โSuspended?โ
Pip sank into the stool in the kitchen, avoiding her dadโs eyes. โYes.โ Her mum was standing on the other side of the room,
Pip in the middle. Talking around her, over her head. โFor three days. What about Cambridge, Pippa?โ
โWho was the other student?โ Dad asked, voice softening where her mumโs had grown harder, sharper.
โAnthony Lowe.โ
Pip glanced up, catching the face her dad pulled: bottom lip rolled up over the top, eyes crinkling like he wasnโt surprised.
โWhatโs that look for?โ her mum said.
โNothing.โ Her dad rearranged his face, untucking his lip. โJust never really liked the kid that much.โ
โHow is that helpful right now, Victor?โ her mum snapped.
โSorry, itโs not,โ he said, exchanging a look with Pip. It was quick, but it was enough, and she felt a little less alone out there in the middle of the room. โWhy did you do it, Pip?โ
โI donโt know.โ
โYou donโt know?โ her mum said. โYou shoved him against a locker with your arm on his throat. How do you not know how that happens? Youโre lucky Cara, Zach and Connor were there and defended you to Mrs Morgan, told her Ant provoked you, otherwise you would have been expelled.โ
โHow did he provoke you, pickle?โ her dad asked.
โCalled me a liar,โ she said. โThe internet thinks Iโm a liar. A jury of twelve peers think Iโm a liar. My own friends think Iโm a liar. So I guess Iโm a liar now, and Max Hastings is the good guy.โ
โIโm sorry about the verdict,โ he said. โThat must be really hard for you.โ โHarder for the people he drugged and raped,โ she said.
โYes, and itโs unfair and awful,โ her mum said with a frown. โBut thatโs not an excuse for your violent behaviour.โ
โIโm not making an excuse. Iโm not asking for forgiveness,โ Pip said, flatly. โIt happened and I donโt feel guilty. He deserved it.โ
โWhat are you saying?โ she said. โThis isnโt like you.โ
โWhat if it is?โ Pip rose from the stool. โWhat if this is exactly like me?โ โPip, donโt shout at your mother,โ her dad said, crossing over to her
mumโs side, abandoning her in the middle.
โShouting? Really?โ Pip said, really shouting now. โThatโs what weโre focusing on? A serial rapist walked free today. Jamie has been missing six whole days and might be dead. Oh, but the real problem is that Iโmย shouting!โ
โCalm down, please,โ he said.
โI canโt! I canโt calm down any more! Why should I?โ
Her phone was face down on the floor. She hadnโt looked at it for an hour, sitting here underneath her desk, her fingers hooked around her toes. Her head was pressed against the cool wood of the desk leg, eyes hiding from the light.
She hadnโt gone down for dinner, said she wasnโt hungry, even though her dad came up and said they didnโt have to talk about it, not in front of Josh. But she didnโt want to sit there at the table, in a fake truce mid- argument. An argument that couldnโt end, because she wasnโt sorry, she knew that. And thatโs what her mum wanted from her.
She heard a knock at the front door, a knock she knew:ย long-short-long. The door opened and closed, and then the footsteps she knew too, the scuff of Raviโs trainers on the wooden floor before he took them off and lined them up neatly by the doormat.
And the next thing she heard was her mumโs voice, passing by the stairs. โSheโs in her room. See if you can talk any sense into her.โ
Ravi couldnโt find her, as he stepped into the room; not until she said, quietly, โIโm down here.โ
He bent down, knees clicking as his face came into view. โWhy arenโt you answering your phone?โ he said.
Pip looked at her face-down phone, out of armโs reach. โAre you OK?โ he said.
And she wanted, more than anything, to say no, to slide out from under the desk and fall into him. To stay there, in his gaze, wrap herself up in it and never set foot outside again. To let him tell her it was all going to be OK, even though neither of them knew it would be. She wanted just to be the Pip she was with Ravi for a while. But that Pip wasnโt here right now. And maybe she really was gone.
โNo,โ she said.
โYour parents are worried about you.โ โDonโt need their worry,โ she sniffed. โIโm worried about you,โ he said.
She put her head against the desk again. โDonโt need yours either.โ โCan you come out and talk to me?โ he said gently. โPlease?โ
โDid he smile?โ she asked. โDid he smile when they said, โnot guiltyโ?โ
โI couldnโt see his face.โ Ravi offered his hand to help Pip out from under the desk. She didnโt take it, crawling out on her own and standing up.
โI bet he smiled.โ She ran her finger along the sharp edge of her desk, pressing in until it hurt her.
โWhy does that matter?โ โIt matters,โ she said.
โIโm sorry.โ Ravi tried to hold her eyes but her gaze kept slipping away. โIf there was anything I could do to change it, I would. Anything. But thereโs nothing we can do now. And you getting suspended because youโre so angry about Max . . . heโs not worth any of that.โ
โSo he just wins?โ
โNo, I . . .โ Ravi abandoned his sentence, stepping over to her, his arms out to pull her in and wrap her up. And maybe it was because Maxโs angled face flashed into her head, or maybe she didnโt want Ravi to get too close to the after-scream still thrumming inside her, but she pulled away from him.
โWhaโโ His arms fell back to his sides, his eyes darkening, deepening. โWhat are you doing?โ
โI donโt know.โ
โSo, what is it, you just want to hate the whole world right now, including me?โ
โMaybe,โ she said. โPip โโ
โWell, whatโs the point?โ Her voice snagged against her dried out throat. โWhat was the point in everything we did last year? I thought I was doing it
for the truth. But guess what? The truth doesnโt matter. It doesnโt! Max Hastings is innocent and Iโm a liar and Jamie Reynolds isnโt missing.ย Thatโsย the truth now.โ Her eyes filled. โWhat if I canโt save him? What if Iโm not good enough to save him? Iโm not good, Ravi, I โโ
โWe will find him,โ Ravi said. โIย needย to.โ
โAnd you think I donโt?โ he said. โI might not know him like you do, and I canโt explain it, but I need Jamie to be OK. He knew my brother, was friends with him and Andie at school. Itโs like itโs happening all over again six years later, and this time I actually have a chance, a small chance, to help to save Connorโs brother where I had no hope of saving my own. I know Jamie isnโt Sal, but this feels like some kind of second chance for me. You arenโt on your own here, so stop pushing people away. Stop pushing me away.โ
Her hands gripped the desk, bones pushing through her skin. He needed to get away from her, in case she couldnโt control it again. The scream. โI just want to be alone.โ
โFine,โ Ravi said, scratching the phantom itch at the back of his head. โIโll go. I know youโre only lashing out because youโre angry. Iโm angry too. And you donโt mean it, you know you donโt mean it.โ He sighed. โLet me know when you remember who I am. Who you are.โ
Ravi moved over to the door, his hand stalling in the air before it, head slightly cocked. โI love you,โ he said angrily, not looking at her. He slammed the handle down and walked out, the door juddering behind him.