Klempner - Twenty-Six Years Ago The air is glacial, but although the breeze whips through my hair, Iâm not cold. Instead, invigorated, I feel strong and ready for anything.
Standing by the frozen sea, I watch the wind drawing snow across the ice in a whirling dervish of frozen granules that lash around my feet. And I think of the last time I did this, here, with her.
Valentineâs Day coming up⦠Iâll be back in time.
Get her a presentâ¦
What would she like?
Something regional? She loved Helsinkiâ¦
Some of the local food?
Then I remember her bending over the porcelain, throwing up gravlax and vodka in equal measureâ¦
Maybe notâ¦
Jewellery?
Still persuading her to wear the emeralds I gave herâ¦
A piece of art?
?
?
Perfect.
I head for the town centre, searching for galleries and craft shops, not knowing just what Iâm looking for.
But Iâll know it when I see itâ¦
Most are full of the kind of useless knick-knacks that are met with an âOh, how lovely. You shouldnât have.â greeting, then get pushed to the back of the cupboard: I-Heart-Helsinki fridge-magnets, overpriced chocolates and tee-shirts, dolls in fake Laplander costumes.
Weirdly, some of the gift shops are stocked with mementoes which seem to me completely out of place. Who comes to Helsinki to buy posters of London buses or âNew York They named it twiceâ tee-
shirts?
Am I missing something?
Nopeâ¦
And then, there it is.
Beautifully painted by some local artist with more Js and Ks in the name than English allows: a scene of the frozen sea, painted from almost where I stood only a couple of hours ago with ice grit-blasting my clothes. A couple stand hand-in-hand looking out over a glinting scene of white and blue, and in the distance, a lone figure sits fishing.
The price, like everything in Helsinki, is horrendous, but who cares? Money is nothing. Mitch isâ¦
⦠Mitch.
Padded and carefully gift-wrapped, I tuck the package under my arm and head back for the ferry port.
Time to go homeâ¦
Home?
When did I ever think of home before?
Sheâs waiting.
*****
Michael âHow is she?â
James props himself, both hands knuckled on the kitchen table, head bowed. âThe same. Not good. Iâd say sheâs gotten past denial, but I almost wish sheâd cry⦠Get it out of her system. Instead, she behaves as though sheâs in shock.â
He's mourning the loss of a daughterâ¦
She's panicking over gaining a father...
Both bereftâ¦
â¦
What a fucking mess.
âShock is probably the right wordâ¦â I say. â⦠Discovering she has a psychopath for a parent. Itâs going to take time and support to get her past it.â
He rubs the bridge of his nose, eyes squeezing closed for a moment. âI think,â he says, âpart of the problem is that not knowing much about him, sheâs cooked up some idealised vision of Conners in her imaginationâ¦â
âThe perfect father who never was?â
âAs it turns out, yes.â He rubs at the back of his head. âHow the hell do we deal with this?â
âTime may be the only thing that deals with it. We simply wait for her to come out of her funk.
Howeverâ¦â I raise a forefinger⦠â⦠What we might try is to deal with the practicalities.â
âLike?â
âLike, when did she last have a bath? Or a proper meal?â
âDon't think she's had a bath since we got back. Just sits there wallowing in pizza boxes and boil-in-a-
minute noodles. Iâm happy to cook anything we can get down her, but first, we have to get her attention.â He jerks his chin towards the lounge. âYou want to get in there again? Give it another try? I think this needs your touch.â
I pull up a seat, rock the chair back, cross my ankles up on the table. âNo, I don't think so. Not this time.
On this occasion, I think she needs what you give her.â
His eyes shift to mine. âYou think?â
âYes, I think. Hugs arenât carrying this one. She needs knocking back into reality.â James straightens up, plucks at a lip. âYou might like to know,â I add, âthat I turned on the heating downstairs first thing this morning.â
He Ahhhs in silence, then, âMaybe youâre right.â He stares into nothing for a long second, then, âCome on then. Youâd better be there too but stay in the background if you prefer.â
I follow him through to the lounge. Charlotte sits on the couch, hugging her knees, gazing slack-faced into the fire. She doesnât appear to notice us.
Whatâs she thinking...?
⦠Feelingâ¦.?
Fear?
Loss?
?
?
Humiliation?
James speaks. âCharlotte?â Thereâs no softness in his voice.
She doesnât turn, maintaining her vigil of the flames. âMmmm?â
Ram-rod straight, his arms folded, âI expect you to look at me when I address you.â
She hunches, then turns to face him. âSorry, Master.â
âCome here.â
Charlotte uncrumples from her self-hug to stand, then shuffles across the room to stand before him.
âYes, Master?â But she doesnât meet his eyes. Head low, her fingers wind and twist together, unwind then rewindâ¦
Yes⦠humiliationâ¦
Her hair, unwashed since God-knows-when, hangs in greasy rat-tails and her face is sallow. Clothes are creased, spotted with what look like tomato stains, and sheâs still carrying traces of makeup she put on days ago; mascara gone panda-eyed.
Doesnât smell great eitherâ¦
James squares up to her. âCharlotte, I am your Master. You will behave appropriately when we speak.
