Raja Khan had been a big man in his fifties, his size emphasised by his voluminous shalwar kameez. He was lying on his back, arms spread in an accidental gesture of appeasement. The right side of his face had been charcoaled by a laser charge, and cut into his left cheek was the usual bloody cross.
“He died between eight and eight-thirty last night,” the forensic officer was saying. “It’s a quiet area—the body wasn’t discovered until this morning.”
Rana entered the data into her com-board. She looked up at Vishwanath. “All ten murders were committed between eight and nine, sir.”
“So perhaps the killer works regular office hours… though a big help that is.”
“There is a very interesting feature,” the officer went on. “The victim has obviously been shot twice, unlike all the other victims. The first shot narrowly missed his forehead—note the burned skin and hair. Then came the coup de gr â ce to the right side of the face.”
“You think he survived the first attack and tried to get away?”
The officer nodded. “Very possibly.”
“So the initial attack might not have happened here,” Vishwanath mused.
Rana asked, “Do we know Raja Khan’s address?”
Vishwanath passed his com-board to Rana and she downloaded the information. Khan had an address in an exclusive city centre apartment building.
“Sir, seeing as how the location of this killing doesn’t conform to the crucifix, I was wondering if this was perhaps a preliminary meeting set up by the killer to lure Khan to one of the four locations. But it went wrong. Khan got suspicious and tried to run. So the killer struck then.”
“Where does that leave us, Lieutenant?”
Rana shrugged. “Perhaps the killer lives in the area.”
“It’s a long shot. Contact Naz and have him organise a house-to-house in the district.”
Rana contacted headquarters and relayed Vishwanath’s order.
The forensic officer was downloading the data gathered by the crawlers into his com-board. He shook his head. “Nothing, sir. Lots of information, but precious little of any use.” He consulted the screen of his com-board. “There’s no correlation between data picked up here and that at the other crime scenes.”
Vishwanath turned to Rana. “I want you to compile the usual list of the dead man’s family, friends and acquaintances. Interview them all—you know the routine.”
Rana was staring at her com-board, and the crucifix pattern that overlaid the city map. “One thing, sir. Perhaps the location of this killing does conform to some kind of crucifix.”
Vishwanath regarded her down the stern length of his aquiline nose. “Do you mean something like the cross of Alsace?”
Rana shrugged. “Maybe.”
“Then why,” he said heavily, “isn’t the crucifix cut into the victim’s cheeks the cross of Alsace, Lieutenant?”
“Because it isn’t exactly the cross of Alsace. It’s… I don’t know… perhaps something that’s harder to carve.”
Vishwanath pursed his lips and finally nodded. “Ah-cha. It’s worth looking into, Lieutenant.”
“I’ll check it when I get back to HQ, sir.”
The corpse was lifted into the back of an ambulance, the lasers dismantled and the crowd told to disperse. Rana rode back in the squad car with Vishwanath. He sat in the passenger seat in silence, watching the passing scenes with eagle-eyed intensity.
Ten minutes later she sat down behind her desk and dealt with the incoming calls. She accessed the messages from duty officers doing the footwork on the Khan murder. They had searched his apartment and come up with a list of addresses. Rana downloaded them and, over the course of the next four hours, got through to over twenty citizens in and around the city. She went through a routine series of questions, establishing each individual’s connection with the dead man, and then made appointments to interview them face to face.
Raja Khan had had contacts in many walks of life, from characters with criminal records to well-positioned state politicians. It spoke volumes for the probity of elected representatives that they kept company with such low life, but then that was the way of the world. Often during her six weeks in the Homicide Division, Rana had wished she was back in the safer, simpler world of Child Welfare.
The monsoon deluge began on time just before five, beating on the windows with the percussive music of relief after another sweltering day. The sun was going down when Rana finished speaking with the last of the dead man’s listed acquaintances and sat back. Her next two shifts would be spent interviewing petty criminals and politicians. For the past two weeks she seemed to have done nothing but conduct fruitless interviews with reluctant citizens.
She remembered the pix of the suspected killer from Madrigal; the day before she had requested further visual enhancement from the computer division. She accessed the file and downloaded a dozen pix of the computer-generated image. These showed different versions of the same man, aged so as to appear in his forties. In one the passage of time had treated the man welclass="underline" his face was flushed and well-fed; in another he was thin and worn. There were pix of him bald, and with hair in various styles and degrees of grey. Rana printed out copies of each pix and slipped them into the breast pocket of her shirt. She would take them with her when she conducted the interviews tomorrow.
She consulted her com-board and read through the notes she’d made at the scene of the crime. The more she considered her suggestion about the crucifix, the less viable the idea became. She wondered if she had been merely throwing out off-the-wall ideas in an attempt to impress Vishwanath.
Nevertheless, she accessed GlobaLink on her com-screen and entered the data bank of symbols and logos. She sketched a representation of a cross of Alsace, with a dozen or so variations, and gave the search command. As she waited, she knew that this would be yet another dead end, another hopeless lead she could forget.
Thirty seconds later the screen flashed with the message that half a dozen crucifixes resembling the image she had requested were ready to be downloaded.
Rana touched the command. Instantly, the six crosses appeared on the screen. Five of them resembled the cross of Alsace, to varying degrees. The sixth crucifix was of the regulation Christian type, but with a small circle beneath each arm. Rana sat up, suddenly interested. What if this was the cross the killer had scored on the cheeks of his victims, but he had been unable to carve a representation of the two small circles? Tenuous, she knew, but worth looking into.
She requested information about the crucifix. Seconds later the screen filled with text. Rana read the article, digested the information, then went through it a second time.
The crucifix was the symbol of a Martian Christian cult known as the Church of Phobos and Deimos, hence the stylised representations of the moons. The church had been founded almost one hundred and twenty years ago by French settlers on the red planet, when two young girls belonging to a traditional Christian order claimed to have seen the image of Christ on the faces of the orbiting moons. Furthermore, they said that they had been told by God to leave Mars and settle the newly founded colony of Columbus, Sirius III, which like Mars had two small moons. Almost a hundred years ago the Church of Phobos and Deimos had raised sufficient funds to expedite the venture. They had sent their disciples to the various space academies, and in time had the expertise to crew their own colony liner. Ninety years ago the entire church, some five thousand citizens in all, had boarded the starship New Hope and embarked on their God-given quest.
They had never arrived. The liner was reported missing, presumed destroyed, a month after phase-out from Olympus spaceport. No trace of the ship was ever discovered, either in normal space or in the void. The disappearance of the New Hope and its five thousand passengers remained a mystery to this day.