Busman’s Holiday Read online




  G R Jordan

  Busman’s Holiday

  A Kirsten Stewart Thriller #9

  First published by Carpetless Publishing 2022

  Copyright © 2022 by G R Jordan

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  G R Jordan asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

  G R Jordan has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet Websites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such Websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

  Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book and on its cover are trade names, service marks, trademarks and registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publishers and the book are not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. None of the companies referenced within the book have endorsed the book.

  First edition

  ISBN: 978-1-915562-05-0

  This book was professionally typeset on Reedsy

  Find out more at reedsy.com

  There’s always that one summer that changes you

  Beth Merlin, One S’more Summer

  Contents

  Foreword

  Acknowledgement

  Novels by G R Jordan

  Chapter 01

  Chapter 02

  Chapter 03

  Chapter 04

  Chapter 05

  Chapter 06

  Chapter 07

  Chapter 08

  Chapter 09

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Read on to discover the Patrick Smythe series!

  About the Author

  Also by G R Jordan

  Foreword

  This novel although set in Zakynthos, is entirely fictional and all persons, organisations and institutions conduct themselves in an entirely fictional fashion.

  Acknowledgement

  To Ken, Jessica, Jean, Colin, John and Rosemary for your work in bringing this novel to completion, your time and effort is deeply appreciated.

  Novels by G R Jordan

  The Highlands and Islands Detective series (Crime)

  Water’s Edge

  The Bothy

  The Horror Weekend

  The Small Ferry

  Dead at Third Man

  The Pirate Club

  A Personal Agenda

  A Just Punishment

  The Numerous Deaths of Santa Claus

  Our Gated Community

  The Satchel

  Culhwch Alpha

  Fair Market Value

  The Coach Bomber

  The Culling at Singing Sands

  Where Justice Fails

  The Cortado Club

  Cleared to Die

  Man Overboard!

  Antisocial Behaviour

  Rogues’ Gallery

  The Death of Macleod - Inferno Book 1

  Kirsten Stewart Thrillers (Thriller)

  A Shot at Democracy

  The Hunted Child

  The Express Wishes of Mr MacIver

  The Nationalist Express

  The Hunt for ‘Red Anna’

  The Execution of Celebrity

  The Man Everyone Wanted

  Busman’s Holiday

  A Personal Favour

  The Contessa Munroe Mysteries (Cozy Mystery)

  Corpse Reviver

  Frostbite

  Cobra’s Fang

  The Patrick Smythe Series (Crime)

  The Disappearance of Russell Hadleigh

  The Graves of Calgary Bay

  The Fairy Pools Gathering

  Austerley & Kirkgordon Series (Fantasy)

  Crescendo!

  The Darkness at Dillingham

  Dagon’s Revenge

  Ship of Doom

  Supernatural and Elder Threat Assessment Agency (SETAA) Series (Fantasy)

  Scarlett O’Meara: Beastmaster

  Island Adventures Series (Cosy Fantasy Adventure)

  Surface Tensions

  Dark Wen Series (Horror Fantasy)

  The Blasphemous Welcome

  The Demon’s Chalice

  Chapter 01

  Kirsten Stewart looked at the long, cool, blue sea in front of her drifting off to the horizon and thought that she might stand up and take a walk out to it. It wasn’t like the Scottish seas, cold any time of year; instead, it was pleasant to go into and she could stay in it for hours. She’d already enjoyed a good swim that morning, and now she was soaking up the rays on this little hideaway of a Greek island.

  In truth, it wasn’t a hideaway, it was one of the larger islands—Zante, or Zakynthos as it was known in the mother tongue, but whatever you called it, it was paradise. Kirsten could feel the sun beating down upon her back and that normally would have caused her concern for she tanned rather quickly, but at this point in time, someone was plastering sun lotion across her back and down her legs. He had said to her that once he was finished, she was going to have to turn over so he could do her front and she had given him a cheeky quip, ‘Not in public.’

  Life was good. She had Craig, she had the sun, she had a chilled existence over these last two months and there hadn’t been a hint of anyone from the service. They had simply cast her off, let her depart, and Craig with her.

  Kirsten grinned; life was certainly good, and she’d grown closer to the man who was now rubbing her back. There were several little local restaurants where they would dine at night and then take a walk along the beach where she snuggled in his arms while they talked about everything and nothing. The nothing moments were relaxed but the everything moments at times were tense, for she’d had a lot to get off her chest; he, too. You didn’t work in the service without picking up the baggage.

