there. I never questioned what he told us to do. Seemed OK to me.â
âAnd you?â Heather asked Rick Beavis, another dark-haired man.
âI trusted him. He was a born soldier. His problem was his missus, so far as I heard. Tried to stop him being deployed out there.â
âWanted him to come out altogether,â added Kelly. âStupid cow! What else could he do that would give her a place to live in and all this base offers? He loved the Army.â
âHe talked to you about his private affairs?â asked Heather dryly.
âLook, itâs different out there. Youâre in it together; living, sleeping, fighting in close proximity for six months. You canât have a can or two, you canât have a session with a girl. So you get very close, help each other, get your probs out in the open around a camp fire when thereâs nothing but miles and miles of dark desert in every direction. You become a family out there.â
Heather had heard this before. âSo Flip Keane was in an aggressive mood over his wifeâs demand?â
Beavis smiled. âHe was in an aggressive mood over the Taliban, who disturbed our peace.â
Kelly replied more seriously. âHe was real choked-up when we left here. A lot were. Saying goodbye to weeping wives and girlfriends. You know. The Corp had kids. He probably cared more about leaving them than getting away from Starr.â He frowned and glanced at his friend. âMost guys are OK once theyâre on their way, but he . . . we both thought he took a little longer to settle in than the others.â
âThatâs right,â agreed Beavis. âHe was morose, edgy for several weeks. Did his job, but seemed to be fretting about something back here. Spent a lot of time calling home.â
âHe was very nervy, at first.â
âThat all changed when we ran into an ambush. The setting sun was in our eyes; couldnât see the buggers moving around,â Beavis explained. âIt was a tricky one, Sergeant, but he got us out with whole skins. After that he always pulled out all the stops. Got us through anything, cool as you like.â
Heather finished writing a note, then looked up. âYouâve described a man with courage, expertise and assurance, someone you liked and trusted, yet somebody killed him yesterday in a most specific way. Can you guess why, or who might do that to him? Had he enemies in the platoon, in B Company, or even in the battalion that you know of?â
âNo,â they said together.
âCan you think of any link Corporal Keane had with jellyfish or ocean creatures?â
Kelly put forward an opinion. âWasnât it just a case of being convenient?â
âUnpremeditated murder is usually committed with the weapon nearest to hand in a sudden loss of control. That synthetic thing in a tank of deep water wouldnât be the most convenient means of strangling a victim.â She held up her hands. âThese would be.â
âYouâre saying someone planned it?â asked Beavis. âItâs weird . Heâd been in the desert for six months, nowhere near the ocean.â
Realizing she was allowing the interview to run away from her with these pleasant young men, Heather fired a more pertinent question at them.
âWhat did you do yesterday from mid-morning until midnight?â
They both looked startled. âYou canât think we killed him,â cried Kelly.
âI need to know your movements during the Open Day. Weâre checking out anyone who knew Keane in case they noticed anything thatâll lead us to the killer. Did either of you see him yesterday?â
âNo,â said Beavis. âWe slept in late, then spent the morning running over the details and timetable of our trip, checking our gear, emailing Robâs sister who weâll be staying with for the first three days.â
âThen we had a late lunch and
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