โWhat do you mean?โ Pip stared at him, open-mouthed.
Ravi answered by holding up the phone and shaking it gently.
โThatโs Salโs?โ Pip said. โHow do you have it?โ
โThe police released it to us a few months after they closed Andieโs investigation.โ
A cautious electricity sparked up the back of Pipโs neck. โCan I . . .โ she said, โcan I look at it?โ
โOf course,โ he laughed, โthatโs why I brought it round, you plonker.โ Unchecked, the excitement charged through her, nimble and dizzying. โHoly pepperoni,โ she said, flustered and hurrying to unlock the door. โLetโs go and look at it at my workstation.โ
She and Barney bolted over the threshold, but a third set of feet didnโt follow. She spun back round.
โWhatโs funny?โ she said. โCome on.โ
โSorry, youโre just very entertaining when youโre extra serious.โ โQuick,โ she said, beckoning him through the hallway and to the stairs. โDonโt drop it.โ
โIโm not going to drop it.โ
Pip jogged up the steps, Ravi following far too slowly behind. Before he got there, she did a hasty check of her bedroom for potential embarrassment.
She dived for a pile of just-laundered bras by her chair, scooped them up and shoved them in a drawer, slamming it shut just as Ravi walked in. She pointed him into her desk chair, too flappy to sit herself.
โWorkstation?โ he asked.
โYep,โ she said, โwhile some people might work in their bedrooms, I sleep in my workstation. Itโs very different.โ
โHere you go then. I charged it last night.โ
He handed her the phone and she took it in her cupped palms with as much deliberate dexterity and care as she did yearly when unwrapping her first fatherโs German-market Christmas baubles.
โHave you looked through it before?โ she asked, sliding to unlock more carefully than sheโd ever unlocked her own phones, even at their newest.
โYeah, of course. Obsessively. But go ahead, Sergeant. Where wouldย you
look first?โ
โCall log,โ she said, tapping the green phone button.
She looked through the missed call list first. There were dozens from the 24th April, the Tuesday he had died. Calls fromย Dadย ,ย Mum, Ravi, Naomi, Jakeย and unsaved numbers that must have been the police trying to locate him.
Pip scrolled back further, to the date of Andieโs disappearance. Sal had two missed calls that day. One was fromย Max-y Boyย at 7:19 p.m., probably aย when-are-you-coming-overย call from Max. The other missed call, she read with a skipped heartbeat, was fromย Andie<3ย at 8:54 p.m.
โAndie rang him that night,โ Pip said to herself and Ravi. โJust before nine.โ Ravi nodded. โSal didnโt pick up, though.โ
โPippa!โ Victorโs jokey-but-serious voice sailed up the stairs. โNo boys in bedrooms.โ
Pip felt her cheeks flood with heat. She turned so Ravi couldnโt see and yelled back, โWeโre working on my EPQ! My door is open.โ
โOK, that will do!โ came the reply.
She glimpsed back at Ravi and saw he was chuckling at her again. โStop finding my life amusing,โ she said, looking back at the phone.
She went through Salโs outgoing calls next. Andieโs name repeated over and over again in long streams. It was broken up in places with the odd call to home, or Dad, and one to Naomi on Saturday. Pip took a few moments to count all the โAndieโs: from 10:30 a.m. on the Saturday until 7:20 a.m. on the Tuesday, Sal called her 112 times. Each call lasted two or three seconds; straight to voicemail.
โHe called her over a hundred times,โ Ravi said, reading her face.
โWhy would he ring her so many times if heโd supposedly killed her and had her phone hidden somewhere?โ said Pip.
โI contacted the police years ago and asked them that very question,โ
Ravi said. โThe officer told me it was clear that Sal was making a conscious effort to look innocent, by ringing the victimโs phone so many times.โ
โBut,โ Pip countered, โif they thought he was making an effort to appear innocent and evade capture, why didnโt he dispose of Andieโs phone? He could have put it in the same place as her body and it never would have connected him to her death. If he was trying to not get caught, why would he keep the one biggest bit of evidence? And then feel desperate enough to end his life with this vital evidence on him?โ
Ravi shot two clicking gun-hands at her. โThe policeman couldnโt answer that either.โ
โDid you look at the last texts Andie and Sal sent each other?โ she asked. โYeah, have a look. Donโt worry, they arenโt sexty or anything.โ
Pip exited on to the home screen and opened the messages app. She clicked on the Andie tab, feeling like a time-hopping trespasser.
Sal had sent two texts to Andie after she disappeared. The first on the Sunday morning:ย andie just come home everyones worried.ย And on Monday afternoon:ย please just ring someone so we know youre safe.
The message preceding them was sent on the Friday she went missing. At 9:01 p.m. Sal texted her:ย im not talking to you till youve stopped.
Pip showed Ravi the message sheโd just read. โHe said that just after ignoring her call that night. Do you know what they could have been fighting about? What did Sal want Andie to stop?โ
โNo idea.โ
โCan I just type this out in my research?โ she said, reaching over him for her laptop. She parked herself on her bed and typed out the text, grammar mistakes and all.
