He smiles at you.
As if that isn’t surprising enough, when he gets to the bed he offers you his hand.
‘Your face looks rough,’ he says.
‘Yeah, well,’ you answer.
‘The police came round last night,’ he says. ‘After they went I wanted to go home straight away and see Mum and Kitty.’
‘They’ve gone to a hotel,’ you say. ‘The police are at the farm still.’
‘Yeah, and I’m too much of a coward in any case,’ he says, rubbing his hand across his face. ‘How are they?’
The truth, you think. Can he take it? Should you rub his nose in it, say that no, perhaps it’s not his fault that his friend turned out to be a fucking psychopath, but if he’d not been behaving like a petulant child for the past three years he might have seen what was going on?
‘I think it’s a bit too early to say,’ you answer.
‘Will rang me out of the blue,’ he says. ‘Not heard from him for three years. Didn’t know who it was at first, and then he started telling me that my mum had got a new bloke, that you’d moved in. That you were a – you know. Whatever you want to call it.’
For some reason that makes you laugh. Your head pounds. None of it seems as important any more. ‘Well, whatever he said probably had some basis in truth. I’m not a prostitute, though; I’m a masseur. In any case, I’m not going to be carrying on in that line of work any more.’
Louis says, ‘You’ve known Mum a long time. She must trust you.’
That he’s willing to change the subject feels like a good sign.
‘We were all good friends at university. But you know that already.’
‘And you went off travelling,’ Louis says.
‘I ran away,’ you say.
He looks surprised. You don’t blame him – you’re finding your new commitment to honesty a little uncomfortable yourself.
‘From Dad?’ Louis asks.
‘From both of them.’
He doesn’t press you. Perhaps he doesn’t need to. It’s only been a few minutes, but you like him. You didn’t think you would, after everything Sarah said about him. She has made allowances for him at every turn, giving him time, giving him space, and only now do you see why.
‘I miss him a lot,’ Louis says. ‘I was so angry that he died. He was only forty-three.’
‘Yes.’
‘I’ve been blaming Mum all this time. You know she should have been driving, that night? She had a cold, she said; that’s why he drove.’
He pauses and looks away for a moment. He’s an adult, a grown man; but just for a moment you can see the fatherless boy. Sarah’s son.
‘I don’t think it was her fault,’ he says. ‘I was just so angry.’
‘I don’t know if he was any different with you,’ you say, ‘but the Jim I knew was a very determined man. If he got an idea in his head, there was no point trying to talk him out of it.’
‘That’s true.’
‘It looks as if you’ve inherited his enterprising spirit,’ you say. ‘I hear your business is doing very well.’
‘Yeah,’ he says. ‘It’s not doing too badly.’
‘He’d be very proud of you. Your mum is too.’
There is so much more you could say to him about Jim, but this isn’t the time or the place. For now, you are suddenly desperate that fences should be mended between Sarah and Louis, This one thing is something that you might be able to fix, and it might make her feel better. You want that more than anything.
‘What are you going to do?’ Louis asks.
In the past you have made your decisions carefully, unless circumstances have forced you into a corner. If you needed to run, you would run. At the time you didn’t feel ashamed; it was the way things were, and you always came out of it all right.
But this time is different. Running isn’t what you want any more. And you don’t know what Sarah wants, but it almost doesn’t matter. Friend, lover, partner – whatever she wants you to be, you’ll be it.
‘I’m going to stay with your mum,’ you say.
Sarah
It’s three days before Sarah, Aiden and Kitty can go home. The wind changes direction, bringing with it warmer temperatures and rain, and, while the snow is still deep in the yard, the Land Rover can make it safely back up the hill. The three of them have stayed in the hotel, venturing out of their rooms only for meals, to visit George in the hospital and to be interviewed by the police. Will Brewer has been charged and remanded, which was a relief to them all. George has made good progress towards recovery, and has been moved to a general ward.
