โHello?โ
โYes, sorry.โ Pip closed her laptop, avoiding her mumโs gaze. โI was just saving something.โ
โWhat do those posters mean?โ
Pip shuffled. โI think their meaning is pretty clear. Jamieโs gone missing.โ โDonโt get smart with me,โ her mum said, one hand going to her hip:
always a dangerous sign.
Pipโs dad paused putting the shopping away โ once the fridge items had been done, of course โ and was now leaning against the counter, almost exactly equidistant between Pip and her mum, yet far enough away that he was safe from the battle. He was good at that: making camp in the neutral ground, building a bridge.
โYes, it is what you think,โ Pip said, finally meeting her motherโs eyes. โConnor and Joanna are really worried. They think somethingโs happened to Jamie. So yes, Iโm investigating his disappearance. And yes, Iโm recording the investigation for season two of the show. They asked me to, and I said yes.โ
โBut I donโt understand,โ her mum said, even though she understood perfectly well. Another of her tactics. โYou were done with all this. After everything you went through last time. The danger you put yourself in.โ
โI know โโ Pip began, but her mum cut her off.
โYou ended up in the hospital, Pippa, with an overdose. They had to pump your stomach. You were being threatened by a now convicted killer.โ That was the only way Pipโs mum referred to Elliot Ward now. She couldnโt use the word, what heโd really been: a friend. That was too much. โAnd Barney โโ
โMum, I know,โ Pip said, her voice rising, cracking as she fought to control it. โI know all the terrible things that happened last year because of
me, I donโt need your constant reminders. I know, OK? I know I was selfish, I know I was obsessive, I know I was reckless and if I said sorry to you every day it still wouldnโt be enough, OK?โ Pip felt it, the pit in her stomach stirring, opening up to swallow her whole. โIโm sorry. I feel guilty all the time, so I donโt need you to tell me. Iโm the expert in my own mistakes, I understand.โ
โSo why would you choose to put yourself through anything like that again?โ her mum said, softening her voice and dropping the arm from her hip. Pip couldnโt tell what that meant, whether it was a sign of victory or defeat.
A high cartoonish giggling from the living room interrupted them. โJoshua.โ Her dad finally spoke. โTurn the TV down please!โ
โBut itโs SpongeBob and itโs only on fourteen,โ a small voice shouted back.
โJoshua . . .โ
โOK, OK.โ
The noise from the TV quietened until Pip could no longer hear it over the humming in her ears. Dad settled back into his place, gesturing for them to continue.
โWhy?โ Her mum reiterated her last question, drawing a thick underline beneath it.
โBecause I have to,โ Pip said. โAnd if you want to know the truth, I said no. That was my choice. I told Connor I couldnโt do this again. So yesterday, I went to speak to the police to get them to actually investigate Jamieโs disappearance. I thought I could help that way. But they wonโt do anything for Jamie, they canโt.โ Pip tucked her hands in under her elbows. โThe truth is I didnโt really have a choice, once the police said no. I didnโt want to do it. But I canโt not do it. They asked me. They came to me. And what if Iโd said no? What if Jamie is never found? What if heโs dead?โ
โPip, it is not your job to โโ
โIt isnโt my job, but it feels like my responsibility,โ she said. โI know youโll both have a thousand arguments why thatโs not true, but Iโm telling you the way it feels. It is my responsibility because I started something and I canโt now take it back. Whatever it did to me, to all of us, I still solved a double murder case last year. Now I have six hundred thousand subscribers who will listen to me and Iโm in a position to use that, to help people. To help Jamie. Thatโs why I had no choice. I might not be the only one who
can help, but Iโm the only one here right now. This is Jamie, Mum. I couldnโt live with myself if something happened to him and I said no because it was the easier choice. The safer choice. The choice my parents would want me to make. Thatโs why Iโm doing it. Not because I want to, because I have to. Iโve accepted that, and I hope you both can too.โ
Pip saw her dad nodding in the corner of her eye, the LED light above drawing yellow streaks across the dark skin of his forehead. Her mum also saw it, turning to frown at him.
โVictor . . .โ she said.
