The Neighbor

The Neighbor Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Neighbor Read Online Free PDF
Author: Lisa Gardner
been alive and well in her own kitchen. And then …
    D.D.’s gaze went to the computer, a relatively new-looking Dell desktop sitting on top of the little red parlor table. She sighed.
    “Turned on?” she asked with barely disguised longing.
    “Haven’t wanted to tempt myself,” Miller answered.
    The computer was tricky. They definitely wanted it, but definitely needed the husband’s permission, as he had a right to privacy. Something to negotiate, assuming they found some ammunition to negotiate with.
    D.D. turned to the tiny, narrow staircase ascending from the back side of the kitchen.
    “Evidence techs already up there?” she asked.
    “Yep.”
    “Where’d they park the van?”
    “Five blocks over, by a pub. I’m feeling coy.”
    “I like it. Have they processed the stairs?”
    “First thing I had them do,” Miller assured her. Then added: “Look, Sergeant, we’ve been here since six A.M. At one point, I had ten officers swarming the house, checking basements, bedrooms, closets, and shrubbery. Only thing we have to show for it is one broken lamp and one missing quilt in the master bedroom. So I sent the evidence techs upstairs to do what they gotta do, and the rest of the guys out into the broader universe to either bring me back Sandra Jones or some evidence of whatever the hell happened to her. We know the basics. They’re just not getting us anywhere.”
    D.D. sighed again, grabbed the handrail, and headed up the chocolate-painted stairs.
    Upstairs was as cozy as the downstairs. D.D. had to fight the urge to duck, as a pair of old light fixtures brushed the top of her hair. The hallway boasted hardwood floors, colored the same dark chocolate as the stairs. Over the years, dust had become trapped in the tight corners of the floorboards, with a couple tumbleweeds of fine hair and dander drifting across her footsteps. Pet, D.D. guessed, though no one had mentioned one yet.
    She paused long enough to look back the way she came, a parade of footsteps mixing and mingling in an indistinct blur against the dusty floor. Good thing the floor had already been processed, she thought. Then frowned, as another thought struck her and made her immediately, acutely concerned.
    She almost opened her mouth to say something, then at the last minute thought better of it. Better to wait. Get all the ducks in a row. Quickly.
    They passed a cramped bathroom that had been decorated in the same fifties motif as the kitchen. Across from it was a modest bedroom with a single-sized bed covered in a pink comforter, tucked under the heavily slanted eaves of the room. The ceiling and eaves had been painted a bright blue, and dotted with various clouds, birds, and butterflies. Definitely a little girl’s room, and just cuteenough that D.D. felt a pang for little Clarissa Jane Jones, who had gone to bed nestled inside such a pretty sanctuary, only to wake up to a nightmarish parade of dark-suited officials traipsing through her home.
    D.D. didn’t linger in the bedroom, but continued down the hall, to the master bedroom.
    Two evidence techs were in front of the windows. They’d just pulled the shades and were now shooting the room with blue light. D.D. and Miller stayed respectfully in the hallway, as the first white-garbed figure scanned the walls, ceiling, and floor for signs of bodily fluids. As spots emerged, the second figure marked them with a placard, for further analysis. The process took about ten minutes. They didn’t do the bed. No doubt the sheets and blankets had already been rolled up to be processed at the lab.
    The first figure snapped up the blinds, turned on the surviving bedside lamp, then greeted D.D. with a cheery, “Hiya, Sergeant.”
    “How goes the battle, Marge?”
    “Winning as always.”
    D.D. stepped forward to shake Marge’s hand, then the hand of the second evidence tech, Nick Crawford. They all went way back, spending too much time at these kinds of scenes.
    “What do you think?” D.D. asked
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Cary Grant

Marc Eliot

The Academie

Amy Joy

Another Man Will

Daaimah S. Poole

Dreams Unleashed

Linda Hawley

Jessica

Bryce Courtenay

The Shadowboxer

Noel; Behn

Hannah Howell

A Taste of Fire