Pip sat at the end of her parentsโ bed well into the night. Her and the albatross on her shoulders and her story. The telling of it was almost as hard as the living of it.
The worst part was Cara. As the clock on her phone had ticked past 10:00 p.m., Pip knew she couldnโt avoid it any longer. Her thumb had hovered over the blue call button but she couldnโt do it. She couldnโt say the words aloud and listen as her best friendโs world changed forever, as it turned dark and strange. Pip wished she was strong enough, but sheโd learned that she wasnโt invincible; she too could break. She clicked over to messages and started to type.
I should be ringing to tell you this but I donโt think I could get through the telling, not with your little voice at the end of the line. This is the cowardโs way out and Iโm truly sorry. It was your dad, Cara. Your dad is the one who killed Sal Singh. He was keeping a girl he believed was Andie Bell in your old house in Wendover. Heโs been arrested. Naomi will be safe, I give you my word. I know why he did it when youโre ready to hear it. Iโm so sorry.
I wish I could save you from this. I love you.
Sheโd read it over, in her parentsโ bed, and pressed send, tears falling against the phone as she cradled it into her cupped hands.
Her mum made Pip breakfast when she finally woke at two in the afternoon; thereโd been no question of her going into school. They didnโt talk about it again; there was nothing more to say, not yet. But still the question of Andie Bell played on Pipโs mind, how Andie had one last mystery left in her yet.
Pip tried to call Cara seventeen times but it rang out each time. Naomiโs phone too.
Later that afternoon, Leanne drove round to the Wardsโ house after picking up Josh. She came back saying that no one was home and their car
was gone.
โTheyโve probably gone to their auntie Lilaโs,โ Pip said, pressing redial again.
Victor came home early from work. They all sat in the living room, watching old runs of quiz shows that would usually be punctuated by Pip and her dad racing to shout out the answer. But they watched silently, exchanging furtive looks over Joshโs head, the air bloated with a sad andย what-nowย tension.
When someone knocked at the front door Pip jumped up to escape the
strangeness that smothered the room. In her tie-dye pyjamas she pulled open the door and the air stung her toes.
It was Ravi, standing in front of his parents, the spaces between them perfect like theyโd pre-arranged the pose.
โHello, Sarge,โ Ravi said, smiling at her bright and garish pyjamas. โThis is my mum, Nisha.โ He gestured like a game-show host and his mum smiled at Pip, her black hair in two loose plaits. โAnd my dad, Mohan.โ Mohan
nodded and his chin tickled the top of the giant bouquet of flowers he held, a box of chocolates tucked under the other arm. โParents,โ Ravi said, โthis isย theย Pip.โ
Pipโs polite โHelloโ got muddled in with theirs.
โSo,โ Ravi said, โthey called us in to the police station earlier. They sat us down and told us everything, everything we already knew. And they said theyโd be holding a press conference once theyโve charged Mr Ward, and will release a statement about Salโs innocence.โ
Pip heard her mum and heavy-footed dad walking up the hallway to stand behind her. Ravi did the introductions again for Victorโs sake; Leanne had met them before, fifteen years ago when sheโd sold them their house.
โSo,โ Ravi continued, โwe all wanted to come over and thank you, Pip. This wouldnโt have happened without you.โ
โI donโt quite know what to say,โ Nisha said, her RaviSal round eyes beaming. โBecause of what the two of you did, you and Ravi, we now have our boy back. Youโve both given Sal back to us, and there are no words for how much that means.โ
โThese are for you,โ Mohan said, leaning forward and handing over the flowers and chocolates to Pip. โIโm sorry, we werenโt quite sure what youโre supposed to get for someone whoโs helped vindicate your dead son.โ
โGoogle had very few suggestions,โ said Ravi. โThank you,โ Pip said. โDo you want to come in?โ
โYes, do come in,โ Leanne said, โIโll put on a pot of tea.โ
But as Ravi stepped into the house he took Pipโs arm and pulled her back into a hug, crushing the flowers between them, laughing into her hair. When he let her go Nisha stepped up and folded her into a hug; her sweet perfume smelled to Pip like homes and mothers and summer evenings. And then, not
sure why or how it happened, they were all hugging, all six of them swapping and hugging again, laughing with tears in their eyes.
And just like that, with crushed flowers and a carousel of hugs, the Singhs had come and taken away the suffocating and confused sadness that had taken over the house. Theyโd opened the door and let out the ghost, for at least a while. Because there was one happy ending in all of this: Sal was innocent. A family set free from the grave weight theyโd carried all these years. And through all the hurt and doubt that would come, it was worth hanging on to.
โWhatย areย you guys doing?โ said Josh in a small and baffled voice.
In the living room they sat around a full afternoon tea spread that Leanne had improvised.
โSo,โ Victor said, โare you going to the fireworks tomorrow night?โ
โActually,โ Nisha said, looking from her husband to her son, โI think we should go this year. Itโll be the first time since . . . you know. But things are different now. This is the start of things being different.โ
โYeah,โ Ravi said. โIโd like to go. You can never really see them from our house.โ
โAwesome sauce,โ Victor said, clapping his hands. โWe could meet you there? Letโs say seven, by the drinks tent?โ
Josh stood up then, hurrying to swallow his sandwich so he could recite:
โRemember remember the fifth of November, the gunpowder treason and plot. I know of no reason why the gunpowder treason should ever be forgot.โ
Little Kilton hadnโt forgot, theyโd just decided to move it to the fourth instead because the barbecue boys thought theyโd get a better turnout on a Saturday. Pip wasnโt sure she was ready to be around all those people and the questions in their eyes.
โIโll go and refill the pot,โ she said, picking up the empty teapot and carrying it through to the kitchen.
She flicked on the kettle and stared at her warped reflection in its chrome frame until a distorted Ravi appeared in it behind her.
โYouโre being quiet,โ he said. โWhatโs going on in that big brain of yours? Actually, I donโt even need to ask, I already know what youโre going to say. Itโs Andie.โ
โI canโt pretend like itโs over,โ she said. โItโs not finished.โ
โPip, listen to me. Youโve done what you set out to do. We know Sal was innocent and what happened to him.โ
โBut we donโt know what happened to Andie. After she left Elliotโs house that night, she still disappeared and was never found.โ
โItโs not your job any more, Pip,โ he said. โThe police have reopened Andieโs case. Let them do the rest. Youโve done enough.โ
โI know,โ she said and it wasnโt a lie. She was tired. She needed to finally be free of all this. She needed the weight on her shoulders to be just her own.
And that last Andie Bell mystery wasnโt hers to chase any more. Ravi was right; their part was over.