His eyes widened. ‘My God.’ He sank into a chair, then listened as she told him about the scene she’d been met with earlier.
She continued with her tidying as she talked, aware of his gaze following her as she moved around the room. She had never been alone with him before, she realized, and she felt oddly exposed in his presence, her movements slow and clumsy beneath his scrutiny. She noticed him pick up the picture of her and Luke on Hampstead Heath and stare down at it, his expression unreadable. She wished that he would go. ‘What brings you here, Tom?’ she asked.
He looked up, the cool blue of his eyes meeting hers. ‘I had to be in town to see a client, and I wanted to see how you are.’
‘Really?’ She was unable to hide her surprise.
‘I’m conscious that you’re very much on your own down here, Clara. My parents and I have each other, but … well.’ He stopped, before adding quietly, ‘I’m sorry if you thought I was less than sympathetic when Luke first went missing. I assumed he’d just taken off for a few days – you know how impetuous he can be. I had no idea …’ he trailed off again, then cleared his throat. ‘Do the police have any inkling who might have broken in?’
‘No. They’ve searched for fingerprints, but I guess it’ll be a while before I hear anything.’ She surveyed the mess hopelessly. ‘The problem is there must be so many prints here. And if whoever it was wore gloves …’ she shrugged. ‘I got the impression they were only going through the motions. They haven’t got a clue. Not a fucking clue.’ She realized that she was going to cry and, desperate not to do so in front of Tom, excused herself and hurried to the bathroom, where she held a towel to her face as she stifled her sobs.
It was some minutes before she felt able to return and she found him standing by the window, staring out at the sky, apparently deep in thought. The silence stretched and though it was in her nature to feel obliged to fill it she sat on the sofa without speaking, unable to summon the necessary energy. She glanced at him, taking in his appearance. He was so different from Luke. They’d both inherited Oliver’s tall, broad-shouldered physique, but whereas Luke had his dad’s olive skin and softer, more boyish face, it was Rose’s pellucid blue gaze, blond hair and strong, symmetrical features that had been passed down to Tom. Even their dress sense was different: Tom’s all sharp suits and expensive shoes, the polar opposite to Luke’s laidback style of jeans and T-shirts. He was a solicitor, she knew, and it was a job she’d often thought suited him, associated as it was in her mind with a certain dry meticulousness.
He turned suddenly. ‘Didn’t the neighbours see or hear anything?’ he asked.
She shook her head. ‘Apparently not. The woman upstairs has been away for a couple of days.’ She reflected again how strange that was – seeing as she was usually there all the bloody time, playing her music, night and day. ‘The people on the floor below say they didn’t hear anything. I guess it must have happened during the night.’
To her surprise he came over and took the seat next to hers on the sofa and she leant away slightly, taken aback by his sudden proximity, the intensity of his gaze. ‘I’m sorry,’ he said, ‘maybe I shouldn’t have come. I didn’t mean to disturb you – I wanted to make sure you’re all right.’
‘Well, uh, you know. I’ve been … better,’ she mumbled.
‘Sorry,’ he said. ‘Stupid thing to say.’ After a moment he asked, ‘What will you do now?’
She shrugged. ‘The police want me to help with a press appeal. Then I guess I’ll stay at a friend’s tonight. Mac’s, maybe.’
He nodded. ‘If there’s anything I can do to help, or you want to talk, I’m here. I’ll leave my number and you could … well, anyway …’ He broke off and she watched him pull a pen from his pocket, then scribble his number on a train ticket.
She tried to hide her surprise. ‘Thank you,’ she murmured as he passed it to her.
‘No problem.’
To her relief, he got up and began to move towards the door.
They stood awkwardly in the narrow hallway. She would normally say goodbye to Rose or Oliver with a kiss or a hug, but that felt unthinkable with Tom. She tried to remember if this dilemma had ever occurred between them before and realized that it hadn’t: greetings and farewells were always a nod or a wave from across a room. He cleared his throat. ‘Well …’
To cover her confusion she darted in front of him and opened the door, saying in a ridiculous, overly bright voice, ‘OK then! Nice to see you!’
He nodded. ‘Bye, Clara.’
He held out his hand and, thrown by the awkward formality, she took it, with a small, embarrassed laugh. She felt the coolness of his fingers in hers and something about the way he was looking at her now, his gaze so piercing it seemed to pin her to the spot, rendered her incapable of moving a muscle. He looked as though he were about to say something, but the moment stretched until the sudden sound of a motorbike revving outside broke the silence and his hand released hers, before he turned, and was gone, closing the door quietly behind him.
12
Cambridgeshire, 1989
Funny how it creeps up on you, how the occasional pick-me-up can morph so seamlessly into such a necessary, vital thing. The odd glass of wine used to be nothing more than a treat – a pleasant way to unwind after a long or tiring day, but slowly things began to change. I was never quite able to move on from that moment, you see, the second I turned to find Hannah standing in the kitchen, knowing that she had heard everything, that she knew everything. At night I would go to bed and wait in vain for sleep, only to relive over and over the shock of seeing her by the pantry door, the awful realization dawning in her eyes.
During the weeks that followed I barely let her out of my sight, terrified of what she might do. But to my confusion she almost seemed happier than she had ever been. The concerned phone calls from school all but ceased, the lying and stealing petered out; life ran more smoothly than it had ever done before. I would torture myself for hours trying to work out what this meant. I was terrified of her telling Doug what she knew, aware that there was no way he’d forgive me for going behind his back, secretly contacting the very person he’d wanted out of our lives forever.
Strangest of all, her relationship with her father began to change too. Now, suddenly, I would come across the two of them, heads bent close together, she sitting on his knee, a wide smile on her face as they chatted about her day. It made me feel sick to see Doug’s surprise and happiness at the change in his little girl. Occasionally she’d look up and our eyes would meet, and I would feel again that cold lurch of fear. It was as if she was deliberately torturing me.
When the secretary of the child psychologist whose waiting list we had been on finally rang to schedule our appointment, I almost cried as I fobbed her off with excuses. Because of course there was no question of that now. How could I possibly risk a doctor delving into Hannah’s mind? How could I risk Hannah telling what she knew? I seemed to live in a perpetual state of cold terror: I had no idea what to do.
So bit by bit, that end-of-day glass or two turned into three, then four. A bottle, sometimes more. I came to expect, then ceased to care about Doug’s disapproving glances. ‘Haven’t you had enough?’ he’d say, when I’d reach for the wine yet again at dinner. Sometimes I’d see a closed, tight expression in his eyes when he noticed the empties piling up in the bin. But I never drank during the day, while looking after Toby, for example. I’d always, always wait until he was safely tucked up in bed for the night – at least at first. I couldn’t tell Doug, you see; I couldn’t tell him what I’d done.
‘She seems to have turned a corner, don’t you think,’ he said with satisfaction one evening, after Hannah had obediently gone off to get changed for bed.
I looked into my wine glass. ‘Hmmm,’ I said.