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Snap

Page 2

by Belinda Bauer


  Kept walking, although he couldn’t feel his legs.

  Or his heart.

  It wasn’t until they were halfway up the slip-road that a car finally slowed and then ground to a halt on the gravel ahead of them.

  They stopped, trembling and tear-stained, and exhausted by heat and by fear.

  There was a long, hot blink of arid time.

  Then the car door creaked open, and a policeman stepped out.

  2001

  Catherine While woke with a start and the feeling – the certainty – that somebody was in the house.

  ‘Adam?’

  Adam wasn’t there. He was in Chesterfield. Catherine knew that because only yesterday he’d sent her a postcard of the bus station with an ironic doodle on it.

  And yet she called out again.

  ‘Adam?’

  Nothing. Just that creepy feeling that she was not alone. The streetlamp outside the window flickered and went out, leaving her momentarily blind.

  It felt … planned.

  ‘Adam?’ she whispered into the blackness.

  ‘Prrrrrp!’

  Catherine squeaked as the cat landed on her legs.

  ‘Get off, Chips!’

  She sat up with a grunt and a series of awkward wiggles under the weight of her occupied belly, and shooed the cat off the bed.

  ‘Don’t panic,’ she told her tummy firmly. ‘It’s only the cat.’

  Adam had had a second cat, called Fish, who had been squashed by a car before they’d met. Catherine had made a sympathetic face, of course, but secretly she had been relieved to hear it. One cat was more than enough to worry about sitting on the baby’s face. Chips was a fluffy white rag-doll, with fetching blue eyes, but Catherine wasn’t a cat person. That didn’t make her a dog person, mind – she’d never had a pet of any description, not even a goldfish – but in the two years she and Adam had been together, she’d learned enough to know she definitely wasn’t a cat person.

  He was. He was all over the cat, and the cat – and its hair – was all over him. Catherine was sure that cats had their place in the grand scheme of things – but she was equally sure that that place wasn’t shitting in a box in a corner of the kitchen.

  Or jumping on her bed.

  She must have left the bedroom door ajar last night, and Chips had seen his chance to reassert his right as a cat to lie on his minion’s pillow, and to piddle freely in his sock drawer.

  Catherine hissed, and Chips stepped haughtily out of the room with a look over his shoulder that said, I’ll remember this.

  ‘Do your worst,’ said Catherine defiantly, and lay back on her pillow.

  At least Chips had brought her back from her fright.

  Catherine clasped her hands over her stomach – amazed and amused by how far away it was from what she’d always thought of as her body. The first few months had been nothing really – a bit of a tum, of the sort that might quickly disappear after a few weeks on an exercise bike. Then the bulge had become big enough to celebrate by leaning back and sticking it out – like carrying a potted plant in from the garden. Now, seven months in, getting out of a chair felt more like hoisting a bag of compost on to a trolley at B&Q.

  She couldn’t wait for the day when the baby was laid on her breast, red and screwed up and bawling …

  I’ll never let anything hurt you!

  The vehement promise was not something Catherine had ever formulated or decided. It came unbidden and at random times, straight from her heart, in the same way she imagined the baby would come from her womb – in a rush of emotion that brought tears to her eyes and steel to her spine.

  She wiped her eyes on the heel of her hand and sighed and cursed Chips. She was going to need all the sleep she could get quite soon, and resented missing out on even a wink.

  Dr Samuels had told her to create the utmost serenity for herself and her unborn child.

  Utmost serenity.

  The doctor had actually used those words and Catherine had actually laughed at them. But the longer her pregnancy went on, the more she could see the value of utmost serenity, and she had started to meditate and light candles, and to read trashy novels in the bath. She had foot massages and kale smoothies and went to weekly antenatal classes, where she rolled around on her back like a stuck beetle while Adam helped her to breathe and to push and to giggle helplessly in supposed readiness for what was to come.

  Catherine decided to read herself back to sleep. She had a tempting To Be Read pile, but her hormones kept drawing her compulsively to The Big Book of Baby Names. It was silly really; she and Adam both preferred traditional names, and the book was full of ridiculous ones. Plus, they’d sort of settled already on Alice for a girl and Frank for a boy, for her grandmother and his father. But while she knew she was never going to call her baby Bunker or Crimpelene, Catherine felt duty bound not to overlook even a remote possibility.

  She turned to switch on the lamp, but stopped with her hand in mid air.

  There was a noise.

  She couldn’t identify quite what or where it was, but it sounded like somebody trying not to make a sound.

  Somebody in the house.

  Catherine’s neck prickled with ancient warning.

  She was thirty-one and had lived alone all her adult life until she’d moved in with Adam nearly two years before. When you lived alone, and you heard a noise in the night, you didn’t cower under the bedclothes and wait for your fate to saunter up the stairs and down the hallway. When you lived alone, you got up and grabbed the torch, the bat, the hairspray, and you sneaked downstairs to confront …

  The dishwasher.

  Which was the only thing that had ever made a noise loud enough to wake her.

  But she hadn’t set the dishwasher …

  Catherine wasn’t as well prepared as she used to be – and was a lot more pregnant than she’d ever been. But there was nobody here but her. And so, with a muffled grunt, she swung her legs out of bed and rocked to her feet.

