The 8:04 is almost deserted. The windows are open and the air is cool after yesterdayâs storm. Megan has been missing for around 133 hours, and I feel better than I have in months. When I looked at myself in the mirror this morning, I could see the difference in my face: my skin is clearer, my eyes brighter. I feel lighter. Iâm sure I havenât actually lost an ounce, but I donât feel encumbered. I feel like myselfâthe myself I used to be.
Thereâs been no word from Scott. I scoured the Internet and there was no news of an arrest, either, so I imagine he just ignored my email. Iâm disappointed, but I suppose it was to be expected. Gaskill rang this morning, just as I was leaving the house. He asked me whether I would be able to come by the station today. I was terrified for a moment, but then I heard him say in his quiet, mild tone that he just wanted me to look at a couple of pictures. I asked him whether Scott Hipwell had been arrested.
âNo one has been arrested, Ms. Watson,â he said.
âBut the man, the one whoâs under caution . . . ?â
âIâm not at liberty to say.â
His manner of speaking is so calming, so reassuring, it makes me like him again.
I spent yesterday evening sitting on the sofa in jogging bottoms and a T-shirt, making lists of things to do, possible strategies. For example, I could hang around Witney station at rush hour, wait until I see the red-haired man from Saturday night again. I could invite him for a drink and see where it leads, whether he saw anything, what he knows about that night. The danger is that I might see Anna or Tom, they would report me and I would get into trouble (more trouble) with the police. The other danger is that I might make myself vulnerable. I still have the trace of an argument in my headâI may have physical evidence of it on my scalp and lip. What if this is the man who hurt me? The fact that he smiled and waved doesnât mean anything, he could be a psychopath for all I know. But I canât see him as a psychopath. I canât explain it, but I warm to him.
I could contact Scott again. But I need to give him a reason to talk to me, and Iâm worried that whatever I saw will make me look like a madwoman. He might even think I have something to do with Meganâs disappearance, he could report me to the police. I could end up in real trouble.
I could try hypnosis. Iâm pretty sure it wonât help me remember anything, but Iâm curious about it anyway. It canât hurt, can it?
I was still sitting there making notes and going over the news stories Iâd printed out when Cathy came home. Sheâd been to the cinema with Damien. She was obviously pleasantly surprised to find me sober, but she was wary, too, because we havenât really spoken since the police came round on Tuesday. I told her that I hadnât had a drink for three days, and she gave me a hug.
âIâm so glad youâre getting yourself back to normal!â she chirruped, as though she knows what my baseline is.
âThat thing with the police,â I said, âit was a misunderstanding. Thereâs no problem with me and Tom, and I donât know anything about that missing girl. You donât have to worry about it.â She gave me another hug and made us both a cup of tea. I thought about taking advantage of the good will Iâd engendered and telling her about the job situation, but I didnât want to spoil her evening.
She was still in a good mood with me this morning. She hugged me again as I was getting ready to leave the house.
âIâm so pleased for you, Rach,â she said. âGetting yourself sorted. Youâve had me worried.â Then she told me that she was going to spend the weekend at Damienâs, and the first thing I thought was that Iâm going to get home tonight and have a drink without anyone judging me.
The bitter tang of quinine, thatâs what I love about a cold gin and tonic. Tonic water should be by Schweppes and it should come out of a glass bottle, not a plastic one. These premixed things arenât right at all, but needs must. I know I shouldnât be doing this, but Iâve been building up to it all day. Itâs not just the anticipation of solitude, though, itâs the excitement, the adrenaline. Iâm buzzing, my skin is tingling. Iâve had a good day.
I spent an hour alone with Detective Inspector Gaskill this morning. I was taken in to see him straightaway when I arrived at the station. We sat in his office, not in the interview room this time. He offered me coffee, and when I accepted I was surprised to find that he got up and made it for me himself. He had a kettle and some Nescafé on top of a fridge in the corner of the office. He apologized for not having sugar.
I liked being in his company. I liked watching his hands moveâhe isnât expressive, but he moves things around a lot. I hadnât noticed this before because in the interview room there wasnât much for him to move around. In his office he constantly altered the position of his coffee mug, his stapler, a jar of pens, he shuffled papers into neater piles. He has large hands and long fingers with neatly manicured nails. No rings.
It felt different this morning. I didnât feel like a suspect, someone he was trying to catch out. I felt useful. I felt most useful when he took one of his folders and laid it in front of me, showing me a series of photographs. Scott Hipwell, three men Iâd never seen before, and then B.