  Kirsten thought the talking had done her better than any number of counsellors and they’d grown together spiritually, she thought, as well as just physically. The only guilt she felt was being away from the Scotland that she loved so well. She had friends there, friends she’d been through a lot with, some of which she doubted she’d see again. Dominic and Carrie-Anne had left the service, gone off together to somewhere like this, Kirsten hoped, but with what they’d done in their time in the service, they would keep a low profile. Sure, she had their numbers; she could always contact them, always reach them, but why? The last thing you did was go near somebody else from the service once they were out; just let them be.

  Along from Kirsten was a man in a suit with a number of followers also dressed rather neatly. A small crowd was around him, locals mainly, but none of them wore beach clothing. There were, however, loose shirts as if they weren’t at work, but rather there for a special event, small as it was. The man was making a speech. Kirsten’s Greek wasn’t particularly good, but he was talking about sewage.


  At that point, she switched off. It was one of the reasons why she was lying face down. With nothing on top, she didn’t want to be caught in some local paper, for there were a few cameras around this man. Part of her was hoping they’d leave, for until they had arrived, Craig and she had enjoyed the beach to themselves. True, there now seemed to be a family at the far end of the beach, but at least they had the decency to be running around in shorts.

  Kirsten reached her right hand out to grab a bottle of water and found that she’d already drunk it.

  ‘Have we got any more?’ she asked Craig, behind her.

  ‘No, you drank it. You know what you’re like in this heat.’

  ‘I know,’ said Kirsten, ‘and I’m feeling it, too.’

  ‘Do you want me to go and get you another one? There’s a shop just up from the beach; they’ll have something.’

  ‘No, I’ll go. I’m absolutely boiling here. Do me good to stretch the legs. You lie down; you’ve been working hard enough on my back.’

  ‘Well, it was a pleasure,’ said Craig, smiling. Kirsten rolled to one side, then sat up, making sure her back was to the entourage close by. Craig handed her, first, her bikini top, and then, her t-shirt. She picked up a small purse from out of the bag beside her towel. ‘I’ll only be five minutes,’ she said, and reached over and kissed him on the lips.

  She stood up, walked away, and cast a couple of glances back. Each time, he was watching, but she didn’t care. This had almost become their private beach, nearly as good as the flat. She’d manage with the intrusion today, and she didn’t think anything could break the way she felt.

  Kirsten took the fifty steps back up to the roadside and then walked along, staring at the smooth surface and dusty sides of the road that she was amazed looked so well in the baked heat. Back home with the snow and the ice, potholes were always forming here and there, and roadworks were just part of life. Here, the roads of Zakynthos seemed to be in reasonably good nick for the mopeds that raced around the island, hired by tourists. That’s what you saw in this part of the island, for they were far away from the main town of Zante. Craig and she had also kept away from a lot of the other holiday traffic where the tourist industry flew in throughout the summer. Instead, they’d found a local flat in a small village, and Kirsten decided it was paradise.

  Having bought her water, she walked back along the road, still in her bare feet. She looked out to sea where there was a large yacht passing by. Kirsten wondered if they could go there next. Imagine being out on the sea for several weeks and no one else. Solitude seemed good, as long as it was solitude with Craig.

  When reaching the top of the steps, Kirsten could hear a commotion on the beach below. Looking down, she saw people running here and there, and she quickly tried to locate Craig, over by her towel. She saw no one. She clocked her bag was still there, his towel beside hers, but nowhere was Craig to be seen. There was a crowd, a smaller number than before, gathered around something in the sand.

  Kirsten decided not to rush there, but walked down, giving the impression of just an interested on-looker wondering what was happening. Her heart was beginning to thump, Craig wasn’t there. If he’d split, run away because of something, he’d have come towards her, especially if he thought it wasn’t anything to do with him, maybe instead just something that they didn’t want to get caught up in.

  As she got closer, she could pick out various words spoken by the locals. There was the mention of blood, mention of a mayor, something about kidnapping, people taken in cars, racing off on the road. Kirsten pushed her way into the gathered crowd and saw a body on the sand. It was the man in the suit, the one who had been speaking earlier. She could see the blood drenching through his shirt and every sinew within her tensed.

  She glanced around. Craig was nowhere, nowhere. Quickly she walked over to where their towels lay in the sand. On reaching, she saw Craig’s had blood on it, it wasn’t a large amount, certainly by no standard of the mayor’s only thirty feet away. Kirsten reached down to the bag. Craig’s wallet was still there, and around the edges of the bag she dived into a small pocket and found Craig’s gun.

  It had taken them time when they had arrived to organise themselves, to set up the flat and their belongings how they wanted. Neither of them was daft enough to think that being out of the service meant that nobody would ever come after them again. Safety was always on their mind, but if Craig reacted to an incident, he mustn’t have thought it was dangerous or the gun would have gone with him. Her own gun was also in the bag. She slung the bag over her shoulder. Quickly she wrapped up the towels, pushing them away inside the bag as well.