  She crept on to the landing and picked up the vase from the bookshelf. It was chunky Swedish glass and she’d never liked it. Throwing it at an intruder would kill two birds with one stone.

  She took a deep breath, then snapped on the landing light and yelled, ‘Whoever’s there had better get the hell out of this house! I’ve called the police and I’m armed!’

  She started down the stairs, holding the vase at shoulder height, feeling both terrified and idiotic. At the bottom she stopped and listened again.

  Nothing.

  Had she been mistaken? It wouldn’t be the first time. Being alone in a house made every noise louder. Scarier. If she’d been sure, she’d have called the police, and she hadn’t – even though the phone was right next to Adam’s side of the bed …

  She adjusted the vase in her right hand, and moved cautiously from room to room. She gained courage with each doorway she passed through. The lounge and the dining room and the kitchen.

  There was nobody there.

  Catherine put the vase down on the kitchen table next to her camera and phone, and blew out her cheeks in relief – glad to be wrong.

  Then she stared at her camera and phone. She didn’t remember leaving them on the table. Why would she? And Adam’s laptop was beside them, when it was always on the desk in the study—

  Son of a bitch!

  Catherine understood in a flash. The items were on the table next to the back door so that the burglar could pick them up on his way out!

  Breathless with panic, she checked the door. It was unlocked! She had locked it, she was sure of that. The intruder must have left through it when she’d shouted – not even stopping to grab his loot!

  Quickly she locked it again, and then pressed herself desperately against the cold glass – cupping her hands around her face to see into the night.

  Then she sucked in her breath as a liquid black shape detached itself from the shadow of the house and flitted through the shrubbery and over the fence, like oil.
/>   ‘I see you!’ she shouted. ‘I see you, you bastard!’

  Her heart hammered but the words gave her strength.

  And then it was over.

  He was there and he was gone.

  She was scared and she was safe.

  It was over, and the patch of condensation her shout had left on the glass shrunk slowly away to nothing.

  Catherine stepped back from the door. Her legs shook, and she sat down and put a trembling hand on her belly.

  Her mind flitted through the events – darting back and forth between cause and consequence, and what was and what might have been, until it finally started to settle and function at a more normal rate.

  She was OK.

  They were OK.

  Nothing bad had happened. Nothing had been taken.

  Those were the most important things. The basics.

  But there was more. She also hadn’t panicked. She hadn’t screamed. She hadn’t hidden under the bed. She hadn’t had to be rescued by a man. She’d been brave and she’d been clever.

  Catherine had almost forgotten what independence felt like, and she went back upstairs with a tiny grain of pride starting to swell in her chest.

  She went into the bedroom and closed the door firmly behind her and let out an enormous sigh of relief. Then she turned to the bed and her stomach clenched so hard that the baby kicked back.

  The bedside lamp was on.

  It hadn’t been on. Her hand had stopped in mid air, remember? She knew she hadn’t turned it on.

  And in the little pool of light, there was a knife.

  Not a kitchen knife.

  A real knife.

  Catherine moved without walking.

  She looked down on the knife.

  A bright blade – serrated on one edge, curved on the other to a cruel point; the handle inlaid with pearly clouds reflected in a petrol sea of …

  Abalone.

  The word surfaced from the deep ocean of her mind and felt right, even though she wasn’t sure what abalone was. The pale shell was so serene, so beautiful, that surely the blade could not be as brutal as it looked? As if from a great distance, Catherine watched her own hand reach out and touch a brief finger to the point.

  She gasped as electricity raced up her arm and neck to the top of her head. Tears sprang to her eyes and a tiny red ball swelled from the pad of her forefinger and sat there shining like a ruby in a Swiss watch.

  She put her finger in her mouth with a shudder.

  And noticed the birthday card.

  Flowers in a bucket. To my Daughter on your Special Day. Her mother chose the worst cards. A week after her birthday Catherine had bundled it up with all her others and put them in a drawer in the spare room.

  And yet, here it was, next to her bed …

  She felt disorientated, as if this were a dream, or a time warp.

  She opened the card.

  Her mother’s scratchy signature had been roughly crossed out and on the blank side was scrawled a new message …

  I could have killed you.

  August 1998

  It had been a week.

  A week when nobody spoke above a whisper, apart from Merry, who cried as often and as loudly as she liked, until a neighbour they called Auntie, but wasn’t, came and took her away, ‘Just until Eileen comes home.’

  When she’d gone, the quiet house got so quiet that the silence itself was nearly a noise.

  Jack and Joy didn’t go to school. It wasn’t as much fun as it sounded. They played cards, or watched cartoons with the sound down, between the silhouettes of policemen who wandered in and out like clumsy ghosts. The head policeman had a moustache as big as a cowboy’s. ‘Call me Ralph,’ he told them, but they called him nothing – just watched him go in and out of the kitchen with papers and pictures, to say secret things to their father.

