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Kate Hamer - The Girl in the Red Coat

Here you can read online Kate Hamer - The Girl in the Red Coat full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2015, publisher: Faber & Faber, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Kate Hamer The Girl in the Red Coat

The Girl in the Red Coat: summary, description and annotation

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Kate Hamers stand-out debut thriller is the hugely moving story of an abduction that will keep you guessing until the very last page. Carmel has always been different. Carmels mother, Beth, newly single, worries about her daughters strangeness, especially as she is trying to rebuild a life for the two of them on her own. When she takes eight year-old Carmel to a local childrens festival, her worst fear is realised: Carmel disappears. Unable to accept the possibility that her daughter might be gone for good, Beth embarks on a mission to find her. Meanwhile, Carmel begins an extraordinary and terrifying journey of her own, with a man who believes she is a saviour.

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Kate Hamer

The Girl in the Red Coat

For Mark

1

I dream about Carmel often. In my dreams shes always walking backwards.

The day she was born there was snow on the ground. A silvery light arced through the window as I held her in my arms.

As she grew up I nicknamed her my little hedge child. I couldnt imagine her living anywhere but the countryside. Her thick curly hair stood out like a spray of breaking glass, or a dandelion head.

You look like youve been dragged through a hedge backwards, Id say to her.

And she would smile. Her eyes would close and flutter. The pale purple-veined lids like butterflies sealing each eye.

I can imagine that, shed say finally, licking her lips.

Im looking out of the window and I can almost see her in those tights that made cherry liquorice of her legs walking up the lane to school. The missing her feels like my throat has been removed.

Tonight Ill dream of her again, I can feel it. I can feel her in the twilight, sitting up on the skeined branches of the beech tree and calling out. But at night in my sleep shell be walking backwards towards the house or is it away? so she never gets closer.

Her clothes were often an untidy riot. The crotch of her winter tights bowed down between her knees so shed walk like a penguin. Her school collar would stick up on one side and be buried in her jumper on the other. But her mind was a different matter she knew what people were feeling. When Sallys husband left her, Sally sat in my kitchen drinking tequila as I tried to console her. Salt and lime and liquor for a husband. Carmel came past and made her fingers into little sticks that she stuck into Sallys thick brown hair and massaged her scalp. Sally moaned and dropped her head backwards.

Oh my God, Carmel, where did you learn to do that?

Hush, nowhere, she whispered, kneading away.

That was just before she disappeared into the fog.

*

Christmas 1999. The childrens cheeks blotched pink with cold and excitement as they hurried through the school gates. To me, they all looked like little trolls compared to Carmel. I wondered then if every parent had such thoughts. We had to walk home through the country lanes and already it was nearly dark.

It was cold as we started off and snow edged the road. It glowed in the twilight and marked our way. I realised I was balling my hands in tight fists inside my pockets with worries about Christmas and no money. As I drew my hands out into the cold air and uncurled them Carmel fell back and I could hear her grumbling behind me.

Do hurry up, I said, anxious to get home out of the freezing night.

You realise, Mum, that I wont always be with you, she said, her voice small and breathy in the fading light.

Maybe my heart should have frozen then. Maybe I should have turned and gathered her up and taken her home. Kept her shut away in a fortress or a tower. Locked with a golden key that I would swallow, so my stomach would have to be cut open before she could be found. But of course I thought it meant nothing, nothing at all.

Well, youre with me for now.

I turned. She seemed far behind me. The shape of her head was the same as the tussocky tops of the hedges that closed in on either side.

Carmel?

A long plume of delicate ice breath brushed past my coat sleeve.

Im here.

*

Sometimes I wonder if when Im dead Im destined to be looking still. Turned into an owl and flying over the fields at night, swooping over crouching hedges and dark lanes. The smoke from chimneys billowing and swaying from the movement of my wings as I pass through. Or will I sit with her, high up in the beech tree, playing games? Spying on the people who live in our house and watching their comings and goings. Maybe well call out to them and make them jump.

We were single mothers, almost to a man as one of the group once joked. We clustered together in solidarity of our status. I think now maybe it was not good for Carmel, this band of women with bitter fire glinting from their eyes and rings. Many evenings wed be round the kitchen table and it would be then he, then he, then he. We were all hurt in some way, bruised inside. Except for Alice who had real bruises. After Carmel had gone oh, a few months or so Alice came to the house.

I had to speak to you, she said. I need to tell you something.

Still I imagined anything could be a clue to the puzzle.

What is it? What is it? I asked, frantically clutching at the neck of my dressing gown. What she told me disappointed me so much I turned my face away and looked at the empty shell of the egg Id eaten yesterday on the kitchen drainer. But when she started to tell me my daughter had a channel to God and could be now at His right hand how I hated her then. Her false clues and her finding of Jesus, those wrists in identical braided bracelets turning as she spoke. I could stay silent no longer.

Stop it! I yelled. Get out of here. I thought you had something real to tell me. Get out of this house and leave me alone, you stupid cow. You crazy stupid cow. Take your God with you and dont ever come back.

*

Sometimes, just before I fall asleep, I imagine crawling inside the shell of Carmels skull and finding her memories there. Peering through her eye sockets and watching the film of her life unfold through her eyes. Look, look: theres me and her father, when we were together. Carmels still small so to her we seem like giants, growing up into the sky. I lean down to pick her up and empty nursery rhymes into her ear.

And theres that day out to the circus.

We have a picnic by the big top before we go in. I spread out the blanket on the grass, so I dont notice Carmel turn her head and see the clown peering from between the tent flaps. His face has thick white make-up with a big red mouth shape drawn on. She puzzles why his head is so high up because his stilts are hidden by the striped tent flap. He looks briefly up at the sky to check the weather, then his red-and-white face disappears back inside.

What else? Starting school, me breaking up with Paul and throwing his clothes out of the bedroom window. She must have seen them from where she was in the kitchen his shirts and trousers sailing down. Other things, how many memories even in a short life: seeing the sea, a day paddling in the river, Christmas, a full moon, snow.

Always I stop at her eighth birthday and can go no further. Her eighth birthday, when we went to the maze.

2

For my eighth birthday I want to go and see a maze.

Carmel. What do you know about mazes? Mum says.

If I think hard I can see a folded puzzle in my mind that looks like a brain.

Ive heard things, I say. And Mum laughs and says OK.

We dont have a car so we go on the bus, just the two of us. The windows are steamed up so I cant see where were going. Mums got on her favourite earrings which are like bits of glass except colours sparkle on them when she moves.

Im thinking about my birthday, which was last Thursday, and now its Saturday and Im thinking about how my friend gets cards and presents from her nan but Mum doesnt talk to her mum and dad even though theyre still alive. I dont mind so much about the cards and presents but Id like to know what they look like.

Mum, have you got a photo of your mum and dad?

Her head shoots round and the earrings flash pink and yellow lights. Im not sure. Maybe, why?

I just wonder what they look like sometimes and if they look like me. Its more than sometimes.

You look like your dad, sweetheart.

But Id like to know.

She smiles. Ill see what I can do.

When we get off the bus the sky is white and Im so excited to see a real maze I run ahead. Were in this big park and mist is rolling around in ghost shapes. Theres a huge grey house with hundreds of windows that are all looking at us. I can tell Mums scared of the house so I growl at it. Sometimes shes scared of everything, Mum rivers, roads, cars, planes, whats going to happen and whats not going to happen.

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