The Girl from the Sea: A gripping psychological thriller (11 page)

BOOK: The Girl from the Sea: A gripping psychological thriller
4.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

His offer takes me aback, but I realise I really don’t want to be on my own right now. ‘Thanks,’ I reply. ‘Breakfast sounds really good. I’m starving.’

‘Not here, though,’ Jack says. ‘I’ll get roped into doing club stuff. Let’s go into town.’

 

 

Chapter Seventeen

Jack and I head away from the river, along the quiet back streets. We pass rows of bungalows and chalets until we reach the older part of town with its tiny terraced cottages.

‘Apart from your dizzy spell, it seemed like you enjoyed that,’ he says as we walk.

‘I loved it. If my legs weren’t so shaky, I’d want to go straight back out.’

Jack laughs and I smile back at him.

After five minutes or so, we reach the High Street. It’s jammed with pedestrians and rush-hour traffic. It feels decadent to be going out for breakfast while everyone else is heading to work.

‘Over there.’ Jack points to a café on the opposite side of the road. We sidestep traffic, getting beeped by an angry guy in a Mercedes. Jack doesn’t get riled, though. He takes my hand, waving at the car as he guides me across the road. I feel a ring on his finger. Glancing down, I see it’s a wedding ring. I don’t know how I never noticed it before. My heart gives a thud of disappointment. He lets my hand go once we’re back on the pavement.

‘That traffic was a bit hairy,’ I say.

‘Yeah, downtown Christchurch can be brutal on a Monday morning.’ He grins and opens the door to the café. I scoot in under his arm. The place has only just opened, and the staff are still setting up.

‘Jack!’ A guy comes out from behind the bar area, and claps him on the back.

‘Alright, Chris. How’s it going?’

‘Good, man, good. I’ll be down the club later. You been out?’

‘Yeah, it’s perfect out there today. You know Mia, right?’

‘Sure. Hi, Mia. How was the water?’

‘Great, thanks.’

‘Awesome. You guys here for breakfast?’

We nod and chat a little more as Chris seats us at a table in a sunny courtyard out the back. But my eyes are drawn upward. The courtyard is set at the base of a grassy hill, and at the top sits a grey stone ruin. It looks ancient. It doesn’t seem real.

‘That’s so cool,’ I say. ‘What is that place?’

‘That’s the castle ruins. We can go up there after, if you like?’

‘Really?’

‘Yeah, sure. It won’t take long.’

We order fresh orange juice, coffee, and a proper fry up – eggs, bacon, mushrooms, fried bread – the lot. We don’t have to wait long for our food to arrive, and it’s absolutely mouth-wateringly delicious. Jack smiles as I sigh with pleasure.

‘Glad to see it’s hitting the spot.’

‘I don’t think I’ve had one proper meal since my accident,’ I reply. ‘This is like heaven.’

‘No one feeding you up?’ he says. ‘What about Piers? Isn’t he looking after you?’

‘Do you know Piers?’

‘Not very well. But I’ve met him a few times at some of our race weekends and club nights.’

‘Oh, yeah, of course.’ I want to ask him about his wife, but it sounds a bit forward, so I don’t. ‘Piers is finding all this a bit hard. My amnesia, I mean.’

‘I guess it’s rough on both of you.’

‘You could say that.’

‘And . . . Can you really not remember anything from before?’ Jack stares at me. His blue-green eyes vivid against his tanned face. ‘You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want.’

‘Well,’ I reply. ‘At least I can remember how to row.’

He laughs. ‘You were great out there, today. Picked it up like a pro.’

‘Thanks. It felt great. It’s the best I’ve felt since the accident.’

‘Good. You’ll have to keep it up.’

‘I’ll make sure to bring water and a hat next time.’

He’s already finished his food, but I’m only halfway through mine.

‘Sorry, looks like I’m a slow eater,’ I say.

‘It’s better for you to eat slowly. I scarfed mine down like an animal, I should be the one apologising.’

I feel more relaxed here with Jack than I ever do with Piers. We’re easy in each other’s company. And it doesn’t hurt that he’s gorgeous looking. But in an understated way, rather than Piers’ slick, groomed handsomeness. I know it’s unfair to compare, but I can’t help it. Jack has charisma. Anyway, I don’t know why I’m even thinking like this. He’s married.

My phone pings. It’s a text from Piers asking what I’m doing today. I’ll reply to it later. I can’t go on like this, dreading his calls and visits. However good we were before the accident, we’re certainly not right for each other any longer. I’ve given it a week, and I can’t stand it anymore.

