THE BINDING ROOM
A Henley Thriller
Author:
Nadine Matheson
ISBN: 9781335426925
Publication
Date: July 12, 2022
Publisher:
Hanover Square Press
Book
Summary:
Detective Anjelica
Henley confronts a series of ritualistic murders in this heart-pounding
thriller about race, power and the corrupt institutions that threaten us for fans of S.A. Crosby and Tami Hoag
When Detective
Anjelica Henley is called to investigate the murder of popular preacher in his
own church, she discovers a second victim, tortured and tied to a bed in an
upstairs room. He is alive, but barely, and his body show signs of a dark religious
ritual.
With a revolving list
of suspects and the media spotlight firmly on her, Henley is left with more
questions than answers as she attempts to untangle both crimes. But when
another body appears, the case takes on a new urgency. Unless she can apprehend
the killer, the next victim may just be Henley herself.
Drawing on her
experiences as a criminal attorney, Nadine Matheson's new novel deftly explores
issues of race, class and justice through an action-packed story that will hold
you captive until the last terrifying page.
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“We all lost,” said DS Paul Stanford as he held out a
Quality Street tin in front of Henley.
“What on earth are you talking about?” Henley asked as she
took off her coat and flung it onto a spare desk. “Are there any toffee pennies
in there?”
“You might want to keep your coat on. The heating’s on the
blink again. Either that or they’ve forgotten all about us and haven’t paid the
bill. There’s a hundred and forty pounds in the pot and no toffee pennies.”
“Why is there a hundred and forty quid in there?”
Stanford rolled his eyes in mock exasperation. “Remember our
bet?” he said. “On him. Our illustrious fully fledged Detective Constable
Ramouter.”
“What have I done?” Ramouter asked from his position in the
kitchen where he’d been eyeing the bottom of a mug with disgust.
“This is ridiculous,” Henley said. Her ears picked up the
whirr coming from the electric fan heaters and the ice-fueled wind whistling
outside and rattling the glass.
“You lasted, Ramouter; that’s what you did,” said Stanford.
“We had a bet on how long you would last in the SCU.”
“And you didn’t think that I would last six months?” asked
Ramouter as he picked up another mug.
“Mate, I didn’t think you would last six days. I’ll have a
coffee if you’re making.”
“You shouldn’t be so mean to him,” said Henley as she took
off her scarf and pushed it against the rotting frame of the window to block
the icy draft that was sweeping across her desk.
“How am I being mean? I’m paying him a bloody compliment.
After everything that happened, no one would have blamed him if he’d bolted for
the door.”
“Well, he didn’t. He’s stuck with it. So, what are you going
to do with the money?”
“I could give Ramouter the money. He could spend it on a
train ticket to Bradford or something.”
“Now who’s getting soft?” Henley said. The phone on her desk
started to ring.
“Or I could book a table at the curry house down the road.
It will be teambuilding.”
“Or a normal Friday night out with you falling asleep in
your chili chicken.”
“Rude,” Stanford replied as Henley picked up the phone and
Ramouter appeared by his side with a mug of steaming coffee for him.
“Right. I see,” said Henley, reaching for the pad of blue
Post-it notes on her desk and a ballpoint pen with a chewed cap. “I didn’t
realize that we were still on duty. Can you send me the CAD details? No, I
can’t get it myself because the system has crashed again. Thank you. Who found
the body? Right.”
Henley pulled off the Post-it note and stuck it to the side
of Ramouter’s mug. He peeled it off and looked at it quizzically. “Depending on
traffic, we should be there in fifteen minutes.”
“You’re not going to have time to finish that,” said Henley,
putting the phone down and grabbing her scarf.
“There’s a body in a church?” Ramouter said as he read the
note. “Seriously?”
“That’s what it says.”
“Why are we dealing with this?”
“We’re dealing with it because the borough commander decided
that the Serial Crime Unit should be helping out Homicide and Serious Crime
with their caseload,” Henley replied wearily.
“Anyone would think that we were just sitting here watching
Netflix all day,” Ramouter moaned. “Is it even a murder?”
“We won’t know until we get there, will we?”
“Can I say it?” asked Stanford, a grin spreading across his
face.
