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Quick off the Mark
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Contents
Cover
Recent Titles by Susan Moody
Title Page
Copyright
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Recent Titles by Susan Moody
MISSELTHWAITE
FALLING ANGEL
RETURN TO THE SECRET GARDEN
LOSING NICOLA*
DANCING IN THE DARK*
LOOSE ENDS*
A FINAL RECKONING*
The Alex Quick Series
QUICK AND THE DEAD*
QUICK OFF THE MARK*
* available from Severn House
QUICK OFF THE MARK
An Alex Quick Mystery
Susan Moody
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2016 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
19 Cedar Road, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM2 5DA.
This eBook edition first published in 2016 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Trade paperback edition first published
in Great Britain and the USA 2017 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD
Copyright © 2016 by Susan Moody.
The right of Susan Moody to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8658-3 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-84751-760-9 (trade paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-826-1 (e-book)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland
PROLOGUE
By now the pain had been ratcheted up to such an extreme that he was jolting in and out of consciousness, head filled with a black blur of agony, edged with the crimson of blood which had seeped from the places where slices of his flesh had been removed. A brutal blow to his hammer-shattered knee sent him into another abyss of excruciating pain. His lips pulled back from what were left of his teeth. Blood dripped heavily into his mouth from his ruined nose.
And all the time, the voice – real or imagined? – intoned, ‘This is what it feels like.’
This was not interrogation, but punishment, pure and simple. He wondered at its extreme ferocity. What had he done? Did he deserve this? Some might say he did, but he’d been no worse than hundreds of others. So why him? Why now? OK, so he had sometimes been careless. Dangerously so. Criminally so, though it had not always been his fault. Not entirely. This level of brutality was not something he had ever encountered before. Never even come close to. Not personally. Not in Afghanistan or Somalia. Not in Kyoto. Not even in Hong Kong.
A sledgehammer smashed into his chest. Bones cracked. ‘This is what it feels like.’ He tried to scream, but he had howled so much over the past few hours that his lungs no longer had the capacity to fill with air and his throat was little more than a torn and ragged wound.
Pale images drifted. The decorated bone handle of the knife he’d once used to slit a man’s throat. A length of butterfly-embroidered brocade. His unknown father. Alex Quick’s fox-red hair. A girl he’d once had in Kabul, all milk-chocolate skin and terrified eyes.
He registered the noise of something mechanical being switched on. By now he was beyond fear, just abandoned to pain. He cringed at the racking torment as the electric drill bit into his hip bone. ‘This is what it feels like.’
Despite the clouds of agony, he was able to wonder if it had all been worth it. Able to decide that it probably had.
It had certainly meant a lot to him. Everything, really. Those who had it would never understand the hunger for money of those who did not have it, but wanted it. Poor Mother. He’d hated to see her weeping over the household bills when he and Dim were small. Now the money was so well concealed that they would probably never find it. His lips moved faintly. What irony. What a waste.
Death reappeared somewhere close. It was the drill again. The voice again. ‘This is what it …’ The pain was so excruciating that, as darkness gathered, as his eyes melted and bled tears, as his heart wavered, he was in no doubt that it was the last sensation he would ever feel.
ONE
‘Come along, Marlowe, stop bloody mucking about, will you!’
Major Norman Horrocks stared round his garden. Where had the wretched animal got to now? He’d never been a dog-lover in the first place, certainly not the sort who cootchy-cootchy-cooed with them (‘Oh, isn’t he sweet?’) or kissed them on the lips. Disgusting when you thought about where and what they licked and sniffed. Kissed? Kicked would be nearer the mark, long as nobody else was around. Mind you, he’d once owned a gun dog, best there ever was, pure-bred setter, called him Leo, not his pedigree name, of course, which was as long as your arm. But this ruddy little centipede …
He didn’t normally use such coarse language, especially when his next-door neighbour – Marlowe’s mistress – was at home, but she wasn’t today. Nor, sadly, would she ever be.
‘Marlowe!’ he shouted militarily. ‘Get yourself out here, sir. Quick, now. On the double.’ He slashed at some nettles by the garden gate with his walking stick (a present for his retirement from the regiment; nice gold band round the ferrule with his dates of service inscribed on it), and speared an empty crisp packet which had drifted down from the rubbish bin at the top of the lane. Bloody litter-louts, he thought sourly, sourness tending increasingly to be his default position. Bloody Marlowe. Marlowe, forsooth! All Nell Roscoe’s dogs had preposterous names: give him a Rex or a Towser any day. Still, Marlowe was better than her last one, unfortunately run over in the lane by an anonymous van. Never knew who, though Nell had her suspicions. Called it Dashiell, if you please. Dashiell … I ask you.
