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- Dawn Barker
Let Her Go
Let Her Go Read online
Let Her Go
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Acknowledgements
Copyright
Let Her Go
Dawn Barker
To Isobel, Isla and Olivia
Prologue
Zoe turned to look out to sea. She hunched over so that her chin covered the head of the baby held against her chest, as if they were one being, as if she could make enough room for the child to simply melt into the space in front of her heart, where no one could ever take her away. Is that how it would have felt to have borne her? She wanted to lock Louise in a place where she could stay exactly as she was now, a baby, oblivious to the world around her, where she would know that Zoe would never let her go. It didn’t matter about Zoe’s sister, or even her husband, not when it was just the two of them.
She pulled her long grey woollen cardigan around Louise, huddled in the baby carrier. Zoe’s hair whipped around her face, wet strands writhing in the blustering sea wind and clinging to her damp cheeks. She held the cardigan closed with one hand; with the other, she raked back her hair, twisted it and tucked it into the back of her collar. She knew she should take Louise inside, out of the wind, but here on the deck she could at least stare at the horizon and hope her nausea would settle. She didn’t want to vomit. There was no one to hold the baby while she bent over and retched. Besides, she hadn’t thought to pack spare clothes in her carry-on bag, and even the suitcase in the crate on the back of the ferry held only the few things she had quickly thrown in.
The ferry was lifted by a wave, then seemed to pause in the air for a moment. Zoe looked over the edge at the trough in front of them, deep and black. The boat began to tip forward. She grabbed the handrail as her stomach lurched; the boat rolled and slammed into the ocean’s surface, the impact reverberating through Zoe’s bones and teeth. She breathed through her mouth, trying not to smell the noxious engine fumes. Leaning her head back, she tried to breathe the fresher air above her, but the nausea rolled around her head and throat, threatening to spill over. The last time she had taken this ferry, years ago now, she’d thrown up all the way back to Perth into white paper bags, with Lachlan rubbing her back. The gagging had been tolerable then: it was proof, proof that the baby was there, inside her. The day the nausea had stopped should have been a relief, but she had known it was too soon, too sudden. Just one of her many failures to hold onto a child.
She focused on the horizon again, waiting for Rottnest to come into view. On a clear day, she could see it peeking over the edge of the Indian Ocean as she drove home from the city, travelling parallel to the long stretch of white beaches towards Fremantle. Some days, if the conditions were right, the island would shimmer, multiplying into two, sometimes three islands perched on top of each other, wavering in the blue sky. When they were kids, Nadia used to tell her that the mirage was a trick played by the spirits of all the prisoners who had died on the island over the years, frozen, starved, ravaged by diseases alone in their damp cells, or those who’d been eaten by the great white sharks when they tried to escape. Nadia would say it was the spirits’ bait, their siren song to lure boats in and smash them on the coral reefs. She said that the prisoners’ voices were trapped in the shells scattered on the island’s beaches, and that if Zoe held one to her ear too long, she’d be cursed. Zoe used to lie awake on the bottom bunk of their holiday rental, sure she could hear them singing, chanting above the whispering of the waves lapping on the sand: hush, hush, hush. She’d cross her fingers, hoping that the skippers of all the boats out on the ocean would see the lighthouse, that they wouldn’t end up wrecked in the bay.
The ferry pitched; Zoe grabbed the rail again. The metal was cold, slippery with spray. She moved her feet into a wider stance, trying to let her knees bend and sway with the boat, keeping her torso – and the baby – still. Holding the rail with one hand, she pulled Louise’s pink knitted hat down more securely over her head. The ocean in front, behind, all around, seethed and churned. Even in summer, when the water was turquoise and calm, Zoe had never liked swimming too deep. She needed to be able to plant her feet on the bottom, on sand. Not in weeds that swayed with the tide, not on rocks that hid poisonous spines of fish and stinging tendrils of jellyfish.