Sarah collects Basil from the vet’s, and Tess from Becca’s, before taking Kitty and Aiden home. It seems only right that they should all go together. She wants to take Sophie, too, but she has gone to stay with her sister in London for a week or two. Their house is being professionally cleaned; Sophie has generously paid for the cottage to be dealt with also.
The dogs are ridiculously excited to see each other, and as soon as Sarah opens the back of the car they both leap out and race through what’s left of the snow, obliterating the remaining tracks. The police have been here, of course. The house – and the cottage – were crime scenes. She locks the door behind her.
The house is dark, and quiet, and warm. Sarah doesn’t understand why it’s warm, she’s expecting it to be cold, but the heating is on, and with the lights turned on and the curtains closed everything is shockingly normal.
At bedtime they start off in three separate bedrooms: Kitty in her room, Aiden in the spare where Sarah has been sleeping, and Sarah in the master bedroom. After only a few minutes on her own, Sarah knocks quietly on the spare room door.
‘Can’t sleep either?’ Aiden asks, lifting the corner of the duvet.
‘I guess it’s not surprising. I’m so tired, though.’
They lie quietly side by side for a moment, and then Sarah moves closer to him and his arms fold around her.
‘I think I’m going to have to sell the house,’ she says.
He sighs into her hair. ‘It’s not good to make rash decisions,’ he says. ‘There’s no hurry.’
‘I’ve been thinking about it for a while.’
‘I know. But I’ll help in whatever way I can until you know what you want to do.’
She listens to the wind outside, rattling the window frame. Less than a week ago she had been lying here and had woken up to find Will sitting on her bed.
Suddenly she feels sick, sits upright in bed.
‘Sarah?’
Above the wind she can hear another sound, coming from the room next door. She reaches for her dressing gown. ‘Kitty’s crying.’
By two o’clock all three of them are downstairs in the living room, the woodburner lit, watching a programme about steam trains and drinking tea. The dogs are with them. Kitty eventually falls asleep with her head in Sarah’s lap.
‘It’ll be better tomorrow,’ Aiden says.
‘I hope so.’
She looks up at him. The swelling has gone down and he looks more like Aiden again; the bruises are starting to change colour.
‘What are we going to do?’ she whispers.
‘I don’t know,’ Aiden says, kissing the top of her head. ‘But we’ll be okay. You know you’re stronger than anyone I’ve ever met. You proved that last week. So, we’ll be okay.’
Kitty stirs, and sighs. Sarah strokes her daughter’s hair away from her face, the way she used to when Kitty was small.
He’s right, she thinks. We will be okay. One day normal life will resume.
The strange thing is, it does. Normal life returns with startling efficiency.
After several weeks, when Sarah is sure she’s strong enough and that the university are offering the right kind of support, Kitty goes back to Manchester to carry on with her second term. Sarah walks the dogs twice a day. She tries to finish The Candy Cotton Piglet at the Circus, but finds she cannot. Instead she paints landscapes, dramatic skies, me
lting snow. Sophie thinks they are good, the best work she’s ever done. She asks to buy them. Of course Sarah refuses, giving them to Sophie as a present instead. But the next ones she frames, offers for sale at the village art exhibition. They sell for fifty pounds each. It’s not much, but it feels like a place to start.
Aiden has a new phone, and he has only used it to call her. He is going to train to be a physiotherapist; his healing touch will be dealing with a different kind of need, a different kind of pain. She is beginning to sleep better, and so is he.
Meanwhile the house is up for sale. Big houses don’t sell as quickly as small ones, but already there have been some viewings; the estate agent promises that the market will pick up when the weather improves. The bank has, mercifully, offered her more time to repay her debt now she has a strategy in place to reduce it.
Sophie and George are back at home, and, whether it’s denial or just a measure of their strength, they are bouncing back, better than ever. The press attention has died down remarkably quickly. They are planning a dinner party. Sarah and Aiden are invited.
