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DEAD GONE

Page 25

by Luca Veste


  He exhaled, spat on the floor as he got his breath back.

  Hard work.

  The blood. Everywhere. He’d started on the fingers, removing them with a pair of pruners bought from B&Q.

  The axe took care of the larger limbs.

  He’d tried to stem the bleeding as best as he could, cauterising the wounds to try to make it last as long as possible. It was difficult on his own.

  It was different this time.

  He could feel it entering every pore of his body, as if the life he’d just ended was now looking for a new body to meld with. He felt energised, his heart beating fast, his hands shaking. He looked down at them, still holding the small axe he’d used. He threw it aside, blood splattering against more blood. His hands were turning dark. He rubbed them, smearing the dark red stains further.

  He smiled. Then laughed as he realised the girl had started singing again. She couldn’t process what had happened not six foot away from her door. The eleven months she’d spent in there destroying her mind. She stopped after another verse, no sound following. He looked around, the sudden quiet unsettling him.

  ‘You’re okay, you’re okay.’ His voice echoed around him, strengthening him, supporting him.

  He rose to his feet, wiping his hands down his front. Looking down at the body, he couldn’t place what he was feeling. Was it guilt?

  Did he have a conscience still?

  It was different this time.

  He had barely known most of the people he’d terminated before. He knew this one.

  Known this one.

  Was this what he was supposed to do? Was this the reason for him?

  He shook it off quickly, looking for the feeling of excitement he’d had previously.

  Finding it.

  He climbed the steps behind him, feeling the adrenaline fade from his body. The effort he’d just given catching up to him.

  He didn’t have much time. He needed to get going.

  He’d already prepared the things he would need. The bags, the twine to tie them shut. He went back down the steps, carrying what he needed.

  The eyes though, the eyes were looking at him. Resting on the table where he left them after removing them from Rob’s hands. Staring up at him, judging him.

  ‘Stop it,’ he whispered. ‘Stop looking at me.’

  He couldn’t take the stare. The eyes accusatory, damning him without trial.

  It had to stop.

  He puffed out a breath, breathing in and releasing it slowly. He laid out a few bin bags next to the torso, then rolled it over so it was lying on them. He then covered the top with more bags, taking the roll of tape and sticking the bags to each other. He’d learned early on this method made it easier to transport. ‘Practice makes perfect,’ he said under his breath, smiling once more.

  It took him longer than he thought it would, but eventually he had all the body parts on the ground floor. He sat with his back against the wall, breathing heavily, sweating even more. He was exhausted from the night’s activities.

  He would change his plans. He’d originally thought he’d leave the body to be found that night, but to do so could be risky. He’d come too far to make a mistake now. He needed to rest, work out what was next. Move on.

  First he’d check in with the little lady. See how she was doing.

  He moved slowly through to the room. His sanctuary. He sat in the chair facing the two monitors, eased himself back slowly. The bottle of water was where he’d left it, he unscrewed the cap and knocked it back, finishing the bottle.

  Singing, still singing. He watched for a few minutes, before leaving the room.

  ‘Frère Jacques, frère Jacques. Dormez-vous? Dormez-vous? Sonnez les matines. Sonnez les matines. Din, dan, don. Din, dan, don.’

  Jemma sang. Blocking out the noises. She couldn’t understand them, it’d been too long. She wouldn’t let herself believe.

  She’d known that voice once. She was sure of it. But it couldn’t be him, not down here.

  Rob. That was his name. Her partner, her lover, her other half.

  He couldn’t be down here. It had been too long. It must be at least five years since she’d last seen him. Surely. He’d have moved on. Moved to the countryside or something. Got married. Forgotten her. Maybe he was a dad now. A little boy he’d call John, after his own dad.

  She was alone now. He was long gone.

  Jemma wondered what the boy would look like. The dimples in his cheeks, and the cleft in his chin, both being passed down. The blue eyes and dark thick hair. Curls when it grew a bit longer.

  That’s what will have happened, Jemma thought. Rob wouldn’t be down there.

