Read Where the Memories Lie Online
Authors: Sibel Hodge
He said he was waiting at the bus stop just up the road here and
she walked past. He said hi to her but she didn’t say anything back, and then he watched her walking towards our house. We thought
at the time she was going to Abbotsbury. That was the last time
he saw her.’
DI Spencer leaned an elbow on the table and rested his chin in
his hand with a pensive look. ‘Did Chris say anything else?’
I shrugged. ‘Not much. I also went to see Mr Cook. He was
the village policeman at the time Katie went missing and he made
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a few enquiries after Rose and Jack found the letter Katie had left.
Um . . .’ I paused.
Everyone waited, watching me.
‘Well, it’s about her dad, Jack. I always thought he was . . .
I don’t know. Odd,’ I said.
‘He gave all the girls the creeps.’ Nadia grimaced.
‘Odd, how? You thought something inappropriate was going
on between Katie and Jack?’ DS Khan narrowed her eyes slightly.
‘Not at the time, I didn’t, but looking back on things, I think it
would explain a lot. Her behaviour, for one,’ I said.
‘What do you mean?’
‘She was the village slag is what my wife means,’ Ethan said.
‘From the age of about fourteen she’d sleep with anyone.’
‘She was looking for attention and love,’ I insisted, still defend-
ing her even though the discovery of her propositioning Ethan was
still raw in my mind. ‘Also, I found something else in her medical
notes that could raise a red flag for possible sexual abuse.’ I told them what I’d discovered about the vaginal infections.
Nadia let out a horrified gasp.
‘Anyway, then I went to see Mr Cook, to see if he remembered
what her goodbye letter said, to make sure she really wrote it. Katie put in the letter that she was leaving the village and they couldn’t stop her. She said, “You know what you both did”.’
DS Khan wrote that down. ‘Did the letter say anything else?’
‘Just that she hoped they rotted in hell.’
DS Khan wrote frantically in her notepad. ‘Did she ever
mention her father was abusing her?’
‘No. Never. And, of course, there could be reasonable explana-
tions for her symptoms.’
DI Spencer stared over my shoulder, looking deep in thought.
‘What was her relationship like with her parents?’
‘Not good. She hated them and they argued a lot.’
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‘She was a thief, too,’ Ethan butted in. ‘When she was seeing
Chris, she was here at the house all the time and things kept going missing. She stole stuff from Nadia.’
‘Is that right?’ DS Khan asked Nadia.
‘Yes, I’m afraid. She took things from my room. I confronted
her and she denied it but it must’ve been her.’
‘I was glad when Chris finished with her,’ Ethan said. ‘She was a
troublemaker. She would’ve messed his head up if he’d married her.’
‘Rose and Jack were alcoholics, although I don’t think any-
one realised how bad they were until after Katie left,’ I added,
still feeling as if I had to stick up for Katie. ‘Looking back, they must’ve neglected her from an early age. I think she had to fend
for herself most of the time, although she never admitted that to
me. As she got older, she didn’t spend much time at home if she
could help it.’
‘Did Katie drink, too? Or was she into drugs?’ DS Khan asked.
‘She liked to drink, I suppose. We both looked older than our
age so we used to sneak into pubs when we were seventeen,’ I said.
‘But it was just usual teenage experimenting. She wasn’t like Jack
and Rose or anything. And she never did drugs that I knew of.’
DI Spencer looked pensive. ‘Did she ever steal anything
from Tom?’
Nadia and Ethan looked at each other and shrugged.
‘Not that I know of,’ Nadia said.
‘He never said anything if she did,’ Ethan said. ‘But it wouldn’t
surprise me.’
A memory flashed into my head then. The last time I’d seen
her. Something else she’d said to me that had seemed insignificant
at the time but now it put a new slant on things. ‘Um . . . I think she might have taken something.’
‘What do you mean?’ Nadia turned her hands palms up in a
question. ‘What did she take?’
