You know, Laurel, all my life all I ever wanted was to feel like everyone else. Iโd turn up in some different country at some new school and Iโd see all the kids whoโd grown up together, whose mums and dads all drank wine together at the weekends, all these laid-back kids with their in-jokes and their basement dens and their nicknames. And Iโd look at them and think, How do you do that? How does that even work? I was never anywhere long enough to get a nickname. I was just โthe new boy.โ Every couple of years. โHey, you, new boy.โ And being a virtual fucking genius didnโt really do me any favors either. Nobody likes a clever clogs. And I was a terrible clever clogs. My cleverness oozed out of me like goo.
Also I was not good-lookingย in the least. Plus bad at sports and completely disinterested. And of course I had these high-flying parents who clearly didnโt think there was any sacrifice too big for the sakes of their careers, who genuinely, genuinely didnโt seem to realize that children liked being with their parents. They threw activities at me and told themselves that as long as I was busy I must surely be happy.
There was one school, one town, in Germany. I liked that school. It was an international school, kids from all over the world; a lot of them couldnโt even speak English. And a transient intake, kids coming and going all the time. So for once I had an advantage. I could speak English. And I was there for nearly four years, from eleven to fourteen. So I started off as one of the youngest and became one of the oldest. This was good stuff. Formative. Almost transformative. Iโd see new kids arrive, little ones, foreign ones, tiny little Korean kids or Indian kids or Nigerian kids, struggling with the language, struggling with the culture shock. And that made me feel normal.
I had a girlfriend there. Mathilde. She was French. Quite pretty. We kissed a few times and maybe if my parents hadnโt dragged me away by the scruff of my neck at that precise moment and dropped me down in the next place, maybe Iโd have had a chance to develop that normality, become a guy with a core and a soul.
As it is, I donโt think I ever really loved anyone, until Poppy came along. And even now Iโm not sure if thatโs quite the right word.
After all, I have nothing to compare it to.
Why didnโt I go straight to the police after seeing Ellie onย Crimewatch, thatโs what youโd like to know, isnโt it? And itโs a very good question.
Firstly, at this juncture, I did not know whether Ellie was dead or alive. I did not know how long sheโd been in Noelleโs basement, assuming she had ever been there. And according to the TV show, there was a slim possibility that sheโd let herself into your house four years after her
disappearance and helped herself to some cash and valuables. So Ellie was potentially anywhere or nowhere and the narrative was all over the place.
But that in itself was not a good enough reason to stop me telling the police what little I knew. You see, what concerned me the most was my role in this scenario. Another thing that Noelle told me the day she told me that she wasnโt Poppyโs real mother was that I was not Poppyโs real father. She told me that the baby had been conceived using sperm sheโd bought off the Internet. Iโd locked this unpalatable little nugget away with all the other stuff she told me and stuck my head in the sands of denial. Poppy was literally, Laurel,ย literallyย the only good thing that had ever happened to me. My pride and joy. My entire raison dโรชtre. You know how difficult my relationship with Sara has always been. You know how she hated me as a child, spat in my face, bit me and scratched me. I thought that was what fatherhood was. I thought that was the child I deserved. And then Poppy came into my life and she was so exquisite and so clever and she adored me. For the first time in my life I had something beautiful and precious that nobody else had, nobody in the world. And if she wasnโt mine, then my life no longer made any sense to me.
But after watching theย Crimewatchย special I realized that if she was mine and if I told the police what I knew about Noelle and Ellie, that there would be no police officer, no detective, no judge, and no juror that would ever, in a million years, believe that Ellie had been impregnated with my sperm without my knowledge or consent. It was preposterous. Clearly. I would be done, at the very least, for aiding and abetting. And I would be done for rape of a minor. A minor that Iโd never even met.
But again I prevaricated. I did not get a DNA test done even though proof that Poppy was not genetically my child would free me to report what I knew to the police. I simply wasnโt ready to let her go, Laurel. Iโm so sorry.
Shortly after theย Crimewatchย special I read an interview with you in theย Guardian. It was some kind of real-life interest story in the magazine. You said, and I quote: โThe nightmare of the thing is the not knowing. The lack of closure. I just cannot move forward without knowing where my daughter is. Itโs like walking through sinking mud. I can see something on the horizon, but I can never, ever get to it. Itโs a living death.โ
And then a month later there were the headlines in the papers. โELLIEโS REMAINS FOUND.โ You had your closure. I came to the funeral. I stood at a respectful remove. I saw your legs buckle as your husband helped you into the crematorium and saw them buckle again on the way out. Closure, it seemed, had brought you nothing but a box of bones. But I could give you something that would get you out of the sinking mud and walking toward the horizon. I could give you Poppy.