Where the Missing Go

Home > Other > Where the Missing Go > Page 14
Where the Missing Go Page 14

by Emma Rowley


  And that’s as far as I’ll let myself think about why I need to know this, now.

  I spend a while looking at the updates they send to alumni, saved as PDFs online, to see if there’s any mention of a Jay. There’s not.

  When the phone call comes I’m still in the kitchen, the sun lower now through the windows, making myself a cup of tea. Out of habit, I let the landline ring out. It’s bound to be some cold caller, or Charlotte again. The man’s voice breaks in on my thoughts, making me start.

  “Mrs. Harlow, this is DI Nicholls. Please could you give me a call back—”

  I’m across the room and seize the handset before he can finish. “Hello? I’m here.”

  He tells me he’s got some news that would be better explained in person.

  “Have you found her?” I hear myself saying, pitched too high.

  “No. No, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to get your hopes up. Are you free now? I tried your mobile.” I glance at it on the table—I’ve let it run out of battery once more.

  “Yes, of course. Should I come to the station again?”

  “No need for that. I’m in the area now and I’ll explain face to face.”

  After I hang up, I bend to pick up the cat, burying my face in his fur. He mews in protest.

  “Another visitor. It’s quite the social whirl in here,” I tell Tom.

  But I’m nervous. Doubly so. Because sleeping on it hasn’t offered any flash of inspiration to getting into Sophie’s other email. I’m going to turn it over to the police.

  Yet first I’ve got to make them understand how important this could be.

  “Turns out we’re not the only ones who’ve been interested in the charity’s phone records. The Message in a Bottle helpline has had a bit of a pest problem. One caller in particular had been very nasty. Sexual stuff, whenever he got a woman on the phone. Threats. And he was persistent.”

  “Oh, right. You mean a pest caller.” Nicholls has turned up, refused a cup of tea—“water, please”—and started talking. For a moment, I let myself feel the oddness of my life now: the suited detective sitting opposite me at my kitchen table, as I wait for him to get to the point. He’s very calm, unhurried.

  And what he’s saying is true. Heavy breathers are the secret bane of helplines, but they don’t like to publicize it—it might encourage more of them. But annoy the volunteers too often and the powers that be can, after a lot of soul-searching, block you. I just don’t yet see what this has to do with me.

  “So,” he begins, “it turns out that the charity had actually made a police complaint about one caller in particular, via its headquarters in London. And they’d agreed police could access the helpline’s caller records for the last couple of months, to find him. They were prepared for him to be charged.”

  I feel a little leap of hope. Could this be good news? He’s got Sophie’s call details this way?

  He continues: “My colleagues in the Met started looking at the phone numbers that had been used to make repeated calls to the helpline. It wasn’t hard to find their guy: he didn’t understand that the confidentiality policy wouldn’t cover a telecommunications offense. This guy was making hundreds of calls from his house landline—somewhere in the West Midlands—when his wife went to work in the daytime.”

  So that’s why I wouldn’t have heard from this creep: I only do nights.

  “And we don’t get a lot of repeat callers,” I add. Not legitimate ones. We get messages to loved ones, and we’re supposed to refer people elsewhere for longer-term support. “But I’m sorry, how’s this going to help in my situation? Sophie only rang me once.”

  “I do have a point,” he says mildly. “Now, the charity wouldn’t agree to release the details of Sophie’s call.” So he did ask. “And there wasn’t any reason for us to try to force it.” I nod. I don’t agree with it, but I understand. “So when I heard about this other investigation, I took a look at the info they’d collected on the repeat caller numbers—call it professional curiosity—and I found something a little unusual.”

  For a second I feel like he’s waiting for me to say something, then he goes on: “There were dozens of calls made to the helpline from a number local to this area.”

  I’m confused. “Well, it’s a national helpline—but anyone can ring in.”

  “Yes, anyone can ring in. And with this one phone number, there wasn’t any abuse, nothing like that. There was just a pattern: the caller rings, then hangs up a few moments after connection. We could see from the length of the call. My colleagues had already traced it, to a telephone box.” He looks at me expectantly. “It’s the telephone box at the end of Park Road. This road.”

  The one near the crossroads, not a hundred meters from my house, if that.

  He rubs his chin. “Could you tell me why that might be, Mrs. Harlow?”

  “No,” I say, bewildered.

  “Have you seen anyone hanging around that phone box, perhaps?”

  “I can’t see it from here.” That’s obvious. “You could try the people on the other side of the road, they’re slightly nearer.”

  “Right.” He’s frowning slightly.

  “I might have a mobile number for them if you want, there’s an old neighborhood list somewhere that we were given when we moved in—” I start to get up.

  “No, no, don’t worry about that.” But he’s not moving from the table. “You must’ve been under an enormous amount of strain since she ran away,” he says.

  “I’m fine.” I’m not. But I can feel this going somewhere I don’t like.

  He rubs the back of his head, a small gesture of discomfort. “I understand that there was an episode in your past. Mental health issues.” I stare at him, my mouth a hard line. “An overdose. Benzodiazepines,” he says it carefully, “and alcohol.”

  “It wasn’t an overdose. Not how you mean, anyway. It was a mistake.”