  As Kirsten turned to walk towards the steps, she saw the police arriving and decided she needed to bypass them. Slowly, she walked along the beach until she got to the far end where she joined a small path leading up to the road. More and more police were arriving and what looked like ambulances as well. She walked along the road back towards the steps that led down as if she’d just arrived and grabbed the local who was standing there. She asked him what was happening, and his reply was a blur.

  He fired off a statement she could barely hang on to, a mayor had been knifed and was dead but other people had been taken, other people had disappeared, one man in particular. Kirsten’s stomach went tight. Craig had been taken? Was Craig gone? Why was Craig gone?

  Kirsten had no information, so she wandered along close to the police cars. As she arrived, a policeman stepped in front of her, and she feigned ignorance, not speaking any Greek.

  ‘I don’t understand what’s happening? Can you tell me what’s happening?’

  ‘You can’t go, you can’t go to the beach. Beach off limits. You need to go to another beach.’

  ‘Why, but why are you all here? This is a nice beach,’ she said, ‘I was going to go here because they said it was a really good beach to swim in.’

  ‘No, you can’t come here. No go here,’ said the man. ‘Person dead, someone has died. We need to work.’

  ‘Someone’s dead?’ asked Kirsten, feeling surprised.

  ‘Yes, and someone taken, someone we think British.

  ‘Are people after British people . . . because I’m British?’

  ‘Were you meeting someone?’ asked the man.

  ‘No,’ said Kirsten. It was the truth, just not the whole truth. ‘Who was taken?’

  ‘British man. They say he tried to help then he was kidnapped.’

  ‘Kidnapped where?’

  ‘We don’t know. Please, please go back. Go to another beach, not this beach, okay? You help me, you go.’

  The man’s English was not great but was probably better than Kirsten’s Greek. She turned as asked and started walking back down the road towards the village. She gave the air that she was a little confused, but otherwise, she was returning back to the rest of her day, but inside, everything hurt, her stomach was hollow. They’d got Craig. They’d grabbed Craig. Why?

  Kirsten walked away from the police officer, but once she was round the corner, she sat down just off the roadside under a small tree. The shade wasn’t particularly cooling, and she wished it had been. For a while, she was trying to think about what best to do. She could feel the sweat pouring down her face.

  If somebody had come for him, why here? Why now? The police officer said that Craig had reacted, gone to help, been involved that way. It made sense; he wouldn’t have grabbed the knife if he thought somebody was just hassling someone. Even when they’d taken out the knife, Craig would probably bank on himself being able to handle it with just his hands, not draw a weapon that he wasn’t meant to have. Too easy to walk into a local feud.

  The very least Kirsten was going to have to do was get changed. She was in a bikini with a t-shirt that was clinging to her from the sweat that was pouring off her in the cauldron of the midday sun. The best option was to return to the flat, pick up her gear and work out how to track down Craig. If they were talking about him being British, maybe he was bein
g taken hostage for a reason. God help them if they had him hostage. She’d go and get him back and they’d better not stand in her way.

  Kirsten stood up, flung the bag over her shoulder again, and began to walk into the village. She took the bottle of water out from her bag trying not to curse as she opened the top and drank the water. If only she’d been there, maybe together they’d have handled it better, maybe together.

  You couldn’t second guess yourself. This might just be a minor incident. Yes, the mayor was dead, but maybe Craig was just something extra. Somebody to make money out of. It certainly didn’t look like anybody from the past was coming for them. After all, this wasn’t the place to do it and they would’ve taken Kirsten as well. She looked at her watch, maybe half an hour Craig had been gone. Time to get to the flat, get changed, get on the trail before it went too cold.

  Chapter 02

  Kirsten found herself breathing in a staccato motion as thoughts spun in her head. She was trying to follow her practice of remaining cool, calm, thinking through what was going on, and trying to pick out the best plan of action, but this was Craig. This was the man she had shared her bed with for the last two months. This was the man she was thinking about sharing her life with.

  As she walked through town, she tried to focus, concentrating on looking at the faces she walked by. There was the man from the bread makers, a local she’d always seen. He smiled over at her. That was pretty normal, for he liked her. Every time she went into the bread shop he seemed to give her a little bit extra, whether it be another croissant in the bag or a bread roll. He was always kind to her, and now he was smiling over at her. She gave her grin back as best she could, but she felt like she was going to swoon, collapse from the weight of pressure piling down on top of her.

  There was the woman who was always at the front of her little house, cleaning, sweeping who knew what into the street. She said good day to Kirsten, who fumbled with the word before saying it back. She crossed the dusty road and looked at their flat high up on the side of a bank. There were two other flats underneath but the outside steps ran up to reach theirs. The top floor flat had a good view of the road and from up there you could see everyone passing by.