โLeanne,โ he replied, stepping forward into no manโs land. โClearly sheโs not being reckless; sheโs put a lot of consideration into her decision. Thatโs all we can ask of her, because it is her decision. Sheโs eighteen now.โ He turned to smile at Pip, his eyes glazing in that way they did. The exact way he looked at her every time he told the story of how theyโd met. Pip at four years old, stomping around this very house he was looking to buy, accompanying her mum on the viewing because the childcare had fallen through. Sheโd followed them into each room, giving him a new animal fact in each one, despite her mother telling her to be quiet so she could inform theย nice manย about the high-spec kitchen. He always said it was both of them that stole his heart that day.
Pip returned his smile, and that hole in her stomach, it started to shrink just a little, freeing up more space for her around it.
โAnd what about the risks, Victor?โ Pipโs mum said, though her tone had changed now, the fight all but gone from it.
โEverything has risks,โ he said. โEven crossing the road. Itโs no different than if she were a journalist, or a police officer. And would we keep her from either of those things because of the potential risks? And also: I am very big. If anyone even thinks about hurting my daughter, I will rip off their head.โ
Pip laughed, and her mumโs mouth twitched with a smile she didnโt want to give into. The smile lost, for now, though it gave a good fight.
โFine,โ her mum said. โPip, Iโm not your enemy, Iโm your mum. I only care about your safety and your happiness, the two things you lost last time. Itโs my job to protect you, whether you like it or not. So fine, I accept your decision. But I will be watching to make sure you donโt become obsessive to the point where itโs unhealthy, and you better believe me when I say there will be no missing school or neglecting your revision,โ she said, counting
the points off on her fingers. โIโm sure everything is fine, but if there is any sign of danger, even the slightest hint, I want you to come straight to us. Promise me?โ
โThank you.โ Pip nodded, her chest releasing. โIt wonโt be like last time, I promise.โ She wasnโt that person any more. Sheโd be good this time. She would. Things would be different, she told that yawning feeling that never left her. โBut I should warn you: I donโt think everything is fine. Put it this way, I donโt think youโll see Jamie at work tomorrow morning.โ
Her mumโs face flushed, and she dropped her gaze, tightening her lips into a line. Of all her motherโs faces, Pip wasnโt sure what this one meant. โWell,โ her mum said quietly, โall Iโm saying is that Jamie is probably OK and Iโm sure this will turn out to be nothing. Thatโs why I donโt want you to give too much of yourself to it.โ
โWell, I mean hopefully itโs nothing,โ Pip said, taking the packet of satsumas her dad handed her, placing them in the fruit bowl. โBut there are a couple of red flags. His phone was turned off that night and hasnโt been on since. And he was acting strangely that day โ out of character.โ
Her mum placed a loaf of bread in the bread bin. โIโm just saying, maybe acting strangely isnโt that out of character for Jamie.โ
โWait, what?โ Pip stalled, pulling back from the box of porridge her dad was handing her.
โOh, nothing,โ her mum said, busying herself with the tinned tomatoes. โI shouldnโt have said anything.โ
โSaid anything about what?โ Pip said, her heart jumping up to her throat, sensing her mumโs unease. She narrowed her eyes at the back of her mumโs head. โMum? Do you know something about Jamie?โ
Pip: Mum, wait, hold on, Iโve set up the microphones now. Can you tell me what you were going to say? About Jamie?
[INAUDIBLE]
Pip: Mum, you . . . you have to come closer to the microphone. It canโt pick you up from over there.
[INAUDIBLE]
Pip: Please can you just sit down and tell me what it is, whatever it is.
Mum:ย [INAUDIBLE]ย . . . need to get started on dinner.
Pip: I know, I know. This will only take a few minutes. Please? What did you mean by โacting strangely isnโt that out of character for Jamieโ? Are you talking about something that happened at work? Jamie was working a later shift on Friday, before the memorial. Was he acting strangely then, is that what you mean? Please, Mum, this could really help the investigation.
Mum: No . . . itโs . . . ah, no, I shouldnโt. Itโs not my business.
Pip: Jamieโs missing. Itโs been almost two full days. He could be in danger. I donโt think heโd care about whatโs anyoneโs business right now.
