I can’t help it, I laugh out loud. ‘Lisa? I’m sure she is.’ I’m remembering Lisa Brookland, all bleached teeth and tight bright sportswear, in the weeks when I was still trying to carry on as normal. She cornered me at the post office once.
‘And you’ve really no idea where she could have gone? There was no sign she was so … unhappy?’ The sharp interest in her face betrayed her thoughts: this doesn’t happen to people like us. Not if you’re doing it right. I never liked Lisa, even before.
And then one day I’d realised, when we’d gone to summer drinks at the tennis club, Mark saying it would be good for us. I’d stepped outside, just for a break from the questioning, the burden of other people’s concern and curiosity. When I’d come back in I saw them in a corner of the hall. It was something about the way they stood, heads close together.
So now I knew: it was her.
I hadn’t asked outright who he’d been with the night Sophie went missing. Because then I’d have to do something about it, and I didn’t have the energy, yet. I suppose I assumed it was some impressed girl in his office. Wasn’t that how it happened, when a husband worked such long hours? But no, he’d made time for the blonde divorcee from his tennis club. What a flipping cliché.
‘Well, of course she worries,’ Ellen says now. ‘Wouldn’t you expect her to?’ Ellen, with her keen appreciation of social niceties, was always hovering around the local queen bee.
I’m lost. ‘Not really,’ I say.
Ellen opens her mouth, shuts it. ‘Well I must get on,’ she says, briskly. ‘I’ve people coming to dinner, and it’s rammed in here, isn’t it. Why I leave things to the last minute I don’t know!’ Her neck’s going pink. ‘I’ll let you go. But do think about Thursday–’ She’s flustered, trying to steer the wheels away.
‘Ellen,’ I say. I put a hand on her trolley. ‘Why would I expect Lisa to worry about me?’
I think I know what she’s going to say before she does. But I want to make her say it.
Her shoulders sag, her hand goes to her mouth. She always had a sense of the dramatic.
‘Oh, Katie,’ she says. ‘I thought you knew, honestly. She and Mark – well, you’re separated now, aren’t you, have been for quite a while.’ She glances up at me through her lashes, slyly. ‘It’s only natural that he … He’s moved in with her.’
6
I keep it together long enough to get out of the supermarket. I can’t remember exactly what I’d said to Ellen, enough to get her to stop talking – ‘Don’t worry at all, it’s fine, I’ll see you.’ – then I’d dumped my basket, marched straight back through the entrance doors and into the car park.
I’d assumed it would fade out in time, that he’d move on. But here he is, moving from his rented flat in town back into a family home. Lisa’s got her kids most of the time, but then he’s always liked family life. My face is wet, I realise.
This is what happens when you try to be normal again. The past lays traps.
Looking back, it’s hard to remember those first days. I could answer questions and make tea for the police and Dad and Charlotte, who seemed to be here all the time, and do what was required. Then another great wave of terror would roll over me, flushing my body with panic: where was she?
The police talked to teachers and pupils at school. Sophie had signed in for registration on the Friday, that they could agree on. But this close to exams, the timetable was pretty much abandoned, much of the students’ time supposed to be spent in the library.
Then Jennifer Silver said she’d seen her heading to the changing rooms straight after registration, her big bag on her shoulder. Jennie Silver, I remembered Sophie telling me, laughing, was a total busybody. I held onto these nuggets of information. She’d got so protective of them.
They found Sophie’s navy skirt and jumper in the changing room, hung neatly on a peg. She’d just walked straight out of the school’s front door, as the older pupils were allowed to do, in her own clothes. In a letter to parents I heard the embarrassed head promised to review the sign-out procedure.
The upshot was the same: she’d been gone since Friday morning.
It didn’t take the police long to get hold of the video footage. The bus station in Amberton had been full of people, but they’d freeze-framed a shot, where she’d swung round in the direction of the camera, and zoomed in on her, a grainy black-and-white figure on their computer.
‘Mrs Harlow …?’ the officer with me had prompted. ‘Is that your daughter?’
I’d had to clear my throat. ‘Yes, that’s her.’
I still couldn’t believe it, that she’d actually done this. But there she was, in jeans and her winter jacket, too hot for the weather – at least she’ll be warm, I’d thought – stepping onto a coach. I couldn’t read her expression, as I tried to decipher the dots on the screen.
The coach was one of those on interminable routes that students love for their cheapness, winding south. They tracked down the driver; he thought he remembered her buying a ticket to London, but he couldn’t be sure, and nor could the police. They weren’t even sure where she’d got off.
‘It’s easier to disappear in a big city,’ said Kirstie, the officer assigned to us as ‘family liaison’ – to hold our hand through the worst. She was Scottish, in her thirties, I guessed, and didn’t shrink from telling me the truth, despite her warm manner. But there wasn’t that much to report, in the end.
They went through her phone, email, her Facebook – nothing out of the ordinary. Her internet searches though, on the laptop she used for homework and watching films, were another matter.
‘Budget work’
‘Casual work’
‘Cash in hand’
‘Travel work student’
Pages and pages, almost laying out her thought process for us.
‘You’d know if she’d gone abroad, wouldn’t you?’ I said, my panic mounting. ‘She’s taken her passport but it’s all electronic now, isn’t it, they must be able to track it. Right?’
‘The records are thorough,’ said Kirstie, ‘especially flights.’
‘Of course, no border system’s infallible,’ said the officer with her that day, a younger guy. ‘It’s not impossible.’
Sometimes my frustration spilled over: I wanted them to do even more.
‘This is a – a child. She’s still at school.’
‘She’s sixteen,’ Kirstie said once. ‘And she’s a clever girl, you say. Lots of teenagers leave home at sixteen.’ I think she was trying to reassure me.
‘Not girls like Sophie,’ I’d replied.
I read her reaction in the swift glance around our spacious living room. She knew: bad things happen to people in nice houses, too. I knew what I meant though: I just couldn’t see why Sophie’d gone.
Yes, we’d had rows; she wanted to go out more; she’d moaned about her revision workload. She loved art, and would happily spend hours hunched over her coursework, but she didn’t understand why I cared so much about maths and science and the rest.
‘Surely that’s not enough for her to do – this?’ I protested.
Kirstie didn’t need to contradict me: Sophie’s absence was its own rebuke.
At least there’d been no sign of … well, anything else. I could picture, all too easily, how it could have unfolded: long grass by a canal, a dog walker out early one morning, following their excited pet off the path: ‘Easy boy, hold on, what’s that … Oh God.’
I had to shut out the images that threatened to overwhelm me, that drove away sleep while Mark was snoring gently in the bed next to me. So I stayed busy. I started off local, driving around the streets at night, just to see. Then I went further, into the city, parking up behind derelict warehouses and near the railway arches, to show them my photos: Sophie, in her school uniform; Sophie, at the dinner to mark her sixteenth that April; Sophie, in cagoule on a school trip to the Lakes.