Nell Roscoe, rightful owner of the dog. Only had to go and get herself taken to the General Hospital a couple of months ago, didn’t she? Suppurating ulcers on her legs or some such, really didn’t need to know the details, thank you. Which had left Marlowe to be cared for by himself until such time as they brought her back home. At the time, God alone had known when that was likely to be, the way they were running hospitals these days, lying on a gurney the first three weeks, like as not,
nobody helping the poor old girl to the WC. Didn’t bear thinking about.
He paused. And now she never would be coming home. Just as well, really. Frankly, she’d never been the same since Lil did away with herself, after the child’s unexpected death. Upshot was, he’d done what he could to help out, which recently had included taking the dog Marlowe for its daily craps. And now … Hells bells.
‘Marlowe!’ he called, his voice gentler than before because when all was said and done, Nell had been a nice old biddy, always ready with the gin bottle and a Findus Shepherd’s Pie, and so what if half of it was horse meat? Nobody’s dropped dead from eating horse so far, don’t know why the newspapers got their knickers in such a twist about it. Even Princess Anne getting in on the act, pointing out the bloody Frogs do it all the time, and look at them, if you could bear to, all black berets and garlic, and anyway, he’d eaten far worse during his life in the military. ‘Marlowe,’ he called again. ‘Let’s be having you. Come on, boy. Look lively. Quick march!’
Marlowe emerged backwards from a bush which the Major was trying unsuccessfully to train into a facsimile of a peacock. When he’d moved into Rattrays (Rattrays? What kind of a name was that for a country cottage? Nell’s place next door was called Metcalfe … I ask you!) ten years ago, and absorbed its acre of unkempt grass and shapeless box hedges, he’d had a vision of exquisitely laid-out knot-gardens with orderly growths of herbs and aromatic plants, a water-garden, maybe a maze, and topiary which would astound and delight passers-by. Not just balls, cones and spirals but cats and cockerels, rabbits, tortoises. He’d seen a full size elephant-family once, on the lawn of a stately home he’d visited with his wife. Dragons, he’d seen elsewhere. A pop group, complete with guitars and drums. Huge cats. All made out of bushes of box.
‘Man’s ingenuity never ceases to amaze me,’ he’d said to Esther at the time. ‘You what?’ she’d responded. But his own topiarial efforts had been, he had to admit, something of a failure. One straggling ball, one tottery cone, and a peacock that might just as well have been a newspaper for all the resemblance it bore to a bird of any kind.
He walked along the lane, remembering other visions he’d had at the time they’d moved down here from Catterick. Esther in a longish sort of dirndl skirt, putting up preserves from garden produce, and gathering blackberries for jam. Himself breeding sheep, or maybe goats, keeping bees at the end of the garden, rows of little white hives, hat with a veil on it, Esther raising Buff Orpingtons, hatching eggs between her substantial breasts (a mental picture which never failed to rouse him, even now). Himself in a cherry-coloured waistcoat over a tattersall shirt, waxed jacket hanging on a hook behind the door, except Esther had told him he looked like a right ponce when he came down one morning in the waistcoat and shirt, and he hadn’t worn it since, not even after she passed away from stomach cancer. A sad end, really. She’d been a helluva girl when he married her, Anglo-Indian blood she’d told him at the time, beautiful as sin, all black eyes and crimson mouth, not to mention that waterfall of ebony hair halfway down her white back. Gorgeous.
‘These are moments of pure magnificence,’ he’d said to her once, looking at the knobs of her spine, the cataract of her hair, feeling something transcendent, far more uplifting than mere sexual desire.
‘You been at the whisky, Norm?’ she’d said.
That’d been years ago. To be honest, the years had not been kind to her.
Marlowe snuffled along beside him. Marlowe only came up to the Major’s ankle, step on the bloody animal if you weren’t careful, a bundle of ginger and white fur, always looked in need of a good barber. ‘Wouldn’t get away with that hairstyle in the Army,’ he said now, feeling something close to friendship with the little animal. ‘It’d be short back and sides before you could say clippers.’ After all these enforced days together, it was only to be expected. He had devised a way of smuggling the tiny creature into the hospital when he went to visit Nell, used to cheer the old girl up no end. A small bottle from the fridge, cunningly disguised as orange juice, although it was at least fifty per cent Gordons, used to cheer her up even more than the dog. All over now, of course, since she’d finally shuffled off this mortal whatsit.
Feeling melancholy, he started to sing. ‘Goodby-ee, goodby-ee,’ he carolled, slashing at the blackthorn on either side of the lane. ‘Wipe the tear, baby dear, from—’ Around him, all nature cowered breathlessly, stunned by the sound.
Coming towards him along the lane was a horse, Charabanc III (by Coach-Party out of Off To The Races), with a chignon-netted, black-helmeted woman up (the Major, an infantry officer who’d never been nearer a horse than a Dick Francis novel, loved using this kind of equine jargon).
‘Oh, it’s you, Major, making that infernal din,’ she said, leaning down and tapping him on the shoulder with her crop. ‘Charry nearly threw me when you started up.’
