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Kenneth Cameron - The Frightened Man

Here you can read online Kenneth Cameron - The Frightened Man full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2010, publisher: Minotaur Books, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Kenneth Cameron The Frightened Man

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London in 1900 is sprawling and chaotic, perfect for a man like Denton, an American with a violent past seeking anonymity as an outsider. But his notoriety as the author of several dark novels sometimes brings unwanted visitors to his door. When a terrified man shows up one night, claiming to be pursued by the long-gone Jack the Ripper, Denton dismisses him as one more victim of Londons lunacy. But then the mutilated body of a teenaged prostitute is found in Londons East End. . . .Disappointed by the lack of police concern, Denton determines to pursue the murderer, even after its clear that hes become the next target. As he begins to peel away the layers of the case, Denton finds himself following nothing but his instincts through the maze of London. Along the way he finds an ally in a woman with a past as haunted, and a spirit as independent, as his own.Kenneth Cameron has brought turn-of-the-century London vividly to life in this intelligent and compelling crime novel. The Frightened Man delves far deeper than the circumstances of a murder to investigate the unseenthe secrets harbored in Londons immeasurable streets and in the dark side of human nature.

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Table of Contents

Chapter Six

Judas Priest, Munro muttered.

The smell burst out to meet them as if under pressure. Denton recognized blood and decay; memories of battle-fields flitted down his mind, then an image of a short man he had shotgunned who had bled seemingly everywhere.

You were at the post-mortem, Guillam said. You know what to expect.

Stella Minter had died in a room only big enough to hold her bed, a rickety chair, a stand that held a chamber pot, and a curtained area no wider than her shoulders, where her few clothes hung. High in the wall opposite the bed, in that part of the house that jutted forward beyond its neighbour, was an oval window, the long axis vertical, a piece of cloth pinned over it for a curtain. Guillam now tried to pull it aside and managed to pull it down.

Touch nothing, Guillam said.

Anything been removed? Munro muttered.

Not supposed tove been. Guillam pulled several folded sheets of paper from some inner pocket and handed it over without looking. Munro opened them and Denton, coming behind him, moved closer and waited for somebody to object. Nobody did. He saw at the top of the paper in a neat hand, Inventory, No. 7-A, Priory Close Alley . He ran his eyes down the paper - 1 dresses, 1 petticoat, 1 wrapper on floor, 1 nightgown on hook , (indeed, there it was, next to the bed) undergarments, on chair; 1 pr. shoes; 1 reticule containing 2s 5d, 1 handkerchief, 1 Masons toffee in paper

Guillam was lighting the only gas lamp, in the wall above the bed, which had been fitted with a polished reflector that made the light briefly painful. When Guillam was finished, he closed the door, making a shooing gesture at somebody outside.

She had been killed on the bed, and most of her blood had soaked into the sheets and the mattress. Some blood, now dry, also lay on the wood floor like ink.

She was laying this way, feet towards the door, Guillam said. He sliced his right hand through the air, index finger up, palm to the left, parallel to the long axis of the bed. Legs were partly drawn up, arms He scrabbled for another paper. Got the City Police drawing somewhere He unfolded it - a stick figure on a rectangle. The arms were above the head. Could have arranged the body somewhat, our killer could. One foot off the end of the bed a little; maybe moved her, or maybe thats just the way she placed herself. He glanced up at Denton. Notion is that he was a customer and all she was wearing was the wrapper; she opens the door, lets him in, lays herself down, and there you are.

He hit her in the face, Denton said. Twice. He met Guillams stolid look. Post-mortem - two contusions on the right side.

Report didnt say that he did it and didnt say there was any damage to the brain or any of that. Whores get whacked all the time. Or, all right, she lets him in, he whacks her, she lays herself down.

Somebody she knew? Denton said.

Wouldnt have to be somebody she knew; she was a cheap toss, move them along and get them out, next chap in. Except this one killed her. What you driving at?

Nothing. Only if she knew him, it would have been easier for him. Wheres the wrapper?

