The Binford Mysteries

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The Binford Mysteries Page 35

by Rashad Salim


  DC Barry Cole has been with the Binford Police force for less than a week when he is assigned to the murder investigation team.

  News of the boy’s murder sends shockwaves around Binford and Asim experiences notoriety in the local community for his discovery. When another local boy is abducted and later found murdered, the town erupts in mass hysteria.

  In a cruel twist of fate Asim finds himself linked to the second victim too. And the third...

  Unprepared and guided by an erratic partner, DC Cole must face mounting pressure everywhere from the media and the local authority to stop the killings and catch the serial killer responsible.

  Told through the eyes of those at the centre of the investigation, The Binford Snatcher finally reveals the true extent of the panic within the local community during this era in Binford’s history.

  For fans of Mark Billingham, Simon Kernick, Harlan Coben’s Mickey Bolitar series, Kevin Brooks, Bali Rai, Chris Carter, Barry Lyga, Gillian Flynn’s Sharp Objects.

  * * *

  Prologue

  DC Cole

  Can a town be cursed? I’ll let you decide.

  Asim

  I love Binford.

  I want to be clear about that despite everything that’s happened in the town.

  When I often think about how it all got started for me I can’t help but wonder what might have been if I knew how to kick a ball.

  1

  May, 1991

  Asim

  It was a Saturday night. I was messing around in the front garden with Omar, a classmate and friend I’d known since we were five years old. We were kicking a football about after having spent most of the afternoon fooling around in the local neighbourhood, which was how we spent every Saturday.

  My best friend, Maqsood or ‘Max’ as we called him, hadn’t made it because he was busy helping out with some DIY work going on at his house. At least that’s the reason he had given Omar who had passed it onto me to explain why he had shown up at my house alone.

  The road outside my house rarely had vehicles pass by and so we moved out further apart allowing us more distance. I stayed in the garden while Omar had moved across the road. My front garden had a driveway where my dad parked his car but right now it was vacant and we made the most of the extra space.

  Omar was tubby but quick. He wasn’t as good as Max – since hardly anyone was – but he was a much better footballer than me. I was the worst player ever.

  This was something I proved when I kicked the football with too much power and sent it flying towards the end of the road about fifty feet away. That wouldn’t have been a problem if the almost-suburban area where I lived wasn’t right beside a canal because that’s where the football had landed.

  Omar and I looked at each other but he was the first to speak.

  “I hope you can swim.”

  I kicked myself and waved him off as I made my way towards the canal.

  It was past ten o’ clock in the evening and I found myself wishing we had stopped messing around way before it had gotten dark. Fortunately the light from the streetlamps was bright enough to give me enough visibility for the canal.

  When I reached the edge of the canal and looked down at the shallow waters, which couldn’t have been deeper than four feet where the ball went in, panic came over me and it had nothing to do with getting the ball back.

  From where I was standing I could see something under a few planks of wood dumped in the canal. It was hard to believe but there was no doubt about what I was looking at.

  There was a body laying face down in the canal. A male I guessed due to the short hair.

  It had been wrapped around a large plastic sheet which had come loose.

  “Hurry up, Ass-im!”

  I moved around to get a better look. I had to slide down the side of the canal and although I didn’t want to get my trainers dirty I slid down to get closer. I was less than ten feet away from the body when I decided what to do about this.

  “What’s takin’ you so long?” I heard Omar say, he was walking towards me now.

  “I found somethin’!”

  “What?”

  “There’s someone down here! Go get help!”

  I watched the body. It didn’t move. I thought it might have been a boy around my age.

  “What you talkin’ about?”

  I turned around and saw Omar standing at the edge of the canal. Before I could shout my instructions again I saw the look on his face that told me he had spotted the body. He spun around and took off towards my house shouting ‘help!” over and over again.

  My heart beat faster and harder as I listened to Omar’s voice, knowing he was going to alarm anyone that heard him. I looked at the body and wondered if the person was dead. I hoped not but even then I knew that was likely.

  I felt a sudden need to get away from the body and climbed back up until I was back on the ground beside the canal. I was staggering to my feet when a white van nearby started up and drove past me slowly. I looked at the driver’s window but it was dark inside the van and I couldn’t make out anything except that the driver had been wearing a hat.

  I watched the van drive away and wondered if I should have tried to stop the driver and told him what I had found but the van was too far away for that by the time I snapped out of it. Besides, I thought, Omar had alerted plenty of people with his shrieking. I saw a few of my neighbours accompanying Omar towards me.

  He ran up to me and told me an ambulance was on its way. My neighbours caught up with us and asked me lots of questions and took a look at the body for themselves but I didn’t take any notice of them. I wasn’t paying attention to them because I was too focused on the white van that had passed me by so slowly. Two things were on my mind in that moment I stood surrounded by all those people.

  Did it mean anything that the van didn’t have its lights on? And had the driver seen me?

