The Runaway Schoolgirl (6 page)

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Authors: Davina Williams

BOOK: The Runaway Schoolgirl
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S
ure enough, around 7am the following morning, the newspaper reporters and television cameras returned and took up their pitches outside the house. It seemed strange how quickly we had fallen into a pattern of living – another day camped out on the street for the press pack, another day of waiting in the kitchen of our blacked-out house for us.

As usual, the post arrived early. To add to all of the madness in the street, we started receiving letters from complete strangers. They would have the words ‘To the parents of Gemma Grant, Eastbourne’ on the front of them and yet, unbelievably, they still somehow got to us, like those letters addressed to ‘Father Christmas, Lapland’ you hear about.

I received some saying ‘God will protect your daughter, God will keep her safe’. I’m not a religious person, but I didn’t mind well-wishers saying things like that. It was comforting
to know that Gemma’s story had touched them enough for them to take the time to write to us.

But not all the letters were positive. Some, frankly, were just plain disturbing. One in particular I remember was from a retired schoolteacher, who wrote: ‘You need to let your daughter be with this man. She loves him and you should let the relationship continue.’ He said it wasn’t important what I believed and that Gemma was entitled to do what she wanted.

I couldn’t believe how some people felt they were entitled to wade in with opinions on good parenting. I received letters, some from other parents of teenage children who should know better, saying, ‘She’s nearly sixteen, she’s free to do what she wants’. To read stuff like this was so upsetting. How could these people not understand that this was abuse, not romance? Gemma had only turned fifteen in June, so presumably the ‘relationship’ had started when she was still fourteen.

Gemma was my little girl; Jeremy Forrest was a predatory monster.

Being a small neighbourhood, I knew the postman, and he would look a bit sheepish when he knocked on the door with armfuls of mail. He was very respectful, though, and even months later would ask us if we were OK and tell us if reporters were still hanging around. It was incredible, the amount of support we got from the most unlikely people.

Darcee arrived quite early and helped me get through all the ‘normal’ things – getting Lilly settled, getting Alfie off to school, and so on – and tried to make me eat something. I’d been surviving on coffee for the past few days; I just wasn’t interested in food. Over the course of that week, I lost a stone, but I can assure you that it is not a diet I would recommend.

One of the first phone calls I received that day was from
the Sussex Police media team, telling me that the BBC1 programme
Crimewatch
was planning to run a report on Gemma that night and asking me if I would be prepared to appear on it. As before, my immediate reaction was: ‘Will it help bring back my daughter?’ The police media team were very honest with me. They said it wouldn’t necessarily make a difference, and there was already much going on in France which the press didn’t know about, but equally it wouldn’t do any harm either. I didn’t like the idea of leaving the house for the day – Gemma could call at any time, after all, and I had the other children to consider – so it was agreed that Max would do it instead.

Darcee and I spent the remainder of the day waiting for news. At that stage, I felt as if everything was out of my control and that I had pretty much done all that I could. I logged on to Facebook and tried to catch up with everything that was happening on social media. There were lots of messages from well-wishers and an old school friend of Gemma’s had set up a Facebook support group. She became my eyes and ears as to what was happening on social media and was good at warning me if someone was being more interested in the case than they should be – she could spot disturbed people very quickly!

The press, meanwhile, had found more songs online that Forrest had written for Gemma. They also started to piece together Twitter conversations that Gemma and Forrest had shared and random comments that she had posted on Facebook. If there was anything to be dug up, it seemed the newspapers managed to find it.

At 3pm that day, Forrest’s parents, Jim and Julie, appeared at a press conference at Lewes police station. I only got to
see it much later in the day and, to be honest, I wasn’t all that interested in what they had to say; I was more interested in what they looked like and whether they seemed like good people. I could instantly see the pain on their faces. I could see his mother’s fear, the worry, the strain and devastation. I could hear his father’s voice shaking as he tried to hold it together. I walked away from the TV with a very saddened heart. What a mess …

Following Mark Ling’s conversations the day before, his colleague, Neil Ralph, called to ask if I would send Louise a text to see if I could get her to open up to me about Gemma. I realised it was a very scary thing for her to be going through, but at this stage it was crucial that she told me the truth.