  When they were hungry, they ate cereal straight from the packet. When they were thirsty, they drank from the tap. When they were tired, they leaned against each other on the sofa like penguins in a snowstorm and slept awkward, restless sleeps where they dreamed of hot, dusty tarmac and of nobody stopping.

  Nobody getting involved.

  Now and then, their father would look up as if he had just remembered them and say, ‘Are you two all right?’ and Jack and Joy would both nod furiously, because he was very busy with the police and with the papers, and because if they said they were not all right, maybe another Auntie they didn’t even know would come and take them away like Merry.

  The newspapers came through the door every morning in a series of thuds, like dead birds falling out of the sky and on to the mat.

  Every paper, every day.

  Their father sat at the kitchen table, obsessively reading and rereading every word anyone knew or had guessed about his wife’s disappearance – bent close to the pages to glean more meaning, his lips moving and his fingers darkening with newsprint. He wouldn’t throw a single paper away in case he’d missed something, and kept every copy in a pile that grew shockingly fast.

  Jack and Joy weren’t supposed to read the papers, but they sneaked a peek now and then when their father was upstairs, discovering in random snatches that the search for their mother was still going on and that the police were looking for clues but not finding any.

  Uncle Bill came from Ireland, with his ugly wife, Una. She pretended to like children, while he sat in the kitchen and watched their father heave piles of papers from one side of the room to the other, pointing at pages, explaining his theory of what might have happened to his wife.

  Theories.

  He had several and Jack was sick of hearing them. All were relayed in shaky little word-bursts not at all like his father’s man-voice. And all involved a mistake, a misunderstanding, a miscommunication that would seem obvious once Eileen came home and explained where she’d been all this time, and everything would be all right.

  Jack hummed loudly so he didn’t have to hear his father sounding so pathetic.

  ‘Shut up,’ said Joy.

  Jack hummed louder.

  They couldn’t go outside because of all the reporters who knocked on the door and stood on the corner near the pub, or sat in cars parked up and down the street.

  Waiting.

  ‘What are they waiting for?’ said Joy, as they played cards on her bedroom carpet.

  ‘I don’t know,’ said Jack, although he thought he did – and thought she must too.

  But she got off the carpet and opened the bedroom window and shouted down at them, ‘What are you waiting for?’

  Nobody told her. But the next day her picture was on the front of all the papers that came through the door.

  The headline was ‘ABANDONED JOY’.

  It tortured Jack.

  Maybe his mother really had abandoned them on the hard shoulder. Maybe he was too noisy and Joy was too irritating and Merry was too shitty for her to take any more. Maybe she’d never even called for help from the orange phone. Maybe she’d just got sick of him and Joy bickering in the back, and had pulled over and walked round the bend, and stuck out her thumb and hitched a ride to a whole new life. A richer husband, a better car, and the new baby, who would be getting all the toys and hugs instead of him and Joy and Merry.

  If he tried hard enough for long enough, Jack could get angry enough not to care if his mother ever came home.

  But even at those times, he secretly wished that she would.

  Three Years Later

  Catherine sat with the phone in her hand until morning.

  Twice she had dialled Adam’s number and twice she had hung up before it could ring.

  Once she had started to call the police, but never reached the third nine.

  Now she just sat on the edge of the bed, with Chips pressed against her thigh for warmth.

  She was desperate to hear Adam’s voice. Had run through their conversation in her head a hundred times in the past few hours.

  ‘Hello?’ he’d say gruffly, and she’d say a
small hello, and then she’d burst into tears.

  She knew she would, however hard she tried not to. Just thinking of it made her well up. And then his voice would change to that soft one she knew so well … ‘Catherine? …’ – the way it had when she’d announced she was pregnant. He’d been so happy! He’d immediately made her lie, giggling and protesting, on the sofa with tea, toast and the remote control, while he’d rushed out and bought chicken soup and multivitamins and all the things that a new baby might need from an all-night garage. These had included a pack of disposable nappies, age 12–18 months, six jars of Heinz banana pudding, and a remote-controlled train that blew bubbles from its stack. Two days later he’d signed up for a St John Ambulance course in Baby First Aid, and had traded in his Golf for a repulsive pea-green Volvo with Side Impact Protection System and automatic child locks …

  She couldn’t tell him.

  Couldn’t tell him that while he’d done everything in his power to protect her and the baby, she’d bumbled about the house, making silly threats, with only a vase to defend herself and their unborn child against a knife-wielding invader.

  That she’d let in!

  She’d left the bathroom window open so that Chips wouldn’t bother her if he wanted to go out, even though Adam had told her not to.

  But it’s so hot! her brain always whined when he said it. And it’s so small and so high! Nobody could get in there.

  But somebody had got in. The air freshener had been knocked on to its side and – if she cocked her head right – she could see a smudged footprint on the white-tiled sill. Piecing it together in the long dark hours, Catherine guessed the burglar had got in there and headed straight downstairs, where he’d collected the obvious things and unlocked the back door to make sure he wouldn’t be trapped.

  Then he’d come back upstairs …

  He must have been right behind her while she was standing at the top of the stairs, waving the vase and shouting empty threats.

  Catherine shivered.

  She hadn’t been brave, she’d been reckless. She could see that now.

 

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