Lelic, Simon - The Child Who

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Lelic, Simon - The Child Who Page 15

by The Child Who (mobi)


  Mad indeed.

  But not mad enough.

  ‘The assault,’ Leo said. His voice did not falter. ‘Is that when it happened?’ Daniel nodded.

  ‘And Felicity. Was she conscious? Was she awake, I mean?’ Another nod, followed by a shake of the head. ‘I hit her. With a stone. She wouldn’t be

  quiet, not even for a minute. So I hit her.’ Daniel stared at his open palm. His fingers curled, as though testing the shape of some unseen object, and then balled themselves into a fist. ‘I didn’t mean to kill her.’ He searched for Leo through glistening eyes. ‘I didn’t. But then, when I saw what I’d done to her, I . . . I looked around me and . . .’

  The fairy lights. The gravel. The river. And it was the river, despite what Daniel had be-lieved at the time, that ended her life.

  Leo turned away.

  He brought squash. He brought biscuits. He set the tray on the floor between them and lowered himself back into the chair.

  ‘I thought you’d be hungry. I know you said you weren’t but you should try and eat something.’

  Daniel said nothing. He was back at the pillow end of the bed, the sheets covering every part of him now except his neck and his puffed, pale face. Beside him, on the built-in shelf that was the bedside table, was an array of figurines: soldiers, mainly, with rifles abutting their shoulders or grenades poised to be thrown. There was a phalanx facing the window, another angled towards the door. They were on guard, clearly. Against what, Leo could not tell.

  He opened the packet of Bourbons. He offered it to Daniel but the boy declined. Leo took out a biscuit for himself. He set it, after a moment, on the arm beside him.

  ‘The arraignment,’ he said. ‘We still have time – three weeks or so – but at some point we need to decide.’

  ‘I don’t want to stay here,’ Daniel said. ‘Tell them whatever you have to so I don’t have to stay here. So I can go . . .’

  ‘Home?’

  Daniel glanced. ‘Anywhere. Anywhere but here.’ ‘Is there any reason you wouldn’t want to go home, Daniel?’ ‘I didn’t say that. I didn’t say I wouldn’t go home.’ ‘No. I know. But Karen – you remember Karen? – she thinks that perhaps there might be

  some reason why you wouldn’t want to go back there. Why, perhaps, you shouldn’t.’ Daniel’s jaw tensed. ‘What does she know?’

  Leo brushed at the sugar on the chair from his biscuit. ‘She’s concerned, that’s all. We both are.’

  Daniel moved his eyes without turning his head. He knew. From his expression, he clearly knew exactly what Leo was talking about.

  ‘Home would do,’ he said.

  ‘Daniel, I . . .’

  ‘I said it would do.’ The boy glared, then dropped his eyes. ‘It’s not like it used to be.’ Leo nodded. There was a silence and he could not think how to fill it. ‘This place,’ said Daniel after a moment. ‘It’s not so bad. Is it?’ ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘I mean, it’s bad, I hate it – but there are worser places. Aren’t there? They could send me somewhere worse.’

  Leo stared. Why he was surprised, he did not know. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘They could.’ Daniel’s face gave a peculiar twitch, as though there was something inside him he was

  trying to keep from slipping out. ‘Tell them what you have to,’ he said. He made to say something more but seemed not to trust himself.

  ‘If there’s a trial,’ said Leo, ‘if we plead not guilty . . . It won’t be easy. For you. For your mother.’ For Ellie, he did not say. For Megan.

  Daniel nodded.

  ‘It will be painful. It will be drawn out. You’ll have to stay here, at least until the trial is over. And after that . . . After that, there are no guarantees.’

  No movement this time. No sound.

  ‘Your barrister: he thinks you should plead guilty, Daniel. He thinks it’s your best chance of a shorter sentence.’

  Daniel’s voice came in a burst. ‘What about you?’ Leo took a breath. ‘I think . .’ I think it shouldn’t be my place. I think someone, some-

  where in the system, is forcing me to decide so they won’t have to. ‘I think what you did was wicked,’ Leo said. He expected Daniel to look away but the boy did not. ‘But you need help, above all. I think you’ve been wronged and that someone along the line should have set it right. I think, if you plead guilty, you’d be taking on more than you deserve to.’ He paused, then added, ‘I think you’d be letting the rest of us off the hook.’

