All Things Nice - Sheila Bugler - E-Book

All Things Nice E-Book

Sheila Bugler

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  • Herausgeber: Brandon
  • Kategorie: Krimi
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2016
Beschreibung

Charlotte Gleeson is living the life she always dreamed of, but it's nothing like she imagined. Her daughter hates her, her husband is having an affair, her drinking is out of control. And now she's the prime suspect in a murder investigation … For DI Ellen Kelly, this is her first big investigation in eight months – since she let a serial killer get away. There's an awful lot riding on a good result, which means keeping up the pressure on Charlotte Gleeson and her messed-up family. As Ellen investigates, it becomes clear the Gleesons are harbouring some dangerous secrets. The more she digs, the more she uncovers … and the closer she comes to a deadly confrontation. All Things Nice is the third in the Ellen Kelly series of crime novels.

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About Hunting Shadows

‘Marks the entrance of a major new talent.

Sheila Bugler delivers a chilling psychological twister of a novel, laced with homespun horrors, a compelling central character in DI Ellen Kelly and a strong contemporary resonance. Fans of Nicci French and Sophie Hannah, prick up your ears.’

Cathi Unsworth

‘Truly a tour de force.

Imagine a collaboration between Ann Tyler and AM Homes. Yes, the novel is that good. Sheila Bugler might well have altered the way we view families and the very essence of mandatory Happiness. This is great writing.’

Ken Bruen

Dedication

For Luke and Ruby, always

Acknowledgements

First and foremost, a huge shout out to the wonderful, talented, patient, funny and very wise Rachel Pierce. A great editor and a very special person.

Thanks as always to the wonderful team at OBP: Ruth, Nicola, Jamie, Emma (for the wonderful cover which I love!) and everyone else.

Thank you to Michael for taking a gamble with me, to Svetlana for putting up with me for so long.

Special mention to Gary Friel for being a true friend and trawling through an earlier version of this when he had so much else to do.

To all my fantastic friends – too many to name-check but I hope you know that I love every single one of you.

Special mention also to:

my lovely godparents, Avice and Stewart;

my brilliant parents, who never fail to amaze and inspire me;

Seán, Luke and Ruby – you guys really do make my heart sing.

Contents

Title PageDedicationAcknowledgementsFridaySaturdayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightSundayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightNineTenElevenMondayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightTuesdayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightWednesdayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenThursdayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightNineTenElevenTwelveFridayOneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightNineTenElevenTwelveThirteenFourteenFifteenSixteenSeventeenEighteenNineteenMondayOneTwoEpilogueAbout the AuthorCopyright

Friday

Face too close, his mouth shouting words she couldn’t hear. Too many other sounds competing with his voice. A hand on her arm, pulling. She tripped, Merlot sloshed out of her glass, wetting the cuff of her black Donna Karan sweater. Outside. The night air cold after the intense warmth of the house. Smoking a fag with Ginny and some guy. Dermot. Big face and shouty voice.

‘What are we celebrating?’ he asked.

‘Charlotte’s birthday.’ Ginny grabbed Charlotte and planted a wet kiss on her cold cheek.

Charlotte’s glass was empty. Where had all the wine gone? She held it up, waved it in front of Dermot’s face.

‘We need more wine.’

He frowned. ‘What was that?’ Turned to Ginny, laughing. ‘You’ve got your hands full with this one.’

Back in the house. Music. Loud. A woman she doesn’t know shouts ‘Happy Birthday’. Lots of people she doesn’t know. What are they all doing here? Then a familiar face. Freya. She smiles, steps forward to say – what? Doesn’t matter. By the time she reaches the other side of the room, Freya has gone.

Up on Blackheath now. How did she get here? She’s with some guy. Can’t remember his name. Declan, maybe. He’s got his body pressed close to hers and she can feel his erection pushing against her leg.

She shoves him away, but he’s not happy about it. Like she cares. Young enough to be her son. What is it about her and younger men? He’s shouting at her but she’s turned away from him, staggering towards home. A sudden twisting inside her gut and she’s leaning over, puke pouring from her mouth.

When it’s over, she stands and wipes the back of her hand across her mouth. The air is rich with the stink of what her body has expelled. No sign of Declan now. He’s lucky she didn’t puke all over him. She giggles, imagining his face if she’d done that.

She’s cold. Shivering. Clasps her arms around her body and starts walking. It’s lonely out here. The empty blackness of the heath stretches away from her on all sides, its edges lined with the twinkling lights from the windows of the tall Georgian houses.

She can see her own house in the background. Brighter than all the others, light pouring from every window in defiance of the dark night. She wonders if Freya is still there. Her mind flashes to her daughter’s boyfriend. She doesn’t want to think about him but his face is there, inside her head the whole time.

She tries to think if she’s seen him this evening. Wouldn’t be surprised if she went back inside the house and found him in there. For all his so-called principles, he’s always been more than happy to eat her food and drink her alcohol.

Freya needs to leave him. The realisation hits her square in the stomach. She bends over, thinking she might be sick again. Retches, but nothing comes up. She staggers forward, moving faster now, knowing she has to hold onto this moment of clarity, find her daughter and tell her what a piece of shit her boyfriend really is.

A shape moves forward, appearing from nowhere out of the shadows. She lurches back, shouting out with fear. For one crazy moment she thinks it’s him; he’s come out here to find her.

‘Charlotte! There you are. We’ve been looking for you everywhere.’

Ginny. The fear subsides. Ginny grabs her arms, starts pulling her towards the house, saying something about a cake and candles. Time to make a birthday wish. She remembers the noise and the heat and the people and she pulls her arm away. But Ginny is insistent and Charlotte’s too tired and sick to fight.

The house is too bright and too warm and the people are too loud and too close. Bodies pressing against her, voices shouting at her. She pushes through it all, looking for her daughter.

Freya is in the kitchen. Standing by the sink, drinking a glass of water. A sour look on her face, like she’s eaten a lemon. Or just seen her mother.

‘He’s a bastard.’

Freya frowns and Charlotte tries again.

‘Kieran.’ She’s slurring, so she grabs Freya’s arm and shouts because this is important.

‘Kieran’s a bastard.’

