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Authors: Rhys Bowen

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BOOK: Evanly Bodies
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Evan jotted down names of dealers who had sold bullets for that particular pistol recently. One to a member of a gun club
in greater London. One to a collector in Newport, South Wales. Both men licensed. And Newport was close enough to be promising.
Evan was about to follow up when Wingate's head came around the computer room door.

"Bragg wants you on the double," he hissed.

"What now? Has he actually turned up something?" Evan hastened to his feet.

"More than that," Wingate said. "There's been another murder."

Bragg was waiting impatiently, standing beside the table in the office where they had previously met.

"Right, lads. In the car," he barked. "I'll explain as we drive."

They followed him down the stairs at a great rate and out into a waiting squad car.

"Another homicide, sir?" Wingate asked. "Similar modus operandi?"

"Do we always have to have your public school education thrust down our throats, Wingate?" Bragg said wearily. "As to whether
the crime had the same trademarks, I can't tell you yet. For once the call has just come in, and we were on the spot. A young
woman called Megan Owens. Lives on one of those new housing estates outside Rhyl. She arrived home from doing the shopping
to find her husband lying in a pool of blood. We've got the doctor and forensics both on their way, and hopefully we'll get
there first this time. Put your foot down, Evans."

Evan obeyed, feeling the rush of excitement that was always present when he was on his way to a crime. Rhyl was one of the
string of seaside towns that straggled the North Wales coastline. It had long been popular with budget holidaymakers, filling
the entertainment needs of the workers in Manchester and Liverpool with arcades, dodgems, splash pools, and dances at the
Rhyl pavilion. It lacked the faded charm of the Llandudno esplanade or the historical majesty of Conwy and Caernarfon. On
this cloudy autumn morning the effect was just plain dreary, as Evan drove past factories, warehouses, and plenty of newly
built housing developments. It was on the grandly named Prince of Wales Crescent in one of these new housing estates that
the Owens lived. A modest, two-story semidetached home, flat fronted, made of yellow brick and wood facing, just like the
one next to it and the rest of the street.

A squad car from the local police station was already outside, and the crime scene had already been secured. The fresh-faced
female constable standing guard looked green around the gills. She'd probably had a peek at what lay inside, Evan thought.

"Is anyone with the widow?" Bragg asked.

"Yes, Sergeant Hopkins," she said. Then timidly, "Excuse me, sir, but who are you?"

"DI Bragg. The senior officer assigned to this case," he said. "Do you need to check my warrant card?"

"Oh no, sir. I saw you arrive in a police car," she said.

"Make sure you keep everyone well away. We don't want any gawkers. And don't let any reporters anywhere near the house. Tell
them there will be a statement later," Bragg said. "Come on, you lot. Let's go and see what we've got here."

They walked up the front path beside a sad-looking lawn. Gardening was clearly not the hobby of the occupants here. Bragg
pushed the front door open and went in. The kitchen door ahead of them was open and they spotted the back of a man in blue
uniform. He turned when he heard them.

"Are you the blokes in charge? I'm glad you've got here. It's been giving me the creeps being in the house with him."

"DI Bragg," the detective introduced himself. "Let's take a look at what we've got."

"From what it appears, sir," the sergeant began, "I'd guess that somebody shot him through the open window."

"You haven't moved him or touched anything, have you?" Bragg barked.

"Oh no, sir. He was so clearly dead when I got here. I don't know whether his wife tried to move him. I was just using my
powers of observation."

"Quite correctly, as it turns out," Bragg said. "Now be a good lad and wait for the doctor and forensics to get here while
we have a look. There's not enough room to swing a cat in here."

He went through into a tiny box of a kitchen. It was neatly designed with built-in cabinets down one wall, cooker and sink
along another. Squeezed in by the window was the smallest of dinette tables with two chairs. It was across this table that
the body was sprawled. Evan could see that he was wearing a dark green T-shirt and jeans. He was still half sitting on one
of the chairs, which had obviously stopped him from sliding down to the floor. Blood had spattered everywhere, spattering
those new white cabinets and even the ceiling above.

