
*
We
were less than five miles from the little market town a few miles from
He
was chewing his nails now - not something I'd seen him do before. I cast him a brief
glance as we moved into yet another street where the houses were getting bigger, with
arched Victorian style windows: perhaps forty years old and set well back from the road
behind sloping drives. Somewhere along the road that led out of the town and into the open
countryside, we found
"Ok?"
It
took a moment for Finn's eyes to leave the house and I couldn't tell what he was thinking.
I could tell a lot more clearly that he was struggling hard to find something
familiar about it.
"Yes.
Let's go," he said shortly, opening the car door.
The short moment of vulnerability was gone. It was perfectly apparent to me that he
now just wanted to get inside, get the meeting and lunch over with and leave as fast as
possible. I stepped out, leaving the car
windows down to catch the light breeze blowing and followed him up to the front door. This
was not going to be easy. I know Finn's shoulders. As a matter of fact I know every inch
of him and I could see the tension everywhere - in his fingers, in his jaw, in his tense
stride as he moved ahead of me. He was holding it together, but he was utterly terrified.
They'd
seen us coming of course. I didn't seriously expect that the Curtises would have been able
to wait inside for the doorbell to ring. They couldn't have slept the previous night and
they must have been waiting hours to see the car turn into the driveway.
I
suppose I should have taken more notice of the drama of the moment - Finn walking up the
path that he had last walked down when he was seven - but those few seconds rushed past
without registering. So pass most major moments in life. Then the door was pulled
open and there on the doorstep were the two people we had seen in the photograph, the man
and the woman, dressed up for the occasion, and painfully, horribly distressed.
Finn
had been standing close to me, but I felt him brace himself and step forward towards the
woman who was smiling although tears were streaming down her face. The man beside her was
not much better. I could only watch in sympathy as with amazing restraint and incredible
awkwardness, the three of them kept a polite distance and shook hands.
Finn
was business-like and introduced me as I've heard him introduce clients. David and Tara
took a moment to say hello, but their eyes were riveted on Finn and while they were
managing not to touch, neither of them could move away from him.
We were quickly ushered in where two other adults about our age waited, standing
close together in the hall way with equally stiff and awkward expressions. The
brother and the sister I presumed - and I could feel an immediate chill in the air.
It
seemed entirely ridiculous that we should just stand here being politely introduced. They
led us through a hall and into a large sitting room with a wooden floor and the large
windows, where a piano and several chairs and sofas stood, and there,
"Finn
- this is Steven - do you remember Steven?"
Finn
took only a moment to look, offering his hand to shake.
"No, I'm sorry. Steven, this is my
partner Craig."
Again,
he was clipped and polite, all business. I shook hands. Steven's handshake was not just
strong but almost testingly tight. I looked up into his face and wasn't at all what I saw
there - his eyes were rather grim and his face was quite expressionless.
"And
this is Melissa,"
"Nice
to meet you Melissa."
I
tried to inject warmth into my greeting but it didn't seem to be returned.
I couldn't remember a more awkward moment in my life and I've had a few.
I couldn't tell if Finn was feeling the same way I was, or if it was because I was
observing this and to me it was the most odd and stilted and suppressedly emotional
experience I had ever been part of.
"Tea."
"Tea
please." I said as gently as I could. She left the room and David cleared his throat
as I drew Finn with me to sit down on the sofa at something of a safe distance.
"Did...was
your drive a good one this morning?" David asked once he'd seated himself in one of
the chairs.
I
left a silence for Finn to fill if he wanted to, and when he didn't, cleared my throat and
tried to tap through the ice filling the room.
"Yes-
you gave us good directions. Thank you."
Silence
again. David leaned over and pushed towards us some photographs in an album on a polished
glass table.
"I
- er - you might like to see those? The police gave them to us."
I
was startled to see pictures of what must have been a teenaged Finn.
"The
police - they aged Finn to try finding him?" I asked, looking with interest at the
photographs. The ones the police gave to me
were the first I'd seen of Finn when he was younger. Even
if it wasn't an actual photo of him at that age, you could tell that's what he would have
looked like.
"Actually,
no -" David cleared his throat and gave Finn another anxious glance. "These came
from the -"
"The
children's home." Finn said bluntly, looking over my shoulder. Even I couldn't tell
what he felt from his tone: David must have been stumped.
"Yes."
he said rather apologetically. "They uh – collected them from your social services
file last week when they tracked down the children's home. They thought it might be a
breach of your privacy but, well. This hasn't happened before. They had no policy to
follow so they did what they felt was - well, most important I suppose."
"Do
you remember your time at this children's home place?" Steven asked bluntly.
"Yes."
Finn sat back, leaving the pictures in my hands. "I went there when I was about
thirteen."
"What
about before?" Steven persisted.
"Steve."
David said mildly. "The police told us that Finn didn't remember much and they said
it wasn't uncommon - not in this kind of case. In a minute I'll show you around the house,
Finn. Maybe that will help you feel more oriented?"
"Maybe,"
Finn replied noncommitally. We were saved by
"I
don't know if you remember - but I did - you loved these as a little boy, you wanted me to
make them every afternoon."
"Thank
you," Finn said rather awkwardly, popping the roll into his mouth.
"We
had them quite often," Melissa added, sipping her tea.
"I never liked them at all."
"I
know you didn't, but I never could resist those eyes."
It
took a long moment for Finn to reply. "Chinese,
mostly. Neither of us cook and that's the
easiest thing to get on the way home or delivered."
He immediately took another sip of tea to cover the silence.
This
one lasted another few minutes and I could feel the desperation rising in the room. I
reached out and turned the photograph album around.
"This
was a nice idea of the police's."
"We-"
Tara looked at her husband for help. "We wanted some idea of what we had missed. They
were very kind. We saw that one - "
She
pointed to a picture of Finn - who looked only seven or eight - in a garden with swings.
"- and we wanted to know where it came from. They told us it was taken the first few
weeks you were at the children's home, Finn? They told us about the doctor's records -
that you were very small, no one believed at first that you could be thirteen at all. They
said it was a give away, a known sign."
"A
sign?" I said when Finn didn't respond.
"Of
imprisoned children. A- apparently it happens where a child has been in an abnormal
environment, abducted, imprisoned, somewhere they feel unsafe or un -"
She
broke off and David spoke for her, subdued. "Unhappy."
