Murder at Crescent Point Read online

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  ‘Please keep it carefully. We have to take it with us. I am going further up to see if there are any clues,’ said the inspector.

  Nikki sat down and unzipped the bag. She was surprised to see a white envelope lying among the other items in the kit. She took it out and opened it. It was a letter. She quietly put the envelope in her pocket and fastened the zip of the bag. The inspector returned after a while and said, ‘I don’t see any evidence around. It appears the girl was sitting here when the killer came from behind and strangled her.’

  Nikki shuddered. ‘How can you be sure of that?’

  ‘There is no other injury on the body of the girl. The only marks are those of strangulation. These marks are deeper on the back of her neck which shows that most probably the killer came from behind and took her by surprise. The expression of astonishment on the face also confirms that she was completely taken by surprise.’

  Nikki asked, ‘Why strangulation? The killer could have used any other weapon.’

  Inspector Rajan replied, ‘A gun shot would have made too much noise. And he probably did not want to make a mess by stabbing her. Thinking about it, I feel that the killer threw the body in the river so that it could look like an accident and he could gain enough time to get away.’

  He added, ‘There has to be some clue. I think I will requisition sniffer dogs and come here again in the afternoon.’

  He picked up Jyoti’s backpack and said, ‘I will keep this in the police station for the time being. Let us go, I will drop you back to your hostel.’

  On the way down Nikki posed another question to the inspector, ‘You said that nobody comes here at this time of the year. The area on top of the hill has a lot of foliage but is it possible to pick up footmarks of the killer who probably came by the same route which we took to come up here?’

  ‘Yes, it is also possible to get a fairly good impression from the grassy surface by examining the difference in pressure of bigger and smaller footwear.’ Then turning towards Nikki he smiled, ‘You are smart.’

  Nikki returned to her room. Now the mystery about the killer deepened. Why would anyone want to kill Jyoti? What about the earrings? She had looked in the pond and also looked around the bench on the hilltop. The earrings were nowhere to be found. Were they an important clue? Did the killer think that they were real diamond? Was that his motive in killing her? But then why did he cut off a tuft of hair? Nikki’s mind was restless with questions. She suddenly remembered the white envelope and took it out from her pocket. It was addressed to ‘Miss Jyoti Taneja’. She unfolded the letter and read:

  Dear Jyoti,

  You will probably not believe the contents of this letter. But every word of it is true. Fifteen years back on 25 December, a woman was admitted for delivery in the Missionary Hospital in Somabad. Unfortunately, the woman gave birth to a stillborn baby. The doctors told her husband that there were some complications and she would never be able to give birth again. Her husband was a rich man and did not want to break her heart. On the same night another woman was admitted to that hospital for delivery. That woman gave birth to a healthy baby girl. With the connivance of the doctors, the man bribed the husband of this woman and exchanged his stillborn child with the healthy baby. The second woman was told that she had given birth to a dead baby. The condition laid to her husband was that the couple should leave the town and settle elsewhere.

  Several years later, the husband of the second woman was afflicted with a deadly disease. He was bedridden for a long time. A year ago, at his death bed he confessed his guilt to his wife and told her about the child he had given away. The woman was devastated. All her life she had been mourning the loss of her baby while her child was actually somewhere hail and hearty with other people.

  Her husband didn’t know the name and address of the person who had adopted her baby. The monetary transactions had taken place through an intermediary who had refused to disclose his whereabouts.

  After the death of her husband, the woman left her hometown in search of her baby. There was very little to go by, as she only knew the name of the town and the name of the hospital. She went to the hospital. The doctors and staff had changed. A kind-hearted matron was moved by her story and unearthed the old hospital records. On 25 December of that year only two deliveries had been registered. A woman had given birth to a healthy baby girl and her own name was against an entry, ‘Gave birth to a stillborn baby girl’.

  She went to the address of the other woman as registered in the hospital. But in place of a house there was a commercial centre, which belonged to someone else. After searching for one whole year the woman ultimately got hold of the information which she was desperately seeking.

