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‘So what do we think?’ said Karlsson. ‘Where do we start?’
Munster and Yvette looked at each other. They didn’t say anything.
‘I don’t know what I think,’ said Karlsson, ‘but I know what I hope.’
‘What?’
‘I hope he had a simple heart attack and this crazy woman panicked and didn’t know what to do.’
‘But he was naked,’ said Yvette. ‘And we don’t know who he is.’
‘If he died of a heart attack, it’ll be someone else’s problem.’ He frowned. ‘I wish someone could make sense of what Michelle Doyce is saying.’
As he spoke, a face came into his mind, unsmiling and dark-eyed: Frieda Klein.
Five
‘Please take a seat, Dr Klein.’
Frieda had been in the room several times before. She had come to seminars here as a trainee; she had led seminars here as a qualified analyst; once, she had even sat where Professor Jonathan Krull was now, with a sixty-year-old therapist, whose name had since been removed from the British Psychoanalytic Council’s register, in the seat she occupied today.
She took a deep, steadying breath and sat, folding her hands in her lap. She knew Krull by reputation and Dr Jasmine Barber as a fellow practitioner. They were on friendly terms and Dr Barber now looked awkward, finding it hard to meet Frieda’s eyes. The third member of the team was a squat, grey-haired woman in a violently pink jumper who was wearing a neck brace. Above it, her wrinkled face was shrewd and her grey eyes bright. Frieda thought she looked like an intelligent frog. She introduced herself as Thelma Scott. Frieda felt a tremor of interest: she had heard of Thelma Scott as a specialist in memory and trauma, but had never before met her. The only other person in the room sat at the far end of the table: she was there to take notes of the proceedings.
‘As you know, Dr Klein,’ said Professor Krull, glancing down at the sheets of paper in front of him, ‘this is a preliminary investigation into a complaint we have received.’ Frieda nodded. ‘We have a code of ethics and a complaints procedure to which as a registrant you have subscribed. We are here today to investigate the complaint against you and to make sure that one of your patients has not been a victim of poor professional practice, and that you have behaved in a safe and appropriate manner. Before we begin, I need to make clear that none of our decisions or findings have the force of law.’ He was reading from the paper in front of him now. ‘Moreover, whatever we decide does not affect the right of the individual making the complaint to take legal proceedings against you, should they choose to do so. Do you understand?’
‘Yes, I do,’ said Frieda.
‘Also, this screening committee is made up of three psychotherapists who are here to give impartial professional consideration to the case. Have you any reason for doubting the impartiality of any of us, Dr Klein?’
‘No.’
‘You have chosen to have no representation.’
‘That’s right.’
‘Then we can begin. The complaint has been made by Mrs Caroline Dekker, on behalf of her husband Alan Dekker. You can confirm that Alan Dekker was your patient?’
‘Yes. I saw him in November and December 2009. I’ve written the dates of each session down.’ She brought out a typed sheet and slid it across the table.
‘Mrs Dekker claims that her husband came to see you in a state of acute distress.’
‘He was experiencing severe panic attacks.’
‘She also claims that, far from helping him, you used him as a –’ Krull looked down at his notes ‘– pawn in a police investigation. That you acted like a detective, not a therapist, casting suspicion on him, and indeed reported him to the police, making him a suspect in a case of child abduction, that you violated your pledge of patient confidentiality and furthered your own career at the expense of his peace of mind and future happiness.’
‘Would you like to give us your version of events, Dr Klein?’ Thelma Scott, the elderly woman in the neck brace and ugly jumper, fixed Frieda with her sharp eyes.
Now that this moment, which she had long dreaded, had at last arrived she felt calm. ‘Alan Dekker came to me in November because he was tormented by fantasies of having a child. He was childless himself, although he and his wife had been trying for some time to have a baby. So we talked about why his childlessness should cause not just grief but severe dysfunction. At the same time an actual child, Matthew Faraday, had disappeared. The child that Alan described – the one he had never had – was so like the boy who had disappeared that I felt I had to report it to the police. And then I told Alan what I’d done.’