"I'd say this one was shot at closer range, wouldn't you?" Bragg remarked, stepping nearer gingerly. "Literally blew his brains
out."

"Maybe you should wait for the tech boys to get here, sir," Wingate suggested. "You could be disturbing the blood-spatter
patterns."

"I know what I'm doing, Wingate," Bragg said, but he retreated to the hallway.

"The back window's still open this time," he said. "Let's go and take a look outside. Not the back door, Pritchard," he bawled,
army fashion. "We don't want to disturb any evidence, do we? We'll approach from the front."

They went back through the front door, around to the right side of the house. On this side there was a narrow concrete driveway,
leading to one of those free-standing prefab garages. A Ford Festiva was parked in front of the garage. A side gate, between
the house and garage, led through to the back garden. The gate was open and Bragg led them through this way. It opened onto
a narrow concrete area with the house on one side of it and the garage on the other. Some straggly bushes had been planted
in front of the garage, in an attempt to disguise what was a very ugly building.

It appeared that Megan Owens had carried her groceries through this way from the car directly into the kitchen. This was confirmed
as they saw several shopping bags lying on the step outside the kitchen door. She had put down her bags to open the back door,
then seen what lay inside and forgotten about them. Bragg stepped around them.

"Another easy target," he said. "You could stand between the bushes and the garage and not be seen, then step out and take
a clear shot through that window."

Evan looked around the back garden. It was quite long and narrow, with nothing more than some more straggly bushes, a patch
of lawn, and a clothesline. It backed onto a similar garden belonging to the house behind. The gunman would have been well
hidden, standing between house and garage. Evan wasn't even sure if anyone would have seen anything from an adjacent upstairs
window.

"Do you want me to go and see if anyone is home in the houses on either side?" Evan asked. "They might have had the only view
of the shooting. The gunman would have been pretty well hidden between the house and garage, wouldn't he?"

"Let's talk to the widow first and see what she's got to say," Bragg said. "Come on. Back inside before we mess up any footprints."

Like a row of ducklings, Evan thought again. As they came around to the front of the house the police doctor was just getting
out of his car.

"This is getting to be a habit," he said dryly. "Nasty business. We're dealing with a wacko-a really sick mind, if you ask
me."

"Take the doctor through to the kitchen and stay with him, Wingate," Bragg said. "Pritchard, you go and see if the neighbors
are home and whether they heard or saw anything. Evans, come with me. I take it the wife's upstairs in her bedroom?"

This was directed at the sergeant, who still hung about awkwardly in the hallway.

"Yes, sir. I would have stayed with her, but she didn't want me there."

"Didn't want you there? Good God, man, it's not what they want. What if she tries to commit suicide from grief and shock?"

"Sorry, sir. I just thought . . ." the sergeant began but Bragg had already pushed past him, taking the stairs two at a time.

The bedroom was just big enough to fit in a double bed and a chest of drawers. Luckily there was a built-in wardrobe down
one wall; there would have been no space for a freestanding one. The bedroom furniture was white and looked like the Scandinavian
type you assemble yourself, but an attempt had been made to make the room pretty with a lilac duvet cover and flowery curtains.
Megan Owens had been sitting on the edge of the bed and jumped up as she heard them. Evan got a shock when he saw how extremely
young she was. Hardly more than a teenager. She was wearing jeans and a Gap sweatshirt. Her face was free of makeup, and she
could still easily ride for half fare on the busses if she'd wanted to. A pretty little thing too-small elfin face and dark
hair pulled back into a ponytail. She was ashen white, and she clearly had been crying.

"I'm Detective Inspector Bragg, North Wales Police, Major Crimes Unit," Bragg said quietly. "This is Detective Constable Evans.
Do you feel up to answering a few questions? We want to get to the truth here, don't we? For his sake."