Freya pushes her. Hard. She staggers back, bangs into the kitchen table, hurting her hip bone.

‘He doesn’t deserve you,’ Charlotte says. It’s difficult getting the words out, but she forces them through her thick tongue. She thinks Freya’s going to say something but she doesn’t. She puts down the glass of water and goes to leave. Panic grips Charlotte’s throat and chest.

‘No!’ She lunges. Grabs Freya and pushes her against the wall, pressing herself into her, determined now. One hundred percent focused on getting Freya to understand.

‘He doesn’t love you. Wouldn’t say it if it wasn’t true, but it is.’

She wanted to say more but Freya was screaming at her now, pushing her away. Charlotte’s hands reach out to calm her down but her arms are all jerky and she hits Freya in the face by mistake.

She tried to say sorry, but Freya was still screaming and calling her a bitch. Charlotte tried to tell her that wasn’t true but it was true, wasn’t it?

‘Come on, Lottie. Let’s get you away from this.’ Ginny’s arm around her shoulders, steering her away from Freya. She looked back. Saw Freya still standing there but her face was blurred because Charlotte was crying. Couldn’t stop.

‘Is she okay?’ someone asked.

‘A bit too much to drink,’ Ginny said. ‘She’ll be fine in a second, won’t you, Lottie? We haven’t done the cake yet. Come on.’

She couldn’t face that now. She wants them all to go home and leave her alone. She’s trying to tell this to Ginny, but Ginny isn’t listening. Ginny is patting her back and telling her it’s okay, it will all be okay.

Charlotte shakes her off, pushes her way out of the house and then – finally – she’s free. Running up the hill and across the heath, running from the song she can hear. Except no matter how fast she runs, she can’t get away from it because it’s there, inside her head. The tinny pitch of the doll’s voice rising the faster Charlotte runs.

‘Sugar and spice and all things nice

Kisses sweeter than wine

Sugar and spice and all things nice

You know that little girl is mine.’

Saturday

One

An early morning jogger discovered the body. The killer had made no attempt to conceal the corpse. The victim – white, male, mid-twenties to early thirties – lay at the bottom of St Joseph’s Vale, a quiet laneway off Belmont Hill in Blackheath. Beside the dead man, a congealed puddle of vomit from the unfortunate jogger.

‘Lucky it’s a Saturday,’ Abby said. ‘Otherwise it might have been a poor kid who found him on the way to school.’

‘I’m not sure lucky’s the word I’d use,’ Ellen said.

She was kneeling down beside the dead man, examining the body. His eyes were open. Wide and empty and staring right at her. Light brown irises, turning black at the edges. Nothing like Billy Dunston’s but reminded her of him all the same. Dirty-blonde hair, a short beard and strong features. The sort of guy you might look at twice if you saw him in a bar or passed him on the street and were in the mood to look twice at a good-looking fella young enough to be your son.

He was wearing jeans and a pale denim jacket. A grey tee-shirt underneath the jacket, stained black across the chest. The point of injury. A knife, Ellen guessed, although it was impossible to tell for sure without lifting the sweatshirt and looking at the wound. Something she couldn’t do until the pathologist arrived.

She looked again at the dead man’s eyes, imagined there was a question there. Knew it was her mind playing tricks with her and turned away from him before she did something stupid. Like talking to him.

She stood and stretched. She knew this road. Her brother Sean had gone to the Catholic boys’ school that gave the road its name. St Joseph’s Vale connected with Heath Lane, an affluent road in an area of affluent roads in and around Blackheath village south-east London. The body lay in the dip at the bottom of two hills, where both paths met.

‘Looks like he’s been here a while,’ she said. ‘Four hours or more.’

‘It must have been a shock,’ Abby said, nodding in the direction of the jogger, giving his statement to a uniformed WPC. ‘No wonder the poor bloke chucked his guts.’

‘I wish he’d thought to do it somewhere else,’ Ellen said. ‘God knows what it’s doing to the crime scene.’

Abby tutted her disapproval at Ellen’s lack of sympathy. Ignoring her, Ellen looked again at the body. He was young. Too young for it all to be over. Another poor soul to add to the growing list of corpses that crowded her dreams and clustered in the shadows of her waking hours. They were here now, the names and faces and finished lives of all those dead people. A line of them that started with her sister and ended with this unknown man on a quiet back-road between Lewisham and Blackheath. Except it wouldn’t end here. There would be more bodies after this. The knowledge depressed her beyond belief.

Questions crammed their way into her head, demanding details she didn’t yet know about the dead man. Details that would make this harder than it already was when she knew about his life and his family and the people he’d left behind.

The immediate area was already sealed off and uniformed officers had been assigned to each end of the lane, ensuring no one came or went without Ellen’s permission. For now, the only people inside the cordon were the five white-uniformed SOCOs scouring each centimetre of ground for evidence. Ellen and Abby wore the same protective clothing. In the muggy May sunshine, the additional layer felt heavy.

A trickle of sweat tickled down Ellen’s spine. More sweat broke out across her forehead. She wiped it away, irritated.

‘At least it’s dry for once,’ she said. ‘Let’s hope the SOCO crew can get through here before any more rain comes.’

‘Forecast is dry for the rest of the weekend,’ Abby said. ‘Rain’s due again on Monday, though.’

Ellen sighed. Another conversation about the weather was the last thing she felt like right now.

The constant rain of the last few weeks was all anyone seemed to speak about.

‘Where the hell is Mark?’ she asked.

As if on cue, the tall, gangly figure of Mark Pritchard, the pathologist, appeared at the top of St Joseph’s Vale. Relieved, Ellen walked up the hill to greet him.

‘Ellen, my love!’ Mark grabbed her and planted a kiss on each cheek. ‘Suspected stabbing?’ He held her for a moment then released her, examined her face. ‘You’re looking good. Much better than the last time we met. Life treating you well, I assume?’

Ellen smiled. Mark’s enthusiasm for life and all it offered was infectious. Being with him always made her feel better. Even during those grey, endless weeks following her husband’s death, Mark had always managed to say or do something that made her smile. She realised she’d never told him how important that had been. Not just for her but for the children as well.

