HOURS LATERย PA LEFT FORย PARIS. Accompanied by Mummyโs sisters, Aunt Sarah and Aunt Jane. They needed to learn more about the crash, someone
said. And they needed to arrange for the return of Mummyโs body.
Body.ย People kept using that word. It was a punch in the throat, and a bloody lie, because Mummy wasnโt dead.
That was my sudden insight. With nothing to do but roam the castle and talk to myself, a suspicion took hold, which then became a firm belief. This was all a trick. And for once the trick wasnโt being played by the people around me, or the press, but by Mummy.ย Her lifeโs been miserable, sheโs been hounded, harassed, lied about, lied to. So sheโs staged an accident as a diversion and run away.
The realization took my breath away, made me gasp with relief.
Of course! Itโs all a ruse, so she can make a clean start! At this very moment sheโs undoubtedly renting an apartment in Paris, or arranging fresh flowers in her secretly purchased log cabin somewhere way up high in the Swiss Alps. Soon, soon, sheโll send for me and Willy. Itโs all so obvious! Why didnโt I see it before? Mummy isnโt dead! Sheโs hiding!
I felt so much better. Then doubt crept in.
Hang on! Mummy would never do this to us. This unspeakable pain, sheโd never allow that, let alone cause it.
Then back to relief:ย She had no choice. It was her only hope of freedom.
Then doubt again:ย Mummy wouldnโt hide, sheโs too much of a fighter.
Then relief:ย This is her way of fighting. Sheโll be back. She has to be. Itโs my birthday in two weeks.
But Pa and my aunts came back first. Their return was reported by every TV channel. The world watched as they stepped onto the tarmac at RAF Northolt. One channel even added music to the arrival: someone mournfully singing a psalm. Willy and I were kept from the TV, but I think we heard that.
The next few days passed in a vacuum, no one saying anything. We all remained ensconced inside the castle. It was like being inside a crypt, except a crypt where everyoneโs wearing trews and keeping to normal routines and schedules. If anyone talked about anything, I didnโt hear them. The only voice I heard was the one droning in my head, arguing with itself.
Sheโs gone.
No, sheโs hiding.
Sheโs dead.
No, sheโsย playingย dead.
Then, one morning, it was time. Back to London. I remember nothing about the trip. Did we drive? Did we fly on the Royal Flight? I can see the reunion with Pa, and the aunts, and the pivotal encounter with Aunt Sarah, though itโs wreathed in fog and might be slightly out of sequence. At times my memory places it right there, in those horrid first days of September. But at other times memory casts it forward, to many years later.
Whenever it happened, it happened like this:
William? Harry? Aunt Sarah has something for you, boys.
She stepped forward, holding two tiny blue boxes.ย Whatโs this? Open it.
I lifted off the top of my blue box. Inside wasโฆa moth? No.
A mustache?
No.
Whatโsโฆ?
Her hair, Harry.
Aunt Sarah explained that, while in Paris, sheโd clipped two locks from Mummyโs head.
So there it was. Proof.ย Sheโs really gone.
But then immediately came the reassuring doubt, the lifesaving uncertainty:ย No, this could be anybodyโs hair.ย Mummy, her beautiful blond hair intact, was out there somewhere.
Iโd know if she werenโt. My body would know. My heart would know. And neither knows any such thing.
Both were just as full of love for her as ever.