Her body had been found at two o’clock in the morning, lifelessly drifting on the outgoing tide, pushed by the undertow. Her arms swayed below her, legs apart, then together, then apart, one red shoe on, the other foot bare. Her spanned fingers moved to and fro with the ebb and flow of the river, waving the coast goodbye, carried by the black waters of the Firth of Clyde.
It was the bright-red dress they had spotted in the searchlight, her cousin’s red dress, which she had borrowed to celebrate the reopening of the nightclub.
The boat neared her, light beams rolling over the dark infinity of water, the glistening rise and fall that flashed and died on the surface, until they hit crimson and flesh. The outboard was cut, the rigid inflatable boat moving forward slowly, the bow nodding in the waves as they approached her, side on, carefully. For a moment, it looked as though she had recovered some vitality and was independent of her watery grave. Long tendrils of ebony hair fanned out like Medusa, the serpents writhing with her in a slow, sinuous dance. Dipping under the surface, the waves closed over her like oil, claiming her, and she fell, sinking.
The pilot throttled back, wary of bumping into her, causing her more injury as if she were still sensitive to pain, or as if she were capable of knowing fear and that she might escape, diving to the depths. Or simply drift out of reach.
Once the pilot was close enough, he leaned over the gunnel with his boathook at the full reach of his arm, steadying himself before placing the curve of the hook on the small of her back, just a gentle pressure to steady her. He braced himself against the powerful surge and push of the waves, holding her as still as possible while the cradle was dropped with a silent splash.
The casket sank on its ropes, then dropped underneath her. Her hair seemed to sense the trap – it twisted and fanned, winding round the side of the cage in an ebony convolvulus. The boat, the girl and the cradle were steady, all three moving at one with the water.
The boat circled once before heading for Greenock. She was going home now, wrapped in her plastic shroud in the bottom of the RIB, rolling with the swell. The pilot could see the welcoming beams of the headlights at the landing slip each time they crested a wave. He radioed ahead: they were on their way back.
When they pulled up to the mooring, the private ambulance reversed down the jetty. Two detectives, huddled in their warm anoraks, waited until she had been raised from the boat on to terra firma before they started the short walk to greet her. The search had taken twenty-eight hours and now she lay in front of them, looking comfortable but cold in her plastic cocoon, her upper body and face covered in fronds of hair, like italic script. Silently, the forensic scientist, somebody the detectives didn’t know, opened the cradle tap and ran the water that surrounded her off into a sterile container. Then he stepped back, letting the two senior officers have their first look.
‘It’s her.’
‘It certainly is.’
‘There’re not many women with hair down to their waist,’ said DCI Colin Anderson sadly. His hopes for a different outcome had vanished with the tide.
‘The dress is an exact match.’ DI Costello pulled up a picture of Aasha Ariti at the nightclub, sitting with her arm round her best pal, toasting the occasion, celebrating. She showed it to her boss. He glanced at it and nodded. It was sodden and the lace at the neck had been ripped, but it was the same dress.
‘Jesus, twenty-three years old and this. Five years at university, a glittering career ahead of her, her first night out post-lockdown and this. She never even made it home.’ DCI Colin Anderson knelt down beside Aasha and looked into her face; her dark eyes staring and ghostly, her nose and cheeks cut and bruised where they had been bumped and scraped. Her fingertips were wrinkled; she had lost a couple of bright crimson nails, painted to match her dress.
Anderson lifted a pen from his anorak pocket and delicately moved a few of the long tendrils of ebony hair from the side of her face, before placing them down to lie over her forehead. Anderson took another look. For a long moment, he saw his own daughter, Claire: the cheekbones, the wayward strands of hair that ran in a fine cord from her ear to the corner of her mouth. Aasha looked as if she might have the same habit of chewing her hair when being asked a question that she did not want to answer. The question of the moment: So what happened to you, Aasha?
He had said it out loud.
But this face was battered, eyes looking over his shoulder at the grey clouds of a dark summer night.
