โWhy are we here?โ Ravi said when he caught sight of her.
โShhh,โ Pip hissed, grabbing his coat sleeve to pull him behind the tree with her. She peeked her head out past the trunk, watching the house across the street.
โShouldnโt you be at school?โ he asked.
โIโve pulled a sickie, OK?โ Pip said. โDonโt make me feel worse about it than I already do.โ
โYouโve never pulled a sickie before?โ
โOnly ever missed four days of school. Ever. And that was because of chickenpox,โ she said quietly, her eyes on the large detached cottage. Its old bricks speckled from pale yellow to dark russet and were overrun with ivy that climbed up to the crooked roofline where three tall chimneys perched. A large white garage door behind the empty drive winked the morning autumn sunshine back at them. It was the last house on the street before the road climbed up to the church.
โWhat are we doing here?โ Ravi said, tucking his head around the other side of the tree to see Pipโs face.
โIโve been here since just after eight,โ she said, hardly pausing to breathe.
โBecca left about twenty minutes ago; sheโs interning over at theย Kilton Mailย office. Dawn left just as I was arriving. My mum says she works part- time at a charity head office in Wycombe. Itโs quarter past nine now, so she should still be out for a while. And thereโs no alarm on the front of the house.โ
Her last word slipped into a yawn. Sheโd hardly slept last night, waking to stare again at the text from Unknown until the words were burned into the underside of her eyelids, haunting her every time she closed her eyes.
โPip,โ Ravi said, bringing her attention back to him. โAnd, yet again, why are we here?โ His eyes were wide in their telling-off way already. โTell me
itโs not what I think it is.โ
โTo break in,โ Pip said. โWe have to find that burner phone.โ He groaned. โHow did I know you were going to say that?โ
โItโs actual evidence, Ravi. Actual physical evidence. Proof that she was dealing drugs with Howie. Maybe the identity of the secret older guy Andie was seeing. If we find it, we can phone an anonymous tip in to the police and maybe theyโll reopen the investigation and actually find her killer.โ
โOK, but hereโs a quick observation,โ Ravi said, holding up his finger.
โYouโre asking me, the brother of the person everyone believes murdered Andie Bell, to break into the Bell house? Not to mention the amount of trouble I would be in anyway as a brown kid breaking into a white familyโs house.โ
โShit, Ravi,โ Pip said, stepping back behind the tree, her breath catching in her throat. โIโm so sorry. I wasnโt thinking.โ
She really hadnโt been thinking; she was so convinced the truth was just waiting for them in this house that she hadnโt considered the position this would put Ravi in. Of course he couldnโt break in with her; this town already treated him like a criminal โ how much worse would it be for him if they got caught?
Since Pip was a little girl, her dad had always taught her about their different experiences of the world, explaining whenever something happened: whenever someone followed him around a shop, whenever someone questioned him for being alone with a white kid, whenever someone presumed he worked security at his office, not as the firmโs partner.
Pip grew up determined never to be blind to this, nor her invisible step up that sheโd never had to fight for.
But sheโd been blind this morning. She was angry at herself, her stomach twisting in uncomfortable hurricane turns.
โIโm so sorry,โ she said again. โI was being stupid. I know you canโt take the same risks I can. Iโll go in alone. Maybe you can stay here, keep a lookout?โ
โNo,โ he said thoughtfully, fingers burrowing through his hair. โIf this is how weโre going to clear Salโs name, I have to be there for that. Thatโs worth the risk. Itโs too important. I still think this is reckless and Iโm crapping myself, but โโ he paused, flashing her a small smile โ โweโre partners in crime after all. That means partners no matter what.โ
โAre you sure?โ Pip shifted and the strap of her rucksack fell down to her elbow crook.
โIโm sure,โ he said, reaching out and lifting the strap back up for her.
โOK.โ Pip turned to survey the empty house. โAnd if itโs any consolation, I wasnโt planning on us getting caught.โ
โSo whatย isย the plan?โ he said. โBreak a window?โ
She gaped at him. โNo way. I was planning to use a key. We live in Kilton; everyone has a spare key outside somewhere.โ
โOh . . . right. Letโs go and scope out the target, Sarge.โ Ravi looked intently at her, pretending to do a complex sequence of military hand gestures. She flicked him to get him to stop.
Pip went first, walking briskly across the road and over the front lawn.
Thank goodness the Bells lived right at the end of a quiet street; there was no one around. She reached the front door and turned to watch Ravi darting across, head down, to join her.
They checked under the doormat first, the place where Pipโs family kept their spare key. But no luck. Ravi reached up and felt the frame above the front door. He pulled his hand back empty, fingertips covered in dust and grime.
โOK, you check that bush, Iโll check this one.โ
There was no key under either, nor hidden around the fitted lanterns nor on any secret nail behind the creeping ivy.
โOh, surely not,โ Ravi said, pointing at a chrome wind chime mounted beside the front door. He snaked his hand through the metal tubes, gritting his teeth when two knocked tunefully together.
โRavi,โ she said in an urgent whisper, โwhat are you โโ
He pulled something off the small wooden platform that hung in the middle of the chimes and held it up to her. A key with a little nub of old Blu-Tack attached.
โAha,โ he said, โstudent becomes master. You may be the sarge, Sarge, but I am chief inspector.โ
โZip it, Singh.โ
Pip swung her bag off and lowered it to the ground. She rustled inside and immediately found what she was looking for, her fingers alighting on their smooth vinyl texture. She pulled them out.
โWhโ I donโt even want to ask,โ Ravi laughed, shaking his head as Pip pulled on the bright yellow rubber gloves.
โIโm about to commit a crime,โ she said. โI donโt want to leave any fingerprints. Thereโs a pair in here for you too.โ
She held out her florescent yellow palm and Ravi placed the key into it.
He bent to rifle through her bag and stood up again, his hands gripped round a pair of purple flower-patterned gloves.
โWhat are these?โ he said.
โMy mumโs gardening gloves. Look, I didnโt have long to plan this heist, OK?โ
โClearly,โ Ravi muttered.
โTheyโre the bigger pair. Just put them on.โ
โย Realย men wear floral when trespassing,โ Ravi said, slipping them on and clapping his gloved hands together.
He nodded that he was ready.
Pip shouldered her bag and stepped up to the door. She took a breath and held it in. Gripping her other hand to steady it, she guided the key into the lock and twisted.