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Dead Guilty

Page 21

by Helen H. Durrant


  Bent: corrupt

  Betting shop: a place where you can place bets on horses and other sports

  Bin: wastebasket (noun), or throw in rubbish (verb)

  Bloke: guy

  Blow: cocaine

  Bob: money

  Bookies: a place where you can place bets on horses and other sports

  Burger bar: hamburger fast-food restaurant

  Buy-to-let: Buying a house/apartment to rent it out for profit

  Charity Shop: thrift store

  Carrier bag: plastic bag from supermarket

  Care Home: an institution where old people are cared for

  Car park: parking lot

  Chat-up: flirt, trying to pick up someone with witty banter or compliments

  Chemist: pharmacy

  Chinwag: conversation

  CID: Criminal Investigation Department

  Clock: punch

  Cock up: mess up, make a mistake

  Common: an area of park land/ or lower class

  Common or garden: ordinary

  Comprehensive School (Comp.): High school

  Cop hold of: grab

  Copper: police officer

  Coverall: coveralls, or boiler suit

  CPS: Crown Prosecution Service, decide whether police cases go forward

  Childminder: someone who looks after children for money

  Council: local government

  Crown Jewels: the Queen’s jewels and crown worn on state occasions (can also be an expression for anything valuable)

  DCI: Detective Chief Inspector

  Deck: one of the floors of a tower block

  DI: Detective Inspector

  DS: Detective Sergeant

  Do a bunk: disappear

  Do a runner: disappear

  Do one: go away

  Doc Martens: Heavy boots with an air-cushioned sole

  DS: detective sergeant

  ED: accident and emergency department of hospital

  Early dart: to leave work early

  Estate: public/social housing estate (similar to housing projects)

  Estate agent: realtor (US)

  Fag: cigarette

  Garden Centre: a business where plants and gardening equipment are sold

  Get rid: dispose of

  GP: general practitioner, a doctor based in the community

  Graft: hard work

  Hairslide: barrette

  Hard nut: tough person

  HOLMES: UK police computer system used during investigation of major incidents

  Home: care home for elderly or sick people

  Inne: isn’t he

  Into care: a child taken away from their family by the social services

  Kark: die

  Kneecapping: punish by shooting in the kneecap

  Lad: young man

  Lass: young woman

  Lecky: electricity

  Lift: elevator

  Lippy: lipstick — can also mean loquacious

  Lorry: a truck

  Mare: derogatory term for woman, or can mean having a bad day (nightmare)

  Missus: wife

  MIT: Major Investigation Team

  Mobile phone: cell phone

  MP: Member of Parliament, politician representing an area

  Naff: lame, not good

  Narky: bad-tempered

  Net curtains: a type of semi-transparent curtain

  NHS: National Health Service, public health service of UK

  Nick: police station (as verb: to arrest)

  No-mark: loser

  Nowt: nothing

  NQT: Newly qualified teacher

  Nutter: insane person

  Nursery: a place which grows plants, shrubs and trees for sale (often wholesale)

  Owt: anything

  Pay-as-you-go: a cell phone you pay for calls in advance

  PC: police constable

  Pear-shaped: go wrong

  Petrol: gasoline

  Piss off: as exclamation, go away (rude). Also can mean annoy.

  Pissing down: raining

  Pleb: ordinary person (often insulting)

  Portakabin: portable building used as temporary office etc.

  Planning Department: the local authority department which issues licences to build and develop property

  Premier League: top English soccer division

  Prom: a classical music concert where some of the audience stands

  Punter: someone who gambles in a betting shop

  Pushchair: stroller

  Querent: person for whom the tarot card reading is done

  Rag: newspaper

  Ram-raiding: robbery where a vehicle is rammed through a shop window

  Randy: horny

  Right state: messy

  Ring: telephone (verb)

  Roadworks: repairs done to roads

  Scally: scallywag

  Scroat: low life

  Semi: Semi-detached house, house with another house joined to it on one side only

  Shedload: a large amount

  Shout the odds: talk in a loud bossy way

  Sixth form college: school for high school students in final two years.