  Daniel did not answer right away. ‘Do I have a chance? If I do what you say?’ And that, really, was the question.

  NOT EXACTLY BEACH WEATHER IS IT LEO? NO LIES NO EXCUSES

  There were no shards of glass this time. That, by itself, should have been a relief. But the implication that he – whoever he was – had been following, watching, just as he had threatened and despite Leo’s vigilance, was somehow more unsettling than if the envelope had arrived barbed with razor blades. And if the intention was to alarm him – to panic him – then whoever wrote the notes could hardly have chosen a more economical turn of phrase. It was, thinking about it, almost as if . . . as if . . .

  No. The thought was ridiculous. He was dealing with a lunatic. Someone deranged. There was simply no way that anyone Leo knew . That someone from work like . like . Terry, for instance. Even Terry. He was jealous, certainly, but even Terry would not stoop to this.

  Closer to home, then. Who was more eager for him to drop the case than his wife? She had asked, repeatedly, and Leo had refused. They could barely have a conversation, it seemed, without Daniel becoming the theme. Maybe if Megan was even more desperate than she so often seemed? Take the man at the window, for example. Did Leo not half suspect, deep down, that the story had been a fabrication? Or, if not quite that, an exaggeration; a deliber-ate misrepresentation. And the phrasing. Not exactly beach weather . Hadn’t Leo, speaking to Megan, used virtually the same expression himself?

  Or Ellie. What about Ellie? She had been at the beach too. And Ellie, in her quieter, more solicitous way, seemed more upset even than her mother. Leo had put it down to the incident with the ink, her troubles at school, but perhaps the last note had also been a clue. A confes-sion. How would your daughter like it? Was that Ellie’s way of saying –

  Your daughter. Your wife. For Christ’s sake, Leo! He wrapped the note in his palm. It crumpled easily, along the scars it had suffered after

  Leo had tossed it, the first time he had read it, into his office bin. He felt an urge to hurl it again but instead slid open his bedside drawer and shoved it beneath his socks and his emergency cash, atop the other two notes tucked away in their envelopes. He stood and the mattress sprung and he turned towards the door.

  ‘Was that it?’

  Ellie was at the threshold. She was sockless and damp-haired and wrapped in a dressing gown that sagged from her shoulders. She bore a towel, damp like her hair, and a book and a hairbrush. Her cheeks were flushed: from the heat of the bath water, Leo assumed, though if he had encountered her in any other guise he might have wondered whether his daughter had in fact been crying.

  ‘Ellie. I didn’t hear you.’ Leo stepped away from the bedside drawer and towards the doorway, resisting the urge to glance back.

  ‘Was that it?’ Ellie said again. ‘That thing you were reading?’ ‘Sorry? Was what what?’

  ‘The article. I heard Mum,’ Ellie added when Leo frowned. ‘Is she going somewhere? Why was she talking about leaving?’

  ‘Leaving? What do you mean? Who’s leaving?’ ‘I don’t know. Mum was talking to Grandma. She said something about . . .’ Ellie ended

  the sentence by shaking her head, as though she were not sure, actually, what her mother had said.

  ‘Ellie? Please. Start at the beginning.’

  ‘I heard Mum,’ his daughter said. ‘On the phone, through the floorboards. She was talk-ing to Bernice. Something about an article.’

  The article. The piece in the Gazette . Leo had seen a copy just that
morning but he had thought, if he ignored it, maybe Megan would never have to know. He had reckoned, clearly, without Terry’s wife: briefed by her husband, no doubt, on Leo’s hesitancy in agree-ing to the interview in the first place, and with nothing else to keep her awake at night but getting to the bottom of why. ‘But . . . What’s this about someone leaving?’

  ‘Mum called Grandma. Afterwards. She said . . . She definitely said something about going to stay. Or . I don’t know. Something, anyway. It was quieter so I couldn’t hear but . . . Are you breaking up?’ Her tone teetered as she voiced the question.

  ‘What?’

  ‘You and Mum. I mean, why else would she be—’ ‘No! No one’s breaking up. Honestly, Ellie, I promise. You misheard, that’s all. I’m sure

  you must have misheard. She was talking about visiting, I expect.’ ‘She sounded angry. Talking to Grandma. She said . What was in the article, Dad?

  What did it say?’

