A yawn split her face as she stared down at the toast in front of her. Not hungry.
โWhy are you so tired this morning?โ her mum asked, watching her over a mug of tea.
Pip shrugged, flicking the toast around her plate. Josh was sitting opposite her, humming as he shovelled Coco Pops into his mouth, swinging his legs out under the table and kicking her accidentally on purpose. She didnโt react, pulling her knees up to sit cross-legged on the chair instead. The radio was on in the background, tuned to BBC Three Counties, as always. The song was just ending, the hosts talking over the fading drums.
โAre you taking too much on with this Jamie thing?โ her mum said.
โItโs not a thing, Mum,โ Pip said, and she could feel herself growing irritable, wearing it like a layer beneath her skin, warm and unstable. โItโs his life. I can be tired for that.โ
โOK, OK,โ her mum said, taking the empty bowl away from Josh. โIโm allowed to worry about you.โ
Pip wished she wouldnโt. She didnโt need anyoneโs worry; Jamie did.
A text lit up Pipโs phone, from Ravi.ย Just leaving for court to wait for deliberation. How are you? X
Pip stood and scooped up her phone, grabbing her plate with the other hand and sliding the toast into the bin. She felt her mumโs eyes on her. โNot hungry yet,โ she explained. โIโll take a cereal bar into school.โ
She had only taken a few steps down the hall when her mum called her back.
โIโm just going to the toilet!โ she replied.
โPip, get in here now!โ her mum shouted. And it was a real shout, a sound Pip rarely heard from her, rough and panicked.
Pip felt instantly cold, all feeling draining from her face. She spun back, socks sliding on the oak floor as she sprinted into the kitchen.
โWhat, what, what?โ she said quickly, eyes darting from a confused- looking Josh to her mum, who was reaching over to the radio, turning up the volume.
โListen,โ she said.
โ. . .ย a dog walker discovered the body at about six a.m. yesterday morning in the woodland beside the A413, between Little Kilton and Amersham. Officers are still at the scene. The deceased is as yet unidentified but has been described as a white male in his early twenties. The cause of death is currently unknown. A spokesperson for Thames Valley Police has saidย โโ
โNo.โ The word must have come from her, but she didnโt remember saying it. Didnโt remember moving her lips, nor the scrape of the word against her narrowing throat. โNo no nonono.โ She didnโt feel anything except numb, her feet a solid weight sinking into the ground, her hands detaching from her finger by finger.
โP . . . i . . . p?โ
Everything around her moved too slowly, like the room was floating, because it was right there with her in the eye of the panic.
โPip!โ
And everything snapped back into focus, into time, and she could hear her heart battering in her ears. She looked up at her mum, who mirrored back her terrified eyes.
โGo,โ her mum said, hurrying over and turning Pip by her shoulders. โGo!
Iโll call school and tell them youโll be in late.โ
โUp next, one of my favourite songs from the eighties, we haveย Sweet Dreams . . . โ
โHe, he c-canโt beโโ
โGo,โ her mum said, pushing her down the hall, just as Pipโs phone started buzzing with an incoming call from Connor.
It was Connor who opened the door to her, his eyes rubbed red and a twitch in his upper lip.
Pip stepped inside without a word. She gripped his arm, above the elbow, for a long, silent second. And then she let go, saying, โWhereโs your mum?โ โHere.โ His voice was just a croak as he led Pip into the cold living room.
The daylight was wrong in here, too harsh, too bright, too alive. And Joanna was huddled against it, wrapped in an old blanket on the sofa, her face buried inside a tissue.
โPipโs here,โ Connor said in barely more than a whisper.
Joanna glanced up. Her eyes were swollen and she looked different, like something beneath her face had broken.
She didnโt speak, just held out her arms, and Pip stumbled forward to lower herself on to the sofa. Joanna wrapped her arms around her and Pip held her back, feeling Joannaโs racing heart in her own chest.
โWe need to call Detective Hawkins at the police station in Amersham,โ Pip said, pulling back. โAsk if theyโve identified the โโ
โArthurโs on the phone to them now.โ Joanna shuffled over to clear a space between them for Connor. And once Connor had settled, his leg pressing into hers, Pip could hear the sound of Arthurโs voice, growing louder as he left the kitchen and walked towards them.
โYes,โ he said, entering the room with the phone to his ear, blinking as his gaze settled on Pip. His face looked grey, mouth in a tense line. โJamie Reynolds. No,ย Reynolds, with an R. Yes. Case number? Um . . .โ His eyes darted over to Joanna. She began to push up from the sofa but Pip cut in.
โFour nine zero,โ she said, Arthur repeating the numbers after her, into the phone. โZero one five. Two nine three.โ
Arthur nodded at her. โYes. Missing since last Friday night.โ He chewed his thumb. โThe body found by the A413, do you know who it is yet? No. No, donโt put me on hold agaโโ
He leaned against the door, closing it, his head resting against one finger, pushing his skin into folds. Waiting.
And waiting.
It was the worst wait Pip had ever had in her life. Her chest so tight she had to force the air through and out of her nose. And with every breath she thought she might be sick, swallowing down the bile.
Please, she kept thinking, no idea who she was thinking it to. Just someone. Anyone.ย Please please donโt let it be Jamie. Please. Sheโd
promised Connor. Sheโd promised sheโd find his brother. She promised sheโd save him.ย Please. Please, not him.
Her eyes slipped from Arthur back to Connor beside her. โShould I be here?โ she mouthed silently.
But Connor nodded and took her hand, their palms clammy, sticking together. She saw him take his motherโs hand, too, on the other side.
