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Authors: Giselle Green

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BOOK: Finding You
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20 - Charlie

 

‘Charlie?’ Dr Killman calls my attention back to her. ‘I don’t want to alarm you. But Hadyn is very little, and there might be some expectations you still have that you’re going to need to alter.’ I raise my eyebrows and she continues cautiously. ‘If we find that he is suffering from hostage-related trauma, we’re going to have to go very carefully and slowly with his rehabilitation. Ushering him into a nursery or a playgroup and hoping that he’ll automatically work out how to handle his peers—that’s not going to cut it.’

‘No.’ I hold up my hands, give a little humourless laugh. ‘Sorry, I was just thinking ... when you get your child back, you think it’s all over, and then there are all these other things that need taking into account. The intricate delicate balance of their life, it’s been upset and that needs ... it needs recalibrating.’

‘People are often surprised at how long that can take,’ she says gently. ‘At what a delicate process that can be. It’s something that we take for granted, that if anything happens, we’ll easily be able to slot right back into our normal lives, but it doesn’t always work like that.’

‘No,’ I agree. A vignette of Spain flickers through my mind momentarily; myself as a child, home for the holidays and out with Rob on our Uncle Ernesto’s boat. How eager I had been, running the length of that slippery deck, to show them all that I still knew what to do, that I had not forgotten. How they had all laughed at my accent, no longer exactly like theirs, more English
,
now—
El Ingles,
they called me—and how I no longer seemed able to catch a fish while my brother Rob had caught a bucketful with ease. I’d sat and watched his haul sliding around in the pail and then after, when they’d all stripped off shirts and jumped into the cool green waves, I hadn’t joined them in that, either.

I couldn’t. I remember staring into the sea. How it had heaved and pulsed, the waves seeming so much bigger than I’d remembered them from before, overwhelmingly so. And the mist on the shore had turned all the houses along the seafront into a white, wavery line like a ghost and reminded me that after all this time of being sick, my mother was finally gone. That I had been allowed home too late and that now, I would never see her again.     

‘Something changes in us when we go away, doesn’t it?’ my voice sticks in my throat. 

‘Not always, but it can, Charlie. It can sometimes take a bit of effort to feel we’ve arrived back home again.’  

I feel a pain in my stomach when she says this. Perhaps it is because I have not yet eaten lunch, though I do not think right now I could eat.

‘Whatever it takes,’ I tell her feelingly. ‘Whatever, Dr Killman. I just want him back.’
My boy, my beloved boy who looks so much like Conchita my mother.
She’d have loved him, I’m sure. She’d have been so proud. 
I wipe my eyes with the back of my hand surreptitiously.

‘And I am sure you
will
have him back, Charlie. Look. Let’s start with having him checked out by the paediatrician. Rule out everything else, first,’ she says gently.

‘There’s nothing physically wrong with him,’ I assure her, taking in a deep breath now. This is safer territory. ‘I’ve had him checked out tip to toe. The ENT reports came back negative. He’s in A-1 condition.’  

‘Sure,’ she says. ‘But you know how complex the body-mind unit is. I wouldn’t want to misdiagnose. However,’ she leans over and taps me gently on the arm, ‘The key thing for you is to know that
if
intervention is deemed necessary in Hadyn’s case, he couldn’t be in more caring or better-informed hands.’

‘I’m sure.’ I lean forward a little now. We need to get down to it, don’t we? ‘So—you’ll be able to give Julia tips on how to handle him—that sort of thing?’

She nods.  ‘One of the key things we have found is that avoiding associative triggers—anything that reminds the abductee of their experience—can be crucial in enabling recovery. When we’re reminded of something, we re-live it.’

‘I understand that
.’ All those parcels and letters they’d sent me from Spain as a kid that went unopened. I hadn’t wanted reminding, had I?

‘In short, part of what I’ll be advising is that you as his parents work to help him to
forget
the time he was away,’ she tells me earnestly.

‘Makes sense,’ I agree.

‘Which leads me to my next question,’ she adds delicately. ‘I know this can be a hard place for parents to revisit, but while the abductee mustn’t be reminded of what went on,
we
must be if we’re to know what scenarios to avoid. Do you mind if I ask, do you have any idea
how
he was kept for that year, the people he’d have been exposed to, the woman herself?’  

