• Complain

Robert Daws - The Rock

Here you can read online Robert Daws - The Rock full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: History. 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:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

The Rock: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "The Rock" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

The Rock. Gibraltar. 1966. In a fading colonial house overlooking the Straits of Gibraltar, the dead body of a beautiful woman lays dripping in blood. The steel handle of a knife protrudes from her chest, its sharpened tip buried deep within her heart. The Rock. Present day. Detective Sergeant Tamara Sullivan arrives on The Rock on a three-month secondment from the London Metropolitan Police Service. Her reasons for being here are not happy ones and she braces herself for a tedious and wasteful twelve weeks in the sun. After all, murders are rare on the small, prosperous and sun-kissed sovereignty of Gibraltar and catching murderers is what Sullivan does best. It is a talent she shares with her new boss, Chief Inspector Gus Broderick of the Royal Gibraltar Police Force. Hes an old-fashioned cop who regards his new colleague with mild disdain. But when a young police constable is found hanging from the ceiling of his apartment, Sullivan and Broderick begin to unravel a dark and dangerous secret that will test their skills and working relationship to the limit.

Robert Daws: author's other books


Who wrote The Rock? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

The Rock — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "The Rock" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

The Rock

A Sullivan And Broderick Murder Mystery

by

Robert Daws

2012 Robert Daws. The books author retains sole copyright to his or her contribution to this book.

All rights reserved.

Acknowledgments

I have been fortunate enough to be a yearly visitor to Gibraltar for some twenty-three years. The warmth and spirit of its people, together with the wonder and magnitude of the Rock upon which they live, has never ceased to amaze me. Even as I write I am looking forward to my next visit.

I would like to thank those within the Metropolitan Police Service and the Royal Gibraltar Police Force who have given their valuable time to offer help and guidance. It has been invaluable.

I hope I will be forgiven for playing hard and fast with the internal geography of the Gibraltar Police H.Q, as well as Gibraltars main General Hospital. I have also changed the names of several places and establishments. Other than that, I have tried to be as accurate as possible with situation and location.

I would like to thank my publisher Circlehouse for faith and encouragement, especially my editor Jenni Bird and designer Aldren Gamalo.

Also thanks to Adam Croft for his knowledge and enthusiasm for books, writing, pubs and fine ales.

To Ted Robbins for access to his huge brain and endless enthusiasm.

Last but not least, my wife Amy, for her wisdom, patience and wonderfully creative mind. A dear writer friend, Christopher Matthew once wrote, Eighty-five percent of a writers life is spent thinking and thinking very hard. Unfortunately for writers, unless they are seen to be pounding away at a laptop keyboard, nobody really thinks they are working at all Amy has always understood this strange process, even when my thinking has drifted into a pleasant little afternoon siesta.

To Messrs Adam Croft and Kempston Hardwick - men of mystery and imagination.

Can a father see his child

Weep, nor be with sorrow filled?

Can a mother sit and hear

An infant groan, an infant fear?

No,no! never can it be!

Never, never can it be!

William Blake

Gibraltar. 1966.

The Captains House stands proud above its high walls. From its imposing gates, statuesque lions gaze down impassively in reminiscence of its colonial past.

A lone Austin Wolesley glides past the gates and continues down the dusty road, the silence of the afternoon broken only by the hum of its engine and the strains of Dave Brubecks Take Five floating from the nearby French windows of the houses large drawing room. To the east, the garden rises in three terraces finally ending at the base of the gigantic limestone Rock itself. To the west, the view crosses the town to the Straits of Gibraltar and the Moroccan coast of Africa. Below the surface of the narrow and busy seaway that separates these land masses, two mighty continents meet. But here on high ground, net curtains flutter in the breeze as a gramophone needle skips and jumps across deep black grooves.

The boy does not move, nor blink, as he stares at his reflection and his reflection stares back at him. For a fleeting moment, he no longer knows which is which. He needs to know. With huge effort he turns his head from the mirror and forces himself to look once more upon the carnage at the centre of the room.

A womans hand hangs limply across the arm of a chaise longue - the trickles of deep scarlet blood dried to the greying skin. The sodden nightdress offers a single bare leg in hope and desperation. The glistening lipstick on her sumptuous lips belies the horror that shines through her bloodshot eyes. The steel handle of a knife protrudes from her chest, its sharpened tip buried deep within her heart.

A man steps in through the French window and surveys the scene. The fine lines of his tailored three-piece suit a sharp contrast to the chaos within the room. He turns and sees the boy trembling in a corner. The boy meets his stare and screams. Screams uncontrollably.

The Rock. Present day.

She sighed contentedly as she looked out through the French windows and took in the sights and smells of the houses compact but perfectly formed grounds. Even after all these years she never failed to smile when she stood on this spot. This she did every day, enjoying the delicate scent of breeze through the garden, the high westward easing sun beating down on the tall gates at the end of the driveway and the fluttering of the drawing room curtains in the warm summer air.

The radio played, barely audible, as the newsreader continued unperturbed. ...Cross border delays are expected from this Saturday the ninth of June, as major roadworks commence on the La Linea approach roads...

As she raised the glass of orange juice to her lips, the blood-curdling scream rang out, piercing through the ceiling above. A blue rock thrush , momentarily perched on the terrace walls, took flight as the glass of orange hit the cold tiles.

She moved now, as fast as her ageing legs would carry her, up to the first-floor landing. Another scream. She stood frozen to the spot, knowing that she must do something. But what? She moved slower now to the bedroom door at the end of the upper hall and tapped gently upon it.

Are you all right, dear?

Silence. Another tap.

Hello? Are you all right?

Silence. Then the single click of the key turning in the lock. The heavy wooden door began to slowly creak open, revealing the terrible scene within. She could utter only four words.

Oh... you poor thing.

1

The violent thrust of the aircrafts engines sent a disturbing vibration through the plane as it started to power its way down the runway of Lutons International Airport. Although she had experienced it a hundred times before, the outwardly composed thirty-one year old woman sitting in a window seat at the front of the passenger deck could not completely hide her anxiety. Nothing about the process of aviation seemed natural to her and the grisly mental images from a dozen disaster movies were now running on a loop through her mind. This mental torture had not been helped by the five hour delay the passengers had been forced to endure because of yet another strike by both French and Spanish Air Traffic Controllers. The vented frustration of some of her fellow flyers meant that the flight attendants had little good will to spare for a single woman travelling alone. She had tried smiling at the one male attendant on board, but had been as ruthlessly ignored by him as by his female colleagues.

The plane now started to rise and climb into the skies. A large and heavily perspiring man in the seat next to her gripped his arm rest and started to practice some kind of breathing technique obviously learnt for just such an occasion.

As the plane passed through the low lying cloud and moved higher into the blue, she finally felt relaxed enough to slip off her shoes and stretch her tense feet beneath the seat of the passenger infront. She once again opened the brightly pictured pages of the Guide to Gibraltar that had been nestling in her lap. She had attempted this read so often over the previous weeks that her failure to get beyond the opening two pages on The Rocks history and strategic geographic position at the southern most tip of the European Continent now made her smile rather than grimace. She knew that it was not the lack of interest in the place itself that led to this response, more the circumstances that had led to her having to journey to Gibraltar in the first place. This had not been a part of her plan. The job that she would have to endure for the next three months was a punishment. A barely concealed form of demotion. The hiding away of an embarrassing incident by an obsessively P.R. orientated internationally renowned institution.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «The Rock»

Look at similar books to The Rock. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «The Rock»

Discussion, reviews of the book The Rock and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.