Sleep Tight: A DC Rose Gifford Thriller
By C S Green
()
About this ebook
‘Eerie, original and compelling’ C.L. Taylor
‘Tense and twisted’ Susi Holliday
‘A brilliant, clever murder mystery’ Jane Casey
Even in your dreams you’re not safe…The nightmare is only just beginning…
When DC Rose Gifford is called to investigate the death of a young woman suffocated in her bed, she can’t shake the feeling that there’s more to the crime than meets the eye.
It looks like a straightforward crime scene – but the police can’t find the killer. Enter DS Moony – an eccentric older detective who runs UCIT, a secret department of the Met set up to solve supernatural crimes. Moony wants Rose to help her out – but Rose doesn’t believe in any of that.
Does she?
As the killer prepares to strike again, Rose must pick a side – before a second woman dies.
Twisty, original and compelling, SLEEP TIGHT is perfect for fans of Alex North and Cara Hunter.
PRAISE FOR C.S. GREEN:
‘Brilliant’ Jenny Blackhurst
‘Unusual, intriguing and funny in places’ Sinead Crowley
‘I read it one sitting, totally gripped’ Erin Kelly
‘Had me gripped from first page to last’ Ruth Ware
Related to Sleep Tight
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Sleep Tight - C S Green
1
Kirsty
He’s no regular stalker.
There’s no shadow of a figure in her peripheral vision as she goes about her day. No footsteps behind her in an alley as she comes home from work.
Instead, he visits her in the darkest part of the night, padding soft and deadly into her dreams at 3 a.m., when she is at her most defenceless. In her own bed.
The sleep rituals are the only weapons she has.
First, she makes herself turn off the iPad, even though she wants to watch another episode of her reality show. But the blue light scrambles your brain and keeps you awake. This is just basic advice. Next comes the bubble bath – not too warm, not too cool – with the meditation audiobook playing from the phone lying on the sink. She doesn’t really like baths; she always ends up getting sweaty or chilled, but all the advice suggests that this is the right thing to do for A Good Night’s Sleep.
That’s how she thinks of it: in capitals. A destination. The Holy Grail.
She’s drunk the mug of hot chocolate – the best part of her routine – and eaten the banana. (They give you serotonin or something like that. She’s a bit hazy on the science.)
Now for the lavender oil, which she spritzes on the pillow, but not too much because someone told her that can have the opposite effect to the one desired.
Climbing into bed, she lifts up her thriller from the bedside table and looks at the picture on the cover. It shows a woman half-turning under a streetlamp, eyes wide and startled, like someone being followed.
With a small shudder, she puts it back on the nightstand. It’s quite good, but maybe not for bedtime reading.
Instead she twiddles with the dial on the clock radio until she finds Radio 4. It’s not her thing at all in the daytime, but droning, posh voices seeping into the room are comforting at night. Someone on there is talking about moving to a Scottish island for a year and doing something involving sheep. It’s incredibly boring, but isn’t that what you want at bedtime? Excitement is not what she needs right now.
Closing her eyes at last, she pulls the duvet with its freshly changed cover up to her chin and inhales its clean scent, breathing in and out very slowly. The lamp is still turned on and the orange glow bleeds through her eyelids, but she isn’t ready to turn it off yet.
She’s not ready for the darkness.
Her parents say she resisted the lights going off from when she was a little girl, even before the night terrors began. And it only got worse.
There was that time on holiday in Devon, when she was eight, and she screamed so ear-splittingly that someone in the next chalet called the police. Her parents, clad in dressing gowns and dozy from too much sun and wine, had to explain that the unearthly sound had been made by a sleepy little girl and not someone being brutally murdered.
Over the years there were various rituals she had made her long-suffering parents carry out before bed, checking everywhere for bogeymen.
But the bogeymen still somehow snuck in, if not physically, then covering her with their slick shadows until she woke up thrashing in panic.
Sleep paralysis they call it.
Lately, it always follows the same pattern.
First, coming to in the pearly light of her bedroom, the familiar furniture appearing as dark, blocky shapes around her.
Awake.
