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Body Harvest

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by Malcolm Rose




  THE OUTER REACHES

  A world inhabited by two distinct and non-interbreeding humanoid species: majors (the majority) and outers. The two races are outwardly similar, but they have different talents, different genetics and different body chemistry.

  In this world, meet major Troy Goodhart and outer Lexi Iona Four. They form an amazing crime-fighting partnership.

  Contents

  Title Page

  THE OUTER REACHES

  SCENE 1

  SCENE 2

  SCENE 3

  SCENE 4

  SCENE 5

  SCENE 6

  SCENE 7

  SCENE 8

  SCENE 9

  SCENE 10

  SCENE 11

  SCENE 12

  SCENE 13

  SCENE 14

  SCENE 15

  SCENE 16

  SCENE 17

  SCENE 18

  SCENE 19

  SCENE 20

  SCENE 21

  SCENE 22

  SCENE 23

  SCENE 24

  SCENE 25

  SCENE 26

  SCENE 27

  SCENE 28

  SCENE 29

  SCENE 30

  SCENE 31

  SCENE 32

  SCENE 33

  SCENE 34

  The real science behind the story

  About the Author

  Copyright

  SCENE 1

  Monday 7th April, Early afternoon

  Using a small plastic spoon, Lexi scooped up live maggots from what had once been a moist mouth. Tipping the wriggling specimens carefully into a jar of alcohol, she muttered, ‘This is tricky.’

  Troy turned up his nose at the dead body that had become a feast for maggots. ‘It’s not very nice, is it?’

  Surprised, Lexi looked up at her new partner. ‘I mean the opposite. Imagine how you’d feel if he was smeared all over with … What’s the best food you’ve ever tasted?’

  Troy frowned. ‘Er … I don’t know. Chocolate, I suppose.’

  ‘Well, imagine he’s covered in chocolate.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘He’s making me really hungry,’ Lexi said. ‘Outers love maggots. Really yummy.’

  Troy was a major, not an outer. He pulled a face.

  Clearly in a teasing mood, Lexi added, ‘At least we keep the fly population down.’

  ‘Weird,’ said Troy.

  ‘You majors are weird to us.’

  Shaking his head, Troy replied, ‘Please don’t eat the evidence.’

  The man’s corpse was lying in a shallow earthy grave which had been uncovered by a foraging fox or other woodland creature. To the side was the brushwood that someone had used to disguise the disturbed ground.

  Still kneeling on the damp soil, Lexi sniffed the specimen jar and then sealed it with a sigh. ‘Ah, the smell of alcohol as well.’

  ‘Don’t drink the evidence either.’

  Lexi smiled. ‘What did you say your name was?’

  ‘Troy Goodhart. And you?’

  ‘Lexi.’

  ‘Lexi what?’

  ‘Lexi Iona Four. I’m the fourth one.’

  Troy nodded. Outers had an odd way of naming their children. As well as odd tastes in food and drink.

  He looked around the clearing in the wood. Dense lines of trees shielded the spot from the quiet lane behind Troy and Langhorn Reservoir at the bottom of the slope. It was a good place to dispose of a victim. If the culprit had buried the body a little deeper, it might never have been found. Whoever had tried to cover up this particular crime must have thought that a shallow covering of earth and brushwood was enough in such an isolated place.

  Lexi checked that her data logger was working and stabbed it into the ground next to the body. Every twenty minutes it would measure and record the temperature. Once it had collected the readings for a 24-hour period, she would be able to work out the time since death. Dating the development of the maggots would also help to calculate how long the body had been lying in the clearing.

  Troy didn’t crouch beside Lexi and the victim. He looked down at the injury to the chest, visible through the open shirt, and said, ‘Do you know what killed him? Is it as obvious as it looks?’

  Lexi shrugged. ‘The pathologist will find out for sure. I can’t tell with his clothes on and all this soil. But …’ She pointed to the gash directly above his heart. ‘This would have finished him off, I guess.’

  There was another bloodstain lower down, on his right-hand side, and possibly others. Lexi and Troy couldn’t see without moving, stripping and washing the body. That wasn’t their responsibility.

