Joshua had given Laurel his grandparentsโ phone number in Dublin. Henry and Breda Donnelly. They were both alive and both still working.
โTheyโre amazing,โ Joshua had said. โLike really amazing. Scary as shitโyou donโt want to cross them. But incredible people. Forces of nature, the pair of them.โ
Laurel calls them on Sunday when she gets back from Floydโs house.
A woman picks up the phone and says โhelloโ so loudly that Laurel jumps. โHello. Is that Mrs. Donnelly?โ
โSpeaking.โ โBreda Donnelly?โ โYes. This is she.โ
โSorry to bother you on a Sunday, youโre not eating, are you?โ
โNo, no. Weโre not. But thank you for asking. What can I do for you?โ โIโve just met up with your grandson, Joshua.โ
โAh, yes, young Josh. And how is he these days?โ
โHeโs great. Really great. I went to visit him at your daughterโs house. Noelleโs house.โ
Thereโs a brief silence on the line and then Breda Donnelly says, โWho is this, please? You havenโt said.โ
โSorry. Yes. My nameโs Laurel Mack. My daughter used to be one of Noelleโs students. About ten years ago. And as a weird coincidence, my current boyfriend is Noelleโs ex-partner. Floyd Dunn? The father of Poppy?โ
Thereโs another silence and Laurel holds her breath.
Eventually Breda says, โYe-es,โ pulling out the vowel to suggest that she needs much more information before sheโll offer any herself.
Laurel sighs. โLook,โ she says, โI donโt really know why Iโm calling, except that my daughter disappeared shortly after she finished her tutoring with
Noelle. And she disappeared right next to Noelleโs house. And then Noelle herself also disappeared, a few years later.โ
โAnd?โ
โI suppose I just wanted to ask you about Noelle, about what you think happened to her.โ
Breda Donnelly sighs. โAre you sure youโre not from the papers?โ
โHonestly. I swear. You can google me if you like. Laurel Mack. Or google my daughter. Ellie Mack. Itโs all there. I promise.โ
โShe was supposed to be coming home.โ Laurel blinks. โWhat?โ
โNoelle. That week. She was coming home. With her little girl.โ
โOh,โ she says. โI didnโt realize. Floyd just said that she disappeared. He didnโt mention that she was supposed to be going back to Ireland.โ
โWell, maybe she didnโt tell him that. But she was. And the papers barely cared. The police barely cared. A middle-aged woman. A bit of a loner. An ex-partner who said she was mentally unstable. I told them she was coming home but they didnโt think it was relevant. And maybe it wasnโt.โ
โAnd she said she was coming with her daughter?โ
โYes. She was coming with her daughter. With Poppy. And that they would be staying here. At the house. And we were all ready for her, we were. Beds all made up. Weโd bought the child a big bear. Yogurts and juices. Then suddenly sheโs given the child to the father, packed a bag, and disappeared. I suppose we werenโt surprised. It always did strike us as faintly unbelievable that sheโd had a baby in the first place, let alone that she was able to raise it on her own.โ
โSo you think she changed her mind? That she was going to start a new life, with you and Poppy, and then freaked out at the last minute?โ
โWell, yes, it certainly seemed that way.โ
โAnd where do you think she is, Mrs. Donnelly? If you donโt mind me asking?โ
โOh, God, I suppose, if Iโm honest, I would say sheโs dead.โ Laurel pauses to absorb the impact of Bredaโs words. โWhen did you last see Noelle, Mrs. Donnelly?โ โNineteen eighty-four.โ
Laurel falls silent again.
โShe came home for a few weeks after her PhD. Then she went to London. That was the last time we saw her. Her brothers tried to visit when they came to London but she always kept them at armโs length. Always made excuses. We had no Christmas cards from her, no birthday cards. Weโd send news on to her: new nephews and nieces, degrees and what have you. But there was never a reply. She genuinely, genuinely didnโt care about us. Not about any of us. And in the end Iโd say weโd stopped caring about her, too.โ