I wasnât sure at first. I stared at the picture, trying to conjure up the image of the man I saw with her that day, his head bent as he stooped to embrace her.
âThatâs him,â I said. âI think thatâs him.â
âYouâre not sure?â
âI think thatâs him.â
He withdrew the picture and scrutinized it himself for a moment. âYou saw them kissing, thatâs what you said? Last Friday, was it? A week ago?â
âYes, thatâs right. Friday morning. They were outside, in the garden.â
âAnd thereâs no way you could have misinterpreted what you saw? It wasnât a hug, say, or a . . . a platonic kind of kiss?â
âNo, it wasnât. It was a proper kiss. It was . . . romantic.â
I thought I saw his lips flicker then, as though he were about to smile.
âWho is he?â I asked Gaskill. âIs he . . . Do you think sheâs with him?â He didnât reply, just shook his head a little. âIs this . . . Have I helped? Have I been helpful at all?â
âYes, Ms. Watson. Youâve been helpful. Thank you for coming in.â
We shook hands, and for a second he placed his left hand on my right shoulder lightly, and I wanted to turn and kiss it. Itâs been a while since anyone touched me with anything approaching tenderness. Well, apart from Cathy.
Gaskill ushered me out of the door and into the main, open-plan part of the office. There were perhaps a dozen police officers in there. One or two shot me sideways glances, there might have been a flicker of interest or disdain, I couldnât be sure. We walked through the office and into the corridor and then I saw him walking towards me, with Riley at his side: Scott Hipwell. He was coming through the main entrance. His head was down, but I knew right away that it was him. He looked up and nodded an acknowledgment to Gaskill, then he glanced at me. For just a second our eyes met and I could swear that he recognized me. I thought of that morning when I saw him on the terrace, when he was looking down at the track, when I could feel him looking at me. We passed each other in the corridor. He was so close to me I could have touched himâhe was beautiful in the flesh, hollowed out and coiled like a spring, nervous energy radiating off him. As I got to the main hallway I turned to look at him, sure I could feel his eyes on me, but when I looked back it was Riley who was watching me.
I took the train into London and went to the library. I read every article I could find about the case, but learned nothing more. I looked for hypnotherapists in Ashbury, but didnât take it any furtherâitâs expensive and itâs unclear whether it actually helps with memory recovery. But reading the stories of those who claimed that they had recovered memories through hypnotherapy, I realized that I was more afraid of success than failure. Iâm afraid not just of what I might learn about that Saturday night, but so much more. Iâm not sure I could bear to relive the stupid, awful things Iâve done, to hear the words I said in spite, to remember the look on Tomâs face as I said them. Iâm too afraid to venture into that darkness.
I thought about sending Scott another email, but thereâs really no need. The morningâs meeting with Detective Gaskill proved to me that the police are taking me seriously. I have no further role to play, I have to accept that now. And I can feel at least that I may have helped, because I cannot believe it could be a coincidence that Megan disappeared the day after I saw her with that man.
With a joyful click, fizz, I open the second can of G&T and realize, with a rush, that I havenât thought about Tom all day. Until now, anyway. Iâve been thinking about Scott, about Gaskill, about B, about the man on the train. Tom has been relegated to fifth place. I sip my drink and feel that at last I have something to celebrate. I know that Iâm going to be better, that Iâm going to be happy. It wonât be long.
I never learn. I wake with a crushing sensation of wrongness, of shame, and I know immediately that Iâve done something stupid. I go through my awful, achingly familiar ritual of trying to remember exactly what I did. I sent an email. Thatâs what it was.
At some point last night, Tom got promoted back up the list of men I think about, and I sent him an email. My laptop is on the floor next to my bed; it sits there, a squat, accusatory presence. I step over it as I get up to go to the bathroom. I drink water directly from the tap, giving myself a cursory glance in the mirror.
I donât look well. Still, three days off isnât bad, and Iâll start again today. I stand in the shower for ages, gradually reducing the water temperature, making it cooler and cooler until itâs properly cold. You canât step directly into a cold stream of water, itâs too shocking, too brutal, but if you get there gradually, you hardly notice it; itâs like boiling a frog in reverse. The cool water soothes my skin; it dulls the burning pain of the cuts on my head and above my eye.
