Tracy King’s young life was blighted by her father’s killing: not only by profound grief and loss, but also abject terror, because she believed his killers – seemingly wrongly acquitted – roamed free near her home. For 34 years this misunderstanding cast a malign shadow. ‘I thought my dad, Mike, had been killed with a karate chop to the head by the ringleader of a gang of five violent youths who had fled the scene after the fatal attack,’ she says. ‘The dread, that I could be passing them in the street or at school, consumed me.’
Tracy stopped going to lessons, stopped sleeping and says she lived ‘in a state of constant exhaustion and fear’. The trauma persisted, unresolved, into her adult life. Then, two years ago – when Tracy was 46 – she confronted it head-on. Writing her new memoir, Learning To Think, she decided to research her father’s death. With astonishing courage, she arranged to meet Andrew Reynolds, the man she believed had killed him – it was a meeting that would shatter every conviction she had harboured.
Today, instead of clinging to the truth as she perceived it, she admits, with spectacular honesty, that she was wrong. ‘I met the man who killed Dad... and I liked him very much,’ she says. ‘Andrew is a kind, thoughtful person without a shred of hatred or aggression. He told me how very sorry he was that he had struck the blow that ended my dad’s life.’
That was Tracy’s first surprise: Reynolds’ genuine contrition. But there was more: ‘Since I was 12, I had been convinced the dad I loved so much – my dear, kind, clever, flawed father, who was so engaged with my learning and taught me to be curious – had met a brutal death at the hands of an aggressor.
‘This belief tortured me for decades. But then, in 2022, Andrew’s story shifted my perspective on the events that changed my life that evening in 1988. It was liberating to know the truth at last.’
This story is from the September 09, 2024 edition of WOMAN - UK.
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This story is from the September 09, 2024 edition of WOMAN - UK.
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