Read Where the Memories Lie Online
Authors: Sibel Hodge
probably stale by now. I thought about adding digestives to my
mental shopping list but then thought, Sod it. I didn’t care anymore.
‘Oh, hi.’ I put my bag on the island. ‘I didn’t know you were all
here.’ I smiled tentatively at Ethan, who gave me a brief tight smile in return and looked away.
‘Have you got some news? About the DNA results?’ I asked
hopefully.
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‘I’m afraid not yet. Any time now we’re expecting it.’ DI Spencer
stood and glanced at DS Khan, who followed his lead. ‘We’ve got
more enquiries to make so we’ll leave you to it.’ He nodded briefly before they showed themselves out.
An oppressive silence settled over the room after they’d left,
buzzing in my ears, and I had to fill it.
‘What did they want?’ I asked Ethan.
He shrugged. ‘They just wanted to talk to me about where I was
that Sunday when Katie left home.’
‘Right.’ I sat down next to him. ‘Where were you? They asked
me if I remembered what you were doing but I couldn’t remember.
I mean, I know we saw each other in the evening, after I’d come
back from looking for her, but—’
‘I don’t remember, OK? How am I supposed to remember what
happened twenty-five years ago?’
I was momentarily stunned by the anger in his voice and the
look in his eyes. ‘I remember.’
‘You only remember some of it. And that’s because you kept
going on and on about it after she left. Just like Chris did.’
‘She didn’t leave, Ethan. She was murdered.’ I surprised myself
by keeping my voice on an even keel.
‘We don’t know that yet.’
‘She had a fractured skull. She’s hardly unlikely to bash her
own head in, is she? What’s wrong with you? I know you’re grieving
about Tom’s death and frustrated and upset about his confession,
but what’s happening to us? It’s like you don’t even want to be in
the same room as me anymore.’ He was silent so I carried on. ‘You
don’t want to talk about anything—’
‘Of course I don’t! Dad talked to you and looked what
happened! That’s
your
job, the talking. And you go on about things until we have to
talk.
’ He said the word mockingly. ‘I don’t want to bloody talk!’
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I counted to ten, trying to think of something nice to say.
I carried on to twenty, but niceness had upped and disappeared
somewhere. ‘Look, this isn’t my fault, so why are you blaming me?
I had to do something. I had to tell the police. Stop distancing
yourself. We’re supposed to be a family – bloody well act like it,
instead of leaving me to deal with Anna and going off on your own
all the time, brooding. You’re not the only one who’s upset by all of this. You’re not the only one grieving.’
He rested his elbows on the table and put his head in his hands.
I didn’t know he was crying at first. I’d only ever seen him cry
once before, and that was when Anna was born, so it seemed so
alien that I didn’t understand. It was only the shaking of his shoulders that gave it away.
I sat next to him, arm around his shoulder. ‘I’m sorry.’
I leaned my forehead against the side of his, feeling his heat through my hair.
He turned towards me, his face a mass of anguished wrinkles.
‘I don’t know how to deal with something like this.’
‘Together. We’ll deal with it together.’
Whoever was up one minute was down the next and vice versa.
Ethan was happier at dinner that night, but I couldn’t shake the
feeling of impending disaster. Lucas was quiet and withdrawn, and
Nadia was almost manic in her liveliness. Anna was back to ask-
ing a million questions, this time about the entomology of insects
on buried human bodies. Not a very appetising conversation for
the dinner table. Charlotte obviously agreed because she ran to the bathroom a few minutes later and vomited up Nadia’s roast beef.
How Nadia had the time or inclination to cook a full roast dinner
in the midst of everything going on beat me, but it was Lucas’s
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favourite, and since he was only home for one night before jetting
off again, she somehow found the time, as she always did. Maybe
that’s what Ethan needed: a nice roast dinner to make everything
OK again!
DI Spencer and DS Khan appeared an hour after we all finished
eating. Nadia poured red wine into large, almost bowl-shaped
glasses. I looked at it as she handed one to me and thought that
definitely wasn’t going to be enough to blot out what was going on.