I
could feel Finn tensing. He had been sensitive
about his size when I first met him and now I understood why.
When Finn didn't speak, I tried to push it.
"You
have decent, if not fond memories of the children's home, don't you Finn?
That's where you learned to play football."
"It
was ok." Finn said very shortly.
"They
said you had a serious growth spurt soon after you arrived,"
"You
don't seem overly short now," Steven added helpfully.
I looked at him, trying to gauge his intentions.
"Come
and look at the house." David said abruptly, putting his cup down. "It's changed
a bit since you- but..."
He
trailed off and couldn't hide the need in his voice.
So
he showed us over the house. It was a standard, nice, spacious, middle class home. The
dining room table gleamed. The kitchen was bright and very clean. Flowers stood in the
small study and music was scattered on the desk. Photographs lined the stairs and I
stopped, looking at several.
David
stood on the landing and I could see he was trying to give Finn no clues. Finn looked back
at him and then without expression at the closed doors.
"Do
you remember?" David said at last. "Anything? You were nearest to us, remember
that?"
"No,
sorry," Finn said shortly.
David
tried to smile, but turned away and opened the nearest door. "This was Steven's room
- he and his wife use it when they stay sometimes - and this was Melissa's."
They were bedrooms with some glimpses of the teenager still left, but mostly guestrooms with personal touches. The next room was the master bedroom, large and comfortable, and David looked again at Finn with almost painful waiting, but didn't say anything. That left one last room and David didn't try to open that door, simply waving Finn ahead of him.
I
followed David into the room and felt the almost palpable question "Do you
remember?" hanging in the air.
"We
changed things around," David said as Finn looked around.
"We had to put the room to good use, so it's now our grandchild's room when my
son comes to visit.
My
eyes stopped on the drum that had been in the first police photograph we'd seen.
It was a little worse for wear, but it was definitely the same drum. I looked at
Finn, wondering if he had seen it, but his face was still expressionless. I took his hand
as David went back onto the landing, drew him against me and took the privacy to give him
a swift, tight hug. I was getting more anxious about him by the minute.
"Are
you ok?"
"I
don't know any of it." Finn said to me under his breath, ducking his head into my
shoulder for a minute. "Nothing. I've never been here before."
"It's
all right," I said forcefully, letting Finn decide when to let go.
"We're just here to meet them, that's all. It's ok."
I
got a quick nod before he turned and I followed him back down the stairs.
"It's
a lovely home Mr. Curtis," I said as we entered the lounge again.
"David,
please." David said to me, watching Finn walk across to the window. He followed and I
heard him trying to sound casual.
"The
play house is still there Finn- do you remember? You loved to play in there, you helped me
build it."
"How
long have you and him been together?" Steven said to Finn from the chair nearest
mine.
"I
see it," Finn said to David as if he hadn't heard Steven, standing with his hands
twisted in front of him.
"You
begged and begged to stay out there one night, but you didn't even make it to
"He
was only six." David said in the same mild tone.
"Liss,
I could really use your help in the kitchen,"
"How
long HAVE you and him been together?" Steven repeated, looking at me.
"About
five years." I said easily, not quite sure of his tone. I wasn't comfortable with it.
"And
you're a physiotherapist? What does he do?"
"Finn
would probably rather explain that to you himself." David said before I could answer,
looking at Steven.
"I'm
a freelance fitness consultant," Finn said shortly.
"What,
you tell people what -"
"I
set up fitness routines for those that are interested in taking better care of their
bodies," Finn said bitingly.
Since
Steven had a distinctly comfortable roll around what was otherwise a fairly flat stomach,
I stifled a smile at that. Finn walked past the piano and cast a quick look at David.
"What
is it you do?"
"I
write music for advertisers," David said, coming with him and running his fingers
over the keys. He seemed to be hovering over Finn, I was aware of him doing it, and I knew
better than anyone that Finn- while he actually is a very affectionate man on the quiet-
doesn't easily do closeness, particularly with people he doesn't know well. We have old
friends he isn't comfortable being touched by and wouldn't consider anything more than a
brief handshake with.
"Anything
I would know?" Finn asked, moving around to the other side of the piano.
"If
you shopped for a Dyson anytime in the last six months or so, my jingle is on that.
Mostly played by Tescos when they advertise."
"I
know that one." Finn gave me the ghost of a smile. "From the office tv. We don't
own one."
"Mostly
we run. Or work out in the evenings. Or walk." I said to Steven, seeing his
expression. "Two sports freaks together."
He
didn't look impressed. I glanced back to Finn, wondering if we'd happened upon a homophobe
here. That was likely to be awkward if true.
"A
lot of kids could do a lot better if their parents promoted more of that, rather than
the television as babysitter," David said, coming back to sit down.
Finn stood looking outside a moment longer before heading back to the couch.
The atmosphere was getting distinctly more strained.
"So
you want to tell us what happened at the children's home?" Steven said bluntly into
the hush.
David
looked perturbed and opened his mouth, but Finn looked round at Steven, one eyebrow
raised. I knew the expression. I saw a sarcastic doorman get a fat lip once after Finn
looked at him like that.
"What
happened? What do you mean?"
"You
learned to play football it seems. Did you
stay there until you were eighteen or did you leave on your own before that?"
"I
left at sixteen." Finn said shortly. "Got a job. Paid my way through
college."
"And
you didn't remember anything at all?" Steven said in the same tone.
I
saw Finn's jaw tighten but before either he or I could speak, Melissa entered the room
with news that lunch was served. I stood up
and followed Finn closely, ensuring that he and Steven didn't get too close.
Steven was starting to worry me.
It
was a classic Sunday lunch, despite it being a Saturday - the typical family get-together
meal, and I couldn't help but see Tara's eyes on Finn, or the way she took the chair
nearest to him and took his plate, serving him with the meat sliced on the plate.
"There
- help yourself. Craig?"
She
held out her hand and I passed her my plate with a smile of thanks, appreciating her
warmth. She was by far the best of the family at hiding her anxiety.
"I
never have liked swede. Or pork." Melissa said rather petulantly across the table,
watching the meat being lifted from the dish.
"Which
is why there are a few slices of turkey here,"
"Pork
was YOUR favourite." Steven said, spooning potatoes onto his plate and looking at
Finn. "But I suppose you don't remember that either."
