Play Dead (D.I. Kim Stone, #4)

The squad room had filled with the stench of death and whether it was imagined or had been brought back on their clothes and shoes it was definitely attached to them now.

Stacey stood on tiptoe to label the top of the whiteboard. The words ‘unknown female’ were written with a perfect underline.

Kim hated that phrase. She detested anonymity in her victims. In life they’d had a name, a personality, a past, facial expressions, loves, hates, fears and dreams. They had weaved through the world interacting, imprinting on others. A smile at the lady on the checkout. A brief exchange with the barista in the coffee shop. A donation to charity. Every victim had left a footprint somewhere.

Finding her name was the top priority.

‘Okay, facts first. Height approximately five foot four. Weight no more than eight stone. Natural blonde. Age: late twenties, early thirties based only on clothing. Time and cause of death we’ll have first thing in the morning. Stace, put a line down the middle of the board.’

Dawson handed her a mug of coffee. It was hot. She placed it beside her on the spare desk.

‘Just notes now. Identification, location, suspects, motive.’

She paused and sipped while Stacey caught up.

‘Fully clothed, nail polish removed,’ Kim stated.

‘She could have done it herself,’ Bryant offered. ‘We don’t know exactly when she was taken. Could have been last night after she’d been for a meal or something.’

Kim nodded. ‘Those were day clothes she was wearing.’ She shrugged. ‘Might mean nothing but I want it noted anyway.’

Stacey stood poised.

‘Handcuff marks to the wrist,’ she said, staring at the board. She moved on quickly. ‘Face beaten beyond recognition.’ She paused. ‘Is this to hamper identification, slow us down – or is there another reason? The dirt in the mouth, accidental or meaningful? Where are her belongings? Most folks have at least a phone and a small amount of cash.’

Stacey was summarising Kim’s sentences to two or three words and noting them.

Kim cast her eyes over the board, satisfied that the main aspects had been covered, and waited for the detective constable to resume her seat.

‘Okay, Stace, I want you to start by seeing what you can dig up on the staff at Westerley. Without an identification we’ll work our way out. The land on the other side of the stream is not officially their property and the facility is secret so what’s the significance of the dump site? Also, I want you to look at the access point. How did he get there and how did he know about it?’

‘Got it, boss.’

‘Kev, get on to missing persons to see if we can get a match.’

He nodded and reached for the phone.

She took a sip of her coffee. ‘And I’m off to brief the boss.’

Bryant smirked. ‘Have fun.’

‘And apparently you’re coming with me.’

His face dropped as Dawson offered a snigger.

‘So, Bryant, what you done wrong now?’ Kim asked as they headed up the stairs.

‘I was just gonna ask you the same question.’

Woody’s instruction had been specific. Bring Bryant. As his superior she would be present for any bollocking for him, but Bryant had never been present for any of hers.

‘Ready?’ she asked, as they arrived at the door bearing the brass nameplate of the detective chief inspector.

She tapped and entered.

‘Sit, both of you.’

They did so.

‘Update, Stone,’ Woody said, glancing her way.

She reiterated everything they had just noted on the board downstairs.

He nodded and then looked from her to Bryant. ‘I wanted to speak to you both. This case has the potential to get complicated if it becomes known where the body was found. The facility is still a closely guarded secret, and I don’t want it to be us who lets it out.’

Was that it? Kim wondered. She had worked that much out for herself.

‘And another thing…’

Of course there was.

‘I want to make sure you haven’t forgotten about the weekend.’

‘Er… the weekend?’ she asked, casting a glance at Bryant. He offered no clue.

‘The award ceremony, Stone.’

‘Oh, that. Yes, sir.’

Jesus, was that here already? She had forgotten. She was being honoured for her work on a recent kidnapping case.

Kim hated to be ungrateful, but awards were not something she craved. As ever it had been a team effort and glory hunting was not in her make-up.

If she could cut up the commendation into pieces she would offer it to her team who had worked the same hours she had without complaint. They had put their entire lives on hold for the sake of that case and had been happy to do so.

Next she would offer some to the police officers who had guarded the site for days while the forensic technicians secured the evidence once she and her team had left.

After that she would send it to the medical staff who had sewn up the girls and repaired their injuries. And then a portion for the psychologists and counsellors who would help put the kids back together again.

‘So I certainly don’t want any complaints landing on my desk between now and then.’

‘Of course not.’

Honestly, from his tone you’d think it happened all the time, she thought.

‘Forgive me for not taking your word for it, Stone. I would recommend you stick closely with Bryant on this one.’

Kim felt her toes curl inside her boots. It seemed to be the natural order of events anyway but she resented the hell out of being directed to do so.

‘Sir, if you don’t mind…’

‘It wasn’t a request, Stone.’

She stood abruptly. ‘If that’s all—’

‘Sit back down,’ he instructed. ‘Don’t sulk, Stone, it doesn’t suit you. I say this because there are some cases that require a different approach. No one doubts your skills in getting the job done but occasionally a little tact and diplomacy—’

‘With all due respect—’

‘Stone, get my right fist open,’ he said, sighing heavily.

‘Sir?’ she said, raising an eyebrow at the closed fist he held across the desk.

He looked from her face down at his clenched hand.

‘It’s a simple instruction. Get my right fist open.’

She leaned forwards and used her left hand to turn the fist upwards. She followed the length of his fingers into his palm and tried to dislodge them. She pulled at the thumb that was helping to hold the fingers in place. It didn’t move.

She took her other hand and tried to lift the thumb with her left and prise the fingers away with her right.

Nothing budged.

She let go and sat back in her chair, unsure exactly what her boss was trying to prove.

He moved the closed hand towards her colleague. ‘Bryant, get my fist open.’

Kim expected Bryant to reach out, but he stayed exactly where he was.

‘Sir, would you mind opening your fist, please?’ Bryant asked.

Magically the fingers came away and splayed apart.

Kim groaned.

‘Point proven, Stone. Same problem, two different approaches. It never occurred to you to use your mouth.’

Well, it had, Kim reasoned, just not in the way he thought. Biting her boss’s fingers would definitely have come up in her performance review.

Kim moved in her seat. ‘May we…?’

‘Go on, Stone,’ he said, waving his hand towards the door.

She could feel Bryant’s smirk burning into the back of her head all the way back to the squad room, which was silent when she entered.

Stacey was staring hard at the computer as Dawson glared dolefully at a pile of paper that stood like a tower block in the middle of his desk.

‘We need to weed out the youngest and the oldest and—’

‘I did. This is what’s left.’

The process attached to missing persons was much more involved than people thought and was not as simple as passing on a few facts in a simple report.

Missing persons had historically been recorded only on paper but were now logged on a computerised system called ‘Compact’ and the procedure now split into two parts.