  It will shock you but the truth is that you are not the daughter of Mrs and Mr Anurag Taneja, but the daughter of that unfortunate woman, whose child was snatched away from her on that cold winter night fifteen years ago. Yes, Jyoti, I am your real mother.

  Having traced so far, I cannot control my heart now. I am burning with desire to set my eyes on you, to hold you in my arms, to kiss you, love you and talk to you about all those things which I had suppressed within me during these agonising years.

  Three days from today will be 25 December, your birthday. I cannot come to your hostel. I shall be very happy if you can come to Crescent Point on the afternoon of the 25th. I know that it will be very hard for me to wait for these three days but I wish to see you on the same day I gave birth to you. Having waited for so long perhaps these three days will also pass.

  I hope you will not disappoint your unfortunate mother. Asha Sayal

  The letter was dated 22 December.

  Tears streamed from Nikki’s eyes. Now everything started falling in place. Jyoti could not have gone out of the hostel without permission so she had taken the lead in arranging a picnic in the valley on the fateful day. She had wanted to go to Crescent Point alone. She had concealed that fact from her and quietly packed her kit in the backpack. But how could a mother kill her own daughter? The mother who had taken all the pain in the world to trace her…no! That can’t be. Something is seriously wrong somewhere, thought Nikki.

  She once again looked at the envelope. There was no stamp or address. It had apparently been hand delivered. She got up and went down to the hostel gate and showed the envelope to the watchman. He confirmed that three days ago a lady had given it to him asking him to hand it over to Jyoti only and no one else.

  ‘What did this woman look like?’ asked Jyoti.

  ‘She was neither old nor young. She was wearing a white sari and came walking.’

  The letter and now the corroboration by the watchman increased her curiosity. Nikki looked at her watch. It was eleven o’clock. She saw Ms Malati coming her way. The warden said, ‘Nikki, the girls are leaving for their winter break this noon. You were to spend the vacation at Jyoti’s place. Now with the changed situation what are your plans?’

  With all the developments and shocks, the impending holidays had not even crossed Nikki’s mind. ‘Ma’am, I have not yet thought about it. Jyoti’s parents will be here in the evening. I will meet them and then decide.’

  ‘OK,’ said the warden and turned towards her office. Nikki asked, ‘Ma’am our picnic baskets and other things are lying in the valley. If you could ask Ramu Kaka to take me there I’ll get the stuff before the girls leave.’

  Ms Malati agreed and sent Nikki on her way.

  — CHAPTER THREE —

  Another Shock

  Nikki was soon in the van. Instead of going to the valley, she told Ramu Kaka to take her to Crescent Point. She climbed the hill and went to the confluence of the two rivers. Something was bothering her. Why had someone cut Jyoti’s hair? Was her hair removed for some tantric rites for making a magical potion? She knew that this belief was rampant among primitive tribes. Maybe a witch doctor killed her and removed the hair? She soon dismissed the idea. It seemed too improbable.

  In her reverie, Nikki soon realised, she had moved
further up the hill in the vicinity of a dense forest. Suddenly, she saw a white cloth fluttering behind a bush. She quickened her pace. What she saw completely shocked her. Sprawled behind the bush was the body of a woman in white sari! A corner of her sari was fluttering in the air which had attracted her attention. There was no one around. She went closer. She was appalled to see

  that like Jyoti, the woman’s face also looked stunned. She was obviously dead.

  Horrified, Nikki turned to leave when out of the corner of her eye she saw something lying close to the woman’s body—a small purse was lying near her open hand. Hesitantly she went near the body, picked up the purse with trembling hands and hid it inside her coat. Quickly, she ran back to the van.

  On seeing her Ramu Kaka said, ‘Miss, what about the picnic baskets?’

  ‘I couldn’t find them there. Maybe someone took them.’