  ‘No sign of a weapon,’ Troy said. It was part-question, part-observation.

  ‘I’ll get a search team onto it.’

  ‘Is he a major or an outer?’ Troy asked.

  Without touching the man’s hands, Lexi inspected the decaying fingertips. ‘Looks like an outer,’ she replied. ‘His DNA and the juices seeping into the soil will confirm it. I’ve bagged samples of decomposing fluids already.’

  The stench was awful. With his superior eyesight, Troy surveyed the area as he raised the usual questions. ‘Who is he?’

  ‘No ID in his pockets,’ Lexi answered. ‘No mobile. They’ll rummage around much more in the lab but, as far as I can see, he’s got nothing on him. Not even a watch or wallet.’

  ‘Someone’s trying to stop us identifying him by taking his stuff away, or he just didn’t have anything. That’d probably make him one of the displaced.’

  ‘Maybe. Under all this earth, his clothes are pretty manky, I think,’ said Lexi. ‘Straggly hair and beard as well. I’m just going to clear the rest of the maggots away so I can get a photo of his face.’

  ‘Was he killed here?’

  ‘Unlikely,’ Lexi said. ‘Not enough blood in the soil.’

  ‘So, there’s a crime scene somewhere else. And his body was probably brought here in a car – which means there’ll be traces of him in it.’

  ‘Almost certainly.’

  Troy glanced back towards the road. ‘You’d have to be built like a lorry to carry him from the road on your own. Maybe it was two people – or one with a wheelbarrow or something.’

  ‘Maybe. The team’ll look for footprints and tracks.’

  Troy and Lexi were both wearing smooth slip-ons over their shoes so that they didn’t leave any impressions on the ground.

  ‘How long’s he been here?’

  ‘That’s what the insect life will tell me, but I need more data to be accurate. These,’ Lexi said, indicating the moving mass of maggots, ‘are from blowflies, so he’s been here more than a day. They’re not very big and there aren’t any pupae – you know, when the casing goes hard before the flies pop out – so it’s been less than ten days.’

  ‘Who called us in?’

  ‘A woman who was collecting logs for her wood-burner,’ Lexi replied.

  ‘She got more than she bargained for, then. Must have been a shock.’

  ‘Yeah.’ Lexi made sure all of the samples were stored safely in her holdall and then stood up. ‘I’m done. I’ll let the lab people take over.’ She made for the road.

  ‘Careful,’ Troy said. ‘Don’t trample all over the place.’

  Puzzled, Lexi halted. ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘This is a perfect place for getting rid of bodies, isn’t it?’

  The large, rectangular clearing consisted of bare soil near to the trees, but grass and wild flowers had taken over the centre. It was early April, sunnier than normal, and bluebells were beginning to colour the edges of the space while white and yellow petals flecked the middle.

  ‘I suppose.’

  ‘Look,’ Troy said, pointing towards two patches of turf that were a sli
ghtly lighter colour than the rest, with fewer wild flowers.

  ‘Younger growth,’ Lexi suggested.

  ‘Why are they like that?’

  Lexi shrugged again.

  ‘You call in the lab guys,’ Troy said, clutching his life-logger. ‘I’m going to ask for ground-penetrating radar. And sniffer dogs.’

  Lexi stared at him, surprised at his attention to detail. ‘You think someone’s been digging more graves.’

  ‘Just a feeling.’

  Carefully, they picked their way back up the slope to the rarely used lane. The two young detectives were the same age as each other and the same height. They were both fit and somewhat shorter than average. Lexi looked wiry and fast. Troy was sturdier, probably slower, but more powerful. Without a close look, it was difficult to tell which one of them was the major and which was the outer. Externally, the two human species were similar. Internally, though, the body chemistry of a major was very different from that of an outer.

  Troy had bright red hair. On his cheeks and chin were the first signs of ginger stubble. A faint moustache was making its appearance above his lip. His bright eyes – a penetrating blue – suggested that he had great powers of observation.