‘Not too bad,’ she said. ‘Better now you’re here.’

‘Of course,’ Mark said. ‘That’s always the case. Lead me to him, then. Haven’t got all day, you know. Ah, DC Roberts. Wonderful. What a day this is turning out to be. And here’s our poor victim. Any idea who’s vomit this is?’

‘A man found the body earlier,’ Ellen said. ‘Jogger. He’d obviously eaten before coming out for his morning run.’

‘Who eats before they go jogging?’ Mark asked. ‘What time was the body found?’

‘Call came through at seven minutes past seven,’ Ellen said. ‘Looks like a stabbing.’ She pointed to the stain across the dead man’s chest. ‘No sign of any knife, though. Not yet.’

‘Okay,’ Mark said. ‘Let me take a closer look. If you two wouldn’t mind stepping away? A bit further, that’s it. Thank you.’

While Mark got to work, Ellen and Abby moved outside the cordoned-off crime scene. Once they’d ripped off their protective outer layer, they walked up Heath Lane, passing pairs of uniformed officers performing the standard door-to-door enquiries, gathering statements from the residents in the hope of uncovering some vital piece of information that would help them track down a killer.

‘You could almost forget you lived in London in a place like this,’ Abby said. ‘It’s beautiful.’

‘Beautiful and way out of your league,’ Ellen said. ‘You’ll have to change career if you harbour any ambitions of living somewhere like this one day.’

‘Or find a rich man,’ Abby said.

Ellen was saved from thinking up a suitable response by the appearance of a pair of uniforms coming out the gate of an elegant red-brick Queen Anne-style house.

‘Anything so far?’ Ellen asked.

‘Couple at the top of the road had a party last night,’ the male officer said. ‘Noisy affair, by all accounts. Went on until the wee hours. Old dear in there,’ he pointed his thumb in the direction of the house they’d just come from, ‘says there was music blaring – her word, not mine – half the night.’

‘Which house?’ Ellen asked. ‘A party means lots of people and the more people there were, the more chance we have that someone saw something.’

‘The first one on the right as you come into this road,’ the man said. So far, his female companion hadn’t said a word. Ellen wondered if that was because she had nothing to say or if she was used to being talked over by her partner.

‘PC McKeown, isn’t it?’ Ellen asked, turning her attention to the dumpy blonde.

‘That’s right, Ma’am,’ McKeown said, blushing.

‘I’d like you to head on up to the house where the party was. Find out who lives there, what was the reason for the party and see if you can get a list of names of everyone who was there. Okay?’

McKeown smiled. ‘Of course, Ma’am. Absolutely.’

Ellen nodded. ‘Good. You,’ she pointed at the man, ‘carry on with the rest of the houses. Think you can do that on your own or do you need someone else?’

‘I’ll be fine,’ the man said. ‘Ma’am.’

If he was pissed off he hid it well, and Ellen gave him credit for that. Maybe she’d misjudged him.

‘Baxter, right?’

He nodded.

‘Good work,’ she said. ‘Well done. Now on you go, both of you. Abby, let’s get back and see how Mark’s doing.’

Mark was already on his way to find them as Ellen and Abby made their way back down the hill.

‘Single puncture wound on the left side of his body, underneath the heart,’ he said. ‘Knife wound, I’d guess. Another stabbing I’m afraid, detectives. No outer sign of any other injury. Although I won’t know more until I examine him properly. I’ll organise a tox test, too. But you won’t get the results of that for at least a week.’

‘How long has he been there?’ Ellen asked.

‘He was killed somewhere between midnight and one-thirty, I’d say. Although again …’

‘I know,’ Ellen said. ‘You can’t say for definite until you’ve done the post-mortem.’

‘Mobile phone in his jacket pocket,’ Mark said. ‘And he had his wallet on him. Almost two hundred pounds cash inside. Which makes me think it might not be a robbery. There’s something else too. I can tell you who he is.’

‘You’re joking,’ Ellen said.

Mark shook his head. ‘A student card in the inside pocket of his jacket. His name’s Kieran Burton. Lives in Ennersdale Road, Hither Green. I’m assuming you’ll want the full address?’

Kieran Burton. They had a name. Soon, they’d have a history. It had begun.

Two

The first thing she saw when she opened her eyes was a slice of sunlight cutting through the hazy grey darkness of her bedroom. It was too bright and she closed her eyes. She was home. Safe in her own room.

Traces of the dream lingered. The song. Always the same song. Distant now but still here. Fading in and out. Scared, Charlotte sat up, scanned the room, checking every corner to make sure the song was all in her head and nowhere else.

Relieved to find the room empty, she sank back on the pillow. Scattered memories from last night skittered across her consciousness. She remembered a man, his body pressed close to hers. Another wave of panic hit her and she sat up. No one else there. Whoever he was, she’d dumped him before coming to bed. Good move. She searched the incomplete memory bank but couldn’t find a single hint that she’d done anything too terrible.

So why the underlying sense that something bad had happened?

She did another quick check through the bits she could remember. Cocktails, sushi, wine, more cocktails. A lot more cocktails. Her stomach rolled. She wanted to lie down, go back to sleep until the worst of it had passed, but a raging thirst made that impossible. The promise of a large glass of cool, sparkling water was strong enough to drag her out of the bed and down the two flights of stairs, into the kitchen.

The house was empty and still as a corpse apart from the ghostly rhythm of last night’s music beating inside her pounding head. The detritus from the party was all around her. She couldn’t remember what time she’d booked the cleaners for.

The kitchen, a huge white and chrome affair, took up the entire lower floor of the house. By the time she’d reached the fridge and managed to retrieve a bottle of water from its chilly depths, her legs were shaking with the effort of walking so far.

Somehow, her fumbling fingers managed to unscrew the lid and get the bottle to her lips. Cold water trickled down her throat, across her chin and neck, soaking the top of the sweater she was still wearing. She drank until she could drink no more, until her insides were bloated from gas and liquid. When she was finished, she fell onto the cream sofa by the window, pushed a pile of paper plates off it and curled up in the corner. The sudden hit of water turned her body cold and she started shivering as she waited for the nausea to pass.