She wiped her eyes with the back of her free hand; it came away damp, her tears lost in the drops of salty, sticky brine that coated her stinging cheeks. She looked behind her, through the glass doors, streaked with salt water, to the interior of the boat. There were only a few others there: a tall, thin man wearing headphones and a fluoro jacket, slouched in his seat staring out the window, nodding his head ever so slightly to the music in his ears; a middle-aged couple trying to take pictures through the window while the boat lurched; a woman with dark curly hair pulled tightly off her ruddy face, chatting to the ferry attendant near the bar.
Zoe stumbled again as the ferry reeled to the right. Was that port or starboard? Lachlan would know. She corrected herself: Lachlan would have known. It had been so long now since he’d gone out to fish or to pull the craypots.
Facing ahead, she watched the island come closer: the white beaches, the jetty, the lighthouse. Patchy sand swirled in the wind and was strewn over rocks jutting out from the shore. Zoe wanted to cry out for someone to help her. She didn’t want to be here on her own. But what else could she do? She took a deep, shuddering breath. Anyway, she wasn’t alone, she reminded herself, she was with Louise. Her daughter. Her daughter.
The ferry slowed and manoeuvred towards the jetty. Zoe staggered back inside, holding her breath against the musty smell of permanently damp seats, then teetered down the steep steps to the ferry door. She waited behind the tourists as the attendant let down the ramp, then walked carefully down the slippery gangplank with one hand on Louise’s back. The wind roared; Zoe shivered. To her left, the beer garden of the wharfside pub was empty, the plastic chairs turned upside down and tilted against the tables. She looked back towards the ferry and watched the staff unloading a bundle of newspapers and magazines, the corner of a paper cover flapping against the plastic cord holding the sheaf together. They unloaded crates of beer and wine, bottled water, bread. Bicycles.
Zoe swallowed and looked towards the mainland. On the skyline she could see the colossal red cranes at the port of Fremantle and the Norfolk pines of Cottesloe Beach, where she’d stood so many times in summer to watch thousands of swimmers leap into the water to swim the twenty kilometres that the ferry had just travelled. Lachlan had done it once, one of a team of four. She thought back to his face yesterday: the hatred in his eyes, his clenched jaw as he stood over her. Did he even know she was gone? Probably not; he’d a
ssume she was still at her parents’ house. What would they think when they realised? And Nadia? Would they try to bring her back? Zoe tried to quell her fear, reminding herself that they didn’t know where she was.
She took her phone from the back pocket of her jeans and glanced at the screen. Lachlan hadn’t called. She told herself that she was relieved, but what she really felt was disappointment. She clenched her fists, feeling her nails dig into her palms. She was not going to be one of those women, making excuses for their husbands. He had ruined everything: now Nadia had what she needed.
Zoe hoisted the nappy bag over her shoulder, and for a moment rested her cheek on the top of Louise’s head, feeling the scratch of her woollen hat. Darling Louise. Nadia was not going to take her away, not now, not after everything they’d been through.
She watched the luggage being loaded into a van, one of the few vehicles on the island; they’d deliver the bags later. Zoe started up the slope towards the visitor centre to collect the keys for her rental. She squeezed her eyes shut, hoping they weren’t too swollen or red. Oh yes, the staff would say when someone came looking, there was a woman with a baby, on her own. She’d been crying. Taking a deep breath, she increased her stride. No one would think to look for them here. She just needed some space, some time to work out what she was going to do. About Lachlan. About Nadia.
About Louise.
Chapter One
Three years earlier
Zoe stood on the front step of her parents’ house, staring at the two floating helium-filled balloons tied to the door handle. Inside, she could hear the rhythmic beating of music pierced by laughter and the clinking of glasses. They were late.
‘You OK?’ Standing beside her, Lachlan squeezed her hand slightly.
She clutched him tighter, but didn’t move. ‘I don’t think I can do this.’
