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‘ What decided you to stay?’ asked McClintock.

For a moment Steven considered not telling but then he said. ‘There was blood and skin under three of Julie’s fingernails. ’

‘ So?’

‘ According to the doctor’s report, there was only a single scratch mark on Little.’

‘ That’s not impossible if she moved her fingers horizontally,’ said McClintock. ‘I mean, if she swiped her hand across his face then

…’

‘ The scratch was on his arm. His face was unmarked.’

‘ Well, his bloody arm then,’ said McClintock.

‘ Little said his cat did it.’

‘ He bloody would, wouldn’t he?’

‘ She was murdered in January.’

‘ What’s your point?’

‘ Little would hardly be out and about in a short-sleeved shirt, would he?’ rapped Steven, sounding equally annoyed.

‘ I guess not,’ McClintock conceded. ‘But Christ, his sleeve could have been pushed up in the struggle.’

‘ Maybe,’ said Steven in a tone that suggested he thought it the least likely explanation.

‘ So just what are you going to ask Ronnie Lee, assuming he’s still on the same planet after all these years?’

‘ I’m hoping he might still have the original lab reports on what was found under Julie Summers’ nails,’ said Steven. ‘If he has, I want to see them.’

‘ You don’t let go easily, do you?’ said McClintock with a sigh.

‘ Nope,’ agreed Steven.

SEVEN

‘ I understand the local police are getting touchy about your presence,’ said John Macmillan when Steven called Sci-Med to say that he would be staying on in Scotland for a bit.

‘ I’m not unsympathetic,’ said Steven, ‘but there are one or two things about the secondary evidence that I want to be perfectly clear about. You wouldn’t think that should be too difficult but they’re certainly making it look that way. Not only were all the forensic samples discarded in some lab screw-up at the time but even the lab reports on them have gone AWOL. I’m reduced to hoping that the police pathologist of the day still has them somewhere, hidden away in his personal files or even in a box under the bed. It’s crazy.’

‘ Does no one remember what was in them?’ asked Macmillan.

‘ Oh yes, I’m told that they confirmed David Little positively as Julie Summers’ killer.’

There was a short pause before Macmillan said, ‘So what’s the problem or am I missing something here?’

‘ I’ve seen the inventory of samples taken at the scene of the crime,’ said Steven. ‘The only real candidate for providing a second positive ID of the killer apart from the semen itself was the material taken from under three of Julie Summers’ fingernails. Data obtained from the other samples collected at the crime could have provided circumstantial evidence to put him at the scene of the murder but for a positive ID it would have to have been the nail samples.’

‘ Because they could have got DNA from them?’

‘ Precisely.’

‘ So?’

‘ According to the police doctor’s report on David Little when he was arrested, he only had a single scratch mark on him and it was on his forearm not his face.’

‘ A single scratch from three fingernails,’ murmured Macmillan thoughtfully. ‘Not entirely impossible I suppose…’

‘ No, but pushing it. I need to be sure about this.’

‘ I admire your attention to detail,’ said Macmillan, sounding as if he didn’t. ‘Chances are all this will probably turn out to be some filing mistake. Try not to upset too many people.’

‘ I’ll do my best,’ said Steven but the line had gone dead.

Steven got an early start next morning and stopped after a hundred miles or so in Aviemore to find something to eat — he had made do with just coffee and orange juice for breakfast so he was feeling hungry. It had rained all the way up and the roads had been busy with commercial traffic sending up clouds of spray so the break was going to be welcome on both accounts. He found a seat in the bay window of a hotel restaurant advertising all-day food and ordered scrambled eggs and bacon and a pot of coffee.

‘ We don’t do pots,’ the waitress informed him.

‘ Well, whatever you do,’ said Steven.

‘ Cup or a mug,’ said the waitress.

‘ A mug.’

Steven looked out of the window while he waited and watched little groups of people in waterproof gear wander aimlessly up and down the main street of the village that promoted itself as Scotland’s premier ski resort. The colour of their jackets added brightness to the otherwise grey and depressing scene.

The food when it came was lukewarm and soggy but when the waitress returned to ask in her automated way if ‘everything was alright’ for him, he simply nodded and said, ‘Fine.’ The truth was that he hadn’t expected any better — although he did wonder what excuse the UK tourist boards would offer this year for falling numbers. He didn’t think that lousy food and bad service would even make it to the starting line.

Grantown-on-Spey struck Steven as one of these places where it was always Sunday. There were very few people about and it seemed almost as if a respectful silence was being observed. It had the kind of ambience that obliged people to speak in whispers. Yet when he looked more closely, shops and businesses did after all seem to be open. He asked at the post office for directions to Ptarmigan Cottage and was given clear instructions from a friendly woman who thought at first that he might be the Lees’ son. She seemed disappointed when he said that he was just a friend.

Steven spent much of the two miles on the forest-track road leading to Ptarmigan Cottage hoping that nothing was coming the other way. There were so many twists and blind turns in it as it led up through dense pinewoods that the seeds for disaster seemed to be sown at every corner. He completed the journey without incident however, and found himself admiring the cottage and its environs when he finally got out the car. It was painted white and perched on the edge of a steep cliff with magnificent views down the River Spey in both directions. He could understand the attraction the place must have had for Lee when he’d moved there; the idea of living among so much natural beauty after spending such a large part of his professional life with ugliness and decay must have proved irresistible.

He supposed that the cottage itself had probably started out as a home for estate workers but, like so many, it had been modernised and prettified — although not to an unacceptable degree — and sold off to incomers. Through the large picture window of the lounge, Steven saw a woman get out of her chair and come to the door.

‘ Can I help you?’ she asked in a well-educated voice but in a tone that questioned his being there.

‘ Mrs Lee? My name is Dunbar. I hate to intrude like this but I wonder if I might have a word with your husband?’ Steven showed her his ID.

‘ The Sci-Med Inspectorate,’ she read aloud. The formal smile faded from her face and suspicion took its place. ‘May I ask what this is about?’

‘ I’m looking into some aspects of an old case your husband was involved in, Mrs Lee. There are a few things I must ask him.’

‘ Ronnie retired more than eight years ago. That part of his life is over. There’s nothing he can tell you. All that stuff was in the past.’

‘ Stuff?’ asked Steven.

Mrs Lee waved her hands in the air and said, ‘Pathology, dead bodies, police evidence, being called out at all hours, all that… unpleasantness.’

‘ Mrs Lee, I really would like to speak to your husband,’ said Steven plainly. ‘It is important.’

‘ My husband is not a well man, Dr Dunbar and I will not have him being upset. If there’s one thing guaranteed to upset him, it’s any allusion to his former career. He’s still very bitter about the way he was treated by these… bureaucratic pygmies.’

Steven saw the steely resolve in her eyes but he said, ‘I need to ask him some things about the forensic evidence in the Julie Summers murder nine years ago.’