Then, the creeping figure. There’s a flare of white panic in her mind before the sweet relief of realization comes.
No, wait, it’s just that thing again. It’s just the sleep paralysis.
It’s not real. None of this is real. I’ll wake up soon.
Except … the face doesn’t go away. Instead, it becomes more defined, more corporeal, until it is visible in high-definition detail, hovering above her as she lies there, powerless and unable to move a single muscle.
The faces used to vary. Sometimes it would be an old man or woman with leathery, crinkled skin and cruel, glittery eyes. But lately, it’s always a man, features hidden, eyes staring down at her through slits in a balaclava.
And that’s when she realizes this time is different. She’s not dreaming. This isn’t sleep paralysis. This is happening.
The surge of horror at this realization is always the tipping point. She breaks free from the sleep-state and finds herself shivering, gasping, out of her bed, carpet under her curled toes, back slick with sweat.
But lately, that moment is taking longer to come.
Friends and family have never understood that it’s worse than a ‘bad dream’. That’s OK. She’s used to being a freak. But what makes her feel really lonely – and really scared – is the people who should know, her fellow parasomniacs.
They don’t believe her when she tells them there’s something different about this.
It’s as if he, whoever he is, is somehow … breaking through whatever barrier exists between the waking world and the nightmare one.
But she’s driving herself mad with thoughts like these. That’s not even possible. Is it?
Don’t they say we only use 10 per cent of our brain or something, and the rest is a mystery? It’s only her silly brain playing tricks.
Tonight, she is going to sleep peacefully all the way through. He won’t come this time. She is quite determined.
She lies still and breathes slowly through her nose, eyes closed.
The bedside clock ticks. Radio 4 burbles on …
The scream of a car alarm outside. Eyes snapping open, insides cold with acid shock, heart punching her ribs. She must have been dozing but she’s wide awake again.
Annoyed at having this promising start compromised, she makes herself switch off the lamp. The shipping forecast is a low drone in the background, and she lets the words soothe her, repeating them slowly in her mind.
Viking, North Utsire, South Utsire, Dogger, Fisher, German Bight.
Viking, North Utsire, South Utsire, Dogger, Fisher, German Bight.
Viking, North Utsire, South Utsire, Dogger, Fisher, German Bight.
Bight Utsire, German Dogger, Fisher Price …
Jerking awake. Focusing once more.
Viking, North Utsire, South Utsire, Dogger, Fisher, German Bight.
Dogger, Dogger, Alfie and Annie Rose and picnics, picnics and cider and when Tim Watts stuck his tongue in my mouth in the rec and fried chicken on his breath … Viking, North Utsire, South German … South …
Finally she sleeps. But at 3 a.m., her eyes snap open.
He’s back.
2
‘Yeah, you can sod off, too,’ mutters Rose at the driver of the white Range Rover, whose mouth is chomping away in silent reproach on her left.
Technically, she was in the wrong, having not exactly seen him trying to back out from that driveway, but she has an unreasonable dislike of people who drive big SUVs. Sailing high above the hoi polloi below, they have a sense of entitlement that irks her.
‘Don’t start, Gifford,’ says DS Colin Mackie – Mack to everyone – from the passenger seat.
‘Don’t start what?’ she says, although she knows the answer.
‘The Eco Warrior stuff,’ he says, and she laughs.
‘Eco Warrior stuff?’ she repeats, drawing the words out. ‘Would you like to call me a member of the Burn Your Bra Brigade next? And oh, hey, has political correctness gone mad?’
Mack makes a sound that is somewhere between a sigh and a laugh.
‘Don’t make fun of the elderly, young lady.’
There is silence for a moment before Rose says, ‘Anyway, it’s not that so much. I just don’t like those cars.’
‘I’m extremely well aware of that fact,’ says Mack, and his tone makes her dart another look.
Maybe she came across grumpier than she meant to. She slept badly – again – and Mack doesn’t exactly look like a man who is well-rested and at one with the world.
He has some sort of situation going on at home with teenage offspring, involving bunking off school, but she can’t remember the details. His phone pings with a text and he fumbles it from his pocket, then frowns at the screen.
