Say You're Sorry Part 4
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I never met her father-he was working in America-but her mum was pretty weird, always visiting doctors and therapists. Emily said she was highly strung, but Tash would tip up her hand, making a drinking motion.
On the first day back at school there were trauma counselors fluttering around the playground like seagulls fighting over chips. They were telling students it was all right to be upset and they should share their feelings. TV cameras were given permission to film the school a.s.sembly when Mrs. Jacobson said a special prayer for us, getting a little wobble in her voice as she talked fondly about Tash and me.
"Would you listen to her," laughed Tash. "A month ago she couldn't wait to get rid of me."
"Now she wants you back."
"Sod that."
A month after we disappeared, George moved us from the attic room to this place. By then the police had stopped looking and everyone a.s.sumed that we'd run away. George no longer talked about ransom demands and money. He had rescued us, he said, like some n.o.ble knight in a fairy tale. He was going to protect us from all the temptations and evil in the world.
You probably think we were stupid to believe his lies. Naive. Gullible. Moronic. Next time you're drugged and locked in a bas.e.m.e.nt, hungry, thirsty, frightened, then you can judge us. When you have cried as many tears as we did; when you're huddled beneath a blanket with your mind twisted; when you don't have the strength to disobey or disbelieve.
He made us swallow some pills and we woke up in the bas.e.m.e.nt. He cut the ladder so we couldn't reach the trapdoor, not without his help, and we no longer had a TV or a skylight.
When we were good he would leave the lights on. If we misbehaved he would turn them off. You have never known darkness like it; so thick I could have suffocated upon it; so deep it felt like a monster breathing in my ears.
Our lives were managed and manipulated. George decided what we ate and what we wore. He controlled the light and air. There were times when he was kind and we could make fun of him. We could give him shopping lists and tease him into bringing us magazines and extra food.
"I don't want you getting fat," he said, as he rationed the chocolate.
The magazines were read cover to cover, over and over. There were new faces, new movies, new fas.h.i.+ons, but also the familiar. Brad and Angelina. Posh and Becks. Elton and David. The world wasn't changing so much. Prince William married Kate Middleton. Pippa's bottom became famous.
We had no way of knowing if we were close to home. I still don't. It could be miles away. It could be just past the trees. I know there's a railway line nearby because I can hear the trains when the wind is blowing in the right direction.
I miss Tash. I miss being able to reach between our bunks and hold her hand. I miss hearing her voice. I miss watching her sleep.
George hasn't come to see me since she ran away and I know he's going to be angry. That's why Tash has to come back soon with the police... before George does.
I'm running out of food and there's hardly any gas left in the bottle.
My handwriting is getting messier, because it's so cold. I can't feel my fingers, which makes it hard to hold the pencil. When the point gets worn down, I sc.r.a.pe the lead gently across the bricks to sharpen it.
Writing keeps me sane, but Tash didn't have anything like that.
She was getting sicker and sicker. Not eating. Chewing her nails until they bled.
That's why she had to get out.
4.
Augie Shaw is sitting at a table, propped forward on his elbows, staring at himself in the mirror. He can't see me behind his reflection yet he seems to be gazing directly into my eyes.
Mirrors have an interesting effect in interview rooms. People struggle to lie when they can see themselves doing it. They become more self-conscious as they try to sound more convincing and truthful.
Augie is up now, pacing, talking to himself using gestures and grimaces as though conducting an internal dialogue. Taller than I imagined, he walks with an odd-legged shuffle, his hair falling over one eye.
Pausing at the mirror, he leans towards it, arching his eyebrows and lowering them. He has large eyes and a broad forehead, handsome features on most men. His hands are wrapped in white gauze and he's wearing a blue paper boiler suit.
"Where are his clothes?" I ask.
"We've taken them for a.n.a.lysis," says Drury.
Augie presses his hands together and closes his eyes as if praying.
"He's religious," says Drury. "Goes to a Pentecostal church in town-one of those happy clappy places."
"I take it you're not a believer."
"I'm all in favor of redemption. It's the lemming-like leaps of faith that worry me."
Opening the door, I step inside. Augie's eyes skitter from the walls to the floor, but never to me. There is a smell about him. Sweat. Talc.u.m.
I take a seat and ask Augie to sit down. He looks at the chair suspiciously and then folds himself down into it, with his knees facing sideways towards the door.
"My name is Joe. I'm a clinical psychologist. Have you talked to someone like me before?"
"I see Dr. Victoria."
"Why is that?"
He shrugs. "I didn't do anything."
"I'm not suggesting you did."
"Why are you staring at me? You think I've done something wrong. You're going to blame me. That's why you brought me here."
"Relax, Augie, I just want to talk."
"You're going to kill me or electrocute me."
"Why would I do that?"
"They do that in some countries."
"We don't have the death penalty in Britain, Augie."
He nods, running his hands down his hair, flattening his fringe.
"How are you feeling?" I ask.
"My hands hurt."
"Do you need painkillers?"
"The doctor gave me some pills."
"How did you burn them?"
"There was a fire."
I don't ask him about how it started. Instead, I focus on getting a history. He lives with his mother in Bingham. He was born in the area, left school at sixteen and has since done odd jobs as a laborer or farmhand. The Heymans hired him to cut wood and mow their lawns. He repaired some of their fences.
"Why did you stop working for them?"
Augie fidgets, scratching at the gauze on his hands. Minutes pa.s.s. I try again.
"You were sacked. What happened?"
"Ask Mrs. H."
"How can I do that, Augie? Mrs. Heyman is dead. The police think you killed her."
"No, no."
"That's why you're here."
He blinks at me. "She's with G.o.d. I'm going to pray for her."
"Do you pray a lot?"
"Every day."
"What do you ask G.o.d for?"
"Forgiveness."
"Why do you need to be forgiven?"
"Not for me-for the sinners."
"Why were you at the farmhouse?"
"Mrs. H told me to come."
"Did she call you?"
"Yes."
"The phone lines were down, Augie. There was a terrible storm. How did she call you?"
"She told me to come."
"When did she call you?"
"The day before."
He makes it sound so obvious.
I take him over the details. He borrowed his mother's car and drove to the farmhouse, almost missing the turn because it was snowing so heavily. He couldn't drive all the way to the house because of the snow, so he stopped and walked the rest of the way.
"The house was dark. There was no power. I saw a light in the upstairs window but it was strange, you know, not like a lamp or a candle." He covers his ears. "I heard her screaming."
"Mrs. Heyman?"
Augie nods. "I bashed down the door. Hurt my shoulder. I went up the stairs, but the flames pushed me back."
He starts to hyperventilate as though breathing in smoke and holds his hands against his forehead, hitting his temple.
"How did you burn your hands?"
"I don't know."
"Did you hit Mr. Heyman?"
He shakes his head.
"Did you start the fire?"
"No, no."
Without warning, he stands and walks to the far side of the room, whispering to himself, arguing.
"Are you talking to someone, Augie?"
He shakes his head.
"Who is it?"
He crouches and peers past me as though something is creeping up behind me like a pantomime wolf.
"Tell me about your brother."
He hesitates. "Can you see him too?"
"No. Tell me about him."
"Sometimes he steals my memories."
"Is that all he does?"
Say You're Sorry Part 4
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Say You're Sorry Part 4 summary
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- Related chapter:
- Say You're Sorry Part 3
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