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Deathly Affair




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  CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR LEIGH RUSSELL

  ‘A million readers can’t be wrong! Loyal fans of Geraldine Steel will be thrilled with this latest compelling story from Leigh Russell. New readers will discover a terrific crime series to get their teeth into. Clear some time in your day, sit back and enjoy a bloody good read’ – Howard Linskey

  ‘Taut and compelling’ – Peter James

  ‘Leigh Russell is one to watch’ – Lee Child

  ‘Leigh Russell has become one of the most impressively dependable purveyors of the English police procedural’ – Marcel Berlins, Times

  ‘A brilliant talent in the thriller field’ – Jeffery Deaver

  ‘Death Rope is another cracking addition to the series which has just left me wanting to read more’ – Jen Med’s Book Reviews

  ‘The story keeps you guessing until the end. I would highly recommend this series’ – A Crime Reader’s Blog

  ‘A great plot that keeps you guessing right until the very end, some subtle subplots, brilliant characters both old and new and as ever a completely gripping read’ – Life of Crime

  ‘Russell at her very best and Steel crying out to be turned into a TV series’ – The Mole, Our Book Reviews Online

  ‘This is an absorbing and compelling serial killer read that explores the mind and motive of a killer, and how the police work to track down that killer’ – Jo Worgan, Brew & Books Review

  ‘An absolute delight’ – The Literary Shed

  ‘I simply couldn’t put it down’ – Shell Baker, Chelle’s Book Reviews

  ‘Highly engaging’ – Jacob Collins, Hooked From Page One

  ‘If you love a good action-packed crime novel, full of complex characters and unexpected twists this is one for you’ – Rachel Emms, Chillers, Killers and Thrillers

  ‘I chased the pages in love with the narrative and style… You have all you need within Class Murder for the perfect crime story’ – Francesca Wright, Cesca Lizzie Reads

  ‘All the things a mystery should be, intriguing, enthralling, tense and utterly absorbing’ – Best Crime Books

  ‘A series that can rival other major crime writers out there…’ – Best Books to Read

  ‘Sharp, intelligent and well plotted’ – Crime Fiction Lover

  ‘Another corker of a book from Leigh Russell… Russell’s talent for writing top-quality crime fiction just keeps on growing…’ – Euro Crime

  ‘A definite must read for crime thriller fans everywhere’ – Newbooks Magazine

  ‘For lovers of crime fiction this is a brilliant, not-to-be missed, novel’ – Fiction Is Stranger Than Fact

  ‘An innovative and refreshing take on the psychological thriller’ – Books Plus Food

  ‘Russell’s strength as a writer is her ability to portray believable characters’ – Crime Squad

  ‘A well-written, well-plotted crime novel with fantastic pace and lots of intrigue’ – Bookersatz

  ‘An encounter that will take readers into the darkest recesses of the human psyche’ – Crime Time

  ‘Well written and chock full of surprises, this hard-hitting, edge-of-the-seat instalment is yet another treat… Geraldine Steel looks set to become a household name. Highly recommended’ – Euro Crime

  ‘Good, old-fashioned, heart-hammering police thriller… a no-frills delivery of pure excitement’ –SAGA Magazine

  ‘Cut Short is not a comfortable read, but it is a compelling and important one. Highly recommended’ – Mystery Women

  ‘A gritty and totally addictive novel’ – New York Journal of Books

  To Michael, Jo, Phillipa, Phil, Rian, and Kezia

  With my love

  ‘And thus the native hue of resolution

  Is sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought,

  And enterprises of great pith and moment

  With this regard their currents turn awry,

  And lose the name of action’

  William Shakespeare

  Glossary of acronyms

  DCI – Detective Chief Inspector (senior officer on case)

  DI – Detective Inspector

  DS – Detective Sergeant

  SOCO – cene of crime officer (collects forensic evidence at scene)

  PM – Post mortem or Autopsy (examination of dead body to establish cause of death)

  CCTV – Closed Circuit Television (security cameras)

  VIIDO – Visual Images, Identification and Detections Office

  Prologue

  Strictly speaking he was not a killer. Not yet.

  Tonight, for the first time, conditions were perfect. He passed several people scurrying along the pavement, hoods and umbrellas up against a light drizzle that had begun to fall. No one would pay any attention to the hood which concealed his own face. He looked unremarkable in every way. The street was deserted, but another pedestrian could appear around the corner at any moment. If he failed to seize the opportunity, right now, he might never have another chance.

  If intention were the same as action this would be easy, but he had underestimated the gulf between thought and deed. Shakespeare, who understood human nature perhaps better than anyone, had warned that overthinking could ‘make cowards of us all’.

  Best not to think about it at all then, now the time had come. He had already given more than enough thought to this, weighing up the risks and playing it out in his mind while he lay in bed at night.