Before Rose can say anything further, the satnav announces their destination is the next road on the right.
The properties on this street are 1930s, semi-detached, each with a brown, chipped moustache of tiles over its bay windows. White-suited CSIs are coming in and out of the house on the end. A small group of gawpers are standing around, stamping their feet against the chill November wind and talking to each other; thrilled horror lighting their faces.
Rose swiftly parallel parks into a space further down the street. As they exit the car, several heads turn in their direction.
Her stomach is rumbling as she reaches the gate. Should’ve had a proper breakfast, she thinks. She’d got it into her head that a banana and a yoghurt would be a good idea, especially after the massive plate of fish and chips she’d had for dinner the night before. They weren’t even from the posh chippie, which was five minutes further from her house.
Rose and Mack pull on their gear once they leave the car. A CSI she recognizes – Dominic Something – gives her a small nod as they pass him on the way into the house.
The hallway smells of hair products, with an undertone of fried food. The walls are covered in bumpy, yellowing anaglypta. The dusty sideboard squatting in the hallway is far too big for the space. A combination of mirror and cabinet with an ornate acorn-engraved top that almost meets the ceiling, it’s covered in fast-food flyers and junk mail, plus a single, dusty-looking stud earring.
There is a room off to the left, presumably a living room, and a uniformed officer she doesn’t recognize is standing at the doorway. The sound of quiet weeping can be heard coming from inside the room, punctuated by bubbly nose-blows and indistinct mumbling.
‘Who’s in there?’ says Mack in a low voice.
The uniform speaks so quietly they have to lean in to hear him. ‘Flatmate,’ he murmurs. ‘Name of Sofia Nikolas. She’s the one who called it in.’
‘Right,’ says Rose, ‘make sure she has enough tissues and tea, and we’ll be back in a bit.’
‘Up here?’ says Mack, gesturing upwards, and the uniform nods confirmation.
They climb the stairs, which are covered in a swirly seventies carpet of browns and purple. The carpet is worn and gritty, even through the protective bootees.
The house is typical of this area. It’s towards the end of a decent tube line into town, which means plenty of privately rented, converted houses or house shares. Landlords charge tenants, mainly the young, a fair whack for the privilege of being able to live ‘in’ the capital, but the local high street is comprised of chicken and kebab shops, charity shops and betting shops, with a lone Costa Coffee and a Sainsbury’s Local for variety.
Turning towards the first bedroom at the top of the stairs, Rose registers the splintered remains of the door, which has clearly had to be broken down for access.
Inside, there is a sweet, flowery smell she can’t immediately place. The room is much nicer than she’d anticipated, based on the state of downstairs. The walls are a calming lilac colour. Fairy lights adorn a dressing table and one wall is taken up with a huge photo board covered in laughing, smiling faces and postcards.
She moves in closer to get a better look. The postcards range from pretty prints of landscapes or cute animals, to a single arty, and strikingly ugly one; the kind that comes from gift shops in the V&A or the British Library. Some kind of gothic creature.
There are several people in the room, including DS John Tennant from CID. Her DCI, Stella Rowland, is just inside the door, blocking the view of the bed. She is talking in a low murmur to the chief pathologist, Derek Peterson, a man destined to die on the job rather than retire.
Rowland is about a foot taller than Rose and an entirely different species of human. She has never, to Rose’s knowledge, dripped coffee on her blouse, or laughed so hard she’s peed her pants, even a minuscule amount. She’s never said anything rash, or stupid. Always serious, always focused, she simply functions on a higher plane. Rose feels like a grubby, emotional child in her presence. Rowland has never liked her and, since the thing that happened a few weeks ago, the atmosphere between them is chillier than ever.
Batting this frequent, intrusive worry away, Rose’s eyes finally find the bed.
The usual feeling starts the moment she sees the body. Rose forces herself to take a slow sip of air. It’ll pass. It always does. The dimming around the edges of her vision; a shadowing of her consciousness. Bone-deep cold and a crawling sensation, like tiny fingers scrabbling at her skin.