This is what I wrote to Louise:

Hi honey, it’s Gem’s mum. Sweetheart, first of all I just wanted to check you’re OK? It’s been horrible not to have seen you since this started as I’m guessing you’re so upset. It’s been like living out a nightmare here. Lee keeps crying, Maddie is beside herself and Alfie keeps asking where she is. As for Lilly, we say a little prayer every night for her ‘adorable mermaid’ to come home. Paul and I are a mess and keep asking ourselves why we didn’t spot the fact she would leave us. As for me, I can’t sleep, can’t eat and I’m so so worried that she’s dead. I can’t stop crying and I haven’t left the house in case she calls me. I’ve managed to keep the home number the same as I know she’ll know it. I had to do that press conference and it was the worst thing I’ve ever done. I got outside and collapsed on the floor and sobbed my heart out. If she doesn’t want to come home, that has to be her choice. I just need to know
that she is safe, well and alive. Sending lots of love and hugs and you know where we are if you want to talk.

Her reply didn’t contain any useful information. All she said was: ‘Hi, I’m okay, just praying for Gem’s safe return. Thinking of you all. Love Louise.’

I later found out that the reply had been scripted by Louise’s mother. I wasn’t surprised, as I imagine she may have thought Louise was an ‘accessory to the crime’ or something like that. Although I understood why she replied that way, it was so frustrating.

Nothing really seemed to be moving forward. I wondered how much more of it I could take.

We watched
Crimewatch
later that evening and Max came over extremely well on the programme. I was really proud of him and I remember thinking what a shame it was that he was referred to as Gemma’s stepfather. Max had always been a wonderful father to Gemma and brought her up as if she was his own, and I felt really sorry for him in that respect. He’d been more of a father to her than her biological dad ever had.

The next day, Friday, 28 September, began in much the same way as the one before. Chloe came over and helped me with the morning routine as the media once again descended on the street and took up their positions outside our house.

As usual, Paul was at his sentry post at the front door, ready to face the barrage of reporters asking for more information. Chloe and I were talking in the kitchen when I realised he was having a much longer conversation than usual with one of the reporters. He came into the kitchen and told us that a journalist from the
Daily Mail
had come up with an idea that
he thought we should consider – writing a letter to Gemma that they would publish in the newspaper.

Unlike the other requests we’d had, we thought this idea actually sounded constructive. First, though, I wanted to talk it through with Nick Cloke, the head of Sussex Police’s media team – I wasn’t going to do anything without the police’s approval. When I called him, he seemed a bit lukewarm about the idea. He explained that he was on a train so he couldn’t talk properly and would get back to me about it as soon as he could. He sounded a bit off with me and I wondered if I’d said something to annoy him.

I was a bit disappointed – I wanted to do something proactive instead of just sitting around, waiting for the phone to ring. Paul was confused and disappointed, too.

Little did we know but Nick Cloke had just received more information about Gemma …

A little while later, at 12.30pm, the phone rang.

It was Hannah. She sounded very serious as she confirmed it was really me that she was talking to, and my heart skipped a beat.

Then she said the words we had all been desperate to hear: ‘We’ve got her!’

I
screamed and screamed with every breath in my lungs. Poor Paul didn't know what the hell was going on.

He wondered if it was terrible news and looked ashen as he ran in and found me holding my head as I tried to find out more information from Hannah. I turned to him and said: ‘It's OK, they've got her!'

Chloe and Lee had popped out to get us fish and chips for lunch, and they came back to find Paul and me jumping around the kitchen with joy. There were chips flying everywhere as we all hugged each other and danced around – it was madness, the best feeling in the world. I didn't know what to do with myself. Excited, thrilled, relieved, hysterical … I wanted to run out into the road, screaming ‘They've got her, they've got her!'

Sky News
had been on in the living room and almost immediately a ticker- tape news alert appeared on screen: GEMMA GRANT FOUND. Meanwhile, I was frantically
phoning Mum and Max, and trying to Facebook friends and text people to say she was safe.

I couldn't believe how quickly the news filtered through on social media; it was mayhem in the house with all the phone calls. Chloe tried to encourage me to get dressed and ready for when Hannah came to pick me up, but I didn't want to leave the kitchen as that was where I had received the good news. I didn't want the bubble to burst. The adrenaline was just incredible.

At 1pm, Hannah arrived and warned me to be prepared for even more reporters than before. There were swarms of them outside the house and I wondered if we were going to be able to get out of the street. As soon as we opened the front door, the cameras and questions started firing. ‘How do you feel about the news?' ‘Are you flying out to see her?' ‘Are there any comments you'd like to make?' It was crazy.

I remember thinking how frightening it must be to be famous and to have to deal with this kind of press attention every single day of your life. Hannah told me to give them a smile, but it felt so strange. I cringed when I later came across the picture on Google – it looks as if I'm gurning!