I take my laptop downstairs and make a cup of tea. Thereâs a chance, a faint one, that I wrote an email to Tom and didnât send it. I take a deep breath and open my Gmail account. Iâm relieved to see I have no messages. But when I click on the Sent folder, there it is: I have written to him, he just hasnât replied. Yet. The email was sent just after eleven last night; Iâd been drinking for a good few hours by then. That adrenaline and booze buzz I had earlier on would have been long gone. I click on the message.
Could you please tell your wife to stop lying to the police about me? Pretty low, donât you think, trying to get me into trouble? Telling police Iâm obsessed with her and her ugly brat? She needs to get over herself. Tell her to leave me the fuck alone.
I close my eyes and snap the laptop shut. I am cringing, literally, my entire body folding into itself. I want to be smaller; I want to disappear. Iâm frightened, too, because if Tom decides to show this to the police, I could be in real trouble. If Anna is collecting evidence that I am vindictive and obsessive, this could be a key piece in her dossier. And why did I mention the little girl? What sort of person does that? What sort of person thinks like that? I donât bear her any ill willâI couldnât think badly of a child, any child, and especially not Tomâs child. I donât understand myself; I donât understand the person Iâve become. God, he must hate me.
hate meâthat version of me, anyway, the version who wrote that email last night. She doesnât even feel like me, because I am not like that. I am not hateful.
Am I? I try not to think of the worst days, but the memories crowd into my head at times like this. Another fight, towards the end: waking, post-party, post-blackout, Tom telling me how Iâd been the night before, embarrassing him again, insulting the wife of a colleague of his, shouting at her for flirting with my husband. âI donât want to go anywhere with you anymore,â he told me. âYou ask me why I never invite friends round, why I donât like going to the pub with you anymore. You honestly want to know why? Itâs because of you. Because Iâm ashamed of you.â
I pick up my handbag and my keys. Iâm going to the Londis down the road. I donât care that itâs not yet nine oâclock in the morning, Iâm frightened and I donât want to have to think. If I take some painkillers and have a drink now, I can put myself out, I can sleep all day. Iâll face it later. I get to the front door, my hand poised above the handle, then I stop.
I could apologize. If I apologize right now, I might be able to salvage something. I might be able to persuade him not to show the message to Anna or to the police. It wouldnât be the first time heâd protected me from her.
That day last summer, when I went to Tom and Annaâs, it didnât happen exactly the way I told the police it had. I didnât ring the doorbell, for starters. I wasnât sure what I wantedâIâm still not sure what I intended. I did go down the pathway and over the fence. It was quiet, I couldnât hear anything. I went up to the sliding doors and looked in. Itâs true that Anna was sleeping on the sofa. I didnât call out, to her or to Tom. I didnât want to wake her. The baby wasnât crying, she was fast asleep in her carry-cot at her motherâs side. I picked her up and took her outside as quickly as I could. I remember running with her towards the fence, the baby starting to wake and to grizzle a little. I donât know what I thought I was doing. I wasnât going to hurt her. I got to the fence, holding her tightly against my chest. She was crying properly now, starting to scream. I was bouncing her and shushing her and then I heard another noise, a train coming, and I turned my back to the fence and I saw herâAnnaâhurtling towards me, her mouth open like a gaping wound, her lips moving, but I couldnât hear what she was saying.
She took the child from me and I tried to run away, but I tripped and fell. She was standing over me, screaming at me, she told me to stay put or sheâd call the police. She rang Tom and he came home and sat with her in the living room. She was crying hysterically, she still wanted to phone the police, she wanted to have me arrested for kidnapping. Tom calmed her down, he begged her to let it go, to let me go. He saved me from her. Afterwards he drove me home, and when he dropped me off he took my hand. I thought it was a gesture of kindness, of reassurance, but he squeezed tighter and tighter and tighter until I cried out, and his face was red when he told me that he would kill me if I ever did anything to harm his daughter.
I donât know what I intended to do that day. I still donât. At the door, I hesitate, my fingers grasped around the handle. I bite down hard on my lip. I know that if I start drinking now, I will feel better for an hour or two and worse for six or seven. I let go of the handle and walk back into the living room, and I open my laptop again. I have to apologize, I have to beg forgiveness. I log back in to my email account and see that I have one new message. It isnât from Tom. Itâs from Scott Hipwell.