  “Whoever made these calls from the phone box made them dozens and dozens of times. . . .”

  Suddenly I understand. “Oh. You think I know something.”

  “Mrs. Harlow, no one’s accusing you of anything, all I asked was—”

  “You think I’m making prank calls,” I say flatly. It’s not a question.

  “I didn’t say that.” He didn’t need to. “And I wouldn’t call them prank calls. Maybe”—he lifts his eyebrows, questioning—“calls for help, perhaps?” His eyes are kind. I can’t stand it.

  “Well, I’m not,” I say. “Yes, I had some obsessive thoughts, over-anxious thought patterns.” I won’t shy away from this. “I couldn’t move on from my daughter’s—Sophie leaving. I didn’t cope very well. And I couldn’t sleep, so I took pills to help me. But I didn’t make those calls.

  “There are a lot of kids round here, they could be messing around.” It sounds weak even to my ears. Who on earth would be calling from there? A thought crosses my mind: “And Sophie’s call, you’re not saying that was from that phone box, too, are you?”

  “No.” He shakes his head. “There was nothing from the phone box on the evening in question. Of course, you were working at the helpline then. Your colleague Alma Seddon, she’s confirmed that.”

  Now I realize: in his eyes, I might well have just incriminated myself. Of course there wasn’t a call made from near my house that evening. I was busy at the helpline. But the other times . . .

  “Look, it’s not a criminal matter to call a helpline and hang up,” he says quietly, pulling something out of his jacket. “Regardless of whether . . . I just wanted you to know: there are some excellent resources available for families of the missing.” He hands me a leaflet, one that I’ve seen before, and I keep my eyes on it as he starts talking about posttraumatic stress disorder, counseling, the various charities that specialize in these issues. He manages not to mention the one I volunteer for, I’ll give him that.

  “Thank you,” I force it out. Be polite. Keep control. “I’m glad you’re here, anyway. I wanted to talk to you about Sophie’s
diary, the email address in it. I’ve noticed some similarities with another case that I wanted to bring to your attention—” I look up, catch the expression on his face: I’m still not getting it.

  My heart starts to pound. “What is happening with the investigation? After the diary—what Sophie wrote about Danny? You were speaking to him. And Holly Dixon, right? Is nothing happening with that?”

  He speaks slowly, like he’s working out how to put this. “Yes, we’ve spoken to both Danny and Holly. They don’t necessarily quite agree with your version of things: of your conversations. Which is perhaps not surprising.” I can imagine: I picture Holly in tears outside the police station, begging me to tell them the pregnancy test was hers. Danny insisting he didn’t sleep with Sophie.

  Nicholls leans forward, getting my attention. “And they say there was some tension between you and them. Before Sophie went away.”

  I can’t deny it—I wasn’t the biggest fan of either of them.

  “When someone goes missing, it can be tempting to find someone to blame.”

  “That’s not it,” I insist. “I’m not saying that they . . . did anything, but I just know something’s not right. Something’s keeping her away. You’ve got the diary, you showed it to me!”

  “The diary explains that she got pregnant, and her boyfriend wasn’t happy about it. It doesn’t change anything, not materially.”

  “But why didn’t you say any of this before? You let me think . . .” But did he? I thought they were taking this seriously, that things were moving again. I try to remember what they’ve told me.

  “I said that when I’ve information I can share with you, I would of course do that.”

  And with a sick plunge of my stomach, I realize that he just has: but it’s information that suggests I might be unreliable, a little unbalanced. I feel the panic rising in me. “But Sophie was scared, on the phone.” Oh God. “You do still believe that she called me. Don’t you?”

  He’s as measured as ever, utterly professional. “You said the voice was a whisper. That the line was bad. Then you heard your and your ex-husband’s names—your first names. And . . .”

  “And I heard what I wanted to hear,” I finish for him, dully.

  “I’m not saying that, not at all, not necessarily.” He doesn’t say: it doesn’t really matter. Not to the police.

  I’ve had enough now. “I’m not losing it. I’m not.” I stand up. “Thanks for coming, DI Nicholls.”

  “Mrs. Harlow—”

  “Thanks for coming. I’ll see you out.”

  I keep it together until I’ve shut the door after him and I hear his car engine start up.

  I’ve still got the leaflet he gave me in my hand. I scrunch it up deliberately and drop it on the floor. I lean against the front door, shaking with anger. It feels better than despair, at least. How dare he suggest I’ve been making calls?

  I push down the wobble of uncertainty, like my world’s twisting around me. It couldn’t have been me, could it? Fear clutches at my gut. Of course it wasn’t me. I know that.

  But if my family hear about this, what the police think. Mark. They’ll think it’s happening again, that I’m losing it....

  I go back into the kitchen and pour myself a large glass of water, then drink it down. I look at the computer and the closed jotter beside it. I need to face the facts.

  I’m back where I started. No closer to finding my daughter. The police are not investigating.

  No. I correct myself. It’s worse. They don’t trust me.

  The email from the helpline is inevitable, I suppose. That’s what I tell myself, when I read it that night.

  “Dear Kate,” it begins. “We’d like to take the opportunity to thank you for all you’ve done for Message in a Bottle.”

