The Sleeper (28 page)

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Authors: Emily Barr

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #General

BOOK: The Sleeper
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‘Shh. Please stop! Please.’

I did not want him to be saying these things. He put a hand on my shoulder and I turned to look at him, to tell him again to shut up. He had been my friend, and now he was close to ruining it.

His face was close to mine, and then closer. He was so much taller than I was that he had to lean right down to reach me. I should have pulled away, but at the crucial moment, I didn’t, and his mouth was on mine.

I had forgotten completely what it felt like. Kissing a new person was so strange, and assaulted me with so vicious a slap of newness that I joined in with it, suddenly curious. It was like being thrown into icy water when you are very hot. It was horrible and astonishing and wonderful, all at once. This was real. It was happening. I had left Laurie in Cornwall, and I was kissing the detective. I was kissing another man.

As soon as that thought solidified in my mind, I pushed him away, and ducked under his arm.

‘I can’t,’ I said. ‘I just can’t, Alex. I have a boyfriend. You know that. I’m sorry, but I just really, really can’t.’

He held me by the upper arm and turned me around, gently, to face him.

‘Iris,’ he said. ‘Come back. Iris. Look. I’m not really sure how to say this, but … I know about Laurie. I know. It’s OK.’

I tried to get away, but he tightened his grip.

‘You don’t,’ I informed him. ‘You don’t understand a thing.’

It was freezing. I felt drunk and sick and I wanted to be away, alone again.

‘I do. I’m so sorry, Iris. I really am, but I know. I looked him up when you told me his name, but I knew already, because after I met you at the Finches’ house I went home and looked for everything I could find about you. And then I discovered that this friend of mine, Dave, an old colleague – he was in the Met at the time of the accident. He was at the scene. So I know what happened. I’m so sorry, but Iris, you are amazing. And I will of course back right off. But I want you to face the world, and that’s what you’re starting to do. I want to help you.’

‘No.’

‘Iris?’

‘No.’

‘Iris – Laurie Madaki is dead. You know that. I know it. He was knocked off his bike five years ago. And he was killed instantly, pronounced dead at the scene. I know you haven’t felt able to let him go …’

The moment he loosened his grip, I ducked away while he was still speaking. He had spoken the unsayable words and I could never forgive him. I ran around Aldwych to the bottom of Kingsway, and set off along Fleet Street heading for St Paul’s, not caring about the people staring. I hoped he would not chase me, and after a while I managed to hail a taxi and get back to the hotel, where I fell, still sobbing, into a drunken, heartbroken sleep.

chapter twenty-three

The day I met him, I knew it would happen. I knew we had to be together for ever, and that I would do everything in my power to achieve that. I knew that if I ever had to be without him, my life would be in tatters. I knew there was nobody else for me. If I could not be with Laurie, I would never be with anyone. I had clung on to him far, far longer than I should have done, but I was going to have to let him go.

Everything Alex had said was true. The cracks had been getting wider for more than a year, and finally they were wide open. The house I had built from denial and delusion had crumbled around me.

I lay half asleep in my hotel bed, the morning light shining through the net curtains as I had forgotten to close the thick drapes, and forced myself to revisit the day I met him. Until that moment I had been perfectly independent, with a job at a publishing house, a rented flat, friends and family and a life that was contented by anyone’s standards. I never had quite enough money, and I perpetually felt that I should have been making plans for the future, but I was fine.

Then, at a friend’s birthday party in a bar, I saw him. We were both twenty-seven, and the last thing I was expecting was to meet the love of my life. I nearly didn’t go: I’d had a long day at work and I just wanted to get back to my flat and run a bath. The only reason I forced myself to put some lipstick on and head into Covent Garden was because I had Alice’s birthday present with me, a bottle of champagne in a box that I had just managed to squeeze into my biggest handbag, and I didn’t want either to leave it at work or to cart it home with me.

I was at the bar buying a bottle of house wine when I realised he was standing next to me. Until that moment I had never believed in love at first sight.

‘Hi,’ he said. He was tall, dark, with soft brown eyes, and he was wearing a nice suit.

‘Hello.’ I could not think of anything else to say.