  Not in the darkness.

  Please God, not down there with her.

  35

  Tuesday 5th February 2013 – Day Ten

  The Strand shopping centre in Bootle was a few minutes’ walk away from the small cul de sac of Georgia Close where George Duffy lived. His cab was parked on the short driveway of the semi-detached house, the window frames and door painted blue, new builds with light red paving stones leading up to the front.

  ‘No record?’ Murphy said as they pushed open the low steel gate which lay at the front of the property, sidestepped an overflowing green bin and approached the door.

  ‘Nope. Been a driver for the last fifteen years,’ Rossi replied.

  They knocked and waited. Knocked again, louder. Eventually, they heard the sound of a key turning and the door was opened.

  Duffy was in his late fifties. Bald, with a grey goatee beard, dark eyes and a weary expression plastered on his face. A paunch protruded over black jogging pants, which were the only thing he was wearing.

  ‘Yeah?’

  Murphy introduced himself and Rossi, showing ID and being invited in. Duffy tidied up as they walked inside, picking up discarded magazines and underwear and putting them away. The smell of grease and cigar smoke was harder to mask.

  ‘It’s about the taxi isn’t it? I knew that was gonna come back to haunt me.’

  ‘We just have a few questions, Mr Duffy.’

  ‘He didn’t seem right from the off. Wanted everything done off the books but when someone’s offering you thirty-five grand in cash, you don’t ask questions do ya?’

  Duffy pointed to a black leather settee, as he plonked himself down on a matching armchair. A fifty-inch flatscreen was screwed into the wall above the fireplace, dominating the room.

  Murphy lowered himself down, Rossi moved a dirty plate from the other side and did the same. ‘So you sold it?’

  ‘Yeah,’ Duffy replied, scratching an armpit. ‘Picked a guy up from town one night and got talking. He took a card off me and called the next day.’

  ‘When was this?’

  ‘About a year ago. January I think. Yeah, not long after Christmas. Didn’t think he was serious at first. Said he wanted the cab and was willing to pay in cash. Offered thirty grand and I bumped him up to thirty-five. Bought that one outside for fifteen and still had a nice amount left.’

  ‘It didn’t seem odd to you?’

  ‘Course it did. What’s he done then? I’m guessing it’s some kind of fraud. Look, I just sold it on, nothing wrong with that.’

  Murphy sighed. ‘It’s a bit more serious than that. Did you get a name from him at least?’

  ‘Said it was Steve something. Can’t remember now. It was ages ago.’

  ‘What did he look like?’

  ‘I can’t really remember now. About your age maybe, looked well off. Clean cut, trendy maybe. I don’t know.’

  Rossi took over then, trying to get more from him, but that was all Duffy had.

  Murphy walked into the hallway as Rossi went over and over the description, seeing if he could remember any more. He called through to the station, putting out an alert for the cab’s licence plate. Automatic number plate recognition, or ANPR, would do the rest. As soon as the cab passed a camera, they’d have it.

  It was all too late.

 
; Murphy stood inside the white tent, staring at the lifeless form of a man. He was lying on his back, arms and legs outstretched, just like the last four victims.

  Yet, he was different.

  ‘Reminds me of that song, the head bone connected to the neck bone …’ Houghton paused from his examination to say.

  The body wasn’t whole. Not by any stretch. The toes were cut from both feet. The feet away from the calf, the calf cut away from the thigh and top part of each leg. And on and on. Only the torso was unmarked.

  It was a human jigsaw puzzle, the pieces put back together again. Only the small gaps between the pieces marking a difference.

  ‘More like Humpty Dumpty,’ Murphy replied. ‘What is this?’

  Dr Houghton sighed, lifting himself up. ‘I don’t know. He wasn’t killed here, I can tell you that much. No blood. And believe me, there would be a lot of it. Anything that could be removed, has been. Almost clean cuts in some places, skewed in others. I’m going to make a guess at a heavy implement, such as an axe. Something different on the smaller parts, pruners or something.’

