Murder in Bollywood (11 page)

Read Murder in Bollywood Online

Authors: Shadaab Amjad Khan

BOOK: Murder in Bollywood
12.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘I don't know about you, sir, but after looking at this evidence, I am pretty certain that the killer is a man, because it would have been impossible for a woman to physically lift an unconscious Nikhil Kapoor and put him in this high chair to pull off the electrocution,' Zagde stated confidently.

‘Always remember, my friend, never arrive at any conclusion until the whole matter presents itself, and never under any circumstances underestimate the ability and ingenuity of a woman. She might be the fairer sex, but that does not make her the weaker sex,' Hoshiyar advised, then paused for a moment and spoke once more, with a hint of concern in his tone. ‘But all things aside, there is one thing about this matter which confounds me. Why did Nikhil continue to sit behind his desk instead of roaming about the stage and tinkering with the light switch, as per his habit? I could understand him doing this if he was writing his script, but all the sheets of writing paper found by the police at the crime scene were blank, which obviously means he hadn't written a word that night. And yet, he sat there motionless for maybe fifteen or twenty minutes, because of which the killer lost his patience and improvised. This sudden deviation from his set routine is what I find most interesting and perplexing.'

‘Well, maybe he just didn't feel like getting up, or perhaps he was too tired to move around. And probably he didn't write anything, because he was stuck somewhere in his story and the thoughts weren't flowing for him that night. Couldn't this have happened?' Zagde reasoned unconvincingly.

‘No, I doubt it. Nikhil Kapoor was a creature of habit and it would have taken a lot more than fatigue or a momentary writer's block to get him to stray from that habit,' Hoshiyar replied.

‘Well, to be honest, sir, what he did or didn't do in the last few minutes of his life doesn't seem all that significant to me. I mean, I just can't see how any of it is relevant to our case,' Zagde said candidly.

‘Neither can I, my friend. But something tells me that those last few minutes are absolutely vital. In fact, I have a feeling that they hold a secret, which could lead us to the killer's identity,' Hoshiyar replied.

7

To

The Special Case Squad (Crime Branch)

C/o Passport Verification Department Building

Carter Road

Bandra 400050

To whomsoever it may concern,

Ha, ha, ha, you fools. You dimwits. You call yourselves Mumbai Police's finest, but you're nothing. I am living proof. Allow me to introduce myself. I am the person who murdered superstars Nikhil and Mallika Kapoor, their secretary Ram Prasad Tiwari and the careless detective Chandrakant Mule. The reason I am writing to you is because the Mumbai Police has offended me. I have been belittled by you and this has made me angry, so I thought it's only fair that I let you know.

The reason for my ire is the fact that you people haven't given me the credit or the praise that I deserve for killing Nikhil and Mallika, two of the country's biggest superstars, and to make matters worse, even the Ram Prasad Tiwari killing, you morons have passed off as an accident, and by not acknowledging the art, you have failed to acknowledge the artist, and this is most insulting. So here's what I want you to do. You will hold a press conference, where Police Commissioner T.L. Ghankar will personally apologize in front of the media for not giving me the credit for the Nikhil and Mallika Kapoor murders, since it was he who handled that investigation, after which I want ACP Meeta Kashyap to do the same, because the SCS under her charge denied me the credit for the murder of the secretary Tiwari. Once these two have apologized on behalf of their respective teams, they will acknowledge before the media that I am the murderer and praise me for my brilliance. But first, I am sure you'd want some proof that I speak the truth, so I will be gracious enough to give it to you. How about I tell you how I killed the four of them, give you details that you don't even know? I am sure that will do. So here goes.