Waiting.
Arthurโs eyes were closed, the fingers on his free hand pressing into his eyelids, so hard it must have hurt, his chest rising in stuttering movements.
Waiting.
Until . . .
โYes?โ Arthur said, his eyes snapping open.
Pipโs heartbeat was so loud, so fast, it felt like that was all she was: a heart and the empty skin around it.
โHello detective,โ said Arthur. โYes, thatโs what Iโm calling about. Yes.โ Connor gripped Pipโs hand even tighter, crushing her bones together. โYes, I understand. So, is โโ Arthurโs hand was shaking at his side. โYes, I
understand that.โ
He went quiet, listening to the other end of the phone. And then his face dropped.
Cracked in two.
He doubled forward, the phone going limp in his fingers. Other hand up to his face as he bawled into it. A high, inhuman sound that wracked his entire body.
Connorโs hand went slack against Pipโs, his jaw falling open. Arthur straightened up, tears spilling down into his bared mouth. โItโs not Jamie,โ he said.
โWhat?โ Joanna stood up, clutching her face.
โItโs not Jamie,โ Arthur said again, choking over a sob, placing his phone down. โItโs someone else. His family just identified him. Itโs not Jamie.โ
โItโs not Jamie?โ Joanna said, like she didnโt dare believe it yet.
โItโs not him,โ Arthur said, staggering forward to pull her into him, crying down in her hair. โItโs not our boy. Not Jamie.โ
Connor unstuck from Pip, his cheeks flushed and tear-streaked, and he folded himself in around his parents. They held each other and they cried, and it was a cry of relief and grief and confusion. Theyโd lost him for a
while. For a few minutes, in their heads and in hers, Jamie Reynolds had been dead.
But it wasnโt him.
Pip held the sleeve of her jumper to her eyes, tears falling hot, soaking into the fabric.
Thank you, she thought to that invisible person in her head.ย Thank you. They had another chance.
She had one last chance.
Pip: OK, recording. Are you OK?
Arthur: Yes. Iโm ready.
Pip: So, why didnโt you want to be interviewed or involved before now?
Arthur: Honestly? I was angry. In my head, I was convinced Jamie had run away again. And he knows how worried we were the first time he did that. I didnโt want to indulge Joanna and Connorโs idea that Jamie was really missing because I didnโt think he was. I didnโt want to believe something was wrong. Seems I preferred to be angry at Jamie instead. But I was wrong, I think. Itโs been too long. And if he was out there, Jamie wouldโve heard about your podcast by now. He would have come home if he could.
Pip: And why did you think Jamie had run off again? Is it because you had a big argument, right before the memorial?
Arthur: Yes. I donโt want to argue with him, I just want whatโs best for him. Want to push him to make smart decisions for his life, to do something that he loves. I know heโs
capable of that. But heโs seemed stuck the last few years. Maybe I go about it the wrong way. I just donโt know how to help him.
Pip: And what were you arguing about last Friday?
Arthur: Itโs just . . . it had been simmering for a while. Heโd recently asked me to borrow a load of money, and I donโt know, he just said something that set me off about money and responsibility and finding a career. Jamie didnโt want to hear it.
Pip: When did he ask you to borrow money?
Arthur: Oh, it was . . . Joanna was out at badminton so it must have been a Tuesday. Yes, Tuesday 10thย of April.
Pip: Did he say what he wanted the money for?
Arthur: No, thatโs the thing. He wouldnโt tell me. Just said it was really important. So, of course, I told him no. It was a ridiculous amount.
Pip: If you donโt mind me asking, how much did Jamie ask to borrow? Arthur: Nine hundred pounds.
Pip: Nine hundred?
Arthur: Yes.
Pip: Nine hundred exactly?
Arthur: Yes. Why? Whatโs wrong?
Pip: Itโs just . . . Iโve heard that exact figure recently, about someone else. A guy called Luke Eaton, he mentioned losing nine hundred pounds this week. And I think heโs involved in drโ You know what, Iโll look into it. So, after you left the pub Friday night, what time did you get back home?
Arthur: I donโt remember looking at the time specifically, but it was definitely before eleven thirty. Maybe around twenty past.
Pip: And the house was empty, right? You didnโt see Jamie? Arthur: No, I was alone. I went to bed but I heard Connor get in later.
Pip: And thereโs no way Jamie couldโve snuck in before then? Like, just after you got back?
Arthur: Not possible. I was sitting here in the living room for a while. I would have heard the front door.
Pip: We believe Jamie came back here, for his hoodie and the knife, so he must have arrived and left again before you got home. Do you know anything about the knife?
Arthur: No. I didnโt even know it was missing until Joanna told me.
Pip: So where were you all last weekend when Jamie was first missing? Connor mentioned you werenโt at home much.
Arthur: I was out driving, looking for him. I thought heโd just be somewhere, blowing off steam. And I could talk to him, fix things, get him to come home. But he wasnโt anywhere.
Pip: Are you OK, Mr Reynolds?
Arthur: No. Iโm terrified. Terrified that the last thing I did was argue with my son. The last words I said to him were in anger. I never told him I loved him all that much, and Iโm scared Iโll never get the chance again. Jamie came to me, asked me for my help and I sent him away.ย Life or death, thatโs what Jamie said to your mum about the money, wasnโt it? And I said no to him. Iโm his dad, heโs supposed to be able to turn to me for anything. He asked me for help and I said no. What if this whole thing is my fault? If I had only said yes to him, maybe . . . maybe . . .