Adrenalin is still surging through me like the bass beat at a rock concert. Setting her down in the hallway near the front door, I put my ear to her mouth and nose and my hand on her lower chest. She’s breathing, but her eyes are fixed. Dilated. I turn her on her side, putting her in the recovery position.
Where are the paramedics? I call 999 again, yelling at the operator, telling them to hurry. The sedative has been in Piper’s system for nearly thirty minutes.
I have to act now. Gastric lavage. Pump her stomach. I remember my medical training-three years of studying to be a doctor, doing my filial duty because God’s-personal-physician-in-waiting wanted me to carry on the family tradition.
I rip open kitchen cupboards and grab a container of salt and run the hot tap until the water is warm. Mixing the water and salt in a clean plastic container, I create a saline solution. Next I need a tube: something about the width of my pinkie and three feet long.
Beneath the sink is a water filter with a flexible blue plastic pipe. I tear it away from the fittings and cut off the ends, hoping it’s long enough. Crouching next to Piper, I turn her head to one side and lubricate the end of the tube with soap, before inserting it through her nose, pushing it gently until it reaches the pharynx. I feel the slight resistance and turn the tube 180 degrees. It continues sliding towards her stomach.
I put my head on her chest and blow a puff of air through the tube, listening for the telltale bubbles from the fluid in her stomach. Holding the plastic container of saline solution above her head, I punch a hole through the base and insert the tube, letting about 300 ml of the warm fluid flow into her stomach.
Then I suction, letting the mixture of saline and her stomach contents flow out onto the floor. Repeating the process, I keep going until the liquid runs clearer. My mobile has been ringing. I’ve been too busy to answer it.
Drury’s name appears on screen.
“What’s happened in there? Neighbors reported a gunshot.”
“Where are the paramedics?”
“Outside. They’re waiting for the all clear.”
“It’s clear. Tell them to hurry.”
“Where’s Grievous?”
“Dead.”
“Casey?”
“I’m sorry.”
Moments later the door jerks open and the DCI’s eyes meet mine. He’s wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet, like a modern-day warrior. In the dim light the scar on his cheek looks like a birthmark.
A dozen police officers surge into the house. Behind them I see two ambulances, their lights beating with color, sirens muted. Four paramedics follow. Two of them crouch beside Piper. The younger one has a farm girl face.
“What did she take?”
“Diazepam.”
“How much?”
“Unknown.”
“How long has she been unconscious?”
“Thirty minutes, maybe longer.” I point to the tube. “I’ve done a nasotracheal intubation and a gastric lavage. She needs activated charcoal to absorb the rest.”
“We can take it from here, sir.”
Drury appears at the top of the stairs. Ashen-faced. Tortured by what he’s witnessed. Two colleagues are dead. A kidnapped girl is alive. It doesn’t feel like a victory.
On the night we were taken,
I left Tash at the church while I went to Emily’s house and told her that we were running away. In the winter Reverend Trevor leaves the small door open at the side of St. Mark’s of a Saturday night so that parishioners who arrive early on Sunday morning don’t have to wait in the cold for the curate to unlock the door. I left Tash lying on a pew, curled up like a kitten.
It was well after midnight when I got back. The funfair had closed down and the rides were being dismantled or folded up like Transformer toys. Scaffolding pipes were loaded onto trucks and canvas tents rolled into tubes.
Tash wasn’t where I left her. I thought she must have found somewhere warmer in the choir stalls or under the baptismal font. It was scary walking through the darkened church, but I couldn’t risk turning on the lights, so I lit one of the prayer candles and tried not to spill hot wax on my hands.
I walked towards the main doors and that’s when I saw George. He was sitting straight-backed in a pew. Tash was asleep with her head on his thigh.
George held a finger to his lips, not wanting to wake her.
“Hello, Piper,” he whispered.
“How do you know who I am?”
“You’re the runner,” he said, stroking Tash’s hair. “She’s sleeping. She told me what happened. I’ve been waiting for you.”
“Why?”
“We have to go to the police station. We have to tell them what happened.”
“Tash didn’t want to tell anyone.”
“I made her change her mind.”
“Who are you?” I asked.
“I’ve come to help.”
He was wearing black combat trousers and dark boots laced to his shins. A dark shirt was visible beneath his waterproof jacket. I thought he looked like someone official-like a soldier or a police officer-except for his jacket, which was old and stained.
Sliding Tash’s head from his lap, he sat her up, leaning her head against his shoulder.
“My car is outside,” he said. “Here, help me lift her.”
I reached down and took Tash’s arm, but that’s when his hand slipped over my mouth and nose, stopping me in mid-breath, squeezing. His other arm wrapped around my chest, pinning my arms and lifting my feet from the ground. I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t run.
“Shhhhhh,” he whispered. “Sleep now, Princess. You’ll be home soon.”
50
They let me ride in the ambulance with Piper. Although she is unconscious, her vital signs are stronger. They can put her on dialysis and clean her blood. She’ll recover. She’ll see in the New Year and meet her new baby sister.
Seated on a side bench, my knees touching the stretcher, I sway through every corner of the journey to hospital. I can see a face reflected in the chrome, but it doesn’t look like me. My body is shaking. I don’t know if it’s the Parkinson’s or the cold or something more elemental. I killed a man. I took a life.
Piper’s eyes flutter open, wide with shock at first. She recognizes me. Relaxes.
“Hello,” I say, holding her hand.
She can’t answer because of the oxygen mask.
“You’re safe. We’re going to the hospital.”
Her fingers squeeze mine.
Her other hand reaches for her mask. The paramedic wants her to keep it on. Piper insists. She mouths the word. I lean closer and hear her whisper.
“Tash?”
“I’m sorry,” I say. “Tash didn’t make it home. She died in the blizzard, but she helped us find you.”
Piper squeezes her eyes shut and a tiny marble-like tear rolls down her cheek and stops at the edge of the mask.
This was always going to be the hardest news and it will hurt her more than anyone imagines-a survivor’s guilt and a sense that the world has moved on without her. There is nobody left who understands what she’s been through.
51
It’s after midnight when I arrive at the cottage. The key is under the third brick beneath the foxglove plant. Letting myself in, I use the glow of the Christmas lights to navigate along the hallway, trying not to make a sound.
In the sitting room, I slump onto the couch and close my eyes. Too exhausted to get up the stairs, too wired to sleep.
“Hello.”
Julianne is standing at the doorway. She’s wearing flannelette pajamas, which she buys a size too large because she says they’re more comfortable. The trousers hang low on her hips and the shirt is unbuttoned to reveal the shadow between her breasts.
“I heard the news,” she says. “Is she going to be OK?”
“Yes.”
“They said a man was shot.”
I nod.
My hands are shaking. I look into her eyes and something small and delicate shreds inside me. I feel the tears coming. I try to hold them back, but she sits beside me and presses her face to mine.