I was stunned. At what I had done? Or his reaction to it? I cannot say. It felt only that, for a moment, I had been somewhere else and a new Christine had stepped in, taken me over completely, and then vanished. I was not horrified, though. Not even disappointed. I was glad. Glad that, because of her, something had happened.

He looked at me. ‘I’m sorry,’ he said, and I couldn’t tell what he felt. Anger? Pity? Regret? Any of those things might be possible. Perhaps the expression I saw was a mixture of all three. He was still holding my hands and he put them back in my lap, then let them go. ‘I’m sorry, Christine,’ he said again.

I didn’t know what to say. What to do. I was silent, about to apologize myself, and then I said, ‘Ed. I love you.’

He closed his eyes. ‘Christine,’ he began, ‘I—’

‘Please,’ I said. ‘Don’t. Don’t tell me you haven’t felt it too.’ He frowned. ‘You know you love me.’

‘Christine,’ he said. ‘Please, you’re … you’re …’

‘What?’ I said. ‘Crazy?’

‘No. Confused. You’re confused.’

I laughed. ‘“Confused”?’

‘Yes,’ he said. ‘You don’t love me. You remember we talked about confabulation? It’s quite common with people who—’

‘Oh,’ I said. ‘I know. I remember. With people who have no memory. Is that what you think this is?’

‘It’s possible. Perfectly possible.’

I hated him then. He thought he knew everything, knew me better than I did myself. All he really knew was my condition.

‘I’m not stupid,’ I said.

‘I know. I know that, Christine. I don’t think you are. I just think—’

‘You must love me.’

He sighed. I was frustrating him, now. Wearing his patience thin.

‘Why else have you been coming here so much? Driving me around London. Do you do that with all your patients?’

‘Yes,’ he began, then, ‘well, no. Not exactly.’

‘Then why?’

‘I’ve been trying to help you,’ he said.

‘Is that all?’

A pause, then he said, ‘Well, no. I’ve been writing a paper, too. A scientific paper—’

‘Studying me?’

‘Sort of,’ he said.

I tried to push what he was saying from my mind. ‘But you didn’t tell me that Ben and I were separated,’ I said. ‘Why? Why didn’t you do that?’

‘I didn’t know!’ he said. ‘No other reason. It wasn’t in your file and Ben didn’t tell me. I didn’t know!’ I was silent. He moved, as if to take my hands again, then stopped, scratching his forehead instead. ‘I would have told you. If I’d known.’

‘Would you?’ I said. ‘Like you told me about Adam?’

He looked hurt. ‘Christine, please.’

‘Why did you keep him from me?’ I said. ‘You’re as bad as Ben!’

‘Jesus, Christine,’ he said. ‘We’ve been through this. I did what I thought was best. Ben wasn’t telling you about Adam. I couldn’t tell you. It wouldn’t be right. It wouldn’t have been ethical.’

I laughed. A hollow, snorting laugh. ‘Ethical? What is ethical about keeping him from me?’

‘It was down to Ben to decide whether to tell you about Adam. Not me. I suggested you keep a journal, though. So that you could write down what you’d learned. I thought that was for the best.’

‘How about the attack, then? You were quite happy for me to go on thinking I’d been involved in a hit-and-run accident!’

‘Christine, no. No, I wasn’t. Ben told you that. I didn’t know that’s what he was saying to you. How could I?’

I thought of what I had seen. Orange-scented baths and hands around my throat. The feeling that I couldn’t breathe. The man whose face remained a mystery. I began to cry. ‘Then why did you tell me at all?’ I said.

He spoke kindly, but still didn’t touch me. ‘I didn’t,’ he said. ‘I didn’t tell you that you were attacked. That, you remembered yourself.’ He was right, of course. I felt angry. ‘Christine, I—’

‘I want you to leave,’ I said. ‘Please.’ I was crying solidly now, yet felt curiously alive. I didn’t know what had just happened, could barely even remember what had been said, but it felt as if some awful thing had lifted, some dam within me finally burst.

‘Please,’ I said. ‘Please go.’

I expected him to argue. To beg me to let him stay. I almost wanted him to. But he did not. ‘If you’re sure?’ he said.

‘Yes,’ I whispered. I turned towards the window, determined to not look at him again. Not today, which for me will mean that by tomorrow I might as well never have seen him at all. He stood up, walked to the door.

‘I’ll call you,’ he said. ‘Tomorrow? Your treatment. I—’

‘Just go,’ I said. ‘Please.’

He said nothing else. I heard the door close behind him.

I sat there for a while. A few minutes? Hours? I don’t know. My heart raced. I felt empty, and alone. Eventually I went upstairs. In the bathroom I looked at the photos. My husband. Ben. What have I done? I have nothing, now. No one I can trust. No one I can turn to. My mind raced, out of control. I kept thinking of what Dr Nash had said. He loves you. He’s trying to protect you.

Protect me from what, though? From the truth. I thought the truth more important than anything. Maybe I am wrong.

I went into the study. Ben has lied about so much, there is nothing he has told me I can believe. Nothing at all.

I knew what I had to do. I had to know. Know that I could trust him, about this one thing.

The box was where I had described it, locked, as I suspected. I didn’t get upset.

I began to look. I told myself I wouldn’t stop until I found the key. I searched the office first. The other drawers, the desk. I did it methodically. I replaced everything where I had found it, and when I had finished I went into the bedroom. I looked in the drawers, digging beneath his underwear, the handkerchiefs, neatly ironed, the vests and T-shirts. Nothing, and nothing in the drawers I used, either.

There were drawers in the bedside tables. I intended to look in each, starting with Ben’s side of the bed. I opened the top drawer and rooted through its contents — pens, a watch that had stopped, a blister pack of pills I didn’t recognize — before opening the bottom drawer.

At first I thought it was empty. I closed it gently, but as I did so I heard a tiny rattle, metal scraping on wood. I opened it again, my heart already beating fast.

A key.

I sat on the floor with the open box. It was full. Photographs, mostly. Of Adam, and me. Some looked familiar — I guess the ones he had shown me before — but many not. I found his birth certificate, the letter he had written to Santa Claus. Handfuls of photos of him as a baby — crawling, grinning, towards the camera, feeding at my breast, sleeping, wrapped in a green blanket — and as he grew. The photo of him dressed as a cowboy, the school photographs, the tricycle. They were all here, exactly as I had described them in my journal.

I lifted them all out and spread them across the floor, looking at each one. There were photographs of Ben and me, too; one in which we are in front of the Houses of Parliament, both smiling, but standing awkwardly, as if neither of us knows the other exists; another from our wedding, a formal shot. We are in front of a church under an overcast sky. We look happy, ridiculously so, and even more so in one that must have been taken later, on our honeymoon. We are in a restaurant, smiling, leaning in over a half-eaten meal, our faces flushed with love and the bite of the sun.

I stared at the photograph. Relief began to flood me. I stared at the photograph of the woman sitting there

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