‘Was he angry?’ asked Jasmine Barber.
Frieda thought for a moment. ‘He seemed understanding, maybe even too much so. He found it hard to express anger. I found him to be a gentle, self-doubting kind of man. Carrie – Mrs Dekker – was angry on his behalf. She was very protective of him. It doesn’t surprise me that she’s the one complaining for Alan.’
‘But that wasn’t the only time you crossed a boundary, was it?’ said Krull.
Frieda met his eyes. ‘The case turned out to be complicated. Alan was adopted. He discovered – no, I discovered and told him – that he was an identical twin. He had a brother, whom he knew nothing about, and yet they had an extraordinary psychological similarity and also a kind of connection, an affinity if you will. They saw things in the same way, to some extent. Not surprisingly, this discovery was disturbing to Alan. It was this brother who had taken Matthew: Dean Reeve – a household name now, the nation’s favourite bogeyman.’
‘Who killed himself.’
‘He hanged himself under a bridge by a canal over in Hackney when he knew he couldn’t escape us. However much Alan hated the thought of his brother, he loved him as well. At least, he felt he had lost part of himself when he died. He must have suffered a great deal. But that’s not what Carrie means when she talks about me using him.’ Frieda looked at the three of them with her large, dark eyes. ‘On one occasion,’ she continued, ‘I talked to him as a way of entering his brother’s mind, of trying to find out what his brother was thinking. Without telling him. If I’d told him, it wouldn’t have worked.’
‘So you did use him?’
‘Yes,’ said Frieda. They were all struck by her voice, which sounded angry rather than conciliatory.
‘Do you think that was wrong?’
Frieda was silent for several moment, frowning. She let herself slide back into the darkness of the case, among its shadows and its inky dread. Her patient Alan had turned out to be the identical twin of Dean, a psychopath who had abducted not only Matthew but, twenty years previously, a little girl. And that little girl Joanna, once skinny and gap-toothed and shy, mourned without cease by her family, had turned out to be the fat, lethargic wife of Dean, hiding in plain sight, a victim turned perpetrator. It was Sasha’s DNA test that had proved the obese, chain-smoking Terry was knock-kneed Joanna, that Dean’s willing collaborator was also his victim. What was more – and this was what Frieda still thought about when she stalked the London streets at night until she was so tired she could sleep, and what she still dreamed about – Frieda’s discovery of the freakish similarity between the twins had led to the abduction of a young research student, whose body had never been found. She thought of Kathy Ripon’s clever, likeable face and the future she would not have. Perhaps her parents were still waiting for her to return, their hearts turning at every knock on the door. These people, her judges, asked her if what she had done was wrong, as if there was a simple answer; a truth that was not slippery and treacherous. She lifted her eyes and faced them again.
‘Yes,’ she said, very clearly. ‘I wronged Alan Dekker, as my patient. But I don’t know if I was wrong. Or, at least, I think I was both wrong and right in what I did. What Alan said to me on that day led directly to Matthew. He saved a little boy’s life, there’s no doubt about that. I thought he was glad he had helped. I know that time alters the way one thinks about things, and I hav
e no idea what he’s been through since then, but I don’t understand why now, a year and a bit later, he would want to complain about something that at the time he accepted. Can I say one more thing?’
‘Please.’ Professor Krull made a courtly gesture with his thin, blue-veined hands.
‘Carrie talks about me putting my career before her husband’s peace of mind and happiness. I did not further my career. I do not work for the police and have no interest in being a detective. A young woman disappeared because of my actions, and I live with that. But that is a separate issue, not what we’re talking about now. As a therapist, I believe in self-knowledge, in autonomy. What people discover about themselves during therapy may not lead to peace or to happiness. Indeed, it often doesn’t. But it can lead to the possibility of turning what is unbearable into what is bearable, of taking responsibility for yourself and having a degree of control over your own life. That is what I do, as far as I can. Happiness …’ Frieda raised both hands in an expressive gesture and fell silent.
