Dancing With the Virgins

Dancing With the Virgins by Stephen Booth Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Dancing With the Virgins by Stephen Booth Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Booth
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective, Crime, Police Procedural
been chucked into the bottom of a gorse bush, in the middle of some birch trees. One of the wheels was off too. I thought somebody had hired it and had an accident and just left it. They do things like that.'
    ‘ Who do?'
    ‘ Well, you know - the visitors. Tourists. They just leave a bike somewhere and say it's been stolen or they've lost it or something. You wouldn't believe the lies some of them tell.'
    ‘ Did you touch the bike?'
    ‘ No.'
    ‘ You're quite sure about that, Mark?'
    ‘ Yeah. I just looked for the number. Because I thought it was one of the hire bikes. And it was, wasn't it?'
    ‘ Yes, it was.' Cooper could hear the gratification in the DCI's voice. The fact it was a hire bike had made it so much easier to identify the victim. She had been obliged to leave her full name and address and proof of identity at the cycle hire centre when she took the bike out earlier that afternoon. So they had already established that her name was Jenny Weston, that she was thirty years old and divorced. She worked as a customer service manager in a large insurance office in Sheffield, and had taken a week's holiday because she had several days' leave to get in before the end of the year. By now, her parents had already been contacted, and her father was on his way to identify the body formally. If only it were always so easy.
    ‘ Then I saw something lying in the middle of the Virgins,' said Mark. 'I went to have a look. Although -'
    'Yes?'
    ‘ Well ... I could already see what it was. I could tell, from a few yards away, from where I found the bike. It was a woman. And she was dead. ’
    Mark moved his hands restlessly, brushing the front of his fleece. Cooper thought at first that he was trying to rub off the vomit stain, but realized he was wrong .
    The young Ranger was stroking the badge stitched to the fabric, fondling as if it were the breast of a lover, tracing the silver letters and the stylized millstone sym bol of the Peak Park.
    ‘ Did you notice anything about the body?' asked Tailby .
    Mark hesitated. 'Only that she was, you know . . .' His hands made half-hearted gestures. 'Her clothes . . .'
    'You mean her clothes had been interfered with?' Mark nodded.
    ‘ And did you notice anything else nearby? Anything unusual or out of place?'
    ‘ No.'
    ‘ So how close did you get to the body, Mark?'
    ‘ I walked as far as the nearest stone. The flat one. I didn't have to go any closer.'
    ‘ You were quite sure she was dead?'
    ‘ Oh yes,' said Mark. 'Oh yes. ’
    Mark suddenly went a shade whiter. His hand went over his mouth, and he made a dash for the loo. A second later, the police officers heard the sound of vomiting .
    DCI Tailby sat for a moment longer, as if still listen ing for elusive bits of information in the Ranger's retching.
    ‘ Cooper, find that Area Ranger,' he said. 'He knows the lie of the land round here, if anybody does. Tell him we need to arrange proper access to the moor. We need the owner of the land or whoever. And we need to get into that quarry, too. Get on to it.'
    *
    Ben Cooper found the Area Ranger waiting by his silver Land Rover outside the briefing centre. Owen Fox was in his early fifties, with grey hair and a thick beard that was going the same way. He was a comfortable badger of a man, with an even more comfortable smell of wool and earth.
    ‘ Mr Fox? ’
    The Ranger turned, with a distracted air. Though Cooper was wearing his dark green waxed jacket over civilian clothes, he thought Owen would recognize him as a policeman. People always seemed able to tell. They said it was something to do with the look in your eyes.
    ‘ Can I help?'
    ‘ I'm Detective Constable Cooper. If you've got time, I'd like to call on your local knowledge. ’
    Cooper explained that he had been given the job of opening up access to the disused quarry and of securing the route for vehicles to get to the crime scene. 'We need to see Warren Leach then,' said Owen. 'And he is . . . ?'
    ‘ Ringham Edge

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