Black Wind From The North
Black Wind From The North
Black Wind From The North
She reported that her mother drugged herself with tablets of antidepressants.
It was a crackling and tear-shedding voice that fired Inspector James Johnson off from his black
Before setting off, he told his secretary to photocopy criminal records and arranged the files on
It was a bright morning; the skies were woolly, as an unchastised white garment of baptism, and
the trees rustled among the wind, rustling decayed leaves on the wretched earth.
Throughout his twenty years as an office, he has recorded thirty suicide cases, and this was no
exception. He called two of his sergeants to come along. The two young men have barely spent a
year on the job after their graduation from college. James too remembered his first day on the job
on 15th February, 2003, then he just graduated from Berkeley College, where he studied
psychology. He desired to become a police officer since his early childhood in the 80s.
Alone in 1973 in North Manchester, seventeen children got missing and only eight of them
survived.
In those days, Johnson’s uncle Inspector McCarthy, a slim, tall, brandish police officer, told his
father what was happening in the force, especially with question on missing children.
His father, who showed more interest in liquors and cigarettes, just pointed fingers at the
He believed there were underground tunnels in specific places across the country, where
abducted children are destructive elements sodomized, trafficked, and offered as sacrifices.
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Johnson doubted him because he didn’t have evidence. One day he said his father will face libel.
Unlike his drunk father, who uttered any gibberish after sipping his liquor, his uncle was a
contrast. He was always busy trying to solve one criminal case or the other, and he admired his
wits.
The two boys got into the van and the youngest officer drove, while Johnson arranged the
materials he needed at the scene. Then they drove for twenty minutes before getting to the house.
Outside, a scrawny, brown dog continued scratching and barking as if possessed by a demon.
The dog fixed a gaze on them, but he scared him with the trigger.
On entering, a stench of acidic antidepressants flossed their nostrils, and the deceased daughters
sobbed in front of her in the humid living room. He exchanged pleasantries with them, ordering
the officers to tape the entrance. Then the young coroner wasted no time in getting forensic
details from here. He took a thumbprint of her lifeless body and wrote reports on plain paper,
while the officer turned to the older girl who called him on the phone.
“What time did she die?” He queried, peering deeply into her eyes.
She mopped the phlegm on her nose and composed herself. Despite her crackling, she still said
something.
“I and my sister Hailey returned from our grandma’s house this morning, only to find her
overdosed with antidepressants and we found a syringe on her bed.” Her eldest daughter said.
John knew there was more to this. She must have had depression, as most people do, because of
“What did she tell you before taking her life? I meant, was she having depression? The girls
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“For a month now we have seen her taking anti-depressants, and each time we asked her why she
did, she said the pills calmed her nerves. But we were unaware of her travails.” She added.
“Ah!” His jaws dropped, thinking why she took her life.
John told the boys to search the other rooms for exhibits, knowing something was fishy. Of
“Five pounds an hour. She complained to her male colleagues who do the same work as her
“Do you think it could have resulted in her death?” He turned to the window, looking for other
exhibits.
“I don’t know, sir. Three days ago, before visiting our grandma’s house, I told her of my college
fees, because I recently gained admission to the University of Manchester to study Business
Administration. She remained mute, and thought of giving it an afterthought. Then I returned to
“So tell me a brief history of her life and the relationship between you.”
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“She was born in Chester, and married to my dad Francis, who died five years ago of lung
cancer. My father was an irresponsible drunkard.. As for my mom, she was a gentle and
hardworking woman. She always taught us the virtuous ways and ensured we dressed decently
and respected others. I remembered when I failed in the Grade Eight and felt the skies were
going to unleash their fury on me. She came to the rescue. She encouraged me and my sister to
strive for excellence in our studies and don’t dally with boys. Though she never hated them, but
wanted us to stay away from the forbidden apple, just as every caring mother would do.” She
“Like I said, sir, I only saw her twice with the addiction, and she said she only wanted to calm
her nerves with them. But I think her meagre wages, coupled with the death of my father, caused
her death.”
