Ursula Archer - Five

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Ursula Archer - Five» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: London, Год выпуска: 2014, ISBN: 2014, Издательство: Vintage Books, Жанр: Триллер, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

Five: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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EVERY CORPSE IS A CLUE N47° 46.605 E013° 21.718 N47° 48.022 E013° 10.910 N47° 26.195 E013° 12.523 A woman is found murdered. Tattooed on her feet is a strange combination of numbers and letters.
Map co-ordinates. The start of a sinister treasure hunt by a twisted killer.
Detective Beatrice Kaspary must risk all she has to uncover the killer in a terrifying game of cat-and-mouse.
THANKS FOR THE HUNT

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Perhaps they would know more tomorrow. The name of the street Sigart lived in had given them the new coordinates.

Beatrice unplugged the landline, but left her mobile on. She took it with her into the bedroom and put it on the bedside table. The night passed without interruptions. But in her dreams, she was running through a burning forest to the strains of the Stabat Mater.

Chapter 3

N47º 48.022 E013º 10.910

The waterfall crashed down a good twenty metres into the depths, colliding with a shallow pebbled basin and resuming its path as a peaceful, level stream. At its highest point, next to one of the many old mills in the area, Florin, Beatrice and Stefan were leaning over the GPS device.

The task of translating ‘Theodebert’ into new coordinates had taken a matter of minutes. Finding the cache, however, would be more difficult, for the navigation device was pointing them towards the rocks around the waterfall.

‘It could be hidden inside the mill, but that would mean the results are very imprecise,’ pondered Stefan. They agreed to clamber down the path to the stream. Drasche stayed close to their heels, lugging along his forensic case and making no effort to conceal his bad mood. He regarded the fact that he was unable to drive his car right up to the location as a personal affront.

They were completely alone here in the forest. At the weekends, the mills and waterfall were popular day-trip destinations, but today they shared the surroundings only with the birds and insects.

The tumbling cascades of water looked even more impressive from below. Beatrice felt a deep sense of foreboding, sensing that the beautiful view was about to be drowned out by something else entirely.

‘A little bit further to the right.’ Stefan pointed to the crag. A steep little mound, around four metres in height, was huddled up against it, sparsely vegetated with shrubbery. ‘One of us should climb up. I reckon that’s the spot.’

Drasche peered upwards. ‘There’s only room for one of us up there, and that’s me. Give me the GPS.’ Ebner helped him clamber up, handed the navigation device and camera to him and waited for further instructions.

Once again, a rushing sound was providing the soundtrack to their search; even though it didn’t come from the autobahn this time, it was still equally pervasive. Beatrice wondered if there was some kind of pattern behind the Owner’s choices of location.

‘I’ve got it,’ she heard Drasche call. ‘It’s smaller than the others though.’ The cache was hidden in a crevice in the rock, concealed by hard-stemmed plants with nodular blooms. Drasche took some photos in situ and then made his slippery descent, holding the plastic box in his gloved hands.

This time, the container was barely bigger than a cigarette packet, its contents – pressed against the transparent lid and clearly defined – only just squeezed in. It was unmistakable: an ear, possibly two if they were laid on top of one another. ‘Fuck,’ exclaimed Drasche. ‘More body parts. Let’s just hope they’re not from a different victim. If only the genetic tests could be quicker—’

Beatrice’s mobile rang, interrupting Drasche mid-sentence. She pulled it out of her bag, surprised that she even had reception out here. The number was unknown. It wasn’t the school, in any case. Nor Achim.

‘Kaspary.’

‘I… I found your card. Your business card.’ It was a woman’s voice. Her words were rushing into one another; she sounded breathless.

‘Who is this?’

‘Beil. Vera Beil. You were in our garden on Sunday.’

‘That’s right. What can I do for you, Frau Beil?’

A trembling intake of breath. ‘Christoph has disappeared. Yesterday evening. He said he was just popping out, but he didn’t come back all night and… I can’t reach him on his mobile either.’

‘Right, I see.’

‘I’m really scared something’s happened to him.’ Her voice almost cracked. ‘He’s so reliable – he always lets me know if he’s going to be late.’

The connection was cutting out. ‘I’ll come over to see you, Frau Beil, okay?’ Beatrice hurried to speak. ‘It may take an hour or even a little bit more, but I’ll set off right now. Are you at home?’

‘Yes. Thank you…’

Beatrice hung up. ‘Beil’s disappeared. That was his wife. I’m heading over there now.’

‘I’ll come too,’ said Florin immediately. ‘Gerd, please investigate the container as quickly as you can. We need photos of the letters as soon as possible – I’m sure there’ll be some in there again.’

They didn’t speak much on the steep climb up to the mill. Beatrice kept thinking of the moment when she had showed Christoph Beil the photo. Her memory of the jolt that went through his body refused to go away.

If I had only kept pushing. If I had pinned him down right away. If…

She gave herself a mental rap on the fingers. The old what-if game won’t help; it just drives you crazy. The clock can’t be turned back. You can’t correct the past .

And if I could, I wouldn’t be where I am today , she thought.

‘He was acting strangely the whole of Sunday evening.’ The tablecloth beneath Vera Beil’s clasped hands was made of plastic. Brown and yellow flowers struggled against each other for dominance, smothering the dingy white background beneath.

‘When did that start? Only after we left?’

‘Yes. I asked him what was wrong, what he talked to you both about, but he said it was nothing important. He said you just had him mixed up with some witness.’ The woman’s gaze darkened. ‘I sensed that he wasn’t telling me the truth. Even though he never normally lies.’

‘I understand,’ said Florin. He had taken over the soothing, sympathetic role and was leaving it to Beatrice to ask the questions. ‘So our visit clearly unsettled him.’

‘Yes, you could put it like that.’

‘What did your husband do for the rest of Sunday? Did he meet anyone? Speak on the phone?’

Vera Beil thought for a moment, running her right index finger along the stem of one of the brown flowers. ‘No, he spent most of it in the bedroom, even though he had actually been planning to watch some crime film. Maybe he did speak to someone on the phone, I don’t know. But I do know that he slept badly – he got up at least four times in the night.’

‘And how was he yesterday? How long exactly has he been missing, did you say?’

‘Well, first he went to work, just like always, but he was back home again by one – he said he was feeling unwell. He lay down and slept a bit, but then at around half-six in the evening, he received a phone call and rushed off. Yes, I think that’s the best way of describing it. He literally ran to the car. He called out to me that he wouldn’t be long – but that was all he said.’

A phone call. Florin and Beatrice exchanged a quick glance, then she pulled the Papenberg photos out of her bag.

‘We’ll do whatever we can to find your husband quickly,’ she said. ‘For now, could you please look at these pictures for us and tell us whether you recognise the woman in them?’

Vera Beil took the tissue that Florin handed to her and wiped her eyes before turning her attention to the photos. ‘No. I don’t know her.’ She said it almost guiltily, as if she felt bad about not being able to be more helpful.

‘Are you completely sure?’

‘Yes. Please, find Christoph.’

It might have been easier if he hadn’t lied to us on Sunday, thought Beatrice grimly. But she kept quiet and was relieved when Florin spoke up.

‘We’ll do everything we can,’ he said. ‘And we’ll keep you posted, of course.’

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