  2

  DC Cole

  I had been with the Binford police department for less than a week when I got assigned the case.

  I was at the station going over some paperwork at my desk when DI Richardson called me from his car phone.

  “Cole, get your arse down here ASAP.”

  At that point all I knew was a body had been found.

  “Right,” I said and stood up. “Be there soon.”

  Up until then I had only met DI Richardson a few times and didn’t know what to make of him. He seemed like an alright bloke – pleasant enough when introducing himself during my orienteering – but I didn’t get any clues about what he was like to work with.

  He was the senior officer I would be working alongside during my time with the department and had showed me around, helping me to settle into the team as best as he could but there was something about that felt out of place with him.

  I couldn’t quite put my finger on it and dismissed it. I figured whatever it was, it wouldn’t be a problem. In time I got to know how wrong I’d be about that.

  When I reached the crime scene with a uniformed officer, it was being handled routinely: cordoned off and being analysed by the forensic team. A large crowd of local residents had formed on Oakland Place. The local gossiping was in full swing by now. I wondered how many of them knew anything important relating to the case.

  “Cole!”

  I looked around and saw DI Richardson waving me over from the other side of the road. He was beside the cordon and when I reached him he lifted it up so we could enter the crime scene.

  “Glad you could join us,” he said and led the way towards the edge of the canal.

  Dr Booth, the pathologist from the police department I had seen in the corridors once or twice, emerged from the canal. He wore waist high waterproof overalls and made his way towards us. Behind him, two members of the forensic team dressed in white body suits preserved the area around the body with a tent.

  “Who found the body?” I asked.

  “Local boy,” Richardson said and nodded in the direct
ion of an Asian teenager who was talking to some uniformed officers near the cordon.

  “Any idea who he is?”

  Richardson shook his head.

  “How long’s he been dead?”

  “We’re about to find out now,” Richardson said as Dr Booth reached us.

  “What can you tell us, Dr?” Richardson asked him.

  “Just the usual. I’m afraid, not much at this stage.”

  “Cause of death? Time of death?” I asked.

  “The boy was strangled and I would say he’s been deceased at least half a day.”

  “He wasn’t killed down there was he? Dragged down and finished off?”

  Booth shook his head. “There aren’t any signs of a struggle and no foot tracks belonging to him. Just those of the lad who found him and a much bigger print. Most likely of the person who left him here.”

  Richardson and I thanked the doctor and he left us.

  “So what do you reckon?” I asked Richardson.

  “Too early yet. Don’t wanna jump to any conclusions.”

  “Mugging?”

  Richardson said nothing.

  “Attempted rape?”

  “...Like I said, can’t be makin’ assumptions at this stage, can we?” he gave me a stern look. “We’ll get more answers when the post mortem’s done. Right now we’ve got to see if we have any witnesses.”

  We walked over to the two boys who discovered the body.

  “Did he see anything?” I asked Richardson.

  “Let’s find out.” Richardson told me the other officers on the scene had already interviewed the boys separately and managed to get down all the information they could get.

  We approached the two boys and introduced ourselves. The boys told us their names. Asim and Omar.

  I looked at Asim. “You the one who found the body?”

  He nodded.

  “How did you find it?”

  “I already told the other policeman everythin’.”

  I nodded. “I know.” I smiled. “Sorry, I was a bit late to all this. Just wanted to catch up now if you don’t mind filling me in too.”

  The boys told us how they were playing football and Asim ended up discovering the body by accident. I thought it was a good thing Asim couldn’t kick for shit. Had it not been for the football, the body may have gone undiscovered for a lot longer.

  “I understand you saw a suspicious vehicle right after you came across the body,” Richardson asked Asim. “Is that right?”

  The boy looked at Richardson and then at me. “...I don’t know about that.”

  His fat friend nudged him in the ribs. “What d’ya mean you don’t know? Tell them what you saw!”

  “Look, I told the other officer about that.”

  “And?” I asked.

  “And I don’t know what I saw.”

  I sighed. It was understandable. It was very common for witnesses to challenge what they had seen.

  “What do you mean?” Richardson asked him.

  “I mean, I saw this white van drive past me but now that I think about it I think I might have overreacted. I was shook up from seein’ the dead body and then the van drove past. It might have been a coincidence.”

  I nodded.

  We asked the boys a few more questions and when we were about to leave Omar called out to us.

  “Was he murdered?”

  I looked at him but said nothing.

  “This investigation has just begun,” Richardson said.

  “But he didn’t fall in, did he?” Omar asked.

  His friend shook his head and cursed under his breath.

  “Just leave it to us,” I said. “You don’t have to worry about this now. We’ll take care of it.”

  “Come on,” Asim said and led his friend away.

  Richardson and I walked over to his car. I surveyed our surroundings and all the people we passed, taking it all in and wondered why the boy had been murdered.

  I was about to get in when Richardson gave me a look. “Welcome to Binford.”