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Where the Memories Lie
‘I don’t know. But I just remembered something weird that she
said to me the day before she supposedly ran away. We were all
going to the Kings’ Arms on the Saturday night to see a band. There was Nadia, Lucas, Ethan, Tom, Chris and I going. I’d been spending
a lot of time with Ethan then, and Katie hadn’t wanted to go out
much because she was still upset about breaking up with Chris.
I went to the shop where she worked and asked if she wanted to
come with us all.’ A picture of Katie in the shop swam clearly into my head, then. How she’d looked frumpy and dowdy and plain,
but how her head was cocked as she spoke, her hand on her hip, her
defiant body language in complete contrast to her new meek look.
‘First of all she said, “If he thinks I’m going to fuck him again, he can fuck off.” Which I thought meant at the time she was talking
about Chris. And then she said, “I’ve got something he wants and
I’m going to make him pay”.’
‘You just happened to remember that, word for word, all this
time later?’ DS Khan looked up from her note-taking and raised
her eyebrows.
‘Well, I thought about it a lot at the time because I felt so guilty afterwards that I wasn’t there for her more. I think it was etched
into my brain and must’ve just needed a nudge to resurface again.’
‘So, it’s possible she meant she’d stolen something from Tom?’
DI Spencer tapped the table lightly.
‘Yes, I suppose.’
‘Who’s Lucas?’ DS Khan asked, pen poised.
‘My husband.
‘So if Katie was here at the house a lot when she was going out
with Chris, did Tom have much to do with her?’ DI Spencer looked
round the table.
‘Well, we weren’t living here when Katie . . . um . . . left,’ Nadia said. ‘We lived in another house on the other side of the village. This barn came up for sale and Dad was renovating it around that time.’
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‘So the garage was built at the same time he was renovating the
barn?’ DS Khan asked.
‘Yes,’ Ethan said.
‘Who would have had access to the garage when it was
being built?’
Ethan shrugged. ‘Dad and Chris. Other builders and contrac-
tors working for Tate Construction. But the site wasn’t secured
while they were working on it. At the weekends or evenings when
no one was around, anyone could’ve just walked in.’
‘But in order to hide a body under the floor of the garage, it
would have to have been someone who was involved in the renova-
tion?’ DI Spencer asked, although it was more of a statement than
a question.
Ethan stared at a spot above DI Spencer’s head. ‘I suppose so,
yes. I’m the company architect, but I wasn’t working there then.
I was at university, getting my architecture degree.’
‘So you don’t remember which employees would’ve been here?’
‘No.’
‘I was working for Tate Construction at that time, in their
offices,’ Nadia said. ‘But I just dealt with the accounts then.
I didn’t have anything to do with which employee was working on
which site.’
DI Spencer crossed one leg over the other and sat back. ‘Did
Katie and Tom get on with each other?’
Nadia shook her head. ‘I never noticed anything strange between
them, although I don’t think he approved of her. He thought Chris
could do better, but he never said anything bad about her to me.’
‘Dad didn’t like her,’ Ethan muttered quietly.
DI Spencer tilted his head. ‘Pardon?’
‘Dad didn’t like Katie,’ he repeated. ‘He thought she was trashy.
He was glad when Chris saw sense and dumped her.’
‘He said that?’
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Where the Memories Lie
‘No. Not in so many words. But I thought it was obvious.’
‘Did Tom and Jack have much to do with each other?’ DS
Khan asked.
‘What? No way.’ Ethan frowned. ‘He thought Jack and Rose
were even trashier.’
‘How was Katie’s state of mind before she disappeared?’ DI
Spencer asked me. ‘Was she angry, happy, depressed?’
‘I’m not sure.’
‘You were her best friend, weren’t you?’
I thought about how she’d changed her appearance following
her break-up with Chris. How she’d avoided me and confined herself
to her house. A house she usually hated with vehemence. Analysing
it now, it was entirely possible she was suffering from depression.
‘Yes, but I hadn’t really seen her much for the six months before
she left so I don’t know for certain. But now I think maybe she was depressed. The only thing I really know for certain is that she hated her parents and they didn’t get on, and apparently they wanted her
to leave home, anyway.’