She picked up the remote control and flicked it at the flat-screen TV on the far wall. A pretty female presenter was interviewing Xavi Cheval, the celebrity chef who was all over the tabloids at the moment after leaving his wife and three children for a man twenty years younger than him. Charlotte watched with detached interest. She’d met Cheval several times and knew his sexuality was no secret to anyone in the restaurant business, least of all his wife.

The story made her think of Nick and she wondered where he was. She had no memory of seeing him at the party. She told herself she didn’t care. Just like she’d told herself yesterday she didn’t care that he’d forgotten her birthday. It wasn’t like it was the first time.

The air inside the house stank of last night. A memory came to her. Bent over, vomit spraying from her mouth. Something else lurked in the shadows of that moment. Not something. Someone. A man. Her stomach clenched with fear. A name came to her. Declan. She relaxed. A stranger. She didn’t care about that. She tried to picture Declan’s face but nothing happened.

She stood up, unable to bear the claustrophobic smell and the mess and the general chaos of the place. Through the fog of her hangover, another sensation clawed its way to the surface of her consciousness. A craving. She moved around the room, rooting through the dirty napkins, discarded food and turned-over glasses. Her hand hovered for a moment over a half-empty bottle of Sauvignon Blanc before she changed her mind. She wasn’t sure she’d be able to keep it down.

When she’d finished with the living room, she searched the kitchen. Still nothing. Not a single cigarette in the entire house. Unbelievable. She steeled herself for the effort required to go outside.

There was a small alcove off the inside porch where she kept her day shoes. She rooted around the neat rows of trainers and boots until she found her current favourites – the white YSL pair. They were dirty. Streaks of mud criss-crossed with splatters of red wine. Too often her clothes were the map that allowed her to find her way back to the things she’d done the night before. Vaguely, she remembered spilling wine. A red stain on her sleeve that looked like blood. She shook her head and the memory dispersed.

Trainers on, she got her purse and went outside to face the unexpected brightness of a perfect early summer morning. In a less desperate state, she might have noticed straight away that something was wrong. As it was, she’d reached the top of Heath Lane before she noticed the pair of uniformed policemen walking towards her. At the same time, she saw the lines of black and yellow police tape criss-crossed back and forth in front of her, preventing anyone from entering or leaving.

The first thing she felt was irritation. Followed closely by panic. If there was some sort of ‘incident’ – wasn’t that the euphemistic phrase the police used for all sorts of human tragedies? – then she bloody well hoped it wouldn’t stall her attempts to get to the shop for her Marlboro Lights.

‘Sorry, Ma’am.’

The pair of plods positioned themselves in front of her, blocking the way.

‘What is it?’ Her voice sounded scratchy, like she’d done a lot of shouting the previous night. When she spoke, it felt like someone was grinding sandpaper against her vocal chords.

‘You live here?’

They were both tall and dark and good-looking in the way that working-class young men sometimes are. All lean muscle, stubble-shadowed jaws and close-cut hair. The taller of the two – greeny-blue eyes that reminded her of a holiday in Morocco many years earlier – was doing all the speaking. He had a deep, rich voice and an accent that was pure south London.

‘Of course I live here,’ she snapped. ‘What’s it to you?’

‘I’m afraid we’ll have to ask you to go back home,’ he said. ‘We’re not allowing anyone in or out at the moment.’

A stab of irrational, guilt-laced fear hit her. Again, she trawled through her damaged memories, trying to remember if there was anything she needed to worry about.

‘What’s happened?’ she asked.

The greeny-blues flickered from her face to somewhere behind her. She turned around.

Heath Lane was a hill that curved up from the end of St Joseph’s Vale to the top, where Charlotte stood. The bend in the hill meant she was unable to see all the way down to the bottom. She could see enough, though, to know that whatever ‘incident’ the police were dealing with, it was serious. Men and women dressed in white were spread out along the lane, creeping their way slowly up the hill.

Charlotte turned back to the two policemen and asked them, again, what had happened. Instead of answering, the tall policeman took her gently – oh so gently – by her right arm and started guiding her back down the path, telling her that she’d better come inside, that there was something they needed to speak to her about.

Don’t worry, he said, but how could she not worry? How could she not associate that moving force of white bodies with the noise and chaos and jumble of images that made up the incomplete picture of last night?

As they reached the front door – the policeman’s arm still linked in hers, his voice still talking, telling her not to worry, that there was no reason for her to worry – she remembered something else. She remembered running across the heath away from her house and her party, running as fast as she could, her face wet with tears. No matter how hard she tried, though, she couldn’t remember what it was she’d been running so fast to get away from.

Inside the house, she led the two men through the entrance hall into the large living room at the front of the house.

‘I had a party last night,’ she said, waving her hand at the mess.

She sat down on one of the pretty, floral-patterned sofas and motioned for the policemen to sit on the one opposite. They both perched on the edge of the sofa as if they were afraid of contamination. Neither man asked for a drink and she didn’t offer, either. She didn’t have the energy to play hostess.

‘What’s happened?’ she asked.

‘A body has been found,’ Blue Eyes said.

Another clitter-clatter of panic across her chest.

‘Who?’

‘We don’t have any details at the moment,’ the other guy said. He had a soft Scottish accent that surprised her. Nothing London about him at all. Funny, she thought, how your first impressions could be so wrong.

‘But you must know something.’ She directed the comment at the Scottish one, wondering what it was about his accent she found so appealing. Until she realised it didn’t matter. There was a dead person lying yards away from where she was sitting.

Her daughter’s face flashed before her.

‘Can you at least tell me if it’s a man or a woman?’

The two men glanced at each other before the cute guy with the lovely eyes responded.

‘A man,’ he said. ‘More than that, I can’t say.’

‘I had a party,’ she said. ‘Last night. My birthday. You’ll want to know who was here, I suppose. I’m not sure I even know half the people who turned up. But maybe it’s someone else. I mean, just because they were here doesn’t mean … lots of people walk through this way, it’s a short-cut between Lewisham and Blackheath. Well, parts of Lewisham.’ She was babbling, needed to stop talking, but it was like her mind had lost the ability to control her mouth. ‘What happened to him, anyway? You haven’t told me that. I mean, did someone attack him or was it a heart attack or … no, not a car. Well, maybe. I mean, cars do come down this way, but …’

Her voice trailed off. She slumped back on the sofa, exhausted.

