Authors: Chris Simms
âI know. The police force here is modelled on yours. We were a British colony until 1968.'
âI didn't realize.' Feeling a little sheepish, she checked around â but there was no one to have overheard her minor gaffe. âSorry, I didn't catch your name.'
âSheila Moruba,' the inspector replied. âSo, checking with immigration, we have no record of Vassen Bhujun re-entering the country.'
âBut, according to the university he was enrolled at over here, his course has already finished.'
âWe might be a small country, Detective Khan. Less than one-and-a-half million. But our immigration systems are as modern as yours.'
âSorry â I wasn't implying they weren't.'
There was a slight pause. âWell, Vassen Bhujun has not passed through Customs and Immigration since leaving for Britain over a year ago.'
Which means if he is still here, Iona thought, it's illegally. âOK, thanks very much.'
âYou also asked if he is known to us.'
âYes,' Iona replied. âI appreciate you can't just send me his criminal record â if he even has one. But, you know, it tends to be the same names that crop up again and again. At least it is here in Manchester.'
âI can tell you â in confidence â he has no record. But his name recently came up as a possible associate of a man we've issued an arrest warrant for.'
âWho's the man?'
âA relative of his, Ranjit Bhujun â the prime suspect in an ongoing murder investigation.'
âReally?' Iona's mind went back to what Hidden Shadow had said. The man with Vassen had looked like an older brother or uncle. âWhat kind of a relative?'
âCousin.'
Iona felt a little jolt of adrenaline. âBut Vassen wasn't involved?'
âNo. Vassen was in Britain when the murder was committed â his address was searched in case Ranjit was hiding there. The rooms were empty.'
âWhen did this murder take place, then?'
âAround six months ago. It was unusual in the sense that the victim was British.'
Iona imagined a tourist mugging gone wrong. Some poor soul straying into the wrong part of town. âA holidaymaker?'
âNo. The person owned a property here. On a very exclusive part of the island. He was killed in his bed.'
âSo it was a burglary?'
âThe file is with the Major Crimes Investigation Team. If you put in a formal request, I imagine they'd share it with you.'
âOK, I'll arrange for that as soon as possible. But can you give me any details in the meantime? I'm really up against it here.'
âYes â I remember the incident well. You may, too. The case made the news for two reasons. Firstly, it was a very brutal and senseless murder. The thief had already emptied the contents of the safe when the owner of the property managed to free a hand and hit the button for the panic alarm above his bed.'
âFree a hand? He'd been tied up?'
âYes. The assailant had got in through an open window of the villa. Cut through the mosquito screen, bound and gagged the victim, then forced him to divulge the combination for the safe. When it was being emptied, the victim set off the alarm. The thief returned to the bedroom and bludgeoned him to death. As I said, brutal and senseless.'
âSo a burglary gone wrong.'
âI believe that was the final conclusion.'
âYou mentioned a second reason why it stood out.'
âYes â the victim. He was quite a prominent figure here on the island. At least in official circles.'
âWho was he?'
âReginald Appleton.'
Iona screwed her eyes shut. The name sounded vaguely familiar. âAppleton . . . what did he do in Mauritius?'
âHe had a retirement property here, a very large one. In Britain, he was a Lord â a very senior part of your legal system.'
Iona opened her eyes. âThe Law Lord? You're talking about the judge: that Appleton? I do remember, it made the news here . . .'
âThe whole thing is very embarrassing. Especially as the prime suspect has not been caught.'
âRanjit Bhujun is still at large?'
âYes â though not thought to be in Mauritius any longer.'
So your borders aren't quite as watertight as you were making out, Iona thought. Which is understandable, considering you're an island, like us. She considered the fact Vassen had been seen with another man of a similar appearance. Am I dealing with some kind of terrorist cell? I need that CCTV footage, she realized. And I need more information on Appleton as well. âOK, thanks Sheila. I'll get a proper request for the file on the murder. Speak to you soon.'
