Bring Me Back

It’s hard driving along the roads that were once so familiar to me. The nearer I get to St Mary’s, the more I find myself thinking about Layla. The hardest thing over the last twelve years has been the absence of a body. I know it sounds terrible, that I should want her body to be found, but at least I’d have had closure, instead of lying awake in the dead of the night, torturing myself with images of her being held prisoner, having to endure God knows what at the hands of some maniac. It’s the not knowing that’s the hardest, the reason I’ve preferred to accept that she’s dead.

I park in front of the little station, needing the walk to the cottage to calm me. As I get out of the car, I see the ghost of myself walking through the station entrance and onto the platform, waiting for the train that will bring Layla back from her weekend in London. Unable to stop myself, I follow him onto the platform and watch as Layla steps off the train, beautiful in a flowing red dress, and runs down the platform into his arms, her red hair streaming out behind her. Suddenly tearful, she clings onto him, murmuring that she missed him and when she whispers over and over again that she’s sorry, he thinks, in his stupid innocence, that she regrets having gone to London and leaving him behind.

The pain of betrayal snaps me back to the present. Leaving the station, I follow the road to the cottage. I can smell the sea in the warm air, taste the salt on my lips. As I near the cottage, my heart feels suddenly heavy and my mouth goes dry. The stone wall of the cottage comes into view, then the upstairs window, then the little garden at the front, and – I come to an abrupt stop, unable to believe what I’m seeing. I expected to find the cottage unkempt and uncared-for. But the beds are full of flowers and there are red geraniums in the window boxes.

‘Layla.’ My voice catches in my throat and for one crazy moment I think that the door is going to open and she’ll be there, on the doorstep, ready to run to me and tell me that she’s glad I’m home, like she used to. Even when it remains closed I can’t accept that she isn’t there, because in my mind the flowers prove that she is, so I run, my heart pounding as I go. I arrive at the gate, fumble with the latch, hurry to the blue wooden door and thump on it. But she doesn’t open it so I thump again, and again, because I need her to be there, because I’ve never stopped loving her, despite trying to close my mind to her, despite loving Ellen.

A man’s voice comes from behind me. ‘You won’t get any answer, it’s been empty for years.’

Rage – red-hot and violent – rips through me. I stay as I am, fighting for control, trying to erase the burning anger from my face so that I can reply civilly to the person who’s ruined the few seconds where I’d allowed myself to believe Layla was alive.

I gesture towards the garden. ‘It doesn’t look empty,’ I snap, finding my voice but not my composure.

‘That’ll be Thomas.’

I take a breath and turn slowly, preparing myself for the jolt of recognition that will surely appear on his face when he sees me, the words that will spring unchecked to his lips, ‘Are you . . .?’ before the rest of the question dies away, leaving an awkward silence in its place. But the man, some ten years or so older than me, is thankfully unfamiliar.

‘Thomas?’ I ask in pretend puzzlement.

‘The old gentleman who lives next door. He’s been tending the garden for years.’ He nods at my cottage. ‘You’re not the first that’s showed an interest in buying it. But it isn’t for sale, never will be, according to Thomas.’

I go down the path and back through the gate, closing it behind me. ‘He lives next door?’ I ask, indicating Thomas’ cottage.

‘That’s right. But you won’t find him there. He’s in hospital, been there for a couple of weeks now.’

I look at the man in dismay. ‘Hospital?’

‘Yes, in Exeter. Only to be expected really, he’s in his nineties now.’

I nod slowly. I want to ask him what happened, if Thomas had a heart attack, if he knows what ward he’s on, but it might sound strange after I’ve pretended not to know him.

‘Oh well, if the cottage isn’t for sale,’ I say, wanting him gone.

‘Don’t think it ever will be. It’s like a shrine.’

‘A shrine?’

The man nods. ‘A young couple used to live here and she disappeared during a holiday in France. The man came back for a while, apparently, waiting for her to turn up and when he realised she wasn’t going to, he upped and left, leaving everything exactly as it was. Take a look through the window and you’ll see what I mean.’

He has a pleasant enough face but it doesn’t stop me wanting to push my fist into it.

‘Do you live in St Mary’s?’ I ask, tortured by images of him, and others maybe, peering ghoulishly through the windows.

‘Moved here six months ago. If you’re looking for something to buy, I suggest you go to one of the estate agents in Sidmouth.’

I start to move away. ‘Right, thanks.’

I feel his eyes on me as I walk back to my car. I’m gutted that I’ve come all this way for nothing. If I’d brought my keys with me, I could have gone back to the cottage once the man had moved on, to have a look around inside, so that I wouldn’t have had a completely wasted journey. But I’d only wanted to see Thomas so I hadn’t collected them from the safety deposit box at my bank in Exeter, where I’d left them twelve years ago, along with Layla’s jewellery, the day I’d left St Mary’s. I could have kept them with me but I couldn’t imagine ever wanting to return to the cottage. Yet I couldn’t consider selling it either.

I’d like to go and see Thomas but I can’t very well walk into the hospital and start asking him questions about supposedly seeing Layla. But Tony could.

I take out my mobile and dial his number. He answers on the second ring.

‘Finn? Everything OK?’ His voice is sharp with worry, and at first I think he knows something of what’s been going on.

‘Yes, everything’s fine,’ I reassure him. ‘Am I disturbing you?’

‘No, go ahead.’

‘I’m phoning to ask a favour, actually. I know it’s a big ask but would you pay Thomas a visit? I’m curious as to why he thought it was Layla he saw outside the cottage.’

‘Why, has something happened?’

I debate how much to tell him. ‘Just that a couple of weeks ago, Ellen thought she saw Layla in Cheltenham. It was probably only someone with the same sort of red hair but it does seem strange, coming on the back of Thomas’ sighting.’

‘Hmm,’ Tony muses. ‘Alright, leave it with me. I’ll go and see him this afternoon.’

‘Thanks, Tony, I really appreciate it.’ I feel bad sending him all the way to St Mary’s when I know that Thomas is in hospital. But I don’t want him to know I’ve been to the cottage. And it’s only a small detour; it won’t take him long to get to the hospital from St Mary’s.

I don’t feel like going home so I take a drive along the coast to the other side of Sidmouth, then park up and go for a walk along the beach, wishing I’d brought Peggy with me. When I’m tired of walking, I find a pub and sit nursing a beer, mulling everything over.

Tony finally phones at 5 p.m.

‘Tony,’ I say. ‘Did you manage to see Thomas?’

‘Bad news, I’m afraid. I went to St Mary’s only to find that Thomas was taken to hospital last week. Seems he had a nasty fall.’

‘I’m sorry you had a wasted journey.’

‘I only found out because, when he didn’t come to the door, I went down to the village shop. They told me he’d been taken to the Royal Devon and Exeter so I went straight there.’

‘And did you see him?’

‘No.’ He pauses. ‘It seems he died in the early hours of the morning.’

I feel a sudden guilt. ‘That’s so sad,’ I say. ‘I should have gone to see him, I promised I would.’

‘He’d been tending your garden. Full of flowers it was. I thought for a minute that you’d sold the cottage but they told me at the shop it was Thomas’ work.’

‘Now I feel doubly bad.’

‘Too late for regrets,’ he says, not because he wants me to feel even worse but because it’s the truth.

‘Well, thanks, Tony. I’m sorry to have troubled you.’

I hang up. All I can do now is find Rudolph Hill and draw him out. I’ll let him think that I believe he has Layla, that I believe she’s alive.

He’ll think he’s luring me, but it will be me doing the luring.





EIGHTEEN

Before

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