  ‘The article? Nothing. Nothing at all. I don’t know why you think your mother would be angry.’ Except, in truth, he did. He could just hear Megan’s voice. One minute you’re chasing the press away, the next you’re preening for the cameras. Never mind that Leo had done his best to back out of the interview. Never mind that the article, anyway, made no mention of the Forbes case. Leo, inevitably, would be at fault. But calling her mother. Leaving . There was no question: Ellie, surely, had misunderstood.

  ‘You should dry your hair,’ Leo said. ‘You’ll catch a chill.’ He made to herd his daughter towards her bedroom but Ellie held her ground.

  ‘Ellie? Please, I really need to . . . ’ Leo looked behind him at his bedside drawer. He looked through the doorway towards the stairs.

  ‘It’s not fair,’ Ellie said.

  Leo’s attention settled on his daughter. The colour on her cheeks had intensified and there was an unmistakable sheen now across her eyes. ‘What’s not fair?’

  Ellie swiped at a tear. ‘Just . . . Everything. School; Sophie; you and Mum. Everything.’ ‘Sophie?’ Leo said, consciously sidestepping the you-and-Mum part. ‘What’s happened

  with Sophie?’ More than his daughter’s closest friend, Sophie seemed Ellie’s only friend. Since they had moved to the estate – since Ellie had switched schools – even her childhood friendships seemed to have withered and she had struggled, in the bigger school, to fill the void. ‘Did you argue? Look, darling. It’s natural, at your age, to have disagreements.’

  ‘It wasn’t just a disagreement! And stop treating me like a little kid! I’m not a fucking five-year-old!’

  Leo recoiled. ‘Ellie! Mind your manners! I won’t have you using language like—’ Ellie did not wait for the rest of the rebuke. She rolled her eyes and turned away. ‘Ellie. Wait. Ellie!’

  She stopped. She angled her shoulders towards her father but not her face. She dragged a baggy sleeve across each eye.

  ‘Look at me. Ellie. Please. I’m sorry. Okay? You’re not a kid. You’re grown up enough to decide for yourself what language is appropriate. Okay?’

  But when she looked at him, finally, she did not seem grown up. She seemed the child he always imagined her: confused, anxious, unsure of herself and the world.

  Until she took a breath and seemed to inflate. ‘You’re the one behaving like a child,’ she said. ‘Hiding things from Mum. Hiding things from me.’

  ‘Hiding things?’ Leo thought of the notes. ‘I don’t know what you’re . . .’ But: the article; the Gazette . ‘I wasn’t hiding things. I was just . . . I forgot to mention it, that’s all. It didn’t seem important.’

  His daughter looked doubtful.

  ‘You were telling me about Sophie,’ Leo said.

  Ellie dropped her chin. ‘There’s nothing to tell. She hates me, just like everyone else.’ ‘Ellie. Really. Why would she hate you? You’re best friends. Aren’t you? I thought you

  two were inseparable.’

  ‘Not any more. Just this week, it’s . . . Something’s changed. It’s like she doesn’t want to talk to me, not if anyone else is around.’

  ‘Maybe she’s . . . I don’t know. Maybe there’s some simple reason . . .’ ‘It’s not just her, Dad. It’s everyone. Even the teachers treat me like an outcast.’ ‘The teachers? Come on now, Ellie, don’t be ridiculous.’ ‘I’m not being ridiculous!’

  ‘No. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—’

  ‘You don’t know! How could you know? You’re not there! You’re always at work. With him .’

  Leo felt his jaw tighten. ‘You’ve been talking to your mother,’ he said. ‘If you have ques-tions about my work, Ellie, you should really come and speak to me.’

  ‘Why?’ she countered. ‘What would you say? What could I say that would make things any different? Ever since Grandad died you never seem to notice what any of the rest of us are feeling. You don’t seem to care!’

  She had. She had been talking to Megan. It was the only explanation as to why they kept accusing him of the same failings.

  ‘I’ll go to your school again. I’ll talk to the head. If you feel like you’re being victimised then it’s important that someone—’

  ‘No! Don’t! Please, Dad, don’t!’

  Leo sensed his exasperation showing. ‘Look, Ellie. If you feel like the teachers are being unfair somehow, I don’t see what other option—’

  ‘Dad! Don’t! I mean it! Please!’

  ‘What then?’ Leo spread his arms. ‘What else do you want me to do? I can’t just . . . It’s not like I don’t have other things to . . .’ He shook his head and gripped his forehead.

  ‘I want it to be over.’