The Scottish guy stood up.

‘How about I make us all a cup of tea?’ he said. ‘And then we can have a proper chat.’

They stayed for longer than she would have liked but after they left, part of her wished they were still here. The house felt too big, too lonely. She wanted to go back outside, to walk down the hill and see what was going on there. It would be all cordoned off, of course. The police wouldn’t let her anywhere near the body.

They hadn’t told her what had happened but she knew it wasn’t good. Their presence and the probing questions they’d asked told her that. Oh they’d been kind enough. They just wanted to know so bloody much. Why had she had the party? Who had been here? Did she often throw parties like this? Were there any arguments? Why were there people here she didn’t know? Was she in the habit of letting strangers into her house? And on and on and on.

She wished Nick was here. He might be a pain in the arse but at least he’d know what to do. Her weakness and indecision were two of the things Nick disliked most about her. Right now, Charlotte could understand why. She’d done nothing wrong, nothing at all, and here she was, hiding out in her own house like some sort of criminal. Whatever had happened at the bottom of her road, it had nothing to do with her.

She stood up and her resolve faltered as a wave of nausea washed over her. She waited for it to pass then went upstairs. The stink of stale booze in the bedroom made her gag. She ripped open the white silk curtains and pulled up the large sash window. Cool air on her warm skin. She stood by the window, looking out across the woods at the back of the house, waiting for her heart rate to slow down.

When she was able to move, she crossed over to the mahogany bedside table and picked up her phone. She’d been planning to call Ginny but when she switched her phone on, she saw that she had two missed calls and one voicemail.

The missed calls were from Freya. Why was her daughter trying to speak to her? It wasn’t as if they had the sort of relationship that involved frequent phone calls to each other.

She dialled her voicemail, the clamouring in her chest getting worse as she listened to Freya’s message.

‘It’s me. Kieran didn’t come home last night and I’m just wondering … It’s not like him to stay out. Can you call me? Please?’

She told herself it didn’t mean anything. Coincidence. Nothing more than that. Except Freya’s voice … she sounded so lost. Vulnerable. Her little girl. A latent instinct kicked in and suddenly the need to see her daughter, to be with her and to make sure no harm came to her, was overwhelming.

Charlotte picked up her bag, stuffed her phone inside, and ran.

Three

Ennersdale Road in Hither Green was a ten-minute drive from the crime scene in Blackheath. Victorian terraces lined the road, in various stages of disrepair and regeneration. Ellen guessed the properties were a mix of private owners and council housing stock.

Their victim’s address was Flat 2, number 19 – a large, semi-detached property near the top of the road. Ellen parked outside the house and climbed out of the car. She was overdressed for the sudden sunshine and unzipped her jacket while she waited for Abby to join her.

‘Patrol car will be here in a second,’ Ellen said. ‘We won’t go in until that arrives.’

Like most streets around here, Ennersdale Road was quiet at this time on a Saturday morning. Very little traffic and only a handful of people out and about. As Ellen walked towards the house, a couple approached, coming down the hill from Hither Green Lane. They had a small girl with them. She was riding a tricycle and giggling as she wheeled her way – dangerously fast, in Ellen’s opinion – towards the spot where Ellen stood. At the last moment, the child swerved left, entering the garden of the house beside number 19. The couple came after her, smiling and nodding to Abby and Ellen before disappearing through the gate after the child.

‘Are you sure you’re okay to be here?’ Abby asked.

‘If you’re going to ask me that every time we see any children,’ Ellen said, ‘it’s going to be a long day. I’m fine. I’ve already told you, the kids are at their friends’ house. When it’s time to pick them up, I’ll go. But in the meantime, you’re stuck with me.’

Abby meant well, but the constant checking was getting on Ellen’s nerves. Her new working arrangements meant she no longer worked weekends. Except with the children both on a playdate, what the hell else was she supposed to do with her time? She’d only popped into the office to pick up some files. Hadn’t planned to stay. Sod’s law – or a stroke of luck? – that the call about the dead man had come in at the same time. That’s the way things happened sometimes. Nothing Ellen or anyone else could do about that. And she meant what she’d said. The moment it was time to collect her children, she’d be gone.

A marked patrol car appeared at the top of the hill and drove down the road. When it was parked, Ellen walked across and leaned down to speak to the two officers inside. She knew one of them.

‘Okay, Maurice?’

Maurice Alter had been a uniformed officer longer than Ellen’s entire time in the force. Reliable, consistent and unflappable, he was one of her favourite old-timers.

‘Not so bad,’ Maurice said. ‘You want us to wait here?’

‘To start with,’ Ellen said, ‘I don’t want to go in mob-handed if we don’t have to. If there’s anyone in, chances are they’re going to be very upset. No need to make things worse for them if we don’t have to.’

‘Fair enough,’ Maurice said. ‘Me and Jamie here, we’ll be ready when you need us.’

Ellen patted the roof of the car and walked back to Abby. Together, they went into the garden of number 19. The house was one of the better maintained properties on the street. Painted a sunny yellow colour with a tidy front garden, it was obvious whoever lived here looked after the place.

Each of the two doorbells was neatly labelled – Flat 1, the lower one, and Flat 2, the upper one. Ellen rang the bell for Flat 2 and waited. Not for long. The sound of someone clattering down a flight of steps was followed by the creak of the front door as it opened. A plump, pasty-faced woman with mousy brown hair stood in the doorway.

‘Yes?’

‘Mrs Burton?’ Ellen guessed.

The woman frowned. ‘Sorry, I think you’ve made a mistake. It’s Mr Burton you want. Kieran.’

‘Ah. I thought you might be his wife,’ Ellen said.

A flicker of something across the woman’s face. Fear? It passed too quickly for Ellen to tell.

‘Has something happened?’ the woman asked. ‘To Kieran, I mean?’

Ellen held up her warrant card and showed it to the woman.

‘DI Kelly, Lewisham CID,’ she said. ‘This is my partner, DC Roberts. Could we come inside, do you think?’