It has always been her reaction to stress, ever since she was a little girl. That’s how she frames it in her mind, anyway. In fact, it is more complicated than that. It started when she first began sensing voices in the house that shouldn’t be there. Rubbing her nails hard against the skin of her arm helped to distract her from it. Over time, that patch of skin has developed a tendency to flare up whenever her senses are on high alert.
The victim looks to be maybe late twenties, early thirties. The flowery white duvet is pulled up to her chest, almost as though she has been tucked in by her mother at bedtime.
Her eyes are closed. Her skin is pale; like Rose, she looks the type who would burn after five minutes in the sun. There is no obvious sign of injury, but the very fact that CID have called in the Major Investigation Team means something is amiss about this young woman’s death.
She swallows and breathes in. That sickly sweet smell again …
‘What’s the story, ma’am?’ says Mack. DCI Rowland says something she doesn’t hear to the photographer who’s taking pictures of the rest of the room and looks down at the body, frowning.
‘Hannah Scott, 32-years-old,’ she says crisply. ‘Nursery worker. Couldn’t be roused from her locked room by the flatmate this morning, so she called it in. No sign of forced entry to the house. So when the paramedics arrived, they thought at first this was natural causes. Maybe adult SIDS. But when they took a closer look at her eyes, they found signs of burst blood vessels consistent with suffocation. That’s when they called us in.’ She pauses. ‘It appears the victim was screaming in the middle of the night too.’
Rose looks up sharply.
‘Screaming?’ she says.
Rowland fixes her with one of those weary gazes that encompasses her entire feelings on the subject of the human race.
‘Flatmate downstairs heard it,’ she says. ‘At three a.m. Went back to sleep, would you believe.’
They all consider this for a moment.
‘That’s odd,’ says Rose, and Rowland looks down at her own notepad.
‘Apparently she suffered from nightmares. In fact,’ she pauses, ‘when the flatmate called 999, she said the bad dreams … she has these bad dreams and she won’t wake up
.’
‘So the door was locked?’ asks Mack, and Rowland nods.
‘Key was still in the lock,’ she says, ‘when the paramedics broke in.’
‘That’s weird,’ says Rose. ‘Doesn’t that mean you can’t open a door from the other side?’
‘Weird indeed,’ says Rowland. ‘But someone got in, because she didn’t suffocate herself.’
Rose comes closer and stares down at the body. The victim has long, fair hair with a russet streak at the front. It lies prettily on the pillow in a way that seems horribly out of place in this room of death.
‘What’s with the smell?’ says Mack, looking around the room. ‘It’s very strong in here.’
‘I think it’s lavender,’ says Rowland. ‘People use it to help them sleep. The pillow reeks of it.’ She wrinkles her nose.
Rose can’t stop looking at the soft hair, curled on the pillow. She pictures Hannah Scott washing it carefully and blow-drying it for the last time. There is a pair of GHDs on the dressing table, fine blond hairs sprouting from the tongs.
‘I’d like you two to focus on getting a statement from this housemate, Sofia,’ says Rowland. ‘Did she have a key to this room? Who else had access?’
‘Right, let’s go,’ says Mack, and they head back downstairs. Before going into the sitting room, they stop to peel off their protective clothes and bundle them into a pile near the front door.
Sofia Nikolas has cried so much that her features have almost become indistinct. Her eyes are red and puffy. Rose notices she has those fake eyelashes that last for ages. But quite a few of them have fallen off, giving her a disconcerting Clockwork Orange, spidery effect on one side. She has round, chipmunk cheeks, a snub nose and thick, dark brown hair that has been scraped back into a fat ponytail. She is wearing a fluffy onesie and currently cuddles a red, tasselled cushion, her feet in woolly pink socks pulled up next to her on the scuffed blue sofa.
‘Sofia?’ says Mack gently. He and Rose sit down across the coffee table, so they are facing her.
She gazes at them, blurrily.
Rose gets out her A4 investigator’s notebook, new for this job, and flips to a fresh page for this first interview. Everything relating to the case will be kept here, from briefing notes to interview notes, witness interviews, and CCTV notes. At the end of the case it will be handed over to the Disclosure Officer. Rose still gets a slight schoolgirl pleasure about cracking open a fresh notebook.