Dear Rachel, Thank you for contacting me. I donât remember Megan mentioning you to me, but she had a lot of gallery regularsâIâm not very good with names. I would like to talk to you about what you know. Please telephone me on 07583 123657 as soon as possible.
Regards, Scott Hipwell For an instant, I imagine that heâs sent the email to the wrong address. This message is intended for someone else. Itâs just the briefest of moments, and then I remember. I remember. Sitting on the sofa, halfway through the second bottle, I realized that I didnât want my part to be over. I wanted to be at the heart of it.
So I wrote to him.
I scroll down from his email to mine.
Dear Scott, Sorry for contacting you again, but I feel itâs important that we talk. Iâm not sure if Megan ever mentioned me to youâIâm a friend from the galleryâI used to live in Witney. I think I have information that would interest you. Please email me back on this address.
Rachel Watson I can feel the heat come to my face, my stomach a pit of acid. Yesterdayâsensible, clearheaded, right-thinkingâI decided I must accept that my part in this story was over. But my better angels lost again, defeated by drink, by the person I am when I drink. Drunk Rachel sees no consequences, she is either excessively expansive and optimistic or wrapped up in hate. She has no past, no future. She exists purely in the moment. Drunk Rachelâwanting to be part of the story, needing a way to persuade Scott to talk to herâshe lied.
lied.
I want to drag knives over my skin, just so that I can feel something other than shame, but Iâm not even brave enough to do that. I start writing to Tom, writing and deleting, writing and deleting, trying to find ways to ask forgiveness for the things I said last night. If I had to write down every transgression for which I should apologize to Tom, I could fill a book.
A week ago, almost exactly a week ago, Megan Hipwell walked out of number fifteen Blenheim Road and disappeared. No one has seen her since. Neither her phone nor her bank cards have been used since Saturday, either. When I read that in a news story earlier today, I started to cry. I am ashamed now of the secret thoughts I had. Megan is not a mystery to be solved, she is not a figure who wanders into the tracking shot at the beginning of a film, beautiful, ethereal, insubstantial. She is not a cipher. She is real.
I am on the train, and Iâm going to her home. Iâm going to meet her husband.
I had to phone him. The damage was done. I couldnât just ignore the emailâhe would tell the police. Wouldnât he? I would, in his position, if a stranger contacted me, claiming to have information, and then disappeared. He might have called the police already; they might be waiting for me when I get there.
Sitting here, in my usual seat, though not on my usual day, I feel as though I am driving off a cliff. It felt the same this morning when I dialled his number, like falling through the dark, not knowing when youâre going to hit the ground. He spoke to me in a low voice, as though there were someone else in the room, someone he didnât want to overhear.
âCan we talk in person?â he asked.
âI . . . no. I donât think so . . .â
âPlease?â
I hesitated just for a moment, and then I agreed.
âCould you come to the house? Not now, my . . . there are people here. This evening?â He gave me the address, which I pretended to note down.
âThank you for contacting me,â he said, and he hung up.
I knew as I was agreeing that it wasnât a good idea. What I know about Scott, from the papers, is almost nothing. What I know from my own observations, I donât know. I donât know anything about Scott. I know things about Jasonâwho, I have to keep reminding myself, doesnât exist. All I know for sureâfor absolutely certainâis that Scottâs wife has been missing for a week. I know that he is probably a suspect. And I know, because I saw that kiss, that he has a motive to kill her. Of course, he might not know that he has a motive, but . . . Oh, Iâve tied myself up in knots thinking about it, but how could I pass up the opportunity to approach that house, the one Iâve observed a hundred times from the trackside, from the street? To walk up to his front door, to go inside, to sit in his kitchen, on his terrace, where they sat, where I watched them?
It was too tempting. Now I sit on the train, my arms wrapped around myself, hands jammed against my sides to stop them from trembling, like an excited child caught up in an adventure. I was so glad to have a purpose that I stopped thinking about the reality. I stopped thinking about Megan.
Iâm thinking about her now. I have to convince Scott that I knew herâa little, not a lot. That way, heâll believe me when I tell him that I saw her with another man. If I admit to lying right away, heâll never trust me. So I try to imagine what it would have been like to drop by the gallery, chat with her over a coffee. Does she drink coffee? We would talk about art, perhaps, or yoga, or our husbands. I donât know anything about art, Iâve never done yoga. I donât have a husband. And she betrayed hers.
I think of the things her real friends said about her:
, , , .
. She made a mistake. It happens. We are none of us perfect.