  Nikki went to her room and closed the door. She took out the purse and turned it upside down on her bed. It contained some currency notes and change, a small handkerchief, a used bus ticket stub, and a photograph. She looked at the photograph. It was taken in a park. Three girls could be seen in the picture. One of them was Jyoti. The background of the picture was an open rain shelter in a park. Jyoti’s face had been circled. Nikki could not recognise any of the other girls in the photograph. But one thing was clear; the place where the photo had been taken was not in Sangalina Hills. Nikki looked at the used ticket stub. It read ‘Somabad to Sangalina Hills.’ So the woman had come from Somabad, Jyoti’s hometown!

  She looked inside the purse. There was an inner pocket which had been secured by a zip. She opened the zip. A key tumbled out with a piece of paper. She unfolded the paper. It was a receipt from Hotel Evergreen in Somabad. The name written on the receipt was ‘Asha Sayal.’ Nikki was shocked beyond measure. ‘Oh my god!’ she muttered. ‘Jyoti’s mother!’

  Nikki was boiling with rage. She started pacing the room restlessly. ‘Something has to be done,’ she was muttering to herself. ‘Jyoti’s killer must be punished.’ She took a momentous decision. She will do anything to find the killer of her best friend. She decided to go to Somabad immediately. The idea of informing Inspector Rajan about the letter and the contents of the purse came to her mind. But she quickly discarded it. Independent and courageous as she was, she thought she would let the police do their job their way—she would do hers her way, at least until she got some more information about the woman in Somabad.

  That evening Ms Malati called Nikki to her room to meet Anurag and Sheila Taneja, Jyoti’s parents, who had just arrived. Nikki had met them every time they came to pick up Jyoti before the vacations or to drop her back at the hostel. Today, they both looked thoroughly shattered. Nikki hugged Mrs Taneja who started crying uncontrollably. Ms Malati tried to console them. When Mrs Taneja had calmed down, she asked, ‘Tell me what happened.’ Nikki told her about the sequence of events but refrained from mentioning the letter of the dead woman found in Jyoti’s backpack. She also omitted any reference to her second trip to Crescent Point. Mr Taneja asked, ‘Where have they kept Jyoti’s body?’

  Nikki said quietly, ‘In the Hill View Hospital.’

  ‘Then let us go,’ Mr Taneja said grimly.

  The warden informed the parents, ‘Inspector Rajan wants to meet you. I have already given him a ring.’

  ‘Who is Inspector Rajan?’ asked Mr Taneja.

  ‘He is the investigating officer for this case,’ replied the warden.

  Mrs Taneja said, ‘He can meet us later. I want to see my girl first.’

  The warden said, ‘I understand your feelings, Mrs Taneja. But it is just a matter of another five minutes.’

  Inspector Rajan entered the room shortly thereafter. As he offered his condolences to the grieving parents, the room was engulfed in a painful silence. Inspector Rajan cleared his throat and said, ‘Another extraordinary thing has happened. This afternoon a dead body of a middle-aged woman was found at Crescent Point, the same site where your daughter was killed.’

  Everyone gasped. ‘What has happened to Sangalina Hills!’ exclaimed Ms Malati.

  Inspector Rajan said, ‘…The woman was also murdered at about the same time yesterday when Jyoti was killed. The surprising thing is that like the girl, the woman was also strangulated. It appears to be the doing of the same person who killed Jyoti.’

  Everybody in the room was stunned to hear the news of the second killing. Nikki kept her eyes firmly on the ground. Mr Taneja asked, ‘Have you got any clue about the murderer?’

  ‘Not yet, but we are working on some leads.’

  ‘Inspector, can we go to the hospital now? I would like to see my daughter,’ said Mrs Taneja impatiently.

  ‘Yes, in fact, I came to take you to the hospital,’ said Inspector Rajan.

  They all got up. Nikki asked the inspector, ‘Sir, may I come too?’

  ‘Yes, of course. Let us go.’

  At the hospital, Dr Shetty took them to the morgue where the parents cried their eyes out, trying to accept the grim fact of their child’s death.