  ‘Letter?’

  ‘Of course.’

  The eyes had been removed. Dark holes where they once sat. The perfect O of the mouth matching the black of the eye sockets.

  Murphy remained passive, trying to stay focused. Images interspersed in his head, his mum replacing the man on the floor. Intangible shifts of light, playing with his vision, as tiredness threatened to overcome him. He watched as the SOCOs went to work, bagging and tagging various body parts.

  And he knew that face. They all did. Even with the damage that had been done, they recognised it, having only seen him a few days earlier.

  Rob Barker.

  Another link to the university.

  And he’d let him go to his death. He’d screwed up again, and someone else had died. Murphy felt his legs threaten to buckle, fingers tapping against his thigh. Anxiety coursing through him.

  This was too much.

  Dr Houghton, the pathologist, was speaking to him, his features covered by the surgical mask. Murphy hadn’t been listening, lost in his thoughts. ‘What was that, doctor?’

  ‘I said, it’s shock due to blood loss most likely. He’s been dead at least eighteen hours.’

  ‘Looks like some kind of thin rope, or wire was used on his neck as well though. Choked him to death, first maybe. Hard to tell. The eyes …’ the pathologist paused, steeling himself. ‘The eyes were removed whilst he was still alive. And we can’t find them. Maybe whoever did this kept them?’

  Murphy nodded. ‘Anything else?’ he asked.

  ‘We’re bagging the letter now so you can read it sooner. I’m guessing we’re on more of a time limit here.’

  ‘Thanks, doctor.’

  Murphy had to leave, he could feel himself swaying on his feet. It was too much. He pushed his way out, moving away from the tent. From death. Lights blinded him as he came outside, the images of his parents’ living room flashing in front of his eyes.

  ‘You alright, sir?’

  Rossi was at his side. ‘Yeah,’ Murphy replied. ‘It’s a bad one.’

  ‘I guessed as much. We’ve got a witness. Saw a black hackney. Driving away from the scene.’

  ‘Good. Just give me a minute, Laura. Just need to catch my breath.’

  ‘Of course.’ Rossi moved away, leaving Murphy alone. He stared out on to the main road. It was a deserted side road, off the busy dual carriageway of Scotland Road. Yet there was lights only a few yards away, a busy road, houses. He turned around, looking towards the main road. Boarded-up shops and off-licences hanging on in there, selling six cans for a fiver.

  He was taunting them. Taunting him. Whoever he was. He wanted Murphy to know he was in control.

  Murphy began to remove the gloves he’d had to put on before seeing the scene, snapping them off, and throwing them to the floor. Anger building in his chest.

  He was escalating.

  Murphy knew what he had to do. Pretend the last year hadn’t happened. Be calm, assured.

  Murphy beckoned Rossi back over. She hurried back, a concerned look in her eyes.

  ‘He’s getting careless, Laura,’ Murphy said when Rossi got to him. ‘I think we’ll have him soon enough. He hasn’t realised we know about the cab. He’ll still be driving it.’ Murphy looked around, there were no windows overlooking the small grassy area where the body had been found. ‘Who found him?’

  ‘The woman over there,’ Rossi replied, pointing to a middle-aged woman. ‘She’d brought her dog out with her whilst she was walking up to the offy about five minutes up the road. Walked up here to let the dog do his business. Stumbled across the victim’s … parts.’

  ‘Okay. It can’t have been long after he was dropped here. See if she remembers the black hack as well.’

  ‘Will do.’ Rossi replied.

  Rossi walked off in the direction of the woman. Murphy moved towards a small wall which surrounded the grass and sat down on it. Pain fired across his forehead. He closed his eyes, instantly trying to force out the images which appeared as soon his eyelids shut.

  They wouldn’t go.

  He held his head in his hands, rubbing his temples slowly. A position he was becoming used to assuming.

  ‘Sir?’

  Murphy lifted his head to see a SOCO stood over him. ‘Yes?’

  ‘Dr Houghton asked me to bring this over. I’m supposed to stay with you whilst you read it. If that’s okay?’

