Pip stepped closer, into the yellow glow of the lamplight. She took a quieting breath, trying to think over the screeching that filled her head. She screwed her eyes and studied the face before her.
Now that she was closer, she could see the obvious differences, the slight differing slope to her plump lips, the downturn to her eyes where they should flick up, the swell of her cheekbones lower than they should be. Changes that time couldnโt make to a face.
Pip had looked at the photographs so many times these past months, she knew every line and groove of Andie Bellโs face.
This wasnโt her.
Pip felt unattached to the world, floating away, empty of all sense.
โYouโre not Andie,โ she said quietly, just as the policeman climbed up the ladder behind and placed a hand on her shoulder.
The wind was screaming in the trees and 42 Mill End Road was lit up
with flashes of blue, rippling in and out of darkness. Four police cars in a broken square filled the drive now, and Pip had just seen DI Richard Hawkins โ in the same black coat heโd worn in all those press conferences five years ago โ step into the house.
Pip stopped listening to the policewoman taking her statement. She heard her words only as a rockslide of falling syllables. She concentrated on breathing in the fresh and whistling air and thatโs when they brought Elliot out. Two officers on either side, his hands cuffed behind. He was weeping, the blue lights blinking on his wet face. The wounded sounds he made woke some ancient, instinctive fear inside her. This was a man who knew his life was finished. Had he really believed the girl in his loft was Andie? Had he clung to that belief this whole time? They ducked Elliotโs head for him, put him in a car and took him away. Pip watched it go until the tunnel of trees swallowed all the carโs edges.
As she finished dictating her contact number to the officer she heard a car door slamming behind her.
โPip!โ The wind carried Raviโs voice to her.
She felt the pull in her chest and then she was running after it. At the top of the driveway she ran into him and Ravi caught her, his arms tight as they anchored themselves together against the wind.
โAre you OK?โ he said, holding her back to look at her. โYes,โ she said. โWhat are you doing here?โ
โMe?โ He tapped his chest. โWhen you didnโt turn up at mine, I looked for you on Find My Friends. Why did you come here alone?โ He eyed the police cars and officers behind her.
โI had to come,โ she said. โI had to ask him why. I didnโt know how much longer youโd have to wait for the truth if I didnโt.โ
Her mouth opened once, twice, three times before the words found their way, and then she told Ravi everything. She told him how his brother had died, standing under shivering trees, blue light undulating all around them.
She said she was sorry when the tears broke down Raviโs face, because thatโs all there was to say; a blanket stitch sent to mend a crater.
โDonโt be sorry,โ he said with a half-laugh, half-cry. โNothing can bring him back, I know that. But we have, in a way. Sal was murdered, Sal was innocent, and now everyone will know.โ
They turned to watch as DI Richard Hawkins walked the girl out of the house, a lilac blanket wrapped round her shoulders.
โItโs really not her, is it?โ Ravi said. โShe looks a lot like her,โ said Pip.
The girlโs eyes were wide and spinning and free as she looked around at everything, relearning what outside was. Hawkins led her to a car and climbed in beside her as two uniformed officers got in the front.
Pip didnโt know how Elliot had come to believe this girl he found on the side of the road was Andie. Was it delusion? Did he need to believe Andie hadnโt died as some kind of atonement for what he did to Sal in her name?
Or was it fear that blinded him?
Thatโs what Ravi thought: that Elliot was terrified Andie Bell was alive and would come back home and then heโd go down for Salโs murder. And in that heightened state of fear, all it took was a blonde girl who looked similar enough to convince himself heโd found Andie. And heโd locked her up, so he could lock up that terrible fear of being caught right along with her.
Pip nodded in agreement, watching the police car drive away. โI think,โ
she said quietly, โI think she was just a girl with the wrong hair and the wrong face when the wrong man drove past.โ
And that other itching question that Pip couldnโt yet give voice to: what had happened to the real Andie Bell after sheโd left the Wardsโ house that night?
The officer whoโd taken her statement approached them with a warm smile. โDo you need someone to take you home, darling?โ she asked Pip.
โNo, itโs OK,โ she said, โI have my car.โ
She made Ravi get in the car with her; there was no way sheโd let him drive home on his own โ he was shaking too hard. And, secretly, she didnโt want to be alone either.
Pip turned the key in the ignition, catching sight of her face in the rear-view mirror before the lights dimmed. She looked gaunt and grey, her eyes glowing inside sunken shadows. She was tired. So unutterably tired.
โI can finally tell my parents,โ Ravi said when they were back on the main road out of Wendover. โI donโt know how to even start.โ
Her headlights lit up theย Welcome to Little Kiltonย sign, the letters thickening with side shadows as they moved past and crossed into town. Pip drove down the high street, heading towards Raviโs house. She drew to a stop at the main roundabout. There was a car waiting on the cusp of the roundabout at the other side, its headlights a bright and piercing white. It was their right of way.
โWhy arenโt they moving?โ Pip said, staring at the dark boxy car ahead, lines of yellow light across its body from the street lamp above.
โDonโt know,โ Ravi said. โYou just go.โ
She did, pulling forward slowly across the roundabout. The other car had still not moved. As they drew closer and out of the glare of the oncoming headlights, Pipโs foot eased up on the pedal as she looked curiously out of her window.
โOh shit,โ Ravi said.
It was the Bell family. All three of them. Jason was in the driver seat, his face red and striped with tear trails. It looked like he was shouting, smacking his hand against the steering wheel, his mouth moving with angry words.
Dawn Bell was beside him, shrinking away. She was crying, her body heaving as she tried to breathe through the tears, her mouth bared in confused agony.
Their cars drew level and Pip saw Becca in the back seat on this side.
Her face was pale, pushed up against the cold touch of the window. Her lips were parted and her brows furrowed, her eyes lost in some other place as she stared quietly ahead.
And as they passed Beccaโs eyes snapped into life, landing on Pip. There was a flicker of recognition in them. And something heavy and urgent, something like dread.
They drove away down the street and Ravi let out his held breath. โYou think theyโve been told?โ he said
โLooks like they just have,โ said Pip. โThe girl kept saying her name was Andie Bell. Maybe they have to go and formally identify that she isnโt.โ
She looked into her rear-view mirror and watched as the Bellsโ car finally rolled away across the roundabout, towards the snatched promise of a daughter returned.