The Cold, Cold Ground

The Cold, Cold Ground by Adrian McKinty Read Free Book Online

Book: The Cold, Cold Ground by Adrian McKinty Read Free Book Online
Authors: Adrian McKinty
only about three hundred yards from the police station as the crow flew, but the crow could juke over a railway line, a stream and Carrick Rangers FC so it took me ten minutes to get there in the Beemer.
    The waiting room was full of people with runny noses, colds and other complaints. A child was vomiting into a bag. A teenage hood stinking of petrol was holding a singed hand. A man with a face caked with dried blood was wearing a T-shirt that said “No Pope Here”. Considering his present condition, the Pope could consider himself lucky. There were, however, no young men lying on gurneys with their kneecaps shot off, which you always saw in the bigger Belfast hospitals.
    I walked to the reception desk.
    The nurse behind the counter was channelling Hattie Jacques from the Carry On films. She was fidgety, scary and enormous.
    “What’s the matter with you?” she asked in one of those oldtimey upper-crust English accents.
    “I’d like to see Dr Cathcart,” I said with what I hoped was a winning smile.
    “This is not one of her days.”
    “It’s not? Oh? Where is she?”
    “She’s doing an autopsy, if you must know.”
    “That’s what I wanted to see her about,” I said pulling out my warrant card.
    “You’re Sergeant Duffy? She’s been trying to reach you for the last hour.”
    “I was busy.”
    “We’re all busy.”
    She showed me the way to the morgue along a dim black and white tiled corridor that seemed unchanged since the 1930s.
    A leak was dripping from the ceiling into a large red bucket with the words “Air Raid Precautions” stamped on the side.
    I stopped outside a door marked: “Autopsy. Strictly No Admittance Without Permission of Staff Nurse.”
    I knocked on the door.
    “Who is it?” a voice asked from within.
    “Sergeant Duffy from Carrick police.”
    “About time!”
    I pushed the door and went inside.
    An antiseptic, freezing little room. More black and white tiles on the floor, frosted windows, a buzzing strip light, charts from a long time ago on “hospital sanitation” and “the proper disposal of body parts”.
    Dr Cathcart was wearing a mask and a white cotton surgical cap. A little Celtic cross was dangling from her neck and hanging over her surgical gown.
    The star of the show was John Doe from last night who Dr Cathcart had opened up and spread about like a frog on a railway line. There were bits of him in various stainless steel bowls, on scales and even preserved in jars. The rest of him was lying naked on the table uncovered and unconcerned by these multiple violations.
    “Hello,” I said.
    “Put on gloves and a mask, please.”
    “I don’t think he’s going to catch anything from us.”
    “Perhaps we’ll catch something from him.”
    “Ok.”
    I put on latex gloves and a surgical mask.
    Cathcart held up the severed right hand. “Were you responsible for fingerprinting this hand?” she asked. Her eyes were blue and I could see the hint of black hair under the cap.
    “One of my officers did it, but I take full responsibility forhim. Why, did we do something wrong?”
    “Yes, you did. Your officer cleaned the fingers in white spirit before taking fingerprints from this hand. We therefore lost any evidence that may have been under the victim’s nails.”
    “Oh dear, sorry about that.”
    “Sorry doesn’t fix things, does it?” she said sternly in what I realized now was some kind of posh South Belfast accent.
    I really didn’t like her tone at all. “Love, in a murder investigation getting the fingerprints is a priority so that we can establish who the victim was and hopefully trace their final movements and question witnesses when things are fresh in their minds.”
    She pulled down her mask. Her cheeks were pink and her lips a dark red camellia. Her eyes were a vivid azure and her gaze icy and disturbing. She was imperious, attractive and she probably knew it.
    “I prefer ‘Dr Cathcart’ rather than ‘love’ if you don’t mind,

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