I finally finish my breakfast, defeated by half a slice of fried bread.

‘Lightweight,’ Jack teases.

He offers to pay for breakfast, but I won’t let him, so we agree to split the bill, leaving a large tip. Back outside, the traffic has eased, but the pavements are heaving with impatient shoppers and slow-moving tourists.

‘Turn right,’ Jack says.

I do as he says and we wind our way, single file through the crowds. We turn right again at the roundabout, and here, at last, the crowds thin out. I recognise the French restaurant where I had lunch with Piers last week. That day seems like months ago. Jack guides me down a little pathway where I’m surprised to see some wooden stocks.

‘Are those real?’ I ask.

‘Yeah. I was put in them as a kid. Had rotten fruit thrown at me all afternoon. Scarred me for life.’

‘No!’ I turn to him in disbelief.

‘No,’ he confirms.

I give him a light shove. ‘I actually believed you for a second.’

‘They’re just a replica of the real thing,’ he says. ‘Must have been uncomfortable and humiliating to be stuck in there all day. And that was the whipping post.’ He points further along to an unremarkable looking wooden post.

I shudder at the thought of such barbaric medieval punishments.

We continue on along the shady lane. To our left is an immaculate bowling green. Then, straight ahead, I see the grassy hill we saw from the café. It doesn’t look quite as astonishing from this angle, but it’s still impressive. And at its summit sit the castle ruins.

‘Can we go up?’ I ask.

Jack nods and I follow him up the steep, curving stone steps which have been carved into the hillside. It only takes us a minute to reach the top. The castle walls are of thick, grey stone, mossy in parts. The roof is missing and most of the walls are crumbling, but there’s a pretty view of The Priory and the surrounding houses. I can also see the courtyard where we had breakfast only moments ago. A young family is seated there now, studying menus.

‘I wonder who destroyed the castle,’ I say.

‘Cromwell,’ Jack replies. ‘What a vandal.’

‘How old is it? The castle.’

‘Early twelfth century. Almost a thousand years old. Amazing really.’

‘Are you into history?’ I ask.

‘My wife’s a History teacher,’ he says. ‘She loves all this stuff.’

I feel an irrational twinge of envy.

‘Does she like to row, too?’ I ask.

‘She loves it,’ he says. ‘Because of her work, she doesn’t get to go out as often as she’d like.’ But there’s something in his voice I can’t place. Like he’s distracted by something. ‘You ready to go back down?’

‘Yeah, sure,’ I reply. But I’m not. I feel like I could stay up here with him for the rest of the day. I don’t want to go back down. Not at all.

 

Chapter Eighteen

It’s lunchtime but I’m not hungry. Probably something to do with the insanely huge breakfast I had this morning with Jack. But my lack of appetite is also down to worry. I’m out on the balcony trying to relax, but I can’t settle. It’s as though I’m riding a never-ending rollercoaster, my stomach constantly swooping and rising. There are too many things to think about, and I don’t know what to do about any of them.

This morning, out on the river, was perfect. If I could do that every day, and nothing else, I think I could be content, even if my memories never returned. But there are too many other concerns tugging at me. It feels like there’s someone tapping on my forehead, slowly and steadily wearing on my nerves. I shift my legs and bottom, trying to get comfortable on the lounger, but the sun is too hot, my brain is racing, my body on edge. It still feels like I’m living in someone else’s house, inhabiting someone else’s life.

This is no good. I’m not going to be able to lie here. I need to do something. I sit up, swing my legs off the lounger, and sit for a moment, resting my chin on the heel of my hand. Finally, I stand, rolling my neck and shoulders from side to side. They’re stiffening up a little after this morning’s rowing session. I pad inside, pulling the balcony doors closed behind me. As I do so, I get a momentary flashback of the woman from my nightmare. Her anger. Her slow walk towards me. I push the image away and swallow down a spark of fear.

My mouth is dry, so I head over to the kitchen and turn on the tap, waiting a few moments until it runs cold. I reach up to one of the cupboards to get a glass. No, that’s where the plates are kept. I still don’t know my way around my own kitchen. I open another cupboard where a few packets and tins rest forlornly on the shelves. Anger wells up inside me, tears forming behind my eyes. This is ridiculous. I can’t cry simply because I forgot which cupboard I keep the glasses in. I yank open another cupboard door. The glasses sit there, glinting, mocking. The urge to smash them rushes through me. But I don’t. Instead, I take one out and hold it under the gushing water. Fill it to the top and then gulp the whole lot down. My hand is shaking, but I will not give into my anger and sadness. I turn off the tap, place the glass carefully on the drainer, and curl my hands into fists to stop them trembling.