‘—your eye-ee,’ sang the Major firmly, tipping the brim of his hat, or at least raising his finger to where the brim would have been had he been wearing a hat, wishing Charabanc III had had the guts to go through with it. He wasn’t going to let the likes of Maggie Double-Barrel boss him around. If he wanted to sing, then he would jolly well sing.
‘I hear the Head of Music at the girls’ grammar school takes private pupils,’ Maggie said, bearing her yellow teeth in a grin that would have startled Charry even more than the Major’s singing. ‘I’m sure he’d take you on, he likes a challenge.’
Oh, piss orf, you old cow, thought the Major. ‘How’re the grandchildren?’ he asked. The two of them proceeded to exchange anecdotes about their grandchildren, all of them designed to indicate how clever, gifted, gorgeous and kind their own were, while Charabanc III gnawed at the grassy verge, occasionally showing the whites of his eyes or producing whiffling snorts.
Honour satisfied (the Major definitely the winner on points), the two of them parted. Where the lane forked, he took the lower road, which went past fields to the road leading onwards to the town and the sea, and paused to lean in a bucolic kind of way on a five-barred gate in order to gaze at the view. Had there been a grass-stem at hand for him to chew on, he might have picked one, but even if there had been, the Council had recently sprayed both sides of the road, and the Major had no wish to come down with some toxic disease; eyeballs turning yellow, like as not, tongue gone black, giant pustules starting up all over his body, nose falling off. He’d seen enough of that when he was growing up in Edmonton, thank you (Just kidding, of course). It was on service in the tropics – Senegal, Morocco – that he had indeed seen men with ghastly diseases; beriberi, dysentery, dengue fever and the like, great big swollen legs, family jewels so enlarged they needed a wheelbarrow to carry them around in, poor chaps, eyes swivelling like ping-pong balls. Horrible.
‘Ah,’ thought the Major. ‘This is the life.’ He took in a deep breath of sun-warmed country air, and wrinkled his nose. What the hell was that stink? Didn’t smell like manure. Nor dog poo. Marlowe was going bonkers inside the field on the other side of the hedge, whining and scrabbling and he yelled at him to shut up, not that the dog took a blind bit of notice. A black cloud of flies suddenly took to the air, buzzing like helicopters. The Major breathed in again, and bit his lip. The smell was all too familiar, a smell he’d experienced time and again during his army career. The stench of death.
He lifted the rectangular metal thingy which kept the gate shut, and trod over the deep ruts which criss-crossed the muddy entrance to the field (dried up now, of course, hadn’t been a drop of rain for weeks), until he could see down the line of the hedge to where Marlowe was barking, lifting a paw as he did so, then moving round the object of his attention, barking and lifting again. Even from this distance, the Major could tell that it was a body. He’d seen plenty of death in Africa, and later in Afghanistan (bloodthirsty little devils they were, too) and it was never a good experience, though death comes to us all, as Esther had told him when he stood teary-eyed beside her hospital bed, (‘and don’
t you forget it, Norm, could be you next.’).
Not so bad when the person had died relatively peacefully, or even like one of his superior officers, shot neatly through the head at his own desk, brains all over the wall behind him, gun tidily on the surface in front of him. Never did find out who was responsible, not that the investigating officers tried too hard, because the man was such an arrogant, self-righteous bastard, that the entire regiment had a motive, the general feeling being let sleeping colonels die.
As he approached closer, it became apparent that this corpse had been horribly mutilated before death. It lay on the rough grass at the edge of the plough, hidden from the road by the blackthorn hedge. It was semi-naked, cigarette burns everywhere, looked as though someone had carved it up like a Sunday joint, trousers pulled down to the knees (good-quality cavalry twill, the Major couldn’t help noticing) to display the fact that where there had once been a – ahem – penis, there was now merely a hole full of jellified black blood and flies. Coming nearer, the Major saw that the gashes in the chest had been carefully cleaned so that it was possible to make out that they actually spelled the word cheat.
Gawd help us, he thought, and what kind of cheat would that be? Hardly a game of Scrabble or Bridge, though possibly a poker game might rouse anger enough to lead to murder (chairs pushed back, guns drawn, “Why, ya lousy stinkin’ cheat, take that!”). What about adultery? Or a drug deal gone wrong? Lies told, money embezzled, or – the Major’s imagination surged wildly – a vendetta?
Not killed here, though, he thought. There was no blood on the grassy edge of the field, so the dirty deed must have taken place elsewhere. Would have to have been somewhere isolated so you couldn’t hear the screams – an empty barn, perhaps, or that derelict warehouse sort of place more or less hidden in the woods alongside the Longbury Road. Then loaded into a van, brought here and tossed over the hedge, maybe even two of them in on it, work of a minute, no CCTV cameras either, not out here, so no danger of identification, then back behind the wheel and away, no one the wiser. Not a dignified death, in any sense of the word.