“I really don’t know how you can be so bubbly.” Evan’s stated irritably as she stirred the thick black liquid in her cup. Conversation between herself and Matthews had been broken and dry since they had finished exchanging pleasantries 5 minutes ago. And it was true, Evans did not understand. With the job they now worked, the jobs they used to do, and all the things they had seen, how on earth could this woman standing before her remain so upbeat? It was infuriating! Not knowing how to reply, the blonde woman remained silently heaping sugar into her milky coffee. She didn’t want to annoy the stern female, but it seemed not to matter what she did or said; Evans’ annoyance was inevitable.
“Well… I don’t see that there is much point in moping around or letting the world’s problems get to you. So I choose to remain optimistic.” That was a civil, democratic answer, right? Apparently not as Evans rolled her eyes and took a swig of her drink as though she were an alcoholic in desperate need of a pint. Before either could say another word, they noticed Valkov taking a mug from the cupboard. When he had appeared there neither of them knew.
“Hi, Agent Valkov!” Matthews greeted, a bright smile playing on her lips “Coffee’s made if you want some.”
“Thanks, but I don’t touch the stuff. Excuse me, Evans.” The blonde slipped between the girls, taking a herbal tea bag from a box on the side.
“Agent Evans.” There was a slight growl to the older woman’s voice, as though she was commanding respect from the man. He either didn’t notice; or he just enjoyed pushing people’s buttons.
“Well, Agent, I’m an agent too. So are Matthews, Thompson, Mokuro, Scott, and I’m not so sure about Barker. Is he classed as an agent? I don’t know. I doubt even he knows. My point, however, is that if we keep referring to each other as ‘Agent’ then matters will get very confusing and very tedious very fast.” Evans let out an aggravated snarl before exiting the break room “What’s wrong with her?”
“Are you sure you don’t drink caffeine?” Valkov looked at Matthews with a puzzled frown before smiling and lifting his cup
“Naturally caffeine free.” He stated before breezing out of the room
“…ok. She’s cynical, and he’s mad.”
“Who’s mad?” Matthews jumped and turned to face the mismatched eyes gazing at her. People just seemed to be sneaking up on her today… “Sorry, I didn’t mean to startle you…We have a new case. We’re all meeting in the conference room.” The timid agent informed before also disappearing, presumably to said room.
“It’s going to be one of those days…” Matthews muttered, making her way to the meeting place, and hoping that this case wouldn’t be too bad...
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
“Evil lurks in the heart of man, and anonymity tends to bring it out. Internet flamers would never say the jagged things they do if they had to sign their names.” ~Garrison Keillor
When everybody had finally arrived, Barker began to explain the details of the case.
“Johanna Mitchell, 35, was found dead on the pier at Cromer, Norfolk, after being reported missing just the day before. Her limbs and head had been removed and scattered around the town. Her head was the last part to be found, and had a note attached; ‘Let’s play a game. Find my next target before I kill it. It goes to the beach often’. The police thought they could handle it, and patrolled the beach. But they didn’t patrol the left stretch, as people rarely went down there. That was a week ago. Yesterday the torso of Laura Garner, 32, was found on the left stretch of beach. Fully clothed. Any evidence has been washed away, and the limbs have not yet been found. There was a note attached to the torso; ‘You failed! Let’s try again.’” Barker grimaced as the picture of the torso with blood spattered note came up on the screen behind him. “Grim… very grim…”
“Sexual Sadist?” Scott queried, though he himself seemed unsure of his own surmise
“No sign of sexual outlet… he surrendered all his trophies from the first kill, so I think we can rule out the power seeker.” Matthews interjected “What do you think, Thompson?”
“I’m thinking we may have a thrill killer. His method of killing seems to be very specific, so it doesn’t look as though he’s progressive; he jumped right into contacting the police. He could still be a power seeker, due to the taunting tone. Also- Agent Mokuro?” The young agent looked up from the photograph she was looking at and pursed her lips nervously before asking Barker to pull up the picture of the second note again. When it appeared on the screen they all stared long and hard, wondering what it was they had missed that Agent Mokuro hadn’t.
“The blood spatters across the note…” She explained quietly “It isn’t natural. There is no way that he could have placed the note anywhere that would allow blood to naturally form that pattern.”