All three looked at the inventory, then at the floor. Guillam muttered, Damn them, and got on his knees and looked under the bed. He got up breathing hard, brushing his knees, muttering, Mistakes, mistakes He looked at the list again. Mustve been taken as evidence.

Why that?

Blowed if I know.

Anything else taken as evidence?

Guillam looked at him. You ask a lot of questions, you do. Surprisingly, he grinned. Yeah, they took the washbowl, the soap dish and the pitcher because the killer might have handled them. Washing himself. Find maybe blood on them or his fingers marks. Dont think much of the finger-mark business - not much to it. He was going through the sheets. The last one was headed Seized for evidence at 7-A Priory Close Alley and listed the toilet articles and the wrapper. Bit sloppy, putting the wrapper down twice. Damn them.

Denton was trying to picture the jet of blood from the severed carotid artery. It would have sprayed the murderer, apparently had also sprayed the wall at the head of the bed. There was a line of blood down the wall beside the bed, as well, as if one spurt had struck it. Had he rolled her that way? Or had Stella Minter moved? He thought of the corpse he had seen at Barts, the stab wounds in the breasts and the tearing incisions in the pelvis. Parmentier with one leg up on the table, miming intercourse and cutting her throat. He must have been drenched with blood, he said. The two detectives looked at him. Even if he wore an overcoat - it would have been all over him.

He may have killed her from behind, then arranged her after.

What, while she was standing?

Yeah, a big man, easy to do - reach around, hes holding her with his other arm.

Hes left-handed, then. Post-mortem made it pretty clear how the cut was made - right side of her throat to the left. He hesitated. Mulcahy said he - the man he knew - murdered a woman while he was inside her. Again, the two detectives looked at him, their faces unreadable. Killing from the front, his clothesd have been covered with blood. Wouldnt have taken his clothes off, I suppose. Wash himself afterwards, or at least wipe himself down. Maybe with the wrapper?

Mulcahy said. Guillam folded up the inventory. Your Mulcahy was talking about something donkeys years ago, and anyway he made it up, if you ask me.

Thats what he said, that it was long ago.

You got Mulcahy on the brain, excuse my rudeness, sir. Guillam winked at Munro, who turned away. Guillam looked back at Denton, saw that hed seen the wink, moved his whole torso inside the big tweed coat in what might have been a shrug. Im about done here, he said.

Munro was moving slowly around the outside of the room, apparently studying the bed and avoiding the stain on the floor. Denton, feeling that he didnt want the visit to be wasted, began to look at the walls. What had he missed? He looked at the ceiling - cracks, discoloration, a moulding that ended halfway along the wall nearest the bed and reappeared on the front wall as if there had once been an opening there, now closed in.

No opening into the house? he said. Guillam, staring at the dress, shook his head.

Used to be.That got no response. Whats over there?

Number Seven - lodging house, Munro said. Nobody heard anything. Nobody saw anything. Right, Georgie?

Nobody, nobody, nobody, Guillam muttered.

Denton looked at the walls. Nothing - more cracks, more discoloration. Over the head of the bed, an engraving from a magazine of two young women, one praying and one ascending up what appeared to be a beam of light. Halfway down the bed, on the near wall parallel to it, a reverse painting on glass, much the worse for wear, of a castle in an exaggerated mountain setting. Denton stepped across the stain as Munro had done and worked his way down the narrow space between the bed and the wall to study the blood-splashed picture. Balmoral was painted on a grey-green lawn that swept away from the castle, most of whose middle had flaked away, leaving a dark hole where the royal apartments might have been. Denton leaned closer.

Mr Sherlock Holmes has found a clue, he heard Guillam say.

If he hadnt said it, Denton might have spoken up. Instead, anger rising, he pushed his hands into his overcoat pockets and stared some seconds longer into the bowels of Balmoral and then turned back to the room, silent about what hed seen. Not waiting for me, I hope, he said.

Guillam was grinning. An admirer of Mr Sherlock Holmes, are you?

Denton was still standing behind the bloodstained bed. I think its claptrap.

You astonish me.

I liked the stupid doctor, whats-his-name. Reminds me of people Ive known.

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