  It was not as though a likely victim had fallen into his lap. Far from it. It had taken him months to find someone who used a covered step as a bed, where he was likely to sleep when it rained. Having identified a suitable target, he had prepared for this moment with care, following his shuffling victim for several evenings along Coney Street to the doorway of an empty shop where he spent the night.

  Winter would soon be on its way, signalling the end of his opportunities until the spring because, when the weather turned cold, the homeless would seek out bricks and mortar shelter from the elements, safe from predators roaming the streets – and killers. But York in early September was warm, with only a slight chill in the air at night, and homeless people could still be found sleeping rough, even in wet weather.

  The tramp settled himself down in his doorway, exactly as he had done for the past few evenings, unaware that this was the last time he would pull his grubby coat around his bare ankles and pat his bundle into shape before using it as a pillow. Oblivious of his watcher, he reached into his coat pocket and drew out a small bottle. Laboriously, he heaved himself into a semi-recumbent position, leaning on one elbow, so that he could fumble with the lid before taking a swig. A trickle of pale amber liquid dribbled down his chin and disappeared into his straggly beard.

  Pressed motionless against the opposite wall, the watcher waited.

  At last the tramp settled down on his rough bed, curled himself into a foetal position, and lay still. Perhaps he heard a cautious footstep or a nearly silent breath because, just as the hooded figure reached him, the tramp stirred and his eyes flickered open. He half sat up, the expression in his watery grey eyes shifting from surprise to fear as he struggled to clamber to his feet, but his hoarse croak of protest came too
late. The noose was already tightening around his throat.

  The tramp’s arms flailed helplessly for a moment before he grew limp, very suddenly, like a puppet whose strings had been cut, and his filthy fingers stopped scrabbling at the sleeves of his assailant’s jacket. Had the sagging body not been held upright by the stick relentlessly turning at the nape of his neck, the victim would have collapsed. And still the noose tautened, carving a dark runnel around the unwashed neck.

  Finally, satisfied that his victim was dead, the assailant released the tension and stepped back. His hood was still pulled forward, masking his face. The only unforeseen complication was that fibres from his own jacket might be found lodged beneath the dead man’s fingernails. It was the kind of detail that could lead to a conviction. He would have to get rid of his jacket. That was a nuisance because his wife was bound to notice, but he could not risk keeping it. He would have to find an identical replacement for the jacket, or invent an excuse for its disappearance. Annoyed with himself for the oversight, he turned and slipped away along the glistening pavement.

  It had taken him less than a minute to become a killer.

  1

  Even though her marriage was a mistake, Ann had never intended to break her vows. It was not as if David was a bad husband. After all, he had done the right thing in offering to marry her as soon as he had learned she was pregnant. She was the one who had blundered by saying yes, but she had been seventeen at the time, and scared. Even then she had known she did not love David, certainly not enough to want to spend the rest of her life with him. The thought of years stretching ahead of her, spending every night in bed with the same man in married monotony, had made her cry when she was alone in her single bed in her parents’ house. Only she had not been alone, not really, because there was a baby growing inside her. Besides, her parents had given her little choice, and at seventeen she had not developed the strength of character to withstand their hectoring.

  ‘Of course I love him,’ she had lied to her mother, choosing to waive any possibility of future happiness rather than admit the humiliating truth, that her affair with David had been thoughtless and meaningless.

  ‘In that case, we won’t stand in your way. You must marry him,’ her mother had promptly replied, as though she wished to support her daughter’s decision and was not merely concerned about what other people might think.

  The truth was that Ann’s parents had been keen for her to marry David from the moment they learned about the pregnancy. He was a qualified lawyer, and they thought she was lucky to have found a man with a steady profession who would stand by her and take care of her and her child. If anyone had asked Ann what she really wanted, the outcome might have been very different. But everyone had been happy to go along with the marriage because, of course, there was the baby.

  David was not a bad man, but he was hardly the partner Ann would have chosen to spend the rest of her life with. To a naive seventeen-year-old, the attentions of a tall and well-spoken man in his late thirties had been exciting at first. Compared to the boys of her own age she hung around with, his maturity had been part of the attraction, and she had been flattered by his interest in her. Before long she had realised the problem. It was not just that he was twenty years older than her, but he was boring. Right from the start he had barely said a word when they were together. He seemed to want to speak to her. Sometimes she caught him looking at her with unnerving intensity, but when she challenged him he would stammer and look away. What she had at first tolerated as shyness became tedious.

  Looking back over the years, it was hardly surprising that one of them would end up being unfaithful, but she had not expected it would be her. Her only justification for having embarked on an affair at all was that since the age of eighteen her life had been filled with nappies and teething rings, trips to the doctor, leaking washing machines, cooking, cleaning, packing for holidays, and homework. Not that she regretted having her daughter. Aimee kept her busy and relentlessly cheerful. And her life could have been a lot worse. Perhaps nothing would have changed had she not met another man during the interval at her daughter’s school concert.

  ‘Can I get you a drink?’

