Written in Bone
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‘I didn’t say you could do this,’ he reminded us, as we loaded the evidence bags into the Range Rover. ‘This was your call, not mine.’
‘You’d rather we ’d left them in there then, would you?’
Brody asked, jerking his head towards the roofless cottage.
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‘Explain to SOC that we ’d stood by and watched the body be buried under the rubble?’
‘I’m just letting you know I’m not taking the blame for it. You can tell Wallace yourself.’
We still hadn’t been able to contact the superintendent. I could almost—though not quite—feel sorry for Fraser. Behind the bluster was a man desperate not to admit he was out of his depth.
‘Oh, don’t worry. I will.’ Brody spoke mildly enough, yet somehow managed to make his contempt plain. ‘And seeing how you’re washing your hands of it, you might as well relieve Duncan out here. He can clean himself up at my place after he ’s helped take the bags to the clinic.’
‘Stay out here?’ Fraser barked, incredulously. ‘What for? There ’s nothing left!’
Brody shrugged. ‘It’s still a crime scene. But if you want to explain to Wallace why you left it unattended, that ’s up to you.’
Duncan had been listening, uneasily. ‘I don’t mind staying.’
‘You’ve been on duty all night,’ Brody said, before Fraser could respond. ‘I’m sure Sergeant Fraser wouldn’t ask a junior officer to do anything he ’s not prepared to do himself.’
The expression on Fraser’s face was poisonous. ‘Aye, all right.’
He jabbed a finger at Duncan. ‘But I want you back no later than six. You’ll be staying out here again tonight.’
He shot Brody a triumphant look.
‘Can’t leave a crime scene unattended, can we?’
I saw the older man’s prominent jaw muscles bunch, but he said nothing as Fraser stalked off to the camper van. He gave the still worried-looking Duncan a smile.
‘Come on, son. You could do with a shower, if you don’t mind my saying.’
I went in the Range Rover with Duncan, while Brody followed in his own car. It was a relief to get out of the wind and rain. My shoulder was hurting, probably jarred as I’d hurried out of the cottage. I put my head back and closed my eyes, and the next thing I knew Duncan was waking me.
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‘Dr Hunter? Should I stop for her?’
I sat up, blinking. Ahead of us the Porsche Cayenne I’d seen at Strachan’s house was pulled to the side of the road. Flagging us down from beside it, unmistakable in her white parka, was Grace.
‘Yes, you’d better.’
The wind was whipping her hair as we pulled up alongside. I wound down my window.
‘David, thank heavens!’ she said, giving me a beaming smile.
“This is a dreadful bore, but I was just on my way to the village and the bloody car’s run out of petrol. Would you mind giving me a lift?’
I hesitated, thinking about the evidence bags visible behind the rear seat. By now Brody had pulled up behind us, the road being too narrow to allow him to pass. I considered suggesting she ride with him, but given the frosty relationship Brody had with her husband I thought better of it.
‘If it’s a problem I’ll walk,’ Grace said, her smile fading.
‘It ’s no problem,’ I said, and turned to Duncan. ‘Is that OK by you?’
He grinned. ‘Aye, great.’ It was the first time he ’d seen Strachan’s wife. ‘I mean, sure, no problem.’
I went to sit in the back, letting Grace have the front seat despite her protests. The delicate musk of her perfume filled the car, and I tried not to smile when I saw that Duncan was sitting noticeably straighter.
Grace gave him a dazzling smile when I introduced them. ‘You must be the young man they’ve got staying in the camper van.’
‘Uh, yes, ma’am.’
‘Poor you,’ she said, sympathetically touching his arm. Even from the back seat I could see Duncan’s ears turn crimson. I don’t think Grace even realized the effect she had on him. She turned round to talk to me as Duncan tried to concentrate on driving.
‘Thanks ever so much for stopping. I feel so stupid, running out of petrol like that. There ’s no garage on the island, so we have to top up from containers. But I’m sure Michael said he ’d filled up the cars last week. Or was it the week before?’ She puzzled over it for a sec-
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ond, then airily dismissed it. ‘Oh, well. Teach me to check the gauge in future, I suppose.’