"Steve." David said quietly.
"What?"
Steven asked him. "I'm curious. Aren't you?"
"The
police explained." David told him, but I caught the rather anxious look he cast at
Finn and then his wife. "This is hard enough for Finn and it's to be expected that he
shouldn't-"
"Remember one damned thing." Steven finished for him. "Yes."
"Steven!"
I
admit, I was relieved to see him at least drop his eyes in deference to his
mother.
"We've
heard about your jobs."
"Yes,
he was telling us." I said when Finn didn't answer, apparently deeply absorbed in
cutting a slice of pork. "Must be interesting work."
"The
turkey's too cold." Melissa said to her mother in a tone that reminded me of a little
girl, whining in a restaurant.
"I'll
put it in the microwave for a moment." She got up and David cleared his throat,
looking back to Finn.
"You
two have a flat, I remember the police inspector telling me?"
"Yes."
I said when Finn didn't respond. "We're on the fourth floor with nice views out the
large windows. Very open. I wouldn't mind having the lovely landscaping you do
though."
"Thank
you,"
"As
it did when we lived here," Melissa interrupted. "We used to help mow what
seemed like every other day."
"But
that's what you do for family, isn't it?" Steven commented through a forkful of food.
Finn said nothing and looked at no one, continuing to eat slowly. I didn't know how he was
managing it: the meal smelt wonderful and it was turning to ashes in my mouth. I'd never
realised how very true that cliché actually was.
"How
did you come to choose the flat?" David asked with despairing brightness. Finn
continued to eat. I gave up and put my fork down.
"It
was a new block overlooking the park. We couldn't find anything else we wanted. Finn likes
open spaces, plenty of places to run."
"Yes,
he's good at running." Steven murmured.
I
didn't know how to respond to that at all. I could see how upset David and Tara were:
Finn, eating in total silence and Steven and Melissa behaving - well. If I was honest,
like a pair of spoiled children.
"I
don't like the potatoes, Mum." Melissa announced pushing them away across her plate.
The pettiness of the gesture surprised me.
"Have
some more vegetables then,"
"No,
thank you," Finn said, his first words at the table.
"You
can have more," Steven said. "Might as well take as much as possible."
My
jaw was tightening with the effort of not telling Steven what I thought of him, but Finn
had finally had enough. He set down his knife and looked directly at Steven, his head very
slightly ducked so that he was looking up under his eyebrows.
"What?"
Steven
put his fork down and sipped water, giving Finn a careless shrug.
"Well
you're clearly here for what you can get, aren't you? We haven't seen hide nor hair of you
for years, you don't 'remember' until the year that Dad retires and his pensions kick in
and he and mum are worth something-"
"Steven!"
David said sharply.
"And
now here you are," Steven went on with brittle false cheer, "Don't remember a
thing, but here you are, with your boyfriend-"
"Leave
Craig out of it." Finn ground out, standing up quickly enough that his chair fell
over backwards. "I didn't ask myself to dinner."
"No,
it was all coincidental wasn't it?" Steven snarled back, pushing his plate out of the
way. "How stupid do you think we are? If you don't want what you can get out of us
now, what the fuck DO you want?"
"To
be left alone." Finn snapped back, and stormed out of the dining room. David and Tara
sat frozen. I knew Finn was heading for the door and I got straight up and followed, doing
what I could to keep up with his stride. Steven erupted after us with a crash that hurled
the dining room door into the wall. The bang shook the house.
"You've
got no bloody right to set foot in this house! How dare you!"
"I
was asked!" Finn spat back, although he'd stopped, at bay just inside the front door.
I was standing between them and sweating, and I seriously wondered now if I was going to
find myself in the middle of a fight.
"Steven,
please!"
"How
could you forget seven YEARS of life here? We went through HELL for those years after you
disappeared. We went through hell and you just forgot about us!"
"I
don't give a damn what you think!"
The
front door was slammed open and Finn stormed out onto the porch and down the steps. As
much as I felt badly for Tara and David, my loyalty was to Finn and he needed me far more
than they did. I saw David with his arm around Melissa,
Oh
God this was ugly. This defined ugly. I was half way across the lawn when Steven barrelled
past me, ripping the car door open. If he'd had the car keys I knew Finn would have gone -
with or without me, the whites of his eyes were showing like a bolting horse. Steven's
face was still scarlet and I broke into a jog, seriously expecting Finn to throw a punch.
Steven's yell hurt the ears.
"Don't
you bloody DARE run away from this! Have you got ANY idea what you've done, you bastard?
Have you got any idea at all what it was like?"
"Stop
it." I ordered, getting between them. I didn't touch Steven, I knew he would have
taken a swing at me, but he raised his hands and stepped back, still looking at Finn.
"Every
bloody Christmas and birthday was terrible. We were never allowed to enjoy them, they were
always days of mourning for you. Tears and silences, we used to flaming DREAD them. Do you
know what that was like? We were never allowed to go anywhere alone because of you,
because we were the only ones left - and we weren't even good enough to fill the hole you
left. WE weren't the kid they wanted. Nothing could replace Sam. Saint fucking Sam was
gone and the world had ended and Liss and I just had to make do with what was left over!
YOU caused that you sod! YOU went off with some fucking stranger and now here you are, not
a mark on you, and you say you don't remember? You were SEVEN YEARS OLD! Seven's old
enough to use a phone! It's old enough to post a bloody letter! It's old enough to TELL
SOMEONE! And you want us to believe you did NOTHING? You liar! You bloody hypocrite!"
Finn
flew out of the car, pushing me roughly aside and grabbed two handfuls of Steven's shirt,
the buttons popping loose under the stress. He has an appallingly efficient left hook when
he's really lost it, but he only shoved Steven backwards with all his strength.
Steven
tripped and landed hard on his backside and Finn took off down the driveway at a dead run.
I barely spared Steven a look as I shut the passenger door and made my way around to the
driver's side. Finn was fast, he was already at the street, choosing to run away from town
rather than run down the road in front of the house. I backed into the turn around and
headed out of the driveway, feeling at once both sorry for Steven and furious with him for
attacking Finn. As I left I caught a glimpse of Tara and Melissa clinging together in the
doorway and David pulling Steven to his feet. It was only a split second that I saw them,
but it was long enough to see that David had pulled Steven into his arms and was holding
him tightly, cradling him, and although Steven was as big as he was, he was clinging to
David with all his strength.
