17
Ilie with my heart pounding as early sunlight soaks through my curtains and over my sheets. I’d been dreaming of Damon, he’d been yelling: Killer’s blood. Murderer. Admit it! I’d been running to get away.
I turn over and stare at one of the photos of Dad beside my bed, see his relaxed, lazy half-smile. Shut my eyes again. But I can’t sleep, not now. So I throw back the covers and sit on the edge of my mattress. What if I get to school and Damon has told everyone what I did? What if Kirsty goes for me again?
I walk over to my desk, flick through Dad’s psych notes, all those bold, typed letters: Sixteen years old . . . running to Shepherd . . . he could relive his flashbacks . . .
It’s too much.
So I pick up Dad’s shirt, bury my face in it. When Dad used to come off tour he’d smell like sweat and rum and another place’s washing powder. Before we sent him off again he’d smell like us and Darkwood. But this shirt just smells of dust; of cold; of something forgotten. I glance towards my window – curtains open on the woods as always. It’s time to go back, and not just to the Leap like yesterday.
I get dressed in jeans and a jumper. In the kitchen I write a note for Mum: Going to school early for a project, back normal time. I even ring the school and tell them I’m unwell. They buy it, course they do. It’s misty and crisp-cold outside our house, winter creeping nearer. I like the bite of it, the way it feels as if my body could snap as I walk the garden path. In the lane I look towards Joe’s house, but no one else, anywhere, is awake, not even him. At the wooden gate, I breathe out and see my breath hesitate too.
‘It could be anyone,’ I remind myself. ‘Someone else who killed her.’
Damon had been so certain yesterday that it wasn’t: everyone thinks your dad’s guilty . . . it’s obvious . . . he’s a monster . . .
I try to focus on the dull thud of my trainers on the path, and on the beech leaves that look like gold sovereigns or foil chocolate coins: try to see their beauty. But like yesterday, I’m still checking for shadows too. I take the pathway that only Dad and I would know as one; it’s more overgrown than I ever remember. Once I would’ve run down it, coat flapping as I leapt tree roots and branches, calling to Dad. Today I’m quiet. It’s not long until I reach the thicket of hawthorn, sculpted like a perfect natural hedge. Beyond it, in that small clearing, I see the slightly raised bit of ground with the leaves and brambles covering it: Dad’s bunker. The only way anyone would know it was here is if they were really, truly looking and if they knew what to look for, but we’d happened upon it by fluke. I get a memory of Dad crouched and whispering: this is our place – a secret just for us. Surely, he would never have brought Ashlee Parker here. It’s another reason why the murder charge doesn’t make sense.
I follow the hawthorn around until I find the small opening. The day we’d found this bunker was the day after Dad had signed up for another deployment out of Darkwood Barracks. Three years ago, four? We’d been walking in the woods to celebrate not having to move house and town, and everything, again. Dad’s eyes had gone wide when he’d seen the edge of the rusted metal lid and realised what was underneath.
‘A bunker?’ He’d moved quickly towards it.
I’d started to ask what a bunker was, then realised it myself from the things Dad had told me from being in the army: a shelter, somewhere to hide from enemies, a place to fight from. ‘Like they have in a war?’ I’d asked.
‘I reckon this one’s just from the threat of war.’
Today I’m expecting the hawthorn hedge to be torn open with police tape flapping across, but it all looks the same as always. I guess the police approached the bunker from the direction that Ashlee came from that night, on that small animal track the other side. Twigs claw at me as I push through the hawthorn and into the clearing. There is still blue and white police tape half buried in the mud, one end flicking like a snake’s tail. It feels colder and quieter here now, full of ghosts: one ghost. I walk across the clearing very slowly, kick at some of the ashes still in the fire pit. Once, Dad would have crouched here with the copper kettle he used to boil water.
‘Tea?’ he’d have said.
But that was in the early days of finding this bunker, back when things were still OK. I get the hugest pang to see this Dad again – to feel honey dribbling down my chin from the crumpets he’d cooked, to taste that smoke and sweetness. But this Dad is even further away than the one in prison. This Dad might never return, and the Dad who got discharged from combat with post-traumatic stress disorder? That Dad hardly ever got the fire going, never made crumpets. He just sat in one corner of the bunker in the dark. I dig my shoe angrily into the ancient ashes. I didn’t come here to remember this stuff. I came to imagine what might have happened that night – how my father ended up carrying Ashlee Parker to our house, how she ended up dead.