‘Where would you like us to drop you?’ I asked.
‘At the school, if that’s no bother. I’m teaching a painting class this morning.’
‘Will Bruce Cameron be there?’
‘I should think so. Why?’
Without going into details, I explained what had happened at the cottage, and why we needed to use the clinic.
‘God, how gruesome,’ Grace said with a grimace. ‘Still, I’m sure Bruce won’t mind.’
I wasn’t so confident, but I couldn’t see Cameron refusing her. When we reached the school Grace hurried inside, while I left Duncan guarding the remains and went to tell Brody what was happening.
‘This should be interesting,’ he said, climbing out of the car. We went up the path to the school. It was a new building, small and flat-roofed. A few wooden steps ran up to the door, which opened straight into a classroom that took up most of the interior. Computer monitors lined one wall, and desks were arranged in neat lines facing a board at the front.
But at the moment the pupils were all gathered round a large table at the back, busying themselves with pots of paint, brushes and water. There were about a dozen in all, their ages ranging from about four to nine or ten. I recognised Anna amongst them. She smiled shyly when she saw me, then returned to arranging a sheet of paper exactly to her liking.
Grace had already taken off her coat and was busy organizing her class. ‘I hope we ’re not going to have another water-spilling crisis this week, are we? And yes, I’m looking at you, Adam.’
‘No, Mrs Strachan,’ a young boy with a shock of ginger hair said, smiling bashfully.
‘Good. Because if anyone misbehaves, I’m afraid they’ll have to have their face painted. And we wouldn’t want to have to explain that to your parents, would we?’
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There were delighted giggles, a chorus of ‘No, Mrs Strachan.’
Grace looked animated and alive, even more beautiful than usual. Cheeks flushed, she turned to us with a smile, motioning with her head to a door at the far side.
‘Go on through. I’ve told Bruce you wanted a word.’
She turned back to the children as we crossed the room, already forgetting about us. The office door was closed, and when I knocked on it there was no answer. I began to wonder if Cameron had slipped out until his bass voice peremptorily drawled a command.
‘Come.’
Glancing at Brody, I opened the door and went in. A desk and filing cabinet took up most of the room. Cameron was standing with his back to us, staring out of the window. I wondered if he ’d done it for effect, knowing he was backlit. He turned and favoured us with an unfriendly look.
‘Yes?’
I reminded myself this would be easier if we had his cooperation. ‘We need to use the medical clinic. The storm brought down the cottage roof, and we need somewhere to store what we salvaged.’
The bulbous eyes considered us, coldly. ‘You mean you want to keep human remains in there?’
‘Only until they can be taken to the mainland.’
‘And in the meantime what about my patients?’
Brody spoke up. ‘Come on, Bruce. You only hold a clinic twice a week, and the next one isn’t for another two days. We should be out of the way long before then.’
Cameron wasn’t appeased. ‘So you say. But what if the
re ’s an emergency?’
‘This is an emergency,’ Brody snapped, losing patience. ‘We ’re not here from choice.’
The teacher’s Adam’s apple bobbed angrily. ‘There must be somewhere else you can take them.’
‘If you can think of anywhere feel free to tell us.’
‘And if I say no?’
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Brody regarded him with exasperation. ‘Why should you do that?’
‘Because it’s a medical clinic, not a morgue! And I don’t think you have any right to commandeer it!’
I opened my mouth to object, but before I could Grace ’s voice came from behind us.
‘Is there a problem?’
She stood in the doorway, one eyebrow cocked quizzically. Cameron blushed like a schoolboy caught out by his teacher.
‘I was just telling them—’
‘Yes, I heard you, Bruce. So did the rest of the class.’
Cameron’s Adam’s apple worked. ‘I’m sorry. But I don’t really think the medical clinic should be used for something like this.’
