I smile and nod, touched by his kindness.
Something shifts as I realize that not only have you taken Lizzie’s life and shattered ours, not only have you turned Lizzie from an ordinary person into a victim, but you have twisted my identity as well. Warped it. For ever more, for most people I will be Ruth, the woman whose daughter was killed. The mother of a murder victim. That’s what people will see first and above everything else; that’s how people will talk about me, will name me.
What is even more sickening is that it’s a role I’ve embraced in these last four years. Because of my hatred, my thirst for revenge, my greed to see you suffer. My obsession. I have allowed myself to disappear into the role of bereaved parent.
And that is partly why I’m writing to you. I want to be more than that. Break that typecasting.
They say no man is an island, they say we’re a construct of all the roles we play, but I am so very, very tired of this one.
You have brought such bitterness to my door. Filled my veins with such violent animosity and my heart with such hate that I can barely recognize myself any more. I want to find the old Ruth, the Ruth who cursed her screaming baby and rowed with her teenage daughter, the bibliophile who fell in love and copied out poems and learnt to grow vegetables and had a penchant for soul music and chocolate and liked cats.
You’ve done your level best to kill her too, but she’s not dead yet, not completely.
Ruth
17 Brinks Avenue
Manchester
M19 6FX
Six days. What’s that in hours? I work it out. One hundred and forty-four. It feels longer. Although time is a pretty nebulous concept, the hours and days bleed together. How many seconds? How many heartbeats?
Had you any idea the police were closing in on you? Or as the days rolled by did you breathe easily, and dare to hope you’d got away with it?
Florence has not touched the doll since she brought it home. She keeps trying to cuddle Milky, hauling the poor animal up with her arms under his stomach. He’s placid, won’t scratch or bite her, but he thrashes about and runs off.
Florence and I are alone. Florence is at the table eating some beans on toast. Kay has a meeting with the investigation team, Jack’s having a rest. We are still stumbling through our lives. I’m sorting through some clean clothes left neglected in the basket. Even this simple task seems to require a Herculean effort.
One of my socks, old grey wool, has a hole in the toe. No point in keeping it. I stick my hand in, wiggle my finger through the hole, put on a funny fluting voice. ‘Hello.’ I make the sock bow.
‘What is it?’ says Florence.
‘I don’t know. Maybe . . .’ I gather the fabric and narrow it into a windsock shape, ‘maybe it’s a Clanger.’
‘What’s a Clanger?’
‘They were on the telly a long time ago. Lived on a planet with a soup dragon. They made a noise like this.’ I combine a hum and a whistle.
‘I want a Clanger,’ she says. ‘No – I want a sock cat. No – a kitten.’
‘A kitten, eh? What would it need?’
‘Some ears.’ She scoops up the last of her beans.
‘And whiskers?’
‘Yes, and paws.’
My sewing skills are basic. ‘Paws might be tricky. Let’s see . . .’
The sewing box yields enough black felt scraps to furnish two triangular ears and two round eyes, Florence chooses a brown leather button for a nose.
‘Look at Milky’s eyes,’ I say. Milky is sitting on the chair by the radiator. Florence kneels up in front of him and stares. Milky yawns, affecting disdain, but then his ears flatten and I can see he’s preparing for a rapid exit if she makes a lunge. ‘Yellow bits,’ she says.
‘What shape?’
She sketches something unreadable with her hands.
‘Great.’
I have some yellow cotton and use that to stitch a vertical line on the eyes. Plaited brown wool furnishes a tail. There’s nothing stiff enough for the whiskers, so we make do with more lengths of the wool, which hang down like a droopy moustache, but Florence seems happy.
‘She needs insides,’ Florence says. ‘She’s all flat.’
‘If we leave it empty, it can be a puppet,’ I say.
‘I don’t want a puppet,’ she scowls. ‘Not a puppet!’ Suddenly cross.
‘Okay.’
A couple of J Cloths, torn into strips, serve as stuffing. I sew the top of the sock shut, biting the thread to cut it. ‘There we go.’
Florence bounces the kitten along the table.
‘What will you call it?’
‘Kitten.’
‘Okay, highly original.’
‘No, Kit Kat,’ she says.
‘Right.’
‘No . . .’ She purses her mouth and furrows her brow as she thinks. ‘Matilda.’