I
followed Finn's progress with my stomach churning and my mouth and throat dry. Finn was
running at a pace that he'd tire of quickly, rather than the steady run he could keep up
for miles. I bided my time, having to stop once and losing sight of him over a hill while
a farmer trotted a small herd of sheep across the road. I was afraid to stay too close to
him as oncoming traffic would avoid me and potentially run him over in the process. I
crested the hill and looked down the road, panicked for a second when I couldn't see him.
Then at the side of the road, I caught sight of him bent over next to a tree. I pulled as
far off the road as I could, leaving the warning lights blinking.
I've
seen him run himself to the point of throwing up once or twice. Running is his answer to
the worst stresses in his life, when he doesn't know what else to do to contain emotion. I
put a hand on his back and he flung it straight off, not looking around at me. A moment
later his shoulders spasmed again and he leaned over, retching again into the grass. I
stood near him, not trying to touch until at last he straightened. Then I took his arm,
pulled him around and hung on when he would have shoved me away. It took a lot of strength
to keep the grasp and I could feel every muscle rigid and corded. He was whiter than a
ghost and he was breathing quickly, I could see his chest rising and falling. He was just
about letting me hold on, I wasn't going to get much closer. All I could do was put all
the concern into my voice that I could.
"Finn?
Honey are you all right?"
He
raised his arms - gently, but it made me release my grasp. I've never seen such a clear
indication of 'back off'.
"I'm
fine," he said gruffly, smoothing his shirt out.
This
was the weirdest definition of fine I'd heard. I'd never seen Finn lose it in the way he'd
lost it with Steven. I'd never seen him scream and shout. Fight, yes: I've seen him go
silently for someone's throat, but he isn't a screamer. When he's upset he vanishes. And I
could see him vanishing now, even as he stood before me. I put out a hand and tried to
touch his cheek, about ready to die of guilt. This was my fault. I'd talked him into this.
I'd caused that appalling scene of devastation back there. Finn stepped back, away from my
hand, piercing me with a look that cut straight to the heart.
If I couldn't remember the last few years we'd spent together, I'd have sworn that
it was a stranger staring back at me. If I'd damaged him - if I'd added to the horrific
damage that had already been done to him twenty years ago - then he wouldn't have to hate
me. I'd be doing that all by myself. He was whiter than a sheet and he looked cold. Shock.
I wouldn't have been at all surprised if he'd been in shock. As gently as I could, not
trying to touch, I put a hand out, ushering him towards the car.
"Come
on baby. It's all right. Let's get to the hotel, get you something to drink."
I
wondered if he'd refuse to move, but to my relief Finn moved automatically to the car,
getting in and buckling up. He was as close to
the car door as was possible, every muscle taunt. I glanced at his family home as we
passed it, the porch empty of everyone, then looked at Finn.
His eyes were facing straight ahead, as if what had taken place in their front yard
had never happened.
*
I
turned onto the drive of the hotel a few minutes later and we walked silently together
into reception where I signed us in, then up narrow stairs to the room we'd been
allocated. It was fairly big- this was an old Victorian house, no more than twelve rooms
in the entire hotel - and at this time of year we were quite likely the only guests on
this floor. There was a small kettle and milk carton with teabags and coffee set out on a
tray on the dresser. I put the kettle on, laid out two mugs and watched Finn walk across
to the window, his arms tightly folded. His face was blank. No hint of anger, nor terror,
nor sadness. There was nothing and he was working very hard at it.
And the longer he managed to remain that way, the less I expected to ever see
again. It was making me as nervous as hell. The kettle boiled and I poured two mugs of
tea, sugared his and took it across to him, keeping my voice quiet.
"Here
honey."
"No
thanks."
I
put it on the windowsill within his reach and tried to sip mine. "Why don't you try a
shower?"
"No,"
Finn said, stepping away.
"You're
cold."
"I'm
fine." Finn settled, arms still crossed,
in front of a picture on the wall, apparently deeply absorbed in it.
Ok.
I put my tea down and sat down on the bed, looking up at him.
"No,
you're not. There's no way you could be. That was a horrible, awful scene and I'm so
sorry. I'm so sorry I talked you into going."
If
Finn heard me, he gave no indication. I was at
a loss as to what to do. It sometimes took a
lot of work to get to the bottom of what was going on with Finn, but he wasn't giving me
an inch. My over riding fear was that the more
he clammed up now, it couldn't be long – maybe weeks, maybe months, or maybe just days -
before we were two complete strangers occupying the same house. This truly had the
potential to be the beginning of the end and I knew it.
"Finn."
I said more clearly.
"I
think I'll take that shower now," Finn said, turning away from the painting.
I
put out a hand to catch his, evading his twist away to grab his wrist and hold it too
firmly to let him pull free. "Finn. We need to talk."
"There's
nothing to talk about. It's over and done
with," Finn said, working harder on pulling free.
"Is
it?" I held on, not letting him go. He hates the fact but I outweigh him by enough to
be able to manhandle him. Which I have known to make him extremely annoyed in bed, even if
we're playing. He didn't like it, but I could win if I tried.
Finn
stopped struggling and looked at me.
"What
are we doing about tomorrow?" I asked him quietly. "What
are you going to do about
"We're
going home."
"You
can just walk away from them?"
"From
people I don't know?"
"I
don't care about them, I care about you." I said shortly, not letting him move.
"Can YOU just block this out? I saw how Steven upset you-"
"I'm
FINE."
"Listen
to me." I said again. "Finn."
"There's
nothing to talk about," Finn said entirely too calmly while at the same time, jerking
his hand from my grip.
"Nothing?
Honey -" I reached over again, caught him before he could escape and made him turn
back to me. "FINN. You're not going to blank me. I was there too -"
He
had an expression of polite disinterest, as if he was listening to a particularly boring
insurance salesman.
I
stopped, trying to swallow my rising anger. Here
we were, in the midst of one of the worst days of our adult lives- although by Finn's
standards this had to be one of many 'worst days' - and he was just refusing to be here.
