Read Where the Memories Lie Online
Authors: Sibel Hodge
What the hell did he mean he’d killed her? Killed who? Who
was Georgia?
It couldn’t be true, though. Absolutely not. Confusion was
a perfectly normal symptom of the disease. Maybe he’d seen a
TV programme about someone called Georgia who was killed,
although quite frankly, I didn’t think they should be letting the
residents watch stuff like that. Or maybe he’d been chatting to
one of the other patients whose daughter called Georgia had gone
missing.
Yes, that was it. That was absolutely it. I’d never heard Tom
mention anyone called Georgia before.
When I got home I made myself lunch and turned on the TV,
flicking through the channels to find something to distract me. I ate
Where the Memories Lie
a cheese and ham sandwich that I didn’t even taste, swallowing it
down with water to get it past my dry throat. I couldn’t even tell you what programme I watched.
After letting Poppy out into the garden to do her business,
I walked the ten minutes to work.
I was chock-a-block with patients from 1 p.m. until 6 p.m.
when the nurses’ appointments finished. I thought maybe dressing
changes and assisting with smear tests and blood pressure checks
would keep me occupied. Usually, I would have a great time chat-
ting with the patients, putting them at ease, finding out what they’d been up to − I’ve always been pretty nosy and love talking − except I couldn’t get it out of my mind: the look of guilt on Tom’s face. The desperation in his eyes. The fear.
When I walked back in the front door, Poppy greeted me, wag-
ging her tail so hard with excitement her whole backside shook.
I praised her, flapped her ears a bit, which she loved, and kicked off my shoes by the bottom of the stairs next to Anna’s.
‘You OK, darling?’ I called out.
‘Yeah,’ Anna said. ‘I’m in the kitchen.’
I walked up the hallway and found Anna sitting on a stool at
the island in the centre of our large farmhouse-style kitchen, which oozed sunlight and was the heart of the house. Her school books
were placed in neat rows over practically the whole surface. Pens of various colours were lined up horizontally in front of her. She was so precise about certain things I sometimes wondered if she had OCD,
but I always pushed that thought to the back of my mind. We all
had it to varying degrees, didn’t we? We all had routines, things that we liked just so. I’d seen far too many labels placed on kids these days. I wasn’t about to put one on my precious girl.
I kissed the top of her head. ‘How was school?’
‘Good. But I’ve got some maths homework I might need help
with. When’s Dad back?’
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Sibel Hodge
Ethan was the maths genius and always helped Anna out with
it. I could only add up with a calculator. I think I had number dys-lexia, or something. When I looked at numbers on a page they all
swam together.
‘He’ll be back Friday.’
‘But he’s always working away at the moment,’ she whined.
‘He’s overseeing a big project in York and he needs to be on
site. He can’t commute from there to Dorset every day; it’s too
far.’ I stroked her hair then peered in the fridge. My appetite still hadn’t returned, and I didn’t fancy cooking. What I fancied was a
big glass of wine. ‘He’s going to call later so you can have a chat, though.’
‘OK.’ She bent over her notebook and underlined something
neatly with a red marker pen and a ruler. ‘I’ve got to do a project on capital punishment for Religion and Ethics.’
‘Oh, how nice,’ I drawled. I’d had a meeting with the school
recently about them wanting to fast-track Anna through some
of her subjects because they’d classified her as ‘gifted’. Ethan and I had debated this for a while. I didn’t think the school should be bandying about those kinds of terms. What about the other kids
who weren’t gifted? How would it make them feel? Still, Anna was
very intelligent, and we’d decided in the end to go ahead with it. It meant she was learning some of the curriculum a lot earlier than she should’ve been, but she was clearly enjoying it, and from her reports she was doing really well.
‘It’s really interesting, actually,’ she said. ‘What do you think
about the death penalty?’
What a cheery pre-dinner conversation. ‘We don’t have the
death penalty in the UK.’
‘Yes, I know, but I don’t think I can put that excuse on my
homework as to why I haven’t done it. We’ve got to consider the
ethics behind it.’