  SIO: senior investigating officer

  Skip: a large open container used for building waste

  Slapper: slag

  SOCO: scenes of crime officer, police officer who gathers forensic evidence

  Sod: an annoying person

  Sort: to do or make

  Solicitor: lawyer

  Stunner: beautiful woman

  Super: superintendent (police rank)

  Sweeting: endearment, like sweetheart

  Tabloid: newspaper

  Tea: dinner (Northern English)

  Tenner: ten-pound note

  Till: cash register

  Tipsy: a bit drunk

  Toerag: a bad person

  Ton: a hundred pounds

  Torch: flashlight

  Tutor: university teacher

  Tower block: tall building/ high rise containing apartments (usually social housing)

  Undertaker: mortician

  Upmarket: affluent or fancy

  Wash: the washing machine

  Water board: company supplying water to an area

  Wheelie bin: a large refuse bin on wheels

  White van man: typical working-class man who drives a small truck

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  Shocking family secrets come to light when a young woman is murdered

  Amy Hill, a nineteen-year-old student, is strangled and her body dumped on open ground in the city. New police partners, D.I. Jim Neal and D.S. Ava Merry are called in to investigate this brutal crime. The last person to see Amy alive was Simon, the son of a family friend, but before he can be properly questioned he disappears.

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topping this tragic cycle of violence will put D.S. Merry’s life at risk in a thrilling and heart-stopping finale.

  If you like Angela Marsons, Rachel Abbott, Ruth Rendell, or Mark Billingham you will be gripped by this exciting new crime fiction writer.

  DEAD SECRET is the first in a new series of detective thrillers featuring D.S. Ava Merry and D.I. Jim Neal. Ava Merry is a young policewoman, recently promoted to detective sergeant. She is a fitness fanatic with a taste for dangerous relationships. Jim Neal is a single dad who juggles his devotion to his job with caring for his son.

  Set in the fictional Northern city of Stromford, this detective mystery will have you gripped from start to shocking conclusion.

  HABIT a #1 best-selling thriller that you won’t be able to put down,

  A young woman, Rebecca Heilshorn, lies stabbed to death in her bed in a remote farmhouse. Rookie detective Brendan Healy is called in to investigate. All hell breaks loose when her brother bursts onto the scene. Rebecca turns out to have many secrets and connections to a sordid network mixing power, wealth, and sex. Detective Brendan Healy, trying to put a tragic past behind him, pursues a dangerous investigation that will risk both his life and his sanity. Habit is a compelling thriller which will appeal to all fans of crime fiction. T.J. Brearton amps up the tension at every step, until the shocking and gripping conclusion.

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  CHARACTER LIST (contains spoilers if you haven’t read previous books in the series)

  Detective Inspector Tom Calladine

  Calladine, the main character in the series, had just turned fifty and is putting on weight. His hair used to be dark but is now greying and he wears it cut close to his head. He is tall and not bad looking — women like him. He is single and has a daughter, Zoe — the result of his short-lived marriage. He only found out about her recently. He lives alone in a terraced house in the backstreets of Leesdon, a few doors up from where he was born and raised.

  Detective Sergeant Ruth Bayliss

  She lives with Jake Ireson, a local schoolteacher, but they aren’t married. She’s in her mid-thirties, and a keen birdwatcher. She has been Calladine’s partner at Leesdon for a number of years. Ruth and Jake have a son, Harry, who is eighteen months old. Ruth is very bright and often sees things that Calladine’s missed. She is fiercely loyal to him, and wouldn't want to work with anyone else.

  Detective Constable Simon Rockliffe — Rocco

  Rocco is in his mid-twenties, and is tall and good looking with black hair. He is a solid team member, who works hard and gets results. He is tipped to go far. He was attacked on the Hobfield in Dead Wrong. He has hinted that he might have a girlfriend, but is giving nothing away.

  Detective Inspector Brad Long

  The other team leader in the police station. Overweight and generally lazy.

  Detective Chief Inspector Rhona Birch

  She has a reputation for being a ‘hatchet queen.’ It is rumoured that she hasn’t spent more than two years at any station.

  DC Alice Bolshaw

  Alice is the new girl. She helped the team out on a case when she was a student at university (Dead Silent). She is hard-working and keen to succeed. She is no longer as nerdy as she was back in her student days.. The team are still getting to know her.

  Dr Sebastian Hoyle

  Former senior pathologist — now retired, but working as a locum at Leesdon Health Centre. Often referred to as ‘the doc.’

  Forensic scientist — Dr Julian Batho.

  Unmarried and dedicated. He was going steady with DC Imogen Goode until she was murdered in Dead Nasty. He is the senior forensic scientist at the Duggan Centre. He is finding it difficult to get over his grief at Imogen’s death.

  Pathologist Natasha Barrington

  Natasha works at the Duggan Centre with Julian. She has a reputation as something of a man-eater.

  Eve Buckley — nee Walker

  Eve is Calladine’s biological mother. They met for the first time in Dead List. He learned the truth about his parentage from a letter his mother left for him to open after her death. Eve wants to try and put things right, and bring Calladine into her family. Calladine isn’t yet sure how he feels about her.

 

 

 


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