‘Are you with the birthday party?’

We both turned and looked at the table. I did not know Alice well – we had been at university together and became friends again when we both found ourselves working in London – and her close friends had made a far bigger fuss of her birthday than I had been expecting. Helium balloons were moored on the backs of chairs, and pieces of wrapping paper and discarded envelopes littered the floor in our corner.

‘I am,’ I admitted. ‘But I didn’t realise it was going to be quite that full-on.’

‘You’re not the birthday girl, then?’

‘No. That’s Alice.’ I pointed her out. She had long blond hair and was wearing a huge badge announcing her status.

‘Oh yes. She’ll be the one with “Birthday Girl” written on her.’

‘It’s a clue.’

I wanted to say something else, but I could not think of one single thing. I wanted to keep talking to him, but without letting him realise that I felt I already knew him, that I wanted to abandon the party and come and sit with him. I was being ridiculous. I knew I was. He was probably with his girlfriend, for a start.

‘So,’ I tried. ‘You’re not with a party, then?’

He smiled. ‘No. I’m just here for a quiet drink. At least it was quiet until you lot turned up.’

‘Yeah. Bars in the middle of London at six thirty p.m. being where you go if you’re after a haven of solitude.’

‘I know.’

I had to ask. I said it quickly. ‘Are you here with your girlfriend?’

‘No such person. What about you? Boyfriend?’

‘Nope.’

‘Fancy doing a runner and getting some food?’

‘Yes.’

We didn’t even know each other’s names, but we stepped out on to Long Acre and wandered along together until we decided, randomly, to go to an Indian restaurant next to the Royal Opera House. I knew nothing about him at all, but I knew, without a doubt, that we belonged together. Astonishingly, he knew it too, and we were at one another’s side from that moment onwards. Everything worked between us, the way I had known it would the moment our eyes first met.

Our last few years, though, had been a pale shadow of our real relationship. The Laurie of back then would not have wanted me to be living like this. He would have been horrified to see it. If things had happened the other way round he would have moved on, met someone else.

If he, the original Laurie, could have seen me with Alex last night, I thought he would have been pleased. Sad, but pleased. Five years had passed since we were properly together. They had been five long, sad years of pretending. The spectral Laurie I had created had turned into a demanding, grouchy figure: he was not the man I had loved at all.

It was a crisp winter’s morning outside. My phone needed charging but I did not do it: I knew Alex would have tried to contact me and I could not face him yet. I felt deservedly terrible, physically and mentally. Something was pounding inside my skull. I got up early and did what I always did when I woke up sad: I went out. I was on my own. I had been on my own for a long, long time.

The blast of cold air did me good, and I was pleased to find a café on the corner and to slump into a rattling metal chair next to a radiator. I ordered a double espresso, a freshly squeezed orange juice and a vegetarian breakfast, and tried to read a free newspaper instead of thinking.

The world looked different. I was weighted down with grief, but, in a small way, liberated. I was on my own, but that meant I could go and look for Lara. In fact, I would go to Bangkok and see what happened when I got there.

I had not been drunk for five years. For a week after the accident I was horrifically drunk every night. I never wanted to be sober, ever again.

I tried as hard as I possibly could to think of Laurie at home in Budock, waiting for me. It did not work. For the first time, that cottage was not our house. It was where I lived, with my cats. I lived alone, with cats. I did not have a boyfriend, because he was dead. I suddenly hoped the cats were all right: later I would call the neighbours and check. They had a cat flap. They would have been able, I hoped, to fend for themselves for the few days I had been away. I would get the neighbours to start feeding them.

I cast around, desperate to focus on something. The floor was black and white, chequered. It was a bit of a posh hotel transplanted to a little corner café. You could have played chess on it, with the right-sized pieces. You could even have done it with little pieces. They would have looked strange, on their enormous squares, but that would have made it an interesting game. It would have been like playing on a normal chessboard with tiny little pawns and a miniature queen.

My breakfast arrived and I forced a smile at the waitress and anchored my thoughts in the present. Today I was going to ambush Leon Campion. I started eating nervously, half hungry, half nauseous.