Hailey interrupted.
“She told me one night she was going through depression, over her hectic job and poor pay,
which was raising her blood pressure. We struggled to have delightful meals.”
The officer forced back the raging storm from his crystal balls, knowing how tough life was to
“It’s alright. I know how pained it was for you to her at this moment of your life.”
“She was everything to us. I don’t know how we will cope without her.” Hailey burst into tears,
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The Investigator collected a few samples of her saliva with a ball of cotton wool and put them in
a plastic bag.
The two other police officers returned with a green rope, two small brown bottles of
“It’s strange how many people take their lives nowadays. Suicide isn’t the way out.”
“Of course. The wages are nothing. Bills are piling, school fees, feeding, rents, and other
miscellaneous expenses. It isn’t a platter for working-class couples, let alone a poor, single
parent. Our government needs to work on gender equality on pay, and soften the taxes.” He
The girls led the way and two ambulance medics wrapped the body in a white wrapper, with the
⭐⭐⭐
There were always strange feelings regarding the resolution of suicide mysteries, and that was
the insider. Such pretentious individual camouflaged among the curtains of the dead, and in his
twenty years of expertise, Johnson knew she didn’t just swallow the pills. Something was behind
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it. He returned to the office to begin the investigation. There were several pictures of murders
and suicide addicts he solved in the past, and every detail mattered.
He peered at the photos of the mysterious people on the wall. The youngest was a boy of fifteen
who killed his father because he always nagged at him, spending endless hours playing video
games.
After ripping his skin with a sharp knife, he cooked and ate him. When he came before a judge,
he asked him a few questions about why he killed his father. He told the court his father was
intruding in his privacy of playing video games, and his yelling caused him a migraine.
The people present that day opened their jaws in wild bewilderment, wondering the demonic
spirit that overtook the predator. He wondered how a child would stab his father to death if not
possession by odd spirits. Growing up as a child, he once saw a child possessed by evil spirits in
his neighbourhood.
The child in question was a quiet one and loved sitting at the window of his house watching
passers-by, until the morning of August 21st, 1994, when strange things began happening in the
house. The drawers shuttered, curtains danced, light flickered, and he elevated. When his mother
saw this, she called Rev. Fr. Facci, a bald Franciscan exorcist to exorcise the dark spirits from
her daughter.
On arriving at the scene, the man saw things for himself as the girl began speaking in strange
poltergeist tongues.
The priest went straight to the task at hand, dressed in a brown hoodie, along with a wooden
crucifix, a rosary, a bottle of holy water and a bible. He began exorcising, chanting the Lord’s
prayer, Hail Mary and the Athanasian creed. But the demon wasn’t going down without a fight.
It compressed the teenager with clumsy dances, awkward trembling and eerie ventriloquism,
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reminding the clergy the body wasn’t a lumbering beast, but a cumbersome sinister that wanted
to stay.
So, after battling with the body for three hours, the ogre from hell left and beads of sweat
covered her entire body. The priest, too, was exhausted, his cassock soaked and eyes bleary. It
was the toughest exorcism he witnessed. Johnson leaned his back on his revolving chair,
wondering how the demon entered her body. But his biggest suspicion was the Ouija board,
He remained himself and spread the six monochrome photographs of the deceased on his table,
“How will she take her life because of the downturn in the country? I know we are all in the
same bandwagon of unending travails. That doesn’t justify one to take one’s life.” He looked at
the photographs closely. “Are you sure her children said the truth? They could be lying. I have
seen many innocent faces spilled lies. But this is complex. There’s more to this, more than my
ears have heard. I will get to the root of this case.” He promised.
In the evening, when he got home, he told his wife, Lilian, about the case. Lilian, a brilliant
psychologist and caring wife, who helped him solved five suicide mysteries in the past, glared at
the pictures of the woman and her two daughters. She took them to the bedroom, taking a clearer
view because of the incandescent light there. Being a thorough psychologist, she studied every
Momentarily, with the squinted eyes and cropped palms of Hailey, the eldest girl caught her
attention.
