Sleepyhead

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by Mark Billingham




  Mark Billingham has twice won the Theakston’s Old Peculier Award for the Best Crime Novel of the Year and has also won a Sherlock Award for the Best Detective created by a British writer. Each of the novels featuring Detective Inspector Tom Thorne has been a Sunday Times bestseller, and the first two books have been made into a hit TV series on Sky 1 starring David Morrissey as Thorne. Mark lives in north London with his wife and two children.

  Visit the author’s website at: www.markbillingham.com

  Praise for the DI Tom Thorne series:

  ‘Morse, Rebus, and now Thorne. The next superstar detective is already with us. Don’t miss him’

  Lee Child

  ‘Tom Thorne is the most interesting cop in British crime fiction at present’

  The Times

  ‘DI Thorne is a wonderful creation’

  Karin Slaughter

  ‘What is so impressive is how real the characters are, not least his physically battered and psychologically scarred Detective Inspector Tom Thorne’

  Guardian

  ‘With each of his books, Mark Billingham gets better and better. These are stories and characters you don’t want to leave’

  Michael Connelly

  ‘If you haven’t yet come across DI Thorne, treat yourself. You won’t be disappointed’

  Sunday Express

  Also by Mark Billingham

  The DI Tom Thorne series

  Sleepyhead

  Scaredy Cat

  Lazybones

  The Burning Girl

  Lifeless

  Buried

  Death Message

  Bloodline

  From the Dead

  Good as Dead

  Other fiction

  In the Dark

  www.markbillingham.com

  Grove Press

  New York

  Copyright © 2001 by Mark Billingham

  Cover design by Marc Cohen/mjcdesign;

  Cover photographs: clock ©Joe Cornish/Getty Images;

  woman ©Mohamad Itani/Trevillion Images

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. Please purchase only author­ized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copy­righted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 154 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011 or [email protected].

  ‘Stranger in the House’ words and music by Elvis Costello

  Copyright © 1978 Sideways Songs Administered by Plangent Visions Music Ltd

  First published in Great Britain in 2001 by Little, Brown and Company

  This edition first published in Great Britian in 2012 by Sphere

  an imprint of Little, Brown Book Group, London

  ISBN: 978-0-8021-9326-1

  Grove Press

  an imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.

  154 West 14th Street

  New York, NY 10011

  Distributed by Publishers Group West

  www.groveatlantic.com

  For Claire. You’re everything, you’re chocolate.

  PROLOGUE

  Roger Thomas. F.R.C. Path.

  Dr Angela Wilson,

  HM Coroner,

  Southwark.

  26 June 2000

  Dear Angela,

  Following our recent telephone conversation, I write to summarise certain concerns which you might like to include as an addendum to my post-mortem report (PM2698/RT) on Ms Susan Carlish, a twenty-six-year-old stroke victim discovered at home on 15 June.

  The PM was performed at St Thomas’s Hospital on 17 June. The deceased died as a result of a brainstem infarction due to basilar artery occlusion from what would appear to be spontaneous vertebral artery dissection. Examination being twelve hours post mortem, I was unable to test for Protein C and Protein S deficiency. This aside, and taking into consideration that Ms Carlish was an occasional smoker, there would still appear to be an absence of conventional risk factors for stroke. I also discovered some minor neck trauma with ligamentous damage at C1 and C2 vertebral level though this would not be inconsistent with some previous whiplash or sporting injury. Traces of a benzodiazepine were discovered in the blood. Enquiries have produced a prescription for Valium made out to Ms Carlish’s flatmate eighteen months ago.

  While I remain in no doubt as to the cause of death, and concede that all police enquiries have drawn a blank, I am consulting a number of colleagues and copying this letter to all pathology departments and Coroners Courts in the Greater London area. I would be interested to confer with anyone who may have dealt with the body of a stroke victim (prob. female 20–30) displaying any or all of the following peculiarities:

  Absence of conventional risk factors

  Torn ligaments in neck

  Benzodiazepines in the bloodstream

  If you wish to discuss my findings, with a view perhaps to a second post-mortem examination, I would of course be delighted to chat with you further.

  Yours sincerely,

  Dr Roger Thomas FRC Path, Consultant Pathologist

  P.S. The condition of the body (which honked like a pair of freshly scrubbed wellies!), was as I told you, of no concern to the authorities and delighted the morticians, but it was, to say the least, a little disconcerting!!

  PART ONE

  THE PROCEDURE

  ‘Wake up, Sleepyhead . . .’

  And lights and voices and a mask and sweet fresh oxygen in my nostrils . . .

  And before?

  Me and the girls are linking arms to belt out ‘I Will Survive’ and scare the shit out of every white-sock-wearing Camberwell Casanova in the club . . .

  And now I’m dancing on my own. At a cashpoint, for God’s sake! Unfeasibly pissed. Top night.

  And I’m struggling to get the key in the door.

  And there’s a man in a car with a bottle of champagne. What’s he celebrating? One more can’t hurt on top of a bucketful of tequila.

