The flat on Dixon Avenue looked like any other in Glasgow’s Crosshill district. Top floor, one bedroom and barely furnished.
But in October 2004, it would become the scene of one of the most frenzied and sadistic killing sprees in modern Scottish history.
Neighbours would later describe what they saw as something out of a horror film . The police gave it a name they rarely use publicly.
The House of Blood.
Inside, three men lay dead: stabbed, beaten, mutilated, scalded. One was beaten to death with a golf club. One had boiling water poured over him. Another’s head had been stamped on.
Blood stained every surface, from the walls to the ceiling. Even hardened detectives were visibly shaken.
But the killers were not faceless strangers. The prime suspect was a woman kn