“You’re saying that it’s staged? Hmm… Ok, everyone grab your go bags and get to the cars. We’re leaving in 5.” Thompson stated “Barker, I want you to see if you can find any similar murders. Start with the entire United Kingdom, then narrow it down from there.” Barker nodded, gathering his laptop and cables in his arms before making his way to his den. He would love to be out there with the rest of his team, but he was needed where he was. It was safer that way.
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
The bitter sea breeze stole the
heat of the sun and whisked it away, leaving Mokuro to stand shivering whilst
watching various crime scene investigators combing the sand.
“I used to go beach combing.”
Valkov mused next to her before dismissing his own conversation and going to
talk to the on-looking police officers. Wrapping her long grey cardigan tighter
around herself, Mokuro glanced around to pin point the other team members.
Evans was helping look for evidence as Thompson spoke to the chief of police,
and Matthews and Scott…
“Scott! We’re working,
not touring!” The agents turned their attention to the muscular male,
whose somewhat hairy legs poked out from knee length forest-camouflage shorts
whilst his off-white t-shirt clung to his well sculpted body. Grinning, the
casually dressed agent slid off his shades and swaggered over to Mokuro.
“How can you be cold, kid?”
“I’m not a kid…” Sighing,
Thompson made his way over to his team to give out instructions. There was
nothing left to find at the crime scene, thanks to the sea, but Mrs Garner’s
husband was standing at the side lines, tears forming in his angry brown eyes
as he snapped at the officers on duty. Matthews was sent to talk him down
which, surprisingly, didn’t take long and she soon found herself leading the
distraught male to an outdoor seating area a little way away from the crime
scene.
“Amazing, isn’t it?” Evans glanced at Scott before following his gaze to where their co-worker sat talking to Mr Garner
“What is?”
“How, amongst all this chaos, she can still smile and comfort the victim’s family, even when she knows all the gruesome details.” Evans snorted
“You mean, how she can smile and lie through her teeth? Because that’s all there is to it.” Before Scott could state that that wasn’t the case, or even query the woman’s aggression, she was called away, leaving him wondering where her evident bitterness had come from. Meanwhile, Valkov continued to watch his co-workers out of the corner of his eye, building a picture in his mind of what made them tick…
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
Samantha Matthews felt her heart wrench in her chest as she listened to the miserable male before her recount the argument he had with his wife before her disappearance.
“I just didn’t understand why she would choose that day to go for a meal with her friend… it was our day… our anniversary… is it so wrong to want to spend your special day with your wife?”
“Of course not… Mr Garner, when did you first realise your wife was missing?”
“I called her friend, Carla. She told me that Laura never turned up at her house…” Taking down the details of Laura Garner’s friend, Matthews left the man to grieve whilst she reported back to Thompson. The conversation was brief, both agreeing that a female UnSub was unlikely, but Carla could hold important information, and it was best that she and Scott go to interview the woman immediately.
Carla Denham worked in a local shop dealing in antiquities, and she looked like she fit in perfectly, despite being only 30 years of age. The two agents were led out back, politely declining the woman’s offer of tea and coming to the conclusion that she had not yet heard about her friend’s death. This conclusion turned out to be wrong.
“Yes, I heard… news travels fast here, you see.”
“You don’t seem to be despairing much.” Scott stated bluntly, earning him a rebuking glare from his co-worker. Carla looked down before turning her sad smile back to them, stating
“Everyone deals with grief in their own way, Agent Scott. I guess it hasn’t quite sunk in yet that she’s gone…”
“We understand.” The blonde replied before her insensitive partner could do any more damage “We just need to ask you a couple of questions regarding Mr and Mrs Garner.” Following a brief signal of acknowledgement, the agents began their questioning, but it seemed like wasted time as the woman merely reaffirmed what they already knew.
