Arjun turned the photographs over. On the back of the last one, in faint pencil, a junior officer had scribbled: Victim’s personal diary recovered. Last entry dated yesterday. Quote: “She visits every third Sunday. I’ve made peace with it.”
The amber glow of the study lamp did little to chase away the Sunday chill. For Superintendent Arjun Sen, the third Sunday of every month was a ritual. The leather armchair, a half-empty glass of single malt, and the case file no one else could solve.
“He bled out from a wound to the wrist first. A slow, deliberate bleed. The carotid cut came after he was already dead. Someone wanted to make sure the message was written in fresh blood—but not his.”
Arjun stood, pulling on his coat. “That’s the question. And tonight is the third Sunday of the month. If the pattern holds, someone, somewhere, is already waiting for their visitor.” Sunday Suspense
“She,” Arjun murmured.
The door had been bolted. The windows were on the 42nd floor, sealed shut. No vents, no secret passages. The security cameras in the hallway showed no one entering or leaving between 7:00 PM and 10:00 PM.
Rohan leaned forward. “A ghost?”
The autopsy report arrived just as the church bells tolled six. Arjun scanned it, then went still. “The incision. It was made post-mortem.”
Tonight’s file was thin, almost insultingly so. It contained only three photographs and a single typed sheet.
He paused at the door. “Come, Rohan. Let’s go meet a ghost.” Arjun turned the photographs over
Rohan’s eyes widened. “Then whose blood was it?”
Outside, the fog was rolling in thick over Kolkata. Somewhere, a door was about to open. And for Superintendent Arjun Sen, the real story had only just begun.