  3

  Asim

  It was madness. The cops showed up and turned the whole place into a circus. I had the cops talking to me and Omar with all my neighbours and everyone else around us watching, all trying to get some answers from us. And as if that wasn’t bad enough, before the cops left, the press showed up.

  “Why did you tell them that?” Omar asked.

  “Tell them what?”

  “About that van.”

  I didn’t answer at first.

  We were sitting down by the kerb, watching the festivities around us – there were police cars, TV news crews and another ambulance still around.

  I wanted to go to my room and stay there but I had to wait outside with Omar until his dad came to pick him up.

  “...I never should’ve mentioned it.”

  “Why? You told the cops you weren’t exactly sure what you saw but that wasn’t it, was it?”

  I stayed silent.

  “Is it ‘cause you’re scared?”

  “Fuck no! It ain’t that.”

  “Then what?”

  “Okay,” I said. “Put it this way: say I told them about the van and they go lookin’ for a van, it’s gonna waste their time. It might fuck up their investigation with me sendin’ them down the wrong path.”

  He spoke softly, “I never thought of that.”

  “Exactly. Anyway, they know about the white van now. So if they find out anythin’ related to that, it’ll help enough.” Right after the words left my mouth I remembered I hadn’t thought to look at the license plate and cursed myself.

  “Hello, is it Asim?”

  I looked up and saw a white woman in her late twenties standing in front of me. There was a white man beside her. He had a camera strap around his neck and held a notebook. I looked at them both and swore in my mind.

  “Yeah and I’m Omar,” my friend said.

  I whispered an insult at him but he took no notice. He was beaming a smile at the reporters and they smiled back. The woman stuck her hand out.

  “My name is Laura.” Omar shook hands with her. “And this is Pete,” she nodded in her colleague’s direction.

  Pete smiled at us.

  Laura stuck her hand out to me and I looked at it. I didn’t want to talk to her or any other reporters but I didn’t want to be rude by not shaking her hand so I took it.

  “May I sit down?”

  I gestured for her to go ahead. She sat down.

  “What do you want?”

  “I just wanted to talk to you boys.”

  Although I couldn’t see it I could tell Omar was still smiling that stupid fat smile.

  “You’re from the newspapers, aren’t you?” I asked.

  “I bet they’re from CNN!”

  I punched Omar in the arm for that. “CNN is American, fool.”

  Laura told us she was from the Today newspaper. I was vaguely aware of it. It was a national paper I had seen lying around at my cousin’s house.

  “I hear that you’re the one who first discovered the body. Is that true?”

  “Yeah.”

  Omar told her about the football and what a bad footballer I was.

  I glared at him and wished his dad would hurry up and take him away.

  “What did you see?”

  I told her. She had a few other questions and I answered them.

  Pete was busy jotting down everything Omar and I had said from the moment he and Laura first approached us.

  “Did you see anything else?” Laura asked.

  I felt Omar’s eyes burning a hole into me.

  “Yeah,” I said and told her all about the van and how I didn’t think it was necessarily part of this but she took all of it in like it was the most interesting thing she’d ever heard.

  “When you print this, will it make a difference?” Omar asked Laura.

  “How do you mean?” she asked him.

  “Will it help solve the murder?” Omar asked.r />
  “I doubt it,” I said.

  Laura and Pete looked at me. I locked eyes with Laura.

  “Look, no offence but I know how you tabloids work.”

  “We’re not a tabloid,” Pete said.

  “Same thing,” I said. “You just want to get a front page story. That’s all.”

  “So you think this is front page news?” Laura asked. There was a smile too.

  “I don’t know. All I know is that boy’s family’s gonna see that article. Bare that in mind.” I thought I sounded really sensible and surprised myself.

  “Don’t worry,” Laura said. “The dignity of murder victims is always a priority for the paper. We won’t print anything that’ll make it worse for anyone involved.”

  4

  Asim

  The next day, it was on the news.

  The BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky News (although I didn’t see that myself because we didn’t have cable. Just the basic four terrestrial channels – BBC 1, BBC 2, ITV and Channel 4).

  The news networks were very brief in their reports about the body. It was the same with the newspapers but I was told it was because the Sunday papers didn’t have much time to print the story with more details.

  I was watching the six o’ clock news when my older brother Rizwan walked into the living room.

  “Still waitin’ for your fifteen seconds of fame?” he asked and slumped down on the sofa beside me. He had just finished lifting weights and stank of sweat.

  “Not really, besides, I didn’t get interviewed by any news crews.”

  “Too bad.”

  He had missed the entire situation with the corpse because he had been out with his bum chum Salman.

  Rizwan was twenty, four years older than me, and worked as a delivery man for a local cash and carry convenient store on Binford Lane. He was my only sibling and I thanked my lucky stars I didn’t have any other older brothers like him. He was okay sometimes but most of the time he was a pain in the arse and I couldn’t wait for him to move out and get married.

 

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