Dad’s defence lawyers say the thunderstorm sent Dad into a flashback, that when he’d heard Ashlee Parker in the trees he must have thought she was an enemy soldier creeping up on him, that he was out of the bunker and strangling her in an instant. Dad’s lawyers say this is consistent with his psychological profiling, and that his flashback could have been building for weeks. But Dad was charged with murder, and there are others, like Damon, who say Dad stalked Ashlee and that he wanted to kill her, that it wasn’t an accident at all. Either way, the forensics show that Ashlee was too drunk to struggle.
But Joe and me? We’ve always said it was someone else. Someone the police haven’t found yet. Someone who could still be hiding in these woods: hiding right now. Time’s running out to find them, though. I shiver suddenly as I look out at the trees.
I’d thought Ashlee Parker was a good girl. It’s hard to imagine her stumbling through these woods, even if she had been out celebrating her exam results with the boys earlier – it’s hard to imagine her being so drunk that she’d stumble this far from her shortcut home. To get here from her shortcut, Ashlee would have had to turn right on to a small animal path. She would have had to follow it all the way here. Would she have kept walking that far?
My feet move slower as I get closer to the bunker. I’m thinking about Dad in flashbacks, how sometimes he’d go motionless and stare deep into nothing. How I’d see him patrolling the garden at midnight with a hunting knife, Mum trying to talk him calm again. How, one time, when I’d surprised Dad in the bunker, he’d had me in a headlock before I could even shout. There’d been more than a couple of nights when Mum had slept in with me, when Dad had started smashing things. Once we’d even called the police. Maybe there are cracks in Dad’s brain now, different cracks to the ones Joe and I used to talk about in his game. Dad’s cracks lead to scarier worlds than we could imagine.
With tingles on my spine, I bend to the bunker. Dad’s lawyers said that killing was second nature to Dad, what his mind and muscles were trained for.
‘It’s like instinct to him,’ they’d said.
But Dad could do other things by instinct; he could save things too. And there’s a difference between having a flashback about killing and actually killing, there has to be. None of the papers have reported anything about the Dad who saved things, who freed caught animals from snares and nursed them afterwards, or the Dad who once told the world’s best bedtime stories.
The lid is down over the bunker’s entrance, the camouflage netting still fastened over it. Like this, I could almost believe Dad is waiting inside. I look across to where they say Ashlee died – a few metres away, between here and that small animal path. My skin goes shivery. It was raining on and off that night: hot, summer rain that could hide footprints and evidence, there was the thunderstorm. Someone could have dumped Ashlee here after she had already died, maybe all trace of that could have been washed away. I’d tried to tell the police.
‘What about all the other ex-soldiers?’ I’d said. ‘It’s not only Dad who’s suffered, who has flashbacks, who has PTSD. This is an army town, it’s full of people like this!’
There’s one thing I can’t believe – that Dad is only using his post-traumatic stress disorder as an excuse, as a way to cover up what he really did, as a way to cover up murder.
I start to lift the lid, my arms shaking.
On the day we’d found this bunker, Dad had knelt at this opening; he’d pulled me close so I could look too. I’d been amazed. Under the ground was an entire buried room, just like the earth had swallowed it. Dad had jumped down into its darkness, held his hand out for me to jump too.
‘What if it falls in on us?’ I’d said.
‘It’s solid.’ Dad had pulled me towards him. ‘Anyway, I’m taller than you so it’ll fall on me first.’
I’d jumped into his arms; he’d been strong enough to catch me then. The bunker had smelt like an unused cellar, like things forgotten, like fear. Dad had walked around it, pushing against the walls and seeing how it was made. The roof was curved and ridged like ribs. It had felt like we were in the belly of a beast.
‘There are secret bunkers like this all over the country,’ he’d said. ‘Just in case.’
‘In case what?’
He’d looked at me as he’d thought. ‘In case it all starts again: the invading, fighting. People always need somewhere quiet and safe.’
But this place was more than that, even then. Maybe if I go inside, I’ll be able to make sense of who Dad was that night, what happened.