  Leo looked up. There were no tears now in his daughter’s eyes, though the burn on her cheeks endured.

  ‘The case. You and Mum. Sophie ignoring me, people hating me. That man taking pic-tures of me at the beach. I just want it all to be over.’

  ‘It’s not that simple, Ellie.’

  ‘You asked me. You said, what else could you do? I’m telling you.’ ‘Yes. I know. But . .’ The plea. The trial. Leo had avoided telling his family about

  Daniel’s decision but it was getting to the point where he would have to. ‘So? When will it be over?’

  ‘It depends.’

  ‘On whether there’s a trial.’

  ‘Right. Exactly. On whether there’s a trial.’

  ‘Do you think there will be?’

  ‘That’s not up to me. That’s up to Dan . . .’ Leo, for some reason, stopped himself saying Daniel’s name. ‘That’s up to my client. As a solicitor, I can only do as I’m instructed. It would be unprofessional of me to try to influence his decision either way.’ Which seemed an odd thing for him to say – now, here, in the circumstances. But at least it was out there. He would not, he hoped, have to say it again.

  ‘But you must know. You must have an idea.’

  ‘Ellie. Really. It’s not my—’

  She stopped him with a look.

  ‘Probably,’ he said, exhaling. ‘At the moment, the way things are looking, it seems likely that there will be a trial.’ He flinched at the sight of Ellie’s despair. ‘But until the plea is entered . . . I mean, technically, at this point in time, at least until the arraignment . . .’

  ‘But . . . How long? How long will a trial take?’ ‘I . . . It’s difficult to say.’

  ‘What does that mean? Days? Weeks, even?’

  Leo hesitated. Weeks, certainly. Months – years, probably – counting the appeals. ‘It might take a while, yes. But really, Ellie, there’s no need for you to worry.’

  ‘That’s what you said before. At the start. That’s exactly what you told me then!’ Which was not fair. He had warned her. That day in the car. He had said, things might

  get uncomfortable. He had used those very words. He would not remind her of that now, of course, because heaven knew how she would respond.

  ‘Now you’re angry.’

  ‘What?’ Leo said. ‘No I’m not.’

  ‘You are. I ca
n tell.’

  ‘Ellie. Don’t. Don’t cry, please.’

  ‘I’m not crying,’ she said with a sniff. ‘I’m just . . .’ ‘What? Ellie, tell me.’

  ‘I’m scared, Dad.’ The tears ran now and she did not try to stop them. ‘It’s all right. Ellie, darling. There’s nothing to be scared of.’ He attempted a reassuring

  laugh but heard, from somewhere, a voice.

  How would you like it? How would your daughter? Leo held out an arm and Ellie allowed herself to be enfolded. Through the heavy cotton

  of the dressing gown, her body seemed barely to have substance at all. A knock. Two beats of a knuckle. As though knocking, in this house, were the way things had always been done.

  Leo waited for the door to open. It did not, right away, so he ventured a come in – just as his wife slid her face into the room.

  ‘This was on the mat with the junk mail,’ she said, waving an envelope and then deposit-ing it on the nearest surface. ‘And I’m ready when you are.’

  Leo rolled his chair back from his desk. ‘Oh. Right.’ He checked his wrist. ‘Whenever you are,’ Megan said again. ‘There’s no great rush. School’s not out for an-

  other half an hour.’ She pressed her lips together – as close to a smile, in the past few days, as she had managed. She turned to leave.

  ‘Meg. Wait.’ Leo used his heels to drag himself closer to the door. Megan stopped, turned. The smile, her expression said, had been a blip. ‘How . um. How much are you taking? I mean, my golf clubs. Should I take them out

  of the boot?’ Were they even in the boot?

  ‘There’s a case each. And Ellie will have her school things when we pick her up.’ A case. A case was a holiday, a week away.

  Megan seemed to sense his optimism. ‘Mum has spares if we run out of anything. And I’ll be able to borrow her car when I work out what else we need.’

  Leo’s focus fell to the floor.

  ‘Are you sure?’ he said. ‘That it’s necessary, I mean?’ Megan swallowed. ‘There’s a casserole in the freezer.’ She faced the kitchen and spoke as

  though Leo was looking where she was. ‘I’ve split it in two. Give it half an hour in the oven once it’s defrosted, or blast it for a few minutes in the microwave. If you stick it in the oven, don’t forget to put it in an oven-proof dish.’

 

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