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He dropped her ankle and stepped back but the ice cracked again – a slab as big as a table tilting upwards under his feet and throwing him on top of her. I fluttered my fingers inside my pockets, feeling Carl’s lighter and the shiny side of the Polaroids. Something in the bottom snagged against my fingertips and under my nails. Something gritty, small and hard. It could have been bits of burned Donald left over from the sprinkling at the crematorium.

Chloe went right down – I saw the top of her head as she bobbed up again between Carl’s arms. Her hair was wet and flat against her scalp. Carl’s head was submerged, perhaps knocking the ice, and his flailing elbow hit her chin and forced her head back. She screamed in a breath and it was as if they were fighting. They were both under and it was quiet and I waited until they didn’t come back up again. I put on my mittens and waited until the surface of the water was still again before I decided to go home.

Chloe and Carl didn’t stay there long. The water might have frozen over their heads like a thin film in the dark to cover them up for a while, but in the morning the sun shone and up they came. Joggers and dog walkers emerged on the paths on cue to discover them, wet heads bobbing in the water like corks. It was Valentine’s Day, and the long-awaited thaw had begun, and I bet it was a right production to get them out and into their matching pair of ambulances.

I was sleeping when they were found. I never saw any of it.

I have imagined it. Hair plastered to their skulls. The blueness of their skin and fingernails. I had already imagined it for Wilson: transferring the details of the imagery to them was quick and involuntary.

When Terry reported it on the news that afternoon, I was eating a Marmite sandwich and looking at the first Valentine’s Day card I had ever received. Anonymous, handmade, and sent in a jiffy bag along with a mix tape of songs I had never heard of. I was examining the writing, trying to picture what the scrawl on Shanks’s whiteboard in the classroom would look like if he was writing properly, in a card like this, with a pen.

I knew the report was going to be about Chloe as soon as I saw Terry’s tie. He didn’t skip to his chair, or do a run and slide over the shiny floor of the studio, as he sometimes did. But he’d walked soberly to his seat before and the news had been no worse than another fuel shortage, or a local carpeting firm going bust, or one more assault with a broken bottle and a bike chain in a pub car park. As I say, it was the tie. What other than a death – a pair of deaths, although it was Chloe’s that was important, because she was the blonde – would have induced Terry to wear a black tie on Valentine’s Day when Ladbrokes had him down at five to one for the ‘kiss me quick, untie me slowly’ design that Woolworths had been carrying with him in mind since Burns Night?

Barbara was in her bedroom. It didn’t matter how close to the television I sat: no one was going to stop me. The Marmite sandwich was my first and only meal that day – it was like I didn’t have a mother anymore. The Christmas tree was long gone, brown and bare and out in the garden, leaning against the back wall, but the odd needle from it was still caught in the carpet and something pricked the palm of the hand that I leaned on.

They showed her school photograph, with her hair Frenchplaited and tiny sapphire studs in her ears. Taken at the end of the summer, while she still had a tan and before she started getting thin.

I hardly listened to the bulletin. I could tell from the way his eyes were moving that Terry was reading from the autocue. He said polished, careful things like ‘local treasure’ and ‘tragic winter flower’ and ‘the heart-shattering sorrow of her parents, who will remember this season of love and romance with heavy hearts for as long as they both shall live’.

They showed pictures of the school, and the car park outside the nature reserve, and the pond. It looked the same. You couldn’t see the hole in the ice – just the trees, and lots of cars, and blue and white tape stretched between the bench and the railings.

Eventually, I realised what Terry was saying. Not only the words, but the implication of them. Chloe, apparently, had faded in front of her parents’ eyes after they had banned her from seeing Carl. Carl, who was not twenty-three, as we’d thought, but twenty-nine (and mourned by his mother who was in a wheelchair, and talked about how he always took her to the supermarket in his car, no matter what, and because of that, Terry made him out to be a hero), had given away a pair of expensive brown-envelope-coloured boots, and an almost new pair of jeans to a friend. And then he and Chloe had held hands and drank Cava and walked out onto the ice towards hypothermia, serious injury and certain death, because of their great and inordinate (which is not a word you hear on the news very much) love for each other.

A Valentine’s Day Suicide Pact. And the thing is, I thought, licking Marmite off my thumb and considering a banana for afters, that’s exactly the sort of overblown, influenced-by-television, schmaltzy gesture Chloe would make. The people who knew her were shocked, and they were sad, but they weren’t surprised.

It was a special extended programme: they cut into Family Fortunes and Terry Best interviewed various experts – including Patsy the school nurse. She tipsily gave five helpful hints to the parents of teenage girls, which were displayed on the screen behind her in courier font as she spoke. She seemed to think Chloe had died of an eating disorder because she talked a lot about the importance of making sure young girls didn’t feel self-conscious about their developing breasts and mistake the natural swellings (she sketched a shape in the air in front of her sweater) for unwanted weight gain. That was never Chloe’s problem.

I didn’t wonder about anything. I was waiting for something else to happen, something worse, or more important, but every time my mind skated forward to think about what it might be, a light went out and everything went dark and I couldn’t think about anything. The sensation was new and peculiar, but it has never quite left me.

I stared and I watched my television and I didn’t say anything to anyone.

It wasn’t long after that the interviews started. The photographs. The way they wanted me and Emma to tell them everything. I knew what they wanted to hear. We helped them make Chloe into who she is today.

When the spring came in proper the headmaster got someone to bulldoze up the cement courtyard at the front of the school and filled it with the yellow Juliet roses. The town has never stunk like it did in the late spring of 1998. Loads of people planted them and although now, ten years later, they are a lot less fashionable, you can still smell them occasionally.

In my dreams now it is always night and their soaked heads break the surface again and again. They want to float and my hands and arms are frozen with trying to push them back under.

Chapter 30

Emma and I are opening the drawers in the tallboy in my bedroom. She’s sitting on the carpet next to me. I can smell her trainers and see the pattern on her socks out of the corner of my eye as I jiggle the sticky bottom drawer open. The grain of the carpet digs into my palms as I lean towards her. I feel young, hunched down on the floor with her like this. We might have been better friends, Emma and me, if it hadn’t been for Chloe.

‘Let’s have it all out then,’ she says.

The photographs of Chloe are tucked between folded jeans and sweatshirts and hiding under balls of socks and old scarves I’ve not worn in years. We lift out the clothes, throw them onto my bed or pile them on the floor, and excavate.

Here’s one of Chloe’s mittens. Here’s a homework diary, filled with her round, squat handwriting. A pink pot of raspberryripple-scented lip balm. A dangling cubic zirconia pendant. I wasn’t as bad at stealing things as Emma and Chloe thought I was. Emma looks at the objects, gathering them in a pile between her crossed legs as I hand them to her. Eventually, I have to go and find her a shoebox.