In the car on the way to the police station, Hannah explained that Forrest had been arrested on suspicion of abduction and that Gemma had been taken into protective custody in Bordeaux. It turned out that someone had recognised Forrest from one of the pictures that appeared in the press and the police had set a trap for him.

The media presence had felt quite intrusive at times, but I couldn't thank them enough for their help in finding my daughter. I wrote a short statement thanking the press and emailed it to Nick Cloke for his approval.

What I didn't realise at the time, however, was that there were now restrictions on what could be said about the case in the media. As a minor who had potentially been the victim of a sexual crime, Gemma automatically had rights to anonymity. From this point on, the media would not be allowed to reveal her name, or the names of anyone else that could lead to her identity being revealed.

People have asked me why Forrest wasn't charged with ‘kidnapping'. That is when a person is taken away by force, while ‘abduction' refers to when a minor is taken without parental consent. In this case it was one permission slip that Mr Forrest had neglected to get me to sign …

Throughout the whole of this book, I have referred to my daughter as Gemma, as this was the name that she had given herself while she was with Forrest in France. She had chosen the name Gemma Grant as it is connected to the real name of her favourite singer, Lana Del Rey. It was also a name that the media picked up on after she and Forrest were found. The press always referred to her as ‘Gemma Grant' or the ‘Runaway Schoolgirl'.

Unfortunately for me, Nick Cloke said that I couldn't contact the press to give them my thanks. I would have loved to have had an opportunity to say how grateful I was, but this was out of my hands. For my part, I had only done a press conference to put my own message out to Gemma. After that, it was the media who kept the message alive and helped spread it far and wide.

When we reached the police station in Eastbourne, Hannah took me up to the major incident suite, where I was met by a group of senior police officers with big smiles on their faces.

There was Mark Ling, Neil Ralph and the assistant chief
constable, Robin Smith. Mark jokily said, ‘The assistant chief constable wants to take full credit for finding Gemma!' Assistant chief constable Robin Smith was actually a very straight-backed, unassuming man who would never have said anything like that, and the rest of his team thought it was hysterical when I threw my arms round him and gave him a kiss to thank him for everything they had done.

Behind them was a white board headed up with the title Operation Oakwood, which was the name the case had been given – as I was later to learn, the names for police operations, like hurricanes, are chosen alphabetically. It was really interesting to see a police-eye view of the case. The board listed sightings, unconfirmed and confirmed, the possible clothing that Gemma would be wearing and other facts about the search for her.

Hannah, meanwhile, was now on her way to Gatwick, from where she was going to fly to Bordeaux. Mark Ling told me that he would have loved for me to be able to go, too, but there was only one seat left on the plane and Gemma had to be accompanied home by a police officer. While I was disappointed that I couldn't go straight to her, I completely understood.

The next thing that Mark said more than made up for it, though.

‘Would you like to speak to your daughter?'

‘
Would
I?' He didn't need to ask me twice! And he got straight on the phone and put me through to Gemma.

Mark and the team left me alone to talk to her. ‘Hello, sweetheart, are you OK?' I said, then I heard her burst into tears. ‘I'm so sorry, Mum …'

From the moment Gemma had been found, I began to
wonder if she wanted to come home to me. I'd always believed that we had a great relationship, but maybe she didn't want to be with us. I knew I had to ask.

I took a deep breath. ‘Do you want to come home?'

She sounded so young and frail, so full of sadness and despair: ‘I didn't even want to come here in the first place, I just want to come home.'

Her voice was a sound that I had feared I would never hear again. There was so much that I wanted to say to her, but I was happy just to listen to her, to know she was truly alive and that I wasn't just dreaming. At that point, it was totally irrelevant what had been happening, I was just so happy to know that she was coming back. In any case, I didn't want to overwhelm her with questions after everything she'd been through.

We only spoke for about five minutes, but I explained that a lovely lady called Hannah was on her way over to meet her and bring her back to the UK. I told her that we had got to know Hannah really well and that she had even held Lilly for me. I wanted Gemma to know that she could trust Hannah and that everything would be alright.

I then found myself clicking into ‘mum mode', asking her if she'd been eating enough, if she was tired or needed anything, but she said she was OK and that I didn't need to worry any more. It was such a relief to hear her voice.

I could hardly speak because of the grin on my face, but before I ended the call, I made Gemma promise that she wouldn't run away again. I was so confused about what had happened. Who was to say that she wouldn't want to just escape from the drama and run away again?