“One last thing, Miss Denham. Around what time did Mr Garner call you last night?” The pair did not miss the way Carla’s eyes flickered, trying their best to blink back any emotion before answering
“Why would he call me?” the two agents glanced at each other, wordlessly discussing how to continue
“Oh, we just thought he may have to make sure his wife got to your house safely?” Matthews watched the woman opposite her carefully as she answered that Mr Garner would have called his wife to make sure she got there – not her, and that she hadn’t received a phone call from him. Thanking her, the pair took their leave to report back to Agent Thompson, who was himself finding pieces of the puzzle that didn’t seem to fit…
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
“You see, there are many different types of serial killers, and distinguishing type can help us to identify suspects,” Thompson explained to the police officers, trying to ignore the shouts of the media that Evans was doing her best to hold back behind the lines “One type of serial killer is the Visionary Serial Killer. People in this category usually hear voices that instruct the killer to execute other human beings. These killers are usually psychotic or schizophrenic. David Berkowitz, also known as the Son of Sam, is an example of a visionary serial killer. A second type of serial killer is the Missionary Serial Killer. This type of killer often feels as if he or she has a responsibility or a special mission to rid the world of a certain specified group of people.”
“Charles Manson would be classified under this category.” Mokuro added
“A third type is the Lust Killer. The lust killer is often driven to kill due to a sexual motivation. The fourth and fifth are known as a Thrill Killers and Power Seekers, thrill killers are those who take lives because they enjoy the experience of killing whilst the power seeker is a person who enjoys having total control over the fate of their victim. One of the last kinds of serial killers is the Gain Serial Killer. A gain killer is one who kills to gain money or items they believe to be valuable.”
“Which do you think we have here?” Thompson turned to the chief of police and began explaining the team’s theories, and how the absence of the limbs prevents them from distinguishing the line between thrill killer and power seeker. Letting out a deep sigh, Valkov sat on one of the rocks protruding from the sand after having cleared a group of on-lookers from the crime scene. It was a pity, he thought, how such a nice, quiet place was to be ruined for one person’s sick psychological gain. Looking down at the sand, he frowned when he saw a discarded shoe jutting out from behind the rock. If the body was found without its limbs, and the UnSub was as meticulous as he seemed, why would there be a lady’s high heel shoe laying around?
“Well, it could be totally unrelated, I suppose.” He murmured, reaching out a gloved hand to lift the shoe from its resting place. Only, the shoe was not by itself. The foot that had once inhabited it wore it still, and that foot remained attached to a long, tight-clad leg, the flesh and bone at the top of the thigh clearly visible where it had been crudely severed from its owner. Jumping to his feet in shock, Valkov dropped the leg and called for Thompson, who was now discussing Scott and Matthews’ findings with the suspicious agents.
“Thompson!! Chief Wilkins!! Over here!” giving a slight growl as his attempts to grab the attention of his colleagues fell through, he called to Mokuro who timidly made her way to his side.
“What’s wrong- oh my…” Kneeling, the young agent pulled on a pair of latex gloves before turning the leg over in her hands, examining it carefully, whilst Valkov picked up the piece of paper that fell from the tattered, blood-stained tights. “What does it say?” Valkov’s eyes darted over the inked words on the page, his jaw set.
“Thompson!! Matthews!!” He yelled, mind reeling for a quick way to gain there attention without leaving Mokuro unguarded “Oi, Scotty!!!” Agent Scott’s eyes snapped to him, narrowing irritably as he, followed by the other team members, made his way over to the blonde male.
“That’s Scott” Agent Scott began, but Valkov paid him no heed and went straight to Thompson, to whom Mokuro had been showing the leg.
“He left us a note. You’d best read it.” He stated, passing the crumpled, stained piece of paper to the unit chief. Mokuro repeated her earlier question as the man’s angry green eyes flickered to her.
“Yes, what does it say?” Matthews echoed, taking the note from Thompsons hand “… ‘I have been browsing for my next victim. ‘Agent Mokuro’ is a pretty little thing, isn’t it?’” she read aloud. Mokuro’s eyes widened
“He could just be messing with us, but I’m not taking any chances. Mokuro, you are not to go anywhere without a member of the team with you. I would also like you to share a room with Matthews or Evans rather than stay on your own.” The brunette nodded, speechless. Even if she had been able to say something, she wouldn’t have argued with the stern look set upon her unit chief’s face at that moment. Despite not knowing her for long, Mokuro was a member of his team, and an attack on her was an attack on him. The UnSub had just made this personal.