I must distract myself with something. Something useful. I leave the lounge and go downstairs. As I descend to the ground floor, the air becomes pleasantly cooler. I push open the door to the office, cross the room and fire up my laptop. I tap in a search for PC repair shops. After a few minutes scrolling and clicking, I find a place not too far away. I consider giving them a call first, but then change my mind. I need to get out of the house.

Glancing around the office, I soon see what I’m looking for on the floor, propped up next to the filing cabinet – a grey neoprene laptop bag. I close the machine, unplug it and slide it into the bag, along with the power cable.

Twenty minutes later, I park up outside a tiny shop imaginatively named
The PC Repair Shop,
squashed in between a sandwich place and a key cutters. It’s a no-parking zone, but I won’t be long. I grab my bag from the passenger seat and leave the Mini’s cool interior for the blazing midday heat. Two steps later and I push open the door to the shop, setting a bell jangling above my head. It’s warm and musty in here, the faint scent of electrical wires and circuits in my nostrils.

‘Coming!’ a man calls out from a back room somewhere. He appears moments later through a half-open frosted glass door. ‘Mm, sorry,’ he says, wiping crumbs from the corners of his mouth. ‘Just grabbing some lunch.’ He’s in his forties, greying hair, friendly looking. ‘Can you believe this summer we’re having?’

‘I know,’ I reply. ‘It’s like the Mediterranean out there.’

‘Too hot to be working,’ he says. ‘Anyway, how can I help?’

‘Just wondering if you’re able to retrieve deleted emails?’

‘From your laptop?’ he asks, inclining his head at my bag.

I nod.

‘Depends on your email provider . . . and other things. Best thing is to leave it with me. I’ll take a look and see if it’s possible. Is it one particular email you’re missing?’

‘No. All of them. I’ve only got the ones that were sent to me this week. The rest have all been deleted somehow and I need to get them back. The “sent” ones, too.’

‘Okay. Well, as I said, leave it with me and I’ll do my best to find them for you.’

‘Thanks. Do you know how long it might take?’

‘Hard to say. Give me your number and I’ll give you a call as soon as I know one way or the other.’

‘Do you think you can do it?’ I ask. ‘What are my chances?’

‘Truthfully, you’ve only got a ten to twenty percent chance of getting them back. You could be lucky – I might snag a few of them.’

‘Okay. Thanks.’

I spend the next five minutes filling out paperwork, and he gives me a receipt which I stuff in my purse. I leave the shop just in time, by the look of it, as I spy a traffic warden up ahead, walking purposefully towards my car. I hop in, start up the engine and pull away. The warden wags her finger at me with a smile, as I drive past. I smile back and shrug my shoulders.

That’s one chore out of the way. But now I have something far more unpleasant to do.

I hear him coming up the stairs. I grit my teeth, waiting, sitting on one of the kitchen stools dipping a carrot baton into a tub of hummus. He smiles as he walks over to me, a bouquet of pink roses in his arms.
Too late for flowers
, I think, shoving the carrot in my mouth and chewing hastily.

‘Hey, babe.’ He leans in to kiss me on the lips, then presses the bouquet into my hands. His aftershave masks their scent.

‘Hi. Thanks, they’re beautiful.’ I lay them on the counter.

‘So are you.’

He’s not making this easy.

‘Piers . . .’

‘Want a drink? It’s not too early is it?’ He looks at his watch. ‘Four thirty. I think we can crack open a bottle of something cold. Got any white in the fridge?’

‘Rosé.’

‘That’ll do.’

Maybe I
will
have a glass. It might make this less difficult.

‘You should put those flowers in water,’ he says. ‘They’ll die in this heat.’

‘In a minute.’

As he strides round to the fridge, I watch him. His outfit is immaculate as usual – one of his many pairs of beige shorts and pale blue shirts. It’s one of the things that irritates me about him. I feel bad for what I’m about to do. He’s obviously trying to make things up with me after our crappy weekend, even if he hasn’t actually apologised. I get the feeling he doesn’t realise he’s done anything wrong. He thinks he’s been supportive – coming round here all the time, organising the party. Maybe it’s my fault. Maybe I’m the one with the problem. Either way, it’s not working and I have to end it. I’ll have a glass of wine first. Dutch courage.