Refusing to think, to feel, to hear, to connect to any of it. It wasn't deliberate either:
Finn doesn't sulk, he doesn't do passive aggression, he wouldn't get the concept. But
under enough pressure he shuts down, closes off. This must have saved him time after time
when he went through the desperately hurtful and frightening events I knew he'd endured,
but that was before us.
And
if I was honest what scared the hell out of me right now was that I knew when he'd reached
this stage before, he'd ended up running. I was seriously afraid that the coping mechanism
would kick in without him thinking, and he'd bolt from me as well as the family.
"Finn,
TALK to me," I implored, still holding one arm.
"About
what?" Finn said politely.
"What
do you mean about what?" I demanded, trying not to let my temper get the better of
me. His calmness was eating into me like acid. "If you don't know what to say then
try telling me how you feel. Or what you want to do. Because I don't want you to walk away
with this all undone and have years of trying to -"
Finn
raised his arm again, trying gently to slip my hand. That was it. I was seriously het up,
that blank look of his was killing me and I knew he'd keep this up indefinitely. I
wouldn't get near him. At some point during that realisation, frustration and emotion got
the better of me and instead of letting go I did something I'd done only once, years ago,
the first few weeks after we'd met when he'd been showing me that blank face and that
infuriatingly detached, rigid calm.
I
yanked, pulling Finn sharply to me and off balance, using my greater strength and weight
to pull him over my lap like a teenager in a tantrum, holding him there in an embrace that
all his struggling couldn't evade, and I brought the flat of my hand down across the seat
of his jeans.
My
grandfather had hauled me over his knee once or twice in my teens, an old man I had loved
dearly and who had a hand like cast iron when he wanted to get through to my thick head.
With memories of him, with memories of five years ago when I had demanded that Finn
listened to me and let me tell him that casual sex and the occasional phone call had no
place alongside what I felt for him, I slapped his tight, jeaned backside hard. Very hard.
And I kept swatting, my hand aching more with each swat.
I was vaguely aware of Finn struggling and tense, although I had a grip around his
narrow waist that he wasn't getting out of, and his first few sounds were of shock. It
made no difference. Even through denim and briefs, the outline of which I could feel
through my smarting palm, he was starting to jump a little with each impact of my hand,
and when I moved my hand down to cup the lowest curves of his backside and the top of his
thighs, his legs began to jerk and his hips began to twist over my lap with anything but
disinterest or detachment. He was here, he was feeling this, he was definitely now
connected to me and what I was trying to explain to him.
It
took only a few swats more. His twisting became frantic rather than furious, and then
under my arm I felt his chest heave, his body shudder all over and all the stress rush up
and out of his body like a seizure. I loosened my grip, scared out of my wits for him, and
Finn slid to his knees on the floor, his hands locking on to my shirt. I was holding on to
him so tightly that I slid too, off balance and clutching for him, pulling him hard
against my chest. His dark hair was beneath my chin and against my chest, scattered
against the white cotton of my shirt, and he shuddered all over. In five years I had
never, never seen Finn cry. Tears were streaming down my face too and I hadn't even
noticed them start. For a few moments we clung there together, him and me, all awkward
legs and hard bones as we tried desperately to get close enough together. Finn twisted
around and his arms clenched around my neck. He sat on the floor and clung to me until the
two of us rocked with the sheer strength of our grip. I kissed what I could of his hair,
saying things that barely made sense but which seemed to quiet him down. I rained kisses
on his face, his eyes, his cheek and eventually he turned so that the next one was square
on his lips. He bit at me more than kissed. He grabbed for me as if he was starving, and I
wasn't much better. We hadn't been this rough with each other since very early on when
emotion was new and raw and stronger than caring about bite bruises in the morning. His
hands were on my face now, both of us wiping away tears that were filling our mouths with
salt. His hands were the first to let go,
nearly tearing the buttons of my shirt as he worked to remove it.
I
grabbed for this jeans, loosening the belt as he pulled his shirt over his head.
He stumbled up and I pulled his pants down as he pushed his shorts free before
helping me to stand. I had started to work on
my pants button but was pushed forcibly down onto the bed as Finn's hands made quick work
of my button and fly. My pants were yanked
down and I found myself rolled onto my stomach, pants now in a knot around my ankles.
Neither
of us were thinking at all by this point. This was a routine we'd practiced until we were
extremely good at it, and all I wanted to do was to touch him, be close to him, feel him
as close to me as he could get; and if he wanted me, I needed him utterly convinced that I
was, without doubt, his. We virtually ground together, and even after we were both spent
the first time we went on, and on, moving from position to position, together,
coordinated. It must have taken hours, but gradually it got gentler and gentler, involving
more and more time spent pausing to kiss, to touch, until finally Finn subsided on top of
me, rolled over and laid his head on my chest, out of breath and wet with sweat. My lips
felt crushed and my ribs ached, but I couldn't have cared less. The weight of him against
me raised tenderness almost too painful to bear. I lifted a leaded hand and ran it down
his spine, which was damp with sweat. We'd long since abandoned all clothes and made hay
of the bed.
"I
love you, do you know that?" I asked between a few last, deep breaths.
Finn
lifted his head to look at me, and then grabbed my chin and leaned to kiss me.
"Yes.
Me too."
That
is usually as close as he gets, but today I held his head between my hands to make him
look.
"You
listen. You belong to me. Whatever else, whoever else, it doesn't matter. I belong to you
and you belong to me and none of the rest of it matters."
"Even
if I am one hell of a disappointment?" he said wryly but softly enough to prove how
much it hurt.
"Finn."
I kissed him again, his eyes, his forehead, his mouth. "No one's disappointed in you.
How can you blame yourself honey? How was any of this your fault?"
"I
didn't get help." He said it helplessly, sounding bewildered like a little boy.
"Steven's right. I was old enough to tell someone. Or do something. Anything."
"Do
you know why?"
Finn
shook his head no, wiping the back of his hand across his forehead.
"You
were a child." I said softly. "You were only seven. You must have been
terrified. God alone knows what the kidnappers told you or where you were taken or if you
were threatened."
"Who
knows? It's not like I remember, is it?" Finn said bitterly, laying his head down
again.
I
stroked his hair, not hearing the immediate question but all the things underneath it.
"You
still feel like it wasn't you. Like there's been some kind of mistake."
