I Will Make You Pay (ARC)

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I Will Make You Pay (ARC) Page 12

by Teresa Driscoll


  Are you sure this isn’t all a bit too fast? My sister Leanne, though she liked Alex by now, was still a tad wary. My

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  mother, who was in good health back then, ahead of

  her lung disease diagnosis, was for her part surprisingly

  relaxed about our haste. She, after all, had been pregnant

  when she married my father and that had worked out just

  fine, she said.

  We planned to marry the following spring and, as I

  kept telling anyone who would listen, I didn’t feel rushed; I felt lucky. I was enjoying my new career and I had a fiancé

  who turned heads everywhere he went and who actually

  wrote songs for me. What was not to love about my life?

  Next came a small shift in routine which at first I

  hardly noticed. Alex asked if it would be OK for me to

  act, in effect, as the ‘chaperone’ for younger pupils whose

  parents were unable to stay for the lesson. This would be

  for occasional evening and weekend tuition. I remember

  him saying that it was wholly understandable for parents

  to want child-protection issues to be watertight, and he

  was also keen to guard his reputation.

  I remember asking him whether this would involve

  me staying in the music room for the duration of each

  lesson. Would I need to actually sit in there with a book

  or something? Alex said – and I had to share this very

  carefully with the police later – that it would be fine for

  me to be in the adjoining sitting room, which was the

  routine chosen by the parents who did stay for lessons.

  The door to the music room would be left open so this

  protected everyone.

  So that’s what happened. Occasionally a pupil would

  be dropped off alone and I would read or watch a film

  on my iPad, with a clear view into the music room. I

  trusted Alex completely and felt this was purely for his

  protection, not the child’s. I was actually worried that

  someone might make a false accusation if we weren’t

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  careful, especially as some of the girl pupils clearly had

  crushes on him.

  It was probably two, maybe three months into this

  routine that something happened just once to unsettle

  me. It was the only thing I shared with police that I felt,

  with hindsight, I should have acted upon.

  One cold October morning, just ahead of Alex’s birth-

  day, I walked into our sitting room after a shopping trip to

  find him pacing on his mobile, raking his fingers through

  his hair, clearly handling a difficult phone call. You are not to do that. Now, come on, we’ve talked about this. You have everything going for you. You have a bright future. You have so many people who care about you…

  Alex glanced up at me and signalled with his expres-

  sion that he was in a fix. I tilted my head to ask if I could help. He shook his head and continued, in a gentle voice

  to reassure the caller.

  I moved into the kitchen, all the while listening to

  his end of the conversation. It alarmed me, as it sounded

  from Alex’s side as if his caller was desperate; maybe even

  suicidal. Alex was patient and kind and reassuring, urging

  the caller to speak to someone; to get professional help.

  To remember that there was everything to live for. Over and over he kept saying that everything was going to be

  all right. That the caller had to look forward, not back.

  The conversation lasted a long time and I found myself

  pacing the kitchen, feeling more and more unsettled. It

  was not only the worry that some young pupil was on

  the line with some kind of mental health crisis – clearly

  crossing the line – but that Alex was using a tone which was a bit odd. Sort of overly gentle. Borderline intimate.

  When the call finally finished, he came into the kitchen

  looking drained.

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  ‘What the hell was all that, Alex?’

  ‘One of my teenage pupils having a crisis. A complete

  meltdown. I suspected she might be self-harming because

  of marks on her arms. They show when she plays. But I

  had no idea quite how bad things were at home. I made

  the mistake of asking about it. The conversation got out

  of hand.’

  I was stunned. Why the hell hadn’t he mentioned her

  to me before?

  ‘What pupil?’

  ‘You don’t know her. She’s fifteen. Comes Tuesday

  mornings.’

  ‘What. On her own?’

  ‘Yes. On her own.’

  ‘But I thought we had this chaperone rule. Parents

  or me.’

  ‘For the younger pupils – yes. And when the parents

  are worried. But she’s fifteen, Jenny. Practically grown-

  up. She doesn’t need a chaperone. To be frank, what she

  really needs is a friend. Her parents sound a complete

  nightmare.’

  I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.

  ‘Have you gone mad, Alex? It’s you that needs the

  chaperone if she’s fifteen. And unstable. Self-harming.

  We need to phone her parents right this minute. Or the

  Samaritans or something. We can’t just let this go.’

  ‘It’s all in hand now. She’s talking to her mum. Anyway,

  she’s not truly unstable. She’s just very unhappy.’

  ‘So is that why you sounded so intimate on the phone?’

  ‘I was not being intimate. I was being kind, Jenny.’

  His tone was now changing; he looked at me as if I had

  no heart. ‘What would you rather I did? Tell her to piss

  off and kill herself?’