Dr Killman puts her glass down carefully on the table between us. ‘It might help me build up a better picture if you could describe to me everything you know about what Hadyn went through.’ 

I shrug out the knots that have suddenly appeared in my back. ‘The woman’s name was Illusion. I know the kind of people she came from,’ I tell her slowly. ‘My brother informs me they’re all well-known to the police, and not just for petty crimes, either. I won’t go into details ...’ I stumble to a halt. Rob hadn’t been too forthcoming on that; he’d been careful of my feelings, but I’d got the gist.  ‘As for the woman who had care of him—Illusion—she was in her late forties, unmarried, with no children of her own.’

‘Illusion,’ she smiles softly. ‘Interesting name. What was she like, Charlie. Do you know? What were the conditions like for him, where he was being kept?’

I let out a soft moan, rubbing my forehead with my fingers. What was she like? God. Why does she ask me? Why do I have to bring this all back into my mind? I have my son back, I have him back, he is with us, he is safe, why all this need to backtrack to the place where he was all those months ...  

‘I don’t know how they normally lived. But when we picked him up, she was staying in a temporary place. She’d come up to Arenadeluna on some family business and had taken out an apartment in some God-forsaken back alley situated in the criminal quarters of the town. You know the kind of place—windowless, airless, full of feral dogs and row upon row of wet clothes.’ I draw in a breath, and continue. ‘The whole place stank,’ I recall for her now. ‘Of ... you can imagine what.’ It stank of urine and bad food odours and worse.  ‘I remember a huge pile of rubbish bags dumped at one end, an old broken mattress. Clothes ...’ I say again. ‘A lot of damp clothes hanging everywhere, hanging from ropes tethered across the windows. I remember all these rumpled, grey clothes ...’

‘That’s a very powerful visual image,’ she comments softly.

‘Illusion had a narrow front door,’ I recall for her now, seeing as she wants images.  ‘So narrow, you wondered how a large person like her could ever get through it. They were living on a ground floor apartment, so there wasn’t too far to go. It was so small … when you got in, you thought that if you laid two people down head to toe they’d take up the length of the apartment …’

‘And there was room for the two of them, in there?’

‘Apparently.’

‘Where did he sleep?’ Dr Killman asks now. ‘I take it there was only one bedroom?’

‘I only saw one bed. I don’t know where he slept. It felt cramped.’

She scribbles something down on her notes. ‘Anything else?’ she prompts.

‘She kept dogs. Large dogs, not child-friendly ones. They tried to attack me and his mother the day we went there.’   

Her face twitches slightly. ‘
Dangerous
dogs?’ she asks.

‘Quite possibly.’

‘Then I imagine dogs might be one of the triggers we need to look out for when it comes to stress-induced behaviours,’ she says earnestly. 

‘He seems to like dogs, though,’ I tell her. ‘He always wants to go up to them when we’re in the park. Julia was suggesting the other day perhaps we should get him a dog.’

‘No.’ Her eyebrows lift a little. ‘If he was being kept with dogs, then these are best avoided, I think. No memory triggers, remember?’

‘Got it.’

‘The key thing to remember is this: what he
wants
at the moment is not always going to be what’s best for him. You’re going to have to be prepared to deny him some things, be resolute, and that’s not going to come easy.’

‘No.’ I stand up, unable to sit still any longer, make a show of looking at my watch. ‘I’m sorry,’ I say, and she follows my gaze to the wall clock. It’s five minutes to two already. Thank God. I’m going to need to make a move. ‘So ... the long and the short of it, Pippa, is—do you think you’re going to be able to help us?’

Pippa Killman straightens in her chair now, her eye contact direct and reassuring. ‘There’s certainly a lot of help available for the kind of presentation you’ve described, Charlie. We do have a sister clinic in Atlanta where we deal with the most severe cases in-house.’

I frown slightly. ‘
Atlanta
as in ...?’

