I am pleased to host an extract from Mari Hannah's new book The Insider as part of the The Insider blog tour.
It was the news they had all been
dreading, confirmation of a fourth victim. For DS Frankie Oliver, the journey
to the crime scene brought back memories of her father driving her around
Northumberland when she was a rookie cop, pointing out the places where he’d
been called to investigate serious incidents throughout his own police career,
giving her the benefit of his advice along the way. He’d been doing this since
she was a kid, only with less detail, leaving out the unspeakable horrors the
locations represented. Back then, they were words. Just words. Narratives that, if she were
being honest, excited her in ways they should not. And then there was the night
he stopped talking: an experience etched on their collective memory forever
more – a night too close to home.
Flashlight beams bobbed up and
down, illuminating sheets of horizontal rain. The detectives stumbled along the
Tyne Valley track, heading east on the Northern Rail line linking Carlisle to
Newcastle. No light pollution here. Under a dark, forbidding sky, it was
difficult terrain, rutted and sodden so close to the water’s edge. The swollen
river thundered by, a course of water liable to flash flooding. Red alerts for
the area were a regular occurrence. At midday, Northumberland’s monitoring stations
had warned of a serious threat to those living nearby. If the Tyne rose
quickly, Frankie knew they would be in trouble. Many a walker had slipped into
the water here by accident.
Few had survived. Lightning forked, exposing the beauty of the
surrounding landscape. A high-voltage electric charge, followed by the rumble
of thunder in the distance, an omen of more rain to come. The lead
investigator, Detective Chief Inspector David Stone, was a blurred smudge a
hundred metres in front of her, head bowed, shoulders hunched against the
relentless downpour.
Mud sucked at Frankie’s feet as
she fought to keep up, two steps forward, one back, as she tried to get a
purchase on the slippery surface. Her right foot stuck fast, the momentum of
her stride propelling her forward, minus a wellington boot. She fell, head
first, hands and knees skidding as she tried to stay upright. Dragging herself
up, she swore under her breath as brown sludge stuck to her clothing, weighing
her down.
Unaware of her plight, David was
making headway, sweeping his torch left and right in a wide arc close to Eels
Wood. He had one agenda and Frankie wasn’t it. With a feeling of dread eating
its way into her gut, she peered into the undergrowth blocking her passage.
Where was a stick when you needed one? As she parted the brambles, there was an
ear-splitting crack, a terrifying sound. Before she had time to react, a tree
fell, crashing to earth with an excruciating thump, unearthed by a raging
torrent of water filtering off higher ground, its roots unable to sustain the
weight of a century of growth, landing metres in front of her.
Frankie blew out a breath. Only
once before had she come closer to violent death.
Hoping her luck would hold, she
vaulted the tree and ploughed on. From an investigative standpoint, the
situation was grim. Had there been any footprints adjacent to the line, they
were long gone. As crime scenes go, they would be fighting a losing battle to
preserve evidence, assuming they ever found the body spotted by an eyewitness,
a passenger on an eastbound train.
Where the fuck was it?
Frankie expected to see the
dragon ahead, a wide-eye LED searchlight used by emergency services, an intense
beam of white light guiding her. As far as the eye could see there was no light
visible, other than the beam of David’s flashlight.
Worrying. Exasperating. Frankie
couldn’t be arsed with this. Pulling her
radio from her pocket, she pressed the transmit button hoping her link to
Control wouldn’t be affected by the appalling weather. It would be a heavy
night in the control room, for sure.
‘Oliver to Control. We’re in
position. Can you repeat the
coordinates? We’re seeing bugger
all out here.’ Silence.
‘Damn it! DS Oliver to Control.
Are you receiving?
Over . . .’
A pause before her radio crackled
to life: ‘Control: go ahead.’
Wiping rain from her nose with
the back of her hand, Frankie repeated her request, yanking at the drawstring
on the hood of her raincoat to stop water getting in. A useless exercise. She
was well and truly drenched. ‘Have a word with first responders, will you? If
they’re guarding a crime scene, they should know where the bloody hell they
are. We need help here.’
‘Copy that. I’ll get back to
you.’
The Insider by Mari Hannah published by Orion Publishing
'It was the news they had all
been dreading, confirmation of a fourth victim. 'When the body of a young woman
is found by a Northumberland railway line, it's a baptism of fire for the
Murder Investigation Team's newest detective duo: DCI David Stone and DS
Frankie Oliver. The case is tough by
anyone's standards, but Stone is convinced that there's a leak in his team -
someone is giving the killer a head start on the investigation. Until he finds
out who, Stone can only trust his partner.
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