There was something unnatural about all that morbid activity on such a beautiful day, Annie thought, as if it were merely some sort of exercise or practice run. But a man was dead; that much she knew.
Counting her blessings, she realized that they had managed to get this far without reporters or TV cameras showing up.
The kids hadn’t known much. About the only piece of interesting information Winsome had gleaned from them was that when they had first approached the shallows along the riverside path from Eastvale at A L L T H E C O L O R S O F D A R K N E S S
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about one o’clock, just after lunch, one of them had chased another up the slope and there had been no sign of the hanging man. It was three-seventeen when the 999 call had been logged, which gave a window of just over two hours. With any luck, the SOCOs and Dr. Glendenning, the Home Office pathologist, would establish cause of death pretty quickly, and she wouldn’t have to watch her weekend go down the tubes, as she had so many times in the past.
Not that she had any grandiose plans, only house-cleaning, washing, lunch with an old colleague from Harkside Station on Saturday.
But over the last couple of months, Annie had started taking more control of her life, and she valued her hours alone. She had cut down on her drinking and started exercising more, even going so far as to join the Eastvale fitness center. She also spent more time on yoga and meditation at home, and she was feeling so much the better for it all.
DI Stefan Nowak slipped off his face mask and goggles, ducked under the tape and walked toward Annie and Winsome over the stepping plates that now marked the common approach path to and from the scene. His pace was unhurried, but then it always was. Annie was glad that he had finally got his promotion to detective inspector and had been appointed crime scene manager. Sometimes the invasion of police work by business terminology made her cynical—it seemed to be all managers, executives and vision statements these days—but she had to admit that a crime scene was a bit like a business in some ways, and it did have to be carefully managed.
Winsome whistled “Who Are You?”
Nowak rolled his eyes and ignored her. “You’re in luck,” he said.
“Suicide?”
“The postmortem should verify our findings, but from what Dr.
Burns and I saw, the only wound on his throat was that caused by the rope, and it was in exactly the place you’d expect it to be. Of course, there’s no saying he wasn’t poisoned first, and we’ll certainly ask for a full toxicology report, but there are no visible signs of serious physical trauma to the body other than those that can be related to the hanging. I take it Dr. Glendenning is back on the job?”
“Yes,” said Annie. “He’s back. What about all the blood, if that’s what it was?”
6 P E T E R
R O B I N S O N
“It was. We’ve taken samples, of course. The only thing is . . .”
Nowak frowned.
“Yes?”
“It
“Soon as you can,” Annie said. “The rope?”
“Cheap nylon washing line, the kind you can buy almost anywhere.”
“And the knot?”
“Perfectly consistent with the kind of knot a potential suicide might tie. Hardly a hangman’s knot. You wouldn’t even have to be a Boy Scout. It was on the left side, by the way, which indicates a left-handed person, and given that he was wearing his wristwatch on his right hand . . . I’d say all the indications we have here point to a suicide by hanging.”
“Any idea who he was—a name, address?”
“No,” said Nowak. “He didn’t have a wallet with him.”
“Keys?”
“No. It’s my guess that he drove out here and left them in his car, maybe in his jacket. He wouldn’t have had any further use for them, would he?”
“I suppose not,” said Annie. “We’ll have to find out who his next of kin is. Any signs of a suicide note?”
“Not on or near him, no. Again, it’s possible he left something in the car.”
“We’ll check when we find it. I’d also like to know what his movements were this afternoon. As far as we know, he killed himself sometime between one and three. Suicide or not, there are a few gaps we have to try to f ill in before we go home. Most of all, we need to know who he was.”
“That’s easy,” said one of SOCOs, a civilian soil expert by the name of Tim Mallory.
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Annie hadn’t noticed him come up behind them. “It is?” she asked.
“Sure. I don’t know his second name, but everyone called him Mark.”