  And we’re in the kitchen. I can smell some sort of soap. And something else. Something desperate.

  And the man is behind me. I’m kneeling. If he wasn’t holding me up I’d flop on to the floor. Am I that far gone?

  And his hands are on my head and on my neck. He’s very gentle. Telling me not to worry.

  And . . . nothing . . .

  ONE

  Thorne hated the idea of coppers being hardened. A hardened copper was useless. Like hardened paint. He was just . . . resigned. To a down-and-out with a fractured skull and the word scum carved into his chest. To half a dozen Girl Guides decapitated courtesy of a drunken bus driver and a low bridge. And the harder stuff. Resigned to watching the eyes of a woman, who’s lost her son, glaze over as she gnaws her bottom lip and reaches absently for the kettle. Thorne was resigned to all this. And he was resigned to Alison Willetts.

  ‘Stroke of luck, really, sir.’

  He was resigned to having to think of this small girl-shaped thing, enmeshed in half a mile of medical spaghetti, as a breakthrough. A piece of good fortune. A stroke of luck. And she was bar
ely even there. What was undeniably lucky was that they’d found her in the first place.

  ‘So, who fucked up?’ DC David Holland had heard about Thorne’s straight-for-the-jugular approach, but he was unprepared for the question so soon after arriving at the girl’s bedside.

  ‘Well, to be fair, sir, she didn’t fit the profile. I mean, she was alive for a kick-off, and she’s so young.’

  ‘The third victim was only twenty-six.’

  ‘Yes, I know, but look at her.’

  He was. Twenty-four and she looked as helpless as a child.

  ‘So it was just a missing-persons’ job until the local boys tracked down a boyfriend.’ Thorne raised an eyebrow.

  Holland instinctively reached for his notebook. ‘Er . . . Tim Hinnegan. He’s the closest thing there is to next-of-kin. I’ve got an address. He should be here later. Visits every day apparently. They’ve been together eighteen months – she moved down here two years ago from Newcastle to take up a position as a nursery nurse.’ Holland shut his notebook and looked at his boss, who was still staring down at Alison Willetts. He wondered whether Thorne knew that the rest of the team called him the Weeble. It was easy to see why. Thorne was . . . what? five six? five seven? But the low centre of gravity and the very . . . breadth of him suggested that it would take a lot to make him wobble. There was something in his eyes that told Holland that he would almost certainly not fall down.

  His old man had known coppers like Thorne but he was the first Holland had worked with. He decided he’d better not put away the notebook just yet. The Weeble looked like he had a lot more questions. And the bugger did have this knack of asking them without actually opening his mouth.

  ‘Yeah, so she walks home after a hen night . . . er, a week ago Tuesday . . . and winds up on the doorstep of A and E at the Royal London.’

  Thorne winced. He knew the hospital. The memory of the pain that had followed the hernia operation there six months earl­ier was still ­horribly fresh. He glanced up as a nurse in blue uniform put her head round the door, ­looking first at them and then at the clock. Holland reached for his ID, but she was already shutting the door behind her.

  ‘Looked like an OD when she came in. Then they found out about this weird coma thing, and she gets transferred here. But even when they discovered it was a stroke there was no obvious link to Backhand. No need to look for benzos and certainly no need to call us.’

  Thorne stared down at Alison Willetts. Her fringe needed cutting. He watched as her eyeballs rolled up into their sockets. Did she know they were there? Could she hear them? And could she remember?

  ‘So, if you ask me, the only person who’s fucked up is, well, the killer really. Sir.’

  ‘Find us a cup of tea, Holland.’

  Thorne didn’t shift his gaze from Alison Willetts and it was only the squeak and swish of the door that told him Holland had gone.

  Detective Inspector Tom Thorne hadn’t wanted Operation Backhand, but was grateful for any transfer out of the brand spanking new Serious Crime Group. The restructuring was confusing everybody and at least Backhand was a straightforward, old-fashioned operation. Still, he hadn’t coveted it like some he could mention. Of course it was high profile, but he was one of that strange breed reluctant to take on any case he didn’t seriously think could be solved. And this was a weird one. No question about that. Three murders that they knew about, each victim suffering death due to the constriction of the basilar artery. Some maniac was targeting women in their homes, pumping them full of drugs and giving them strokes.

  Giving them strokes.

  Hendricks was one of the more hands-on pathologists, but a week earlier, in his laboratory, Thorne had been less than thrilled at having those clammy hands on his head and neck as Hendricks tried to demonstrate the killing technique. ‘What the bloody hell d’you think you’re doing, Phil?’

  ‘Shut your face, Tom. You’re off your face on tranquillisers. I can do anything I like. I just bend your head this way and apply pressure to this point here to kink the artery. It’s a delicate procedure this, takes specialised knowledge . . . I don’t know. Army? Martial arts, maybe? Either way he’s a clever bastard. No marks to speak of. It’s virtually undetectable.’

  Virtually.