Costello looked at her watch and stepped forward, reading his disquiet accurately. ‘Colin, do you want me to take this from here?’ She stuck her hands deep inside her jacket pockets, hunching her shoulders a little. It was June, but the breeze off the water carried a deadly chill. ‘It’s gone two in the morning. We’ve been here for three hours and you have a big day tomorrow, with the girls going away. Moses isn’t well, the dog’s not well. You can’t leave Brenda to deal with all that. You need to prepare to interview Poole. Especially now we have found her.’
‘Yes. Yes, I should,’ he said, glad to be going, feeling guilty about leaving Aasha, but Claire was driving to Tyndrum that day, his daughter’s first long drive since she had passed her test. What were Aasha’s parents thinking now? What were they thinking when they sent her back on the train to Glasgow to finish her studies? What was her aunt thinking when she said goodbye as Aasha left the house on Saturday night? You never believe, not for one minute, that they are not going to come back. ‘Are you OK to inform the aunt? She might want to tell the parents. Or she might want you to.’ Anderson stood up and ran his hands through his short fair hair, staring out across the waves, looking every inch a Viking god of the sea. ‘I promised them the minute we found anything we’d … The aunt has a nice neighbour, Pamela somebody … you could get her … and make sure Florence at Family Liaison gets the call before you go.’
Costello glanced at her watch. ‘Yes, of course.’ She took one final look at the cold, churning water before turning round. ‘I’ll catch up with you tomorrow.’
Costello walking along a beach, accompanied by a cat she did not own. Strolling along the water’s edge, letting the oncoming waves run over her feet, thinking that her toes were not getting wet. The sand was dry because this was only a dream. This was her world. She wasn’t going to get pulled into the deep by a student in a red dress who was called Aasha and who wanted to apologize for keeping her up most of the night. A boy called Anthony was combing the beach, searching, calling out Aasha’s name, but he couldn’t see her, even though she was floating in the waves only a few yards from shore.
In her dream, she looked over her shoulder and Aasha was gone. Anthony was still on the beach. The waves were now rattling and banging on the sand as a voice told her that time for sleep was over and she should really answer the door.
She said goodbye to Anthony, to the beach, and woke up. As she sat up, she had to steady herself on the arm of the sofa, waiting for the dizziness to subside before padding her way down the hall in her socks, seeing the swaying shadow behind the glass panel of the door of her flat.
Apart from it being daylight, Costello had no idea what time it was. She placed her hand on the door handle, slipping the chain on just in case, before opening the door wide enough to see the concerned face of her downstairs neighbour, Mrs Allan. It looked more important than the usual running out of sugar. She closed the door again, sliding the chain off.
‘Can you come, dear? Can you come over? I can’t get Vera to answer and her door’s open. It shouldn’t be open, should it?’
Costello wiped the sleep from her eyes; the name did not mean anything. ‘Vera?’
‘Mrs Craig.’
‘Of course.’
Her elderly neighbour had her hair neatly curled and was smartly dressed in beige slacks and a brown jumper. The long fawn cardigan slung over her shoulders was a response to the morning chill of the landing. Mrs Allan stood to the side so Costello could see that the door of the flat across the landing was indeed slightly open, revealing what it always did: the side view of the hall table with her ivory-and-ebony Viking longship in its glass case; above it, silver spoons arranged in an arc on the wall. Everything looked just as it always did.
‘Sorry, dear, did I get you up?’ Mrs Allan was contrite, concerned, but crabbing towards the door across the landing.
Yes, we pulled the dead body of a young woman out of the river this morning. ‘We had to work a night shift. It happens. Don’t worry about it.’
‘Oh, I am sorry.’
‘No trouble. Let’s have a wee look here,’ said Costello, suddenly aware of her haystack hair, dog breath and crumpled clothes as she stepped outside on to the carpet, trying to clear her head of lack of sleep. ‘You knocked and she hasn’t come to the door?’
‘She won’t be out. She knew I was coming up at nine.’ Mrs Allan stood and looked at her, obviously wanting Costello to do something.
‘I saw her yesterday,’ said Costello as she walked towards the clean glass pane, its fine lace curtain and the gleaming nameplate underneath. She placed her hand on the door. It had been sitting slightly open and it edged further under the slightest pressure from her finger.
And then she smelled it.
Blood. Recent blood.