  Lexi’s hair was cut short, revealing an attractive face with a steely expression of determination. She wore no make-up on her bronzed skin. Her striking hair colour – somewhere between blonde and silver – made her look older than her sixteen years. Like any outer, her fingertips were smooth and did not leave prints on anything she touched.

  ‘Is this your first case?’ she asked Troy.

  ‘Is it that obvious?’

  A faint smile was her reply.

  Troy gazed at her and said, ‘What happened to your last partner?’

  ‘We didn’t get on.’

  ‘Oh. What’s wrong with you?’ He grinned to show that he was joking.

  ‘Nothing. It was her. To be honest, I didn’t think she was … clever enough.’

  ‘All outers say they’re north of majors when it comes to cleverness.’

  ‘That’s because we are. No doubt about it. It’s been measured scientifically. But this particular major held me back.’

  Troy admitted, ‘I’m not clever either. Not really.’

  ‘What are you, then? You must have something special to become a detective.’

  ‘My reports always said I was perceptive. I didn’t know what it meant at first. I had to look it up.’

  Lexi nodded. ‘That’ll do. I can work with perceptive. Me, I was always called methodical.’

  ‘Sounds boring.’

  ‘I like following procedures,’ she replied. ‘It gets results.’

  ‘Do you always get results?’

  ‘With the right partner, yes.’

  Emerging from the last line of trees and ducking under the police tape, they stopped beside the road and removed their slip-ons. Troy turned towards Lexi and said, ‘I don’t think I’ll hold you back.’

  She looked him up and down. ‘We’ll see.’

  There were two uniformed officers on duty, guarding the crime scene. ‘We’ve finished for now,’ Lexi told them. ‘There are teams on their way, though. More tests and searches, and a body to take to the pathologist. Maybe more digging as well. We don’t have to be here while they do it but you’re stuck, I’m afraid.’

  ‘Hope you’ve got toothbrushes and a change of clothes,’ Troy added. ‘We’ll be back if anything else turns up.’

  Every detective carried a life-logger. Lexi and Troy each had one of the small mobile devices and it stored every aspect of their working lives. It recorded everything they did, everywhere they went, and everything they saw, heard and said. It provided the evidence in any later trial and ensured that the investigation had been conducted correctly. Lexi’s and Troy’s life-loggers had already sent their requirements to the coming teams.

  The two teenage detectives had come separately to the crime scene, but they were leaving together. Lexi secured her precious holdall in the boot of the police car and then they both got in. Talking to the onboard computer, Lexi said, ‘Shepford Crime Central.’ As the car accelerated, they knew that they were about to spend a lot of time in each other’s company. If they worked well together, they would form a partnership and tackle many more cases.

  SCENE 2

  Monday 7th April, Afternoon

  Analysing the fluid leaking from the corpse first, Lexi was looking at the peaks and troughs on the chromatogram. ‘I don’t need to wait for the DNA result,’ she announced. ‘This is the normal profile of decay products from an outer.’ She tapped out a few instructions on the keypad and added, ‘The computer says it’s a ninety-seven per cent match.’

  On the other side of the large glass panel, forensic scientists were working on several different cases in a totally clean environment. One of them was measuring the maggots that Lexi had plucked from the body. Two were staring at paint flakes and fibres through microscopes. Others were preparing samples for various chemical analysers. Some were comparing fingerprints or examining handwriting. Each of them was dressed in an all-over white lab coat. Troy and Lexi were sitting in the attached computer room.

  ‘A bit depressing really,’ Troy said.

  ‘What is?’

  ‘One day, we all decompose to smelly goo and seep into the ground.’

  ‘That’s nature for you,’ Lexi said cheerfully. ‘It’s beautiful. But don’t you believe there’s a mysterious spirit that leaves the body before rot sets in? The essence of major’s gone before nature starts to recycle the body.’

  Troy nodded. ‘There’s got to be more than feeding flies and bacteria.’

  ‘Has there?’ Lexi said with a twisted smile. ‘I don’t know why. There’s life and there’s death. I’ve never seen anything in-between. No sign of life after death. And no body scanner’s ever found a soul – or whatever you want to call it.’

