Читаем The Janus Stone полностью

The Janus Stone

Ruth Galloway is called in to investigate when builders, demolishing a large old house in Norwich to make way for a housing development, uncover the bones of a child beneath a doorway – minus the skull. Is it some ritual sacrifice or just plain straightforward murder? DCI Harry Nelson would like to find out – and fast. It turns out the house was once a children's home. Nelson traces the Catholic priest who used to run the home. Father Hennessey tells him that two children did go missing from the home forty years before – a boy and a girl. They were never found. When carbon dating proves that the child's bones predate the home and relate to a time when the house was privately owned, Ruth is drawn ever more deeply into the case. But as spring turns into summer it becomes clear that someone is trying very hard to put her off the scent by frightening her half to death…

Elly Griffiths

Детективы18+

Elly Griffiths


The Janus Stone

The second book in the Ruth Galloway Mystery series, 2010

For my nieces and nephews: Francesca, William, Robert, Charlotte and Eleanor


1st June, Festival of Carna


The house is waiting. It knows. When I sacrificed yesterday, the entrails were black. Everything is turned to night. Outside it is spring but in the house there is a coldness, a pall of despair that covers everything.


We are cursed. This is no longer a house but a grave. The birds do not sing in the garden and even the sun does not dare penetrate the windows. No one knows how to lift the curse. They have given in and lie as if waiting for death. But I know and the house knows.

Only blood will save us now.

CHAPTER 1

A light breeze runs through the long grass at the top of the hill. Close up, the land looks ordinary, just heather and coarse pasture with the occasional white stone standing out like a signpost. But if you were to fly up above these unremarkable hills you would be able to see circular raised banks and darker rectangles amongst the greens and browns – sure signs that this land has been occupied many, many times before.


Ruth Galloway, walking rather slowly up the hill, does not need the eagle’s eye view to know that this is an archaeological site of some importance. Colleagues from the university have been digging on this hill for days and they have uncovered not only evidence of a Roman villa but also of earlier Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements.

Ruth had planned to visit the site earlier but she has been busy marking papers and preparing for the end of term. It is May and the air is sweet, full of pollen and the scent of rain. She stops, getting her breath back and enjoying the feeling of being outdoors on a spring afternoon. The year has been dark so far, though not without unexpected bonuses, and she relishes the chance just to stand still, letting the sun beat down on her face.

‘Ruth!’ She turns and sees a man walking towards her. He is wearing jeans and a work-stained shirt and he treats the hill with disdain, hardly altering his long stride. He is tall and slim with curly dark hair greying at the temples. Ruth recognises him, as he obviously does her, from a talk he gave at her university several months ago. Dr Max Grey, from the University of Sussex, an archaeologist and an expert on Roman Britain.

‘I’m glad you could come,’ he says and he actually does look glad. A change from most archaeologists, who resent another expert on their patch. And Ruth is an acknowledged expert – on bones, decomposition and death. She is Head of Forensic Archaeology at the University of North Norfolk.

‘Are you down to the foundations?’ asks Ruth, following Max to the summit of the hill. It is colder here and, somewhere high above, a skylark sings.

‘Yes, I think so,’ says Max, pointing to a neat trench in front of them. Halfway down, a line of grey stone can be seen. ‘I think we may have found something that will interest you, actually.’

Ruth knows without being told.

‘Bones,’ she says.

Detective Chief Inspector Harry Nelson is shouting. Despite a notoriously short fuse at work (at home with his wife and daughters he is a pussy cat) he is not normally a shouter. Brusque commands are more his line, usually delivered on the run whilst moving on to the next job. He is a man of quick decisions and limited patience. He likes doing things: catching criminals, interrogating suspects, driving too fast and eating too much. He does not like meetings, pointless discussions or listening to advice. Above all, he does not like sitting in his office on a fine spring day trying to persuade his new computer to communicate with him. Hence the shouting.


‘Leah!’ he bellows.

Leah, Nelson’s admin assistant (or secretary, as he likes to call her), edges cautiously into the room. She is a delicate, dark girl of twenty-five, much admired by the younger officers. Nelson, though, sees her mainly as a source of coffee and an interpreter of new technology, which seems to get newer and more temperamental every day.

‘Leah,’ he complains, ‘the screen’s gone blank again.’

‘Did you switch it off?’ asks Leah. Nelson has been known to pull out plugs in moments of frustration, once fusing all the lights on the second floor.

‘No. Well, once or twice.’

Leah dives beneath the desk to check the connections. ‘Seems OK,’ she says. ‘Press a key.’

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Роковой подарок
Роковой подарок

Остросюжетный роман прославленной звезды российского детектива Татьяны Устиновой «Роковой подарок» написан в фирменной легкой и хорошо узнаваемой манере: закрученная интрига, интеллигентный юмор, достоверные бытовые детали и запоминающиеся персонажи. Как всегда, роман полон семейных тайн и интриг, есть в нем место и проникновенной любовной истории.Знаменитая писательница Марина Покровская – в миру Маня Поливанова – совсем приуныла. Алекс Шан-Гирей, любовь всей её жизни, ведёт себя странно, да и работа не ладится. Чтобы немного собраться с мыслями, Маня уезжает в город Беловодск и становится свидетелем преступления. Прямо у неё на глазах застрелен местный деловой человек, состоятельный, умный, хваткий, верный муж и добрый отец, одним словом, идеальный мужчина.Маня начинает расследование, и оказывается, что жизнь Максима – так зовут убитого – на самом деле была вовсе не такой уж идеальной!.. Писательница и сама не рада, что ввязалась в такое опасное и неоднозначное предприятие…

Татьяна Витальевна Устинова

Детективы
Безмолвный пациент
Безмолвный пациент

Жизнь Алисии Беренсон кажется идеальной. Известная художница вышла замуж за востребованного модного фотографа. Она живет в одном из самых привлекательных и дорогих районов Лондона, в роскошном доме с большими окнами, выходящими в парк. Однажды поздним вечером, когда ее муж Габриэль возвращается домой с очередной съемки, Алисия пять раз стреляет ему в лицо. И с тех пор не произносит ни слова.Отказ Алисии говорить или давать какие-либо объяснения будоражит общественное воображение. Тайна делает художницу знаменитой. И в то время как сама она находится на принудительном лечении, цена ее последней работы – автопортрета с единственной надписью по-гречески «АЛКЕСТА» – стремительно растет.Тео Фабер – криминальный психотерапевт. Он долго ждал возможности поработать с Алисией, заставить ее говорить. Но что скрывается за его одержимостью безумной мужеубийцей и к чему приведут все эти психологические эксперименты? Возможно, к истине, которая угрожает поглотить и его самого…

Алекс Михаэлидес

Детективы