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  I began pacing. My mind was in overdrive. I felt deeply

  unsettled, and yet Alex was now making me feel guilty.

  ‘So she’s suicidal? Threatening to hurt herself? Well,

  I’m right; we need to call her parents. Social services.

  Her doctor, even. There are protocols for this, surely?’

  ‘Of course. Yes. That’s absolutely what I planned at

  first. But as I said, her mum’s with her now. She saw her

  on the phone, crying. So she’s in adult care. She’s promised

  to speak properly to her mum. To get support.’

  ‘But what if she doesn’t? What if she made that up

  about talking to her mum? What if she hurts herself, Alex,

  and you’re the last person she spoke to?’

  ‘I’m pretty sure it was just a teenage girl being a bit

  melodramatic. I think she’s fine. As I said, her mum is with

  her now. I was just worried when she was on her own.

  To be honest, you’re the one being melodramatic now.’

  ‘Me? Melodramatic? Jeez, Alex…’

  We then had a full-blown barney. Our biggest and

  most unpleasant argument, in which he accused me of

  being heartless while I accused him of being naive and

  irresponsible. In the end, he agreed to phone the girl’s

  mother right back to make sure she was in the loop. I

  listened in to the call and at last felt just a little easier.

  Later I would have to share the full details of this

  episode and our row over it with the police. Unbeknown

  to
me, the girl on the phone was the first fifteen-year-old

  that Alex had seduced and then dumped. Her mother,

  in reality, knew nothing of the girl’s trauma. She was at

  work the whole time and received no phone call from

  Alex. He must have pretended to ring her.

  But in my panic and rage at the time, I genuinely

  saw none of that. I saw Alex being supremely stupid. I

  worried that the girl might have a crush and that there

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  was a real danger that Alex could come unstuck. That he

  would be in trouble for providing a shoulder for the girl

  and that she might wrongly accuse him of something.

  Or hurt herself.

  I told him in no uncertain terms that he was not to

  teach her anymore.

  He agreed immediately and promised to be more care-

  ful. Later, I would feel mortified by my own gullibility.

  But the whole episode was one tiny blip in this context

  where Alex seemed one hundred per cent solid, sensible,

  loyal and in love with me. I had no reason to suspect him

  of playing away, and never in my wildest dreams did I

  imagine he would do so with someone underage.

  Looking back and sharing the details of that row with

  the police, I felt ridiculous. But it was the only fluttering of a red flag in all of our time together. And somehow

  Alex managed to manipulate our argument so that, in the

  end, I felt like the one in the wrong for being heartless.

  The truth – though it sounds bonkers now – is that at

  the time I was worried about his reputation. I was furious because I was afraid the girl might become a problem, and

  that Alex was being too kind and naive for his own good.

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  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  Him – before

  It is the Wednesday after the scene with Stan at the Daisy

  Lawn Nursing Home. The school day seems to go on

  and on and on – but the thing is, he doesn’t mind this.

  He doesn’t want the day to end.

  He keeps staring out of the window at the clouds. In

  maths, during the afternoon, he finds that he is daydream-

  ing for so long that his teacher becomes cross. He can

  hear her voice saying his name and he turns back to the

  room. Miss Henderley is asking him to answer a ques-

  tion but the problem is he did not hear the question. He’s still sitting up on a cloud wishing that his mum wasn’t

  dead – wishing that he had a normal mum and dad like

  Jim and Helena.

  ‘I don’t know,’ he says. Everyone in the room is look-

  ing at him and the other pupils are laughing, saying that

  if he doesn’t know then nobody will know. He normally

  gets all the sums right first.

  ‘That’s enough,’ Miss Henderley says. ‘Try to pay at-

  tention, all of you. You need to listen.’

  When the final bell goes for end of school, his stomach

  feels bad and he dawdles in the cloakroom, putting on

  his coat ever so slowly. He thinks again of the clouds and

  wishes that he could fly. He doesn’t want to go home. He

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  doesn’t want to have tea. He doesn’t want the Wednesday

  treat of fish fingers and beans and ice cream. He doesn’t

  want to get into his pyjamas nice and early. He wants to fly around the world. Zoom, zoom. Like the rockets on

  his duvet cover.

  He is one of the last to leave the cloakroom and he

  sees his gran across the playground in her blue mac and

  her pink scarf. On the days when she is on day shift and

  he stays in the after-school club, he likes the first sight of his gran. It makes him happy. But not on a Wednesday

  when she picks him up right after school and they have

  to hurry, hurry. It’s raining and so he puts up his hood. He likes it when the hood stops all the noise around him. He

  often uses it as an excuse. I can’t hear you.

  His gran takes his hand and asks if he had a good day.

  ‘I’m sorry, I can’t hear you.’