The woman’s eyes flashed from Ellen to Abby and back to Ellen again. She stood back and gestured for the two detectives to come past her into the house.

Inside, the woman closed the door, submerging the narrow space into sudden darkness. Ellen blinked, waited for her eyes to adjust. When they did, she saw she was standing in a well-maintained, communal entrance hall. The door to one flat on her left, a flight of stairs in front of her.

‘Up here.’ The woman pushed past them and started up the stairs, Ellen and Abby close behind. They followed her into a light and airy first-floor flat with large sash windows and views across Hither Green and Catford. The place was cheaply but tastefully furnished. Second-hand vintage pieces chosen over Ikea.

An original Victorian fireplace dominated one side of the room. A single, wooden-framed photo was the only decoration on the mantelpiece above it. There were two people in the photo: the woman who’d let them into the flat and a man. The woman’s arms were wrapped around his neck. They were in the countryside somewhere. Both wearing sensible, outdoor jackets and both smiling at Ellen. The man looked different in life. People always did. But there was no mistaking who he was. The same pale brown eyes and tight-cropped blonde hair.

Ellen turned from his smiling face and back to the woman.

‘Can we sit down?’ she asked.

The woman lowered herself onto a low, overstuffed armchair beside the fireplace. Ellen chose the small two-seater sofa opposite, while Abby perched on a high-backed chair by the table near the window.

‘Nice photo.’ Ellen pointed to the photo on the mantelpiece.

‘West Sussex,’ the woman said. ‘We spent two weeks there last September. Before you lot kicked us out. Is that what this is about?’

‘Anti-fracking?’ Ellen said. ‘No, that’s not why we’re here. It’s about Mr Burton. Kieran. You’re his girlfriend, Miss …?’

‘Lover,’ the woman said. ‘Kieran’s my lover. I’m his. And it’s Ms Gleeson. Freya Gleeson. Look, can you please tell me what this is about? I’m worried.’

‘Any reason?’ Ellen asked.

Freya snorted. ‘Apart from you turning up unannounced, you mean? Wouldn’t you be worried?’

‘Kieran lives here with you,’ Ellen said. ‘Is that right?’

‘Yes.’

‘And he was here with you last night?’

Freya groaned. ‘Please. Tell me what’s happened.’

‘We’ll get to that in a minute,’ Ellen said. ‘Is that Mr Burton with you in the photo?’

Freya nodded. She looked scared now and Ellen dreaded having to tell her why they were here.

‘When did you last see him?’ she asked.

‘Yesterday,’ Freya whispered. ‘We went to a party. Kieran left before me but he never came home. He wasn’t here when I got back last night and I haven’t seen him since. It’s not like him and I’ve been worried. He’s not answering his phone. Something’s happened, hasn’t it?’

‘Where was the party?’ Ellen said.

‘Blackheath,’ Freya said. ‘It was my mother’s birthday. She always throws these huge parties. It’s not really my scene but she insists I come along. Even though she’s usually too drunk to notice if I’m there or not.’

‘A man’s body was found in Blackheath early this morning,’ Ellen said. ‘We think he may be Kieran.’

Freya shook her head. Her mouth opened and closed like she was trying to speak but had forgotten how to. She leaned forward, arms clasped around her middle, gasping for air. Abby jumped up, ran to Freya’s side and put her arms around her.

Freya shoved her away and started crying, loud, howling sobs that Ellen tried to block out. Like her colleagues, this was the bit of her job she hated the most. She’d learned early on that the only way to deal with moments like this was to shut herself down. Literally. She pictured her brain as a number of compartments. Each one responsible for different functions: breathing, moving, thinking, feeling. The feeling compartment – bigger than the others – was the one she closed off now. It was a skill she’d developed as a young child. A little girl’s way of dealing with a trauma too impossible for a young mind to understand. Applying the same technique to her job was easy. The hard part came later. Finding the switch that got the compartment working again. Once she’d shut herself down, it was difficult to bring herself back sometimes. Difficult to open herself up once again to all the pain and the long line of dead people waiting to take up space inside her head once more.

Gradually, Freya’s wailing diminished to a low, keening sound. Some long minutes later she wiped her face and looked up. Ellen saw raw grief and forced herself not to look away.

‘Where is he?’ Freya asked.

‘He’s been taken to the morgue,’ Ellen said. ‘The pathologist needs to examine him, see if we can find out exactly what happened. We can arrange to take you to him if you’d like. First, though, I’m afraid there’s some questions we need to ask you.’

‘Of course,’ Freya said. ‘Yes. What happened to him? You haven’t told me that. Did … oh God, what was it? A hit-and-run or …?’

Ellen saw the dead man’s face. The surprise she imagined in his wide-open brown eyes. The dark stain of blood spread across the front of his sweatshirt.

‘We’re not sure,’ Abby said. ‘Until the pathologist has had a chance to examine him, we can’t confirm the cause of death.’

‘But you must have some idea,’ Freya said. ‘I mean, you’d know if it was a heart attack or what-do-you-call-it, natural causes or …’

‘Freya, please,’ Ellen said. ‘We shouldn’t speculate. We need your help. Can you do that?’

Freya nodded.

‘Good,’ Ellen said. ‘Can you start by telling us about yesterday evening? Talk us through it until when you left the party.’

‘We had dinner here.’ Freya’s voice wobbled, but apart from that she’d done a good job of getting a grip on her emotions. She was either a very tough young woman, Ellen thought, or she’d had time to prepare. Ellen wasn’t sure which.

‘It was lovely,’ Freya said. ‘We’ve both been … oh God, I can’t believe … we’ve been really busy. Kieran’s studies take up so much time. He works … worked … so hard. We made the effort last night to spend some time together. Both of us wanted to stay in but we had to go out. My mother. She … well, she can be a bit needy. Oh God. Has anyone spoken to her yet?’

‘We’ll get to that,’ Ellen said. ‘Tell us what happened after dinner.’

‘We went to her stupid party,’ Freya said. ‘Kieran met a friend for a quick drink and he joined me there later.’

‘What friend?’ Ellen asked.

Freya shrugged. ‘Someone from his uni course, I think. He was at the party by nine. My mother was drunk already, of course. She can get a bit nasty when she’s drunk and last night was no exception. She doesn’t like Kieran. Didn’t like him.’