  That’s the nice bit, obviously. The rest is not so pleasant. My services will no longer be required. They phrase it differently of course, stressing that the work of the charity can put high demands on its volunteers, and suggest that I might like to take some time out to reflect on how I might best put my skills to use.

  I don’t bother replying.

  CHAPTER 22

  I don’t really know what to do with myself anymore. I made myself get up today, though I couldn’t really see why, eating breakfast in front of the TV, losing hours there, my bad habit. I feel so tired and defeated. Then I started to tidy the living room uselessly, picking at dust that’s barely there. After that I went into the kitchen and picked up the phone, twice, wondering.

  Should I call Dad? Charlotte? For once, I just want some human contact. But what can I tell them that won’t just make it worse? That won’t make them think that I’m losing my grip?

  Then I think: the one person who won’t judge me.

  I grab my keys and head out of the door.

  Lily’s in her usual spot, dozing in her armchair in a shaft of sunlight. Her head’s lolled forward, that can’t be comfortable.

  “Lily,” I say. “Lily.” Her eyes open, blink into waking.

  “Oh hello, dear,” she says, lifting her face to mine slowly. “Has he gone then?” She must mean her care worker. I wonder if he’s actually been though, or she’s getting confused again.

  “Yes, it’s just me, Lil. Shall we have a cup of tea?”

  “Lovely. Yes, please.” I head to the kitchen, check the milk and make us a cup each. It all looks tidy and clean, I’m reassured to see.

  I’ve two china mugs of tea in my hands, pretty things with violets splashed over them, when I see the scrap of newspaper on the sideboard, neatly folded on top of her telephone directory.

  RAN AWAY?

  Send a message to let them know you’re safe

  NO QUESTIONS ASKED

  Just phone and give your message

  We will pass it on

  Send a MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE

  I manage not to spill anything.

  “Lily,” I say, walking back into the sitting room, urgency in my voice. “Why’ve you got that bit of paper—the advert for the helpline?” I hear the sharp note and try to soften my tone. “You know I work there, don’t you. That I volunteer there?” She doesn’t reply.

  I put our teas down on the little side table and try again. “Have you maybe tried to call me where I work? Maybe a few times?”

  I’m not sure she’s listening, but then she starts talking, surprisingly brisk.

  “You said always to call, you know. You said: Lily, if you need anything, don’t hesitate to call. Well, you know I told you I was perfectly fine, but you insisted. Well, I said, I don’t need—”

  “No, no, that’s totally fine. I’m sorry. I just—I didn’t know you knew I worked at the charity.” My heart’s sinking.

  “Of course I do, I remember things.” She’s getting cross. A sign she’s feeling vulnerable, I know now. Is she feeling a little guilty?

  “Oh, Lily. I’m only next door. And you’ve got my phone numbers if there’s anything.” She must have been calling the charity number, trying to get hold of me. And then what—hanging up? Asking for me? But from the phone box? I didn’t realize she was in so bad a state, that she was so confused. What is going on in her head?

  I have an idea now: I pull up the footstool in front of her. “Lily, how’s your little boy?”

  “My little boy . . .” Her brow creases.

  “Yes,” I say encouragingly. “Your little boy, you’ve told me all about him.”

  “I don’t have a little boy,” she says flatly.

  “Oh. I thought—”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “I’m sorry, Lily, I thought you liked talking about your little friend. You said he had blond curls like you had. Does he look like Bob, your husband, too?”

  That’s a mistake. “We didn’t have any children.” She looks upset. “You’re a cruel girl.”

  I draw back, shocked. Lily’s never angry with me. But then I’ve read that, on top of confusion and forgetfulness, mood changes can
be a symptom of what I’ve feared: dementia.

  “I’m sorry, Lily. I didn’t mean to upset you.”

  “All right,” she says fretfully. “But you ask too many questions. I don’t like it.” She sounds like a child.

  “OK. We won’t talk about it again.” I take a deep breath. “I’ve got a few things to do but I’ll come and see you again soon. Have a nice afternoon.”

  What the hell’s going on with her? Back home I hurry to my computer, still on the kitchen table, and type in the name of the drug: the morphine I saw in her cabinet. I click on a website aimed at patients and start scanning: “It’s a controlled medication.... Strict rules . . .”

  One paragraph I read twice: “Don’t break, crush, chew or suck morphine pills. If you do, the whole dose might get into your body in one go. This could cause a potentially fatal overdose.”

  Another note makes my stomach give a little flip: “What if I forget to take it?” There’s a warning: never double up your dose to make up for a missed one.

  Lily’s so forgetful now. And she’s got so much of it, bottles of pills and liquid. What are they all for?

  That decides me. Lily isn’t in a state to be managing this, not when the medicine itself could be making her more confused. The note on the bottle, to take when needed—she could be taking it around the clock.

  I don’t care if I’m interfering, I don’t want to wait around for Dr. Heath to have a polite word with a colleague. Before I can think about it more, I call the surgery and give full force to the unsuspecting receptionist. She won’t even confirm that Lily’s a patient, which doesn’t help my mood.

 

‹ Prev