Watching the Ghosts by Kate Ellis

By Kate Ellis

DI Joe Plantagenet investigates a home with a aggravating earlier within the fourth of this well known police procedural sequence.  - Boothgate condo has a sinister prior. as soon as an asylum for the insane, serial killer Peter Brockmeister used to be despatched there on his free up from legal in 1978. 3 years later, it closed, and Brockmeister died in mysterious conditions. Solicitor Melanie Hawkes is investigating the suspicious occasions whilst her younger daughter is abducted. in the meantime, Boothgate condominium resident Lydia Brookes is burgled. And why is a magical researcher occupied with the building’s basement? As Joe uncovers the appalling fact, he faces an evil that threatens these closest to him – and places his personal existence in jeopardy.

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That’s why they’d offered him two guns, and the important gun wasn’t the one he’d chosen, it was the one he’d touched and rejected. Well, that really iced the cupcake. All they had to do was pick him up—for anything at all, really—and he was finished. They’d match his prints to the prints on the Glock, and what could he possibly say? I touched the gun, but I went for the revolver instead, because automatics tend to jam, although this one evidently didn’t. And I didn’t want to shoot a governor with it, just some mope weeding his lawn, and I never did shoot anybody, so what difference does it make?

But if this worked, he’d have some breathing room. They’d find the car, with his rental papers in the glove box. They’d find the smashed-up phone, and they’d probably get a print off the pizza box, and what conclusion would they draw? That he’d switched cars? That he’d switched plates and kept the same old car? No, they’d almost certainly assume that he’d come to the airport because it was in fact an airport, with the intention of getting on a plane. And they’d have a tough time establishing unequivo- Hit and Run ■ 49 cally that he hadn’t somehow managed to slip through Security and do just that.

He stared at the phone as he might have stared at a talking dog. It was Dot, it could only be Dot. Nobody else had his cell number, and who else would have repeated the message and inserted damn the second time around? But how had Dot managed to turn herself into a robot? Then he remembered. A neat trick she’d discovered in one of the applications she ran on her computer. You highlighted a piece of text, pressed something or other, and the computer read the words aloud in a voice all its own.

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