Louis has been in touch. Explaining everything to him has been awkward, but he listens; he phones almost every day. He is coming home for a whole weekend at Easter. Sarah feels as if he is finding his way back to her.
And Tess no longer barks at the croft.
Whatever was inside it has gone.
It’s always the same story for me. They all seem to like me, they all say nice things, and then when I get close they back off. Happens every time. Happened with Sarah, after Louis’s party; same thing with Sophie. Like I don’t have feelings. Like I don’t matter.
Years ago, when my mam and dad split up, they sat down with my sister Emily and told her it wasn’t her fault. She didn’t understand, she had a hard time accepting it, she was crying her eyes out, but it was right what they said. It wasn’t her fault, even though Amy was Emily’s best friend, even though she’d been the one to introduce us. Amy didn’t understand how much she meant to me and what we could be together. And the fact that her dad came round to our house to see my dad and my dad got angry and my mam blamed me for that, and they argued with each other all the time about what they were going to do with me and then it all got too much and all fell apart – that wasn’t Emily’s fault either. That was Amy’s.
They didn’t say that to me, of course. I wasn’t even supposed to be there by then, I was on bail, and there was some sort of injunction that meant I wasn’t supposed to go within a mile of them or their house, but I don’t know why they bother doing things like that. When you’re facing a court case for harassment and other stuff and you’re probably going to prison, well, it’s not like you can make it worse, right?
Besides, they never saw me.
I’m good at watching people without them realising. I’m good at keeping their secrets.
You get to know people properly when you watch them from the outside. It’s like you’re there, belonging but not belonging, a part of the household but separate from it.
Like a shadow. Like a ghost.
It’s when the watching isn’t enough any more that it goes wrong. When you want to be inside a place properly, inside people’s lives – when you want to become a part of their lives and not apart from them – then you make mistakes; then you get angry; then you ruin it.
There’s a lass here, one of the counsellors – I like her. She’s only young. She said to me yesterday, You don’t belong in here. You’re too nice, she said.
Where do I belong? I asked her.
Safe, somewhere, she said. Safe and with people who care about you.
I’ll wait for that, then, I said.
I’m good at waiting.
Acknowledgements
Never Alone has been on a long journey since the first draft of it was written during NaNoWriMo in November 2014. Many people have helped the story develop, and have provided invaluable research assistance, and I am glad to have the opportunity to acknowledge them here.
Firstly my eternal gratitude to the Myriad Editions family, particularly my outstanding and insightful editor Vicky Blunden, and publisher and friend Candida Lacey, for being excited about every draft, for improving it each time, and for your patience as I worked my way round in circles with the plot. Thank you both for your faith in me, and in the story. As always I am profoundly grateful for my genius copy-editor Linda McQueen, who spots things no one else can and always leaves me with a manuscript I can be proud of.
I am not very good at writing on my own, and so I’m lucky to have a posse of talented writing friends who have supported, inspired and encouraged me on a daily basis. For saving my sanity, making me laugh, supplying me with tea and cake and being fantastic in every way, my thanks to my cabin mates: Jo Hinton Malivoire, Denise West and Donna-Louise Bishop.
In the company of these great writers, Never Alone took shape in various cafés and tea rooms in Norfolk; with this in mind I recommend to you the Alby Tea Room between Cromer and Aylsham, and Henry’s Coffee and Tea Store and the Rocket House Café in Cromer. Thank you for the cake, the breakfasts, the tea, and for making us feel so welcome.
I would also like to thank Gail and Mick of the Royal Oak Hotel in Helmsley, North Yorkshire, who willingly answered all sorts of daft questions about hospitals and what the roads are like when it snows.
Thank you to Jeannine Taylor and Bruce Head, who allowed me to write about their beautiful, clever dog, Tess.