‘Atlanta, Georgia. That’s correct. From what you’ve described that is certainly a possibility in this case but of course, we don’t need to go there just yet. For now, I’d certainly like to see Julia too, as soon as we can arrange it.’

‘Fantastic,’ I say. Because that is all I’ve really visited her today to hear, isn’t it? How to put this right.  Hopefully ours won’t be one of the cases that needs going as far as Atlanta, but if it is, that’s okay with me, too. Whatever is going to work. ‘You want to see Julia. Okay. We’ll make an appointment then. I’ll tell her.’

‘Is Julia likely to be happy with that?’ she asks unexpectedly. ‘Is she of the same mind of you—that she needs some help with her son? Sometimes ...’ Dr Killman looks down at her notes. ‘One parent recognises the need for outside help sooner than the other. It happens,’ she says.

‘Oh no, I think you’ll find Julia and I are pretty much on the same page with this, Pippa. When we spoke last night, it was pretty clear to me that Julia ... she’s totally motivated about this. She wants help. She’s the one who brought it up, in fact.’ I give a short laugh. ‘She’s a ... a totally devoted and loving mum, who’ll go to the ends of the earth for our son.’

‘As she has already proved,’ Pippa Killman reminds me softly. ‘I’ll wait for her to ring me then, shall I?’

‘Absolutely. She’ll be straight onto it, I have no doubt.’ I lean over, grasping her hand warmly, feeling the weight summarily lifted from my shoulders. Now that Dr Killman’s brought back into my mind those shitty conditions they kept my son in, it’s hardly any wonder if he’s a bit spooked now and again; if he’s finding it hard to settle. What sentient child wouldn’t, under the circumstances? This Pippa Killman, I like her, though. She’s put me at my ease, and it’s clear she knows her business. Julia will love her.

Okay, it’s going to take understanding and love and—as I understand it from this meeting today—some careful and informed intervention.  But everything’s going to be all right. That’s all I can think as I take the corridor down to my own rooms, remembering to drop off the Trinity-St Mark’s forms with Angus’s secretary on the way. One day in the future, I tell myself, when Hadyn’s captaining the rugby team, this visit to Pippa Killman will seem like nothing but a distant, bad dream.

‘Remember. No memory triggers,’ she says again, standing in the doorway as I come back down the hall.

‘Got that. Thank you again, Pippa.’

 It might take us a while, but at the end of it, my son’s going to be all right.

 

21 - Julia

 

‘Hadyn’s a very lucky boy to be getting all this,’ Mum says. ‘When it isn’t even his birthday. Does Charlie realise how
big
this is?’ We’re outside in my garden watching the delivery men who’ve just unloaded a very large sandpit, which they are now filling up with bags of sand from their truck.

 ‘Charlie doesn’t know I’ve bought it. He’s not even going to see it till he gets back from clinic tonight.’ And as he’d been hoping to catch that Dr Killman today, either at lunch or after surgery, that might be a while yet, I muse.

‘Hadyn loves it, though,’ I say, savouring the moment. He’s clapping his hands together in joyful  anticipation and the sand, a dull biscuit colour, sticks together in clumps as the men shake it all out. I cup my face in my hands, and survey the peaceful garden scene before me: in the patch Mum started off with Hadyn just four weeks ago, the sunflowers are shooting up, the wiry stalks of the poppies and the tall, bobbing Aquilegia. A little grey-winged beetle drones past us now, landing on the peony bush where the buds are at last beginning to fatten, deep green and bursting with the promise of colour.

Mum’s still fretting. ‘But … it’s such a big one. It looks as if you’ve imported the entire beach in for the child. Are you
sure
you shouldn’t have mentioned this to Charlie first?’

Now that Mum’s pointed it out, the bright red rectangle that’s taking up most of our patio area does look superfluously big. But Charlie won’t mind. Charlie’s going to be
delighted
.  Just wait till he catches sight of Hadyn’s face when he gets home. I haven’t seen Hadyn this excited and enthused over anything in all the months since we found him.

‘Well. Maybe the solution to helping my grandson settle in was under our noses all the time,’ Mum concedes. Then she adds tentatively; ‘Perhaps Charlie won’t need to go consulting that trauma psychologist lady after all, then?’

