THE DO IT YOURSELF MURDERS
CHAPTER ONE
Even in the heavy downpour from a dark broody night sky
there was still sufficient light from the adjoining alley's sodium street lamp
for me to see where I was going while I moved my husband's body across the slippery
smooth pink and grey patio paving slabs.
Thankfully,
the rigor mortis had worn off. Earlier,
when I'd tried moving Steven he was as stiff as one of his damned
chipboards. I'd often thought he was as
thick as a plank, and at that moment his rigidity seemed to resemble a plank's
as well - rigid in death if never in bed, the wimp... I'd laughed at that thought but pulled myself
back from the brink of hysteria with a glass of his precious Napoleon brandy.
I glanced
over my shoulder, but neither neighbouring house had any lights on at the
back. My shoulder-length black hair
usually had an attractive sheen and curled naturally but now it hung lank and
drab, the rain smelling of town pollution.
Dribbles of cold wetness insinuated under my rain-coat's collar and
soaked the T-shirt. I momentarily
recalled him ogling a video of models in wet T-shirts and gritted my teeth at
the memory: he was all mouth and no trousers.
My jeans were too tight at the hip and made it painful for me to bend
down, digging into the upper thigh and crotch, but I had to persevere now I was
already soaked.
Steven was
dressed in his bus conductor's black uniform which helped to conceal his shape
from any prying eyes. Arms wrapped
around his chest, I tugged the dead weight, my lower back aching, feet unsteady
in Steven's green Wellington
boots, three sizes too large for me.
The big
green plastic tub of the compost maker Steven enthused over and bought last
month was tucked away at the bottom of the garden, between his bloody greenhouse
and the blasted work-shed.
Once I'd
pulled him between these two buildings I stopped and straightened up, glad of
the respite. Hauling dead corpses was no
fun, and I should know...
The rain
was an unpleasant irritant, but at that moment I was pleased to lift my head
back and bathe my face in the downpour.
The water seemed strangely cleansing, no matter how much grime was in
it.
Yes, he
would fit into the compost maker, I reckoned, sizing them both up. It seemed fitting: Steven would feed his damned
garden!
Very faint
twinges of conscience niggled - they got fainter after each murder - but I
brushed them aside as absently as I palmed away stray hair from my forehead.
Now I would
have to pretend he'd deserted me, run off with one of his bus's fares. That would be sensational enough, I thought,
leaning down to haul Steven the last few yards to his final resting place. The compost maker was a departure from the
usual, I knew, but it was very appropriate.
I hate
gardening.
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