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Written in Bone

Simon Beckett




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  WRITTEN IN BONE

  Also by Simon Beckett

  T H E C H E M I S T RY O F D E AT H

  WRITTEN

  IN BONE

  Simon Beckett

  D E L A C O R T E P R E S S

  written in bone

  A Delacorte Press Book /October 2007

  Published by arrangement with Transworld Publishers Published by Bantam Dell

  A Division of Random House, Inc.

  New York, New York

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved

  Copyright © 2007 by Simon Beckett

  Book design by Lynn Newmark

  Delacorte Press is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc., and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Beckett, Simon.

  Written in bone / Simon Beckett.

  p. cm.

  eISBN: 978-0-440-33720-1

  1. Forensic anthropologists—Fiction. 2. Murder—Investigation—Fiction. 3. Scotland—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6052.E286W75 2007

  823'.914—dc22

  2007017215

  www.bantamdell.com v1.0

  For Hilary

  CH APTER 1

  GIVEN THE RIGHT temperature, everything burns. Wood. Clothing.

  People.

  At 250° Celsius, flesh will ignite. Skin blackens and splits. The subcutaneous fat starts to liquefy, like grease in a hot pan. Fuelled by it, the body starts to burn. Arms and legs catch first, acting as kindling to the greater mass of the torso. Tendons and muscle fibres contract, causing the burning limbs to move in an obscene parody of life. Last to go are the organs. Cocooned in moistness, they often remain even after the rest of the soft tissue has been consumed. But bone is, quite literally, a different matter. Bone stubbornly resists all but the hottest fires. And even when the carbon has burned from it, leaving it as dead and lifeless as pumice, bone will still retain its shape. Now, though, it is an insubstantial ghost of its former self that will easily crumble; the final bastion of life transformed to ash. It’s a process that, with few variations, follows the same inexorable pattern. 2

  Simon Beckett

  Yet not always.

  The peace of the old cottage is broken by a footfall. The rotting door is pushed open, its rusted hinges protesting the disturbance. Daylight falls into the room, then is blocked out as a shadow fills the doorway. The man ducks his head to see into the darkened interior. The old dog with him hesitates, its senses already alerting it to what ’s within. Now the man, too, pauses, as though reluctant to cross the threshold. When the dog begins to venture inside he recalls it with a word.

  ‘Here.’

  Obediently, the dog returns, glancing nervously at the man with eyes grown opaque with cataracts. As well as the scent from inside the cottage, the animal can sense its owner’s nervousness.

  ‘Stay.’

  The dog watches, anxiously, as the man advances further into the derelict cottage. The odour of damp envelops him. And now another smell is making itself known. Slowly, almost reluctantly, the man crosses to a low door set in the back wall. It has swung shut. He puts out his hand to push it open, then pauses again. Behind him, the dog gives a low whine. He doesn’t hear it. Gently, he eases open the door, as though fearful of what he ’s going to see. But at first he sees nothing. The room is dim, the only light coming from a small window whose glass is cracked and cobwebbed with decades of dirt. In the mean light that bleeds through, the room retains its secrets for a few moments longer. Then, as the man’s eyes adjust, details begin to emerge. And he sees what’s lying in the room.

  He sucks in a breath as though punched, taking an involuntary step backwards.

  ‘Oh, Jesus Christ.’

  The words are soft, but seem unnaturally loud in the still confines of the cottage. The man’s face has paled. He looks around, as if fearful he ’ll find someone there with him. But he ’s alone. He backs out of the doorway, as if reluctant to turn away from

  WRITTEN IN BONE

  3

  the object on the floor. Only when the warped door has creaked shut again, cutting off his view of the other room, does he turn his back. His gait is unsteady as he goes outside. The old dog greets him, but is ignored as the man reaches inside his coat and fumbles out a pack of cigarettes. His hands are trembling, and it takes three attempts for him to ignite the lighter. He draws the smoke deep into his lungs, a nub of glowing ash chasing the paper back towards the filter. By the time the cigarette is finished his trembling has steadied.