I never drank more than a small glass of red wine. It was a decision I had made for my own sanity (if sanity was a word that could be applied to a person like me), and I knew now that it was the right one. There were flashes of memory, jumping up and assaulting me again and again. Kissing Alex had been electric. I was not sure if I could ever bear to see him again. But he knew the truth, and had known it all along, and he had still wanted to spend time with me. He still wanted to kiss me.

‘Do you mind if I plug my phone in?’ I asked the waitress next time she passed.

‘Sure,’ she said. ‘There’s a socket over there.’

The texts arrived as soon as it started charging. There were several from Alex, which I did not read, and one from an unfamiliar number. I took that one first.

Hi Iris
, it said.
This is Sam Finch. Just wondering how you’re doing and if you’d maybe come over 2day. It would be gud to CU. Also there’s something I want U2C
.

His phone rang five times, and just as I was composing the voicemail in my head, he picked it up.

‘Iris. Hey.’

‘Hi, Sam. How are you doing?’

There was a long pause.

‘Crap. Fucking hell. You know what? I never used to swear. Now I do it all the time. Even when we failed at IVF and everything, I never needed to swear about it because I had my wife. Or so I thought.’

‘Oh, Sam.’ I tried to think of a good thing to say. The fact was, there was nothing. ‘It’s awful for you. I can’t imagine.’

‘I wish she’d killed me instead of him.’

‘She didn’t kill him! She didn’t. You know Lara – she …’

His voice was harsh. ‘That’s the thing, though. I don’t fucking know Lara. Nor do you. You can spend as much time as you like saying “but Lara was so lovely and she can’t have killed anyone”, but you didn’t know her. You thought you did. I thought I did. I thought we were happy. More than happy – I thought we were absolutely rock solid. I thought we understood each other. I thought she was doing the London thing to pay off the cards so we’d be ready to start the adoption process, from abroad. I’d been looking into the logistics of Nepal, because she claimed she’d always had a yearning for the place, and the only time she’d been really up for the idea of adopting was when she thought about finding a baby up there, in the mountains. I was going to make it work for her. It literally never occurred to me that she was living with another bloke most of the week. I mean, what a mug. What a stupid fucking mug. And that’s barely the start of it.’

It was impossible to say the right thing, because there wasn’t one.

‘I’m so sorry, Sam.’

‘I know.’

‘Had she been to Nepal before?’

‘No, never. I was going to take her, to look at orphanages.’

‘She’d been to Asia, though.’

‘Yeah, Thailand and shit. That’s what I wanted you to see.’

I frowned, not following. ‘What did you want me to see?’

He paused. ‘Oh, don’t worry. Forget it. It was only if you were going to come over. Are you?’

‘Can’t. I’m in London. My family live here, you know.’

‘You said you didn’t see your family.’

‘It’s complicated. What is it?’

‘Oh. Don’t worry. I started going through her things. It was doing my head in, having it all there. My brother, Ben, he was on at me to chuck it all in a skip, and then him and Mum finally went back to Sussex, which meant I knew I had to deal with it somehow. So I went through all her stuff – I’ve been up all night, doing it. Piling it into bags and shit. She ain’t coming back, after all. And I found this old book, that I never knew she had.’

‘Old book? What sort of an old book?’

My phone was barely charged enough for this conversation. I shifted my chair close to the socket, and plugged it back in.

‘It’s a diary,’ he said. ‘An old diary of Lara’s. From when she was in Thailand. I flicked through it. Couldn’t really bear to read it. There’s some weird shit in there. That’s why I thought I’d show it to you. So you could have a read and then we could give it to the police or whatever. You’re the only person I could think of, who would read it for me.’

‘Sam. What sort of weird shit? Is it about drugs?’

‘Did you know that about her? Yet another thing she never thought to mention to me.’

‘Not at all. Sam – can I read it? Could you – well, would you send it to me? I know you should hand it over to the police, but I can take it to them here when I’ve read it.’

He said nothing for a while.

‘Why not,’ he agreed, in the end. ‘What the fuck. You’re more together than I am. If I post it, it’ll get me out of the house. Going to the post office, I mean. A little errand to run. I’ll walk through town and back again. See who stares at me. Give me an address.’

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