"Whatcha got?" Frank Kerman asked.
"Snuff flick... possibly," Bob Yorke replied.
He held up a jiffy envelope that was a bilious beige colour. '
Snuff/Skin Flick'
was written on the side in black marker pen.
"Fake... almost certainly," Frank said.
"I know, I know," Bob said. "You know what the young uns are like. I keep telling them over and over—snuff films, real snuff films, are an urban myth, but will they listen..."
"Twonks," Frank said. "You got the kebabs?"
Bob lifted up a plastic bag containing two parcels wrapped in white paper. "Efe's finest."
They entered the small viewing room. Bob passed the bag of food to Frank. He opened the beige envelope and pulled out a small disk in a blank jewel case. He opened the bag wider and looked inside. His leathery face—like someone had knocked all the stuffing out of a punchbag, as an unkindly soul had once described it—creased up in a frown.
"I don't believe it. Stupid twats have gone and left off the paperwork. Again."
"Twonks," Frank said. He popped open the drawer of the disk player.
"I'll give them a clip around the ear, so help me."
Frank took the disk and placed it in the player while the other man leant back and switched off the lights. He started the tape recorder sitting on the desk and spoke into a mounted mic.
"This is DI Frank Kerman and DI Bob Yorke. Time is," he checked his watch, "8:36 PM. About to view footage of a suspected murder. Footage is from..."
He switched off the tape recorder and turned to Bob.
"Are you sure there's no paperwork?"
"Nothing. Found it sitting on my desk with an email from the super saying one of the lads had found it and we should take a look."
"The papers are probably lost on that pigsty you call a desk."
"It's all this stupid bureaucracy. I'm supposed to be out solving crimes, not spending eight hours a day at a desk filling in forms."
Frank shook his head. He switched the tape recorder back on.
"...footage of unknown origin."
He pressed play on the player and a large monitor flickered into life. The flickering image revealed a large tiled room. A bathroom, Frank thought, and a large one at that. A raised bath jutted out from one of the side walls and took up most of the centre of the room. Judging by the angle, Frank suspected the camera was set up in one of the top corners of the room. Between the bath and the camera was a large inflatable mattress. The camera was positioned so that both mattress and bath were fully in the shot. Frank stared intently at the screen. He paused the film to describe what he saw into the tape recorder.
"And there's nothing to say where this came from—internet, private club, dodgy geezer down the pub?" he asked Bob.
Bob shook his head.
Frank sighed. "Could be from sodding anywhere for all we know."
"Chuck us me kebab. I'm famished," Bob said.
Frank passed him a white parcel before opening up his own. A hearty, meaty smell of grease, onions and chilli sauce wafted up to him. His stomach rumbled appreciatively.
"Lovely," he said.
He restarted the film, then picked up the overstuffed pitta bread in his lap and took a large bite of crisp lettuce, onion, and strips of meat slathered in tangy chilli sauce. That hit the spot, he thought, gulping a mouthful down into a stomach that had been running on nothing but coffee for the past six hours.
"Resolution's too good for regular CCTV," Bob noted. "No time stamp. Looks to have been recorded in real time as well."
"Not exactly feature film quality either."
"Shitty quality is a filmmaker's best friend," Bob said. "Harder to spot the special FX."
"True. Reckon it's some film student playing Deodato?"
Some film students made viral videos of eagles flying off with toddlers. Others, the wannabe Argentos and Romeros, posted their fake snuff vids to the darker corners of the internet, hoping to dredge up a little media interest.
"Playing is the right word," Bob said. "Deodato was a horror master. You know they arrested him after
Cannibal Holocaust
? They thought it was all real. The actors had all signed contracts to stay out of the media for a year to make it seem like it was genuine found footage. They had to track them down to get him off the murder charges."
"Quality film that,
Cannibal Holocaust
. The animal stuff always made me feel a little uncomfortable though. That turtle."
"Hey, do you remember Faye Donahue?"
"The PETA loon that wanted to ban all meat from the canteen?"
"That's the one. Well, she really liked
Shaun of the Dead
and because I'm the station horror film buff—"
"You? You still haven't watched
Kill List
."
"—and because
I'm
the office horror film buff, she asked me to recommend anything similar."
"What, you didn't."
Bob smiled.
Frank shook his head.
"Should have seen the look she gave me the next morning. Priceless."
Frank paused the tape again. Something was bothering him.
"Look how clean those tiles are," he said. "The film students would dirty them up. They'd want their set to look like something out of