‘He was already seeing her today.’ I pull a wry face—
too late.
  ‘They might even have had their meeting by now.’

Mum looks thoughtful.  ‘I don’t like to speak out of turn, Julia, but Dick and I were a little surprised Charlie felt the need to go talking to somebody like her in the first place. It’s not as if ...’ She digs around in her bag for her knitting needles and I can tell she’s not entirely comfortable with the subject. ‘It’s not as if Hadyn’s
psychologically disturbed
, is it?’

‘Well ... we hope not.’ I give a little gallows laugh.

‘You hope not?’ She looks worried, and I know it’s because she thinks we’re going too far with this.  ‘Hadyn doesn’t need a psychologist, love. He’s got nowhere
near
the behaviour problems that my friend Meg’s grandson was exhibiting before they took him to see anyone ...’ she lowers her voice as she always does when speaking of the terrible shame and tragedies that have befallen other people, ‘and
he
had to be sent away to a school in the end, poor mite.’ I raise my eyebrows at this and she continues, ‘Hadyn’s not like that. He just needs a little more time to recognise that he’s back with his Mummy and Daddy.’

‘I hope so.’

Mum stops looking for her knitting pattern and peers at me over the top of her specs now. ‘So what did the health visitor have to say on Weds?’

‘Mariaed’s still very keen for him to be seen by that paediatrician Dr Fraser has referred us onto. She says she’s going to expedite that if she can.’

‘About his feet?’

‘She didn’t say. About ... everything, I think. All the little things we’ve been noticing since we got him home.’

‘He’s still not eating much, is he?’ Mum observes. ‘He’s getting thinner.’

I sigh, feeling my heart constrict a little as she points out what I already know. He
is
getting thinner, and it’s troubling me more and more these days.

‘He barely wants to touch anything I have to offer him,’ I admit. ‘Not even when he’s clearly hungry.’       

‘Hmmm ... He’s stubborn,’ Mum observes. She pulls a long-suffering face as much to say,
and we know where he gets that from, don’t we
? ‘Kids won’t always do what we want them to do. Remember how stubborn
you
were when I wanted you to come live with me when I left your father?’ she brings up out of the blue.

‘I was fourteen ...’ I start.

‘You got the idea in your head that you weren’t coming, and it took you a good
two years
to change your mind.’

My eyes open wide in astonishment that she’s brought that up now.  ‘What’s that got to do with anything, anyway?

‘Sometimes children just have to be allowed to come to their own conclusions, that’s all I’m saying, love. When things got too tough at your dad’s ... you eventually saw the sense of coming to mine.’

I stare at Mum for a moment, wondering if she’s really still holding onto all those old gripes about decisions I made as a teenager, but for now, she genuinely seems to be making a different point.

‘When Hadyn gets hungry enough ... he’ll eat what you want him to.’

‘Maybe.  Mariaed has urged me to keep on plying away with whatever he might have eaten in Spain, anything familiar.’ Bringing this up, I feel very flat suddenly, and she sees it.

‘It all sounds like very sound advice to me,’ Mum says. ‘Hopefully Charlie’s psychologist will come up with a very similar plan, and then we’ll know what we’re doing.’   

I watch as she knits to the end of the row in plain then swaps the needles round in her hands to make the run back in purl. In all this time, she’s only knitted one centimetre of the cuff and I note that she’s right: some things do take time.

‘How
are
things between you and Charlie, anyway?’ Mum switches deftly over to the other subject closest to her heart. ‘You told me a couple of weeks back that he’d been all set to book you two in for a registry wedding, but I’ve heard not a peep from you about it since then. He’s not changed his mind, has he?’

‘He hasn’t changed his mind.’

‘What then?’ Mum asks. ‘What’s happening with that?’

What’s happening with that is you rung us up that same night and told us you’d found Hadyn perched on the window ledge
.  

I don’t answer her.

‘Seriously. If Charlie’s that keen to tie the knot with you, I don’t see why you two just don’t get on and do it.’ Mum’s come to the end of the row already. She swaps her needles round without seeing them. She flicks out a kink in the wool and carries on. ‘At the very least, you could satisfy the man by setting a date?’