Let's begin with Bollywood's biggest director, Nikhil Kapoor. I waited for him inside Stage 7 of Gulistan Studio, then knocked him out with my trusty stun gun when his back was turned, after which I sat him down on a really tall chair that I had stolen from the studio's prop room, put his hand on the light switch that I had already rigged and simply turned it on, and watched him fry. You will find the chair that I used hidden away inside Stage 6, which is a short distance away from the crime scene, just in case you'd like to bag it as physical evidence. As far as Bollywood diva Mallika Kapoor is concerned, I dropped by at the shooting of her film disguised as a journalist earlier that day and entered her vanity van while she was hamming it up on the set. There, in her handbag, I found her cocaine, stashed away inside a mother-of-pearl-encrusted cigarette case. Then all I had to do was add to it a little bit of Dreamer's Dust, which although looks and feels exactly like cocaine, happens to be just a harmless hallucinogenic. But the moment it is added to substances like heroin or cocaine, the combination is lethal and the end result looks very much like a drug overdose. Now, although you fools have cremated Mallika's body, and therefore cannot test it for Dreamer's Dust, you can, however, test the cocaine she was snorting the night she died, for I am sure you boys still have it locked away in your evidence room; so run along, send it to the lab and prove me right. As far as Tiwari goes, he was an irritant, so he had to die. I watched him enter his home that night at around 1.30, then sneaked inside without the watchman seeing me. I knew the layout of the house, as I had been there a few days earlier in my favourite disguise, that of a journalist, so I had no trouble finding his bedroom, where I did him in with my stun gun, then killed him in the bathroom and made it look like he fell while taking a shower. In fact, I had my eye on the house the following morning to see how the police went about their business this time around and was very excited when I saw the SCS descend on the place after Ghankar had done another hack job. But you cannot imagine my disappointment when even you guys called Tiwari's death an accident on every news channel a couple of hours later, which prompted me to write this heartfelt letter and tell you exactly how I feel. But before I killed Tiwari, I shot dead the careless detective Mule, along a deserted byroad called Kaala Raasta, off the main Shimla highway. Now, I have nothing personally against the late detective which makes me call him careless. But what else am I to call a man who leaves his loaded revolver in the glove compartment of his car, while he stops over at a liquor bar? I broke in and emptied out all his bullets and he didn't even come to know. Serves him right for trying to dig into my past, for it's common knowledge that when you stare into the darkness for too long, sometime or the other the darkness will stare back at you. Perhaps his mother should have taught him this. Maybe then he would have seen me coming, which he never did. And now, as I am about to end my letter, I have a small confession to make. My frustration at not being acknowledged and appreciated for my handiwork filled me with the urge to behave like a very bad boy a little while ago, which I did by attempting to take the life of a young man, who I had earmarked as my fifth victim quite some time ago. I think you know the lad I speak of. His name is Rohan Kapoor, the late Nikhil's and Mallika's adopted son. I'd been planning his murder for quite a while and last night I felt the time had come for me to put my plan into action. So I lured him away from the security of his home and his bodyguards, and got him to an isolated place, where I attacked him with violent fury, but he survived and managed to escape. It wasn't hard bringing him out into the open. Just ask young Megan Morris, who's on Rohan's Facebook. I am sure she'll tell you all you need to know. And just in case you imbeciles are wondering where master Rohan is, go to the ICU of the newly opened D.B. Charak Hospital and Medical Centre near Gorai Beach and inquire if anyone was brought in there last night with a near-fatal knife injury. I could have had a second run at the boy last night itself if I wanted to, but I decided to inform you people instead so that you could protect him and make the hunt somewhat challenging for me. So, on this note, dear gentlemen, I will take your leave, with a promise that the cycle of violence that I've started will not end until I have eliminated each and every name on my death list. And I suggest that if you people intend coming after me, then you better bring your A-game to the party. This message is specifically for the benefit of one Senior Inspector Hoshiyar Khan, who is widely regarded as the Mumbai Police's absolute best. Dear Inspector saheb, I have been your fan for a very long time and have keenly followed each and every one of your exploits. You cannot imagine how happy I was when I saw you at Ram Prasad Tiwari's home in the morning, so much so that I've been following you around ever since. In fact, I was right behind you in my car when you and your sidekick paid a visit to Billimoria House, to perhaps ask Rohan a few routine questions which makes me want to believe that at least you were on to me and my handiwork the moment you saw Tiwari's body, unlike the rest of the police, who continue to stumble along blindly. If so, then goody gumdrops, for I've finally found a worthy adversary! But if not, then I suggest you better step away from this case, because the carnage has only just begun, and if you don't believe in the devil, then how on earth will you take him on?