While replacing the receiver with one hand, she was typing into the search box of Google with the other. Appleton, Law Lord.
T
en minutes later, Iona had contacted the UK Border Agency. As she waited for the person to get back to her, she turned to the Wikipedia entry she'd printed off for Reginald Appleton. Four pages of dense text. Iona skimmed over the opening pages.
Born in 1937, in Kent, educated privately and then at Queen's College, Oxford, where he won the Vinerian Scholarship. Called to the Bar in 1965, made a QC just eleven years later in 1976 and then a judge in 1980.
All par for the course so far, Iona thought, reflecting for a moment on her own â failed â application to Oxford. Still, she gave a quick smile, if I had got in I'd have probably ended as a merchant banker or something similar. Living in London, working in the Square Mile, hours from my family. No, three years reading maths at Newcastle University and then into the police is suiting me just fine.
But this guy, she thought; he'd been born into the establishment and was obviously destined to become part of the establishment. Made a Judge of the High Court of Justice, Chancery Division in 1984 followed by a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1991 to 1996. Then, at fifty-nine years old, he was appointed Lord of Appeal in Ordinary and created a life peer by the title Baron Appleton. Retired as a Law Lord in 2009, just prior to the title changing to Justice of the Supreme Court.
At which point, Iona thought, he invested in a property on Mauritius. No doubt the plan had been to see out his twilight years in a tropical climate, cocktails on the verandah, fresh seafood and stunning sunsets. Except the poor man had been battered to death in his bed.
The next section detailed the man's life outside his role as a Law Lord. Had received a blue from Oxford for rowing. Married in 1962. His wife, Margaret, had died of cancer in 2003. He was a jazz aficionado and had published what was widely regarded as one of the finest biographies of the pianist, Oscar Peterson. In 1995, his eldest daughter, Lucinda, had married the son of Tristram Dell â a senior civil servant who â until his retirement â had worked in the Foreign Office. The man had also graduated from Oxford in the early fifties.
Iona's eyes stopped moving. Did the two men know each other before their respective children got married? Were they more than just contemporaries?
She moved to the next section, titled Selected List of Cases Decided. A series of bullet points detailed various actions. One plc company versus another, a shipping corporation versus a chartered bank, a private name versus an insurance company. Then, in the early years of the new millennium, a series of decisions where the defendant was listed as either the Secretary of State for the Home Department or the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs. She searched for any more details on what the cases had been about. Just dates and a few letters that obviously denoted some kind of reference code.
The final subheading read, Opinions in Terrorism Cases. Iona's eyes narrowed. Of course, she thought; the man was a Law Lord in the years following on directly from 9/11. The start of the Bush and Blair administrations' so-called War on Terror. She sat forward, eyes now fixed on the text. Appleton had been involved in a variety of judgements. Again, the cases were listed, but with no accompanying detail.
The concluding few lines stated that, in the long tradition of English judges deferring to the executive in matters of national security, Appleton had been no exception. Which meant, Iona thought, going along with the government.
She highlighted one of the decisions where the defendant was listed as Secretary of State for the Home Department and fed it back into Google. An obscure legal website came up. The judgement related to the detention without charge of several foreign prisoners that were being held in Belmarsh prison under the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001.
Iona brushed hair back from her face. This was all getting very murky. The nature of Appleton's job had made him a symbol of the British establishment. Then he was involved in cases like that. A terrorist's dream target, surely. She glanced uneasily towards the corridor leading past the stairs up to her boss' office. If this cousin â the prime suspect in the Appleton murder is over here â and the Labour Party conference is about to kick off, we could have a problem. Her dad's words came back to her; the observation Blair and his old cronies were due to be sweeping into town. This, she thought, is something Wallace needs to know about.
The phone to her side went off. âConstable â I mean, Detective Constable Khan speaking.'
âForgot your rank there? It's Dominic Edwards.'
