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Not Dead Enough

Not Dead Enough

Titel: Not Dead Enough Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Peter James
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the door and entered. Grace looked up and saw a young man he recognized from this department standing there. Lorna looked up at him. ‘Sorry, Dermot, is it anything urgent?’
    ‘No – no problem – see you tomorrow.’
    He went out and closed the door.
    Her face blanked. ‘Where was I?’
    ‘Janet’s diary,’ he prompted.
    ‘Yes, right. There was one name on it, about nine months back, that none of us here know. It was an entry for an evening in December last year. She had written down, Drink, Brian .’
    ‘Brian?’
    ‘Yes.’
    Grace felt a sudden frisson. Brian. Rostering. Big house in Brighton. Flat in London. A murdered woman.
    Now his brain was really engaging, all his tiredness gone. Was that why he had woken in the middle of the night, thinking about Janet McWhirter? His brain telling him that there was a connection?
    ‘It looks like this means something to you, Roy.’
    ‘Possibly,’ he said. ‘Who’s running the inquiry on Janet?’
    ‘DI Winter, in MIR Two.’
    Grace thanked Lorna and headed straight to the incident room that had been set up in MIR Two. There he explained the possible connection to his own double-inquiry that he had just learned.
    Then he returned to MIR One, almost colliding with a triumphant-looking Glenn Branson, who came round the corner at a speed close to a run. ‘Got him!’ Branson said, pulling a piece of paper from his pocket and unfolding it. ‘I’ve got a name and an address!’
    Grace followed him into the room.
    ‘His name is Norman Jecks.’
    Grace looked down at the crumpled sheet of lined paper, with a jagged edge where it had been torn from a ring-pad. On it was written 262B, Sackville Road, Hove.
    He looked up at Branson. ‘That’s not Bishop’s address.’
    ‘No, it’s not. But that’s the one the man wrote down on the A&E registration form on Sunday morning. The disguised Brian Bishop. Maybe he has two lives?’
    Grace stared at it, with a bad feeling. As if a dark cloud was swirling around his insides. Did Brian Bishop have a second home? A secret home? A secret life? ‘Is it a real address?’
    ‘Bella’s checked the electoral register. There’s a Norman Jecks at that address.’
    He looked at his watch, adrenaline pumping into his veins. It was ten past six. ‘Forget the briefing meeting,’ he said. ‘Find out who the duty magistrate is and get a search warrant. Then get on to the Local Support Team. We’re going to pay Norman Jecks a visit. Just as fast as we possibly can.’
    He sprinted back along the labyrinth of corridors to the PNC suite.
    Lorna Baxter was halfway out of the door when he arrived.
    ‘Lorna,’ he said breathlessly, ‘have you got a moment?’
    ‘I’ve got to pick my eldest up from a swimming lesson.’ She looked at her watch. ‘Is it something quick?’
    ‘Just a few minutes – it’s really important – sorry to do this to you. I’m right, aren’t I, that Janet McWhirter would have had signatory authority to make entries on the PNC?’
    ‘Yes. She was the only person here who could.’
    ‘On her own, unsupervised?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Would you mind looking up something for me on the PNC?’
    She smiled. ‘I can see you need me for more than just a few minutes. I’ll get someone to pick Claire up,’ she said, pulling her mobile from her handbag.
    They went and sat down in her office, and she tapped her keyboard, logging on. ‘OK,’ she said. ‘Shoot!’
    ‘I need you to look up someone’s criminal record. What information do I have to give you?’
    ‘Just his name, age, address.’
    Grace gave her Brian Bishop’s details. He listened to the click of the keys as she entered the information.
    ‘Brian Desmond Bishop, born 7 September 1964?’
    ‘That’s him.’
    She leaned forward, closer to her screen. ‘In 1979, at Brighton Juvenile Court, he was sentenced to two years in a young offenders’ institute for raping a fourteen-year-old girl,’ she read. ‘In 1985, at Lewes Crown Court, he received two years’ probation for GBH on a woman. Nice guy!’ she commented.
    ‘Is there any anomaly with the entry?’ he asked.
    ‘Anomaly? In what sense?’
    ‘Could it have been tampered with?’
    ‘Well, there is just one thing – although it’s not that unusual.’ She looked up at him. ‘Normally records as old as these are never touched – they just sit on the file forever. The only time they are touched is when amendments are made – sometimes because of new evidence – old

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