Piers locates the wine glasses without any of the problems I had earlier. Opens the right cupboard first time.
Well done, Piers
. I’m being a bitch in my head. I need to stop it. He fills each glass to the brim, half emptying the bottle.

‘Got anything else to dip in the hummus?’ he asks.

‘Celery? More carrots?’

‘Yeah, okay,’ he says without much enthusiasm.

I go to the fridge and take out a packet of ready-prepared veggies, slide them onto a plate, grab the hummus, and follow him out to the balcony. But then I stop. Things might get heated in a minute, and I don’t want the neighbours to hear.

‘Can we sit inside?’ I say.

‘I’ve been inside all day,’ he says. I hear the scrape of furniture as he repositions the chairs to face the sun.

‘Okay.’ I acquiesce.

He takes a gulp of wine. ‘Ah, that’s better. How was your day? You look good. Been out in the sun? You’ve got a few freckles, babe.’ He touches the tip of my nose with his finger. ‘Cute.’

My nerves return, but I can’t chicken out of this. We’re not right for each other. I know it, even if he doesn’t. I take a sip of wine. It’s cold and crisp with a hint of sweetness, but I’m not enjoying it. I set my glass back on the table.

‘Piers,’ I begin.

He smiles across at me, a look of lazy lust in his eyes.

‘Piers, this past week has been . . . difficult.’

‘You can say that again. You’re feeling better, though, aren’t you? Apart from the whole memory loss thing.’

‘Kind of,’ I say. ‘But, the thing is, losing my memory has meant that I’m starting all over again. With everything. I don’t know any of the people in my life. I don’t remember our history, or what drew us together.’

‘You’re talking about us, right?’ he says, putting his glass on the table. ‘You and me?’

‘You, me, my family, my friends.’

He leans forward. ‘I’ll help you through it, Mia. I can tell you everything you need to know. I love you, babe. I’m here for you.’

‘But that’s just it,’ I say. ‘I don’t think I want to be told. I think I want to rediscover it all for myself. Start again, if you like.’

‘Why don’t I move in here?’ he says, not taking the hint. ‘It’ll be easier. We can rediscover everything together . . . if you know what I mean.’ He grins.

‘No,’ I say. ‘I think . . . I need to be on my own.’

‘Okay. Well, I don’t have to move in.’ His smile disappears. He’s offended.

‘Piers, you’re not listening.’ I look into his eyes with the most serious expression I can muster. ‘I want to be on my own.’

He stares back, finally understanding. ‘Without me, you mean.’ He tilts his head and chews his lower lip.

I don’t reply.

‘What happens when you get your memory back and you realise you’ve made a mistake?’ he says. His voice isn’t pleading. It’s hard.

‘I guess I’ll have to take that chance.’

‘So that’s it then? We’re finished?’ he says, shaking his head, disbelieving.

‘I’m sorry.’

‘Well, that’s just fucking great isn’t it.’ He stands up and downs his wine. ‘That knock on the head really screwed up your brain, Mia. You’ve been weird ever since the accident. I’m the best thing that’s ever happened to you, and you’re chucking it all down the drain. I was going to ask you to . . . Oh, what’s the point. You’re going to regret this.’ He shoves past my chair and walks back inside. I stand up and follow him, trying to ignore my trembling body, and keep it together. I knew this would be hard, but it’s awful seeing him so bitter and angry.

‘I’m sorry, Piers. I didn’t want to hurt you. I . . . It’s just not right between us.’

‘And what about the business?’ he says. ‘The new apartment’s in both our names. What about all the work I’ve put into it?’ He runs both hands through his hair.

‘I don’t know,’ I reply. ‘We’ll work something out. You can buy me out or something.’

‘Yeah, like you need the money,’ he mutters. His face twists. ‘For someone so loaded, you’re a tight cow.’

‘Charming,’ I say, taken aback by his vitriol.

He’s standing at the top of the stairs, his face red, his perfect hair messed up for once. ‘God, Mia,’ he says with disgust. ‘You really are a complete bitch.’

He turns away, his footsteps recede, the front door slams. Through the French windows, I hear his car start up, the engine revving hard. The squeal of tyres as he leaves.

I’m shaking, but it’s done.

BOOK: The Girl from the Sea: A gripping psychological thriller
4.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Thief of Lies by Brenda Drake
Maia by Richard Adams
Preservation by Fiona Kidman
The Sleeping Sands by Nat Edwards
The Boy with No Boots by Sheila Jeffries
The Saddler Boys by Fiona Palmer
The Gypsy Crown by Kate Forsyth