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Where the Memories Lie
‘Um . . . well, let me see.’ I shut the door on the pretty much
empty fridge. Unless I could make something out of a lone cheese
triangle, some dried-up flat leaf parsley, a wrinkly mushroom and
a potato with sprouty bits on it, then dinner would be of the
takeaway variety. ‘I think if you’re guilty of committing a crime −
and presumably to get the death penalty we’re talking terrible
types of murder − then I think you’d probably deserve it. I mean,
take Myra Hindley, for example. What if she’d ever been let out
of prison before she died? Or Peter Sutcliffe? People wouldn’t
be safe, would they?’ I explained who they were. ‘So the death
penalty could be for the protection of the public to make sure it
doesn’t ever happen again. Plus, it would hopefully put people
off doing such crimes in the first place and the crime rate might
go down.’
‘Actually, from the research I’ve been doing so far, about
90 percent of top criminologists in America think that the death
penalty doesn’t act as a deterrent to reduce murder or violent crimes.
And . . .’ she lifted her pen in the air and pointed it at me, ‘doesn’t it actually make you as bad as the criminal if you kill them?’
‘No.’
‘Why? It violates their human rights.’
I rolled my eyes. I hated these in-depth ethics homework
debates. Sometimes you just know things, don’t you? You know
things are right or wrong, but you don’t want to spend all night
analyzing
why
you know it. ‘Because people who kill and rape and torture shouldn’t have any human rights. They gave them up when
they did whatever heinous crime they committed. And if a bunch
of psychos were allowed to wreak havoc and do whatever they
wanted without consequences, then we’d be living in a world of
anarchy and chaos, wouldn’t we?’ Although I sometimes thought
we already
were
living in such a world, anyway, but we were calling the psychos ‘governments’. ‘Every action has a reaction. Every deed 21
Sibel Hodge
has a consequence. There’s always a price to pay. And people have to think about that before they commit crimes.’
‘Yes, but two wrongs don’t make a right.’
‘Sometimes they do.’
‘You could make the criminal pay back to society by serving
their time in prison instead. That would also give them punishment
for what they’d done and would still protect the public.’
‘Not if they got let out again, which happens a lot now due
to overcrowding. Most of the time they only serve piddly little
sentences these days. And I wonder how many prisoners actually
reoffend. Have you researched that yet?’
‘No, but that’s a good point, Mum.’ She scribbled that down.
‘Yes, I make them occasionally.’
‘Shouldn’t they have a second chance to become educated
in prison and change so they could start a new life when they’re
released?’
‘Not everyone deserves a second chance.’
‘What if the person was innocent, though, and they got the
death penalty and were executed? Then you would’ve killed an
innocent person.’ She sat back smugly and crossed her arms. ‘That
wouldn’t be justice, would it? We’d be as bad as they were for
supposedly murdering someone.’
‘Do you want a delivery pizza for dinner?’ I changed the subject,
not really wanting to talk about death anymore. It made me think
of what Tom had said again, and I wanted to get it out of my head
because there was no way it could possibly be true.
The guilt of not providing a healthy, home-cooked meal like
Nadia would be doing right now was cancelled out by the excitement
on Anna’s face.
‘Yeah!’ Her eyes lit up. ‘Ham and mushroom?’
‘If you like.’
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Where the Memories Lie
I ordered the pizza, fed Poppy and poured myself a large glass of
something Australian, fruity and red. Ethan knew all about differ-
ent kinds of wine. I just knew about drinking it. Pulling up a stool, I sat next to Anna and stared into space.
‘What do you think?’ she asked a few minutes later, popping
the cap back on her marker pen.
‘Pardon?’
‘Weren’t you listening?’
‘Um . . . sorry, I was miles away.’
‘About penicillin?’
‘I know all about penicillin. What about it?’ I said, thinking
back to my medical training.
‘No, it’s OK. That would be cheating if I asked you. I’m going
to do some research on the Internet about it.’ She slid off the stool, tidying her books into a neat pile. ‘I’ve just started doing the history of medicine.’