Now they were getting somewhere.

‘Where in Blackheath does she live?’ Ellen asked.

‘Heath Lane,’ Freya said. ‘Oh God, is that where you found him?’

She started wailing again. Ellen thought the sudden switch from control to hysteria seemed forced. She glanced at her watch. Three minutes to midday. She was due to collect her children at four o’clock. A while away yet. She considered calling Rosie and asking her to do it. Just as quickly, she changed her mind.

She stood up.

‘Mind if I have a look around the flat?’ she asked.

Freya wiped her face with the back of her sleeve and sniffed. ‘You won’t find anything.’

‘It helps us get an idea of who Kieran was,’ Abby said. ‘DI Kelly won’t mess anything up. And it won’t take long. Why don’t we let her get on with what she has to do? In the meantime, how about I make us both a nice cup of tea?’

‘You think that will help?’ Freya asked. ‘You think tea is going to make this all right? When can I see him? That’s all I want to do right now. Not sit here drinking fucking tea.’

Ellen caught Abby’s eye and motioned for her to make the tea, regardless. Quietly, she slipped out of the sitting room into the hall. From here, Ellen could see through open doors into the other three rooms in the flat – a small, galley-style kitchen, a blue-tiled bathroom and a bedroom.

She started in the bedroom. A small, dark room with a musty smell and a layer of dust across the window-sill and the second-hand wooden wardrobe. The double bed was unmade, with a faded-looking matching quilt and pillow set thrown on top. One pillow indented from where someone had slept on it. The other, fluffed up and untouched.

Ellen opened the wardrobe, flicked through the collection of jeans and shirts. It was difficult to tell which clothes belonged to Kieran and which were Freya’s. A messy pile of posters sat by the side of the bed. Ellen picked one up. An advertisement for a Greenpeace demonstration that had taken place in London three months ago. The other posters were all Greenpeace as well. Otherwise, there were no personal touches in the room.

Beside the bed, there was a small cabinet with three drawers and another layer of dust across the top. Ellen opened each one of these. Neat piles of washed-out underwear in the top two drawers and a selection of cheap-looking tee-shirts in the bottom drawer. Nothing else.

The bathroom didn’t offer anything, either. Cheap men’s cleanser and moisturiser in the bathroom cabinet but no corresponding products for a woman. Ellen didn’t think she was particularly vain, but sharing her partner’s beauty products? That was a new one. Even if she had no money, she was pretty sure her bathroom cabinet would have female beauty products for sharing with a partner, not the other way around. Maybe Kieran was a bully who insisted his needs came first. Or Freya was a doormat who put his needs before her own? Ellen filed both thoughts away for later.

The galley kitchen was tiny. An old-looking oven and washing machine, a microwave oven. No dishwasher but no dirty plates in the sink and everything tidied away neatly. An unopened bottle of red wine from Aldi stood on the MDF worktop.

On her way back to the sitting room, the doorbell rang.

‘I’ll get it,’ she said.

Whoever the caller was, they were determined to be let in. The bell rang repeatedly as Ellen ran to answer it. She noticed an empty coat-stand in the corner of the hall. Kieran Burton had been wearing a jacket when they found him. Ellen wondered if they’d shared that, as well.

Downstairs, she opened the door to a scrawny woman with skin that had spent too long under a sunbed and sticks of straw hair that protruded from her skull in random directions. When she spoke, the stink of stale booze nearly floored Ellen.

‘Where is she?’ the woman asked. ‘What have you done with my daughter?’

The mother. First impressions – she was nothing like Freya. Ellen supposed last night’s party might go some way to explaining the boozy breath and the dishevelled appearance. Although something about the woman made her suspect this was more than a one-off.

‘Freya’s mother?’ she asked.

‘That’s right.’

‘DI Kelly,’ Ellen said. ‘Lewisham CID. Freya’s okay. So please don’t worry about her. But I’m afraid I have got some bad news. You’d better come inside.’

Four

‘I can’t believe it.’ Charlotte shook her head. ‘No. I’m sorry. It just won’t go in. Freya, darling, what on earth happened?’

Freya shrugged and edged her way along the sofa, away from her mother.

Charlotte looked at Abby. ‘I don’t know what I’m meant to do,’ she said.

Ellen thought of her adopted parents, remembering what a strength they had been in the days and weeks and months after Vinny died. She doubted Freya would get anything like that from her own mother.

A strand of bleached blonde hair had fallen across Charlotte’s face. The hand she used to brush it back was shaking. Shock or hangover or some combination of both.

‘There’s nothing you can do,’ Freya said.

‘How did it …?’ Charlotte directed the question at Abby. She appeared to be doing her best to ignore Ellen. It was a reaction Ellen was used to. She knew she could come across as intimidating. Abby, on the other hand, exuded a warmth that made people – victims and suspects – instinctively trust her.

‘We can’t confirm that yet.’

Abby gave Charlotte her best sympathetic smile. Ellen didn’t know how she managed it. Charlotte Gleeson was pathetic. All she’d done since she’d got here was cry and say how terrible it was and what were they going to do in the face of such a tragedy. Not once had she asked her daughter how any of this was affecting her, or how she was feeling.

Ellen remembered what Freya had said about her mother: she can get a bit nasty when she’s drunk and last night was no exception.

‘He was at your party last night?’ Ellen said.

‘Was he? I don’t … I’m not sure, actually.’ Charlotte frowned and looked at Freya as if she might have the answer.

‘He didn’t stay long,’ Freya said. She looked at Ellen. ‘Like I told you, it wasn’t exactly his scene.’

Ellen looked at Charlotte. ‘Did you have some sort of argument with Kieran? Is that why he left?’

Charlotte put a hand over her mouth and shook her head. ‘Oh no. Definitely not.’ She attempted a laugh but it sounded more like a sob. ‘Freya, darling, why would she say something like that?’

‘You were drunk.’ The expression on Freya’s face made up for the lack of emotion in her voice. Disgust mingled with hatred. Something that ran far deeper than whatever had happened between Charlotte and Kieran at the party last night.

