Who Did You Tell (ARC)

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Who Did You Tell (ARC) Page 29

by Lesley Kara


  have to breathe soon or I’ll . . .

  Water floods my mouth, my throat. I’m breathing it in. Sink-

  ing, sinking. My eyes stare blindly at the greenish- brown

  murk. Light’s coming from somewhere, but I can’t gauge the

  direction. The noise in my ears is deafening. My limbs dangle

  uselessly. I’m spinning in a dream. Water everywhere. Above

  me, below me. In my eyes, in my mouth, in my nose. So salty

  it burns. Whirling round and down, round and down. So this

  is what it’s like. This is how it ends. It’s all a terrible mistake, but it’s too late now. It’s all too late. I see Mum’s face. Her beautiful, kind face. Dad’s too. Simon’s. They’re crying. They’re

  crying for me. All the things I haven’t done. The dreams that

  alcohol stole from me.

  The ringing intensifies. The light fades.

  Then hands are under my shoulders. Strong arms lifting me

  up. My head breaks the surface and water rushes out of my

  mouth. Water and puke, all mixed up together. I’m choking on

  it. Strong forearms are levered under my armpits, towing me

  back to shore. But I still can’t get enough air into my lungs. Just

  tiny, useless gasps. I’m still going to die.

  My eyes snap open. I’m lying on my back on the sand. Josh’s face

  is peering down at me. He looks scared. Voices are shouting. A

  siren wails. I don’t know what’s happening. My eyes close. My

  head spins.

  The next time I open them, more faces bob in and out of

  focus over Josh’s shoulder. It looks like the woman who shouted

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  at me in the shop. Except now she looks more frightened than

  frightening. And oh, there’s Rosie.

  ‘Hang on in there, Astrid,’ she says.

  Josh wipes his mouth with the back of his hand. ‘Stay with

  me,’ he says.

  I want to stay, I really do, but I’m fading into blackness. He’s

  spinning away from me.

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  48

  Behind my closed eyelids coloured shapes and geometric

  designs shift and slide like the kaleidoscope I had as a child.

  They zoom in and out of focus – my very own psychedelic light

  show. Rising through layers of sleep, I have a moment of clar-

  ity. Am I seeing the shadows of blood vessels in my eyes?

  They’re so intricate and beautiful, like ancient Aztec patterns.

  I’m awake now, but only just. Clinging to consciousness like

  a drowning woman. The patterns scare me. How can such

  timeless art forms be swirling around inside my own head?

  I open my eyes and blink in the light. Consumed by thirst,

  I reach for the glass of water on my bedside cabinet, the one I

  always put there at night. But my hand’s caught up in my head-

  phones, and something tight is pinning me down. Sheets.

  Tightly tucked sheets. Wait, this isn’t my bed, and these aren’t

  my headphones, it’s the tubing of a drip. My left hand is con-

  nected to a drip.

  Oh shit, not again. I’m in hospital. What’s happened this

  time? What have I done? Mum’s going to kill me.

  A slow trickle of sensations and images seeps into my head.

  The fragments of a dream. A nightmare. I close my eyes against

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  the light, willing myself to sink back down into sleep. But now

  that I’ve started to remember, the trickle turns into a steady

  flow and then a wave. A colossal wave that breaks over me and

  leaves me gasping. Because it wasn’t a dream, was it? It really

  happened.

  Someone places a hand on my forehead.

  ‘Astrid? Can you hear me?’

  The light seems even brighter now, and it takes a huge effort

  to peel back my eyelids. When I do, the first thing that comes

  into focus is Josh’s face peering down at me. Blond, tousled

  hair. Green eyes flecked with gold.

  ‘Astrid,’ he says, his voice breaking on the second syllable.

  ‘Oh, Astrid!’

  Now there’s another face next to his. Anxious and drawn,

  but full of love and as familiar to me as my own.

  Mum is here too.

  Over the last couple of days it’s taken us all quite a while to

  piece everything together. Helen put a drug in my wine. Fluni-

  trazepam. Brand name Rohypnol. The hospital found traces of

  it in my blood and urine. Not much alcohol at all, as it hap-

  pens. She must have been saving those empty wine bottles just

  to deceive me. To make me think I’d lost control and drunk

  the lot.

  ‘There’s no way of proving it’s an actual crime, though,’ Josh

  says. ‘She’s told the police you found it in her bathroom cabi-

  net, that you took it yourself to increase the high.’

  Mum shakes her head in disbelief. That kind of thing is way

  beyond her comprehension. If she only knew a fraction of what goes on in the world of recreational drug use, she’d be shocked

  to her very core.

  ‘And it’s not as if she got it off the internet or anywhere

  dodgy – apparently, it was a private prescription she had years

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  ago, for insomnia. She told the police she never got round to

  throwing it away.’

