Steven Watson - Before I Go to Sleep

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The sensational
bestseller—now a major motion picture starring Academy Award-winners Nicole Kidman and Colin Firth.
Memories define us. So what if you lost yours every time you went to sleep? Your name, your identity, your past, even the people you love—all forgotten overnight. And the one person you trust may be telling you only half the story.
Welcome to Christine’s life. “As I sleep, my mind will erase everything I did today. I will wake up tomorrow as I did this morning. Thinking I’m still a child. Thinking I have a whole lifetime of choice ahead of me…”

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Relief mixed with terror, leaving me numb.

We tidied away the dinner plates. I stood at the sink, dipping the dishes he passed to me into hot, soapy water, scrubbing them, passing them back to him to be dried, all the time avoiding my reflection in the window. I forced myself to think of Adam’s funeral, imagined myself standing on the grass on an overcast day, next to a mound of earth, looking at a coffin suspended over the hole in the ground. I tried to imagine the volley of shots, the lone bugler, playing, as we—his family, his friends—sobbed in silence.

But I could not. It was not long ago and yet I saw nothing. I tried to imagine how I must have felt. I would have woken up that morning without any knowledge that I was even a mother; Ben must have first had to convince me that I had a son, and then that we were to spend that very afternoon burying him. I imagine not horror but numbness, disbelief. Unreality. There is only so much that a mind can take and surely none can cope with that, certainly not mine. I pictured myself being told what to wear, led from the house to a waiting car, settled in the backseat. Perhaps I wondered whose funeral we were really going to as we drove. Possibly it felt like mine.

I looked at Ben’s reflection in the window. He would have had to cope with all that, at a time when his own grief was at its most acute. It might have been kinder, for all of us, if he had not taken me to the funeral at all. With a chill, I wondered if that was what he had really done.

I still did not know whether to tell him about Dr. Nash. He looked tired again, now, almost depressed. He smiled only when I caught his gaze and smiled at him. Perhaps later, I thought, though whether there might be a better time I did not know. I could not help but feel I was to blame for his mood, either through something I had done or something I had not. I realized how much I really cared for this man. I could not say whether I loved him and still can’t—but that is because I don’t really know what love is. Despite the nebulous, shimmering memory I have of him, I feel love for Adam, an instinct to protect him, the desire to give him everything, the feeling that he is part of me and without him I am incomplete. For my mother, too, when my mind sees her, I feel a different love. A more complex bond, with caveats and reservations. Not one I fully understand. But Ben? I find him attractive. I trust him—despite the lies he has told me, I know that he has only my best interests at heart—but can I say I love him, when I am only distantly aware of having known him for more than a few hours?

I did not know. But I wanted him to be happy, and, on some level, I understood that I wanted to be the person to make him so. I must make more effort, I decided. Take control. This journal could be a tool to improve both our lives, not just mine.

I was about to ask how he was when it happened. I must have let go of the plate before he had gripped it; it clattered to the floor—accompanied by Ben’s muttered Shit!— and shattered into hundreds of tiny pieces. “Sorry!” I said, but Ben did not look at me. He sank to the floor, cursing under his breath. “I’ll do that,” I said, but he ignored me and instead began snatching at the larger chunks, collecting them in his right hand.

“I’m sorry,” I said again. “I’m so clumsy!”

I don’t know what I expected. Forgiveness, I suppose, or the reassurance that it wasn’t important. But, instead, Ben said, “Fuck!” He dropped the remains of the plate and began to suck the thumb of his left hand. Droplets of blood spattered the linoleum.

“Are you okay?” I said.

He looked up at me. “Yes, yes. I cut myself, that’s all. Stupid fucking…”

“Let me see.”

“It’s nothing,” he said. He stood up.

“Let me see,” I said again. I reached for his hand. “I’ll go and get a Band-Aid. Do we—?”

“For fuck’s sake!” he said, batting my hand away. “Just leave it! Okay?”

I was stunned. I could see the cut was deep; blood welled at its edge and ran in a thin line down his wrist. I did not know what to do, what to say. He had not shouted, exactly, but neither had he made any attempt to hide his annoyance. We faced each other, in limbo, balanced on the edge of an argument, each waiting for the other to speak, both unsure what had happened, how much significance the moment had held.

I could not stand it. “I’m sorry,” I said, even though part of me resented it.

His face softened. “It’s okay. I’m sorry too.” He paused. “I just feel tense, I think. It’s been a very long day.”

I took a paper towel and handed it to him. “You should clean yourself up.”

He took it from me. “Thanks,” he said, dabbing the blood on his wrist and fingers. “I’ll just go upstairs. Take a shower.” He bent forward, kissed me. “Okay?”

He turned and left the room.

I heard the bathroom door close, a tap turn on. The boiler next to me fired to life. I gathered the rest of the pieces of the plate and put them in the garbage, wrapping them in paper first, then swept up the tinier fragments before finally sponging up the blood. When I had finished, I went into the living room.

The flip-top phone was ringing, muffled by my bag. I took it out. Dr. Nash.

The TV was still on. Above me, I could hear the creak of floorboards as Ben moved from room to room upstairs. I did not want him to hear me, talking on a phone he does not know I have. I whispered, “Hello?”

“Christine,” came the voice. “It’s Ed. Dr. Nash. Can you speak?”

While this afternoon he had sounded calm, almost reflective, now his voice was urgent. I began to feel afraid.

“Yes,” I said, lowering my voice still further. “What is it?”

“Listen,” he said. “Have you spoken to Ben yet?”

“Yes,” I said. “Sort of. Why? What’s wrong?”

“Did you tell him about your journal? About me? Did you invite him to Waring House?”

“No,” I said. “I was about to. He’s upstairs, I— What’s wrong?”

“I’m sorry,” he said. “It’s probably nothing to worry about. It’s just that someone from Waring House just called me. The woman I spoke to this morning? Nicole? She wanted to give me a phone number. She said that your friend Claire has apparently called there, wanting to talk to you. She left her number.”

I felt myself tense. I heard the toilet flush and the sound of water in the sink. “I don’t understand,” I said. “Recently?”

“No,” he said. “It was a couple of weeks after you left to go and live with Ben. When you weren’t there she took Ben’s number, but, well, they said she called again later and said she couldn’t get through to him. She asked them if they’d give her your address. They couldn’t do that, of course, but said that she could leave her number with them, in case you or Ben ever called. Nicole found a note in your file after we spoke this morning, and she rang back to give the number to me.”

I didn’t understand. “But why didn’t they just mail it to me? Or to Ben?”

“Well, Nicole said they did. But they never heard back from either of you.” He paused.

“Ben handles all the mail,” I said. “He picks it up in the morning. Well, he did today, anyway…”

“Has Ben given you Claire’s number?”

“No,” I said. “No. He said we haven’t been in touch for years. She moved away, not long after we got married. New Zealand.”

“Okay,” he said, and then, “Christine? You told me that before, and… well… it’s not an international number.”

I felt a billowing sense of dread, though still I could not say why.

“So, she moved back?”

“Nicole said that Claire used to visit you all the time at Waring House. She was there almost as much as Ben was. Nicole never heard anything about her moving away. Not to New Zealand. Not anywhere.”

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