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
The next morning began quite
quietly, but soon became rather hectic. Mr Garner was nowhere to be found for
interviewing, and the chief of police had brought in a herd of suspects who had
done nothing but chose the wrong two weeks to take a holiday in Cromer. The
third thing to go wrong was Chief Wilkins spilling his coffee over the laptop
connecting the team with Barker… and Thompson’s white shirt. Agitated, Thompson
went to his room to change, shivering as he entered the chilly space. He could
have sworn he had closed the window… pulling on a clean shirt, a bang from
behind him spurred his hand to his gun, drawing the weapon as he turned to face
the source of the intrusive noise. A ginger tom cat mewed hungrily from the top
of the dresser, nuzzling the gun barrel affectionately in the hope of obtaining
a morsel to satisfy its appetite. Sliding the gun back into its holster,
Thompson carefully picked up the animal, holding its hopeful gaze with his own
stern glare.
“You shouldn’t be here.” The cat
mewed again as if to argue against his statement. “You are a nuisance.” Another
mew and Thomson reprimanded himself for wasting time attempting to reason with
a cat. He really was exhausted. Placing the cat outside, he quickly
pulled the window closed and turned back to his bed to reach for his tie. But
instead of his tie, he picked up his phone, hitting speed dial and waiting for
Matthews’ voice to answer.
“Matthews! We have a situation…”
he stated, trying to keep confusion and annoyance from his voice as he looked
down upon the blood-crusted arm that lay upon his once white sheets…
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
“He must be watching us.” Evans mused, watching as Mokuro examined the severed limb “He knew Mokuro’s name after we’d only been here a couple of hours. Now he knows where we’re staying…”
“News travels fast in places like this.” Valkov stated, petting the ginger tom that remained sat on the windowsill “Everybody knows everybody else, and everybody knows everybody else’s business.” Thompson rubbed his temples. The UnSub was toying with them.
“The cat was part of the taunt. He attached the note to its collar.” Matthews revised, re reading the note to the team “‘Agent Mokuro’ isn’t my type. I’ve found my next target. The question is: can you find it?’”
“He refers to his targets as ‘it’. He sees them as objects.” Scott identified, to which Valkov added
“Or game.” When asked to clarify, Valkov stated that a hunter wouldn’t refer to their prey by gender or anything else that could give it an identity. In a way, this detaches them from the target as it is classed purely as ‘game’, or an object to be hunted, rather than a living creature or individual.
“What about in ‘Moby Dick’? They name the whale…” Mokuro queries with an embarrassed blush. The blonde male just smiles before clarifying
“Yes, but that is to single it out as a sole target of a vendetta.” Sighing, Thompson turned back to Matthews
“Have we found Mr Garner yet?” she
shook her head “Keep trying. He is now a key suspect. Let’s go back to the
station; Barker may be able to find something on the CCTV footage.” The team
agreed and, taking the severed arm and the cat with them, quickly made their
way back to the station.
-
“Get a load of this.” The tinny voice
of Gregory Barker rattled through the old speakers connected to the police
computer as the CCTV footage from outside the place they were staying came up
on screen, revealing a figure enveloped in a shining white light placing the
cat in the room and waiting 10 minutes before throwing the arm in, onto the
bed.
“One of your spooks, Valkov?” Scott
grinned, to which Matthews rolled her eyes
“He’s obviously wearing reflective
clothing.” She stated
“10 points to Matthews!” Barker
smiled, popping a malteaser between his lips before continuing “Our UnSub is 5
feet 9 inches, or 69 inches for those of American origins, and of average
build. Can’t specify much more than that, I’m afraid.” As the screen went blank
Thompson sank slowly down into his chair. The UnSub had been right there…
“Valkov, how many people matched that
description at the beach?”
“More than I’d like to think.”
“Did you-… do you have a cat
allergy?” the unit chief asked as his eyes rested on part of Valkov’s forearm
where an angry red rash had appeared.
“What? No, why- oh…” Valkov frowned
as Mokuro took his arm, cleaning it and bandaging it with the first aid box the
chief had handed to her “The cat must have had tuna over its paws of
something.”
“Right… well, you and Evans can go onto the streets and see what people know. Scott, Matthews, continue trying to find out more about Mr Garner, visit Miss Denham again if you have to. Mokuro, we’re going to the morgue to take a look at these limbs.”
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
Evans watched as her colleague
drummed his nails against the car door irritably, his aggravated stare gazing
out of the open window and into some other world which only he could see into.