  ‘What about all the rest of it, though? Sending horrible

  threats through the post? Lies? Manipulation?’ Mum closes her

  eyes then opens them again. ‘You could have drowned, Astrid.’

  She turns her face away.

  ‘But it’s my word against hers, especially since I got rid of half

  of the evidence, and of course she won’t admit to sending them.

  Hardly enough to warrant an arrest, is it? The police aren’t

  going to waste their time on something like that. I’m just a for-

  mer “addict with issues” to them.’

  Josh squeezes my hand. ‘If only I’d ignored that letter and

  got in touch with you sooner. I was so sure I was doing the right

  thing.’

  I couldn’t believe it when he showed me, when I read the

  words she’d written in my name. In my handwriting too, or

  near as damn it. She must have kept hold of the pieces of paper

  I wrote my confessions on and copied it.

  If you respect me at all, please, Josh, DON’T CONTACT ME. Telling you the truth was a major step forward for me. Now I’ve got to give myself a chance to heal. Our relationship may compromise my recov‑

  ery. I should never have let it happen – it goes against everything they say at AA. I KNOW you’ll understand.

  Those endless days I spent crying under my duvet, waiting

  for him to contact me, to tell me I was forgiven and put me out

  of my misery, and all the time he thought he was doing the

  right thing. Thought he was following my instructions. Help-

  ing me get better.

  Mum makes her cross little harrumphing noise. ‘I’ve always

  tried to believe that all human beings contain at
least some ele-ment of goodness and truth, however bad they might appear to

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  others. And I sympathize with her about losing her son. Of

  course I do. But what she did . . .’

  ‘She didn’t pour that first glass of wine down my throat,

  though, did she, Mum? There’s only one person to blame for

  that, and that’s me.’

  A lump forms in the back of my throat. Because accepting

  this means I also have to accept that I’m not responsible for

  what happened with Simon. I never was. I close my eyes and

  take a deep breath. I do have a death on my conscience, though.

  It’s impossible to make amends now, but I’ll do whatever I can

  to trace that young woman’s family and make them see how

  sorry I am, how I’ll regret what happened for the rest of my life.

  If they press charges, then so be it. I need to take whatever pun-

  ishment comes my way. I won’t be able to live with myself

  otherwise.

  Mum gathers up our empty coffee cups and puts them into

  the rubbish bag at the side of my bed. ‘I still don’t understand

  why Rosie kept her suspicions to herself for so long. If she knew Helen was a fraud, why on earth didn’t she tell you? Why did

  she let you leave the shop and go round there?’

  ‘I didn’t give her much of a chance. I basically pushed her out

  of the way and ran off.’

  Rosie came to visit me this morning. We talked for ages. I try

  to explain to Mum what she said.

  ‘She didn’t tell me because she didn’t know for sure. It was

  just a hunch. She gets these . . . feelings about people.’

  Mum raises an eyebrow.

  ‘She senses things from objects too. It’s something to do with

  picking up their energy. I know it sounds weird, but it is a thing, apparently. It’s called clairsentience. She says she doesn’t usually say anything about it because most people take the piss.’

  ‘I’m not surprised,’ Mum says, and I can’t help smiling. Mum

  and I, we’re more alike than I realized.

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  It was why Rosie wouldn’t let go of his juggling ball, that

  time in the shop, and why she kept Simon’s T- shirt, the one

  Helen accidentally gave away. The photocopied news report

  about Simon’s suicide was folded up at the bottom of the car-

  rier bag Helen dropped off at the shop. Helen couldn’t have

  realized it was there.

  Right from the start, Rosie never trusted Helen. All she felt

  when she was anywhere near her was this terrible, hateful anger.

  Plus, she’s been around the block a few times. She’s worked with

  loads of addicts in the past and she said that something about

  Helen just didn’t add up. She had no proof that Helen was con-

  nected to Simon, but some instinct kept nagging away at her.

  I wriggle my toes under the bedclothes and try to loosen the

  top sheet. I can’t wait to get home and have a duvet again.

  ‘I couldn’t stand Rosie at first. Had her down as one of those

  annoying types who think God’s the answer to everything.’

  Mum shifts in her chair.

  ‘Actually, she’s nothing like that. She’s just worked out that

  God’s the only thing keeping her sober. She’s tried everything

  else, and nothing worked. She was only ever trying to save me

  the trouble of finding that out for myself.’

  When Rosie came to visit me in hospital she offered Simon’s

  T- shirt to me as a keepsake, but it’s time to let go of the past.

  T- shirts, juggling balls. They’re not Simon; they’re just things.

  ‘I wonder where she’s gone,’ Mum says. ‘Helen, I mean.’