Mum: But Joanna โ
Pip: Sheโs the one who asked me to do this. Sheโs accepted she might learn things about Jamie she wouldnโt want to know.
Mum: Does Joanna . . . does Joanna think Jamie still works at Proctor and Radcliffe? Is that what he told her?
Pip: Yeah, of course, what do you mean? He does work there. He was at work on Friday before he went missing.
Mum: Heโs . . . Jamie doesnโt work at the agency any more. He left, maybe two and a half weeks ago.
Pip: Heย left? Did he quit? His family have no idea, they still think he works with you.
Heโs been going to work every day. Why would he quit and lie about it?
Mum: He . . . he didnโt quit.
Pip: What?
Mum: Pip . . .
Pip: Mum?
Mum: There was an incident. But I donโt really want to talk about it, it has nothing to do with anything. My point was just that maybe Jamie disappearing isnโt something so out of character, and why cause trouble for him when โ
Pip: Mum, heโs missing. Anything that happened in the last few weeks could be relevant. Anything. Joanna wonโt be angry if you tell, I know she wonโt. What was the incident? When?
Mum: Well . . . it must have been a Wednesday because Todd wasnโt in, and Siobhan and Olivia were but they were out on viewings.
Pip: Wednesday two weeks ago? So that was the . . . 11th?
Mum: That sounds about right. Iโd been out on lunch, went to see Jackie in the cafรฉ, and left Jamie in the office alone. And when I got back . . . well, I must have been quicker than he expected because he . . .
Pip: What? What was he doing?
Mum: He had my key somehow, he must have taken it out of my handbag earlier in the day, used it to unlock my desk drawer when I was out. I walked in on him taking the company credit card out of my drawer.
Pip: What?
Mum: He panicked when I came in. He was shaking. He tried several excuses as to why he was taking the card, said he needed the info so he could order more envelopes in, then said Todd asked him to do something for him. But I knew he was lying, and Jamie knew I wasnโt buying it. So then he just started apologizing, over and over again. Said he was sorry, he just needed the money and he said something . . . he said something like, โI wouldnโt have done this, if it wasnโt life or death.โ
Pip: โLife or deathโ? What did he mean by that?
Mum: I donโt know. Iโm guessing he wanted to take the card to an ATM and draw out a few hundred pounds. He knew the PIN because Iโd sent him out with that card to get office tea supplies before. I donโt know why he needed the money, but clearly he was desperate. Weโd never had any problems with Jamie before this. Iโd offered him the job to help him out, to help Joanna and Arthur out because Jamie had been
struggling to settle anywhere. Heโs a very sweet young man, has been like that since he was a kid. The Jamie I walked in on felt almost like a different person. He looked so scared. So sorry.
Pip: He must have been desperate, because he wouldโve known, even if heโd managed to steal the cash, youโd have found out eventually. Why did he need money so urgently?
Mum: I never asked. I just told him to put the card down and return my key and I said I wouldnโt call the police. I didnโt need to make any more trouble for him; it looked like he had enough going on, whatever it was. And I wouldโve felt too guilty, calling the police on one of my friendโs children in trouble. You donโt do that. So I told Jamie I wouldnโt tell anyone what I saw, but that he could no longer work at Proctor and Radcliffe and his contract would be terminated immediately. I told him he needed to straighten out his life, or Iโd have to tell Joanna eventually. He thanked me for not calling the police, said thank you for the opportunity in the first place and then he left. The last thing he said on his way out was, โIโm so so sorry, I wouldnโt have done it if I didnโt have to.โ
Pip: What did he need the money for?
Mum: He didnโt say. But if he was willing to steal from the company and get caught for it, what else could he have needed the money for except, well, something . . . illegal .
. . criminal?
Pip: Well, maybe. But that doesnโt mean his disappearance two weeks later isnโt suspicious or out of character. If anything, this makes me more certain Jamieโs in trouble. That heโs got himself mixed up in something bad.
Mum: I certainly never thought heโd be the sort to steal. Ever.
Pip: And the only reason he gave you was that it was life or death? Mum: Mum: Thatโs what he said, yes.
Pip: Whose life or death did he mean?