‘Why ever not?’
‘Well . . .’ Cameron was visibly squirming. He gave her an ingratiating smile. ‘I am the nurse after all, Grace. I ought to be able to decide what happens in my own clinic.’
Grace regarded him coolly. ‘Actually, Bruce, it belongs to the island. I’m sure I don’t have to remind you of that.’
‘No, of course, but—’
‘So unless you can suggest somewhere else they can use, I don’t really see that there ’s an alternative.’
Cameron made an effort to hold on to his tattered dignity.
‘Well . . . in that case, I suppose . . .’
‘Good. That ’s settled, then.’ Grace gave him a smile. ‘Now why don’t you run over there and show them where everything is? I’ll look after things here until you get back.’
Cameron stared down at his desk as she went back to her class. The flush had gone from his face, leaving him white and tight-lipped. Grace might help him out at the school, but he ’d just had a public reminder that it was her husband ’s money that paid his wages. Wordlessly, he snatched his coat down from where it was hanging and walked out.
‘I’d have paid to see that,’ Brody said in a low voice, as we went after him.
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The medical clinic was a short distance from the school. It was little more than a small extension tacked on to one end of the community centre, with no external door of its own. Cameron had ridden there on his mountain bike, forging against the wind. By the time we arrived he was already going into the glassed-in porch that covered the community centre ’s entrance. Leaving Duncan in the car with the evidence bags, Brody and I followed him inside. The community centre looked like a throwback to the Second World War, a long wooden structure with a low asphalt roof and panelled windows. Most of the inside was taken up by a large hall. Our footsteps echoed hollowly on its unvarnished floorboards, on which the ghostly markings of a badminton court had faded almost to invisibility. Posters advertising dances and the now-past Christmas pantomime were pinned to the walls, and old wooden chairs were stacked untidily at one side. The island ’s redevelopment evidently hadn’t extended this far.
‘Strachan wanted to build a new community centre, but everyone liked this as it is,’ Brody said, guessing what I was thinking. ‘Familiarity, I suppose. People like some things to stay the same.’
Cameron had stopped by a new-looking door and was searching irritably through a jangling key ring. While we waited, I went to a scuffed upright piano that stood nearby. The lid was raised, exposing ivory keys that were cracked and yellow with age. When I pressed one a deep, broken note rang out, fading discordantly into silence.
‘Would you mind not doing that?’ Cameron said, waspishly, unlocking the door and going into the clinic. It was only small, but well equipped, with pristine white walls and shining steel cabinets. There was an autoclave for sterilizing instruments, a well-stocked medicine cabinet and a fridge. Best of all, from my point of view, was the large stainless steel trolley and powerful halogen lamp. There was even a large magnifying lens on an adjustable stand, for examining and stitching wounds. Cameron had gone to a desk and was making a point of checking that its drawers were locked. Brody and I watched as he did the same
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with the filing cabinet. That finished, he confronted us with illconcealed dislike.
‘I expect you to leave everything exactly as you found it. I’ve no intention of cleaning up any mess you make.’
Without waiting for us to answer he started to leave.
‘We ’ll need the key,’ Brody said.
Tight-lipped, Cameron unhooked one from the bunch he carried and slapped it down on the desk.
‘What about one for the community centre?’ I asked.
‘We don’t keep it locked,’ he responded primly. ‘It belongs to everyone on the island. That’s why it ’s called the community centre.’
‘I’d still prefer to have a key.’
He gave a condescending smile. ‘Well, that ’s too bad. Because if there is one I’ve no idea where it is.’
He seemed to take a petty satisfaction from being able to deny us that much, at least. Brody watched him go out.
‘That man is a royal pain in the arse.’
I’d been thinking along the same lines myself. ‘Come on, let ’s get the evidence bags inside,’ I said.
I had an unpleasant conversation with Wallace while Brody and Duncan carried the evidence bags of bone and ashes into the clinic. Word had belatedly reached the detective superintendent that we ’d been trying to contact him. Unfortunately, he ’d called Fraser rather than Duncan, and the sergeant had lost no time in giving his side of events.
