Detective Amanda Lacey Box Set Read online




  Three Book Set

  Linda Coles

  Blue Banana

  Contents

  The Hunted

  Dark Service

  One Last Hit

  Chapter One

  What is an acceptable age to kill your first victim? Jackie pondered that very question as she sat outside the woman’s house in her car, ready to find out. She couldn’t simply let it go, couldn’t let any of them get away with it; it would never do. She opened the driver’s side, stepped out, and walked towards the front door. The first of the murders was about to begin.

  Chapter Two

  “Jackie! What a pleasant surprise, I wasn’t expecting you just yet. Come on in!”

  As the curly blonde-headed woman waited in the open doorway and smiled back brightly, she let the lethal syringe slip down the inside of her shirtsleeve into the latexed palm of her hand, which was out of sight behind her back. The blonde leaned forward to give the other woman a quick peck on the cheek in greeting, and at the same time, slipped the protective cap off the syringe needle, all out of view. The other woman turned and started her way down the hallway towards the lounge area chatting as she went about nothing in particular, not that Jackie was even paying attention. Instead, her focus was on what she was going to do next. The other woman’s words sounding to her ears like she was talking under water, the bubbles masking the words making no sense at all. The thin plastic syringe was now set and ready to kill, and it felt heavy in her hand. Even knowing it would only take a moment, it seemed like a lifetime to the inexperienced woman, and she wanted it over. She'd never thought of herself as a killer, yet was about to cross the line and become one. With the other woman’s back still to her as they entered the lounge area, she quickly took her opportunity to strike. The blonde knew it wouldn't need much, just a quick jab, the plunger and a couple of drops of the fatal liquid would do the rest. Well, they would do the first part. The easier part. Jackie raised her right arm in preparation, syringe at the ready and slammed it forward into the back of the woman’s right arm, the plunger depressing quickly. The woman hardly had time to feel or react.

  “What the …” Her words were lost. Jackie watched the other woman crumple down onto the floor at her feet, like her whole body has lost its bones, a pile of dying flesh slumped obscurely on the wooden floor, her eyes glazing over in near death. Jackie knew it wouldn’t take long for the liquid to activate and she stood and watched in awe, never having seen someone in the throes of dying before. And definitely never witnessed a murder before. She checked her wristwatch, the second hand moving slowly around the clock face. A minute passed, then another, and one more just to be sure. She double-checked her watch again; then she checked the woman's pulse. Nothing. The first part of her task was done, the easy part. It was what she had to do next that she wasn't looking forward to.

  “It’s your own fault. You chose to do what you do, and I’m choosing to do what I do,” she reasoned with the lifeless woman as she moved her still-warm body into position, laying her out on her back on the floor. She reached into her bag, pulled out the insanely sharp, smooth-edged hunting knife she’d brought with her and laid it beside the woman.

  “I’ll use your towels, if you don’t mind. It was too risky bringing my own. Shall I help myself?”

  Was she really expecting an answer? Obviously not, but talking to the woman somehow gave her comfort for the task ahead. Stepping over the prone body, Jackie headed to the bathroom to look for a couple of towels, and then changed her mind and headed back out to a cupboard she’d noticed in the hallway.

  “I really don’t want to use your best white ones, so I’ve taken your beach towels I found in the hallway cupboard. Seemed to make more sense. And they are probably a bit bigger anyway.” She laid them both around the woman’s shoulders on the floor.

  Jackie stood to look at the arrangement in front of her, a feeling of queasiness starting in her stomach. Knowing her body all too well, she knew she’d need to be prepared, just in case the inevitable happened. She absolutely couldn't leave any evidence, so she stood up and left the lounge, entering the small kitchen in search of a plastic rubbish bin liner.

  “Better grab two, just in case. Don’t want to leave a drop somewhere if there’s a hole in the bottom of the bag.” Opening the cupboard door under the sink, she found what she was looking for, a roll of white refuse bags. She tore off two and inserted one inside the other for extra protection. Satisfied the bags would be secure and nothing would leak out, she made her way back through to the lounge, and her first victim. And the task.

  “Okay, I think I’m ready. Can you tell I’m a bit nervous? It’s my first time you see, but I suspect it won’t be my last. People like you will always be around I expect, and that will keep me busy. No doubt I will get better at this, get more used to it, not think about it so much.”

  She knelt down beside her victim’s head, towels around her shoulders as she lay there, and took the hunting knife in her hands.

  “Here goes.”

  Holding her head up slightly by her hair, Jackie slashed quickly from left to right and made a wide incision across her friend’s throat with the smooth blade. The blade went through her skin like the proverbial knife through butter, the blade as sharp as a new scalpel. Dark red blood slowly seeped out of her gaping neck wound into the towels, their presence doing their job of soaking the excess up beautifully. Even to a vet, the sight of so much blood, human blood, made her stomach roll and she was glad she had been prepared with the double-lined plastic bag. What she hadn't expected was how violently the sight would affect her. Making a grab for the bag, she held it high to her mouth and rapidly emptied her stomach as it spasmed excruciatingly several times, depositing the contents inside it, her body not able to control itself after the revoltingness of what she'd just done. When she was sure her retching was over, her stomach empty, she tied the bag up and slipped it gently into her own bag, ready to dispose of when she left. She sat back on her heels, catching her breath, gasping.

