The Lake by Louise Sharland (best ereader for pc txt) ๐
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- Author: Louise Sharland
Read book online ยซThe Lake by Louise Sharland (best ereader for pc txt) ๐ยป. Author - Louise Sharland
In a moment of unconscious compassion โ Iโm a mother too after all โ I lay my hand on his. โIโm so sorry this happened to you, Alistair.โ
โWhy are you doing this?โ He pulls his hand away so fiercely that I nearly lose my balance and topple backwards. He grabs my wrist to steady me, and the simple act of kindness, of care, seems to drain him of all anger. He begins to cry. My heart breaks. โWhy couldnโt you just leave it all alone?โ
โLeave it all alone?โ I take a few steps to the window. On the bedside table is a tidy arc of framed photographs. I lean forward to study them more closely. โI only found out a few months ago myself, about Michael and Desra.โ There is an image of Alistair as a youngster with his parents, and someone who I assume is an older sister; pale like her brother and with the same bright auburn hair.
โYour sister?โ I ask, pointing to the photograph. He gives a curt nod. โThey must be proud of you winning a scholarship and coming all this way to study.โ
โMy sister thinks itโs cool that Iโm studying at the same uni Prince William did, but my parents โฆโ he trails off and looks as if heโs going to cry again.
โThey didnโt want you to come?โ
He doesnโt reply but the look on his face says it all. I wonder if they had any inkling that their son was coming to study in Scotland so he could be near Desra. Once again I am reminded of the enduring damage that woman has left in her wake. I return my attention to the photos, to the flame-haired sister, now grown up, married, and standing with her husband in front of a baptismal font holding a baby dressed in a cream gown with pale blue piping.
โYour nephew?โ Alistair nods. I place my hand on the bedframe for support. โI want you to come with me to the St Andrews police station. To report Desra McKinley for the historic grooming and sexual exploitation of minors.โ The time to play it safe has long since passed. I return my gaze to the image of the sleeping baby at the font, run my fingertips across the ornate frame. โWould you want him to have to go through something like that?โ
Alistairโs complexion turns crimson.
โHow fucking dare you!โ he roars. I find myself cowering against the wall. โYou come here, out of nowhere, to emotionally blackmail me!โ Heโs in front of me, his large frame looming. โIโm doing a work placement next summer with a top firm in Japan. How do you think it would look if Iโm involved in some sort of sex scandal? How do you think it would affect my career?โ
My mouth drops open. โYour career? Innocent people have died, more are at risk, and all you can think about is your career?โ
Alistair steps back as if struck. Stumbling towards the desk he grabs the bottle of Jack Daniels from the gift bag, then two shot glasses from the shelf above. He cracks open the bottle and pours two shots. He downs one and places the other on the desk. โDrink it,โ he snarls, โand then get out.โ
36
It is dusk by the time I reach the stag-framed gates of Lennoxton. I have spent most of the afternoon sitting in an anonymous car park, overlooking an anonymous beach, sipping endless cups of lukewarm coffee. With no Alistair, there is no concrete proof. With no concrete proof, there is no conviction. With no conviction, there is Desra with a publishing deal, a possible teaching post at a prestigious private school in Rhode Island, and a catalogue of discarded innocents behind her with no avenue to justice or recompense. Michael is just dust โ collateral in Desraโs relentless rise to glory. The truth is like a dart in my vein, spreading poison to every tributary, accruing in my heart.
I fake my way through dinner, but I can only manage the final nightโs celebrations with wine, wine, and more wine. As the group moves outside for a singsong by the bonfire, I escape to my room. The dormitory is silent and unpeopled. I sneak into Julia and Marie-Claireโs room and slip the bottle of vodka from the desk drawer where I know Julia keeps it. In a moment of despair and disgrace, I search through the lining of my bag for a blue pill. With a gasp of relief I find one, nestled in amongst old shopping receipts and a lost stamp. I gulp it down with a slug of vodka and retreat under the bedcovers. Later, when I hear a knock on my door and Marie-Claireโs worried voice, I turn my face to the wall.
I sleep badly, dreaming I am walking hand in hand along a forest path with Michael. Water oozes from his every pore, trickles down his body and pools at his feet. He opens his mouth to speak but something blocks his breath. I reach into his mouth, past his blackened tongue and deep into his throat. I feel something thin and slimy. It squirms beneath my fingertips. I pull it free and fling it to the ground. An eel. Its greasy body swivels and squirms as it wraps itself around my feet. Grabbing a large stone, I pound it against the creatureโs head, smashing its tiny bulb-like eyes into oblivion. Slowly the creature transforms into something different; something human. When I look closer, I see Desra McKinleyโs ruined face on the ground in front of me.
I wake bathed in sweat, with a terrifying sense of the walls closing in. Throwing on my clothes, I race from the dormitory and into the night.
Moonlight has transformed the loch into an undulating silvery blanket. A breeze blows in from the east, drying the perspiration that dots my forehead. Open water had once been my salvation: a place where I
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