  ‘Back to London, I suppose. I don’t expect she ever sold her

  house. That was another lie. She just took out a short- term lease

  on the flat when she worked out where I was.’

  Visiting time is almost over and, although part of me doesn’t

  want them to go, another part does. There’s something I have

  to do – something I should have done by now – and I have to

  be alone when I do it.

  Josh leans over and gives me a kiss. Not a proper one, not in

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  front of Mum, but it’s enough to feel his lips on mine and to

  know that whatever happens between us now, he knows the

  truth.

  ‘Dad’s new girlfriend’s coming round tonight. ‘We’re getting

  an Indian takeaway.’

  I smile. He’s still a bit uptight about it, I can tell, but he’ll come round, in time, and if he doesn’t, well, that’s his problem, not

  Richard’s. Everyone deserves a second chance at love. Even me.

  I kiss Mum goodbye and watch the two of them leave. Yester-

  day, Josh asked me what was going to happen when summer’s

  over. Would I go back to London with him?

  I couldn’t answer him at first. Because being with Josh is what

  I want more than anything in the world. But then Mum wants

  me to stay here, with her. And according to Richard, Charlie’s

  offered me a part- time job in his shop. Everyone’s been so kind.

  Even that bossy old woman with the walking stick turned out to

  be on my side. She remembered me saying I was a friend of the

  Carter family, that time at the beach huts. If she hadn’t, she

  might not have rushed over to Charlie’s flat and asked him to

  ring Richard. And if Charlie hadn’t rung Richard, Josh wouldn’t

  have known I was in trouble. He wouldn’t have driven like a

  madman to the beach. He knew I’d be there. He just knew.

  That’s the thing about living in a small town like Flinstead.

  Everyone knows everyone else and, even if that gets a bit tire-

  some sometimes, a bit claustrophobic, you’re never completely

  on your own. People look out for each other. People care. Well,

  maybe not everyone, but lots of people. Lots of people care.

  Like Rosie. She’s going to help me with my recovery. She’s

  moved out of the Oxfam shop at last and into the spare bed-

  room of one of Richard’s many ‘mates’, a nice old bloke with

  Parkinson’s who needs a bit of help with housework and

  cooking.

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  him. He can’t promise me anything because these situations are

  notoriously difficult to prove, and it’s probably going to take a

  hell of a lot of paperwork, but he’s working on getting some

  kind of restraining order put on Helen. Just in case she decides

  to try anything else. I’m lucky to have him on my case. He used

  to be a hot- shot lawyer in the city before the drink got to him.

  Oh, well, London’s loss, Flinstead’s gain, that’s what I say.

  So what I said to Josh was this: ‘We’ll see each other at week-

  ends and see how things go.’

  ‘One day at a time, eh?’
r />   ‘Yes,’ I said, burying my face in his chest. ‘One day at a time.’

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  49

  Finally, the moment has come. I open the door of my bedside

  cupboard and stare at the brown envelope Mum brought in for

  me earlier.

  Before I can change my mind, I take it out and open it up,

  unfold the paper inside. My hands are trembling and Simon’s

  voice fills my head as I try not to cry.

  Dear Astrid,

  I’m writing this from hospital. I don’t have your number any

  more. Mum must have deleted it from my phone. I didn’t tell

  you that I’d been staying with her, that she took me in when I

  had nowhere else to go.

  Even now, I still can’t get my head round Helen being Simon’s

  mother.

  The nurses say she was here the whole time I was out of it on

  a drip.

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  WHO DID YOU TELL?

  I picture her at his bedside, waiting for him to wake up. Just

  like Mum was there for me, and, crazy though it is after every-

  thing she’s done, I can’t help feeling a pang of sympathy for her

  loss.

  It was a mistake going back – I know that now – all she does is

  try to control me. It’s all she’s ever done. I really regret opening up to her, telling her things about my life, about you, because it

  didn’t take her long to start on at me again. We had a massive

  argument yesterday, the worst we’ve ever had, and I flipped.

  Told her to get the hell out of here and leave me alone. Told her

  it was her fault all this happened in the first place. If she hadn’t tried to keep me as a prisoner, I might not have felt the need to

  escape. Might not have bumped into you that day in the park.

  I take a deep breath. Reading this was never going to be easy.

  I love you, Astrid – you know that. I always have, right from

  that very first time you came up to me in the pub and started

  talking bollocks about the shape of my head. I’ve never met

  anyone like you.

  I squeeze my eyes shut. This must have been where Laura

  stopped reading.

  I like to think that, if things had been different, we could have

  stayed the course. We could have ended up an old married

  couple with kids and grandkids. But you and I – we’re not

  made like other people, are we? When I woke up in this bed

  and listened to Mum going on and on, blaming you for making

 

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