Mark Ling then asked me if I would like to be introduced to the team who had been working on the case and led me
into the main operations room. I couldn't believe the scale of it. There were at least 30 officers behind their desks and they all started clapping and cheering as I walked in. It was just incredible. On the walls there were more white boards, each with much more detailed information on them, showing what a huge operation it had been. I was awestruck by how many people had been involved and the amount of work it had taken to find Gemma.

Completely blown away, I made up a little speech on the spot, thanking them for everything they had done. I said that words couldn't actually express how grateful we all were for how much support and care we had all received from them. I added that I hoped we hadn't been too demanding and joked that the only thing I had ever asked of an officer was a cigarette! One of the officers stepped forward and said, ‘If it's a fag that you want, then that's what you shall have!' They were all so lovely to me and it was so nice to be able to smile and joke around with them. It was such a contrast to the nightmare that I'd been through over the previous seven days.

A group of about five of us went outside for a cigarette together. ‘It's so fantastic to have her back,' one of the police officers told me. ‘Tonight will be the first time in a long while that I have been able to tuck my children up in bed.' It really hit me very deeply to see how many other people had been affected by what had happened.

Next, I met up with Jim, the family liaison officer who had helped us over the weekend when Gemma first went missing. It was lovely to see him at the other side of the investigation; it felt like the whole episode had gone full circle. Jim introduced me to Sarah, the family social worker, and they explained to me what was going to happen next.

There had been some stories in the media saying that Gemma would be taken into care when she returned to England. The reports had really upset me because they seemed to me to be suggesting that I must have been a terrible mother for letting this kind of thing happen to my daughter in the first place.

Jim reassured me that this wasn't the case at all. Gemma was being kept in protective custody while she was in France to keep her safe while she was there, but she would come straight home to the family as soon as she returned to England. There was no question that the social services were going to take her away from us.

Sarah told us that the Children's Services department had arranged a safe house in the country for us so that we could all lie low for a few days. It would give us time to regroup and would keep the press at bay.

We also discussed what Gemma's state of mind was likely to be after the experience. In order to work out how I was going to handle the situation, Sarah asked me a series of questions and evaluated my responses. She needed to be sure that Gemma wouldn't come home to a barrage of interrogations and demands that she just forget about Forrest and move on with her life. I also needed to be prepared in case Gemma said she was in love and wanted to be with him. It was going to be a challenging time for everyone concerned.

I wanted the whole episode to be over, but I had to be realistic about the situation. My first priority was Gemma. I had a hundred unanswered questions, but I knew that she had to tell me on her own terms. She was fifteen, still a child – still my little girl – and had been through so much. She needed time to process everything that had happened.

Unbeknown to me, Max was giving a press conference
with Jason Tingley at Sussex Police HQ while I was meeting the team in Eastbourne. I only found out about this after the event, but I was glad to be able to go home and breathe.

It was lovely to have a house full of happiness again. Maddie and Lee were there, and we were all enjoying being together as a happy family. There were loads of messages on Facebook from well-wishers and the phone kept bleeping with texts from friends.

Jason Tingley phoned on his way home from the press conference to tell me how happy he was for us. I could hear the elation in his voice. He too has children and I knew he had been deeply touched by the incredible outcome.

Once Paul and I had got Alfie and Lilly tucked up in bed, we sat down together with his parents, who had come up to stay for the weekend. At some point, we switched on the TV and there was a
Sky News
journalist reporting live from outside our house, saying how there were no signs of life inside and that I had flown to France to be reunited with Gemma.

It was so funny. There we were, eating our dinner and watching her live on TV from the other side of our window! Paul begged to put the outside light on and show her that there was someone home, but I was scared it would only make the reporters start knocking on the door again. ‘No signs of life, eh?' my father-in-law laughed. ‘I'm in here eating my dinner! What more life does she want?' I'm surprised they didn't hear us laughing.

I was so happy – and not even the news that Gemma's biological father Gary had spoken to a newspaper about her disappearance was going to ruin things. Even though she hadn't seen him or spoken to him for several years, he was going on about how upset he was about her going missing. He
said he thought she would be sensible and mature about the situation, though I don't know how he could possibly know that as they'd had so little contact over the years.

After all that had happened, I was too exhausted to get wound up, though. The important thing was I knew Gemma was coming home to me.

Finally, I could go to bed and get some proper sleep rather than just passing out, exhausted, on the sofa. I was so excited about seeing Gemma, though I knew I couldn't completely relax until I had her safely in my arms again …

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