She can hear them laughing like day-trippers, smoking around the war memorial down below her flat window, though the curtains are drawn. The curtains have been drawn against them since they gathered yesterday.
First there were only a few, but they flew down like birds on crusts, vying with one another around the narrow blue door to the side of Barclays – her front door which has until now seemed invisible. ‘Helena Reed!’ they called, as if she might open a window and invite them up. When she pulled aside a net to look, they locked onto her, nudging one another, shouting to her and setting their zoom lenses for a grainy shot, so she had quickly retreated. She sat all day yesterday, and all last night, listening to the answer machine click and rewind with each new appeal from strangers luring her with false intimacy – ‘Look, this must be a difficult time, we can help’ – while she chewed on the skin at the edge of her thumbnail. Wondering who’d released her name.
But then, she’s been waiting for this to happen, knowing it would happen, since Crimewatch. After slamming into those two detectives outside Dr Young’s, she’s been a prisoner of her thoughts. Three days, four long nights. Would the police check who she had been visiting in Newnham? Would they find out she was seeing a shrink and assume all manner of mental instability from that? Would they talk to Dr Young and would he mention her terrorised thoughts, and what on earth would the police infer? Would they inform Dr Young that she was Edith’s lover, to which he would say, baffled, ‘Well, she never told me that,’ and to all of them she would appear madder and more inscrutable, a dissembler of the facts about Edith’s disappearance?
Thursday afternoon they sent someone round – ‘to sit with her’, the officer said. A babysitter. Helena had moved round this person in her flat, trying to look natural, but inside she was gnawed at by the sensation of being observed in her own home – they were watching her – so she said, ‘You go, I’m fine, I don’t need looking after. In fact, I’m going to stay with friends.’ Helena smiled, her hand on her open front door. The officer/babysitter said, ‘If you’re sure?’ but Helena could see she was glad. She’d received some furtive call about childcare arrangements and she couldn’t get away fast enough.
Friday morning, Saturday morning, she ran out early to check the papers, dreading but assuming she would be named, and surprised to find no mention of her apart from in the usual timeline descriptions. So yesterday afternoon, when the crows first gathered at the bottom of her stairs, it was as if the inevitable had taken place.
She stared and stared at the only card she had from the police. DS Manon Bradshaw. The other one – the kindly chap she’d crashed into who’d promised to protect her – his card must’ve fallen out of her pocket in her rush to get home that day. DS Bradshaw appeared not to be available. Dr Young’s practice number clicked through to a machine. She couldn’t think what message to leave so she hung up.
This morning, around 10 a.m., there’d been a noticeable quietening outside and she braved a glance through a crack in the curtain. They seemed to have dispersed, perhaps to a greasy spoon for a Sunday fry-up, leaving one or two hapless representatives to keep watch at her front door. She chanced it, out of the need for bread and milk, running down the back staircase – concrete and municipal, the air hung with the smell of stale cigarettes – which brought her via a door with metal push-bar, out by the bins to the rear of Barclays. The cold and rain drove welcome pins into her hands and cheeks as she ran, clasping her hood, to the nearest newsagent, but she was brought up short by the grey box-grid outside and eight images of herself and Edith, flapping in the wind.
Best friend was missing Edith’s lover
‘Lover’ was with Edith on night she vanished
Girls were lovers
It was like looking at images of a very familiar stranger. She noticed how young she looked, though she feels anything but young. She wasn’t nearly as fat as she assumed; rather slender, in fact. She tried to see herself as the readers of those rags might see her: unstable, predatory, sexually loose. There was a gap – the outside and the inside, and sometimes it was very wide indeed. Wide enough for you to fall through.
She’d given no thought to how she would get back in and soon she was set upon, enveloped in bodies and voices, the smells of strangers, as she struggled for her key.
‘Helena, over here!’ they shouted as she barged the black mass of jackets, arms, and shoulders, careful never to meet a face. Someone pushed a card in her hand – a blonde woman, she thinks – but she was scrunching her eyes shut, trying to get through them, trying to get her key in the door without dropping the milk. This woman had got up very close and said in her ear, ‘We can tell your side of the story. Here’s my card.’
Up the stairs, she’d slammed her inner front door and leant her head back against it with her eyes closed. Scheming lesbian Helena Reed. Jealous lover Helena Reed. Murdering Helena Reed. Edith – cloaked in all the innocence of the un-dead, can do no wrong – lured into Helena’s crimson bed of joy. Now Helena would always be the vamp, in whatever job interview, PhD viva, applying for research funding, meeting a new man, joining a GP practice. Someone somewhere would look up from their desk and say, ‘Helena Reed? From Huntingdon? Weren’t you a friend of that missing girl?’ And the word ‘friend’ would drip with all its sly connotations.
It was typical of Edith, blithe Edith, to leave her with all of this, while Helena did all the worrying. It had been like that from day one, the day Helena had knocked on the door across the halls at Corpus Christi. Edith shouted ‘Come in!’ and there she was, standing on her bed, wearing faded Levi 501s, knocking a nail into the wall to hang up a Modigliani print. On the desk in the window was a vase of anemones, reds and purples and whites, like rich jewels. ‘From my mum,’ Edith said, breathless, still with her back to Helena. ‘Tea?’
Edith was breezy yet determined. She was set on her own course – like the move to Huntingdon – and you could accompany her or you could jog on. Edith, certain; Helena, anxious, following on. She sees how insubstantial she is next to Edith’s luminous features, her charisma. And she hates herself for having been their lapdog. All those Saturday nights watching films on their Netflix account, Sunday lunches in their kitchen, Edith lying on the sofa, reading with her head on Helena’s lap, Will sat on the floor sipping wine. Helena, the only child in audience to the couple.
She wonders, sat here in her airless lounge while she listens to them laughing and talking on the street below, if she should call her parents. But what if they, too, have crows on the front step, imprisoned together, and she would have to hear it and know she was the cause? When will it end, being trapped like this, with the curtains drawn? And if she ever ventured out into the world, what would she find? She’d called the MIT offices yesterday evening, having no responses again from the sergeant’s phone, and she’d got through to a duty person, Constable Monique something, who said she’d ‘look into it’, but nothing had come of it.
‘There’s quite a lot of people outside.’
‘And what did you say your name was again, madam?’
No point calling today. Sunday was bound to be worse, and what could they do anyway? The story was out now and it couldn’t be taken back in. Her own phones – mobile and landline – were filled to the brim with intrusions from people who shouldn’t have her number at all, hectoring and bullying her. She couldn’t bear to play them back, so she switched them all off.
During the night, by about 1 a.m., the crows had flown off (staying at the George Hotel, probably). Another chance: she pictured herself catching a plane to Rio de Janeiro, then another to Manaus, then a boat to where the Rio Negro meets the Solimões River – the Meeting of Waters, she’d always wanted to see that – and then deep into the tributaries of the Amazon. The world is so big and so beautiful and she’d hardly begun to explore it.
She wandered room to room, planning her escape. Where was her passport? What would she wear? Somehow, when she turned around, it was 7 a.m. and the crows were back on her doorstep and she didn’t know how she’d get past them, let alone to the Amazon basin. She found herself staring at the back of the bedroom door – and the hook where her dressing gown hangs.
She can’t see a way clear. She longs for someone – Edith, if she’s honest – to throw a coat over her head and usher her through it all. She stands before the nets in the lounge and the tears flow out of her in a great outpouring. She cries out, though it is silent, her lips cracked. She will never get out, she will never see the Amazon river. She will never be free or happy. And the girl she loves has gone.