"If it was me – if I WAS Sam – surely I'd know SOMETHING." Finn said softly
and bitterly. "You'd think I'd know something. Anything at all."
How
do you explain something you don't even understand yourself?
"The
mind is -" I began, and Finn cut me off, impatient.
"A
powerful thing. I GET that, what I DON'T get
is why I can't remember a damned thing about it! I
was there, I lived it, day by day. Why is it
just gone and when did it go?"
"Shock."
I said softly. "Trauma. You couldn't do anything about the situation you were in.
Finn, God only knows what they said to you."
"Why
does it matter what they said? Who said it?
It means I must have given up wanting to get home at some point.
Or maybe my home life was really bad and it was better wherever I was taken?
Maybe it's all a mistake and I was never Sam at all. Who's ever going to know if I
don't?"
I
lay back, running a hand over his hair. It was damp, and I could feel the heat and the
tension in his scalp below.
"Maybe
'gave up' is right, Finn. Maybe kids do eventually give up hope. Tara and David didn't
strike me as bad people."
"No,
they didn't," Finn said wearily. "Who knows, Craig? Why did I have to get
involved in the assault in the first place? Why
did the police have to reopen the case, why couldn't they just leave me the fuck alone?
It's too late for this."
"We're
kind of past that stage." I rolled over, resting my chin on my arms beside him.
"You liked
"He
was and Melissa wasn't much nicer."
"I
liked
Finn
took a few breaths, and I could see his eyes, open and fixed on the ceiling.
"I
do have to go back." he said eventually, heavily. "I don't bloody want to, but
it's not fair. I at least need to make a decent goodbye to David and Tara."
I
raised up on an elbow so I could touch his face. "I
think that would be the right thing to do. Let
them know there are no hard feelings and leave on a good note."
He
didn't answer, but after a moment he lifted his head to kiss me and I pulled him closer,
holding him. I don't think either of us slept until almost dawn, and unusually for us, we
didn't let go either.
*
The
house looked exactly the same as it had last night, but for less cars on the drive.
"Oh
Finn… Are you all right? We didn't know which hotel to look in or if you'd even talk to
us - Steven isn't here, neither's Melissa. I'm so sorry-"
"I'm
sorry too."
Finn
put her gently back, evading what I suspect would have become a hug without much prompting
on his part. David had followed
"I
don't think" David said, putting an arm around Tara who looked very tearful,
"Either of us thought about how difficult things were going to be all round. It must
have given you a very bad impression of your brother, Finn. I'm sorry for that. Steven's
usually a very gentle lad."
"It's
all right, really," Finn said, moving over to let me shake hands with David.
"Please
let Steven know we understand," I said, giving
"He
went to pieces after you were taken."
I
looked at Finn, wondering what he was thinking, and almost in shadow of David, put my arm
around Finn's waist.
"Come
on in. If you'd like to that is. I promise no screaming, no shouting, no dramatics."
We
walked up the garden and sat at the wrought iron patio table in the sun, amongst well cut
shrubs and flowers and drank coffee.
"Okay?"
Finn
nodded. "Unreal."
I
knew what he meant. An hour or two, politeness, then we could go home. Our lives were
quite simple and we'd re established that last night. Him and me, nothing else much
mattered. Finn must have read my mind. He has an uncanny knack for it sometimes. He
suddenly put out a hand towards me and his fingers brushed my chin, half a nudge, half a
caress.
"I
love you."
It
was muttered, but oh God it was sincere. I'd never before heard him say it, openly, in
daylight, straight out like that. My eyes stung and I grasped his hand, letting my fingers
tangle with his.
We
were still holding hands and Finn was sipping coffee when I heard him make an odd sound
and looked across. He was staring over the tall, ash hedge at something, and when I
started to ask, he put a hand out to grab at my shoulder.
"Am
I going mad?
I
looked with him, standing up to see better. The house opposite Tara and David's was a
standard, urban middle class house, I hadn't given it a second glance, but the house name
was clear in a brightly coloured tile, set in to the bricks at the front.
'Finn
Uisce' was the house name, and below the writing leapt a blue dolphin. Finn has never
been much into houses or names and I put my cup down, wondering what had bothered him.
"What's
the matter?"
"You
know which window that's opposite?" Finn said shortly. I glanced up. The window of
what had been Finn's room as a child did look directly down at the house.
"Finn?
What's the matter?"
"The
house," Finn said, indicating. "The dolphin sign."
"Do
you remember it?"
Finn
said nothing more but I could see the shock in his face. Finn.
Had something stayed in his memory long enough that he had chosen his own name from
something that he'd kept buried and his, that had been a means of secretly holding on to
who at some level he knew he was? There was almost a defiance in the gesture.
It
seemed incredible. And yet so very, very simple.
"I
think I've got a few of them left,"
"No,
no," Finn said quickly. "I don't
need to see them. Thank you, I was
hungry," he said, taking one of the warm rolls and effectively ending the
conversation.
I
sat back, aware his hand was shaking slightly. He ate mechanically and
I
steered the conversation back to safer ground, commenting on the beautiful land around
them.
"Was
he terribly upset?"
"He
was for a while," I said slowly, looking back towards
"I
think that was what shattered Steven the most, that Sa- Finn just couldn't tell him
anything at all."
"That's
what Finn remembered. A woman, and a male
guest that hung around for a while, but nothing much more until he was in school.
He never talked about it, and now that we're forced to thing about it, it scares
the hell out of me what could have happened to him during that time."
I looked up quickly. "I'm sorry -
I didn't mean.."
"Oh
you can't think of one thing we haven't already imagined."
"Male
guest?" she said after a moment with studied casualness that didn't take me in at
all. "I didn't hear about him."
I
could hear the anxiety in her voice.
"Some
man who slept on the sofa?" I said, struggling for what Finn had told me.
"Charlie. Used to give him money for fish and chips sometimes - this woman, Molly
Green, didn't cook."
"Charlie?"
I
nodded slowly. "I'm sure that's what Finn thought his name was."
"There,"
"That
was never mentioned to police?" I asked, wondering if
"No,
not then. He seemed harmless and I don't
remember him paying any particular attention to the children."
"Finn
thought she was mentally ill." I said, racking my brains for exactly what he'd told
me. "She didn't try very much in the way of parenting from what he remembers - she
pretty much abandoned him in the end."