Lucas was on beer. Ethan hit the whisky. DI Spencer and DS Khan
declined anything.
‘We just have a few more questions for you and Nadia, actually,’
DI Spencer said to Lucas. ‘You don’t all need to be here.’
‘Right.’ I stood up.
Ethan and I went into the lounge to wait, avoiding each other’s
eyes. There was one of those awkward, fidgety silences that you get on a blind date when you find out you’ve got absolutely nothing in
common with the other person. I chewed on my lip and stared out
into the garden.
A little while later I heard Nadia talking in the hallway outside
as she showed them out.
‘So, we’re no further forward, then?’ Nadia asked them.
‘Oh, I wouldn’t say that,’ DI Spencer replied before they left.
Nadia poked her head round the door. ‘Come into the kitchen.
I need another drink.’
‘What did they ask?’ Ethan asked her as he sat at the sparklingly
shiny glass dining room table.
Nadia set her glass on the worktop and uncorked another bottle
of wine. ‘They wanted to know if I remembered where Dad was
that Sunday when Katie left home, but I don’t know. It was a long
time ago. Apparently Chris told them that Tom mentioned he had
something urgent to do that day and couldn’t give him a lift to
boxing, and they wanted to know if he’d mentioned what might’ve
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been so urgent.’ She poured some wine into her glass and topped up
mine, then sat in between Lucas and Ethan.
Lucas sighed. ‘They wanted to know if Tom could’ve been
working at the barn, but he couldn’t have been, could he? He never
worked on Sundays. Ever.’
Nadia took a sip of wine, and when she set it back down, the
base of the glass clipped the edge of the table and the glass tipped over. She leaped back as red wine splattered across the glass and
dripped onto the laminate beech floor.
I shot up and grabbed the tea towel resting on the back of the
oven door as Nadia reached for the kitchen roll, and between us we
mopped up the spilled mess.
‘Sorry. Sorry about that!’ Nadia sat back down, face flushed,
wiping her hair away from her forehead.
Ethan took Nadia’s glass and silently refilled it. Lucas stared at
the floor, looking blank. Or bored. I wasn’t sure which. Probably
wishing he was a million miles away, just like all of us.
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Chapter Twenty-Five
That night in bed it felt like I had the old Ethan back at
first. After I’d seen a sullen and uncommunicative Anna
to bed, we went upstairs to avoid Nadia and Lucas’s jibes
to each other.
‘It’s only nine o’clock.’ Ethan lay on top of the bed, rigid, like a corpse. ‘I feel like a prisoner here, too. It’s like we’re in limbo. I can’t stay here anymore. I need my own space.’
I felt the same. The only one who was enjoying being at Nadia’s
was Poppy.
‘What about Anna, though?’ I asked. ‘You said we’d stay until
the weekend. This is a lot for her to handle. Just give it a few more days.’ I lay on my side facing him, propping my head up with the
palm of one hand.
I twined my fingers through his. He stared down at them as if
they were something foreign.
He sighed. ‘OK.’
I stroked the stubble on his cheeks. He hadn’t shaved in days,
and it was flecked with grey now.
‘Are you growing a beard?’ I laughed, trying to lighten the
mood. ‘I hate beards. Especially grey ones.’
Where the Memories Lie
‘What about Sean Connery? He’s got a grey beard and you
fancy him.’
His words catapulted me into the past, sparking off a memory.
I gasped. ‘I don’t think it was Tom’s baby.’
He glanced at me sharply. ‘Why not?’
‘Because I just remembered something. One day Katie and
I were having a conversation about older men, and she’d said they
were disgusting and they made her feel ill. I mean, I was talking
about good-looking older men at the time, and I was listing my
top five actors who I fancied.’ I waved my hand around. ‘Anyway,
I said Sean Connery and Jack Nicholson and − God, I can’t remem-
ber who else − but she got . . . I don’t know, really angry about it, and upset. Saying it was sick and twisted to have some old man
pawing at young girls and they had no right to do it and why didn’t anyone listen to them.’ I shook my head. ‘I mean now, suspecting
Jack might have sexually abused her, it puts all that into context, but at the time I just thought she was overreacting.’
