her. But I know Charlie is listening and I want her to forget her ordeal rather than have it brought up again.
‘She had a formal caution last time,’ says Constable Dwyer. ‘This time the matter will be referred to the CPS.’
Mr Singh seems happier. His nose has stopped bleeding. I fancy punching it.
‘So what happens now?’
‘A court summons will be sent by post. If it doesn’t arrive, she’s in the clear.’
I look at the driver. ‘What if I offered to pay your medical bills ... and compensation?’
His head rocks and he points to his nose.
Dwyer recovers a remnant of his former warmth. ‘It may not go any further, sir. Take your daughter home.’
Charlie picks up her schoolbag and I take Emma’s hand. Pushing through the doors, we descend the steps and follow the glow of streetlights to the car. Charlie drags her feet as though carrying bricks instead of books. Emma has fallen into a worried silence.
‘Why didn’t you call me?’ I ask.
Charlie doesn’t raise her head. ‘Don’t blame me. If that dickhead wasn’t so uptight . . .’
‘Mind your language.’
Emma is quick. ‘What’s a dickhead?’
‘Nobody. I’m talking to Charlie.’
We sit in silence for half a mile. Charlie finally answers.
‘I called the hospital but they wouldn’t tell me anything about Sienna.’
‘So you decided to catch a cab?’
‘I didn’t realise how much it was going to cost.’
Charlie is animated now, marshalling her arguments, defending herself.
‘There were all these stories going round school. They’re saying that Sienna killed her Dad, that she’s been arrested, that she’s tried to commit suicide.’
‘We don’t know what happened yet.’
She takes a deep breath. ‘I saw Sienna when she came to the cottage. I saw the blood.’
Emma is listening intently from her booster seat. How much does she understand?
‘I don’t think we should talk about this now.’
Charlie won’t let it go. ‘You’re treating me like a child.’
‘Maybe because you’re acting like one. You’ve been arrested. God knows what your mother will say.’
‘Don’t tell her!’
‘It’s too late. She called me.’
Charlie groans. ‘Now she’ll get all sad and she’ll spend days looking at me like she’s a seal pup about to be hit with a club.’
‘She’s not that bad.’
‘Yes she is. She’s sad enough already.’
Julianne is standing in the doorway of the cottage as I park the car. She opens her arms for Emma, who runs up the path. Charlie takes longer to retrieve her bag and open the car door.
‘We still need to talk about this.’
‘Whatever.’
I hate that word - ‘whatever’. She’s telling me I don’t understand. I’ll never understand. I’m too old. I’m too stupid. I have no taste in clothes or music or friends. I don’t own the right language to talk to her. I don’t dread the same things or dream the same dreams.
I’m caught in that in-between place, unsure whether I can be a father or a friend to Charlie, knowing I can’t be both.
Right now she is like a separate nation state seeking independence, wanting her own government, laws and budget. Whenever I try to avoid conflict, choosing diplomacy instead of hostility, she masses her troops at the border, accusing me of spying or sabotaging her life.
She walks up the path and steps around Julianne, going straight upstairs to her room.
Julianne calls out to me. ‘Did she say why?’
‘Sienna.’
‘We’ll talk about it later.’
The door closes and I sit on the low brick wall across the lane, beneath the overhanging branches. Gazing at the cottage, I can sometimes make out silhouettes behind the curtains. Right now Julianne is getting Emma ready for bed. Next will come the brushing of teeth, the reading of bedtime stories, a kiss, a hug, a thirsty summons, and one final hug before the light is turned down.
I know the script. I know the stage directions. I no longer have a walk-on part.
8
It’s six thirty-five. Still dark outside. Sometimes I wake like this, aware of a sound where no sound belongs. The terrace is old and full of inexplicable creaks and groans, as if complaining of being neglected. Footsteps in the attic. Branches scratching against glass.
I used to sleep like a bear, but not any more. Now I lie awake taking an inventory of my tics and twitches, mapping my body to see what territory I have surrendered to Mr Parkinson since yesterday.
My left leg and arm are twitching. Using my right hand, I pick up a small white pill and take a sip of water, raising my head from the pillow to swallow. The blue pill comes next.
After twenty minutes I take another inventory. The twitches have gone and Mr Parkinson has been kept at bay for another few hours. Never vanquished. Till death us do part.
At seven o’clock I turn on the radio. The news in scolding tones:
The second bulletin:
Gunsmoke can hear me coming down the stairs. He sleeps outside in the laundry, an arrangement he resents because the cat sits on the windowsill almost goading him.
‘A short walk today,’ I tell him.
I have work to do - a lecture at the university. Today my psychology students will learn why people follow orders and act contrary to their consciences. Think of the Holocaust, Abu Ghraib, black prisons and Guantanamo Bay . . .
I make mental notes as I walk across Haydon Field. I shall tell them about Stanley Milgram, an assistant professor of psychology at Yale University, who in 1963 conducted one of the most famous experiments of them all. He organised a group of volunteers to play the roles of teachers and students and then set up an ‘electric shock’ machine. The students had to memorise a pair of words and were ‘punished’ for any wrong answer with a shock from the machine.
