โAnd there are still too many youths loitering on the common in the evenings,โ an old woman croaked, her arm raised beside her head.
โWe spoke about this at a previous meeting, Mrs Faversham,โ a female
police officer with ringlet-sprung hair said. โThey arenโt engaging in any anti-social behaviour. They are just playing football after school.โ
Pip was sitting on a bright yellow plastic chair in an audience of just twelve people. The library was dark and stuffy and the air filled her nostrils with that wonderful cosmic smell of old books and the fusty smell of old people.
The meeting was slow and dreary, but Pip was alert and sharp-eyed.
Daniel da Silva was one of the three officers taking the meeting. He was taller than sheโd expected, standing there in his black uniform. His hair was light brown and wavy, styled back from his forehead. He was clean-shaven, with a narrow upturned nose and wide rounded lips. Pip tried to not watch him for long stretches of time, in case he noticed.
There was another familiar face here too, sitting just three seats down from Pip. He stood up suddenly, flashing his open palm at the officers.
โStanley Forbes,ย Kilton Mailย ,โ he said. โSeveral of my readers have complained that people are still driving too fast down the high street. How
do you intend to tackle this issue?โ
Daniel stepped forward now, nodding for Stanley to retake his seat.
โThanks, Stan,โ he said. โThe street already has several traffic-calming measures. We have discussed performing more speed checks and, if itโs a concern, I am happy to reopen that conversation with my superiors.โ
Mrs Faversham had two more complaints to drawl through and then the meeting was finally over.
โIf you have any other policing concerns,โ the third officer said, noticeably avoiding eye contact with old Mrs Faversham, โplease fill out one
of the questionnaires behind you,โ she gestured. โAnd if youโd prefer to talk to any of us in private, we will be sticking around for the next ten minutes.โ
Pip held back for a while, not wanting to appear too eager. She waited as Daniel finished talking to one of the library volunteers and then she pushed up from her chair and approached him.
โHi,โ she said.
โHello,โ he smiled, โyou seem a few decades too young for a meeting like this.โ
She shrugged. โIโm interested in law and crime.โ
โNothing too interesting in Kilton,โ he said, โjust loitering kids and slightly fast cars.โ
Oh, if only.
โSo youโve never made an arrest over suspicious salmon handling?โ she said, laughing nervously.
Daniel stared blankly at her.
โOh, itโs . . . thatโs an actual British law.โ She felt her cheeks redden.
Why didnโt she just play with her hair or fiddle like normal people do when nervous? โThe Salmon Act of 1986 made it illegal to . . . uh, never mind.โ
She shook her head. โI had a couple of questions I wanted to ask you.โ โShoot,โ he said, โas long as itโs not about salmon.โ
โItโs not.โ She coughed lightly into her fist and looked up. โDo you remember reports being made, about five or six years ago, of drug use and drinks being spiked at house parties thrown by Kilton Grammar students?โ
He tensed his chin and his mouth sank into a thoughtful frown.
โNo,โ he said, โI donโt remember that. Are you wanting to report a crime?โ She shook her head. โNo. Do you know Max Hastings?โ she said.
Daniel shrugged. โI know the Hastings family a bit. They were my very first call-out alone after I finished training.โ
โFor what?โ
โOh, nothing big. Their son had crashed his car into a tree in front of the house. Needed to file a police report for the insurance. Why?โ
โNo reason,โ she said faux-nonchalantly. She could see Danielโs feet starting to turn away from her. โJust one more thing Iโm interested to know.โ
โYep?โ
โYou were one of the first responding officers when Andie Bell was reported missing. You conducted the primary search of the Bell residence.โ
Daniel nodded, lines tightening around his eyes.
โWas that not some sort of conflict of interest, seeing as you were so close to her father?โ
โNo,โ he said, โit wasnโt. Iโm a professional when I have this uniform on.
And I have to say, I donโt really like where these questions are going. Excuse me.โ He shuffled a few inches away.
Just then, a woman appeared behind Daniel and stepped in beside him and Pip. She had long fair hair and a freckled nose, and a giant belly pushing out the front of her dress. She must have been at least seven months pregnant.
โWell, hi,โ she said in a forced pleasant tone to Pip. โIโm Danโs wife.
How entirely unusual for me to catch him talking to a young girl. Must say you arenโt his usual type.โ
โKim,โ Daniel said, placing his arm on her back, โcome on.โ โWho is she?โ
โJust some kid who came to the meeting. I donโt know.โ He led his wife away to the other side of the room.
At the libraryโs exit Pip took one more look over her shoulder. Daniel stood with his wife, talking to Mrs Faversham, deliberately not looking over at her. Pip pushed the door and went outside, huddling further into her khaki coat as the cold air enclosed her. Ravi was waiting for her just up the road, opposite the cafe.
โYou were right not to come in,โ she said when she arrived at his side. โHe was pretty hostile to just me. And Stanley Forbes was there too.โ
โLovely guy,โ Ravi said sarcastically, dipping his hands in his pockets to hide them from the bitter wind. โSo you didnโt learn anything?โ
โOh, I didnโt say that,โ Pip said, stepping in closer to him to shield herself from the wind. โHe let one thing slip; donโt even know if he realized it.โ
โStop pausing for dramatic effect.โ
โSorry,โ she said. โHe said he knew the Hastings, that he was the one who filed the police report when Max crashed his car into the tree by their house.โ
โOh,โ Raviโs lips opened around the sound. โSo he . . . maybe he could have known about the hit-and-run?โ
โMaybe he could.โ
Pipโs hands were so cold now that they started to curl into claws. She was about to suggest going back to hers when Ravi stiffened, his eyes fixed
on a point behind her. She turned.
Daniel da Silva and Stanley Forbes had just left the library, the door banging behind them. They were deep in hushed conversation, Daniel explaining something with gestured hands. Stanleyโs head did a half-owl spin, checking around them and thatโs when he spotted Pip and Ravi.
Stanleyโs eyes cooled, and his gaze was a cold blast in the wind as it flicked between the two of them. Daniel looked over and stared, but his eyes were just on Pip, sharp and blistering.
Ravi took her hand. โLetโs go,โ he said.