“Why did she squint? Was the light too dim or bright? Her palms were nervy as well.” She
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“Honey, we have to re-investigate those children. I smell a rat.”
“Why do you say so?” Johnson stopped chewing his chicken for a moment.
“Look at the girl’s eyes. Don’t you see the squint? Look at her nervy palms. They are telling.
You need to begin a thorough investigation before they escape.” She warned.
“I thought as much, and will summon them for another hearing tomorrow. I know they will
The night came with a warmth springing from the full moon, and the constellations shone in
disarrays, holding back the days to remain. A barn owl and two bats perched howling and
squeaking on a sycamore facing their windows. He hated those creatures for their bad omen. He
winded down the curtains and thought about the mysterious cases at his office. There were
several of them waiting to be resolved on his office table. But in this exact case, he would
definitely get to the bottom. He switched off the lights and dozed off.
⭐⭐⭐
Officer Johnson waited two and a half months before collecting the autopsy result from the
coroner. The result showed the victim took seven cyanide capsules. But he was still unconvinced
she committed the act on her own. For weeks he questioned her daughters, but they kept denying
the allegations. So, he thought of closing the case since the coroner said she caused her death. He
He cast his mind off the matter and began studying the case of a criminal who had robbed a
bank. For a year, the criminal was nowhere in the city, and people said he travelled to London to
continue his exploits. Johnson knew he must catch him else the thief will continue to terrorize
the country.
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The information he got from his neighbours was that Humphrey had a terrible childhood and his
parents divorced when he was a child. So he grew with Elizabeth, his mother a substance addict,
who cursed him at a slightest compunction. The thief never had a good upbringing and stole food
and money from his classmates. Because of this, his head of school sent him away when he was
in grade nine.
Dejected and separated from his alcoholic mother, he joined the Cheetham Hill gang, a notable
armed robbery cult in the 1990s in Northern Manchester. Together with his gang members, they
assault pedestrians, broke into houses, and killed the residents. At seventeen, the county police
jailed him for five years for robbing a lady one night on a pedestrian. After his jail term expired,
“How has he escaped for two years and no one knew his hideout, and how certain is he in
London? I remembered before the county promoted me as an inspector, I wanted to pursue this
case, but my superiors said it was too big for me. Now I that the mantle has fallen on me, I will
He rang his bell, signalling his secretary to enter and do this when he needed her attention.
“Alright sir.” She closed the door, leaving him with his thoughts.
“Humphrey can’t escape my wrath. When I catch him, I will not scruple and throw him in the
bin.” He grinned.
“Here is your coffee, sir.” She puts the tray of coffee on the table.
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“Thank you.” He watched her leave.
The coffee was a rustic brown clay, an aroma of soulfulness that infiltrated the innermost core of
his senses. Without the brownish liquid, he wouldn’t be able to work overnight on his job. He
added a cube of sugar, even though he disliked it because his maternal grandfather died of
diabetes mellitus. Then glared at the man’s picture again with the thoughts of capturing him. He
“Enter.” He said.
The man entered. He was five point four metres with a Mohican hair, crescent eyebrow and wore
“I am Armstrong Fowler, an inhabitant of this neighbourhood. I have lived here all my lives. But
I am here to make a confession. It’s been bothering me for two weeks now.” His voice went
silent.
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“I remembered a few months ago you came to Cottage 54 to investigate a crime scene of the
The words shot Johnson off his feet as he his body trembled.
The man paused a while as he tried to regain his composure. He knew telling the truth and
“But before I proceed, I want you to promise you won't charge me to a court of law for coming
“As long as we can get to the root. Or do you care for a cup of coffee?” Johnson promised.