‘So if you were asked to apologize …’
‘Apologize? For what? To whom? I’d like to know what Alan has to say in all of this. He shouldn’t be letting his wife be his mouthpiece.’
There was an awkward silence, and then Thelma Scott said in a dry voice: ‘As far as I know, Mr Dekker has nothing to say.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘I imagine you don’t. The complaint appears to come from Mrs Dekker.’
‘On his behalf.’
‘Well. So one would assume.’
‘Wait. Are you telling me that Alan has nothing to do with this?’
‘I’m not sure.’ Professor Krull looked embarrassed.
‘What’s this for?’ Frieda made a gesture at the long oval table, the woman taking the minutes at the far end, the portraits of august members of the council hanging on the walls. ‘I thought it was to investigate a complaint made, however indirectly, by a patient. Since when are we responsible for dissatisfaction felt by the partner of a patient? What am I doing here? What are you all doing here?’
Professor Krull cleared his throat. ‘We want to head off any possibility of litigation. Smooth things over.’
Frieda stood up abruptly, her chair scraping over the wooden boards. Her voice was quivering with suppressed fury as she said, ‘Smooth things over? You want me to apologize for something I believe to be justified, or at least not unjustified, to someone who wasn’t involved anyway?’
‘Dr Klein,’ said Krull.
‘Frieda,’ said Jasmine Barber. ‘Please wait.’
Thelma Scott said nothing; her grey eyes followed Frieda.
‘I’ve got better things to do with my time.’
She took her coat from the back of the chair and walked out, making sure not to bang the door behind her. As she went along the corridor towards the front entrance, she caught a glimpse of a woman going down the stairs on her left and stopped. Something about the sturdy frame, the short brown hair, was familiar. She shook her head, continued towards the exit, but then changed her mind and turned back, taking the stairs to the canteen. And she was right: it was Carrie Dekker, Alan’s wife, the woman who had just made her sit through the charade upstairs. In the year since she had seen her, she seemed to have grown shorter, stockier, older, more tired. Her brown hair was shaggy. Frieda waited while Carrie got herself a mug of coffee and took a seat in the corner, next to a radiator, then approached her.
‘Can I join you for a moment?’
Carrie stared at her, her face tightening with hostility. ‘You’ve got a nerve,’ she said.
Frieda took the chair opposite her. ‘I thought we should talk face to face.’
‘Why aren’t you still being interviewed? You’ve only been in there for a short while.’
‘I wanted to ask you something.’
‘What?’
‘Alan was my patient. Why are you, rather than him directly, making the complaint against me?’
Carrie looked startled. ‘Don’t you know?’
‘Know what?’
‘You’ve really got no idea? You came into our lives. You talked about safety. You told Alan he could trust you. You fed him with ideas about knowledge, about being true to himself. You told him not to be ashamed of anything he felt. You gave him permission.’
‘And?’
‘I just wanted him cured.’ For a moment her voice wavered. ‘He was ill and I just wanted him to get better. That’s what you were for. Is that what you mean by cured? You find yourself and leave your wife.’
‘What?’
‘You changed him.’
‘Carrie, stop a moment. Are you telling me that Alan left you?’
‘Didn’t you know?’
‘No. I haven’t seen or talked to Alan since the December before last, when his brother was found dead.’
‘Well. Now you know.’
‘When did he leave?’
‘When?’ Carrie lifted her head. Her eyes met Frieda’s. ‘Christmas Day, that’s when.’
‘That’s hard,’ said Frieda, softly. She was beginning to understand why Carrie had complained. ‘So it’s been just over a month.’
‘Not this Christmas. Last Christmas.’
‘Oh,’ said Frieda. For a moment, the room around her seemed to lose its definite shape. ‘You mean straight after his brother killed himself?’
‘As if he was just waiting. You really didn’t know? I assumed he’d talked to you – I assumed you’d encouraged him.’