Where’s this come from? Has she had the book? Seen the film? The little girl who is neglected and bullied at home and school but who finds secret powers and blossoms in the love and care of her teacher.
‘Yes,’ she says firmly, ‘Matilda.’
The door opens and I look up, expecting Lizzie, come to collect Florence. Tired from her journey but glad to be working, with stories from her day.
I have forgotten, which means I have to remember anew. A lance in my heart. Swallowing the cry in my mouth, I fight to smile at Jack.
Florence is in the living room with Kay, CBBC on the television. There is talk of the BBC moving to Manchester. Jack hopes it will happen; it might provide more work for him.
‘We should think about getting her back to school,’ I say.
‘I don’t think she’ll wear it,’ Jack says.
‘She’ll have to sooner or later, unless you plan to home-school her.’
He gives me a sceptical look.
‘A phased return,’ I say. ‘We can work something out with the staff. Who is it, Mrs Bradshaw?’
‘Yes.’
‘Even if we have to go and sit in with her for a month. You’ve no work lined up?’ I ask him.
‘No,’ he says, ‘I’ve not had an audition since I went up for
The History Boys.
I should speak to Veronica, tell her the situation.’
Veronica is his agent. ‘She’ll have heard,’ I say. ‘There’s time.’
‘I should get a phone,’ he says. Like Bert the teddy bear, Jack’s phone was in the house and is off limits for now.
I get a glimpse of all the practicalities Jack will have to face, rearranging work and childcare around Florence, sorting out the house: he will want to move, surely, find somewhere new, neutral, not tainted with Lizzie’s murder. And then all their financial affairs and all the connections of Lizzie’s. All the organizations and individuals she’s linked with. All the arrangements that will need cancelling.
‘Use mine whenever you need,’ I remind him. ‘And if I can help with anything, the school stuff, or looking after Florence when you go back to work, I can reduce my hours. Anything.’
We decide that Florence can go without a bath. I supervise her getting ready for bed and read her book, then she asks for Jack and he stays with her. Downstairs I nod off myself and come to with a start when he returns.
It is windy, a storm is forecast. In bed, I lie with the duvet tight around me and listen to the wind, to the bumping of the gate and the sudden rattle of something along the alley at the back when a stronger gust blows through.
It used to be one thing I relished, being warm and cosy inside while outside the wind prowled and roared. Reminders of ghost stories and adventure yarns.
It was a dark and stormy night.
That has changed.
I’m cold, chilled deep inside and I no longer feel safe.
Ruth
17 Brinks Avenue
Manchester
M19 6FX
I wake early. The storm is buffeting the house, heavy rain lashes against the window. Milky, unsettled, starts to wash himself, then freezes, cowering. He won’t even come on to my lap for a stroke.
Pain in my chest again. Perhaps I need to go back to the GP. I’m fearful that it’s something serious. No, ‘serious’ is the wrong word. Something physical, mechanical, a blockage or a clot, a leak or a tear. That my heart is broken, not just that I am heartbroken.
Florence and Jack come down together. She has woken him. Before, she used to be happy entertaining herself for a while, able to understand that Mummy and Daddy didn’t want to get up before seven, but now Jack says that as soon as she’s awake she rouses him.
Jack makes her cereal and goes to have a shower.
I consider whether to broach returning to school with her but decide it’s best to let Jack take the lead on that. The line between supporting and interfering is very hard to see in the circumstances. But she’s his daughter and he is the sole parent now, and I trust him to judge how best to handle things with her.
There’s a crashing sound from outside and Florence flinches. I feel myself wince in sympathy.
Peering out of the window, I can see that the planter I fixed up has come away from the wall. And the trellis further down is loose, moving with each fresh blast.
‘It’s just one of Nana’s pots,’ I tell her. ‘You want to see?’
Non-committal, she sits for a few seconds longer then comes over, and I lift her up and show her. ‘See, all the soil’s spilt.’
‘And the flowers,’ she says.
‘They were old anyway. Past their best.’ Verbena and lobelia from the summer.
‘You’re old.’
My mind does gymnastics trying to work out what hers is thinking. That I might just collapse too? If my world feels unsteady, how much more fragile must Florence’s be?
‘Not really,’ I say. ‘I’m not past my best. Fit as a fiddle, me. Fit as a flea.’
A ghost of a smile.
Jack makes some toast and I put the kettle on again.