‘I’m Detective Sergeant Colin Mackie, and this is my colleague Detective Constable Rose Gifford,’ says Mack. Sofia stares back at him and says nothing. ‘Have you been offered a tea or coffee?’ he adds.
Sofia leans to pick up a toilet roll that’s sitting on the table. She yanks off a length before blowing her nose, then nods.
‘Yes, but I feel sick,’ she says in a small, snotty voice. ‘He put sugar in, and I don’t take it.’
Stroppiness over the poor tea revives her a little and she finally meets eyes with Rose, who offers a small smile of sympathy.
‘We know how difficult this is,’ she says, ‘but it’s very important, if we’re to find out what happened, that we get as much information as we can straight away.’
Sofia sits up and gives her shoulders a wiggle, as though physically shaking some courage into her limbs. But almost immediately a beseeching expression washes over her face and she visibly shrinks.
‘Can I ask something first?’ she says.
‘Of course,’ says Rose.
Sofia swallows and plucks at the cushion. ‘Did she have a heart attack or something?’ she says. ‘I mean, I don’t think you would all be here if it was that, but maybe it is, is what I’m thinking.’
The two police officers regard her in silence for a couple of seconds.
‘We don’t know for certain,’ says Rose gently, ‘but it looks likely that someone did this to her.’
Sofia squeezes her eyes tightly shut and cries soundlessly, nodding, as though her suspicions have been confirmed. Her fingers pluck, pluck, pluck at the tassels on the cushion.
‘Are you OK to continue, Sofia?’ says Rose.
After a moment the other woman nods and opens her eyes again, swiping fresh tears away with the heel of her hand.
‘Let’s get it over,’ she says nasally.
‘Perhaps we can start off with a few basic facts,’ says Mack in a soothing, gentle tone. ‘Who lives in this house, as a general rule?’
Sofia takes a deep breath then begins counting off on her fingers, which have elaborate nail art – tiny black cats, by the look of it, against a white background.
‘Well, there’s Mohammed,’ she says in a rush, ‘who’s been away working in Dubai for three months. He’s in the downstairs bedroom and he’s the one who’s been here the longest. We hardly ever see him.’ She draws breath in again before continuing. ‘Then upstairs it’s me and, and …’ Sofia’s shoulders begin to shake, and she clutches the crumpled, disintegrating toilet paper against her nose. Her words come out in a wail as she completes her sentence: ‘… and Hannah …’
Sofia sobs into her fisted hands. Mack and Rose quietly wait. Rose catches the eye of the uniformed officer standing sentry by the entrance and says, sotto voce, ‘Do you think you could find more tissues or kitchen roll for her?’
He nods and leaves the room, emerging a few moments later with a wodge of kitchen roll, which he hands to Rose with a ‘best I could do’ shrug.
Rose goes to Sofia and holds the rosette of paper towards her.
‘Here you go,’ she says. ‘It’s still going to sandpaper your eyelids off, but at least it won’t turn to mush.’
Sofia looks up with a grateful smile before taking the offering and blowing her nose loudly.
‘OK to keep going, Sofia?’ says Mack after another beat. ‘We do realize how difficult this is.’
A car alarm goes off outside. Sofia flinches and closes her eyes.
‘Yes, I can go on,’ she says, her voice weak but resigned-sounding. ‘I know this has to be done.’
‘That’s great,’ says Mack. ‘You’re doing really well. Now, you were telling us who lives in the house. How long have you all been here?’
Sofia sighs. ‘Let me think,’ she says. ‘Mohammed was here when Hannah … when Hannah and me moved in. That was a year ago.’
‘You say you and Hannah moved in at the same time,’ says Mack. ‘Did you know each other before?’
Sofia looks as though she may dissolve again. Her chin wobbles and her eyes fill with fresh tears, but she swipes them away and clears her throat before giving a savage nod.
‘We work … worked together at Little Angels,’ she says thickly. ‘I’ve been there two years and she was my line manager. She was ever so kind to me.’