“No, you can’t,” Henley replied. She picked up her bag and
headed toward the door, with Ramouter in tow. She knew Stanford well enough to
know exactly what he was going to say.
“I bet you a tenner that it was the Reverend Green with a
candlestick in the library,” Stanford shouted out as Henley slammed the door
shut behind her.
“I’m not telling you again. Step away from the tape.”
“What’s going on?”
“If I knew I was going to spend the afternoon standing
out in the freezing cold I would have stayed in bed this morning.”
“I bet that they’ve found a body or something.”
“Look, those CSI lot have turned up.”
“I only popped out for a coffee and now the old bill are
saying that I can’t go back into my own office.”
“F this. I’m going home.”
“I’m telling you that they’ve found a body.”
“Wouldn’t be the first time.”
“I don’t understand these kids. Too busy stabbing each
other up. No value for life.”
“You can dress it up as much as you like. It’s Deptford
innit.”
The murmurings of the curious and disgruntled crowd met
Henley and Ramouter as they walked toward the scene of the crime.
“This is a church?” Ramouter asked as he looked up at the
cream-colored facade of the brickwork. “I was expecting something a bit more… I
don’t know, church-like. Maybe a steeple. This looks like a bank.”
“It used to be a NatWest when I was seventeen. The space was
once cheap to rent. Not so sure now,” Henley replied.
“I did a quick Google search—”
“Of course you did.”
“And there’s another seven churches on the Broadway.”
“I’m not surprised,” said Henley. “Betting shops, churches
and chicken shops on literally every London high street.”
Henley and Ramouter held up their warrant cards to the
officer behind the police tape. Henley scoped the gathering crowd. Nothing
about them raised any alarms, but she knew from experience that some murderers
were voyeuristic by nature.
“Look likes Dr. Choi is here,” Ramouter said, pointing out
the car of Henley’s friend and the Serial Crime Unit’s favorite pathologist,
parked between a police motorbike and small white transit van that had ‘Forensic
Services Crime Scene Investigation’ marked in black font on the side.
Henley stopped and looked around the small car park. There
were no security cameras. She felt a sense of calm as she walked closer to the
crime scene. It was a welcome emotion and a respite from the anxiety that was
usually coursing through her veins, which she could keep at bay if she bothered
to take her prescription to the chemist. She spotted the police officer that
she was looking for leaning against the side of a police car, flipping through
the pages of his notebook with a pen in his mouth.
“PC Tanaka? DI Henley from the SCU.”
PC Tanaka looked up and then stood to attention a little bit
too quickly as Henley walked toward him.
“Ma’am,” said PC Tanaka.
“This is my colleague, DC Ramouter.”
“Shit,” said PC Tanaka when he dropped his notebook.
“Sorry.” He brushed off slush from the cover. “It’s bloody freezing.”
“You were first on scene?” Henley asked.
Tanaka nodded. Henley could tell that he wanted to get it
right. Giving a senior officer information about a murder scene was a lot
different to dealing with burglaries, domestics and breaking up a fight between
a couple of crackheads at the bottom of the high street.
“We, that’s the sarge, Sergeant Rivers, and I were driving
back to the station. We’re based around the corner at Deptford station. We had
just finished our shifts and was coming back from the McDonald’s up the road…”
PC Tanaka paused and took a breath.
Henley felt sorry for him as nerves or possibly shock
overtook him. She saw a look of sympathy on Ramouter’s face as they both waited
for PC Tanaka to continue.
“Sorry, guv, I mean ma’am,” said PC Tanaka straightening
himself again and lowering the volume on his crackling police radio. “As I
said, we were heading back to the station and one of the guys who works in the
design agency practically threw himself onto the bonnet of the car. He was
screaming about a body. We found the cleaner in hysterics in the staffroom of
the agency. She refused to leave and take us to the church. I left her with the
sarge and I went into the church and yeah, I won’t forget what I saw.”
Excerpted from The Binding Room by Nadine Matheson.
Copyright © 2022 by Nadine Matheson. Published by arrangement with Harlequin
Books S.A.
Author
Bio:
Nadine Matheson is a criminal
defense attorney and winner of the City University Crime Writing competition.
She lives in London, UK.
Social
Links:
Twitter: @NadineMatheson
Facebook: @NadineMathesonWriter
Instagram: @QueenNads
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