Professional instinct kicked in. She turned to her companion and told her to stay there for the moment, reaching for her mobile before realizing it was probably still in her jacket pocket from the previous night. Had the door been closed when she arrived home in the small hours of the morning? She would have noticed. Or would she? She had been getting the groceries of both neighbours through the twelve weeks of lockdown, but now that it was over, she had barely given Mrs Craig’s door a second glance. She had been tired and emotionally drained after talking to Aasha’s family.
She walked down the short hall, the mirror image of her own flat, but carpeted in dark brown and beige, big patterns on the walls that made her eyes ache. She paused when she noticed a few spots of blood on the cream skirting board. Well, she had entered in good faith – no point in turning back.
‘Mrs Craig?’ Costello had never called her by her first name, and she had never been invited to. Opening the kitchen door, peering in, checking that everything was neat and respectably clean, everything in its place. How many times had Costello dumped a two-pint carton of milk there, a big bag of potatoes and a wee bottle of the Edinburgh Gin Company Rhubarb and Ginger during the last twelve weeks?
‘Is everything OK, dear?’ Mrs Allan called from the landing, her voice less confident now.
‘So far so good.’ Costello jumped across the hall to the bedroom door. Again, it was slightly open. The bed was neatly made, the smooth pink-and-white duvet cover, two decorated pillows. A large china doll, wearing a matching pink flowery dress, leaned against the top pillow, watching with her steady painted eyes, her pursed ruby lips disapproving. In the living room, the pale-brown curtains were still pulled across the big window, giving a sepia quality to the light, but Costello could easily see the small smattering of blood that curved behind the three-seater sofa.
Behind the settee was a pair of brown shoes.
And there she was: Vera, lying on her side, fully dressed in a smart blouse and skirt, a trickle of blood on the back of her wrist, a matching stain on the carpet under her head.
‘Shit, shit,’ said Costello to herself, leaning forward, touching the wrinkled, still warm skin of the neck where she felt a faint pulse. She looked around. How many times had she been in this flat and never noticed where the telephone was?
On the far side of the sofa, hidden by a soft cushion, was a side table with a couple of photographs and the upright handset of the phone. She pressed 999 for the emergency services, requesting an ambulance and the police, adding that she was both a neighbour and a serving police officer – a detective, in fact – and the scene looked suspicious. She had no real idea why she said this, but then she realized that she was looking straight at the door handle, covered in dark-red smears that evidenced somebody had tried to wipe the blood away.
She ended the brief conversation once she had confirmed the address, not wanting to be talked through the procedure by somebody young enough to be her daughter. Mrs Allan was still standing at the end of the hall, wringing her hands, her face full of concern. She had overheard the phone call.
‘Can you put a coat on, Mrs Allan, and wait downstairs – maybe up on the road so you can make sure the ambulance gets the right block of flats?’
It was the best way to deal with shock: give them something to do. She went back to Vera and made sure her airway was clear; her breathing was laboured but still rhythmic. They were close to both the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and the old Royal Infirmary. It was past the morning rush hour. The weather was good, visibility was fine. The worst of the virus was over. Hopefully, ambulances were available.
She looked at her neighbour, a frail figure curled like a child. Her cream blouse had come loose from the thin belt fastened round her waist. Costello resisted the temptation to tuck it back in. Vera’s nostrils were flaring, the blood still oozing from a cut on the back of her head. She had got dressed and done her hair, but hadn’t got as far as putting on her face powder. Costello noticed that her neighbour was in the habit of painting her eyebrows on; it wasn’t just blood loss that was giving her this pallor.
She heard the door behind her open further, a thin reedy voice that she could hardly hear. ‘Oh, my dear goodness, oh my God.’
‘Can you wait downstairs, please? For the ambulance?’ asked Costello again. ‘Get your coat first. It’s cold out there.’
When Colin Anderson came downstairs, he was showered, dressed, iPad in hand, ready for his breakfast and a quick walk with the dog before work. Then he noticed that Nesbit the Staffie did not get out of his basket; his favourite dry food lay untouched in a bowl. The dog’s ears and eyes tracked Anderson’s movement, but the contents of the food bowl remained uneaten. Anderson poured some water into his cupped hand and knelt down beside the dog bed, proffering him some fluid. Nesbit didn’t even raise his head.