Kay arrives, commenting about the weather and the disruption. There’s been an accident on the M60 with a lorry gone over. Trees have blocked roads and some of the rail networks have been closed where the overhead lines are down.
Almost immediately her phone goes and she leaves us to take the call in the living room.
I’m mixing a banana milkshake for Florence, whizzing the fruit with milk and a spoonful of honey, when there is a knocking at the front door, just audible above the liquidizer.
Florence has her hands pointedly over her ears.
‘Let Kay get it,’ I say to Jack when he moves to go.
We hear voices, male, more than one. Not Tony, I can tell his voice anywhere.
I pour the frothy yellow drink into a plastic cup.
‘Can I have a straw?’ Florence says.
‘The bits might clog it up,’ I say, ‘but you can try.’
The visitors come into the kitchen with Kay. Police officers. Jackets wet with raindrops.
‘Mr Jack Tennyson,’ one of them says.
‘Yes,’ Jack says, looking to see what they want.
They both hold up their ID cards. And the one who spoke, plump, fair-haired, introduces them. PC Curtis and PC Simmons.
They must have news! Have they found you? I lean against the worktop to steady myself, intent on whatever is coming next. I’m waiting, eager, poised, holding my breath. The men move further into the room past Florence to Jack at the end of the table. Then PC Curtis speaks again. ‘Jack Tennyson, I am arresting you on suspicion of the murder of Lizzie Tennyson, on the twelfth of September 2009 . . .’
Shock jolts through me, stealing my breath.
Jack jumps to his feet, his face white with shock, shouting, ‘No!’
Florence flies to reach him, knocking her drink over as she drops from her chair.
‘. . . you do not have to say anything . . .’ Jack lunges along the side of the table, knocking over a chair. PC Simmons charges after him, blocks him in. Jack wrestles, still trying to get away. But Simmons has a set of handcuffs and he grabs for Jack’s arms.
PC Curtis keeps talking as he moves after Jack, ‘. . . but anything you do say may be given in evidence and . . .’
Jack is struggling, shouting, ‘This is crazy! I didn’t do it. I didn’t do anything.’ Lunging to try and break free. He kicks out with his legs, knocking a chair over, wrenches away but Simmons holds him fast.
Florence is screaming, ‘Daddy! Daddy!’ She darts under the table to her father.
My heart hammers in my chest and I feel the pain needle through it, sharp as a knife.
‘. . . may harm your defence when used in court.’
They have Jack’s hands behind his back. His face has gone rigid, his eyes blazing.
Florence is screaming and hitting at PC Simmons, trying to reach her father. She squeezes past him and grabs Jack’s leg.
Kay calls out, ‘PC Simmons, please!’
‘Let her say goodbye.’ My voice cuts through the mayhem. I stare at PC Simmons, the one who has cuffed him. ‘Look at her, she’s four years old. Let her say goodbye.’
‘Do it,’ says Kay.
His eyes flicker at me. Jack is still shaking his head, his face flooded with colour now.
I move round until I’m by Florence and lift her up so she’s level with Jack. She throws her skinny arms around his neck, still sobbing, ‘Daddy. Daddy.’
‘I’ll be back soon, sweetheart,’ Jack says, his voice hoarse. ‘Just a silly mix-up.’
I have to pull her away, use my hands to release hers, peeling her off him, and she falls silent. Suddenly there’s just the uneven shake of her breath.
The men lead Jack out. The room stinks of banana and male sweat.
The truth settles on me heavy as lead, the ground is wobbly beneath my feet. I edge on to Jack’s empty chair and sit Florence on my knee and stare vacantly at the walls. Outside a car starts and there’s a splatter of rain on the windows behind me.
The truth pours through me like water on sand, soaking in instantly. In my belly and my guts, in my arms, my thighs, from the nape of my neck to the soles of my feet. I’m aware of Florence, her weight on my legs, one hand gripping my little finger, the heat from her body against my stomach.
The truth solidifies inside me, granite-hard yet raw as flesh, quick as lightning and deep as space. Fathomless. I taste it in the roof of my mouth, hear it in the tick of my blood, see it in Kay’s eyes, in the image of Jack trying to run, in the way Lizzie’s hand caught the firelight. I smell it in the stink of body odour and ripe fruit. I feel it in my scalp and my bowels and the marrow of my bones.
You are not Broderick Litton.