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I shook my head.

Emma unwrapped a small square bar of Turkish Delight and let the shiny pink wrapper fall onto the tiles. She broke it in two and handed the bigger half to Chloe. She spoke and chewed at the same time.

‘You can have my fags,’ Emma said. ‘I’ll nick a packet off my brother. He went to Ibiza last month and he’s got a massive carton of duty-free under his bed. He’ll never know.’

Chloe brightened.

‘And relax about Carl. You don’t need to phone him. He’ll ring you himself before too long. Just keep your phone on you. Put it on vibrate and keep it in your knickers or something.’ Chloe laughed and I could see that it was working – that Emma was doing my job for me and getting Chloe to be reasonable. It wasn’t fair.

‘He doesn’t know your parents know – doesn’t even know you’ve been in hospital. Give him a few days. He’ll ring, and then you can update him and he’ll get you some money. I’ll go and get it off him, or you can send Lola if you want.’

Chloe sighed. ‘He better had,’ she said irritably, and kicked her foot at the selection box. It toppled and fell onto the floor. ‘Pick that up, will you?’

I knew she was talking to me and not Emma so I picked it up and slotted it back onto the table between their feet and tried to think of something to say. Even I could work out that telling her I’d seen Carl the night before would be a bad idea.

‘At least you’re not pregnant,’ I said. ‘Carl will be glad about that, won’t he?’

Chloe shook her head and pursed her lips at me. ‘For fuck’s sake,’ she said, under her breath, ‘can’t you keep your mouth shut about anything? Tell you something, and I might as well broadcast it on the news.’

I glanced at Emma, who was frowning.

‘Forget it,’ Chloe said, ‘just sod off home, will you? I never asked you to come round. I’m supposed to be resting. I’ll see you when I get back to school.’

I stood up and turned round, making my way slowly through the arch into the living room and towards the front door – walking as slowly as I could to give Chloe a chance to change her mind, to laugh and say it was a joke. I hadn’t even had the chance to take my coat off. She could have called me back in then and there and I’d have laughed along with her and Emma and pretended to find it funny. The only noise I could hear as I went out into the street and clicked the front door shut behind me was the noise of their voices, low and murmuring, talking about something I wasn’t allowed to hear.

Chapter 18

Donald and I had been watching videos. Piles of matches and cards from an abandoned game of Crazy Eights littered the coffee table. Barbara was somewhere else – out in her coat and headscarf hacking at the garden, or upstairs beating bed linen into submission. My heart wasn’t in the game that night.

Donald and me had a routine, after school. Watch his Blockbusters videos in the afternoons, play cards. Drink Lemsips in front of the news and wait for our tea to be ready. I was late because I’d stopped at Chloe’s house first, and then had to wash my face in cold water so he wouldn’t see that I’d been crying on the way home. Even Crazy Eights, which was a card game I enjoyed and regularly beat Donald at, hadn’t held my attention for long.

‘Turn it off now, Lola, the news will be on.’

‘Dad? Why don’t we just carry on with this?’

‘Lola, come on.’ He poked at the remote control before giving up and tossing it into my lap, ‘you know I can’t figure these things out.’

I didn’t want to watch the news – knowing that it would probably be about Wilson. But Donald wouldn’t hear of it. The news was routine for him – when it was finished he knew that it was time for us to decamp into the kitchen for our tea. He liked knowing the names of all the members of the cabinet and tested his memory by making lists of the countries which were at war. He often quizzed me and Barbara on current affairs, tutting when we always got the answers wrong. I knelt in front of the video player and pressed the eject button. The tape slid out into my hands and the news flashed onto the screen.

‘Dad?’ My voice sounded thin and trembly.

Donald shushed me. ‘He’s made the reconstruction,’ he said, appreciatively. ‘He said he was going to.’

‘Not the police?’

Donald shook his head. ‘Too slow,’ he said, ‘Terry wanted to take matters into his own hands. Get things sorted. Look.’

Terry introduced the latest, which was, as Donald had anticipated, a reconstruction of Wilson’s last movements. The posters had worked and the police had found two girls who’d spoken to Wilson on Boxing Day and they’d got together with a cameraman and a few extras and made a film with them in it.

Melanie and Dawn were the same age as me and Chloe but at a different school. They’d gone to the park in the morning and they’d seen Wilson. Perhaps Terry had found an outlet for his frustration over not getting any of the flasher’s victims on his programme. Melanie and Dawn weren’t real victims of anything, but they were girls, and fairly photogenic so they’d do until he could get hold of the real thing. He had them in the studio with him, watching themselves star in the short film. They were in their school uniforms: cherry-coloured pullovers, navy blue skirts and solemn, made-up faces. Terry praised them lavishly, Fiona scowled and the two girls squirmed.

It should have been a relief. According to Terry and from then on everyone else, these two girls were the last to see Wilson and not us. They’d been drunk on a bottle of stolen Advocaat they’d smuggled out to drink on one of the wooden benches near the fountain.

But it wasn’t a relief because it wasn’t true. They’d seen Wilson in the late morning, when they’d been in Avenham Park. We hadn’t seen him until the afternoon and across the town in the car park of Cuerden Valley nature reserve.

‘I’ve seen the posters about him,’ Donald said, ‘they’ve got them pasted up in the shopping centre.’

‘Yes,’ I said, ‘they’re everywhere. The council takes them down at night and his mum and dad put them back up in the morning.’

‘That must be a full-time job.’

‘They want him to come home.’

I recognised the man who they’d hired to be Wilson as the owner of the video shop near our school. He had the same fine brown hair thinning into wisps at the temples and he was the same height as Wilson. I watched as the man shambled around the park and walked aimlessly around the fountain throwing twigs and dried out conker cases onto the frozen cap on the water.

It wasn’t working. It should have worked. The details were right. The North Face jacket was ostentatiously identical to the one Wilson had worn: the camera’s eye hovered over the cuffs and collar while Terry provided a voiceover that called our attention to the distinctive white stitching of the design. The video man was doing his best to look like Wilson by letting the skin around his eyes and jowls go slack and pretending to be baffled by a litter bin. He tried to limp, as if this would be shorthand or code for Wilson’s disability. He was all wrong. He wasn’t Wilson and he wasn’t a professional actor, so he was still himself and carrying with him the associations everyone who knew about him would have.

He was a leering, lecherous, nasty little man. He was oily and his whole shop smelled like Dettol and curry and when we walked home from school we’d see him through the window, sitting behind the counter on a ripped and taped-up and ripped again bar-stool, the stuffing coming out behind him and dangling like droppings. He’d perch, and drink hundreds of tins of pop, and spend all day reading the plot summaries on the back of the porn videos and looking up the names of the actresses in a film encyclopaedia.