Your face lowered in submission is acceptable. Your head hanging in shame is not.â
Her voice chokes. âMasterâ¦â
He takes her by the shoulders, pinning her, almost shaking her. âListen to me, Charlotte. Nothing has changed. Nothing. You are exactly the same person you were a few days ago.â
Still she wonât look at him. âBut Iâm not. Iâ¦â The words choke into a sob.
Finally crying?
Goodâ¦
For Godâs sake let it outâ¦
âThe only thing that is any different is inside your head. You are not Jenny, the child victim. You are Charlotte, the woman who reinvented herself, who knew what she wanted and took on all comers to get it. The woman who took the world by the throat and shook until it gave her what she deserved.â
Sheâs still gulping down sobs. James continues. âCharlotte faced down everything life threw at her. I saw you do it. I saw you auction yourself to the highest bidder; to me; because doing so would take you where you wanted to go. Even though you knew it was dangerous. Even though your memories must have made that an appalling decision for you to take.â Heâs still holding her, jolting her at the shoulders to punctuate his words. And each shake draws a sob.
âI saw you face down the man who terrorised your childhood and who threatened you with assault and gang-rape. And just because that man might be, genetically, your sire⦠I donât say father⦠that does not mean he has any power over you. Klempner has no hold over you unless you give it to him. And you are too strong to let that happen. Do you understand me?â
âJenny didn't have choices, but Charlotte does. And one of those choices is whether or not she lets something that is part of her past control her present and her future.â
She swallows, her sobs subsiding a little.
And now, he grips her chin, forces her face up to meet his. âWhen you and I first met, I wanted you because I admired you. Not just liked you. Not just loved you, although all of that is true. I admired you.
Your courage, your tenacity, that resilient core you have, your refusal to knuckle under. And I will not see you bend at the knee over something that does not matter. If Klempner was the sperm donor to your mother, that does not change who you are or what you are.â
And finally, she looks up to Jamesâ face. His eyes soften at the corners. âJust because Klempner allowed his monster of a father to turn him into a monster doesn't mean that will happen to you. It hasn't happened to you. You made different choices in the past. You will make different choices now.â
She blinks tears then wipes a hand across her eyes. James draws a thumb across the streaks running down her cheeks.
Her voice hollow, âHe said he was sorryâ¦â
James snaps, outrage in his tone. âHe has no right to say that. Sorry? Whatâs different for him to be sorry about? He abused a child. The fact that it turns out he sired that child makes no difference. âSorryâ
isnât good enough. Sorry doesnât even come close to good enough.â
Her head hangs again, her voice small. âHeâs in prison.â
He knocks her chin back up with a finger. âSo Klempnerâs locked up. What of it? Thatâs to punish himâ¦â
Keep your anger under controlâ¦
From behind, I wave my palm down a couple of times.
Cool itâ¦
James scowls at me but moderates his tone, gentler now as he speaks to her.
â⦠And to keep him from doing more damage than he already has. Do you think that gives him any kind of right to salvation? How would a man like that ever earn redemption?â
Her voice is trembling. âI always thought⦠even when it was at its worst⦠I thought that somewhere out there, she must be there. My mother. And sheâd been with my father. With Frank Connersâ¦â
And finally, weâre getting itâ¦
What sheâs thinkingâ¦
Whatâs really upsetting herâ¦
â⦠and they'd have been happy together while he was still alive. Before Klempner murdered him. And there must have been some reason that she left me there. With him. She couldnât have just abandoned me. But if he was my father⦠Klempner⦠Maybe thatâs why she did it. Maybe she was so⦠horrifiedâ¦
that I was his⦠Maybe she simply didnât want me. She just left me with himâ¦â
She raises eyes red-rimmed and swollen, looking first at James, then at me. âDo you think he raped her?â
Is that whatâs bothering her?
She thinks sheâs the child of rapeâ¦?
âNo,â James snaps, his voice decisive. âKlempnerâs admitted to a lot; murder, enslavement, terrorism, but he denied rape. Given his willingness to admit everything else, Iâm inclined to believe him. I donât think he forced your mother.â
She uncoils a bit, weeping again, but now it has the sound of release⦠I move to stand behind her, wrap my arms around her. She shudders, her weight relaxing back into my arms.
âYou're right.â Her voice is still shaky, but some calm is returning. âYouâre right. With everything else, he would have no reason to lie.â
James stands back, letting me hold her. âThatâs better. I know youâre unhappy, but at least weâre talking about it now.â He nods me to the cabinet. âMichael, why donât you open a bottle of wine. I think weâll share a drink and then youâ¦â He plants a long forefinger on Charlotteâs chest⦠â⦠are going to have a long soak in the bath. Michael or I will join you if you wish. Or you can be by yourself if you prefer.
After thatâ¦â
âAfter that, Master?â
âAfter that, we are going to share a mealâ¦â
âIâm not very hungry, Masterâ¦â
âSo, we will share a small meal. Now, sit by the fire, get warm and drink your wine.â
She submits, sits and returns to staring into the embers. James lays a hand on my shoulder, murmuring, âCan you keep her company for a while. I want to get the basement ready.â
âOf course. What are you planning on doing?â
âIâm going to take her to the edge then tip her over.â
âDon't overdo it.â
âThat's what you're there for. â
*****