  Troy took a swig of blueberry juice and said, ‘I don’t think we’re going to settle this right now.’

  ‘You’re scared of losing the argument.’

  ‘I’ve just got other things on my mind,’ Troy replied. ‘Like a murder.’ Knowing that Lexi’s life-logger would have many images of the victim, he asked, ‘Have you uploaded a picture of him?’

  She nodded. ‘I had to clean up the ones of his face for ID purposes. The computer still doesn’t recognize him. And he doesn’t match anyone on the missing persons’ list either. We’re going to have to work harder to find out who he is.’

  Lexi’s drink was different. It was mulled wine and Troy could smell the warm alcoholic vapour. Outers drank beer, wine and cider from an early age because alcohol nourished them like any other food. Unlike majors, their bodies lacked the metabolic pathway that caused intoxication, so alcohol didn’t damage their organs and they never got drunk.

  ‘Maybe his DNA will be in the database,’ Troy said before hesitating and adding, ‘Or is that too easy as well?’

  ‘We’ll find out tomorrow.’

  Troy typed a few commands on the keypad until the screen showed him a satellite image of the area where the body had been found. He cocked his head on one side and murmured, ‘Why here?’

  Lexi shrugged. ‘Because it’s remote? Not many people go there.’

  ‘Our bad guy knows all about it, though.’

  ‘Maybe he collects logs as well.’

  ‘So he’d have a wood-burning stove.’

  ‘Or he’s into wood-carving,’ Lexi replied with a smirk.

  ‘My point exactly,’ said Troy. ‘Place always tells a story. In this case, we just don’t know what it is yet.’ Examining the map again, he said, ‘Could be a lot of deer roaming around, so maybe he’s into hunting. Maybe he – or she – goes sailing on the reservoir. Maybe he’s a tree surgeon. I don’t know, but there’ll be a connection for sure.’

  ‘We’ll probably pin it down after forensics have solved the case.’

  Troy frowned and turned back to the monitor. He zoome
d out to get an overall view of the area. ‘I’ll run a check on every building within ten kilometres.’

  Lexi peered at the map. ‘Won’t take long. Probably a few farms, a yachting club and the waterworks. That’s the lot, isn’t it?’

  ‘Maybe one of the farmers is a mad, tree-felling, wood-carving murderer.’

  Lexi laughed. ‘No chance. Anyone like that would use an axe or a chainsaw. Ours is nowhere near as messy.’

  All murder detectives laughed a lot. Troy knew why. It was the way they protected themselves from the awful things they saw. They had to cleanse themselves of the violence committed by both human races and they did it with dark humour. If they didn’t laugh, they’d probably cry.

  ‘What are those maggots telling you?’

  ‘At this time of year, flies would have found the body within an hour and laid eggs on the moist bits – the mouth, eyes, armpits and open wounds. The maggots would have hatched in twelve to twenty-four hours and started munching straightaway. The ones I sampled were under a centimetre long. That’s two days’ growth or thereabouts, but it depends a lot on temperature. I’m still waiting for those readings.’

  Troy looked down at his life-logger. ‘They want us back at the field,’ he announced.

  Lexi nodded and stood up. ‘That means you were right. More bodies.’

  SCENE 3

  Monday 7th April, Early evening

  The wood was no longer empty and peaceful. It was heaving with crime scene officers in white overalls. To Troy’s left, a line of policemen and women on their hands and knees stretched across the clearing. They were inching forward slowly, conducting a fingertip search for a weapon – or anything else that might be relevant. Two officers were coming to the end of their zigzag inspection of the area with ground-penetrating radar. Forensic scientists were carrying sealed bags back to the vehicles parked in the narrow lane beyond the trees. The team had found two more bodies, exactly where Troy had predicted. A small digger was parked between two new holes and four small mounds of soil. The pathologist – an outer called Kofi Seven – had removed the body that Lexi and Troy had already seen. Now he was examining another in a makeshift grave.

 

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