  Christine Owen and Madeleine Vickery both had risk factors: one in middle age, the second a heavy smoker on the pill. Both were discovered dead at home on opposite sides of London. That they had recently washed with carbolic soap was noted by the pathologists concerned, and though Christine Owen’s husband and Madeleine Vickery’s flatmate had considered this odd, neither could deny (or explain) the presence of a bar of carbolic in the bathroom. Traces of a tranquilliser were found in both victims, and were attributed in Owen’s case to a prescription for depression, and in Vickery’s, to an occasional drugs habit. No connection between these tragic yet apparently natural deaths was ever made.

  But Susan Carlish had no generally accepted risk factors for stroke, and the tranquillisers found in the one-room flat in Waterloo, in a bottle with no label, were something of a mystery. It was down to the torn ligaments in her neck and one bloody clever pathologist that they’d even got a sniff of it. Even Hendricks had to admire that particular bit of path. work. Very sharp.

  But not as sharp as the killer.

  ‘He’s playing a percentage game, Tom. Loads of people are walking about with high-risk factors for stroke. You for a start.’

  ‘Eh?’

  ‘Still got a gold card at Threshers, have you?’

  Thorne had started to protest but thought better of it. He’d been out on the piss with Hendricks often enough.

  ‘He picks three different areas of London knowing there’s a hell of a slim chance that the victims will ever be connected. He goes about his business and we’re none the wiser.’

  Now Thorne stood listening to the persistent wheeze of Alison’s ventilator. Locked-in syndrome it was called. They didn’t know for sure but she could probably hear, see and feel. Alison was almost certainly aware of everything going on around her. And she was completely and utterly unable to move. Not the tiniest muscle.

  Syndrome wasn’t the right word. It was a sentence. And what about the bastard who’d passed it? A martial-arts nutcase? Special Services? That was their best guess. Their only guess. None the wiser . . .

  Three different areas of London. What a mess that had been. Three commanders sitting round a table playing ‘Whose Knob’s the Biggest?’ and putting Operation Backhand together.

  He had no worries as far as the team was concerned. Tughan was efficient at least, and Frank Keable was a good DCI, if at times a little too . . . cautious. Thorne would have to have a word with him about Holland and his ­notebook. He never put the bloody thing down. Couldn’t the division take on a single detective constable with a memory span greater than the average goldfish?

  ‘Sir?’

  Goldfish Boy was back with the tea.

  ‘Who put us on to Alison Willetts?’

  ‘That would be the consultant neurologist, er . . . Doctor . . .’

  Holland cleared his throat and swallowed. He had a plastic cup of hot tea in each hand and couldn’t get out his notebook. Thorne decided to be nice and reached out to take a cup. Holland groped for the notebook.

  ‘Dr Coburn. Anne Coburn. She’s teaching over at the Royal Free today. I’ve made you an appointment for this afternoon.’

  ‘Another doctor we’ve got to thank.’

  ‘Yeah, and another bit of luck as it goes. Her old man’s a consultant pathologist, David Higgins. He does a bit of forensic work. She tells him about Alison Willetts and he goes, “That’s interesting because . . .”’

  ‘What? And he says and she says? Bit of a casual post-nookie chinwag, was it?’

  ‘Don’t know, sir. You’ll have to ask her.’


  Standing aside to let a pale ginger-haired nurse through to change Alison’s feeding line, Thorne decided there was no time like the present. He thrust his untouched tea back at Holland.

  ‘You stay here and wait for Hinnegan to show up.’

  ‘But, sir, the appointment isn’t until four-thirty.’

  ‘So I’ll be early.’

  He trudged along a maze of cracked red linoleum-floored corridors in search of the quickest way to the exit and an escape from the smell that he and every right-minded person in the world hated so much. The Intensive Therapy Unit was in a newer wing of the National Hospital for Neurology and Neuro­surgery, but it still had the smell. Disinfectant, he reckoned. They used something similar in schools but that just took him back to forgotten gym kits and the horror of PE in underpants. This was a different smell.

  Dialysis and death.

  He took the lift down to the main reception area, whose imposing Victorian architecture made a surprising contrast with the modern, open plan style of the hospital’s newer parts. There was a faded grandeur about the stone tablets that lined the walls and the dusty wooden plaques inscribed with the names of the hospital consultants. Pride of place went to the full-length portrait of Diana, Princess of Wales, a former patron of the hospital. The painting was accomplished, unlike the bust of the Princess that stood on a plinth next to it. Thorne wondered if it had been sculpted by a patient.

  As he neared the exit, the muttered curses and dripping umbrellas coming towards him through the main doors told him that summer was at an end. A week and a half into August and it was over. He stood beneath the hospital’s elaborate red-brick portico and squinted through the downpour towards where his car was parked, tight against the railings that ran around Queen Square. People scurried through the rain, heads down, across the gardens or towards Russell Square tube station. How many were doctors or nursing staff? There were a dozen hospitals or specialist units within a mile of him. He could just see Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital from where he stood.

 

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