Yours truly

The Ripper of Bollywood

This particular letter, which arrived at the SCS headquarters late afternoon, caused quite a stir among the officers present in the building at that time, forcing ACP Kashyap to urgently summon Hoshiyar, who, along with Zagde, was just about winding up from Gulistan Studio. On examining the letter, Hoshiyar had no doubt that it was 100 per cent genuine, for its writer and the killer were one and the same. This fact was made obvious by the manner in which the writer described the four murders in that letter, mentioning specific details, like the use of the stun gun and the bar stool, which only the killer would have known about. Another telling factor was the mention of the hallucinogenic Dreamer's Dust, which the killer claimed to have used in Mallika's murder. The technicians at the forensic lab confirmed that Dreamer's Dust was no myth and it really did exist. They called it a very powerful hallucinogenic, made by first drying and then grinding to a powder the petals of a particular flower, found at the foot of the Andes mountain range in South America. According to them, Dreamer's Dust was fast emerging as one of the most popular new-age party drugs in Latin America, as well as the United States and Europe, although not too many people had heard of it in Asia, because of which it was not easily available in this part of the world, and if anyone here wanted it, they'd have to contact one of it sellers over the Internet. What made Dreamer's Dust so popular was the fact that on its own, it was non-fatal and an overdose of it would only knock you out for a few hours, after which you'd wake up feeling nauseous, with a banging headache and unable to remember your own name for the next fifteen to twenty minutes. Although it was suspected that an over-indulgence in the drug would ultimately lead to the degeneration of brain cells, resulting in the user turning into a vegetable in due time, or maybe even ending up brain dead; however, if Dreamer's Dust were added to cocaine or heroin, its chemical properties would be dangerously altered by the far stronger narcotics, turning the non-fatal hallucinogenic into a deadly poison, which could kill in a matter of minutes and all the post-mortem symptoms would scream ‘accidental drug overdose', for until and unless a specific test for Dreamer's Dust wasn't carried out, that drug would go undetected, as it bore an uncanny resemblance to both cocaine and heroin, and was virtually tasteless when combined with any one of those drugs. After giving this information, the lab boys confirmed that on Hoshiyar's suggestion, when they retested the cocaine that killed Mallika, they discovered that it was laced with a fair amount of Dreamer's Dust, which didn't show up in the test they had conducted immediately after her death, as they weren't looking for that particular substance. With all of these facts confirmed, Hoshiyar sent a team of officers down to D.B. Charak Hospital and Medical Centre, where it was discovered that a teenager matching Rohan's description had indeed been admitted to the ICU the previous night, when he staggered into the hospital calling for help, with a knife stuck deep in his back, and although he was still unconscious, his condition was stable and the doctors were confident that he would make a full recovery. Once it was established that the patient was indeed Rohan, a constable was posted outside the ICU for his protection round the clock. The next order of business for Hoshiyar was to have Rohan's laptop, iPhone and iPad brought over to the SCS headquarters, where he had the chain-smoking professor Kulkarni, their in-house cybercrime specialist, analyse their data to see if he could find this Megan Morris that the killer had spoken about and determine how she was connected to the attack on Rohan. It turned out that Megan Morris was an eighteen-year-old girl living in New York, whose photograph and profile were stolen by the killer after he hacked into her account. He then used those photos and information to get in touch with Rohan on Facebook and befriended him over a period of two weeks. From their to-and-fro conversations retrieved by Kulkarni on examining Rohan's laptop, it became known that at 7.30 on the night of the attack, Megan had contacted Rohan on Facebook and told him that she was in Mumbai for a couple of days and would really like to meet him that night itself. When an excited Rohan readily agreed, Megan asked him to come over to a place called Priya Bungalow on Gorai Beach after midnight, where she was spending the night with a few of her friends. When Rohan suggested that she and her friends come over to his place instead, because his security team might not like the idea of him suddenly venturing out that late, Megan taunted him relentlessly, until Rohan played right into the killer's hands by sneaking out of Billimoria House unseen and coming over to Priya Bungalow at the appointed hour. However, in spite of accessing each and every bit of their Facebook conversation, the SCS had no way of tracking down the killer's IP address and booking him, because the person they were dealing with had used TOR to conduct all his business on the Internet. Now, TOR, as Kulkarni explained, was a free software developed