“Green Light.” He stated,
breaking the frozen wall of silence that had fallen between them. Regaining her
concentration on the frustrating, winding roads before her, Evans navigated her
way to the main road which would take them back to the police station.
Meanwhile, Valkov thought back to their encounter with the fishmonger. Their
questions had been perfectly reasonable; the man’s stall was on the street, and
he caught his own produce, so surely asking to know if he had seen anything
suspicious of late was a rational request? But no, he had been arrogant and
rude; treating the agents as if they were stealing his time like it was gold
dust being stolen from his treasury! Valkov didn’t particularly care about what
strangers thought of him, but there were some comments that just didn’t need to
be made. As if insulting him hadn’t been enough, he also insulted Evans by
muttering about the ‘inadequacies’ of women – a stupid opinion that there was
no need to voice aloud. The meeting was playing in Evans’ mind also, although
it had been down to her to guide Valkov away, causing more insults about his
masculinity to be thrown his way. Unfortunately, however, it was just rudeness,
and there were no real grounds to act upon it.
“I know what you’re thinking.”
She stated suddenly, causing him to snap back into reality.
“Really? Don’t tell Thompson.
I’ll get fired.” He replied, a faint grin playing on his lips
“I was going to say that you
were thinking you want the fishmonger to be the UnSub…”
“It’s probably safer if you think that’s what I’m thinking.” This caused the usually stern female to smile, and Valkov to take a step back from his original opinions and take a good look at her for a moment. She did smile. She was human. She wasn’t always the cold, harsh statue of a woman she liked to portray herself as. Everybody had their reasons for the ways in which they acted – he just needed to spend a little more time trying to figure them out.
“It’s probably safer if you think that’s what I’m thinking.” This caused the usually stern female to smile, and Valkov to take a step back from his original opinions and take a good look at her for a moment. She did smile. She was human. She wasn’t always the cold, harsh statue of a woman she liked to portray herself as. Everybody had their reasons for the ways in which they acted – he just needed to spend a little more time trying to figure them out.
“When this case is over, we
should all go for drinks.” He announced to no one in particular before adding
“Team building.” As way of explanation to Evans, who had been thrown off guard
by this random comment.
“Drinks? Team building? Really?”
she did not sound convinced “I don’t think everyone would go for that.”
“Would you?”
“You would have to invite Scott.” Although she hadn’t answered his question, Valkov was rethinking his idea, unsure whether spending an evening with Scott would end well. Before he could come up with a witty retort, they had pulled up to the police station, and the afore mentioned male bounded up to them announcing that Rhys Garner had been found and was, at that moment, being questioned in the interrogation room.
“You would have to invite Scott.” Although she hadn’t answered his question, Valkov was rethinking his idea, unsure whether spending an evening with Scott would end well. Before he could come up with a witty retort, they had pulled up to the police station, and the afore mentioned male bounded up to them announcing that Rhys Garner had been found and was, at that moment, being questioned in the interrogation room.
Thompson exited the
interrogation room as they walked up the corridor, shaking his head.
“He threw up when he saw the
pictures. He’s hiding something, but I don’t think he’s our UnSub.” Letting out
a ragged breath, Thompson ran a hand over his eyes “It’s getting late. Get some
rest, we’ll regroup tomorrow.”
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
Valkov gasped as warm water cascaded over his skin, relaxing to the sound of the droplets hitting shower curtain and trickling down into the bath. He had a bad habit of waking up at ungodly hours of the morning, and had just finished reading ‘The Tennant of Wildfell Hall’ before deciding to have a shower before he was needed. His room was next to Thompson’s on the ground floor, and he hadn’t heard Thomson stir yet, so he knew he had plenty of time. Humming to himself, Valkov reached out to change the temperature when a weight slammed into his side, throwing him into the wall and causing him to lose his footing, crashing down and taking the shower curtain and pole down with him…
He wasn’t sure what had awoken him, but a nagging feeling in the back of Thompson’s mind told him something was wrong. He still had half an hour before his alarm was due to go off, but found he couldn’t go back to sleep, no matter how hard he tried. Surrendering to the nagging sensation, he rose from his bed and changed, having showered before he went to sleep. Feeling the groan of his stomach rumble through him, Thompson exited his room with the thought of finding an early breakfast and going over some case details, only to notice Valkov’s door was ajar. At first it meant nothing to him, until Scott and the girls came down the stairs from the second floor.
