Pip watched Connorโs fingers as they slipped down the glass. โJamieโs missing?โ she said.
โYes.โ Connor stared at her.
โWhen?โ she asked. โWhen did you last see him?โ
โAt the memorial.โ Connor paused to take another sip of water. โI last saw him at the memorial, just before it started. He never came home.โ
Pipโs breath caught. โI saw him there after that. Maybe around eight, eight fifteen. He was walking through the crowd.โ She pulled up the memory, unpicked it from everything else last night. Jamie knocking into her as he made his way to the other side, his hurried apology, the way his jaw was set, determined. Sheโd thought it was strange at the time, hadnโt she? And the look in his eyes, not unlike Connorโs were now: somehow both distant and sharp. They looked very similar, even for brothers. They hadnโt as kids, but Pip had watched it happen over the years, the gap closing. Jamieโs hair was just a couple of shades darker, closer to brown than blonde. And Connor was all angles where Jamie was heavier, softer. But even a stranger could tell they were brothers. โYouโve tried calling him?โ
โYes, hundreds of times,โ said Connor. โIt goes straight to voicemail like itโs off or . . . or itโs dead.โ He stumbled over that last word, his head hanging from his shoulders. โMe and Mum spent hours calling anyone who might know where he is: friends, family. No one has seen him or heard from him. No one.โ
Pip felt something stirring, right in that pit in her stomach that never quite left her any more. โHave you called around all the local hospitals to see if โโ
โYes, we called them all. Nothing.โ
Pip awakened her phone to check the time. It was half five now, and if Jamie hadnโt been seen since around eight last night, seen byย her, that meant heโd been missing for over twenty-one hours already.
โOK,โ she said firmly, bringing Connorโs eyes back to hers, โyour parents need to go to the police station and file a missing persons report. Youโll need โโ
โWe already did,โ Connor said, a hint of impatience creeping into his voice. โMe and Mum went down to the station a few hours ago, filed the report, gave them a recent photograph, all that. It was Nat da Silvaโs brother, Daniel, the officer who took the report.โ
โOK, good, so officers should be โโ
Connor cut her off again. โNo,โ he said. โNo officers are doing anything. Daniel said that because Jamie is twenty-four, an adult, and has a history of leaving home without communicating with his family, that there is very little the police can do.โ
โWhat?โ
โYeah, he gave us a reference number and just told us to keep calling Jamieโs phone and anyone heโs been known to stay with before. Said that almost all missing people return within forty-eight hours, so we just have to wait.โ
The stool creaked as Pip shifted. โThey must think heโs low risk. When a missing persons report is filed,โ she explained, โthe police determine a risk assessment based on factors like age, any medical issues, if the behaviour is out of character, things like that. Then the police response depends on whether they think the case is low, medium or high risk.โ
โI know how it might look to them,โ Connor said, his eyes a little less far- away now, โthat Jamieโs disappeared a couple times before and he always comes back โโ
โThe first time was after he dropped out of uni, wasnโt it?โ Pip said, scratching at the memory, how the air had been thick with tension in the Reynoldsesโ house for weeks after.
Connor nodded. โYeah, after he and my dad had a huge argument about it, he stayed with a friend for a week and wouldnโt answer any calls or texts. And it was two years ago when Mum actually filed a report because Jamie never returned from a night out in London. Heโd lost his phone and wallet and couldnโt get home so just stayed on someoneโs sofa for a couple of
days. But . . .โ He sniffed, wiping his nose on the back of his hand. โBut something feels different this time. I think heโs in trouble, Pip, I really do.โ
โWhy?โ she asked.
โHeโs been acting strange the last few weeks. Distant, kind of jumpy. Short-tempered. And, you know Jamie, heโs normally really chilled out. Well, lazy, if you ask my dad. But recently, heโs seemed, at times, a little off.โ
And wasnโt that how he seemed last night when he knocked into her? That strange focus, like he could see nothing else, not even her. And why was he moving through the crowd right then, anyway? Wasnโt that a little off?
โAnd,โ Connor continued, โI donโt think heโd run off again, not after how upset Mum got last time. Jamie wouldnโt do that to her again.โ
โI . . .โ Pip began. But she didnโt really know what to say to him.
โSo me and Mum were talking,โ Connor said, shoulders contracting like he was shrinking in on himself. โIf the police wonโt investigate, wonโt contact the media or anything, then what can we do ourselves, to find Jamie? Thatโs what I wanted to talk to you about, Pip.โ
She knew what was coming but Connor didnโt pause long enough for her to cut in.
โYou know how to do this; everything you did last year where the police failed. You solved a murder. Two of them. And your podcast,โ he swallowed, โhundreds of thousands of followers; thatโs probably more effective than any media connections the police have. If we want to find Jamie, spread the word that heโs missing so people can come forward with any information they have, or sightings, you are our best hope of that.โ
โConnor โโ
โIf you investigate and release it on your show, I know weโll find him.
Weโll find him in time. We have to.โ
Connor tailed off. The silence that followed was teeming; Pip could feel it crawling around her. She knew what heโd been going to ask. How could it have been anything else? She breathed out, and that thing that lived inside her twisted in her gut. But her answer was inevitable.
โIโm sorry,โ she said quietly. โI canโt do it, Connor.โ
Connorโs eyes widened, and he grew back out of his shoulders. โI know itโs a lot to ask but โโ
โItโs too much to ask,โ she said, glancing at the window, checking her parents were still busy in the garden. โI donโt do that any more.โ
โI know, but โโ
โLast time I almost lost everything: ended up in the hospital, got my dog killed, put my family in danger, blew up my best friendโs life. Itโs too much to ask. I promised myself. I . . . I canโt do it any more.โ The pit in her stomach ripped wider still; soon it might even outgrow her. โI canโt do it. Itโs not who I am.โ
โPip, please . . .โ He was pleading now, words catching on their way up his throat. โLast time you didnโt even really know them, they were already gone. This is Jamie, Pip.ย Jamie. What if heโs hurt? What if he doesnโt make it? I donโt know what to do.โ His voice finally cracked as the tears broke the surface of his eyes.
โIโm sorry, Connor, I am,โ Pip said, though the words hurt her to say. โBut I have to say no.โ
โYou arenโt going to help?โ He sniffed. โAt all?โ She couldnโt do it. She couldnโt.
โI didnโt say that.โ Pip jumped down from her stool to hand Connor a tissue. โAs you can probably guess, I have a certain relationship with the local police now. I mean, I donโt think Iโm their favourite person, but I probably have more sway in matters like this.โ She scooped up her car keys from the side by the microwave. โIโll go talk to DI Hawkins right now, tell him about Jamie and why youโre worried, see if I can get them to rethink their risk assessment so they actually investigate.โ
Connor slid from his stool. โReally? Youโll do that?โ
โOf course,โ she said. โI canโt promise anything, but Hawkins is a good guy really. Hopefully he sees sense.โ
โThank you,โ Connor said, wrapping his awkward and angular arms around her quickly. His voice lowered. โIโm scared, Pip. โ
โItโs going to be OK.โ She attempted a smile. โIโll give you a lift home on my way. Come on.โ
Stepping out into the early evening, the front door got caught in a cross- breeze and slammed loudly behind them. Pip carried the sound with her, inside her, echoing around that hollow growing in her gut.