“Of course I’ll take care. I’ve got a book to finish, love. I’ll talk to you later.” It was a promise he fully intended to keep.
Like a child on Christmas Eve, Steve had scarcely been able to sleep. What had happened between him and Terry thus far had left him feeling breathless and exhilarated. But the promise of what could follow had robbed him of all but the sketchiest of sleep. And yet he wasn’t tired.
He leaned back on the pillows, stretching his arms over his head and arching his spine. Relaxing again, he rolled on his side to watch her. She was a sprawler, legs and arms extended like a giant starfish. Terry lay on her stomach, face turned towards him. Even with smudged make — up and sleep-distorted hair, he thought she was gorgeous. He felt dazzled and dazed in equal measure. His own body felt strange and new. He’d made more technically perfect love with a woman before, but last night technique had seemed irrelevant. He’d occupied his body entirely, not a scrap of himself available for scrutiny of what he was doing. There had been none of that sense of performing for someone else’s benefit, or his own. Whatever had happened between him and Terry, it had consumed him as never before.
And it had been fun. They hadn’t just burned up in the heat of passion, they’d found laughter as well. Steve had woken in the same familiar space, but he was looking at the morning with the eyes of an explorer. It was unnerving, almost frightening to find himself so thoroughly gripped by attraction. All his adult sophistication, all his professional shrewdness had left him unprepared and vulnerable, and he didn’t know how to handle it.
Terry stirred, making a small indeterminate noise in the back of her throat. Her face twitched, eyebrows rising. Then she opened her eyes.
A moment’s disorientation, then her mouth spread in a self-satisfied grin. “Thank fuck it wasn’t a dream,” she said, gathering her limbs together and snuggling against him.
He rubbed his chin, bristled with overnight stubble, across the snarl of her hair, slipping his arms around her. “You academics have a real way with words.”
“Ah, but actions speak louder than words, and I am definitely a woman of action,” Terry countered, running her fingers down the defined muscles of his chest and across his ribs. She could feel him hard against her, and hooked one leg over his, languorously moving her hips towards him.
Steve groaned softly. “You’re a morning person, then,” he said, his voice roughening with arousal.
She pulled her head back and pouted. “You have a problem with that?” Her voice was as much of a tease as what her body was doing to his.
He drew her into his arms, her breasts warm against his chest. “Not unless you have to be somewhere in the next hour.”
Sarah Duvall felt sick. She knew it had more to do with having had no sleep and too much coffee than with what she’d seen at Smithfield Market, but understanding didn’t make her faint underlying nausea go away. Explaining to Anthony Fitzgerald exactly what he was going to have to identify at the morgue hadn’t helped either. She almost wished that the killer had stuck more closely to the text. Then there would have been one less horror for them to face.
She sat grim-faced in the back of the car. But the immobility of her features disguised a mind that was racing. This case was messy in more ways than the obvious. It was going to produce potentially devastating media interest, which meant every move she and her team made would be under scrutiny not only from an army of hacks but also from a nervous hierarchy worried lest she should do or say the wrong thing.
And then there was Fiona Cameron. With this latest development, Fiona would no longer be the only person putting two and two together and coming up with a serial killer. It wasn’t something Duvall wanted to acknowledge publicly, but she had no conviction that they could continue to maintain there was no connection between the deaths of Drew Shand, Jane Elias and Georgia Lester. Either way, it wouldn’t be long before some bright and ambitious journalist remembered that Fiona lived with a crime writer. They’d be beating a path to her office, and while she believed Fiona was unlikely to go to the press off her own bat, Duvall had no idea how she would respond to a direct question from a journalist. And once the kite was in the air, there would be a stream of panicking thriller writers demanding police protection. It was a minefield. Especially if the media also found out that someone had been sending out death threats to crime writers.
And then there was the investigation itself. This morning had been a nightmare, but that was only the beginning. After the gruesome discovery just after midnight, she had tried to prevent the market from opening for trading less than four hours later. But Barren Green had argued vigorously that she was out of order. By no stretch of the imagination could she claim the whole market was a crime scene. It was obvious, he pointed out, displaying an intelligence and a steely determination she wouldn’t have suspected him capable of, that whatever had been done had been done some time previously. Hundreds of people had been in and out of the market since then, and there was no chance of the police finding any traces of their quarry anywhere other than the immediate vicinity of the freezer in question.
His trump card had been to point out that the best way to make sure the police questioned every potential witness was to allow the market to function as normal. They could take names and addresses of everybody who turned up and maybe even begin their interviews.
It had been a smart suggestion, not least because it allowed Duvall to save face. So they’d sealed off the storage area and drafted in a small army of officers to make sure nobody entered Smithfield without providing contact details. Meanwhile, the SOCOs had begun the painstaking task of examining every inch of the equipment store where the grisly discovery had been made.
So far, so bad. What made it even worse was that she was going to have to continue her liaison with the local police in Dorset. Whatever had happened to Georgia Lester might have ended up on her ground, but it had started on their patch. If there were going to be eyewitnesses, the chances were far higher that they’d turn them up down there. Much more likely that someone noticed something out of the ordinary in a remote country area than that one person with a load of meat would attract attention in Smithfield Market. Always provided the officers down there knew what the hell they were doing, she added automatically. Duvall had never been good at delegating authority even to her own team, but having to rely on another force for the core of an investigation was her idea of hell on a stick. Thus far, she’d not found anything specific to complain about in the work of her Dorset colleagues, but nevertheless she felt a general unease that they weren’t moving sharply enough on the case. She’d have to set up a meeting, preferably down there so she could get a feel for where the initial abduction had taken place.
But that would have to wait. First, she owed Steve Preston the courtesy of filling him in on what his steer had led to, so she’d asked her driver to detour to New Scotland Yard before returning to her offices in Wood Street. She took the lift to his floor and stalked down the corridor, earning a few apprehensive looks from those she passed. A quick tap on the door, and straight in. Her first impression was that Steve had somehow squeezed a week’s holiday into the last twenty-four hours. The lines of strain round his eyes had relaxed. Instead of the pallor of the senior officer overworking on an obsession, his skin had a healthy tone. His eyes were bright and the grin he greeted her with was light years away from the careworn smile of the previous day.
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