“No. Thanks.” He breathed with relief. “A fortnight ago, I saw two girls yelling at each other
outside a cafe at Downing street. At first, I thought they were arguing over a boyfriend. But on
closer look, I saw Bridget, the younger sister of Hailey, blaming her for their mother’s death. I
don’t know how she killed her, but both threw tantrums at each other before walking away. Then
I remembered you carried out an investigation at their house. I was in my apartment that morning
watching what was ongoing. As I earlier said, I could have come here right away, but I tensed,
knowing I would bear witness to a stranger, and victimized if the accused didn’t commit the
Johnson’s face creased into smiles, knowing he’s gradually getting enough details to prosecute
the case.
“The police are your friend. Next time, you can walk to the station.” He said.
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Inspector Johnson invited the two girls for another interrogation at his office. It was 9:00 a.m.
and the radiant morning cast reflecting beams on everything in the town. The girls sat on the
“How have you been feeling since your mother’s death?” He glanced at them.
“It’s been tragic. We think about her every day. I can’t imagine living a day without recalling the
“I know how you feel. Losing one’s mother to the chilly hands of death is the worse feelings that
can happen to someone. But there is a new twist and I want you to comply.”
“I called you into my office to get the truth, and I shall record everything you say. Is that clear?”
He said querulously.
The girls shook their heads as an intense fear crawled underneath their skins.
The girls glanced at each other as if someone spilled the truth, and the room went into a grave
silence. Seeing their trembling lips and palpitating hands, Johnson understood the girls knew
what killed their mother. So he called in the witness. When the man entered, Hailey remembered
“Please have a sit.” He pointed at a chair. So tell me what you know about the murder.”
The man gawked at the two suspects, and his face smouldered with resentment.
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“Please don’t say that, sir. How can we murder our loving mother? She was our world and
“These are crocodile tears. By not telling us the truth, I will parade both of you in the court, and
certain to get lengthy sentences. But by telling the truth, you could lessen your punishment. One
last time, who murdered her?” He walked towards the window with a pale face.
“It was all your ideas. You told us to kill her.” An enraged Bridget barked at her.
“This is getting interesting. I am glad you conceded to the crime. It’s the first step in the right
“Speak witch! Tell them the entire truth. I felt miserable being an accomplice to this. I wished
the earth would swallow me.” Bridget held her head in horror.
“It was all my fault. Our mother was an exceptional woman who loved us. Even though things
were difficult, she went out of the way to make us happy. I remembered she collecting loans to
pay the bills. But she nagged at us when she was moody or saw us doing wrong things. I
remembered me inviting my boyfriend, Jerry to our house. Jerry is a quiet young man I so much
loved. We have been lovers for three years and I have invited him since my mother was at work.
I don’t know what brought my mother home. Maybe she forgot her bank credit score slip, which
she wanted to tender for a new loan? When she saw me kissing my boyfriend, her jaws dropped,
eyes widened and a furnace of fury splotched on her face. She hunted for him with a knife on the
table, but he escaped through the window. The next day, my boyfriend broke up with me and
told me he can’t have a substance addict as a mother-in-law. I begged him to stay since he was
my first lover and the one that popped the cherry. But he never accepted me back. Because of
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this I coup with my sister to take her off the line since our mother had done similar thing to her.
So on the windy night of her death, I drugged her coffee with seven antidepressants tablets. After
sipping the coffee, she felt dizzy and exhausted. Then I told my sister to get a green rope, which
The two men pretended not to hear the breakdown because they pressed against their ears.
“But why will you murder her? Because she protected you against an unwanted pregnancy. I
don’t know what the world is turning into every day.” He hit his fist on the table. “Did you regret
your actions?”
Three days later when the officer presented the atrocity before a judge. He couldn’t believe his
“How can you kill your mother? It’s barbaric. Because of your confession, I sentenced you to
On hearing the pronouncement, Bridget fainted and Hailey gasped for breath. The deceased elder
sister rattled on the floor after learning the girls killed their mother. Two burly female warders
led them away as the ambience turned into unending mumblings. The county frowned against the
children’s action. But for Johnson it was one of the few mysteries he encoded, thinking a black
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