โNow you need to look at the last text he sent my dad,โ Ravi said. โThe one they said is his confession.โ
Pip flicked over to it. At 10:17 a.m. on his final Tuesday morning, Sal said to his father:ย it was me. i did it. iโm so sorry.ย Pipโs eyes flicked over it several times, picking up a little more each read through. The pixelated building blocks of each letter were a riddle, the kind you could only solve if you stopped looking and started seeing.
โYou see it too, donโt you?โ Ravi was watching her.
โThe grammar?โ Pip said, looking for the agreement in Raviโs eyes.
โSal was the cleverest person I knew,โ he said, โbut he texted like an illiterate. Always in a rush, no punctuation, no capital letters.โ
โHe must have had autocorrect turned off,โ Pip said. โAnd yet, in this last text, we have three full stops and an apostrophe. Even though itโs all in lower case.โ
โAnd what does that make you think?โ asked Ravi.
โMy mind doesnโt make small jumps, Ravi,โ she said. โMine takes Everest- sized leaps. It makes me think that someone else wrote that text.
Someone who added in the punctuation themselves because thatโs how they were used to writing in texts. Maybe they checked quickly and thought it looked enough like Sal because it was all lower case.โ
โThatโs what I thought too, when we first got it back. The police just sent me away. My parents didnโt want to hear it either,โ he sighed. โI think theyโre terrified of false hope. I am too, if Iโm honest.โ
Pip scoured through the rest of the phone. Sal hadnโt taken any photos on the night in question, and none since Andie disappeared. She checked in the deleted folder to be sure. The reminders were all about essays he had to hand in, and one about buying his mumโs birthday present.
โThereโs something interesting in the notes,โ Ravi said, rolling over on the chair and opening the app for her.
The notes were all quite old: Salโs home Wi-Fi password, a listed abs workout, a page of work experience placements he could apply to. But there was just one later note, written on Wednesday 18th April 2012. Pip clicked into it. There was one thing typed on the page:ย R009 KKJ.
โCar number plate, right?โ Ravi said.
โLooks it. He wrote that down in his notes two days before Andie went missing. Do you recognize it?โ
Ravi shook his head. โI tried to Google it, see if I could find the owner, but no luck.โ
Pip typed it up in her log anyway, and the exact time the note was last edited.
โThatโs everything,โ Ravi said, โthatโs all I could find.โ
Pip gave the phone one last wistful look before handing it back.
โYou seem disappointed,โ he said.
โI just hoped thereโd be something more substantial we could chase up on. Inconsistent grammar and lots of phone calls to Andie certainly make him appear innocent, but they donโt actually open any leads to pursue.โ
โNot yet,โ he said, โbut you needed to see it. Have you got anything to show me?โ
Pip paused. Yes, she did, but one of those things was Naomiโs possible involvement. Her protective instinct flared up, grabbing hold of her tongue.
But if they were going to be partners, they had to be all in. She knew that.
She opened up her production log documents, scrolled to the top and handed the laptop to Ravi. โThis is everything so far,โ she said.
He read through it quietly and then handed the computer back, a thoughtful look on his face.
โOK, so the Sal alibi route is a dead end,โ he said. โAfter he left Maxโs at ten thirty, I think he was alone because that explains why he panicked and asked his friends to lie for him. He could have just stopped on a bench on his walk home and playedย Angry Birdsย or something.โ
โI agree,โ said Pip. โHe was most likely alone and therefore has no alibi; itโs the only thing that makes sense. So that line of enquiry is lost. I think the next step should be to find out as much as we can about Andieโs life and, in the process, identify anyone who might have had motive to kill her.โ
โRead my mind, Sarge,โ he said. โMaybe you should start with Andieโs
best friends, Emma Hutton and Chloe Burch. They might actually speak to you.โ
โIโve messaged them both. Havenโt heard back yet, though.โ
โOK, good,โ he said, nodding to himself and then to the laptop. โIn that interview with the journalist, you talked about inconsistencies in the case.
What other inconsistencies do you see?โ
โWell, if youโd killed someone,โ she said, โyouโd scrub yourself down multiple times, fingernails included. Especially if you were lying about alibis and making fake calls to look innocent, wouldnโt you think to, oh, I donโt know, wash the frickinโ blood off your hands so you donโt get caught red-handed, literally.โ
โYeah, Sal definitely wasnโt that stupid. But what about his fingerprints in her car?โ
โOf course his fingerprints would be found in her car; he was her boyfriend,โ said Pip. โFingerprints canโt be accurately dated.โ
โAnd what about hiding the body?โ Ravi leaned forward. โI think we can guess, living where we do, that sheโs buried somewhere in the woods in or just out of town.โ
โExactly,โ Pip nodded. โA hole deep enough that sheโs never been found.
How did Sal have enough time to dig a hole that big with his bare hands? It would even be a push with a shovel.โ
โUnless she isnโt buried.โ
โYeah, well, I think it takes a little more time and a lot more hardware to dispose of a body in other ways,โ said Pip.
โAnd this is the path of least resistance, you said.โ
โIt is, supposedly,โ she said. โUntil you start askingย where, whatย andย how