  “Hell, I could do with a glass of water right now, but I can’t, not yet anyway,” she said to her victim. “I’ll just have to wait. Good job I'd stopped your heart first off, otherwise it would have been a whole lot messier, and I'd probably be a whole lot sicker, and we couldn’t have that. And, I’ve still got part three to do yet. No rest for the wicked, eh? Now, if I could just get your phone—where is it?” Jackie looked around the small room, scanning the surfaces but couldn't see the woman's phone resting anywhere visible. She stood up, her legs a little wobbly, but gained the strength she needed as she moved across the room.

  “Strong as an ox! Well, apart from my stomach, that is.” She chatted away to the woman like they were gossiping over coffee, as nothing of any consequence had happened. She walked over to the big comfy leather chairs on the other side of the room and spotted what she was looking for. “I’m going to have to look in your bag. Sorry for the intrusion, but needs must.”

  Digging deep into the woman’s handbag she felt the familiar smooth surface of a smartphone and pulled it out. Pressing the home button, she activated the screen.

  “I’m glad to see you still don’t bother with a passcode. I noticed when we were out, at the Italian restaurant, stroke of good luck for me. Not that it would have mattered that much, I’m pretty much buried in most of your life now anyway, been following you and your movements for a while. It’s amazing what you can learn about someone being their friend online. You’ve been really useful to me; did you know that? I’m guessing not. And now I’m following your death too. And so will your other friends shortly.”

  She took the phone and tapped the settings icon on the screen and when she'd found wha
t she was looking for in privacy, turned location services to ‘off.'

  “Don’t want people knowing where I am when this gets posted now do I, not that stupid.”

  Clicking the camera icon on the screen, she prepared to take a photo.

  “I'm going to lift your head up now and take a pic. A rather different kind of selfie from what you’d normally see, not the pouty type you usually post. This one will be shall we say, more attention-grabbing?” Holding her up by the hair, she took a picture of her half-severed head, taking care not to add anything of herself into the frame.

  “Don’t want to be in this particular selfie, now, do I?”

  When she was satisfied with the image she’d taken, she put the phone into her own bag to deal with later and felt remarkably calm and satisfied at what she’d done.

  “Right, I think I’m done. I'll just wipe the knife off. Mind if I grab another plastic bag to wrap it in? I don't want blood in my lovely new bag; I bought it especially for the occasion.” She headed back off to the kitchen for another bag, then returned and wiped the knife on the edge of one of the towels beside her head. She was all set. Checking around the room one last time to make sure she’d not moved anything or left anything unnecessarily, she rolled her latex gloves off her hands and then stuffed one inside the other, dropping the small bundle into her bag along with the neatly secured vomit.

  “Well, thanks for being such a sport and being my first. Apart from being ill, it was easier than I’d expected it to be. Sorry about the mess, but needs must. It’ll be interesting to see what happens next, with your friends, and of course the police, but unfortunately, you'll never know. Anyway, I'm off now. Think I'll take the back door, if you don't mind. Fewer people about.”

  With one final glance around, Jackie made her way to the rear door through the kitchen and out into the small back garden.

  “Bye-bye,” she called inside quietly like good friends would have done, then closed the door and made her way down the path. She opened the little gate at the bottom and casually walked along at the rear of the row of properties’ gardens and emerged from a communal side entrance further up. Before she entered the full view of the quiet suburban street, she slipped the blonde curly wig off her head and into her bag, fluffing up her own short auburn hair as she walked. To anyone who noticed her, she looked like any other young woman taking a walk and mixed in with the suburban surroundings easily.

  Chapter Three

  Two weeks earlier

  Fiona was good at her job. Too good. Which made her a small fortune on the side even though it wasn’t legit. Legit? Who was she kidding with such a word? It was downright illegal, and if she got caught again, it would probably land her a spell inside this time. Fiona had been lucky last time she’d been found out. The charges had all fallen through due to a lack of any real evidence and she’d simply lost her job, but she’d managed to find another position in another town not long after. Keep changing her location and her identity was proving expensive, so with her current job, she’d vowed to take more care, more precautions, and not be too greedy. Though the job as a bookkeeper at a hotel and restaurant complex wasn’t particularly well paid, being just outside Croydon, it was good and local into the bargain. And she needed the money. And the hotel owners wouldn’t miss a few extra thousand each year, and that was how she reconciled it in her own mind. Reconciled—definitely a bookkeeper term, how apt. Over the years, she’d developed quite a few simple scams; the current one she used topped up her bank balance up nicely each month and was almost foolproof. Almost, because you really needed to know where to look to find it. She’d buried it nicely, though no doubt a forensic computer scientist could locate it if they had access. Since no one suspected anything, she was safe for now.