“What are you doing up so early?” he queried, knowing that the team wouldn’t have to be up for another hour at least.
“I heard a crash…” Matthews frowned, looking Thompson up and down “Mokuro and I got Scott and Evans up to check it out… are you ok?” Thompson nodded, his confusion slowly fading into worry
“What room are you in?”
“18.”
“Right above…” Thompson darted to
Valkov’s door, drawing his gun “Valkov?” Pushing the door open with his foot,
Thompson darted into the room, his attention snapping to the window that had
been pried open from the outside. The others followed him in, guns drawn.
“Be careful, the UnSub may still be in here…” Evans cautioned, looking over the books which lay casually stacked on the bedside table. The bathroom door creaked, but hurriedly snapped shut as Scott’s gun fired prematurely, sending a single bullet exploding into the door frame.
“Shit!! What the hell was that for!?” the team relaxed as Valkov’s shaken yell came from the other side of the door. Scott could feel several glares rest upon his back, and swiftly came to the conclusion that this was one of those situations were an apology was not only acceptable – it was mandatory. As he apologised, Valkov warily edged out from behind the door, bruised and shirtless.
“Matthews heard a crash.” Thompson offered by way of explanation. Seeing the damaged window, Valkov let out a heavy sigh
“Our UnSub decided to deliver a little gift whilst I was in the shower. He caught me off guard and I fell, taking half the shower with me…” Expecting to be reprimanded for causing a fuss, let alone letting the UnSub get away, the blonde could only stand in shock when his unit chief laid a hand on his shoulder and, with concern lacing his words, asked if he was alright. “Yes, sir… I’m ok…” Matthews, meanwhile, found herself being slightly jealous of her male co-worker. Whilst she noted that, even though Valkov wasn’t as muscular as Scott or broad-shouldered as Thompson, Matthews was paying attention to his complexion, the fair milky skin that stretched across the expanse of his slender, toned body, with only one or two scars telling of minor scrapes and the more recent bruises blemishing it. That was until he realised he was shirtless and turned to root through one of his drawers, and each member of the group came to rest their eyes upon his lower back, where several aged, dark scars criss-crossed down into the fabric which hid the rest of his body from his team mates’ curious gazes. Despite his curiosity, Thompson knew better than to ask. He barely knew the man, and also knew that he wouldn’t want his own personal life pried into. Courteously, he looked away, noting that Mokuro had done the same, though for the embarrassment of seeing her co-worker shirtless or out of politeness he did not know, whilst Evans and Scott did not show the same courtesy, their eyes fixed upon the marks ingrained upon their co-worker’s back. Matthews tore her eyes away just as Valkov turned back round, pulling his shirt on and fixing Scott and Evans’ inquisitive gazes with a daring glare, to which they quickly backed down. Clearing his throat, Thompson announced that they were to see what Barker could find on CCTV before going any further with their investigation.
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
From the images Barker had managed to isolate from the CCTV footage, the team were able to obtain very little. The man had been wearing an over coat and a hat, and the staff weren’t much better, their descriptions amounting to ‘an angry looking man, unshaven between the age of 35 and 50’.
“Maybe we should try questioning some of the locals again?” Matthews suggested, feeling as exasperated as Thompson looked.
“Evans, Valkov, does he look like anyone you interviewed?”
“He seems familiar, but I can’t place him… I apologise.” Evans replied, anger rising at the feelings of helplessness and hopelessness that radiated from the situation. She jumped as a hand rest on her shoulder, and violet eyes shot her a reassuring smile. For a moment Evans once again became lost in thought, wondering how the man beside her could be so calm and collected. He had been attacked in the shower – he could have been killed – and yet, here he was, offering comfort to her. It made no sense. She was so caught up in her confusion she didn’t notice as the rest of the team began to file out of the room, and she had been left with Mokuro.
“What’s our task?” the older woman questioned,
needing something else to focus her attention on
“First, to look over the forensics reports, then to
work on a geographic profile.” Sighing, Evans split the reports, wishing that
there was more that she could do.
