‘Why don’t you start at the beginning?’ he said.
Ellie hesitated then looked up and saw Ben’s face. She swallowed.
‘I met the missing boy,’ she said.
‘His son?’
‘Sam, yes. On the road bridge, a few days ago. He was about to jump.’
Ellie felt Ben’s grip on her hands tighten.
‘I brought him back here. He was all over the place. He had blood on him, not his own.’
‘His dad’s?’
Ellie nodded.
‘He stabbed him?’
Another nod.
‘You should’ve turned him in,’ Ben said.
Ellie took her hands away from his and stared at him. ‘I couldn’t.’
Ben held her gaze for a long time. Rubbed at the stubble on his chin.
‘OK,’ he said finally. ‘But you should’ve told me.’
Ellie looked down, spoke under her breath. ‘I know.’
‘Why did he do it?’ Ben’s voice was soft, mirroring Ellie’s.
‘His dad has been abusing his little sister.’
‘Jesus. Are you sure?’
Ellie looked up. ‘Yes. I’ve spoken to both of them.’
‘The girl too?’
Ellie nodded again. It felt like all she ever did, nod in agreement.
‘They have to go to the police.’
‘I know,’ Ellie said. ‘They will. I’m taking Libby tomorrow morning, first thing. It’s just taken us a while to get to this stage.’
Ben frowned, thinking. ‘What did the mum say?’
‘She doesn’t believe it.’
‘Are you sure the kids are telling the truth?’ Ben said.
‘I think so.’
‘You think so?’
‘They are.’
‘Are they back home?’ Ben said.
Ellie shook her head. ‘Jack is out of hospital already. I couldn’t let them go back there.’
‘So where are they?’
Ellie looked past Ben to the black water out the window.
‘In the boat.’
‘Our boat?’
‘Yeah.’
‘Christ, since when?’
No point complicating things. ‘Just today.’
Ben shook his head. ‘What have you got yourself messed up in, Ellie?’
She put her hands on the table. ‘I know, it’s ridiculous. But you understand, don’t you? When I saw him on the bridge . . .’
She felt her breath getting short and the words caught in her chest.
‘It’s OK.’ He rubbed her hands. ‘You’re doing the right thing. You’re protecting them.’
She wiped at her eyes. ‘Thank you.’
He laughed. ‘Don’t thank me, I haven’t done anything.’
She stood up. ‘Yes, you have.’
He stood up too, and she put her arms around him, kissed him, nestled into his chest.
‘Do you want me to come with you tomorrow?’ he said.
She didn’t speak for a moment, weighing it up. ‘No, I’ll do it myself.’
‘If that’s what you want. But I’m here if you need me for anything. You know that, right?’
She looked him in the eye. ‘I know.’
30
The wind was up, whipping her hair into her face so that she had to pull a strand away from the corner of her mouth. She looked down.
She’d swithered this morning. For the first time in the months since she’d been coming to the bridge, she thought about walking out on the west side, not the east. The east was Logan’s side, the expansive spread of water out to the rail bridge, the North Sea and Norway beyond. But from the east side she couldn’t see the marina, the Porpoise. If she’d walked out the west side she could see the boat, imagine Sam and Libby curled up asleep in the forward cabin, unaware of the stress today would surely bring. Out west it was all industrial, the new bridge, the ferry port, the naval base, the oil refinery upriver. It was a diminishing view, the Forth getting narrower, the banks edging closer, squeezing the body of water, reducing it to a trickle.
Looking this way, east, the firth got wider and wider, endless possibilities out there in open water, the chance to get lost in the enormity of it all. It was that sense of freedom that had brought her on to the east side if she was honest, not the nagging dedication to the place Logan fell from. Or maybe it was both. She couldn’t let go of that moment, that instant when her life ended with his, one simple act reducing her to dust.
Up over the railing, drop on to the ledge, then step off.
That’s all it took.
She got her phone out of her pocket. Couldn’t resist. Flicked to Videos. There it was, the footage of Logan jumping from the spot where she was standing.
She pressed play, her stomach cramping, chest tight.
She watched the empty walkway on her phone, glanced up to check the CCTV camera was still there, watching her right now. It was. Same camera, same walkway, same bridge.
She stared at the clock running at the bottom of the screen, knew exactly when Logan appeared. Seventeen seconds. And yes, there he was, sauntering, not in a hurry, why would you be in a hurry to kill yourself, you’ve got the rest of your life to do it, once it’s done you’ll never be in a rush again.
Step, step, step, so easy, one foot in front of the other, a quick glance at the traffic out of sight from this angle, then another glance out to sea, two more steps then he slowed and turned, rested against the railing with both elbows, just another tourist or local taking in the view, feeling the size of the planet under his feet, his insignificance in the face of it all, the kind of feeling everyone gets in the presence of something big. That simple factor of scale can make a human being feel like an insect, a microbe, a virus, can make them ponder their own existence, the meaning of it all. Or maybe Logan was standing there thinking nothing at all, his mind blank like a Zen master, an empty bowl waiting to be filled with ideas. Or maybe he was tormented, a million thoughts jumbling his brain, voices telling him to jump or not jump, evil, paranoid devils, convinced that his mother and father hated him, all his school friends were laughing at him behind his back, the voices telling him he was a worthless individual who didn’t deserve to live, constant mental anguish and pain and the best way to escape was to end it all, stop existing.
Logan pushed his elbows away from the railing and hoisted his feet sideways on to it. A slight hover there, his body in equilibrium, his poise, like a gymnast preparing for the dismount, then he was over on the wrong side of the railing, standing on the ledge, facing out, the toes of his shoes at the edge, almost dangling over the drop.
Ellie pressed pause. The two thick vertical lines of the pause sign flashed up in the middle of the screen, partially blocking the view of her son. Logan, at the moment of decision, the split second before it was all over, the infinitesimal increment of time before his life blinked out of existence.
Ellie took a shaky breath and looked away from the screen. Cars roared at her back, strangers she would never meet going places she would never visit. The surface of the Forth was choppy with the wind. The water was sepia today, a thin muddiness, white smudges of waves everywhere. It gave the impression of constant movement. She spotted a train heading south across the rail bridge, a small two-carriage affair, and beyond that three oil tankers were lined up at the fuelling depot. Ellie imagined pressing pause on the world, two vertical lines flashing in front of her eyes, the train freezing on the track, waves stalling, traffic behind her suddenly motionless, caught in that instant, the glorious moment before everything went to shit. She imagined the silence of it, no traffic roar, no rush of the ocean, no clack of train wheels. No thoughts in her head, none whatsoever.
She looked down at the screen.
Pressed play.
Logan stepped off the bridge and dropped out of view of the security camera.
She closed her eyes. Counted in her head.
One elephant.
Two elephants.
Three elephants.