She nodded without speaking.

"All right. Sit down, or lie down if you feel more comfortable. Now take us through the morning until you came home and found
your husband's body. Every little thing you can remember. You got up when?"

"I got up around seven thirty," she said. "I made some tea. Did some housework. Put a load in the washing machine."

"And your husband? What's his name, by the way?"

"Terry. Terrance William Owens like his dad." She gulped back a sob as she said the words.

"What time did Terry get up?"

"About nine thirty, maybe."

"Was he on a late shift?"

"No, he was unemployed, and it was really getting to him. He couldn't be bothered to do anything, not even get up in the mornings."

"So he got up at nine thirty."

"Maybe a little later. I told him I was going out shopping because we were out of milk and eggs, and he got a bit upset about
there being no eggs because he wanted an egg for breakfast. But I told him he'd just have to have cornflakes or wait until
I got back from the shops. He got upset really easily recently. It was the stress of being out of work, you know. It's not
good for a man."

"So you went to the shops and came back when?"

"I didn't exactly look at the time, but I was as quick as possible, so that he could have his egg for breakfast, if he still
wanted one. I was probably gone forty-five minutes. Not more than an hour. I came in through the side gate, put down the bags
so that I could open the back door. Then as I opened it I saw Terry out of the corner of my eye and then I looked at the wall
and there was red on it, and I couldn't think what it was. I thought he'd been throwing jam around . . . and then, and then
I realized and I just started screaming and screaming. I couldn't make my fingers push the buttons on the phone." Her voice
had been rising as she spoke and suddenly she was racked with great shuddering sobs. "He killed himself, didn't he? He shot
himself. He blew his own brains out because he was so depressed. I should have done something. I should have noticed and stopped
him."

Evan went over and sat on the bed beside her. "There was nothing you could have done, Mrs. Owens," he said gently, patting
her hand.

"And I don't think that your husband shot himself," Bragg added. "It's more probable that somebody shot him from outside the
kitchen window."

She took her hands away from her tear-stained face. "What? Who'd want to shoot Terry? That's stupid."

"This is the third such case within a week," Bragg said. "All shot in the same manner. When our forensic team gets here, they
can tell us whether the same weapon was used as the other two."

"But why?" she asked. "Why would anyone do that? Is there a madman on the loose?"

"Possibly," Bragg said. "We're still trying to piece the puzzle together. Maybe you can help us. Your husband had been unemployed
for how long?"

"Six months."

"And what did he do before that?"

"He worked at an assembly plant near Chester. It closed last year."

"So he hadn't been able to find another job since?" Bragg asked. "He didn't think of taking a job in fast food or something
like that?"

"He had his pride, Terry did. He was a trained machinist. Besides, he made as much from the dole as he'd have got serving
hamburgers."

"What about you, do you work?"

"I used to," she said. "I was a receptionist at a solicitor's office. It was a nice place to work. I liked it."

"So why did you leave?"

She looked down, studying her hands. "It was bad timing," she said, "but I got pregnant, and I wasn't feeling very well. So
Terry said it would be best if I quit." There was a long pause. "Then I had a miscarriage, and I was in hospital," she said.
"That was just over a month ago. I told him I'd have to go out looking for a job because one of us needed to be working, but
so far I havn't found anything."

Evan looked at her with pity. She looked so young and innocent, and yet she had been through so much recently. "Do you have
friends or relatives nearby you can go to?" he asked.

"My mum doesn't live far away," she said.

"That's good, isn't it?" Bragg said. "You can call her to come and get you then."

"I suppose so." She sounded unsure.

"You don't get on well with your mum?" Evan asked.

She shrugged. "She didn't like Terry. There was always a scene when we went over there, so Terry didn't like me going. She
thought he was lazy for not getting a job."

BOOK: Evanly Bodies
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