Conscientious to a fault, my daughter. I wondered how long
it would be before it all went wrong. Before she locked herself in
her room and only came out to eat. Before the only response I’d get from her would be a monosyllabic grunt. When she wouldn’t want
to be seen dead in public with me or Ethan, and would take the
advice of her friends over her parents. Before she stayed up all night partying and slept all day. I dreaded the thought of when it would
all change. I didn’t like change.
Later, I was on my third glass of wine, staring through
the window of the kitchen into the dark woods behind, when the
phone rang.
‘I’ll get it!’ Anna shouted from the lounge and picked up the
wireless phone. ‘Dad!’
I heard her chatting and laughing with Ethan but I couldn’t
make out what they were saying. I was too busy deciding how to
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Sibel Hodge
broach the subject of what Tom had said. In between swigs of wine I chewed on the skin at the side of my thumbnail until I drew blood.
Fifteen minutes later, Anna padded gracefully into the kitchen
like a dancer, all skinny long limbs and perfect posture. Not like some of the kids in her class who slouched all over the place. I wanted to tell them they’d end up with neck and shoulder problems later in
life. She handed me the phone and padded out again.
‘Hi, sexy,’ I said to him, watching Anna’s retreating back.
Anna glanced over her shoulder and pulled a face at the word
‘sexy’, miming sticking her fingers down her throat.
‘Hi, darling. How’s everything going?’
‘I’m going to take this upstairs.’ I slid off the stool, picked up
my wine and went up to our bedroom, shutting the door firmly.
‘Oh, sounds ominous. What’s Anna been up to that you don’t
want her to hear? Did she get caught shoplifting? Or try to get
served at the Kings’ Arms with a fake ID?’
I laughed but it sounded flat. ‘No, it’s nothing to do with Anna.
It’s Tom.’
‘Dad? Why? What’s happened?’ His voice rose with concern.
I lay on my side on our king-sized bed, head propped up with
one hand. ‘I don’t know how to say this, but when I got to the nursing home today, Mary said he’d been having some bad dreams and
acting agitated afterwards.’
‘I thought you were going tomorrow, not today.’
By then, I’d completely forgotten what Nadia had told me
before about Lucas and his possible affair. I wanted to tell Ethan
about that, too, ask his opinion, but I’d promised to keep her secret.
‘Well, Nadia was tied up with some stuff so I said I’d go. Anyway,
Tom’s been acting strange after these dreams, they said.’
‘He’s got Alzheimer’s. He’s been acting strange for years. And
he’s had bad dreams for a long time. What do you mean by strange?’
I stared up at the ceiling and took a breath.
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Where the Memories Lie
‘Liv?’
There was no easy way to repeat what Tom had told me so I just
blurted it out. ‘He said he’d killed someone called Georgia.’
Silence on the other end. Then, ‘What do you mean? Killed
someone?’
‘Just what I said. Tom’s been dreaming about someone called
Georgia. Afterwards, he gets very upset and agitated, so much so
that Mary asked if I knew anyone called Georgia because Tom told
her she’d disappeared.’
‘Disappeared? Well, who is this Georgia?’
‘I don’t know. That’s what I’m trying to explain. I asked him
about her and he said she was haunting him. That she wouldn’t
leave him alone. And then, when I took him outside for a walk
and some fresh air, he told me he’d killed her.’ My head throbbed.
Probably with the wine, but maybe from anxiety, too.
‘Don’t be ridiculous, Liv!’
‘I’m not being ridiculous. I’m not being anything. I’m just
repeating something Tom told me and the staff.’
‘Well, it doesn’t make sense. He doesn’t even know anyone
called Georgia. Neither do I. He’s just confused. I mean, last week he came out with a really obscure story about walking along the
Great Wall of China, and he’s never even been there!’
I rubbed my forehead. ‘I know, I know. I’ve been thinking of all
the strange things he’s talked about lately that either didn’t happen or didn’t happen like he’s remembering them. It’s just . . .’