The Border Agency official I spoke to earlier, Iona thought. âThat and being in a new office. Keep setting off to my old one in the mornings.'
He chuckled. âI've had a search on the system.'
She tilted her head so she could wedge the phone against her shoulder. The strand of hair she'd tucked back over her other ear fell forward again and she blew at it from the corner of her mouth. âDid you have more luck than me?' she asked, pulling off the cap of a biro.
âAfraid not. You're right â Vassen Bhujun was granted a student visa to undertake a one-year course at the University of Manchester. That visa expired in June, but there is no record of him leaving the country.'
âSo you have his file?'
âYes â right here.'
âIs there a photo with it?'
He gave a little cough. âI believe there was a human error â that's polite-speak for someone dropping a bollock. No photo with the paperwork.'
Iona sighed. âOK. So he shouldn't still be here. How many other people in the country on student visas promptly vanish when it expires?'
âYou want the official number or the real one?'
âReal one, please.'
âWe don't know.'
She frowned. âRoughly, then. Thousands?'
âHigher.'
âTen thousand?'
âKeep going.'
âTwenty thousand?'
âKeep going.'
âBloody hell. So, what happens in those scenarios?'
âYou want the official version or the real one?'
She sensed a quagmire of unknown depth. âLet's have the official version this time.'
âWe send out enforcement officers to check their last known address, flag their names with various government agencies, pro-actively pursue any leads we might unearth. In reality, if they change name, they aren't going to be troubled by us. Especially if they start working cash-in-hand.'
âThought you might say something like that,' Iona muttered gloomily.
âSorry.'
âHey â not your fault.'
âAnyway, that's the good news. You want the bad?'
She took hold of the receiver and tilted her head to look up at the ceiling. âThe bad?'
âHe's a possible terrorist suspect, is he not?'
âAbsolutely.'
âHis paperwork lists the subject he was here to study.'
Iona closed her eyes. Damn, I should have asked that of the university. âWhat was it?'
âChemical engineering.'
âWell,' Iona said, getting to her feet, âthat's just pants. Thanks, Dominic. Time I spoke to my boss about this.'
âT
his is looking a bit tasty,' Superintendent Paul Wallace said, rubbing his hands together. âEspecially the Appleton murder.'
Iona took in the nasal-twang in the man's voice. Wallace was a born and bred Mancunian who'd grown up on the east side of the city where some of its poorest neighbourhoods were found. She had heard somewhere that he was ex-army, but she wasn't sure of any details. What she did know was that he'd been in the CTU from its inception. A beak-like nose, slightly hooded eyes and a fuzz of brown hair made him look faintly like something out of the muppets.
He glanced at his monitor once again. âAccording to this old article from
The Daily Telegraph
, the attack was so ferocious they had to ID him off fingerprints. If dental records were a no-no, there couldn't have been much left of his face.'
Iona grimaced, partly at the suspicion that her boss was slightly thrilled by the grisly detail. It had occurred to Iona on more than one occasion that Wallace would have excelled as a criminal. But then again, she concluded, many of her fellow colleagues in the CTU looked like they might too. It was probably what made them so good at their jobs. âThat level of violence,' she said. âDoesn't that normally suggest the attacker knew the victim?'
Wallace sniffed. âYou're right. Overkill, I think they call it over in the Major Incident Team.'
âI vaguely remember it being on the news,' Iona replied. âHeadlines asking if there was a dark side to paradise, that type of stuff. Won't MI6 have taken an interest in something like this? A figure of the establishment, involved in some high-level stuff . . .'
âProbably. I'll ask the question.'
One of Iona's hands was hanging down at the side of her chair. She crossed her fingers. âDo you want me to follow up on this student character?'
âShit-bag,' Wallace muttered, eyes now on the university printout with Vassen Bhujun's name highlighted. âComing here and taking advantage of our educational system.' He glanced at Iona. âYou went to uni, didn't you?'