Time to Play (North East Police)

Time to Play (North East Police) Read Free

Book: Time to Play (North East Police) Read Free
Author: K.A. Richardson
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the last dribble.
    Elvie placed her hand on Nita’s head, checking for a temperature as her grandmother had done when she was small. Nita’s head felt hot and sweaty as she thrashed beneath Elvie’s touch.
    The fear she had felt at the start had faded. Now Elvie just wanted to get to wherever she was going. She had an ache in her head that had been a constant for days. Her hunger had eased today and she felt tired. Whatever was coming she would deal with when she got there. She missed her Noni terribly. Her gran would never have let anything happen to her. Laying her head on top of her knees, she started to cry silently.
     
    2 nd November, 0610 hours – footpath along the River Wear, Durham
    Wallace Pemberton was following his normal route. He’d been to the corner shop to pick up his newspaper, as he did every day, and had progressed down the road and onto the footpath that ran alongside the river. His west highland terrier, Poppet, was eagerly sniffing every plant and bush as they made their way leisurely along.
    It was still dark, and the path was deserted: the joggers and dog walkers not yet braving the early morning. But Wallace liked the dark, and the walk kept his ageing muscles from seizing up. At almost ninety years old, his hearing was starting to fail and his eye sight wasn’t the best, but he was definitely fitter than your average old man.
    He had his paper tucked under one arm, his jacket collar was pulled up around his neck and the flat cap sat perched on his balding head keeping the skin warm. Poppet’s lead hung loosely beside him, not that she would ever run off even without the lead. The dog was almost as old as he was, in dog years at least.
    The sun was just starting to think about rising, and the sky to the east changed from black to blue slowly; Wallace was just approaching the cathedral. It stood on the opposite side of the bank to the path, lights illuminating the walls and turrets. It had stood for nearly a thousand years, and was one of the main tourist attractions in Durham. He had visited once as a young man, trying to impress his latest flame. They had walked all the way along to the lovers’ chair and shared their first kiss. So long ago he couldn’t even remember when. Her name had been Lacey, and she’d ended up his wife so his wooing had obviously done the trick. Lacey had passed on several years before, but Wallace always thought about her when he passed the Cathedral. He missed her a lot.
    ‘Love you, Lacey,’ he whispered with a nod as he passed.
    The route Wallace took wasn’t short; it was probably five times longer than just using the normal streets to get home. But it was a nice walk, the odours of wild garlic and aniseed ripe in the spring and summer, and the crisp smell of winter approaching at this time of year. The leaves had started falling from the trees the month before, and Wallace trod carefully, mindful that he might slip.
    He was just walking past the weir, when something caught his eye. It was trapped in the tumultuous water rolling at the weir itself, and it looked like clothing. Wallace pulled the hard glasses case from his inside pocket and placed the lenses over his eyes. The water ragged the object about a little more and suddenly, Wallace realised it wasn’t just clothing. It was a dead man. He should know; he’d seen enough of them during the war.
    Wallace felt a pain start in his chest and move down his arm. He struggled to draw breath and the pain increased. He tried not to panic, he’d had a heart attack a few months back and had ended up being fine. His legs gave way and he sank to the ground with a soft sigh. Remembering what he’d been told last time, he coughed hard. Drawing in a shaky breath, he coughed a few more times. His newspaper floated off in the morning breeze as he freed the new-fangled mobile phone from his pocket. His grandson had insisted he carry it with him on his walks. Now he just had to remember how to use it.
    The pain

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