Between the day in May 2005 that Ellie had failed to come home and exactly two minutes ago there had been not one substantial lead regarding her disappearance. Not one.
The last sighting of Ellie had been caught on CCTV on Stroud Green Road at ten forty-three, showing her stopping briefly to check her reflection in a car window (for a while thereโd been a theory that she had stopped to look at someone in the car, or to say something to the driver, but theyโd traced the carโs owner and proved that heโd been on holiday at the time of Ellieโs disappearance and that his car had been parked there for the duration). And that was that. Her recorded journey had ended there.
Theyโd done a house-to-house search of the immediate vicinity, brought in known pedophiles for questioning, taken CCTV footage from each and every shopkeeper on Stroud Green Road, wheeled out Laurel and Paul to be filmed for a television appeal that had been seen by roughly eight million people, but nothing had ever taken them further than that last sighting of Ellie looking at her reflection at ten forty-three.
The fact that Ellie had been wearing a black T-shirt and jeans had been a problem for the police. The fact that her lovely gold-streaked hair had been pulled back into a scruffy ponytail. The fact that her rucksack was navy blue. That her trainers were bog-standard supermarket trainers in white. It was almost as though sheโd deliberately made herself invisible.
Ellieโs bedroom had been expertly rifled through for four hours by two DIs with their shirtsleeves rolled up. Ellie, it seemed, had taken nothing out of the ordinary. It was possible she might have taken underwear but there was no way for Laurel to know if there was anything missing from her drawers. It was possible she might have taken a change of clothing, but Ellie, like most fifteen-year-old girls, had way too many clothes, far too many for Lauren to keep an
inventory. But her piggy bank still contained the few tightly folded ten-pound notes she forced into it after every birthday. Her toothbrush was still in the bathroom, her deodorant, too. Ellie had never been on a sleepover without her toothbrush and deodorant.
After two years, theyโd downgraded the search. Laurel knew what they thought; they thought Ellie was a runaway.
How could they have thought that Ellie was a runaway when there was no CCTV footage of her at any train station, at any bus stop, walking down any road anywhere apart from the one from which sheโd disappeared? The downgrade of the search was devastating.
Even more devastating was Paulโs response to this pronouncement. โItโs a sort of closure, I guess.โ
There, right thereโthe final nail in the dry box of bones of their marriage.
The children meanwhile were shuffling along, like trains on a track, keeping to schedule. Hanna took her A levels. Jake graduated from university in the West Country where heโd been studying to be a chartered surveyor. And Paul was busy asking for promotions at work, buying himself new suits, talking about upgrading the car, showing her hotels and resorts on the Internet that had special deals that summer. Paul was not a bad man. Paul was a good man. She had married a good man, just as sheโd always planned to do. But the way heโd dealt with the violent hole ripped into their lives by Ellieโs disappearance had shown her that he wasnโt big enough, he wasnโt strong enoughโhe wasnโtย insaneย enough.
The disappointment she felt in him was such a tiny part of everything else sheโd been feeling that she barely registered it. When he moved out a year later it was nothing, a small blip in her existence. Looking back on it now, she could remember very little about it. All she could remember from that time was the raw need to keep the search going.
โCan we not just do one more house-to-house?โ sheโd pleaded with the police. โItโs been a year since we did one. Thatโs long enough, surely, to turn up something we didnโt find before?โ
The detective had smiled. โWe have talked about it,โ she said. โWe decided that it was not a good use of resources. Not at this time. Maybe in a year or so. Maybe.โ
But then suddenly this January, out of the blue, the police had called and said thatย Crimewatchย wanted to do a ten-year anniversary appeal. Another reconstruction. It was broadcast on 26 May. It brought no fresh evidence. No new sightings.
It changed nothing. Until now.
The detective on the phone had sounded cautious. โIt could be nothing. But weโd like you to come in anyway.โ
โWhat have you found?โ Laurel said. โIs it a body? What is it?โ โPlease just come in, Mrs. Mack.โ
Ten years of nothing. And now there was something. She grabbed her handbag and left the house.