  She squeezes his hand and gives up with the ques-

  tions, leading him through the gate and down the path

  past the line of oak trees. He knows they’re oaks because

  they studied the different kinds of leaves in art last week.

  They had to collect leaves and dip them in paint and make

  pictures. He splashed them hard on the paper. Splash,

  splash, splash – squirting paint on Suzie, who was sitting

  next to him. The teacher told him not to use so much

  paint but he pretended not to hear then too.

  It doesn’t take very long to walk home from school

  and he wishes it were a lot further, like the journey to

  the home where Gran works.

  She says she’s trying very, very hard to find another

  job without night work but she’s really too old and not

  very good at many things. He says he thinks she’s bril-

  liant at lots of things. She should be a dinner lady at his

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  school but his gran says, ‘Life doesn’t work like that.’ They already have enough dinner ladies at his school.

  He sits at the table in the kitchen later, staring at his

  fish fingers and beans.

  ‘Can’t you stay home? Please stay home.’

  Her eyes get all weird again as if she might cry, and

  she sits down on the chair right next to him. ‘I know it’s

  hard, sweetheart, but I wouldn’t do this unless I absolutely

  had to. I’ve told you lots of times. I can’t afford the rent

  here and all the bills unless I do my job. And Stan will

  report me if I don’t do the night shift.’

  She pushes his hair back from his forehead. ‘Remember

  what I told you about when I was little on the farm and

  my dad had to go out lambing and leave me. I didn’t like

  it either. I didn’t have a mummy either, remember. She left

  us when I was very small. Just a baby. But it was always

  OK when my dad went out lambing. And we lived in

  the middle of nowhere. You’re safe here. So long as you

  follow the rules. It’s just sleeping.’

  He digs his knife into his fish finger and cuts it up

  into two pieces. Then four. Then eight.

  He thinks of his maths lessons and his teacher. She’s

  nice.

  ‘We could ask Miss Henderley to look after me on

  Wednesday nights. She’d do it.’ He has suggested this

  lots of times before and doesn’t understand why it’s not

  a good idea. Miss Henderley looks after loads of them

  all day long. How hard could it be to look after one boy

  one night?

  His gran suddenly looks very worried. ‘We’ve talked

  about this, lovely, and it’s way too dangerous to tell people, especially at school. Because they may tell social services

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  I’m not managing. And they might take you away from

  me again. You don’t want that, do you?’

  He shakes his head. It’s true; he doesn’t want that again.

  ‘So you’ll be brave? Yes? Just until I can find another

  job? Now, eat up. Ice cream for pudding. Your favourite.’

  * * *

  Two hours later and she is back in her
blue mac and her

  pink scarf. He’s in his pyjamas even though it’s quite

  early. Six o’clock.

  She goes over the rules. No touching the cooker or

  any electrical things. No answering the door or the tele-

  phone. No matches or candles or anything to do with

  fire. He can watch telly until the small hand is on the

  eight, and then he must switch off the television and go

  to bed. Lights out in the sitting room and kitchen area

  but he can keep the little lamp on in his room.

  ‘Can we get walkie-talkies?’ He’s looking right into

  her face.

  ‘I can’t afford things like that, love. And I don’t think

  walkie-talkies would work.’

  ‘In the army they work.’

  ‘We’re not in the army. You’ll be fine. If you stick to

  the rules, you’ll be fine. The only time you’re allowed

  to leave the flat is if there’s a fire. Then you get out and

  run. But there won’t be a fire if you’re a good boy and

  follow the rules, so you don’t need to worry about that.

  You’re safe in here with the door locked.’

  She looks at her watch. ‘Look, I’m sorry but I have to

  go. You’re a good boy. Gran’s little soldier. Remember,

  I’m not…’ She stops.

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  She normally says that she’s not far away but he knows now that isn’t true. He remembers the bus ride and all

  the walking. He can feel tears in his eyes and she takes

  a deep breath. She kisses him on the forehead, squeezes

  him tight and then she is gone.

  * * *

  He watches telly but it’s not good. Boring programmes.

  He drinks his juice and eats the biscuits his gran always

  leaves out for him. He can hear some kind of music in

  the flat below them and he likes that. It’s later, when all

  the noises stop, that he doesn’t like it.

  It’s a bit cold and so he puts on his dressing gown and

  climbs into his bed with his books. He can read some

  of the words but not all of them. It’s why he’s working

  so hard in school – so that he can read on Wednesdays

  when he’s on his own. Sometimes, when he reads a book,

  he sort of drifts off right into the pages and completely

  forgets where he is. That would be good now.

  He looks around his room and hopes there are no

  spiders. One Wednesday, there was a huge spider in the

  corner and so he had to go and take his duvet into the

  sitting room and lie on the sofa. He shut the door and

 

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