  He drops the stub on to the grass and treads it out before bending down to retrieve it. Then, slipping it into his coat pocket, he takes a deep breath and goes to make the phone call.

  I was on my way to Glasgow airport when the call came. It was a foul February morning, brooding grey skies and a depressing mizzle driven by cold winds. The east coast was being lashed by storms, and although they hadn’t worked their way this far inland yet, it didn’t look promising.

  I only hoped the worst would hold off long enough for me to catch my flight. I was on my way back to London, having spent the previous week first recovering then examining a body from a moorland grave out on the Grampian highlands. It had been a thankless task. The crystalline frost had turned the moors and peaks to iron, as breathtakingly cold as it was beautiful. The mutilated victim had been a young woman, who still hadn’t been identified. It was the second such body I’d been asked to recover from the Grampians in recent months. As yet it had been kept out of the press, but no one on the investigating team was in any doubt that the same killer was responsible for both. One who would kill again if he wasn’t caught, and at the moment that wasn’t looking likely. What made it worse was that, although the state of decomposition made it hard to be sure, I was convinced that the mutilations weren’t post-mortem. So all in all, it had been a gruelling trip, and I was looking 4

  Simon Beckett

  forward to going home. For the past eighteen months I’d been living in London, based at the forensic science department of university. It was a temporary contract that gave me access to lab facilities until I found something more permanent, but in recent weeks I’d spent far more time working out in the field than I had in my office. I’d promised Jenny, my girlfriend, that we ’d be able to spend some time together after this. It wasn’t the first time I’d made that promise, but this time I was determined to keep it.

  When my phone rang I thought it would be her, calling to make sure I was on my way home. But the number on the caller display wasn’t one I recognised. When I answered, the voice at the other end was gruff and no-nonsense.

  ‘Sorry to disturb you, Dr Hunter. I’m Detective Superintendent Graham Wallace, at Northern Force Headquarters in Inverness. Can you spare me a few minutes?’

  He had the tone of someone used to getting his own way, and a harsh accent that spoke of Glasgow tenements rather than the softer cadences of Inverness.

  ‘Just a few. I’m on my way to catch a flight.’

  ‘I know. I’ve just spoken to DCI Allan Campbell at Grampian Police, and he told me you’d finished up here. I’m glad I’ve caught you.’

  Campbell was the Senior Investigating Officer I’d been working with on the body recovery. A decent man and a good officer, he found it difficult to separate himself from his work. That was something I could appreciate.

  I glanced at the taxi driver, conscious of being overheard. ‘What can I do
for you?’

  ‘I’m looking for a favour.’ Wallace clipped the words out, as though each one was costing more than he liked to pay. ‘You’ll have seen about the train crash this morning?’

  I had. At my hotel before I’d left I’d watched the news reports of a West Coast commuter express that had derailed after hitting a van left on the line. From the TV footage it looked bad, the train carriages lying mangled and twisted by the track. No one knew yet how many people had been killed.

  WRITTEN IN BONE

  5

  ‘We ’ve got everyone we can up there now, but it ’s chaos at the moment,’ Wallace continued. ‘There ’s a chance the derailment was deliberate, so we ’re having to treat the whole area as a crime scene. We ’re calling in help from other forces, but right now we ’re running at full stretch.’

  I thought then I could guess what was coming. According to the news reports, some of the carriages had caught fire, which would make victim identification both a priority and a forensic nightmare. But before that could even begin, the bodies would have to be recovered, and from what I’d seen that was still some way off.

  ‘I’m not sure how much help I’d be at the moment,’ I told him.

  ‘It isn’t the crash I’m calling about,’ he said, impatiently. ‘We ’ve got a report of a fire death out in the Western Isles. Small island called Runa, in the Outer Hebrides.’