‘Why did he go?’
‘Because he felt better. He didn’t need me any more. He’s always needed me. I looked after him. But after you’d got to him, he was different.’
‘Is that what he said?’
‘Not in so many words. But that was how he behaved. For a few days after Dean killed himself, he was – I can’t describe it. He was cheerful, full of energy, decisive. It was the best few days of my life. That was what made it so hard. I thought everything was going to be all right. I’d been so scared for so long, and suddenly there he was, the old Alan. Or, rather, a new Alan. And he was so – so affectionate. I was happy.’
She turned her head so that Frieda wouldn’t see the tears in her eyes, and sniffed angrily.
‘He must have given some explanation.’
‘No. He just said it had been good but now it was over. When I think of what I gave up for him, how I looked after him, how I made him safe in the world … I loved him and I knew he loved me. Whatever else happened, we had each other. Then he just left without a backward glance – and what have I got now? He took everything – my love, my trust, my child-bearing years. And I’ll never forgive you for that. Never.’
Frieda nodded. Her anger with Carrie had long gone.
‘You know, Alan went through a terrible trauma,’ she said. ‘Perhaps he just couldn’t bear to be in his old life for a bit, so he ran away from it, but it doesn’t mean it’s permanent. The important thing is to keep communicating with him, keep doors open.’
‘And how am I supposed to do that?’
‘Won’t he talk to you?’
‘He’s gone. Disappeared.’
Frieda felt suddenly cold in spite of the radiator blasting out heat beside her. She spoke slowly and carefully. ‘Do you mean you don’t even know where he is?’
‘I’ve no idea.’
‘He didn’t leave a forwarding address?’
‘He just walked out with a few clothes and that bag of tools his psychopath brother left him just before he killed himself. Oh, and almost all of the money in his bank account. I opened his statements. I’ve tried to find him but he obviously doesn’t want to be found.’
‘I see,’ said Frieda.
‘So that’s why I made a complaint. You stole my life from me. You might have found that little boy, and rescued Dean’s wife, who didn’t seem to want rescuing, but you lost my Alan.’
Carrie stood up and buttoned her jacket; a skin was forming on the surface of her unt
ouched coffee. Frieda watched her as she left but didn’t move for several minutes. She sat quite still, her hands on the table in front of her, her face without expression.
Six
As Frieda walked away from the Institute she was thinking so hard that she scarcely knew where she was. When she felt a nudge on her shoulder, she thought she had bumped into someone.
‘Sorry,’ she began, and then gave a start. ‘What the hell are you doing here?’
Karlsson laughed, feeling his grim mood lift at the sight of her grumpy face. ‘It’s good to see you too, after all these months,’ he said. ‘I came to find you.’
‘This isn’t a good time,’ said Frieda.
‘I can imagine,’ said Karlsson. ‘I saw Carrie Dekker leave a few minutes before you came out.’
‘But why are you here at all?’
‘Charming. After all we went through together.’
‘Karlsson,’ Frieda said warningly. He had never persuaded her to call him by his first name.
‘I had trouble reaching you. Why don’t you ever switch your mobile on?’
‘I only check it about once a week.’
‘At least you got round to buying one. I talked to your friend, Paz, up at the clinic. She told me what was up. Why didn’t you call me?’ He looked around. ‘Can we go for a coffee somewhere?’
‘I was just in the canteen with Carrie. Alan’s left her. Did you know that?’
‘No,’ said Karlsson. ‘I didn’t stay in touch.’
‘And when I say “left”, I mean really left. He’s just gone. Don’t you think that’s strange, for someone who was so utterly dependent on her, and adoring?’
‘He’d been under a lot of pressure. Sometimes people just need to escape.’ He gave a small wince that Frieda noticed, as she took in the new lines in his thin face, the silver threads flecking his dark hair, and the patch of stubble that he’d missed while shaving.
She shook her head. ‘It doesn’t feel right. Something’s happened.’