Ethan watched me without saying a word.
‘So, you know, she wouldn’t have slept with Tom, would she, if
she felt like that? Did you ever see Tom looking at her in that way when she was at the house with Chris or us?’
‘In what way?’ He pronounced every word slowly like I was
stupid, and it was clear he was only humouring me.
‘You know. A sexual way.’
‘I can’t believe you’re even saying it. No, I didn’t notice that. Of course not.’
‘Neither did I. Unless . . .’ Another horrible thought hit me.
‘What if he raped her?’
Ethan dropped my hand and sat up. ‘He did
not
rape her.’
‘How do you know?’
‘Because no one needed to rape her. She would’ve dropped her
knickers for anyone.’
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A fire sparked in my head, molten anger bubbling to the
surface. I sat up. ‘I can’t believe you just said that. How can you trivialise being raped?’
He rolled his eyes. ‘Oh, for God’s sake, here we go again.’
‘What?’ I blew out an angry breath.
‘I can’t say anything right these days, can I?’
‘Well, neither can I!’ I hissed, hyper-aware that the walls were
very thin and we were in someone else’s house. ‘Victims of abuse
come in all shapes and sizes. Even the strong ones can be abused,
you know. I once worked with this surgeon whose husband was
beating her up. You’d never have guessed this composed, confident,
competent woman was a victim of domestic violence.’
‘How do you know Jack wasn’t the one who got her pregnant?’
He bit back.
‘If Jack raped her, she wouldn’t have kept the baby, would she?’
I muttered.
‘What?’
‘DI Spencer said she was almost six months pregnant. Why
would she have kept it, if it was Jack’s baby? She would’ve had a
termination, wouldn’t she? I mean, no one in that situation would
want to have their father’s baby.’
‘How the hell do I know what she thought? Maybe she couldn’t
afford an abortion.’
‘She could’ve explained what happened and got it done on
the NHS.’
‘Maybe she didn’t want to explain anything. She didn’t even
tell you at the time how bad Rose and Jack were and you were
supposed to be her best friend. She didn’t tell you she was leaving.
And she didn’t tell you she tried to sleep with me!’ He had a defiant glint in his eye. ‘You didn’t really know her at all. All you’ve got is speculation and pieces of a puzzle that don’t fit anywhere. We’re
just going round in bloody circles here!’ he spat out, trying to keep 224
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his voice down and failing miserably. ‘There’s no point in going
over and over this until the police tell us the results of the DNA
test. And even then I don’t know what that proves. No one saw
anything, and the only people who remember much are you and
Chris. Maybe we’ll never know what really happened. The police
investigation is going nowhere. They’re not going to find out exactly what happened. Not after all this time. I don’t know why they’re
even bothering. But just remember that if it wasn’t for you, none
of this would’ve happened! Dad’s dead because of your actions.
I just hope you’re satisfied now.’ He lay down and turned away
from me onto his side so hard the bed bounced up and down under
his weight. He stayed in that position, ignoring me, for the rest of the night.
I stared into the darkness, tears silently falling down my
cheeks, wondering again if I should’ve done things differently.
But then wondering just what I could’ve done instead. Whether
I could’ve lived with myself if I hadn’t shared Tom’s terrible secret.
I waited for sleep to claim me, for some sort of reprieve from
the blame I shouldered, but all I got were more tormented images
of Katie in my dreams.
The next morning when I was heading to work, I bumped into DI
Spencer outside Chris’s house again.
‘Morning,’ he said.
‘Morning. Is everything OK?’ I glanced at Chris’s front door.
It was shut and the curtains were still closed. His pick-up was on
the drive.
‘We were just giving Chris an update. It appears there’s no