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Hunter snapped the top back onto his pen. “Then why on earth are you dilly-dallying about Grace. Get your butt in gear girl — we haven’t got all day.” he cried jubilantly.

* * * * *

Later that afternoon Hunter drove the unmarked CID car into the force’s forensic examination facility and swung it into an empty parking slot. Excitedly he jumped out, slamming the car door behind, not bothering to lock it and at a quick pace made for the drying room. Grace jumped out of the passenger seat and half-skipping followed in his wake.

Duncan Wroe, dressed in a blue all-in-one, was edging backwards out of the rear of the white Renault.

Giving it a quick once over Hunter thought it looked in remarkably good condition to say it had been languishing in a car dismantler’s for several weeks, though it was missing its rear number plate.

Hunter stopped at the door and shouted to Duncan.

He turned and acknowledged them with a wave, a small fluorescent light in one hand and a bottle of Luminol blood reagent spray in the other. He sauntered towards them.

“Hi Hunter, Grace. Wondered how long it would be before you got here.” He set the spray down on a table.

“We wanted to give you enough time to work your magic on it Duncan,” Hunter replied.

Duncan smiled and mussed his fingers through his tousled lanks of fair hair. “Too early for miracles just yet I’m afraid, though I have made a start on it.” He picked the Luminol spray back up. “Come on, slip on some overshoes and I’ll show you what I’ve got so far.”

He peeled away leaving Hunter and Grace to fit on the blue latex shoe coverings, kept in a dispenser by the entrance door. Duncan still continued talking as he parted from them and Hunter found himself hobbling after him, trying to fit on one shoe protector whilst at the same time hanging onto what the SOCO manager was saying.

“I’ve only done a preliminary examination you understand. The van’s been out in the open for months and will need at least a couple of days in the drying room before we can bottom it. However I have made a start.” Duncan stopped by the open rear doors, resting against one as Hunter and Grace caught up.

“Is it the right van?” questioned Hunter, finally snapping both the forensic overshoes in place and pointing at the absence of the rear number plate.

“Absolutely. The engine and chassis number are a match. This is definitely the van belonging to Mr Hassan.”

“And what have you got so far Duncan?” asked Grace.

“Well I have found traces of blood — just small amounts. I’ve given it the once over with the Luminol and it shows up under the fluorescent. Whose it is at the moment I won’t be able to say but my guess is Samia’s. Her throat was cut as I recall and I would think despite the fact she was bundled up in the carpet some will have seeped out. I’ll swab it and send it to the lab.”

“Anything else?”

“The impossible I can do, miracles take a little longer Hunter. Once it’s thoroughly dried out I’ll be checking it out for fibres and DNA. I’ve got the samples from the carpet she was wrapped up in and so I’ll be able to examine them under the lighting equipment and get the frequency and wavelength of the fibres to see if there is a match — to confirm if this was the vehicle she was carried away in before she was dumped in the lake.”

Hunter returned a thank you smile. “All very technical for me Duncan but I have faith in you.”

“In layman’s terms it’s a bit like the fluorescent lights in a nightclub picking out white clothing.”

Hunter and Grace nodded understandingly.

“I’ll also be checking for soil samples in the wheel arches and on the wheels and see if I can marry them to the samples I’ve taken from the car park at the country park. Lastly we’ll swab the cabin’s interior and see if there is a DNA composite for the driver and passenger. With a bit of luck in a day or two I should have all the answers.”

* * * * *

Hunter found Barry Newstead bending over his desk as he pushed through the office doors. Grace was only a few strides behind.

“Caught you!” Hunter said. “Snooping through the bosses things whilst he’s away?”

“It would take a real detective to ever catch me doing that,” Barry returned craning his neck back over his shoulder. “I thought you’d disappeared for the day I’m just leaving you a note before I knock off.” He finished scribing on an A5 pad, then tore off the top sheet and spun around to hand it to Hunter. “A couple of things I wanted to leave for you before tomorrow morning’s briefing.”

“What’s that Barry?”

“Firstly we might have identified Samia’s cousins — the two men from the Meadowhall CCTV footage. I’ve been chasing up the Intelligence Units throughout the Force and Sheffield think they have a positive ID on the pair. It looks as though they’re known to Drug Squad, so I’m just waiting on final confirmation of that. It looks promising.”

“Great stuff. And the second thing?”

“Remember we set up a trace search of the part index number of the Volkswagon Golf which that prostitute Kerri-Ann Bairstow gave us belonging to one of her punters?”

Hunter pursed his lips. “Yes?” he retorted.

“Yep. Well you’re going to love this. Guess who it comes back to? You’ve already interviewed him.”

Hunter shook his head. “Surprise me.”

“Mr Chistopher Woolfe. An address in Sheffield,”

Hunter’s eyes widened. He locked on to Grace who had the same surprised look.

“Told you. You’d love it.”

Hunter brushed past Barry and snatched up the phone, punched in a number and waited for a response. His feet were tapping ten-to-the-dozen. After a brief conversation he slammed the handset back onto its cradle and turned to Grace. “Have you got anything pressing this evening?” he enquired, searching her face.

“Nothing that can’t wait. I’ll just make a quick call to Dave to sort out the girls and then I’m with you.”

Hunter patted Barry on the shoulder. “Cheers for this. Now I’ve got some arse to kick.”

* * * * *

Hunter listened as the footfalls padded towards him. He took his eyes off the car park for a few seconds whilst he checked his watch; he and Grace had been waiting in the entranceway to the hospital generator plant room less than half an hour.

Whilst they had been there the last light of dusk had faded into early evening. The car park security lighting had activated giving everything a blue white tinge.

Hunter narrowed his eyes as he focussed on the shadowy outline of the man passing across his vision only a few yards away. He recognised him from their previous visit to Barnwell General Infirmary.

“Good evening Dr Woolfe,” Hunter greeted him, stepping out of the shadow of the doorway. Grace slipped in beside him.

Hunter saw the doctor physically jump, slapping a hand across his chest, covering his heart.

“Christ you made me jump!” Chris Woolfe returned with a startled look on his face.

“Good.”

The doctor returned a perplexed look.

Hunter took a few determined steps towards him and then stopped inches from his face. “Give me one good reason why I shouldn’t haul you down to the station right now for perverting the course of justice!”

Even in the low-light cast from the glow of the overhead security lighting Hunter could make out that Chris Woolfe had coloured up.

“I–I,” he spluttered.

“Why after contacting us and giving us all that information about Samia’s cousins assaulting you and threatening you, didn’t you tell us that on the evening of Friday the first of August you recognised them leaving the country park in their white van?”

The Doctor dropped his head onto his chest.

“You could have saved us a lot of time — do you not realise that? Instead you gave us a storyline half pointing us in their direction. Is it because you were with a prostitute that night?”

He raised his head and nodded. “I’m close to finishing my time as a junior Doctor. If the hospital finds out about this I’ll not get a post. Believe me I didn’t want to obstruct your investigation I thought if I gave you enough to lead you to Samia’s cousins and help catch them this wouldn’t come out.”