What She Knew (28 page)

Read What She Knew Online

Authors: Gilly Macmillan

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Adult

She didn’t notice my disorientation. She did ask me what I was cradling in my arms.

“Ben’s books,” I said.

I put them carefully down on the table and then we just stood facing each other and she reached forward to hug me. It was an awkward hug, just as it had been the first morning at the police station, although this time it was worse because her body offered none of the softness that it had before. We were both too wary of each other, and we made do with the minimum of contact, because for the first time in our lives neither of us knew where we stood with the other. And then, as if she knew that was inadequate, Nicky stood in front of me and put her hands on either side of my arms, and rubbed them up and down.

“Will you be OK?” she asked.

I nodded.

“I can come back whenever you want, just call me, if it’s too much being on your own.”

“I can ask Laura to come over,” I said, and my voice sounded strange, as if I were speaking with a thick tongue.

She hesitated just slightly before saying, “OK, good.”

Then we stood there again and her hands fell away from my arms and she looked at me in a way that made me want to start screaming with the uncertainty and the awfulness of it all, so with the last reserves of my strength I said, “Just go, Nicky.”

“Now I’m not sure I should,” she said. “Looking at you now. You’re not OK, are you?”

And I shouted. I shouted, “JUST GO!” because I felt as if I would implode if anybody said anything else to me, and it shocked her so much that she took a step back, and from her reaction I could tell that my expression must be ugly.

She stared at me, and then started to say something, but I couldn’t stand to hear it, so I shouted “NOW!” and it was more of a scream than a word, and then I ran up the stairs so fast that they pounded and I didn’t hear the sound of the door clicking shut behind her, but I did hear the press badgering her to tell them who had been shouting and why, and if she replied to them she did it very quietly or not at all, because within minutes all I could hear were the sounds of my empty house.

Laura came to mop me up. I didn’t ask her to, she just arrived. As I went to answer the door I heard her chatting with one of the journalists on the doorstep. When I let her in she said, “How funny. I trained with one of those guys out there.” She said it lightly, as if they’d run into each other at a party. I wondered which one of them it was. There were a few regulars. Most likely, I thought, to be the youngest of the bunch, the one who could outrun the others and was the last to stop beating on the windows of the car when I was driven away. I didn’t ask her.

She’d brought takeaway food and a bottle of wine with her. Before she arrived I thought I’d tell her everything that had happened. But I didn’t. I couldn’t find the words; they felt trapped inside me, made prisoner by my numbed senses and my decaying ability to trust. Within my head I was jittering, like a withdrawing addict, obsessing over my sister, and what she’d told me, replaying my loss of consciousness at the school.

Laura let me jitter. She calmly laid out our food on the kitchen table and poured us glasses of wine. “I know you probably don’t feel like this,” she said, “but I’m going to do it anyway and I won’t be offended if you don’t want it.”

The food and drink she’d brought looked like ancient relics of a life that I’d once enjoyed, but I went through the motions of appearing grateful. I picked at one or two of the dishes, managed just a sip of the wine, which had lost all of the comforting qualities it had before Ben disappeared and tasted like acid in my mouth.

“Do you want to talk about him?” Laura asked, breaking our silence. “Would it help?”

Laura never ate much; she had the appetite of a sparrow. She toyed with her food for a few moments, while I failed to answer her question, and then she said, “Do you remember when you had him? At the very beginning? We couldn’t believe how tiny he was, do you remember that?”

I found my voice. “You wouldn’t hold him at first.”

Laura hadn’t been able to take her eyes off him when she came to see me in the hospital. I lay exhausted in the bed, my body bruised and sore, hormone-drenched and soft, and watched her while she’d stood beside his Perspex crib, all trim and well dressed and tanned and pretty in a little summer dress and big sunglasses pushed up on her head—like a postcard from my life before motherhood. I told her she could pick him up, but she’d shaken her head at first.

She smiled at the reminder. “I’d never held a baby before. I didn’t want to break him, or to drop him.”

“But I made you.”

“And he puked on me.”

“He puked everywhere for the first few months. It was constant washing.”