‘OK,’ says Mack. ‘What can you tell me about yesterday evening? Were you at home?’
Rose feels a rush of admiration for her boss in taking it so steady. She can’t stop thinking about that scream.
Sofia’s shoulders stiffen and her hands begin to work at the soggy kitchen towel; twiddling it through her fingers into a twisty point.
‘I was out with, with my … boyfriend until about ten,’ she says. ‘Then I came home and went straight to bed.’ Her eyes are cast down as she speaks. ‘I’d had a late night the night before and was shattered.’
‘Did you see Hannah when you got back?’ says Rose, making a note on her pad: Boyfriend? Interesting pause before it.
‘No. But I could hear her in her room,’ says Sofia. ‘I think she’d had a bath, because the bathroom was all steamy.’
‘What exactly could you hear?’ says Mack.
Sofia shrugs. ‘Hannah moving about in there, you know.’
‘Did you call out to her or anything?’ says Rose. ‘Exchange any words?’
‘No.’ Eyes pinned to her hands, which are twisting the kitchen roll so hard that it’s beginning to shed dandruffy flakes onto the carpet.
Rose and Mack trade glances.
‘Can you be sure that she was alone in there?’ says Mack in a gentle tone.
A flare of anger, bright and hot. ‘Like I said, it sounded like it was only her. I can’t be sure because I didn’t go in, did I?’
‘That’s fine,’ says Mack. ‘Did your boyfriend come back too? What’s his name?’
Sofia reaches quickly for the cold cup of tea on the coffee table and then puts it down again. A blush is staining her throat and chest, where the onesie is open, and Rose watches it creep up to her cheeks. Interesting.
‘What do you want to know that for?’ The hand is now pulling the onesie together at the neck, as though to contain the heat rising from her skin.
A sympathetic smile from Mack. ‘Routine, that’s all,’ he says. ‘Did he come home with you?’
‘No,’ says Sofia firmly. Mack and Rose exchange glances again.
‘The thing is,’ says Mack, ‘that from what we can tell, there is no sign that anyone broke into the house. So, we need to make sure we speak to everyone who may have been in the house in the last twenty-four hours. Do you understand what I’m saying?’
Sofia stares down at the floor, silent. Footsteps outside thud down the stairs and the front door opens and closes.
‘His name,’ says Rose. ‘Can we get that, please?’
Sofia’s eyes are brimming and a tic jumps in her right cheek. She murmurs something, too quietly to hear.
‘What was that, Sofia? I didn’t quite catch it,’ says Mack.
Eyes up. Chin raised. Defiant.
‘Leon,’ she says, ‘Leon Gavril. But he has nothing to do with anything.’
Rose looks her in the eye. ‘Tell me,’ she says, ‘does Mr Gavril have a key to this property?’
Sofia shakes her head so hard her ponytail does a little dance at the back of her head.
‘Who does have a key?’ says Rose.
Sofia scrunches up her brow in thought. ‘Well, only the people living here. Us.’
‘What about a key to Hannah’s bedroom?’
‘No one!’ This is in danger of becoming a wail and Sofia scrubs at her raw nostrils again. ‘So I don’t see how anyone could get in there! Are you sure this isn’t some sort of accident?’
She casts a desperate look at their faces, which give her the answer she needs. The wild panic in her eyes causes Rose to hurriedly speak. This interview has a limited shelf life before Sofia breaks down again.
‘What about your landlord?’ she says. ‘Does he or she have a key to that room?’
Sofia shrugs. ‘I dunno. Probably.’
‘What about previous tenants?’ Rose says, half to Mack, but Sofia is shaking her head.
‘New landlord changed all the locks when we moved in,’ she says. ‘He bought the property off someone else and he said he always does that, for security.’
‘Right, OK,’ says Mack. ‘Are you absolutely certain that no one else has a key to the front door at least?’
‘Yeah, I—’ But Sofia doesn’t finish her sentence. She draws in a breath and her eyes go wide. The plucking resumes on the poor cushion again.
‘What is it?’ says Mack, sharply.
Sofia is breathing heavily and her