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Authors: John Mannion

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BOOK: Century of Jihad
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On the way down in the lift, Lisa looked at Stuart and, mimicking the blonde, said, ‘I will make myself available to you at any time.’

Stuart blushed a little and responded. ‘I can’t help it if I have that effect on a damsel in need.’

Lisa gave Stuart one of her looks, then said, ‘I would say she is more than in need. I’d say she is desperate.’

Stuart wasn’t sure how to take Lisa’s comment, so said nothing.

During the course of the next few hours Lisa and Stuart knocked on many doors in the apartment block. Nobody else had seen or heard anything untoward that they could think of. Many of the residents were not at home. These individuals would have to be followed up later.

Ed and Theo, meanwhile, were interviewing the concierge; a rotund man in his middle years. Ed opened the interview,

‘Mr Nardoni, as you know, one of the residents was found dead in his apartment this morning. We are investigating this man’s death. At the moment we cannot say if anyone else was involved. We will need to take a look at any CCTV footage you may have, so that we can investigate anything suspicious or out of the ordinary. Has anything of this nature come to your attention in the last few days?’

The concierge answered straight away:

‘Well, I have been giving this a lot of thought since things kicked off this morning. At about eight o’clock yesterday evening there was a lot of noise at the front of the building, just outside of the apartments. I saw on the CCTV a couple of young lads larking about, so I went out to have a word with them. I was expecting a bit of verbal abuse, you know? Being told to mind my own business, or words to that effect, but they were alright. We chatted for a minute or two and they left.’

Ed continued, ‘Did anyone you didn’t recognise, or who wasn’t expected, enter the premises?’

The man thought for a moment. ‘Nothing out of the ordinary. People are always coming and going in a place this size. All sorts. You know – maintenance people, deliveries, visitors and so on. All in an average day. I ask who they are and then they go about their business. There’s rarely an issue that can’t be resolved.’

Theo asked, ‘Can I have a list of the names of people visiting in the last few days?’

‘Of course, Officer,’ the man replied.

Ed asked, ‘Can you describe the young lads you spoke to outside?’

The man looked reflective, then spoke. ‘They were just two young lads. Jeans and denim jackets. A bit rough-looking, I suppose, but reasonable enough I thought, when I spoke to them. One had a tattoo of a spider’s web on his neck. They were in their teens, I would say. About five eight to five ten, not much taller. Both were slightly built.’

Ed requested, ‘I’d like to have a look at the footage taken on the lobby camera around the time of the incident with the two lads, if I may.’

The concierge took the two detectives into his office and selected the relevant recording for them to view.

As the footage reached the time the concierge left the building to remonstrate with the two youths outside, two men in dark clothing, wearing dark cloth caps, were seen to enter the premises and head straight for the lifts.

Ed spoke first. ‘Just as I expected. These two characters sneaked in while you weren’t looking, under cover of the incident outside which, no doubt, they had orchestrated. Their faces are partially concealed by their peaked caps; positive identification will be difficult.’

A flustered concierge responded, ‘I saw those two leave the building. I can’t remember what time it was. I’m in the shit now. Once management find out about, this I’m history. I’m gone.’

Ed responded, ‘Calm down, Mr Nardoni. You’ve been a great help to us. We’ll let the relevant people know. We’ll take all the footage recorded over the past forty-eight hours. We need to check if anything else of significance is recorded.’

The concierge handed over all the footage taken in the relevant timeframe to the detectives. Ed thanked the worried man. Ed and Theo headed back to the Yard – Ed to brief the powers that be, Theo to go through the CCTV footage.

Theo went over the footage they had collected over the next few hours. He noted that the men left the apartment block just after 10pm. The concierge gave the men a cursory glance as they passed his desk. People leaving the premises were obviously of little interest to him. Theo observed nothing else of significance on the footage.

The next morning Theo set about identifying the two young men. This presented little difficulty. Both youths were well known to the police, they had both been involved in a string of petty offences over a period of several years, mostly anti-social behaviour, drink and drugs-related. Local police were tasked with bringing the youths in for questioning.

Ed spent the morning attending Fayez’s post mortem. No suspicious marks or abrasions were found on his body. Blood and tissue samples were taken for toxicology tests.

The two youths were found dead at midday, in a derelict building. Both had succumbed to the pure heroin they had introduced into their veins.

On hearing the news of their demise, Ed commented to Theo,

‘Well, that’s one dead end. Let’s see if we can find anything to identify those two heavies seen at the apartment block.’

CCTV footage showed the two unidentified suspects leave the scene in an old blue Fiat, reported stolen on the night of Fayez’s death.

The Fiat was found that afternoon in a field in Essex. It had been torched.

The investigation identified only a handful of visitors to Fayez’s apartment, all of whom were interviewed and removed from the suspect list.

