The Child (Kate Waters #2)(62)



“No. What an animal,” Nina spat. “And he took his own personal photographer?”

Kate looked at her. She was right. She’d been so busy looking at the images, she hadn’t clocked the obvious fact that there had to be two people involved. The photographer and the man in the pictures. This wasn’t a selfie. It was posed and framed.

“Nina,” she said. “You are a constant marvel.”

Nina looked confused but pleased. “I help when I can. Now get me back on my feet.”





FIFTY


    Emma


FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2012

I woke crying last night. Not dream crying. My face was wet with real tears and I lay curled in on myself. Fighting to silence my breathing so I didn’t wake Paul next to me.

Fighting not to think about my dream. But it’s hard not to. It invades my every cell. It’s the same dream I’ve had for years.

It started when I was fifteen. I remember I used to wake up then, unable to move or breathe, it felt like. Night terrors I suppose they’d be labeled now. But no one could imagine what it was like. In the dream, a baby was talking to me, angry with me, following me on its little legs like a grotesque doll. It was banging on the door to get in. And I was holding the door closed and sobbing. I woke, as I always did, when the door began to crack open.

I can see myself then, transfixed. My chest tight and my throat thick with distress. It took what felt like ages for me to be able to move again. I had to work out where I was and convince myself that it had just been a dream and I could nail the door shut again. I remember I used to bury my face in my pillow when I heard Jude moving about in her room below mine because she’d heard me. I used to slow my breathing to pretend I was still asleep.

Sometimes it worked, but other nights, Jude’s bedroom door creaked to alert me and I heard her pad in bare feet to the bathroom.

“Go back to bed, Mum,” I whispered to myself, willing her to stay away. But, inevitably, the bare feet padded up the attic stairs and stopped outside my room.

“Are you all right, Emma?” Jude said softly as she opened the door. “I heard you crying again.”

I remember lying there with my back to her, in silence. I didn’t know what to say, what to tell. Sometimes Jude stroked my head and went away when I ignored her, but that night, she sat down on the bed.

In the end, the pressure of my mum’s presence in the dark forced me to speak.

“It was just a dream. I think I ate too much dinner. That’s all.”

“You hardly ate anything. You’re getting thin and I’m worried about you. Will and I both are. I know things have been difficult, but you’re just growing up. I wish I knew what’s going on in your head. Tell me, please.”

“Nothing’s wrong, Jude,” I said quickly. I hadn’t realized she’d noticed so much. I thought I’d made myself invisible. “I’m just a bit fed up with school.”

“Oh, Emma, what’s happening to you? You were doing so well. It’s like you don’t care about anything anymore.”

? ? ?

I roll onto my back and put my hand out to touch Paul’s face. To know he is there. He puts an arm across my chest, squeezing me as he sleeps. I’d wanted to hug my mum that night, but I was afraid to.

Afraid that my body would give me away.

? ? ?

Paul is so worried about me he’s rung in to cancel a lecture this morning.

“I’ll work from home, Em. I can’t leave you like this,” he says. I try to object, but I haven’t got the energy. I go upstairs and try to work but nothing is happening. The words just jumble up and stick, like an old record, juddering in my head until I want to scream. In the end, I go downstairs to make a coffee and turn on the radio for company.

When the music stops, the lunchtime newsman announces there’s been a new development in the Alice Irving case and I stand and wait, letting the kettle go cold again. I have to listen to three or four stories about the Olympics and politics and wars. And suddenly, the newsreader tells me that the baby was buried in the 1980s. Just like that. And I shout “No!” at him. I want him to take it back. Say he’s made an error. But he carries on, saying the police have “made fresh discoveries that place the burial of Alice Irving at least ten years after her abduction.”

I don’t know what to think anymore. Everything is wrong. I’ve got everything wrong.

Paul rushes into the kitchen, making me jump. I’d forgotten he was there and it frightens me when he appears suddenly.

“What’s the matter?” he says. “What’s happened?”

“Just something on the news. Just me being silly, that’s all,” I say, trying to be soothing but sounding too loud.

“What was on the news?” he says.

I try to lie. But I can’t. There are no other words in my head.

“About a baby,” I say. “They’ve got it all wrong. They’re making a terrible mistake.”

“Come and sit down. You are getting yourself all upset again,” he says and takes me by the hand to sit me at the table with him. “Now then, why are you so worried about this baby?”

I look at him and say, “I think it’s my baby.” And I watch his face collapse.

“Em, you haven’t got a baby,” he says gently. “We decided not to have one, didn’t we? Because you weren’t ready.”

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