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5

Catatonia

Next day I didn’t so much wake up as float about just below the surface of full consciousness. My senses felt muffled, as if I was buried in an avalanche.

I couldn’t think – but that was all right, because I didn’twantto think. In fact, I didn’t want to do anything except lie there like a leaden log. Inertia weighed so heavily that I could hardly move my arms and legs. It was all very odd …

In the other room my phone began to buzz spasmodically, like a dying fly. Then later there was an urgent tapping noise that might have been a woodpecker … or someone rapping at the door. I curled into the smallest possible ball and pulled the covers right over my head.

Edie, discovering my near-catatonic state, called the doctor out, who diagnosed delayed shock and prescribed some pills, which she duly forced down me by sheer strength of will.

I’d always hated popping pills and though they eventually set my feet on the path back from Catatonia, I seemed to have almost entirely mislaid April. There were fuzzy memories of the two kind sisters who were Edie’s live-in staff, taking turns to spend the nights on the sofa in the living room, and of William popping in with little delicacies with which he hoped to tempt my non-existent appetite, but that was about it.

Even after I started to come out of the fog, my mind still tended to make sudden sideways darts down the nearest dark burrow, like some other Alice. I resisted, because there wasn’t much prospect of findingany kind of Wonderland down there, and anyway, I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to climb back into the light again.

When I mentioned the rabbit holes to the doctor, he changed my prescription to an antidepressant, instead of whatever he’d been dosing me with before.

They seemed to do the trick … or at any rate, turned me into a fully functioning zombie, going through the motions of living and communicating in quite a lifelike manner, though with all the sharp emotional edges rubbed off.

It certainly fooled Edie into thinking I was well on the road to recovery, but I knew Lola suspected there were still rats gnawing at my sanity, because in early May she made a flying visit north to see me, despite being so busy helping in the family herb-growing business, not to mention the burgeoning one she’d set up with her mum, under the trade name Dolly and Lola’s Perfectly Pickled and Preserved Company.

They’d started off with their Jam Session line of traditional jams, curds and marmalade and had recently added a Get Pickled range of chutneys and relishes. Lola had commissioned small wooden display stands and several local shops were now stocking their products.

Lola is quietly determined and makes you do things by stealth, so before she went home she’d prised me out of the cabin for a drive and several walks, since she said that although I was naturally pale, I’d started to look like a mushroom. Then she made me promise to answer my phone when she rang every day, since I couldn’t access the internet from my cabin.

I suppose getting out did do me good, because after this I started to help out with the cakes and pastries in the hotel kitchen. William was a wonderful chef, but his puff pastry might as well have been shortcrust and his sponge cakes never looked as if they were about to float off the plate. Edie was still refusing to take any rent for my chalet, so I felt I was doing something in recompense.

And it was thanks to Edie that I was to have a little nest egg in the bank, for she remembered what I’d said about finding Dan’s insurance policy and insisted on coming up to the cabin and unearthing the paperwork from the depths of a mixed box of my belongings.

Reading through it, she made a discovery. ‘There aretwopolicies here, Alice,’ she said. ‘There’s the one you mentioned, which appears to be part of Dan’s contract with the TV company, and a second policy, an annual one. Perhaps he needed life insurance to run his business leading groups of climbers?’

‘Yes, I expect he did,’ I agreed.

‘And whoever the beneficiary of the annual one was originally, it’s in your name now,’ she said bracingly. ‘I’m surprised the insurers for the TV programme haven’t contacted you already.’

‘They might have tried, but I still haven’t opened most of the post,’ I confessed. I’d left Jen the keys to the house and she’d been sending on any letters for me, which I’d simply dumped in a cardboard box. ‘And I haven’t checked my emails since I moved in, either.’

‘You’d better let me go through the mail and throw out the junk for you before you tackle the rest,’ she suggested.

A thought suddenly struck me, which made a change, because I hadn’t been having a lot of those lately. ‘Edie, if there are two policies, does it mean I’m rich?’ I asked, though without an awful lot of interest. The riches I’d been seeking all my life hadn’t been that kind: you can only warm your hands on money if you set it on fire.

‘I think you’ll find you’ll be more than comfortably off,’ she said, scanning the end of the second document and then laying it down. ‘In fact, I think there should be plenty to buy a nice wee home of your own and more to spare. Perhaps even enough to purchase Climber’s Café, if you wanted to?’

I shuddered. ‘No, there’s no going back. In fact, I seem destined never to belong anywhere, really. I’m the human equivalent of tumbleweed.’

‘Oh, no,’ she said. ‘You were found in Yorkshire, so you must have been born there, which makes you as much a Yorkshirewoman as I’m a Scot.That’swhere your real roots are.’

‘I suppose you’re right, and I’ve always been fascinated by Haworth and the Brontës, because of all the fairy stories Dad used to spin me about my being found there, on the Parsonage steps. Even after I’d realized he’d made most of it up, I still assumed I’d been left somewhere in the village, but I had a feeling that going there would somehow breakthe spell. But then, of course, my mother shattered it anyway, when she told me I was actually abandoned up on the moors.’

‘That was wrong of her; she behaved very badly to you,’ Edie said disapprovingly.

‘It certainly made me resist the pull of the place, so I’ve never been there,’ I agreed. ‘Of course, by then I’d already read everything about the Brontës and Haworth that I could find. I like Emily best – she was so awful in company and preferred to be with her dogs on the moor, or baking in the kitchen. She was her own woman and a bit of an enigma … and I do love her poetry.’

‘You have a lot in common with her, then,’ Edie said drily. ‘I went to Haworth many years ago and it was very interesting. You can see the moors spreading out beyond it, where you must have been found – savage and wild, just like that Heathcliff inWuthering Heights.’

‘It’s lucky I don’t identify with him rather than Emily, isn’t it?’ I said. ‘I wouldn’t want to wreak vengeance on my birth mother and any family she might have, even if I found her, and I just want to forget all about my adoptive one.’

‘No, you’re not the vengeful type, Alice. And though your adoptive mother behaved very badly, I don’t expect your birth one was thinking in a rational way when she abandoned you, so you shouldn’t take it too much to heart.’