Consequently, Wallace was incandescent, demanding to know why we ’d violated a crime scene without his permission. In no mood to be shouted at, I angrily pointed out that we ’d had no choice, and that none of this would have happened if he ’d sent SOC in the first place.
It was Brody who calmed things down, taking the radio to talk to Wallace out of earshot. When he handed it back to me, the 124
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superintendent was grudgingly apologetic. He told me to go ahead and continue my examination of the remains.
‘I suppose now you’ve got this far, you might as well see what else you can find out,’ he said, ungraciously.
The gesture was little more than an olive branch, as we both knew there was precious little I could do without a properly equipped laboratory. But I said I’d do my best. Before Wallace hung up, I asked what the situation was with the train crash. I’d not heard any news since I’d been on Runa, and I was out of touch. The superintendent paused. ‘It was joyriders. They stalled the van on the line and then panicked and ran off.’
Not a terrorist attack after all, then. People had died, and SOC prevented from coming to Runa, all because some bored teenagers had stolen a van.
I was thinking about that as I returned to the clinic. Duncan was gingerly putting the dead woman’s hand into the fridge, holding it out at arm’s length. In the plastic of the evidence bag, it looked unsettling like a cut of meat for the freezer.
‘Still can’t get my head round how this happened,’ he said, closing the fridge door with relief. ‘How the body was burned, I mean. Just doesn’t seem natural.’
‘Oh, it was natural, right enough,’ I said, still brooding over what Wallace had said.
Both Duncan and Brody looked at me.
‘You know what caused it?’ Brody asked.
I’d known almost from the moment I set eyes on the remains. But I hadn’t wanted to commit myself until I’d been able to confirm my theory. Now, though, with the island cut off and half of the evidence buried under the cottage, there didn’t seem any reason not to tell them.
‘Pretty much,’ I said. ‘I gave you a c
lue the other day, Duncan, remember?’
‘The fatty stuff on the cottage ceiling, you mean? Aye, but I still haven’t been able to work it out.’
He looked embarrassed. Brody was watching me, waiting.
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‘It comes down to two things. Body fat and what she was wearing,’ I explained. ‘Have either of you heard of something called the wick effect?’
They both looked blank.
‘There are two ways to reduce a human body to ash. You either incinerate it at a very high temperature, which didn’t happen here or the entire cottage would have burned down. Or you burn it at a lower temperature, for longer. We ’ve all got a layer of fat just under the skin, and fat burns. Candles used to be made of tallow made from rendered animal fat before paraffin wax was used instead. So what happens is that, in certain conditions, the human body effectively becomes a giant candle.’
‘You’re joking,’ Brody said. For once the ex-policeman seemed rattled.
‘No. That ’s why the residue on the ceiling and ground around the remains was significant. The fat liquefies in the heat and gets carried in the smoke. Obviously, the more body fat a person has, the more fuel there is to burn. Judging from how much was on the ceiling at the cottage, the dead woman had quite a lot.’
‘So she was overweight?’ Duncan asked.
‘I’d say so, yes.’
Brody’s forehead was furrowed. ‘I don’t see where what she was wearing comes in.’
‘Because as the fat melts, it soaks into the clothes. They act like a candle wick, letting the body burn for much longer than it would otherwise. Particularly if they’re made from a flammable fabric.’
Brody still looked shaken. ‘Christ. That’s a hell of an image.’
‘I know, but it ’s what happens. Most cases of so-called spontaneous human combustion happen to people who are elderly or drunk. There ’s nothing suspicious or paranormal about it. They just drop a cigarette on themselves, or brush too close to a fire and set themselves alight, and are either asleep or incapable of putting out the flames. Like Mary Reeser,’ I said to Duncan. ‘She ’s the classic case that ’s always cited as being “inexplicable”. But she was elderly, overweight, and a smoker. According to the police report, the last person to see 126