At 6pm Ed received a phone call from the pathologist who had conducted the post mortem on Fayez’s body. The pathologist gave Ed the results of the toxicology tests:

‘The toxicology report on Fayez indicates traces of Temazepam residue in the left posterior margin of the liver. This substance would have led to the deceased experiencing muscle weakness, reduced alertness and reduced motor co-ordination. I can’t say with any degree of certainty if the substance was ingested by the deceased voluntarily or not. I can confirm that there were no needle marks or indications of a struggle on the deceased’s body.’

Ed responded, ‘Thank you, Doctor.’ He slowly, gently, put the phone down. He sat silently for a moment, thinking; staring, but not seeing. So Fayez had ingested Temazepam. What did this mean in terms of the direction of the investigation? He reasoned that at the very least this information left open the possibility that someone else was involved. Ed was certain it was the two men seen entering the building while the concierge was talking to the two youths outside. The same two men seen by the female witness in the corridor leading to Fayez’s apartment. Fayez must have invited them in. There was no sign of forced entry, but this would not have necessarily been evident if professionals were involved. There was no evidence of a struggle in the apartment, but this could have been cleared up. There was no sign of injuries being sustained by Fayez in a fight for survival immediately prior to his death, apart from those incurred as a result of his hanging. However the Tamazepam would have left Fayez weak, affected his state of mind, made him more compliant. Fayaz could have ingested the Tamazepam voluntarily or it could have been put into a drink without his knowledge. The two men could have been involved in some deviant sexual practice with Fayaz that had gone wrong. But why the covert entry if sex play was all they had in mind? No other crimes had been reported by the residents of the building which could be linked to the presence of these two men, whose stolen car had later been found, burned out, in a field in Essex. Ed concluded that on the balance of probability, Fayez had been murdered. But where had his two suspects disappeared to?

Three days after Fayez’s untimely end, the bodies of two tall, well-built men in their forties were found shot dead in a parked car on the outskirts of Glasgow. Traces of cocaine were found in the vehicle the men had hired that morning in Glasgow city centre. The men had told the car hire company that they were expatriate oil workers returning to the UK on a short break from their place of work in Bahrain. The local police failed to identify the two men. The police investigation in Scotland indicated they were possibly the victims of a drug-related gang war. The inquest into the men’s death would conclude that they had been unlawfully killed by a person or persons unknown. Ed was not made aware of the demise of these two individuals. There was nothing to tie them to any police investigation at the time.

Three months after the discovery of Fayez’s body, Ed was summoned to DAC Braithwaite’s office. When he entered the DAC’s office, he found DI Ward was already there. The DAC spoke directly to Ed.

‘Ed, I know you’ll find this hard to swallow. The investigation into Fayez’s death is going nowhere. The Coroner has left an open verdict. The Commissioner has directed that we wind up our active investigation at this time. You and your team have enough on your plate to be getting on with. We can resume enquiries if anything new turns up. We would appear to have been unfortunate, in that all avenues have thus far led to a dead end. No pun intended there, by the way. Suicide is a possibility, or it may have been an unfortunate accident which may, or may not, have involved your two suspects. Do you have anything further to contribute, Ed?’

Ed responded, ‘Something stinks here. Dead ends. Odd comings and goings at around the time of the death.’

Ed knew that behind the scenes strings were being pulled, but he knew from many years’ experience that there was no point in arguing the case.

The DAC could only say, ‘I know how frustrating it can be sometimes. I know you are a very busy man. I won’t detain you any longer.’

Ed got up and left the room. His team was about to get what would possibly be their first taste of an establishment cover-up.

Inside the offices of the private security company, located on a windswept business park in Croydon, the two men were having a quiet drink as they wound up their business for the day. The men had known each other for a number of years. Their close business dealings could, from time to time, prove mutually beneficial.

The short, smartly dressed visitor spoke, ‘Well, it would appear that you have tied up all the loose ends in this unfortunate business. I don’t think we will be hearing any more regarding this matter. The hounds have been called off.’

Ed listened to the news report with interest. The newsreader was reporting on Fayez’s death.

‘The Coroner’s inquest left an open verdict into Fayaz Davi’s death. However, unofficial sources say that the MI5 officer, found dead in his Canary Wharf apartment, was involved in sex play that went wrong. Literature found at the scene indicates that the officer was involved in, what our sources tell us was, extreme sexual behaviour.’

Ed stared blankly at the screen for a moment, then muttered to himself,

‘That is one way of keeping our house in order.’

‘I am a very firm believer in the people. If given the truth, they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them the real facts.’

Abraham Lincoln

All rights reserved

Copyright © John Mannion, 2011

John Mannion is hereby identified as author of this work in accordance with Section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

ISBN: 978-1-908447-31-9 in epub format

The book cover picture is copyright to Inmagine Corp LLC

This book is published by

Grosvenor House Publishing Ltd

28-30 High Street, Guildford, Surrey, GU1 3HY.

www.grosvenorhousepublishing.co.uk

This book is sold subject to the conditions that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the author's or publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed
on the subsequent purchaser.

A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

BOOK: Century of Jihad
9.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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