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
Jacob Scott was not a patient man. It was his firm
belief that patience was not so much a virtue when you worked the job he did.
That and he was a night owl, not an ‘early bird’ like Matthews. He was yearning
to wrap up this case and go home, if only so that he could spend one evening
winding down in a busy club, knocking down a couple of pints and collecting
phone numbers for future meetings. Unfortunately for him, it didn’t look like
this was going to happen anytime soon. Out of the handful of locals who were
co-operating, very few actually had any useful information, and he could now
see why Evans and Valkov had looked so exasperated when they had returned from
their around-town interviews.
“Can we go back to the station now?” he asked,
barely managing to keep the childish whine from his voice. Not that that
mattered, Thompson had picked up on it anyway, and spoke to him as if talking
to a tired toddler.
“No, Scott, we can’t. After we’ve spoken to the
fisherman, then we’ll go.” Settling for second best, Scott trudged along next
to the unit chief, wondering if they had actually gained anything from this
excursion, or if it had just been a case of finding a load of people who
definitely aren’t the UnSub. As the pair approached the small stall next
to the arcades on New Street, Scott couldn’t help liken the man behind the
stall to the stereotype of a homeless person. He was messy and unshaven, with a
khaki parker jacket that seemed to be two or three sizes too big for him. His
boots were caked in wet sand, and his hands were covered in congealed fish
blood and guts as he prepared his latest catches for display.
“Excuse me, sir?” Thompson called, polite yet stern,
flashing his badge “We’re with the CIU, and we’d like to ask you some questions.”
The man looked them up and down as if sizing them up, before shrinking back
slightly with a sneer, looking anywhere but the two agents before him
“What about?” his words were rapid, almost melding
into each other, before he clamped his mouth shut. If they hadn’t had three or
four similar conversations, with men displaying similar behavioural traits,
Thompson would have this man marked as a top suspect. But a mixture of feelings
of inconvenience and not wanting to be seen talking to these new ‘agents’
caused a number of people to show their disgruntlement with being approached.
“It won’t take long.” Thompson stood back and let
Scott take over, watching the old fishmonger carefully as he did so. He found
the man oddly suspicious, although logically he knew that the fisherman’s
behaviour was no different to other men they had questioned. Marking down his
suspicion to a personal dislike, Thompson waited until Scott had finished
before walking with him back to the car park by the beach. Desperate to find a
lead somewhere in the information they had, the two agents began discussing the
suspects they had as they slid into the car.
Rhys Garner was unlikely to be the UnSub. From his reaction to the crime scene photos, Thompson doubted he would be capable of being faced with the actual dismembered limbs.
Mark Pope, the baker, had lost his wife to another man. He had no alibi, and was still a viable suspect, but his past was all they had to go on.
The fisherman, Nicholas Saxxon, was a loner. He had no history with women, and grew up in a poor household.
“But he has the equipment, right?” Scott suggested “He’s allowed to carry knives and nets and restraints, and he’s a well-known local figure. Not to mention he-” Scott stopped dead in front of the car “Hey, Tim, did you open the bonnet?” Thompson shook his head, not caring that Scott had called him by his first name. Frowning, Scott lifted the bonnet, wanting to make sure the car had not been vandalised, only to see a severed arm had been crudely wedged into the left wing, slightly crushed where someone had slammed the bonnet down onto it, crusted blood littering the interior mechanisms. After a moment of stunned silence, Scott turned to Thompson, his eyes reflecting the untainted seriousness he felt about his next comment.
“I am not touching that.”
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
‘It will be mine soon. Next time we talk, it will be dead.’
The words were copied from the note and written across the blank space at the top of the whiteboard. Why Valkov had felt the need to do this no one knew, but it seemed spur the police assigned to the case into action.
“Well? What do we have, Agent Thompson?” Chief Wilkins had been growing increasingly agitated as more and more people questioned the effectiveness of the Criminal Investigations Unit. As time goes on doubt seeps into a person’s mind, and Wilkins was no different. Thompson looked at the rest of the team, listing the physical traits they were looking for.
“He taunts the police personally, yet doesn’t try contacting the media. This could suggest he doesn’t trust them, or doesn’t know how.” Matthews suggested, thinking about the personal attacks that could have easily been sold as stories to the local paper.
