Chapter 58

HENRY

Henry had first met Hugh Warrington at medical school, and even though they were never great friends (Henry wasn’t one for friends) they ending up sharing student digs together.

Hugh was a narcissist: that was obvious to Henry early on.

He wanted to play God. And Henry was good at dealing with narcissists, thanks to his father.

He recognized parts of himself in Hugh. The morally grey parts.

Like attracts like. After medical school they lost touch until, a year or so after Henry and Marielle married, she persuaded him to join some pretentious males-only members’ club that her dad went to.

Hugh was also a member and they reconnected.

Hugh liked a drink and he liked to brag, and it wasn’t long before he admitted to Henry what he was up to at St Calvert’s.

Henry sometimes wondered if perhaps he gave off a kind of immoral aura, like a dark-hearted priest, because of the number of people who had confessed things to him over the years.

One night, while drinking at their club, Henry admitted to Hugh about Marielle wanting to try fertility treatment. Hugh had agreed to persuade her that it wouldn’t work for them and she had believed him. And then she had fallen pregnant naturally.

It had been a shock and Henry had hoped it was a phantom pregnancy. But, no, their doctor had told them this could happen when a couple stopped trying. As the weeks went on and Marielle’s belly continued to grow, Henry knew he was running out of options.

So, he went to Hugh with a plan and Hugh had agreed to help, for a large sum.

A few days before Marielle’s due date Henry would give Marielle a solution of misoprostol to drink to induce her.

Hopefully it should work within twenty-four hours and Hugh would book the day off so he could deliver the baby, but unofficially, so there would be no record of it.

‘We can take her to the new natural birthing unit that is nearly finished,’ he told Henry.

‘The builders have always clocked off by three so we won’t be seen.

It’s in a separate building to St Calvert’s because,’ he’d rolled his eyes, ‘it’s supposed to make the woman feel like she’s giving birth at home.

Anyway, some of the suites are already finished so we can use one of those.

I’ll have it ready. I’ve got a midwife who will be in on it with me.

Someone I trust. She’ll keep Marielle sedated until it’s all done. ’

Simone Harvey. He hadn’t forgotten her name.

A pretty little thing who had judged him, he was sure of it, when she ushered them into the unit that night.

Marielle was a little bemused that they were going to St Calvert’s instead of the fancy private maternity hospital she’d been booked in to but she was in so much pain, screaming at him that she’d made a huge mistake in getting pregnant, and didn’t argue.

It had all worked so well. Hugh said he knew a couple who couldn’t conceive and were desperate for a baby. As he whisked their little boy away from under an exhausted Marielle’s nose, Henry left Hugh to organize the fake death certificate and pretend ashes he could give to Marielle.

Henry had continued to sedate Marielle at home, for weeks afterwards, in a bid to stop her asking too many questions.

He pretended they’d had a small memorial for the baby, just the two of them, which she must have forgotten about, and they scattered the ‘ashes’ in Richmond Park, her favourite place.

By this time her father had moved abroad with his new wife, and she was more or less estranged from her sister so there was nobody to involve.

The whole thing had cost him a lot of money. But it had been worth it. He was safe in the knowledge that his son was growing up somewhere with parents who would give him the emotional strength that he and Marielle never could.

He could never have predicted that twenty years later Hugh Warrington would rear his smarmy head again and derail his perfectly orchestrated life.

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