“But it was love at first sight, wasn’t it? For you?”

“Yes.”

“I envied you that. It was so intense, so private.”

Her fingers sat on the stem of her wineglass and she turned it slowly, delicate wrists flexing. Then she refilled it. More than half the bottle was gone, and I hadn’t had more than a sip.

For the first time I noticed that lines were beginning to form on her elfin face. It was just an impression, they seemed to be there one moment, and gone the next, but they were a reminder that she was aging, that we were all aging. I stretched my hand across the table toward her and our fingers linked briefly.

“I can’t believe this is happening to you,” she said. “It’s like a bolt of lightning came out of nowhere and struck you, and Ben. I can’t imagine what you must be going through.”

“All my feelings hurt.”

Her eyes brimmed with unshed tears, and she said, “Can I tell you something? I want to say it so you know that other people know how you feel. Just a little bit of what you feel anyway.”

“Tell me,” I said, and instinctively I felt a reawakening of the feelings of dread that our reminiscences about Ben had briefly put to sleep.

“I had an abortion.”

“When?” This was startling news, shocking too. I thought Laura and I had had the kind of friendship where you lay yourself bare, where the only secrets you keep are to do with your plans for each other’s Christmas or birthday presents.

“Before you had Ben.”

“I don’t know what to say. Why didn’t you tell me before?”

“You were pregnant.”

And there it was: a wedge in our friendship that I’d never known about.

“Who was the father?”

“Do you remember Tom from Bath?”

I did. He was a married man, whom she’d met through work.

“Did he know?”

“He paid for it. God, Rach, I’m sorry. It’s stupid of me even to mention it now. I don’t even know why I’m telling you. It’s nothing compared to what you’re going through.”

And here’s the thing: I couldn’t deal with it. If Laura wanted us to feel solidarity at that moment, then she’d just said completely the wrong thing. It was simply too much to cope with: the intentional loss of a child.

A week previously I would have been there for her, supported her, but at that moment it was viciously, unbearably painful to hear, and my brain, addled with her news, with everything, did a flip.

The exquisite and painful pleasure of our reminiscences about Ben disappeared in an instant. The earlier warmth of her friendship, and her company, suddenly felt frosty and brittle. Goose bumps ran across my skin like squalls agitating glassy water.

“No,” I said. “No, no, no. I can’t hear this now. Why are you telling me this?”

And then another thought, a corrosive one, as the distrust that my sister had sown as a seed now bloomed freely in my mind. I voiced it with a tone that was raw enough to surprise even myself, the tone of somebody who has reached the end of her tether. “Are you feeding stories about me to the other journalists? To your friends out there? Is that why you wanted to talk about Ben?”

I got to my feet, and my wineglass tipped over in my hurry to stand, the wine everywhere, pooling on the table, on me, dripping onto the floor, and Laura stood too and shock had peeled away any softness in her expression so that her cheeks looked cold and smooth as marble.

“Jesus, Rachel! I know you must be feeling desperate, but…”

I pushed her. She came around the table toward me, wanting to hug me, and I pushed her away. I grabbed her coat and her bag and I shoved them at her and I hounded her all the way to the front door, ignoring her pleading words, and her tears, until she was out and gone, like Nicky, and the press, her so-called friends, took photographs of her on the doorstep while I sat back down at the kitchen table, on the chair that was damp with wine, and I sobbed.

JIM

We worked closely with John Finch all day. The feeling of recognizing myself in him didn’t abate; if anything it got stronger as we talked. It troubled me.

He waited at Kenneth Steele House with me while my officers began checking out families whom he’d identified for us. We sent a pair of DCs down to the hospital, hoping there weren’t going to be too many confidentiality issues and bureaucratic hoops to jump through before they would release information to us.

“Do you ever tire of it?” Finch said to me in a long moment of silence when my thoughts had flown to Emma, to when I might see her next. “Do you ever tire of the daily contact with people when their lives are shattered?”