‘We don’t need to stay long, we’ll just show our faces, then we’ll go home again. I promise.’ He let go of her hand and put his arm around her.
Zoe nodded, then closed her eyes for a moment. If she didn’t go in, there would be too many questions later. She opened her eyes again, looked up into Lachlan’s face, then tried to smile. He smiled back, then pushed open the door. Inside, the narrow hallway was lined with even more balloons, distorted 60s stretched on the taut blue metallic skin, each string weighed down by a book. Her mother must have gotten the idea from a magazine. Zoe stepped in, swatting at the balloons as they drifted towards her face. Lachlan followed her and closed the door behind them.
The music was Paul Simon, of course, her stepfather’s favourite. With each thump of the deep bass, her body vibrated. The noise seemed to rattle through the hollow of her pelvis, as if it was something more solid than sound. She wanted to turn around and run, but instead she shuffled down the hallway towards the party.
When they emerged into the kitchen, Zoe forced herself to smile and wave at her mum. Rosemary had been to the hairdresser: her ash-blonde hair barely moved as she put a tray of sausage rolls down on the kitchen bench. She spotted Zoe and Lachlan, and raised her hand and smiled back. Zoe had an urge to run to her and tell her what had happened, but her mother had already turned away and was gesticulating to the two teenage waitresses. Besides, this wasn’t the right time.
Lachlan’s hand was in the small of her back; she kept walking through the open-plan kitchen to the lounge room. All the furniture had been pushed to the edges of the room, and the patio doors were open onto the timber deck, which was thick with people.
Lachlan leaned down towards her ear. ‘Do you want a drink?’
Zoe nodded, then stood still as he went to find one, not trusting herself to be able to walk without Lachlan by her side. One drink wouldn’t hurt, not tonight.
People pushed past her, a few saying hello. She heard herself responding, as instinctual as breathing. Lachlan came back, a beer in one hand, a glass of champagne – of all things – in the other. She took a sip, then a gulp, grimacing at the bubbles popping in her mouth. She drank another mouthful, then followed Lachlan out onto the deck.
Her stepfather, Martin, stood by the barbecue, holding long tongs. His nose was red and shiny in the glare of the deck lights, and his cheeks were flushed. Someone spoke to him and he threw back his head and roared with laughter. Zoe smiled, genuinely this time. He was wearing the apron with the image of a bodybuilder’s torso on it that she and Nadia had given him one Father’s Day. He was sixty now. Zoe couldn’t imagine herself at sixty. She mightn’t make it that long; if she did, who would come to her party? Her parents would be dead, probably, in another twenty-four years. She would have no children. No grandchildren.
Shaking off her maudlin thoughts, she gulped down her drink. Tonight was about Martin. She put down her empty glass, laced her fingers through Lachlan’s, walked towards Martin and touched his arm.
‘Happy birthday.’ She stood on tiptoe and kissed his cheek, then took the shiny silver parcel from her handbag and handed it to him.
‘Hi!’ Martin cried. ‘How long have you been here? Thanks!’ He put down the tongs and started to open the parcel.
‘We just got here. I hope they’re OK, I didn’t know …’
Martin grinned and moved the open box from side to side so that the cufflinks caught the light. ‘Zoe, they’re great!’
She smiled. ‘Are you sure, I —’
He put his arm around her and kissed her forehead. ‘They’re perfect.’ He looked at Lachlan, then clasped his shoulder. ‘Lachie! Great to see you! When did you get back from Kalgoorlie?’
‘Happy birthday, mate,’ Lachlan said. ‘I just got in last night, I’m back for a couple of weeks.’
‘That’s good timing! I’m glad you could make it. You got a beer?’
Lachlan held his up. ‘Got one here!’ He looked around the garden. ‘Good turnout.’
