The Camelot Code

The Camelot Code Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Camelot Code Read Online Free PDF
Author: Sam Christer
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers, Action & Adventure
had too much to drink.’
    He stretches out a hand and grabs hers. ‘Seriously, Mitz.’ I’ve always been attracted to you. Even when I met Ruthy, it was you I wanted to be with.’
    She pulls her hand free and stands. ‘I’m going to pretend I never heard that.’
    He gets up and slips between her and the door. ‘Why? Don’t tell me you don’t feel the same way. I’ve seen how you look at me. How you’ve
always
looked at me.’
    ‘Back off, Jack. All you’ve ever seen is what’s in your mind.’
    ‘Hey’ – he sounds offended – ‘a woman like you should be grateful for attention from a man like me.’
    Mitzi can’t believe her ears. ‘What?’
    He lumbers into her personal space, puts a hand to her cheek and breathes beer into her face. ‘I’ve been good to you and your girls. No harm you being a little good back.’ He pulls her close.
    She flips her arms outward and pushes him away. ‘This never happened.’
    He grabs her again. ‘But it should.’
    Mitzi whips his wrist behind his back and slams him against the wall. She kicks out his right leg, so he’s left spread-eagled and eating brickwork. ‘
Never
happened, Jack.’ She pulls on his wrist and gets a grunt. ‘You never said anything and you never ended up like this.’ She kicks his leg wider until he face-slides down the wall.
    The patio door makes a loud shushing noise as she slides it open, enters the vault of a lounge and slams it again. Before heading to the stairs, she takes one look back at the sorry heap out on the terrace and then heads to bed.
    What she misses on the way up is her sister.
    Ruth has been stood in the shadows of the lounge watching them both.

10
     
KENSINGTON, MARYLAND
     
    Irish sits alone at the bar drinking whisky.
    He can’t be bothered to eat. Couldn’t care less about going home.
    What he wants is to get blind drunk.
    He needs the alcohol to flush the toxins of murder out of his body. Clear his head of the images of the old man with his staring eyes and his opened-up stomach twitching with maggots. And he needs it quickly, before the fragile dam walls in his memory break and the other horrors burst through.
    The ones from the black day.
    It’s eight years since he took a deep breath and lifted the lid of a crappy chest freezer in a suspect’s basement. He’d expected the worst. Knew it would be bad. But nothing had prepared him for what lay inside.
    ‘Again.’ He slams the shot glass down. ‘Double.’
    The bartender knows better than to expect manners. Tomorrow or the next night, when Irish comes in sober, he’ll tip him big and apologize. Which is more than most people do.
    The cop raises a hand to acknowledge the arrival of another pale amber vial of Slaney Malt.
    Everything is still too clear.
    He welcomes the tingle of the ten-year-old whisky against his lips. It goes down his throat like a trail of lit petrol then starts a comforting fire in his gut.
    Sophie Hudson’s face swims to mind – the moment when she realized the cross was missing. How can a man get killed for a crucifix? How much could it possibly be worth? Who would buy such a thing and what would they do with it?
    He feels the start of a sneeze and grabs a handkerchief from his pocket. The explosion is so hard it leaves blood on the dirty cotton. Must have picked up a cold from the damned store clerk. It’s the last thing he wants.
    ‘Again.’ Another bang of glass on wood.
    The bartend gives him a dark look as he pours another.
    ‘Amir Emmanuel Goldman.’ Irish raises his refill high. ‘God bless you and’ – he grasps for something appropriate – ‘and may your fucking lousy killer rot in hell.’
    He throws back the whisky and bangs the glass down.
    Now he waits. The shot hits his stomach like gasoline in a volcano. His head rocks. Vision blurs. Tongue goes numb.
    Drunkenness. At last, it is coming. Horribly late. But like a much-loved friend, always welcome.
    Irish pulls out a wad of dollars and peels off too much.
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