in the West, allegedly by a group of hackers, which guaranteed its users total online anonymity and freedom from any and all censorship. In other words, TOR was designed to make it possible for users to traverse the length and breadth of the Net under a cloak of invisibility, making it impossible for their activities and locations to be traced by the police. Needless to say, this particular software was extremely popular with freelance criminals and organized crime syndicates in both America and Europe, who would use it to communicate and relay vital information, secure in the knowledge that if the authorities weren't tracking them real time, then they couldn't be tracked at all. In fact, Hoshiyar was absolutely certain that the Dreamer's Dust used to kill Mallika was bought off the Net by the killer, using TOR. So, all in all, whatever the killer had said in his letter turned out to be true, which in the eyes of the SCS and Commissioner Ghankar, who was also apprised of the situation, proved that they were dealing with a brilliant homicidal maniac with an overwhelming and intense hatred for people connected to the film business, who was one step ahead of the police at all times. In fact, Ghankar even proclaimed that he was certain that the killer was either a struggler or a flop actor, who was taking his revenge by bumping off famous Bollywood personalities one by one; then impressed with this brainwave, he declared that his team and the SCS should investigate this case separately, which meant that Meeta Kashyap and her squad were free to conduct the investigation their way, while Commissioner Ghankar would investigate the case in accordance with his theory and have his men round up all the strugglers and flop actors, then interrogate them until one or some of them confessed. However, through all of this brainstorming and confusion, Hoshiyar remained distant and detached. It was because his mind was unable to accept the theory that they were dealing with some sort of a madman, who had dashed off a letter to the police because he wanted appreciation and recognition for his crimes. It was Hoshiyar's belief that the killer was far from insane, and was, in fact, a very intelligent person, who happened to be in complete control of his senses. The only reason he wrote that letter, in which he confessed to his crimes and described them in great detail, was not for the sake of acknowledgement or notoriety, but simply because he panicked when he felt that the Nikhil and Mallika case was being reopened, and realized that it was only a matter of time before the SCS discovered that they had been murdered. Therefore, in a bid to confuse and complicate the investigation, that all-revealing letter was created and sent to the SCS headquarters, for they were the new hounds on his trail. Hoshiyar also surmised that the letter itself was a desperate attempt by the killer to come across as more powerful and intelligent than he actually was so that he could wrest control of the investigation from the SCS and get the upper hand in their game of cat and mouse. But in doing so, the good inspector believed that the killer had committed a few significant blunders. Firstly, by referring to Hoshiyar by name in his letter and challenging him to a duel of wits, the killer had inadvertently shown that he felt threatened by Hoshiyar, which meant the good inspector was hot on his trail and moving forward in the right direction. Secondly, the fact that the killer had decided to write the letter now and not before, clearly indicated that he was afraid of the SCS taking over the investigation and that his words of bravado were nothing but a smokescreen. And finally, the attack on Rohan was the biggest blunder of them all, for although it appeared that the killer had been planning it for a long time, the decision to carry out the attack on the very day that Rohan was questioned seemed like one taken in panic, and a lot sooner than the killer would have liked. The sudden Facebook post from Megan, saying that she was in the city for a short while and luring Rohan to a convenient spot, followed by a haphazard attempt to kill him, from which he escaped, all of this reeked of an ill-conceived, hurriedly put-together murder plot, which hammered home the fact that the killer now wanted Rohan dead immediately, because he was afraid that the boy knew something and it was only a matter of time before he would blurt it to the police. But the one aspect of this matter that Hoshiyar found most baffling was the killer's inability to finish off an unsuspecting nineteen-year-old boy, in spite of having the element of surprise on his side. It was then that a thought entered Hoshiyar's mind, which suggested to him that perhaps the killer's use of the stun gun in two out of the four murders was not on account of convenience, but pure necessity. Maybe the killer was not physically strong enough to overpower and subdue his victims, hence he needed to sneak up on them and render them unconscious with his stun gun before killing them. Probably his lack of physical strength was the reason why he preferred to use his intellect to do away with his victims in such clever, complicated ways, be it the rigging of the light switch to make Nikhil's murder look like an accidental