  Inspector Rajan then instructed the doctor to show them the body of the woman which was discovered from the same spot.

  They moved to the adjacent table and Dr Shetty uncovered the face of the woman. The inspector asked, ‘Do you know this woman?’

  Before Mr Taneja could respond, his wife said, ‘No, we have never seen this woman before.’

  The inspector turned to Mr Taneja and asked, ‘What about you, Sir? Have you seen this woman earlier?’

  Mr Taneja replied, ‘No’. But his reply appeared circumspect to Nikki, who was watching him carefully. She saw his face being drained of all colour when he saw the woman’s face. There were, however, no expressions of either surprise or shock.

  The inspector said, ‘Since the woman was not a local resident and the two murders took place at the same time and place I thought maybe the woman knew your daughter. That is why I asked. Someone must know her. Sorry for the trouble.’

  Mr Taneja asked, ‘Doctor, can we take the body with us?’

  Dr Shetty replied, ‘You will have to wait for a couple of days till we have the post-mortem report. It should have arrived yesterday but we were waiting for you.’

  When they came out of the hospital, Inspector Rajan asked Mr Taneja, ‘Where do you propose to stay?’

  ‘At Hotel Orient.’

  ‘Fine,’ said Inspector Rajan, ‘I will see you there tomorrow morning at ten o’clock.’

  As Mr and Mrs Taneja entered their car, Mrs Taneja asked Nikki, ‘What about you? How are you going back to the hostel?’

  ‘Her hostel is on my way, I will drop her,’ Inspector Rajan offered and the two sped away.

  During their journey, Inspector Rajan said, ‘There has to be some link between the two murders. It is not plausible that the girl, the woman and the killer just happened to be there at the same time.’

  Nikki kept quiet. She had noticed Mr Taneja's discomfort when he saw the woman’s dead body. Why?

  The inspector continued, ‘I have to find more information about the woman, who she was and what was she doing that day on the hill? Only then can I reach the killer.’ Inspector Rajan looked uncomfortable. ‘During the post-mortem, we also discovered that a tuft of Jyoti’s hair seems to have been chopped off. I couldn’t bring myself to tell the Tanejas as I didn’t want to upset them further. This must be a missing link, though.’ Nikki kept quiet. When they arrived at the hostel, Nikki asked, ‘Inspector, can I come with you to the hotel tomorrow morning?’

  ‘What will you do there?’

  ‘I have known them for some time. Maybe I can gather some information which is useful to you.’

  ‘Be ready by quarter to ten.’

  ‘Thank you, Sir.’

  — CHAPTER FOUR —

  Facing the Facts

  The next morning, when Inspector Rajan came to pick her up, Nikki asked, ‘Sir, have you been able to find anything about the dead woman?�


  ‘We have put an ad in today’s newspaper with the photograph of the woman. This is a small place—I am sure I will get some lead,’ the inspector continued, ‘There is one more thing. Our forensic department has found two sets of footprints from that area apart from our footprints and the footprints of the girl and the woman. They have done a casting of both these impressions. This means that it was not one but two people who were involved in the killings.’

  ‘Oh I see,’ said a somewhat surprised Nikki. ‘Does that mean that the two killings were not done simultaneously but with some gap of time, maybe a few minutes?’

  Inspector Rajan became pensive and said, ‘It is unlikely but, yes, we can’t rule it out.’

  At the hotel, Nikki found Mrs Taneja much more composed though Mr Taneja appeared somewhat fidgety. Inspector Rajan asked them some general questions regarding Mr Taneja’s personal life, his business, other family members, income and properties, business partners, etc. ‘Are you absolutely sure that you have never previously seen or met the dead woman?’

  ‘Yes,’ replied Mr Taneja, but he didn’t sound very convincing. Both Nikki and Inspector Rajan noticed this.

  Finally, the inspector asked, ‘Do you suspect anyone who could have killed your daughter?’

  ‘No.’ And this time Mr Taneja appeared more firm.