And that was when he knew.
He debated whether to stay or to sneak out to work and leave Brenda to deal with this, use Aasha Ariti as his excuse, but the thought was gone before it took traction. He called the incident room and asked Patterson to brief the team on the discovery of Aasha Ariti’s body. He’d already submitted a brief report in the early hours. The evidence was pointing increasingly to Anthony Poole being the man who had killed her. There was a public appeal for any dashcam footage around the Robertson Street/Broomielaw junction in Glasgow recorded between one and two o’clock on Sunday morning, looking for the taxi that Poole claimed Aasha had got into. That was a job he could leave to Costello.
He got off his mobile, hoping that Nesbit had eaten something, but he was still in his basket, ears twitching occasionally at the frantic footsteps high above him. The girls were leaving for Tyndrum this morning, though from the excitement it might have been Las Vegas. When Anderson offered the dog more water, the brown eyes barely responded.
He didn’t want Claire’s holiday spoiled, or her concentration to be affected because of the death of the much-loved family dog. Driving with tear-filled eyes was no good for anybody. Equally, he didn’t want Nesbit’s last minutes on earth being stressed by two over-excited teenagers running around trying to find their mobile phone chargers. He had lived the nightmare of the packing drama every day since Claire and her friend had decided to do a charity challenge in Malawi, which lockdown had transformed into a cabin in Tyndrum.
Anderson felt it was good for them to get away after twelve weeks of forced togetherness: Peter gaming, Claire painting, Paige constantly dyeing her hair, Brenda trying to do the garden, and everybody taking a turn with Moses. He was only too happy for them to take over the holiday let. Paige had even got a job in the Real Food Café which was doing takeaways; Claire was working in the Green Welly and doing some painting.
He listened to the chaos above as he stroked the velvet head of his dog. His dog. Always his. He was the one who had brought Nesbit back from the police station – what, ten, twelve years ago? It was supposed to be just an overnight until he could be taken to the rescue centre. Of course, as soon as the kids saw him, that had been it: wee Nesbit had his paws well and truly under the table. He was going nowhere. He had been a great family dog, never a minute’s trouble. Mischief here and there, but his high spirits were naughty, never malicious. He had looked after the children, protected Brenda, but he had always been Colin’s dog. Always his wee pal, always three inches away from his master’s heel.
There was loud footfall on the stairs. Moses, his biological grandson, now adopted son, started screaming, and then Brenda said, not unkindly, ‘Oh, for God’s sake, you two, be quiet. You’ve woken up Moses,’ and then Peter’s voice shouted from behind his bedroom door, ‘And you’ve woken me up as well.’
Then Claire was screaming back that it was only zoomers who were asleep at this time of the morning, and Peter screamed back that … Anderson had had enough and picked the dog up, wrapped his blanket around him and carried him out to the car.
The vet’s surgery was only a five-minute drive from the house, but it was the longest five minutes of his life, aware that Nesbit was already slipping away from him. He was a very old dog, who started life as bait for dog fighting, but what a grand wee pet he had turned out to be.
And the vet, a bearded young man whom Anderson had not met before, made all the right noises. ‘He has lived a long and happy life. Look how he ended up!’ Then he had caressed Nesbit’s velveteen ears and muttered the terrible words. ‘It’s the best thing you can do for him now.’
The conversation made Anderson want to bolt for the door, but he had to stay there and cuddle Nesbit as the vet prepared the needle. He nuzzled the dog’s head, saying his name over and over, hoping that there was enough awareness in there to know that he wasn’t alone, that they were still together. The vet was talking again, now saying that there was no real neurological response and he was going to pass away either later today or tomorrow. It was kinder to put him to sleep right now.
He hoped, really hoped, Nesbit knew that he had not left him to die in the arms of a stranger. The ears that turned more in response to the noise of a gingernut being snapped than they ever responded to his name gave a little flicker. The dark-brown eyes had opened, rolled up to look at him; he was saying thank you. It took very little time for his friend to be gone.