  She turned and saw a young man. He had neatly cropped fair hair and green-blue eyes that almost disappeared when he smiled, giving an impression that he did not take life seriously. She liked that about him instantly. Returning his smile, she was dismayed when he turned and vanished into the crowd.

  ‘Was it something I said?’ she muttered.

  Considering she had not said a word to the man who had just approached her, she felt unreasonably disappointed as she began to make her way back to the auditorium.

  ‘Hey, you can’t leave yet, not now I’ve paid for this.’

  The young man was back, with a pint in one hand and a glass of wine in the other, which he held out to her. He told her that his name was Mark and he was a music teacher.

  ‘Music teacher?’ she repeated. ‘I like music. Not sure about teachers though.’

  ‘We should get along famously then,’ he replied. ‘Most teachers I know are insufferable.’

  His flirting became more blatant but she did not object and, by the time he bought her another drink, she felt as though she had known him for years. She must have had too much to drink because she agreed to visit him at his home the following week. He lived in a flat above a shop in Gillygate. All that week she thought of little else but the man with green-blue eyes. Even when she made up her mind to forget all about him she knew, deep down, that she was going to accept his invitation. As soon as she arrived, he offered her a glass of wine. One drink turned into three then four until Ann was tipsy and, unusually for her, she found she was having fun, thrilled by a rare sense of freedom.

  ‘I feel like a teenager again,’ she giggled.

  ‘You’re pissed.’

  ‘Isn’t it wonderful?’

  She was on the point of thanking him for the drinks and telling him she had to go home. He had no right to expect anything else. Yet when she felt his leg touching hers she did not move away but let things unfold, not unlike when she had fallen pregnant at seventeen.

  She could hear her mother’s voice inside her head, warning her as she followed Mark into his bedroom: ‘Have you learned nothing?’ But she did not want to listen, nor did she want to learn. Her mother could teach her nothing. She had been sensible for long enough. So although she had never intended to cheat on her husband, that was exactly what she did. The trouble was, it did not end with that one night. Because despite the difference in their ages, or maybe because of it, Mark and Ann hit it off. That was a pity. If he had turned out to be a good-looking but callow dullard, she would have walked away from her secret fling and gone back to her normal life with hardly a backward glance. She could have forgiven herself one fleeting encounter in fifteen years of loyal duty to a man she had never really loved. But Mark listened to her, and he made her laugh. He insisted on playing music and dancing with her when they went back to his flat, and he flatly refused to let her help him clear up when they ordered a takeaway.

  ‘Next time, I’ll cook for you,’ he promised her, when they were lying in each other’s arms, naked.

  ‘Next time?’

  ‘That’s what I said.’

  Gazing into his smiling eyes, she realised he was right in supposing she would see him again.

  ‘What makes you think there’ll be a next time?’ she asked. ‘You do know I’m married.’

  Mark shrugged. ‘Yet here you are and, as long as you are here, nothing else exists, does it?’

  Cocooned in the warmth of his embrace she realised he was right. Never before had she felt so overwhelming a rush of love for another adult. Intense infatuation, passion, she did not understand what she was feeling; she only knew that it was wonderful. It was not about sex, although his prowess was undeniable. It was like a drug, as though she had onl
y seen in black and white before and now everything appeared to her in glorious colour. She wondered if this was love. As long as her husband remained ignorant of her affair it could not hurt him, and she would make sure he never found out. Whatever happened, she had to carry on seeing Mark.

  2

  The evenings were drawing in and there were a few other hints of approaching winter with the leaves beginning to fall and a noticeable drop in temperature, especially at night. First thing in the morning there was a chill in the air and Geraldine had begun wearing a jacket on her short journey to the police station. She preferred to get to work early to avoid the traffic and often had breakfast at her desk. The office seemed dull without her fellow detective sergeant, Ariadne, who was away on a week’s holiday. Geraldine had become accustomed to her colleague’s smiling greeting each morning. They had a lot in common, being around the same age and single, and it had not taken them long to slip into the habit of spending their lunch hour together. Without Ariadne sitting opposite her, punctuating the hours with her occasional quips, Geraldine’s day dragged. She was on good terms with her other colleagues but, after living in York for seven months, Ariadne was the only one with whom she could let her guard down. Generally focused on her work in the serious crime unit, it was not in Geraldine’s nature to be frivolous, and her new friend’s lighthearted approach to problems often lifted her spirits.

  There had been a time when Geraldine had regarded another of their colleagues as her closest friend. She and Detective Inspector Ian Peterson had known one another when he had been her sergeant in her days working as a detective inspector. But their roles were now reversed and since he had become her senior officer he had become aloof, only rarely showing flashes of his former warmth towards her. Having missed Ariadne, Geraldine was pleased to hear from her on her return, and they arranged to meet for a drink.

  ‘So, what’s been going on while I’ve been away?’ Ariadne asked as she put a couple of pints on the table between them and pulled up a chair.