We sat in a windowless interview room around a gray-topped table. A strip light above us threw out a glare that made my temples ache. I didn’t answer him. If I had, I would have lost my separateness, my professional distance. I had to remember that John Finch was not my friend, but it was hard not to answer, because there were parallels between what he did and what I do. For a moment or two I was overwhelmed with a desire to say yes, to talk to him, to compare notes and admit that there were times when it was very, very difficult to stand back. In another universe, I thought, we might have been able to do that, and it would have been nice, but not here, not now.

“Do you know what this room reminds me of?” he asked.

I shook my head.

“We call it the bad news room at the hospital. It’s where we take families when we have to tell them the worst. It’s exactly like this, except that there are brochures.”

I kept my reply neutral. “We’re hoping to bring you good news, Mr. Finch.”

“Do you know how they know?” he said. “The smart ones, the clever families? They see the china teapot and the china cups with saucers, and the door closing behind them, and the unusual number of staff all together in one room, and they ask themselves why all this fuss, just for us? It doesn’t take them long to work it out. They read the situation before we’ve even started talking. They start to grieve before the milk goes into the cups.”

“Well, you’re safe on that count,” I said.

In front of us was a tray of four polystyrene cups with gray coffee remains swimming in the base of them. Torn and half-emptied sachets of sugar littered the table like doll-sized body bags.

He understood why I’d given such a shallow response. “I’m sorry,” he said. “Of course you don’t want to have this conversation because to do so would be unprofessional. That was stupid of me. I’d do the same in your situation.” He barked out a noise that was supposed to be a laugh, but instead was a noise that crept sullenly around the edges of the room, mocking his attempt at forced jollity.

I wondered then if all the pain and difficulty of his profession, the hopelessness and the encounters with death, had become toxic for John Finch, too toxic to bear any longer.

I let my guard down then, just for a moment, because I was curious.

“Do you get emotional when you lose a patient?” I asked him. I wanted to know how much failure hurt him; I wanted to know if he was like me.

“Very occasionally there’s one that gets to you, no matter how hard you try. It’s very rare. You learn early on, when you’re training, that you have to keep your distance emotionally, because if you don’t, you can’t do your job.”

“What makes that one stand out?”

“Sometimes you don’t even know. Once I operated on a boy who reminded me a little of Ben, and I met his mother, she wasn’t unlike Rachel. They reminded me of us, of our family. It wasn’t that long ago, Ben was about seven at the time. The boy’s operation was quite a simple one, but there was bleeding, and he died. His heart failed. There was nothing we could do. It was an unexpected death and when I went to tell his mother, I… I’m afraid I broke down.”

Distress swam deep in his eyes, but John Finch had obviously learned to be stoic too. He didn’t lose control; he said, “It was unprofessional of me.”

“It’s understandable.”

“Do you think so, Detective? Has it ever happened to you?”

I looked at my watch. It was late. I was in danger of confiding. I had to get things back on track. “I think we could do with something to eat,” I said. “Chances are, it’s going to be a long night.”

We took John Finch home at ten that night. By midnight, we’d narrowed things down based on the information he’d given us, and we had a standout suspect for the letter. By the early hours of the morning we’d disturbed countless colleagues and we were as certain as you can be. We’d checked and double-checked the details, gone into background, and triple-checked that we had the correct address for our suspect.

Fraser, on what must have been her fiftieth cup of coffee, tasked me with leading a dawn raid. We wanted the element of surprise, and that’s the best time to get it. I chose my men, and we went through our preparations carefully.

We were due to go in at five a.m.

DAY 7

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2012

An abduction may occur for many reasons, including a desire to possess a child, sexual gratification, financial gain, retribution, and the desire to kill. Research findings indicate that when a child is killed, the motivation may be either emotion-based, where the abductor seeks revenge on the family; sexual-based, where the offender seeks sexual gratification from the victim; or profit-based, which involves most often ransom for money (Boudreaux et al., 2000 & 2001). Moreover, child homicide usually follows an abduction and is not the reason for the abduction.

—Marlene L. Dalley and Jenna Ruscoe, “The Abduction of Children by Strangers in Canada: Nature and Scope,” National Missing Children Services, National Police Services, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, December 2003

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