  I hadn’t heard of it, but that was hardly surprising. All I knew about the Outer Hebrides was that the islands were some of the most remote outposts of the UK, miles from anywhere off the northwest coast of Scotland.

  ‘Suspicious?’ I asked.

  ‘Doesn’t sound like it. Might be suicide, but more likely to be a drunk or a vagrant who fell asleep too close to a campfire. Dog walker found it at an abandoned croft and called it in. He ’s a retired DI, lives out there now. I’ve worked with him. Used to be a good man.’

  I wondered if the used to be was significant. ‘So what else did he say about it?’

  There was a beat before he replied. ‘Just that it ’s badly burned. But I don’t want to pull resources away from a major incident unless I have to. A couple of the local boys from Stornoway are going out by ferry later today, and I’d like you to go with them and take a look. See if you think it’s low priority, or if I need to send a SOC team. I’d like an expert assessment before I press the panic button, and Allan Campbell says you’re bloody good.’

  The attempt at flattery sat awkwardly with his bluff manner. I’d noticed the hesitation when I’d asked about the body, too, and wondered 6

  Simon Beckett

  if there was something he wasn’t telling me. But if Wallace thought there was anything suspicious about the death, he ’d be sending a Scene of Crime team, train crash or not.

  The taxi was almost at the airport. I had every reason to say no. I’d only just finished working on one major investigation, and this sounded fairly mundane: the sort of everyday tragedy that never makes it into the newspapers. I thought about having to tell Jenny that I wouldn’t be back today after all. Given the amount of time I’d spent away recently, I knew that wouldn’t go down well. Wallace must have sensed my reluctance. ‘Should only take a couple of days, including getting out there. The thing is, it sounds as if there might be something . . . odd about it.’

  ‘I thought you said it wasn’t suspicious?’

  ‘It isn’t. At least, nothing I’ve heard makes me think it is. Look, I don’t want to say too much, but that’s why I’d like an expert such as yourself to take a look.’

  I hate being manipulated. Even so, I couldn’t deny my curiosity had been aroused.

  ‘I wouldn’t ask if we weren’t hard pressed right now,’ Wallace added, turning the screw another notch.

  Outside the rain-smeared taxi window I saw a road sign saying the airport was approaching. ‘I’ll have to get back to you,’ I said.

  ‘Give me five minutes.’

  He didn’t like that, but he could hardly object. I rang off, biting my lip for a moment before dialling a number I knew off by heart. Jenny’s voice came on the line. I smiled at the sound of it, even though I wasn’t looking forward to the conversation we were about to have.

  ‘David! I was just on my way to work. Where are you?’

  ‘On my way to the airport.’

  I heard her laugh. ‘Thank God for that. I thought you were phoning to say you weren’t coming back today after all.’

  I felt my stomach sink. ‘Actually that’s what I’m calling about,’ I said. ‘The thing is, I’ve just been asked to go on another job.’

  ‘Oh.’

  WRITTEN IN BONE

  7

  ‘It ’s just for a day or two. In the Outer Hebrides. But there ’s no one else to do it right now.’ I stopped myself from explaining about the train crash, knowing it would sound as though I was making excuses. There was a pause. I hated the way the laughter had gone from Jenny’s voice. ‘So what did you say?’

  ‘That I’d let them know. I wanted to talk to you first.’

  ‘Why? We both know you’ve already made up your mind.’

  I didn’t want this to develop into an argument. I glanced at the cab driver again.

  ‘Look, Jenny . . .’

  ‘You mean you haven’t?’

  I hesitated.

  ‘That ’s what I thought,’ she said.

  ‘Jenny . . .’

  ‘I’ve got to go. I’ll be late for work.’

  There was a click as she hung up. I sighed. The day wasn’t getting off to a good start. So call her back and say you’ll turn it down. My finger poised over the phone.

  ‘Don’t worry, pal. My wife ’s always giving me a hard time too,’

  the taxi driver said over his shoulder. ‘She ’ll get over it, eh?’

