Odette HOUGHTON


Personal Details
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Year of birth: 1967
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Height: 167 cm
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Build: Slim
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Eyes: Blue
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Hair: Brown
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Complexion: Olive
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Gender: Female
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Distinguishing Feature:
Hair in dreadlocks. Nose earring.
Circumstances
Odette Houghton had been living in India for
around a year after a period of overseas travel. She
was last seen by her family in April 1990 in
Thailand, and was wearing her hair in dreadlocks and
an earring in her nose. Her regular contact with her
family ceased in August 1991.It has been established
that in February 1991 Odette was in Bangalore for
the winter, then in Rishikesh, Uttar Pradesh for
summer, then back to Kudli Beach, Gokaran,
Karnataka. She then moved to Manali in the mountains
of Himachal Pradesh. Odette is reported to have been
living in a commune 34 km north of Manikaran before
she went missing.
Help me find my daughter
by Edward Houghton, 65, Valla Beach,
NSW
Thanks to That's Life magazine
Looking up from my desk, I saw my daughter bound in. 'Hi, Dad,' she chirped,
kissing me.
As usual, my flower-power child was dressed in pyjama-style pants and a tie-dyed
shirt. 'What are you wearing?' I groaned, noticing the looks of my colleagues at
the insurance firm where I worked.
Odette was a free spirit. Her brothers Mark, now 42, Jason, 38, and Christopher,
37, would rib her about being a hippie but adored their sister.
Odette was always inquisitive, wanting to experience and explore everything.
People warmed to her open personality and she had heaps of friends.
As soon as she left school in 1985, Odette was off to see the world. 'Write
often,' my wife Marie, now 65, sniffled, as Odette walked through the departure
gates. 'I will,' she grinned, waving. 'Love you!'
She sent letters and postcards every few weeks. We loved hearing of her
adventures.
She first went to the UK to work, and travelled around Europe. Then she
travelled through India and Japan.
She told us on the phone how she sold strawberries dipped in chocolate at street
markets in Japan. 'Only Odette would think of something wacky like that,'
Christopher laughed.
When she returned home a year later, we were thrilled to see her. 'India is
incredible,' she bubbled, showing us photos.
'Isn't it dangerous?' her mum asked. 'You know me,' Odette laughed. 'Anyone
messes with me, I'll kick them in the ankles.'
She enrolled in a hospitality course, but she still had itchy feet. In January
1988, she had saved enough to go back to India. She was so excited. 'Come and
visit me,' she begged. 'India's not for me,' I said. 'Too chaotic.'
Odette's postcards were filled with comments on India's mystic beauty. Our
flowerchild had found her Shangri-la.
In April 1990, the family went to Thailand for my and Marie's 25th wedding
anniversary. Odette joined us from India.
'Hey hippie!' Jason teased, seeing her at the airport. We had a great time,
hiring scooters and tearing around the islands.
'I've got a boyfriend,' Odette confessed later. 'What's his name?' Marie smiled.
Odette told us he was called Stefano. He was 10 years older than her and from
Switzerland.
'That's quite an age gap,' Marie started. 'Stop fussing,' Odette laughed.
All too soon, our family reunion came to an end.
'Visit us soon,' Marie said as she kissed Odette goodbye.
Back home, we kept looking forward to Odette's letters and cards. Occasionally,
she asked us to send her things from home. Marie chuckled as she wrapped a
parcel of Vegemite and tea-tree oil. 'You can take the girl out of Australia...'
she laughed.
We posted it to an address in an area called Manali. Two months later, in August
1991, the parcel was returned to us. That's strange, I thought.
When other letters to her were returned a couple of days later, alarm bells
started ringing. We tried contacting the post office in India, to no avail.
As the weeks ticked by and Odette didn't get in touch, we started getting
worried.
With a sinking heart, I went to the Department of Foreign Affairs. 'My daughter
is missing in India. It's very out of character for her not to stay in touch,' I
pleaded. 'We won't take action to locate missing persons overseas except in
special circumstances,' I was told.
They seemed to think Odette didn't want to be contacted and advised us not to go
looking.
I approached Interpol, the Indian police, the International Red Cross, everyone
I could think of. They were all dead ends. 'Where is she?' Marie wept.
Weeks became months as we agonised over what could have happened to her.
Eventually, Marie and I flew to India to try to find her ourselves.
As the taxi drove us from Delhi airport to our hotel, Marie and I looked out of
the windows in silence. The city was vast, hectic, with people everywhere.
'We'll never find her,' Marie whispered.
'Yes we will,' I said through gritted teeth. I was determined to get my daughter
back.
Our hunt took us to the mountains of Himachal Pradesh in northern India. Odette
told us she was planning to go there. We'd had posters printed of her, and put
them up everywhere.
A few people thought they'd seen her at a Hindu temple near Manali. Someone
suggested she'd been living in a hippie commune some 35km north in the
mountains. The Indian police drove us there, but no-one knew where she was.
After weeks of appealing for information, we left India with nothing except a
sense of dread.
Back home in Canberra, we tried to get on with life but knowing that our
daughter had vanished was torture.
Then we found her boyfriend Stefano was missing too. 'What if she's dead? All
the signs are pointing to it,' Marie wept.
I refused to believe it.
In 1996, five years after Odette's disappearance, we returned to India,
following the backpacker trail into the mountains, then back down to the popular
tourist spot of Goa on India's south coast.
As we put up posters, young foreigners would chat to us. 'When last did you call
home?' I asked them. 'Not for a couple of years,' some would shrug.
It made me so angry. 'Your poor parents,' I shouted. 'Think of how worried they
are.'
After that, Marie and the boys tried to move on. But I couldn't. I went to see a
clairvoyant who told me Odette was still alive.
I've kept trying to trace her, but I've found nothing. Since Odette's
disappearance, at least 16 backpackers have vanished in Himachal Pradesh. People
call it India's Bermuda Triangle or the Valley of Death.
When I heard recently how Britt Lapthorne's parents battled to find their
missing daughter in Croatia, my heart ached for them. But at least they know
now. We might never have closure.
Every day I dream Odette will suddenly come through the door. She was 24 when
she went missing. She'd be 41 now.
I'll never give up hoping I'll see my bubbly free-spirited daughter again.