As Martin and Lachlan chatted, Zoe let the noise around her fade out. Lachlan didn’t have great timing at all. Yes, he’d made it back in time for the appointment with Dr Patel this morning, but he’d been away so many other times in the past few years when she had needed him. What about the times she’d woken up barely able to move because of her joints burning, her face swollen, a livid rash scalding her cheeks, and knowing that it meant the lupus had flared up again? Or the times when an ache in her abdomen had sent her running to the bathroom, praying that she wouldn’t see streaks of blood on the toilet paper, but knowing that she would? While grief had torn through her body, he hadn’t been there. Yes, he’d offered to come back early, but in the next breath told her that he didn’t want to tell the guys on the mines what was going on, and that someone else would have to cut short their own time with their wife and kids to take his place. So, the last time, Zoe had told him not to come back; after all, it wasn’t like she hadn’t been through it before, she’d be OK. But she hadn’t meant it.
‘Glad you like them,’ Zoe said to Martin, even though he wasn’t listening any more, busy talking to Lachlan. She took the box from him. ‘I’ll put these inside.’
She walked back into the house, taking another drink from a waiter’s tray as she went through the kitchen and down the hall to her parents’ bedroom. She opened the door and slipped inside. The room hadn’t changed in years, and standing there, on the edge of the dark red Persian rug, looking at the grey floral bedspread that she remembered from when she was a kid, she felt uneasy. Her parents’ bedroom had always been off-limits when she and Nadia were children. The door was kept closed; it had been her mother’s space. Martin always had work at the bank to escape to, or golf, or the pub, while her mum had tried to gather the pieces of two broken families and hold them together. It couldn’t have been easy for her, marrying a widower and raising another woman’s child as her own, especially when Nadia’s mother’s photograph still sat on the mantelpiece. And then later, when Zoe was diagnosed with lupus at the age of fifteen, her mother had been the one who dragged her to appointments, who slept by her bed, who forced her to take her medicati
on when she refused because it made her fat and gave her acne. Zoe blushed at the memory of how she’d treated her mother back then, and took a deep breath. There was no point thinking about that now. That was the past. She put the present on Martin’s bedside table, next to a pile of thrillers, then left the room.
In the hallway, she closed the door and took another gulp of her drink. Her cheeks were warm; the champagne had gone to her head already. Suddenly, she felt completely adrift. She needed to find Lachlan. Her breath quickened. She should never have left his side, not for a moment. He loved her, she knew that, but would he still want her now? There was nothing wrong with him. He could have children with someone else if he wanted to.
She started to hurry back towards the party, but stumbled in her heels. ‘Shit!’ Her shoulder banged into the wall and her drink splashed out of the glass. She wanted to let herself fall, curl up in the corner and wail.
A small voice said, ‘Are you OK, Aunty Zoe?’
Zoe looked down. ‘Oh, hi, Charlotte. Silly me, I almost fell! How are you?’
‘Good.’
Zoe kneeled down so she was at eye level with her seven-year-old niece. ‘You’ve got a pretty dress on.’
Charlotte looked coy but smiled and held out the skirt of her green dress. Nadia always dressed her children beautifully. Zoe wanted to reach out and give the little girl a cuddle, stroke her wavy brown hair, but she didn’t trust herself not to break down.
‘Where are your brother and sister?’
Charlotte shrugged.
Zoe put her hands on her knees and stood up again, then held onto the wall to steady herself. She shook each of her legs to get the blood flowing again. ‘I’ll come and play with you later, OK?’
Charlotte nodded then ran back towards the two other bedrooms, where Violet and Harry must be playing. Zoe wished she could just sit in the doorway, unobserved, and watch them. But she knew she couldn’t bear it.
When she reached the living room, Zoe couldn’t see Lachlan through the crowds on the deck and couldn’t face trying to push through everyone. She walked back into the kitchen and poured some white wine into her empty champagne glass; to look busy, she started tidying up the bench. She wouldn’t stay much longer. There would be a cake, and a speech, then she could go.