"But
Charlie wasn't around the whole time?"
"I
don't know," I said, putting my cup down. It
wasn't going to do anyone good to contemplate what we didn't, and couldn't know at the
moment. "Let me help you clean up."
"I'll
be all right."
Steven
kissed her, stooping to return her rather tight hug which said a good deal more than his
mother had, and then gave me a distinctly awkward look. This morning he didn't look nasty
at all – just tired and anxious, with shadowed eyed as though he hadn't slept.
"Hello.
Sorry I'm back. I didn't mean to turn up again but I kind of -" he glanced out of the
window at the drive where David and Finn were still working. "Couldn't keep away. I'm
sorry Mum."
"It's
all right,"
"I'm
fine," Steven said, pulling out a chair at the kitchen table.
"I wanted to apologise for yesterday, to you and Finn both," he said
carefully, looking at me.
"Thank
you," I said as calmly as I could, putting down the mug I'd been drying.
"Don't think we don't understand. It was a hard day all around."
"No
kidding," Steven agreed. "Is he -...
is Finn feeling better?"
That
wasn't what he'd started to ask and I could hear the genuine anxiety in his voice which
warmed me towards him in spite of myself.
"Ask
him yourself," I said as Finn and David came into the house.
I turned back to get another dish to dry, hoping Finn's hackles wouldn't raise at
the first good look at Steven since yesterday.
Finn
did stop in the doorway with David behind him and without thinking David put a hand up on
Finn's shoulder. I wondered if Finn knew he was there or felt the protectiveness I saw in
the gesture. He and Steven looked at each other silently for a moment. Then Finn came into
the kitchen and held out a hand and Steven gripped it.
"I'm
sorry." Steven said still more gruffly. "No excuses. Just a hell of a
shock."
Finn
didn't say anything in return, but he didn't pull his hand away either.
A
few minutes later the kitchen door was opened and Melissa rather tentatively looked around
it. Steven met her at the door and after a
hurried few words in voices too low to hear, they both came back to join us.
"Hi
Mum, Dad...Finn." Melissa looked down
quickly, then back to her mother. "I saw
these at the market today and thought you'd like them."
"Thank
you,"
Steven
didn't say anything at all, but as his sister passed him I saw him hook an arm around her
neck, pulled her head over and kiss her cheek.
Finn
got up and wandered across to the kitchen door without meeting Melissa's eye. In the
lounge I heard a piano start to play. Melissa, looking thoroughly awkward, gave me a
forced smile, digging her hands in her pockets.
"That's
Dad. He always plays when he's nervous."
It
was a shame she'd said it: her parents were trying so hard to be relaxed. With Steven and
Melissa in the house, I was starting to look at my watch and wonder how soon it was before
we could leave. David’s voice, a curiously gentle and husky baritone could be heard
singing over the piano in the lounge,
“…down
by the quay
The
winds of night so softly are sighing
Soon
they will fly your troubles to sea.”
I
glanced at Finn to catch his eye and indicate we could start manoeuvring towards a polite
goodbye- and found that his face was absolutely colourless. I put my hand on his shoulder,
alarmed, and he was rigid. Barely breathing. Then he slipped out from under my hand and
went into the lounge like a sleepwalker. It was a simple waltz tune in a minor key, sad
and sweet, and I caught sight of Steven leaning against the kitchen doorpost, his eyes on
Finn, his face white and his arms tightly folded.
“Dad
couldn’t play that for years without crying.” Steven said softly, seeing me looking.
“He used to sing it for Sam; it was one of Sammy's favourite songs.”
Finn
wasn’t looking at the piano or at David, but through the glass of the window without
seeing anything, his eyes unfocused. David saw him and the music stumbled for a few
seconds, he nearly stopped, then I saw him change the pattern of the chords and begin the
waltz again from the beginning, singing in a far more hesitant tone.
“A
gentle breeze from
Softly blows o'er lullaby bay.
It fills the sails of boats that are waiting--
Waiting to sail your worries away.”
Finn
didn’t move, I didn’t even see him breathing, then he suddenly took a convulsive gasp
and I saw the tears spill down his face, not one or two but a silent wash that kept
flowing. I took half a step towards him, then made myself stop, folding my arms tightly as
Steven was doing. David was watching him intently, and his own face was wet, although
somehow he kept on singing, managing the words despite that he was sounding increasingly
choked.
“So
close your eyes on
Wave good-bye to cares of the day.
And watch your boat from
Sail far away from lullaby bay.”
Finn
was still standing stock still, his eyes staring at nothing and still flooding with tears
as David stumbled up from the piano. He moved very tentatively, but when he put his hands
out to take Finn’s arms, Finn stepped blindly towards him. Very awkwardly David folded
both arms around him and Finn slowly bent his head down to rest on David’s shoulder, the
two of them absolutely silent.
I stood
where I was for a moment, aware my own face was wet, and when I turned, Steven was crying,
a hand over his mouth to silence himself. I touched his arm as I went past him, walked
softly through the hall and let myself out into the garden, leaving the Curtis family
alone together.
*
It was a
long time before Finn came out. He was very pale still, his eyes red, and he looked
disoriented. Shocky. I got up from the bench and went to him, and Finn buried himself
gratefully in my offered hug. He was shaky and cold, despite the sunshine. I cupped his
head in both hands, tipped it back to see his face, and then kissed him, with all the
tenderness and sympathy I could put into the gesture.
“Are
you all right?”
Finn
nodded, sniffing slightly, and managed something approximating a smile. “Yeah. God, that
was the weirdest experience.”
It was
so HARD, not to say as the Curtises had been saying all yesterday, “Do you remember?
WHAT do you remember?”
“What
was?” I said gently. Finn sat down on the grass and I took a seat beside him, wrapping
one arm around his denimed knee.
“I
don’t know his face. But I KNEW his voice and that song. Not just knew it, I’d seen
it, I’d been there. I used to sit on the wooden piano stool beside him, I remember the
music piled up on top of the piano, I remember the sweater he was wearing, I knew that was
my dad. I’ve always HAD that memory, I don’t know why it didn’t connect.” Finn
shook his head as if he was trying to clear it, and rubbed at his nose. “It’s the
weirdest sensation. I never had forgotten, it
was just- not connected up, like it was misfiled.”
