The phone rang and she picked it up.
‘Sarah?’
‘Bob. Hi.’ She’d meant to ring him earlier but got absorbed in her work. ‘How’s Emily?’
‘That’s just it. I don’t know.’
‘Don’t know? What do you mean? Where are you ringing from — school?’
‘No, I’m at home. But she’s not here.’
‘What time is it?’ She glanced at her watch. Half past six. ‘Did she leave a note?’
‘No, nothing. I got home at five and she wasn’t here. No plates or sign of lunch. I’ve rung her friends — Michelle and Sandra anyway — and they haven’t seen her either.’ There was a hint of anxiety in Bob’s voice — unusual for him.
‘Didn’t you ring this afternoon like I asked?’
‘Look, I’ve had two teachers sick and a football match to referee, for God’s sake! Anyway the answerphone was still on when I got here.’
‘Have you tried her mobile?’
‘It’s here in her bedroom. She told me this morning the card has run out.’
‘Well …’ Sarah was nonplussed. ‘Have you tried her friend Joanne? She sometimes goes there.’
‘I haven’t got the number.’
‘Well, go round by car. You know where she lives.’
‘All right. But someone should be here in case she comes home. It’s not like her, Sarah — you know what a state she was in this morning.’
‘I’ll be back in an hour or so. I’ve got this speech to write …’
‘The hell with your speech! Bring it home, Sarah, do it later — you should be here!’
Sarah’s face tightened. She didn’t need this, not now. ‘Stop panicking, Bob. She’ll be OK. She’s probably gone for a walk to get her head together. There’s nothing we can do until she comes back anyway. If I get my speech out of the way I can talk to her later.’
Silence came from the phone. Don’t play silly games with me, Bob Newby, not now. In a light voice intended to reassure, she said: ‘In about an hour. OK?.’ And put the phone down.
Now — how to appeal to the jury’s emotions. The deadline would concentrate her mind, as it always did. She bent forward over her desk, and her mind closed down all thoughts of Bob and Emily.
It would open again in an hour.
She got home at eight to find Bob alone. He had tried Emily’s friend Joanne and two more without success, he said. The schoolgirls had phoned their network of friends — none of them had seen or heard from Emily today.
Bob looked distraught. When Sarah came in he rushed downstairs, hoping it was Emily. One of the mothers had suggested he search her bedroom to find out what clothes she had been wearing, but he had no memory for girls’ clothes at the best of times. But the idea, the fear in the mind of the woman who had put him up to it, made Sarah shiver as she unzipped her black leather jacket.
‘Why do you want to know what she’s wearing?’
‘I don’t know … well, in case, the police …’
‘Bob..’ She put a hand on his arm. ‘She’ll be all right.’
‘So you say. You haven’t been here — you’ve been writing your wretched speech to defend some rapist! Sarah, it’s eight o’clock in the evening and none of her friends have seen her all day. It’ll be dark in an hour.’
‘Well, maybe she’s gone for a walk.’
‘Where?’
‘Well, you know — where does she go? By the river.’
Oh God no! The same thought struck them both at once. ‘I didn’t know she went by the river,’ Bob said.
‘She has done once or twice recently. She told me about it. She saw a heron …’
‘We’d better go and look.’ He grabbed a coat and went to the back door. She followed. Outside in the garden he turned. ‘No, one of us ought to stay here, in case she comes back …’
‘But if we both go, one can go upstream and one down. As you say, it’ll be dark soon.’
‘But what if she comes back?’ Bob’s panic was infectious. They stood there, indecisive, staring at each other on the carefully mown lawn, beside the weeping willow and the rose trees they had worked so hard to afford. This is absurd, Sarah thought. Nothing is going to happen.
‘We’ll leave a note,’ she said firmly. ‘Surely you left a note when you went out before?’
‘No. I didn’t think.’
Christ! And you a head teacher! ‘All right, I’ll write one.’ She turned back to the house. ‘You go on. Which way will you go?’
‘Upstream.’
‘I’ll go down then. See you soon.’
She wrote two large notes — GONE FOR A WALK BY THE RIVER, BACK SOON, MUM AND DAD — and left one on the fridge door and one on the stairs. If Emily came in she would either look for food or go to her room, surely. Then she put on her wellington boots and went out through the garden gate, across the field to the river bank. She set off downstream.
She could hear birds singing in the trees, and a blackbird called out in alarm as she approached. A lawnmower hummed in the distance. But other than that the silence was eerie, empty as she often found it. The sound of her boots on the grass, the creak of her leather jacket, became large as they never were in the city. She could even hear the cows munching in the meadow. The sudden croak of a moorhen startled her, and without warning two ducks skimmed round the bend and crash-landed on the river in front of her.
I’m supposed to like this place, she thought. It’s luxury. Emily likes it anyway, that’s why she may be out here. But why so late? She noticed a tangle of green weed close under the bank and shuddered. God what am I looking for? She braced her shoulders resolutely and strode on. For Christ’s sake the child can swim well enough and anyway why would anyone be so crazy as to try swimming here when there are perfectly good swimming pools in town?
But she might have slipped and fallen in. Then she would climb out and come home. The girl’s not an idiot.
So where is she?
A woman, a matronly figure in stout boots, tartan skirt and woolly hat, came along the path walking two labradors. ‘Hello,’ she said politely. ‘Lovely evening, isn’t it?’
‘Yes,’ Sarah said. ‘Er … you haven’t seen — a girl, have you?’ A corpse, a drowned body floating up from under the water, her long hair drifting around her like water weed?
‘Girl? No, I don’t think so. Do you mean a small child?’
‘No — no, not a child, a teenager. She’s got long dark hair, looks a bit like me, about fifteen years old …’
‘What was she wearing?’
‘I don’t know, I’m afraid. She’s my daughter, and she went out before I came back from work. I’m a bit worried — but you haven’t seen anyone?’
‘No one like that, dear, no, I’m sorry. They’re a worry, aren’t they, children? Specially at that age. I remember …’
‘Yes — well, thanks anyway.’ Sarah moved on swiftly to avoid getting entangled in the woman’s reminiscences. But after fifty yards she thought: there’s no point, if that woman’s already been along here. I should have asked her how far she went. She looked back and saw the woman and the dogs in the distance. If I go back I’ll get involved in conversation and that’s pointless too. I’ll go half a mile further on and then back. Emily wouldn’t have gone further than that, she’s no great walker but she’s been gone all day and Bob’s right, it’s getting dark. Christ this is bloody absurd, she can’t have been abducted. She’s probably gone into town and run out of bus fare.
Did I leave the answerphone on? I didn’t check it when I came in — surely Bob did that? What happens if she hasn’t got any money and she rings the operator for a reverse charge call and gets the answerphone?
Nothing, probably. No message at all.
Sarah walked another hundred yards, stared despairingly at the empty towpath winding through vacant fields beside the river in the gathering twilight, and turned back. I’m no good here, I’d be better in the house. I can organise things there.
When she got back the house was empty and there were no messages on the answerphone. She dialled 1471. A flat mechanical voice said: ‘Telephone number 0–1 — 9–0 — 4–3 — 3–6 — 8–9 — 4 called today at ten twenty seven a.m. If you wish to return the call press 3.’