‘It was my birthday,’ Charlotte said. ‘Surely you don’t begrudge me that?’

Freya looked like she begrudged it very much indeed but instead of saying that, she turned to Ellen.

‘Can I see him?’

Ellen wanted to say no. You can’t see him yet. Not until you tell me more about your mother and why you hate her so much and what she said that made your boyfriend leave the party early last night. But that would have to wait. Before she could get answers to any of those questions, she needed a formal ID that would confirm what she already knew. That the dead man was definitely Kieran Burton.

* * *

The tall, stern detective drove them across in a dark green Audi. The car was a surprise. Charlotte would have expected a Ford or a Vauxhall or something equally tasteless. She felt sick and would have sat in the front, but Freya got in there first. Clambering in beside the police woman without even checking if that was okay with everyone else. Not that Charlotte could really blame her. Poor Freya was probably still in shock. Charlotte certainly was.

The morgue was a red-brick Victorian building at the back of Lewisham Hospital. The detective pulled into a parking bay and got out without saying a word. Which was awkward really because it didn’t give Charlotte a chance to ask what she was meant to do.

Beside her, the pretty one unstrapped her seatbelt and put her hand on Freya’s shoulder.

‘Ready?’

Freya twisted her head around and looked at Charlotte. ‘Are you coming too?’

Oh God. Charlotte wanted to say no. She couldn’t do it. Not like this. She licked her lips as she thought of a way out. There was a pub across the road. She’d spotted it on the way in. How bad would it look if she suggested they go there first? Just for one. She wasn’t mental and she knew how important it was that they did this. But surely it would be easier with a bit of Dutch courage to help them along the way?

Freya shook her head and Charlotte recognised the familiar look of disgust in her daughter’s eyes. Almost as if Freya knew what Charlotte was thinking. Which was stupid, she knew, but she couldn’t help it. Her daughter always made her feel like this: stupid and pointless and nothing more than an irritation.

‘What about Nick?’ Charlotte managed. ‘Shouldn’t he be here?’

‘Fine,’ Freya said. ‘Don’t bother. I’d rather go in without you anyway.’

She opened her door and got out, the car shaking and swaying from the heavy movements.

‘If you can’t face it,’ the pretty detective said, ‘that’s not a problem. I’ll go with her, make sure she’s okay.’

‘No.’ Charlotte got out before she could change her mind. Freya was right to be angry. This was the one time her daughter actually needed her. The one time she could do something that wouldn’t make Freya angry or upset or any of the other things Charlotte made her feel, none of them good or positive or the sorts of emotions a mother should inspire in her daughter.

She leaned against the side of the car to stop herself swaying from the wave of nausea that ran through her body.

‘I’m coming too.’

Freya was ahead of her, walking through the swinging glass doors behind the other detective. Charlotte tried to remember the woman’s name as she hurried after them. Irish name. Kelly. Erin Kelly? Something like that. It didn’t matter. All that mattered right now was getting herself through the glass doors and staying strong for Freya. It wasn’t a lot to ask. She forced herself inside, into the cool, dark hallway. You can do this, she told herself. You can do this and you will do this and afterwards, when it’s all over, Freya will see what you’ve done for her and she will be grateful for it. And that was something to hold onto.

If she’d known how bad it was going to be, she would have stayed outside. Nothing in the world could have prepared her. There was the smell, for starters. A pervasive, chemical stench that invaded her insides, growing stronger and more repulsive with every breath she breathed in and every step she took deeper and deeper into the heart of this terrible place.

The room where the bodies were kept burned under the white glare of strip-lighting that hurt Charlotte’s eyes and made it impossible to focus on what was happening. Rows and rows of silver drawers. A body inside each one. She knew this because the man in the white medical jacket pulled one open and drew the drawer out to reveal the body they’d come to look at.

She saw a toe first. Sticking out from the pale green sheet. A single toe that could belong to anyone, but it was Kieran’s toe. She knew it was Kieran because the man had pulled the body out completely now and it was there, lying in front of her.

His eyes were closed and he looked like a dead man and nothing like someone she’d ever known. But it was him. She knew the moment she saw him. Her head filled up with images and memories and smells and she remembered his hands on her body and his breath warm on her face and the way it had been with them, fast and desperate and wrong. So bloody wrong, and she’d hated him for it and hated herself more.

Freya screamed. The sound cut through Charlotte, hurting her. She closed her eyes and she could hear her daughter crying beside her, sobbing like a little girl. And Kieran, whispering in Charlotte’s ear, telling her this was what she wanted and her own voice saying yes, yes, yes. And Freya crying and Charlotte’s stomach twisting and vomit rising up her throat, burning and bitter.

She put her hand over her mouth but she knew she couldn’t stop it. She swung around, away from the dead body and away from her daughter, still crying, doubled over as if the pain of it was too much. She ran towards the swinging glass doors and the light and the world outside without its dead bodies and its memories and her daughter, crying for a man she’d loved but who had never loved her back because he was only ever capable of loving one person and that was himself.

Five

After the morgue, the detectives said they needed to come to the station and make statements. Charlotte asked if that was really necessary but Kelly made it clear they didn’t have a choice. There was something hard about her that made it difficult to like her. Charlotte preferred the other woman, Abby. She was pretty and kind and seemed to really understand how difficult this was for Charlotte. And for Freya, of course.

Charlotte assumed they’d be allowed to stay together to give their statements. Instead, Abby took Freya in one direction, while Charlotte found herself being led into a different room with Kelly. She wished it was the other way around and suspected Freya did, too. Abby’s sweet, touchy-feely manner was bound to be an irritation.

‘Take a seat,’ Kelly said, as if she was welcoming Charlotte into her living room instead of into this horrible, grey room that smelled of bleach and sweat.

Charlotte tried to pull the chair from under the table but its legs were screwed to the ground. She slid herself onto it, trying to think clearly through the pounding in her head and the clawing, craving thirst.

Kieran was dead. Murdered. She knew this because if he’d died of a heart attack or something like that, she wouldn’t be sitting here now. Images jerked through her head. All of them ending with a body on a gurney in a bleached bright room.

‘Can I get you something?’ Kelly asked. ‘Tea or coffee?’