“He objectifies his targets, they mean nothing to him. This could be his general attitude towards all people.” Scott informs, only for the Chief to throw his hands up in exasperation
“‘Could’? ‘Suggests’? We need definite answers! A woman’s life is at stake!”
“Then how’s about this for a definite answer,” Barker piped in, a wide grin across his round face “Some of the blood found on the dismembered limbs didn’t belong to Laura Garner.” He had everyone’s full attention “It belonged to various species of fish.”
“The fisherman?” Scott looked at Thompson, who felt like kicking himself, whilst Evans shared a secretive glance with Valkov before they all ran out to the cars…
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
“CLEAR!” Nicholas Saxxon was nowhere to be found at his house, but pictures of his targets littered each room.
“He’s already at the pier!” the unit chief shouted having just received Saxxon’s whereabouts from Barker. Each agent grabbed a picture of the UnSub’s target before tearing towards the seafront.
Caitlyn Grover tossed her glossy black tresses over her shoulder. She felt like she was being watched, but assumed it to be the devilish gazes of various men wandering over her as she wrapped a towel around her body, craving its warmth. A coarse hand rested on her bare shoulder causing her to turn and look upon the unshaven male who had appeared behind her. Something about the way he looked at her was unnerving.
“Can I help you?” Caitlyn glanced around, wondering if anyone was watching, or if anyone would realise something was wrong. She had seen this man out on a fishing boat before, but hadn’t taken much notice – she was on holiday, and had wanted to work on her tan. The male did not reply, but his thin lips crept up his face into a deranged smile as his hands came up around her neck, cutting off her air supply until her head began spinning.
“FREEZE!” A muscular auburn-haired man leapt from the pier, tackling Caitlyn’s attacker into the icy waters. Matthews pulled the woman close, explaining what was going on whilst Thompson dragged the UnSub and his agent from the water, passing Saxxon to the police to deal with whilst he handed Scott a towel.
Meanwhile, Mokuro watched from the side lines trying to tie up the loose ends in her mind.
“Ok, Saxxon I get. He’s an anti-social madman who killed and taunted the police for the thrill of doing so. But what about Rhys Garner and Carla Denham? Did they know? Where they concealing evidence?” Evans shook her head
“The only thing they were concealing was adultery. Miss Denham was afraid of being incriminated, so she denied everything. But Rhys Garner soon spilled when he thought he was going to go to jail for his wife’s murder.” Mokuro merely sighed. Even when they were investigating murder, loved ones still lied to protect their dirty little secrets.
~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~/~~~~~~~
“I’m sorry I ever doubted you.” Chief Wilkins repeated for the umpteenth time, shaking Thompson’s hand firmly. As the stoic male walked towards the cars, he could see there was still a clear rift between his team members. Mokuro, Valkov and Evans stood around one sleek black car whilst Matthews and Scott waited by the other. If not for the lack of practicality and professional appearance, Thompson would be half tempted to ask for a people carrier so that everyone was forced to remain together.
“Only two cases and already grudges are beginning to form.” he muttered “How is this team supposed to survive if it isn’t even coming together as a team?”
“Through understanding.” Thompson jumped and glared at the agent standing in front of him. He had been too busy with his thoughts to notice Valkov approaching. “Understanding takes time and patience, but we’ll get there in the end.”
“Sometimes the end seems to be very far away. Besides, I think I’m the only one on this team who doesn’t dislike any of you.” Valkov laughed at the implications and followed the unit chief’s gaze around the team
“I’m sure that isn’t true. A wise woman once told me that those who find nothing to dislike about each other are blind. Those who acknowledge their dislikes and still accept that person, flaws and all, those people are friends and team mates.” Thompson wondered where Valkov had gotten these words, especially as the agent was much younger than himself. Other than Mokuro, Thompson was sure Valkov was the youngest member of his team.
“Can you accept Scott’s flaws?”
“I’ll think about it. I’m not promising any miracles.” The ghost of a smile played on Thompsons lips at this parting comment. For a moment, the blonde male considered asking the team for drinks. They deserved them, after all, and in their line of work they had to function as a single unit. Yes, it would be a good idea.
“Hey, Valkov! Sure you don’t want to go hunting for the Kraken whilst you’re here?” Or not. He didn’t trust himself not to shoot Scott…