Several people helped me with research and I am grateful to Charlotte Buckley for answering questions about veterinary practice (and Cath Bore for putting us in touch with each other); Ann Dunkerley, who helped a great deal with early drafts and was very encouraging at every stage; Simon Lloyd, who answered questions about massage services for women in London; Boris Starling and Sophie Hannah for explaining how cars perform in heavy snow in rural areas; Alison Murray, who, on a very intense creative writing weekend run by the brilliant Greg Mosse, told me that the scariest thing she could imagine would be waking up to find someone sitting on her bed; Yvonne Johnson for helping me choose the Margaux from George’s wine cellar; Karen Gambrell for advising on banking procedure; Ben Clarke for checking my hospital scenes; Andrew Taylor for technical help; @alexisgebbie and @JFDerry on Twitter for assistance in navigating my way around York city centre (alas, you may notice that the busking scene does not now take place in Parliament Square, but thank you nonetheless). Any mistakes, omissions and applications of artistic licence are, of course, my responsibility alone.
Special thanks, as always, to my dear friends Samantha Bowles, Katie Totterdell and Greg Mosse, who always seem to be able to offer an insight into plot opportunities that I would otherwise miss; and to the brilliant Jacqueline Chnéour for providing a fresh perspective on the book. You never fail to make my books better.
Thank you to everyone who helped me with the crime scene. You know who you are; I’m not going to name names. I would not have made it this far without you.
As always I am grateful to anyone who reads my books, and to those who take time to let me know what they thought, either by email or by writing a review. In particular, the members of THE Book Club on Facebook, and to the awesome Tracy Fenton, who has been unendingly supportive of my writing, and helped me with some important changes at the last minute – you are brilliant, thank you.
Lastly but not leastly, my fabulous family who have kept cheering me on – thank you all. I love you.
Author’s Note
The idea for Never Alone came to me when we were thinking of moving house. For many months, I spent far too much time browsing through houses for sale on various property websites, and in the course of my search I came across the property that became the inspiration for Four Winds Farm. Alas, it sold before our house was even on the market, but perhaps that was just as well. Personally, I don’t think I would cope with living somewhere so remote!
Looking at the pictures of the grey stone house nestling into the hillside, the valley
laid out before it, I could imagine how it might feel to be safe and warm inside when the weather closes in. From picturing safety and comfort, it’s never long before I start to imagine what would be the most terrifying thing to happen next – and Sarah’s story began to emerge.
I hope you’ve enjoyed Never Alone. I’d love to hear what you think of it, so if you have a spare minute please do come and say hello on Facebook or Twitter, or email me via the website – all the details are below.
The setting for Never Alone is central to the story, and if you enjoyed it you might also enjoy my second book, Revenge of the Tide, which is set mostly on a houseboat on the river Medway in Kent. Strange how the most beautiful places inspire the scariest of stories! You can read the first part of Revenge of the Tide here – hope you like it.
Elizabeth Haynes
July 2016
@elizjhaynes
facebook.com/elizabethjhaynes
www.elizabeth-haynes.com
Read on for an extract from Elizabeth Haynes’ bestselling novel Revenge of the Tide.
It was there when I opened my eyes, that vague feeling of discomfort, the rocking of the boat signalling the receding tide and the wind from the south, blowing upriver, straight into the side of the Revenge of the Tide.
For a long while I lay in bed, the sound of the waves slapping against the hull next to my head, echoing through the steel and dulled by the wooden cladding. The duvet was warm and it was easy to stay there, the rectangle of the skylight directly above showing the blackness turning to dark blue, and grey, and then I could see the clouds scudding overhead, giving the odd impression of moving at speed – the boat moving rather than the clouds. And then, that discomfort again.
It wasn’t seasickness, or river-sickness, come to that: I was used to it now, nearly five months after I had left London. Five months living aboard. There was still a momentary shock when my feet hit the solid ground of the path to the car park, a few wobbly steps, but it was never long before I felt steady again.