  ‘Of course.’ Murphy took the plastic bag containing the letter from the SOCO. Moved closer to the light to read it.

  EXPERIMENT SIX

  Detective Murphy,

  He was too close, he wouldn’t stop looking. He had to go. Just like with the others.

  Do you remember the Unit 731 experiments? I had to try that out.

  I removed his body parts one by one, over a lengthy period of time. Waited to see the light go out.

  I dislike the name the papers have given me. Maybe you could talk to someone about that, David?

  Do you know how it feels to end someone’s life? To be the cause of it? It’s unlike anything you can imagine. So much more than I expected it to be. When you kill animals in experimental situations, rats, dogs, etc. you think you can treat human subjects with the same apathy. It doesn’t work like that though. It takes you over, a hunger for more.

  But, then you have to factor in your own survival. It’s still a gamble. One that I am willing to take.

  Yet, none of the experiments really matter.

  Except for one.

  One experiment I started this whole process with. An ongoing investigation, which is almost at its end.

  And I’m torn as what to do when it’s finished. Should I terminate the project, just as I have with so many before? Or do I reveal the results of my hard work?

  For all to see. A masterpiece.

  Decisions, decisions.

  What would you do, Detective Murphy? Would you give up on the whole thing, just in case it leads to *my* end? Or would you take the chance to show the world what can be done?

  It’s a tough one. I’ll be chewing it over in the coming days.

  In the meantime, I’ll let your fruitless investigation go on.

  I am so enjoying the game. I hope you are too, Detective. Experiment Six was so much fun to act out. That’s four bodies you’ve found now.

  Of course, that’s only the ones I have let you find.

  Do you know how many people go missing every year, every day? Thousands. Never to be seen again.

  Still, I do have that nagging worry over what to do about the experiment.

  Not long left now. And then onto pastures new I guess.

  In the end, all that matters, is that what I do lives on forever. No one will ever forget what happened in this city, by my hands.

  Murphy handed the bag containing the letter back to the SOCO, looked for a uniformed officer. He beckoned to a young woman who was manning the police cordon,
and she hurried over.

  ‘Yes, sir?’

  ‘I need you to check that everyone is on the lookout for that cab.’

  ‘Okay.’ She took her radio off her shoulder and talked to control. Murphy waited as she explained what she needed.

  ‘Thanks,’ Murphy said, moving away from the officer. He went over to where Rossi was studiously taking notes from the witness. As he reached her, she was thanking the woman for her time, and telling her what to expect next. Murphy waited for her to finish her spiel, before taking her by the arm and leading her away.

  ‘Laura. We need to find this guy now. We don’t have much time. He’s planning something.’

  ‘The letter?’ Rossi asked.

  ‘Yeah. He talks about an experiment and having to make a decision over someone’s life. We need to find him before that happens.’

  Rossi nodded, as Murphy rubbed his temples again. ‘First though, we check out the victim’s house. See if anything can help us there.’

  ‘We were only in there a few days ago. Didn’t find anything.’ Rossi replied.

  ‘We don’t know what he’s been doing in the past few days. He was close to something. We need to find out what.’ Murphy reached into his inside pocket, took out some paracetemol, and dry swallowed two. ‘We best get the next one right. Everyone we suspect seems to end up dead within a couple of days.’

  Rossi attempted a smile, but Murphy knew it was for show. She was feeling the pressure almost as much as he was.

  The wind whipped around the green, rippling the tent which surrounded the body parts in the distance. Haunted faces of various officers stood around the scene, Murphy looking around for inspiration.

  It would take a long time to forget this one.

  Experiment Two

  She was thirsty. Cold as well. She hadn’t eaten for a while, just to see what would happen. It was okay though, her dad was with her. He’d turned up some time ago, she could hear his voice talking to her from the corner. She hadn’t been able to see him though, it was too dark. Plus every time she ran towards the voice, he’d disappear. Playing probably, she thought. He always had a strange sense of humour.

 

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