DS Khan made more notes.
‘When was the last time you saw her?’ DI Spencer asked
Nadia.
‘I don’t know. I wasn’t friends with her. Probably when Chris
was still going out with her.’
‘How about you?’ he asked Ethan.
He shrugged. ‘I haven’t got a clue.’
‘Has Tom Tate ever made any other confessions to you about
crimes in the past?’ DI Spencer asked.
‘No, of course not!’ Ethan said.
‘Are you sure you don’t want something to drink?’ I asked them.
‘No, thanks.’ DI Spencer stood. ‘I think we’ve got enough
for now.’
DS Khan clicked the top of her pen closed and followed suit.
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‘The scene of crime team will be here for a while longer, but we
really need to go and speak to Mr Tate.’
‘I don’t think that’s a good idea,’ Ethan said. ‘He gets agitated
and confused easily. I don’t want him getting upset and having
another heart attack.’
‘Well, I was going to suggest that one of you accompany us to
try and keep things as calm and familiar for him as possible,’ DI
Spencer said.
‘I agree.’ Nadia nodded. ‘I’ll come with you.’
‘You’re not questioning him without me.’ Ethan stood, tower-
ing over DI Spencer.
DI Spencer looked at me, silently asking my opinion.
‘I’d like to go, too,’ I said.
‘Right. Well, shall we all jump in our car together?’ DS Khan
asked.
‘I’ll take my car,’ Nadia said. ‘I have to stop at the supermarket
on the way home.’
I wondered how she could even think about eating at a time
like this but stress and anxiety affected people in different ways.
Who was I to judge? Nadia’s drug of choice was comfort food. I’d
be numbing the anxiety later with wine.
‘I’ll drive, too.’ Ethan grabbed his car keys from the island and
clenched them in his fist before anyone could challenge him.
As we drove in convoy to the nursing home, I had the feeling
that my normal life would never be normal again.
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Chapter Seventeen
Tom’s room was crowded with all of us in there. I stood
in front of the window while DI Spencer and DS Khan
stood at the end of Tom’s bed. Nadia sat on the edge of
the bed next to her father, stroking his hand. Ethan stood protec-
tively on the other side, fists clenching and unclenching, looking
as if he was about to explode, or hit someone or . . . do something volatile. My heart squeezed in sympathy for him. He still wanted
to believe the impossible, to hang onto the insane idea that Tom
hadn’t committed this terrible crime. That there was some other
explanation. I got it, of course. I understood why no one would
want to believe their parent could be capable of something like his.
I didn’t want to believe it, either. Not of Tom. His words from a few days ago floated in my head.
I was just protecting my family. I was
just doing what a parent should.
It was exactly what Ethan was doing then, trying to protect his father. I was torn between wanting to
protect Tom and wanting him to rot in hell, just like Katie had told Jack to. Even if she’d stolen something or blackmailed Tom, or slept around and lied, or dared to dream of a better, more secure life, or tried to have sex with Ethan, she didn’t deserve to be murdered and buried under a pile of earth and concrete like a piece of rubbish.
Sibel Hodge
‘I don’t want an enema.’ Tom looked at DI Spencer and
DS Khan.
Nadia squeezed his hand. ‘They’re not doctors, Dad.’
‘Why are they in my room, then?’ Tom turned his head to her
for guidance.
‘They want to ask you some questions.’ Ethan’s voice was laced
with contempt for the officers that he didn’t bother to hide.
‘I’m tired.’ Tom rested his head back on the pillow and closed
his eyes. ‘I’m going on holiday later and I want a nap. I’m going to Spain. It’s nice there – have you been?’
I pictured us all about five years ago, before the Alzheimer’s
was really rearing its ugly head, when we had all taken a family
holiday out to stay with my parents at their converted
finca
in Andalucía. I didn’t get to see them that much after they moved
abroad so it was a great time, with both the Tates and Maxwells
spending lazy days around the pool, reading books or playing water