Son of a Serial Killer

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Book: Read Son of a Serial Killer for Free Online
Authors: Jams N. Roses
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Psychological, Thrillers, Retail
Alexia had had her head bashed against the concrete until she was dead. But he wasn’t sure on the weapon used on Ricky.
    ‘It wasn’t a blade of any sort, maybe a hammer? But you’d expect the hole to be more…’ he paused, ‘round?’
    He flashed the close-up image on the screen of the digital camera.
    ‘It almost looks like a point, but what could make a hole like that?’ he asked.
    Summers took another look at the photo; the corner of the brick had left a clear indent in Ricky’s head. They both surveyed the ground, seeing stones, litter, cigarette butts, more stones, and the occasional broken brick.
    Summers turned to the wall that went from the ground up to the bottom of the bridge. It was old, and a few of the bricks had literally fallen from the wall on to the pathway over time. She carefully picked up a broken brick in her latex-gloved hands.
    ‘If I were to smash this brick extremely hard, into the side of your head, what kind of wound do you imagine it would inflict?’ Summers asked Kite.
    She examined the brick and found no traces of skin, hair or blood so tossed it into the canal.
    ‘And that’s where it’ll be,’ said Kite.
    Both detectives knew the murder weapon would hold no DNA evidence if it had been discarded into the water, no prints would be found on the rough surface of the brick, so there was no point in sending in a team to search it.
    Their best hope at this point was to speak to as many people in the area and try to find a witness. Summers would still have the area combed for the murder weapon, more a PR stunt than anything. The search would likely be a waste of time for the six officers called out to do it.
    Summers and Kite spoke briefly with the small crowd who had seen the police cars, it turned out they were just being nosey and had nothing of value to add to the investigation, other than one old lady, another dog-walker, who had seen the young couple together around two hours ago, walking in this direction. Over the next day or so, the detectives would also have to speak to family and friends, to see if anything was amiss or anybody knew something of interest.
    But Summers had a gut feeling. The attack looked random to her. If it was planned, why wasn’t a real w eapon used? Ricky had nearly twenty pounds in his pocket, if it was a robbery, that didn’t work out either. Ricky’s mother had been called and asked to go to identify the body at the morgue later that afternoon, and on the phone she said he should have been at home, doing chores. Alexia certainly should have been at school, so Summers concluded that hardly anyone, if anybody, knew that the couple were where they were. This would rule out premeditated murder. Both were fully dressed so a sexual motive wasn’t clear either.
    So was it just a random act of violence?
    The killer could have left the scene either way along the canal, north or south, or gone up the steps to the bridge that crossed over the water and escaped east or west.
    Summers thought the likely escape route was along the canal, as one would expect less human contact that way, meaning less chance of witnesses, but she walked up the steps to the road and had a look around anyway.
    There were CCTV cameras recording the activity on and around the road above the canal. This would cost more man hours, going through any recordings, but never-the-less that had to be done as well. Anyone filmed near the bridge that morning could be the killer, or maybe seen the killer, before or after the murders took place.
    She descended back down to the crime scene as her mobile phone began to vibrate in her pocket.
    ‘Yes, chief,’ she answered.
    Summers gave Watts a quick run-down of the situation. Two dead bodies, viciously murdered, no witnesses so far and probably no DNA evidence.
    ‘That bloody Phantom,’ he said. ‘He must have left some sort of clue. He’s bound to fuck up sooner or later.’
    Looking thoughtfully at the stains of blood on the concrete floor,

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