”David singing?”
Finn
gave me a shaky, somewhat disbelieving smile. “I know. I know that it was David I can
remember.”
There
was nothing I could do but sit there and hug him and watch him, shaking a little, still
tearful, but not anything like in a bad way. Two days ago I had never seen Finn cry, and
in the last twenty four hours I'd seen him reduced to terrible tears and these
not-so-terrible tears. It was an odd experience, and like last night, it was a struggle
not to let my own eyes prickle to the point where I ran a serious risk of joining in.
Melissa
crossed the lawn towards us and I straightened up, discreetly nudging Finn. She looked odd
-- determined, something hugged in her arms, and Steven was trailing her at a distance,
his hands dug in his pockets. Melissa knelt down in front of Finn and sat on her heels,
and I looked with him at the very battered old lunch box she laid down on the grass. It
was incredibly seventies, I remembered that kind of thing from a kid, and it was filthy,
cobwebbed and battered.
"What's
this?" Finn asked, and I heard the slight cough first to make sure the words came out
normally rather than squeaked.
"Open
it," Melissa said, sitting back. "It's
a little worse for wear. It's been stuck under the floorboard in my old room."
"Liss....."
Steven said in an odd tone, and I realised he was hanging back, his hands in his pockets,
the peculiarly sullen, defensive expression from yesterday on his face again.
"It's
ok." Melissa said, pushing her hair back over her shoulders.
"No
it isn't," Steven muttered. "I told you, we don't-"
"Yes
we DO." Melissa flung herself up to her feet and for a moment I could see the little
girl she must have been, the brown hair swinging, the fierce face under the fringe.
"You
saw him with Dad just now. And Mum told me."
"Told
you what?" Steven said blankly.
Melissa
grabbed him by the arm and turned him around, pointing across the road to the house where
the blue dolphin sign hung.
"Finn.
FINN. You remember. He called himself FINN. How the HELL can you not believe now?"
Steven
looked at her in shock and I saw the connection dawn on him.
I
stopped watching their interactions when I heard my partner's sharp intake of breath.
He'd snapped the lunchbox open and pulled out two, worn dolphins. They
were both a blueish-gray color, one being stuffed and the other a plastic toy that was
probably made to go in the bathtub.
"I
told you." Melissa said quietly, letting Steven go. She sank back down onto her
knees, watching Finn stare at the two battered toys. "I kept them. Mum and Dad- they
got rid of everything in the end, all of it, so I took these away and hid them, years ago.
I kept them hidden, I could never bear to see them go. They're yours."
There
were a couple of other things under the dolphins. Something red, an item of clothing. A
battered large marble. A tin car with a wheel missing. Finn pushed aside the clothing and
pulled a card out of the bottom of the box. It
was yellowed with age and had obviously been opened and closed a lot.
When Finn opened it, he could see signatures in bold felt tip: 'mum' and 'dad' with
lines of x's, 'Melissa' in an uneven and childish hand, and 'Steve' in Steven's slightly
more mature child's handwriting. Under
Steven's name, in the green pen he had chosen, there was a note that once Sam was good
enough on the drum, they might let him join the family band.
"We
used to play a lot." Melissa said, a little unsteadily, trying to smile as she read
over Finn's shoulder. "Do you -" She stopped herself and put her hands on her
knees, hunching her shoulders. "Dad breathes music, it's in the house all the time,
we all played instruments. We always teased that you had to do percussion because you were
the youngest and no one else would. It was why Steve gave you the drum."
Finn
was still staring down at the box and the plastic dolphin that he hadn't yet let go of.
Steven slowly crouched down on Finn's other side, until the four of us were making a small
circle on the grass.
I
don't know how long we sat there. Finn was against my shoulder, but looking around the
circle, Steven's face, Melissa's face, Finn's face - I had the oddest sensation of seeing
kids' faces on the adult bodies. The same coloured hair on each sibling. The similarities
between each face. I didn't know if I was seeing what I wanted to see, but I could
recognise the connection between each of the three.
It
was Tara who called to them, and she sounded somewhat hesitant, as though she was
reluctant to interfere.
"Kids?
Tea."
It
was a habit: I could hear the automatic collective word which two of the siblings around
me knew well, and which to one was a new - or a very long ago - call. Finn was the last to
stand up, and it was Steven who absently put a hand out to pull him up, with a slight
nudge at his shoulder once he reached his feet. It was anything but aggressive, and I saw
Finn look over with something faint, approaching a smile.
I
hung back as the three of them walked up the lawn towards the house, Finn carrying the
dolphins, Melissa gathering up the box. It didn't seem right to interfere. Tara and David
were in the kitchen, I could see David watching from the doorway. This was a private
moment. Steven had chosen not to bring his wife here, this was for the Curtis family alone
and I felt very much now as though I should no longer be here. It was not a sense of being
unwanted - more a sense of this being something too precious to step into. I had no place
here. I moved quietly away down the lawn, intending to take myself away for a walk.
I
had no idea how this was going to pan out. We would go home tonight - and I could see that
it would not be long before
It
was going to take a long time, and a lot of work on everyone's part to bring the shattered
family together. I could see that Tara and
David had nothing but love for Finn, but they were going to need time to learn about the
person their son had become. Steven and Melissa would need time to sort through their
feelings, both of love for their brother as well as the anger at him for disappearing and
wrecking the happy childhood they'd had. Finn was going to have the toughest job of all.
He was going to be fighting to remember what he'd lost, with the very real
possibility of remembering too the intervening years and whatever bad things may have
happened to him. He also had to learn how to be a family again, how to accept there were
more people out there than just I who cared very deeply for him. I didn't think
My
musings were interrupted by a tug on my hand. I
looked up in surprise, not having heard Finn approaching.
"This
is a family tea. That means you too."
"You
go play on your own," I told him, starting to detach my hand, and Finn hung on,
walking backwards to get in front of me.
"Hey.
You got me into this. You can come do the domestic thing too."
"I'm
not doing the scene from Annie." I told him, letting him pull me around. He laughed,
and I paused to kiss him, a brief and gentle exchange. The stress was gone from his body:
he looked young, and at ease, and calm; and that in itself made my eyes sting.
In
the doorway of the kitchen, I saw
Hand
in hand with her son, I walked with him, slowly up the lawn towards the house.