  I made a non-committal comment. In the distance I could see a plane taking off from the airport. The driver indicated for the turn as I keyed in the number. It was answered on the first ring.

  ‘How do I get there?’ I asked Wallace.

  CH APTER 2

  I SPEND MOST of my working day with the dead. The long dead, sometimes. I’m a forensic anthropologist. It’s a field of expertise, and a fact of life, that most people prefer not to confront until they have to. For a while I was one of them. When my wife and daughter were killed in a car crash, working in a field that reminded me every day of what I’d lost was too painful. So I became a GP, a doctor of medicine tending to the living rather than the dead.

  But then events occurred that forced me to take up my original vocation once again. My calling, you might say. Part pathology, part archaeology, what I do goes beyond either. Because even after human biology has broken down, when what was once a life is reduced to corruption, decay and old, dry bones, the dead can still bear witness. They can still tell a story, if only you know how to interpret it. That ’s what I do. Coax the dead to tell their story.

  Wallace had obviously anticipated that I wouldn’t turn him down. A seat had already been booked for me on a flight to

  WRITTEN IN BONE

  9

  Lewis, the main island in the Outer Hebrides. The flight was delayed by almost an hour because of bad weather, so I sat in the departure lounge, trying not to watch as the London flight I should have been on was called, closed, and finally disappeared from the board. It was a bumpy ride, whose only redeeming feature was that it was short. The day was half gone by the time I caught a taxi from the airport to the ferry terminal at Stornoway, a dour working town still largely dependent on the fishing industry. The dock where I was dropped off was misty and cold, pungent with the usual harbour fug of diesel and fish. I’d been expecting to board one of the big car ferries that belched smoke into the rainy sky above the grey harbour, but the boat I found myself standing before looked more like a small fishing vessel than anything meant to carry passengers. Only the distinctive presence of a police Range Rover taking up most of the deck told me I was at the right place.

>   A boarding ramp led up to it, rocking queasily in the heavy swell. A uniformed police sergeant was standing on the concrete quayside at the bottom, hands stuffed into the pockets of his coat. His cheeks and nose had the permanent flush of broken capillaries. Pouchy eyes regarded me balefully over a salt and pepper moustache as I wrestled with my bag and flight case.

  ‘You Dr Hunter? I’m Sergeant Fraser,’ he informed me, gruffly. There was no first name, and his hands remained in his pockets. He spoke with a hard, almost nasal burr, very different to the mainland Scottish accents I’d heard. ‘We ’ve been waiting for you to turn up.’

  With that, he went back up the ramp, making no offer to help with my heavy luggage. I hefted the shoulder bag and aluminium flight case and started up after him. The ramp was wet and slippery, rising and falling unevenly with the slap of the waves. I struggled to keep my footing, trying to time my steps with the unsteady motion. Then someone was trotting down the ramp to help. A young uniformed constable grinned as he took the flight case from my hand.

  ‘Here, I’ll take that.’

  I didn’t argue. He went over to the Range Rover strapped to the deck and loaded the case into the back.

  10

  Simon Beckett

  ‘What have you got in here, a body?’ he asked, cheerfully. I put my bag in with the aluminium case. ‘No, it just feels like it. Thanks.’

  ‘No problem.’ He couldn’t have been much older than twenty. He had a friendly, open face, and his uniform looked neat even in the rain. ‘I’m PC McKinney, but just call me Duncan.’

  ‘David Hunter.’

  His handshake was enthusiastic, as though to make up for Fraser’s lack. ‘So you the forensic man?’

  ‘Afraid so.’

  ‘Great! I mean, not great, but . . . well, you know. Anyway, let ’s get out of the rain.’

  The passenger cabin was a glassed-in section below the wheelhouse. Outside it, Fraser was talking heatedly to a bearded man in oilskins. Behind him a tall teenage boy, face rippled with acne, looked on sullenly as Fraser jabbed the air with a finger.