electrocution, or adding Dreamer's Dust to Mallika's cocaine and making her death look like a tragic overdose. It was only in the case of Rohan that the killer felt confident of pulling off a murder without the need of a cunning plan, perhaps because he had the element of surprise on his side, apart from the fact that Rohan was just a nineteen-year-old kid. But in spite of this advantage, the killer failed in his attempt, and Rohan, although knifed in the back, managed to get away, which gave Hoshiyar the impression that either the killer was a physically weak man or a fragile woman. However, the good inspector also acknowledged the discrepancy that the same infirm person was strong enough to lift Nikhil Kapoor, who weighed 155 pounds, and put him on a bar stool, which he later pulled out from under the victim with some force, creating the possibility in Hoshiyar's mind that perhaps the police was dealing with not one, but two killers, a fragile woman and a strong man. But Hoshiyar was also aware that mere conjecture and theories based on clever suppositions did not tantamount to facts. And if the facts were to be determined, then the place where Rohan was attacked had to be investigated, meaning, it was time to visit Priya Bungalow. That particular property was not very hard to find, although it was tucked away right at the end of a secluded by-lane, overlooking Mumbai's famous Gorai Beach. The reason for Priya Bungalow's lack of anonymity was the fact that it was at one time a hotspot for filming low-budget movies and television serials of all kinds; thus, Priya Bungalow would be booked 365 days of the year. But in the last one year, all filming on that property had come to a standstill and the place itself had been locked up and abandoned. This was because the owner, one Hasmukh Bhai Patel, had got himself embroiled in some scam on the stock exchange, and to make matters worse, had absconded from the country, because of which his bank accounts were frozen and all his properties attached. But all of this did nothing to placate the angry shareholders who had been duped by him, as they threatened his family with dire consequences if their hard-earned money was not returned, while some of the more dangerous and vengeful ones even tried to burn down a couple of properties. It was because of this that the government placed armed guards outside all of his properties, including Priya Bungalow, so that when the time came for them to be auctioned, they were safe from vandalism and in mint condition. However, as Hoshiyar and Zagde reached Priya Bungalow at around five in the evening, they were greeted by the site of a poorly maintained one-storey structure, with tall, wild grass growing all over its front lawn, and strips of paint peeling off its whitewashed facade, which had begun to discolour, turning mouldy green and black on account of the year-long neglect. Even the bungalow's main gate, which was made of strong, dark wood, had turned weak from decay and the government notice declaring the property to be sealed, which was once nailed to that gate, could no longer be seen anywhere. It was then that a team of officers from the local police station, who were awaiting Hoshiyar's arrival, informed him that there was a security guard on duty at the bungalow's main gate the night before, who was attacked from the back, a little before midnight, and rendered unconscious by a sharp blow with a heavy object to the back of his neck. Needless to say, the guard couldn't get a look at his attacker's face. And just like Rohan, he was also admitted to D.B. Charak Hospital and Medical Centre, which was about a kilometre down the road. The police team also told Hoshiyar that the only thing they could understand from Rohan's incoherent statement, right before he passed out, was that he was attacked from behind in the living room of Priya Bungalow and since it was pitch-dark, he never got a look at his attacker's face. The officers then revealed that they hadn't as yet visited the crime scene, as they had been instructed to let the SCS take the lead, after which they advised Hoshiyar that if he wished to examine the crime scene, he better do it
quickly, since the house would get rather dark shortly as there were no lights inside, owing to the fact that the local authorities had cut off the electricity immediately after the place was seized. Fortunately for Hoshiyar's investigation, there were a couple of flashlights in his police jeep for such emergencies, so Zagde and he grabbed one each, then entered Priya Bungalow to examine the crime scene. The place on the inside was cobwebbed and dusty, with all the furniture in the living room lying covered with plain white bed sheets. Hoshiyar noticed a broken coffee table and a smashed sheet of glass in the centre of the living room, indicating some sort of struggle, while there was quite a bit of dried blood on the front door, as well as on its handle, which in all probability came from Rohan, during his frantic scramble to get out of the house after he was attacked.

Other books

Nocturne by Christine Johnson
Winter's Thaw by Stacey Lynn Rhodes
Das Reich by Max Hastings
Trauma by Ken McClure
Rain Dance by Joy DeKok
Hustler by Meghan Quinn, Jessica Prince
Substantial Threat by Nick Oldham