  “Here we go,” she said warmly. A few clicks of her mouse in the right places and her account was topped up again for the month, with no one any the wiser. Over the two years, she'd been working at the hotel, she'd amassed a tidy sum, and it had paid for her expensive hobby, something she couldn't afford to take part in without the added income. She flicked her thick sun-kissed mane off her shoulder as she rose from her seat and went out to the break room and fancy coffee machine to make herself a cup. Adrenaline was already starting to pump through her veins at finalising the monthly transaction and the feel of it thrilled her as it always did. And coffee would add to that, the caffeine pushing the adrenaline harder, her high even more euphoric; it made her giddy with excitement. Each time she did it, each month she transferred the money, the buzz was absolute. She had begun to crave it, wanting the months to roll around quicker so she could experience the thrill of it all over again, feel it inside of her veins, strumming away, and had been sorely tempted to do it more often. But greed could land you in a whole heap of trouble, and she'd restrained herself from it.

  The strong coffee tasted good as she sipped it from her mug and stared out of the window that looked out to the staff car park and the back of the hotel complex. From her vantage point, she could see Isabel, her boss’s wife, dressed in all her usual finery, all perfect long shiny hair and red nails, getting into her sports car ready for her weekly trip. Michael wasn’t with her—never was. They rarely went anywhere together, though Fiona knew for a fact where Isabel was going, and it wasn’t more shopping like Michael thought. No, because today was Tuesday. For the last six months, Isabel had driven off every Tuesday morning at 11.30 precisely and had come back mid-afternoon, looking just as good as when she had left earlier, but with a certain rumpledness about her, a look that was so subtle, only a woman who had been there herself could detect it. Fiona knew what she was up to, that she had a regular lover. She just didn’t know who it was. Maybe Michael knew what she was up to, though she very much doubted it; he was too busy wrapped up in his own world to notice the telltale signs. Isabel started her engine, and it purred like a big cat as she manoeuvred her car out of the parking space and to the main road out front. With a couple of loud revs, she was gone, leaving Fiona to check her watch, knowing full well what the time was. And when she’d be back.

  “See you about three o’clock. Enjoy yourself!” she called through the window, though no one could hear her sarcasm.

  She took her mug of coffee back to her desk, feeling her heart rate increase a little more as the caffeine penetrated her blood and went back to reconciling the hotel's transactions for yesterday. The month was turning out to be one of the busiest they’d had so far this year, with each month getting better than the last one, and Fiona wondered why the owners were such cheapskates in hiring ‘professionals’ for certain tasks. It wasn’t like they couldn’t afford someone better qualified. Take her own position, for instance; a business of this size really should employ someone a little more competent than the services of ‘Fiona, the bookkeeper.’ But while they were having great months and were happy with the hotel’s income, they were blissfully unaware of their deeper financials, and the report that she went through with them both each month was nothing more than what she wanted them to see. If only they’d spent a little time looking in more detail they’d have seen that things were not quite as they should be. But no matter, Fiona wasn’t about to spill all her illicit activities—and in the absence of annually audited accounts, they’d never find out. So she kept up her very lucrative skimming.

  It was nearly lunchtime when her office door opened and Michael stood leaning against the frame, smiling.

  “Hey Fiona,” he said seductively. No doubt he appreciated Isabel’s departure each Tuesday whether he knew where she was going or not.

  “Hey yourself,” she replied smiling sweetly at her boss, watching as he sauntered over to her desk, checking if anyone was behind him before bending down to plant a slow kiss on her neck, pushing her hair to one side as he did so.

  “Mmmmm, you smell good.”

  Fiona laughed lightly at the compliment and offered her neck up for another kiss. “What can I do for you, Michael?” she asked teasingly.

&nb
sp; “Oh, I wish we had time for what I'd like to do for you, but right now I need a breakdown of the bar takings this month for a meeting with a drinks rep in a couple of hours.” He pecked her neck lightly again. “Can you get them ready for me?” he said, making his way lower down her neck. Another peck.

  “Not a problem. I’ll get them organised. Oh, and don’t forget, I’ve got some time off coming up soon—Friday, in fact. And I’m going away.”

  He carried on nibbling. “Damn, I’d forgotten about that. Do you really have to go, now?”

  “Yes, I do,” she said, enjoying the nibbling.

  “Then I’ll just have to manage. Not sure I can do without you for seven whole days, though.” He was teasing her rotten, blowing little kisses onto her shoulder, though Fiona knew he was just using her body like she was his. As well as his bank account.

  “I’ll make sure everything is up to date before I head out. You know that.”

  “That’s not quite what I meant, and you know it,” he said, winking at her. Yes, she did. Their relationship, for want of a better word, had been going on almost as long as she’d been working there, an instant spark having ignited between them both, though it was nothing more than good fun for each of them. Both in relationships, the little extra together gave them what they missed out on from their respective partners. He bent again and kissed her hard and full on her lips in a brief and desperate attempt to satisfy his craving for something a little rougher than what Isabel provided. Fiona pushed back with her lips in response then, realising where they were, broke off abruptly before someone walked in, someone who’d tell Isabel what they were up to. Michael might not care whether Isabel found out, but Fiona didn’t want to lose the goldmine she’d been working.