‘Mum ...’

‘At least
think
about setting a date,’ she urges. ‘Give the man some hope. You were already planning a wedding before Hadyn went missing, don’t forget.’ She looks at me hopefully. 

‘I’m not blocking it, Mum,’ I tell her. ‘I’ve got other priorities to deal with right now. I can’t see all this need to hurry it.’

‘Well,’ Mum purses her lips, and I know there’s another bone of contention coming. ‘You
should
see, Julia. You should have learned by now that men can be fickle. They can be ... inconstant.’

I feel myself stiffen, going a little pink at her words.
Why has she brought that up now
?

‘That isn’t fair, Mum. Charlie has never ...’ I bite my tongue, determined not to get into this.  ‘Are you worrying that if I don’t tie Charlie down quick as I can, he might get away again?’ I make light of it, pulling a crooked smile at her.

‘He nearly did last time,’ she mutters under her breath. ‘That woman—what’s-her-name—she’d have been in there like a shot if you hadn’t happened to chance upon your son when you did. There are always going to be people like her, Julia. Especially with a man like Charlie.’ Her needles are clicking together so fast now, I can barely see them.
Clicketty-clicketty-click
. They’re just flashes of grey in her hands. ‘Women only too willing to give him what he wants and take what they want into the bargain.’

‘So everyone has always been at pains to warn me.’ I shoot her a weary look. ‘That doesn’t automatically mean Charlie’s a philanderer, Mum. Just because women fancy
him
. Have a little faith, won’t you?’      

She looks up and the sandpit men are standing behind us, waiting for me to sign their delivery note and looking at us both with unashamed curiosity.
All done here missus
, they say, and then they lumber off, grinning to themselves.       

‘I’m trying to
forget
about what’s-her-face,’ I hiss at mum. I know that in the world Mum grew up in—in the life she would have liked to have lived—a wedding band would have once signified all the certainty and security she wishes for me now. She thinks that me and Charlie rushing to the registry will mean that Forever means Forever. Just because it says so on a bit of paper, even though
men can be so fickle.
 

I bend to pick up Mum’s ball of wool that’s escaped, jumped out of her bag and rolled some way across the grass, the bright edges of it dotted with flecks of earth now, grains of sand. I brush them off. ‘There you go, all clean again.’ I hand it back to her.

‘Look, Mum,’ I say, as she’s still waiting for me to reply to her last observation. ‘If I’ve learned
anything
, it’s that the only thing that’ll stick is what’s written indelibly in a person’s heart—and that’s something that no amount of legal underpinning will ever guarantee.’ 

‘Hmmm,’ she says.

‘I have to trust him now,’ I tell Mum. ‘Because if Charlie’s not in it for the long haul, then a ring on his finger isn’t going to make any difference to that, is it?’

‘Maybe,’ she mutters. ‘Maybe you’d better just pray that he
is
in it for the long haul, Julia. Hadyn’s a beautiful little boy and I know you both dote on him, but if it turns out he
does
have behavioural problems due to having been away from you ... a lot of couples split up over far less.’        

‘I know it’s important,’ I say decisively. And we are supporting each other. I’ve said I’ll support Charlie going down this Dr Killman avenue, even though I have my qualms about it and we all have our different views. Charlie thinks it’s trauma, Mum doesn’t really believe there is anything up with Hadyn at all and I ... I watch my boy playing quietly now, his hands letting all the sand pour out of his fingers in a quick, flicking movement, his face both intent and strangely vacant at the same time, and I really don’t know.

Mum’s words have given me pause for thought, though. Perhaps she has a point about the wedding? It’s clearly what Charlie wants. And given that there’s at least
one
person out there who still imagines she’s in love with him, it might be just what’s needed to affirm our commitment to the outside world.  Because Lourdes does have feelings for him, doesn’t she? I saw it the day I went to that party without him. Mum’s only just reminded me of something I’ve already begun to suspect: that even
despite
the fact that I’m the one who’s borne him a son—until the day Charlie and I make it official—Lourdes won’t ever let go of hope. 

Maybe I need to take that hope away from her, before it has any chance to grow.

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