reach.

Breathe. Slowly, deeply. Take your time.

He picked up the glass of water from the coffee table and tipped it over Steven's head. He didn't wake up.

He raised the hammer, bringing it down on Steven's middle finger.

Steven's eyes shot open. He screamed, a primal roar from the pit of his gut, his gaze darting around the room.

The noise curdled his own stomach. He swallowed, his throat constricted. "So you're awake then?"

"What the fuck are you doing?"

"Come on, Steven, you know what I'm doing and why."

"I can pay you."

"Can you really?"

"Please, how much do you want?"

"This isn't about money. At least not to me. No, it's about the betrayal of trust." He reached for the pliers, gripping the fingernail on Steven's left thumb and yanked. The scream turned his stomach anew.

One, two, three...

Two minutes - one hundred and twenty - that's all he'd allow himself to enjoy his work.

He stayed in the shadows, watching the yellow flickering in the living room and kitchen windows at the back. The briefest smell of charcoal and petrol.

Glancing around the street, he couldn't see anyone.

One nineteen, one twenty. Time up.

A cough. Somewhere to the left.

He looked around. There - a fat man stood a few doors down, focused on his phone as a small dog ratted around the bushes of the compact front garden, cocking its leg as it sniffed the air. It was the man who'd almost spotted him as Steven made a hash of getting in.

The dog sensed him, its brown eyes locking on, its mouth curling.

He stepped back into the shade. The dog's bark rattled around the small space.

"Benji, will you bloody quit it?"

One, two, three...

After sixty he peered out, the phone's backlight illuminating the man's face, thumbs working at the screen, the dog pulling the lead tight.

He clenched the claw hammer, hoping he wouldn't have to resort to another murder just to get away.

"Come on, Benji." The man tugged at the dog and led him inside.

He let out a breath, watching it mist in the cold air, before walking off. He headed for home, his work complete.

He allowed himself another glance at the house, the flames now visible and obvious to anyone who cared to look.

Chapter 2

"Secret Santa's another thing I fucking hate about Christmas." Detective Constable Scott Cullen put the bondage ball gag to his mouth, biting on the red sphere and tugging the black dog collar but not tying it. He took it out and chucked it on the table, before looking around at the other four officers. "There's not a bigger waste of ten quid in the western world."

"Maybe someone's trying to tell you something, mate." Acting DC Simon Buxton took a sip of red wine, chasing it down with lager. He ran a hand through his hair, long on top and flicked, but shaved at the side. He was tall, athletic and looked older than his twenty-five years.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

"Well, you're always whingeing on about how nobody wants to promote you. You chomping on a ball gag is probably the only way you'll stop."

Cullen scowled at him as he sunk more wine. "Was it you?"

"No, mate. I got Methven a change jar."

"Priceless." DS Sharon McNeill doubled over with laugher, her dark ponytail dancing a jig. She sat up again and folded her thin arms. "Was it made of crystal?"

Buxton raised an eyebrow. "For a tenner?"

"Christmas is bullshit." Cullen finished his pint and moved onto the next one, the glass still cool. "The only good thing," he stabbed a finger in the air, "the only good thing is I'm not working this year. I just want to spend a day not dealing with scumbags killing each other. It's always the same every year, fuckwits slotting fuckwits on Christmas Eve. Just absolute bollocks."

"Bloody hell, Cullen." DC Chantal Jain shook her head, her dark hair fanning out. "You're a bloody nightmare. I'm not exactly the most Christian of people but I
love
Christmas."

"That's because you've usually got about three men chasing after you, throwing flowers and bottles of perfume at you."

Jain scowled at him. "I think you've had enough to drink, don't you?"

"Bugger off. I took tomorrow off so I don't have to worry about how much I get through tonight."

Jain smirked. "Never usually stops you."

"Look, the hard-core alcoholics wouldn't even bother to turn up to this sort of thing in case they showed themselves up."

"So, why are you here?"

"Charming." Cullen looked across the upper floor of Tigerlily, the wide room split into sections, each decorated with flowery tablecloths, dark green table lights, red roses. "See next year, can we not just go to a proper pub for our Christmas night out? We always end up in places like this."

"I organised tonight." Jain folded her arms. "You'd much rather end up in the Elm, right?"

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