Pip sat in her car, halfway down Tudor Lane. Not outside his house, just a little further up, so no one would see. Her thumbs on her phone, she played the audio clip one last time:
โMax, at a calamity party in March 2012, did you drug and rape Becca Bell?โ
โWhat? No I fucking didnโt.โ
โMAX, do not lie to me or I swear to god I will ruin you! Did you put Rohypnol in Beccaโs drink and have sex with her?โ
โYes, but, likeย . . .ย it wasnโt rape. She didnโt say no.โ
โBecause you drugged her, you vile rapist gargoyle. You have no idea what youโve done.โ
Her ears rang, trying to push away his voice and listen to her own. Good and bad didnโt matter here. There were only winners. And he only won if she let him. That was justice.
So, she did it.
She pressed the button, uploading the audio of that phone call to her website, reposting it on the podcastโs Twitter account. Alongside the post, she wrote:ย Max Hastings trial final update. I donโt care what the jury believes: he is guilty.
It was done, it was gone.
There was no going back now. This was her, and it was OK.
She dropped her phone on to the passenger seat and picked up the pot of paint sheโd taken from the garage, tucking the brush into her back pocket. She opened the door, reaching back for the final item, the hammer from her dadโs toolkit, before stepping silently out of her car.
She walked up the road, passing one house, two, three, four, until she stopped, looking up at the Hastings familyโs sprawling home, with its
painted white front door. They were out, all of them, at their fancy dinner at the Savoy. And Pip was here, outside their empty house.
Up the drive, past the large oak tree, coming to a stop before the front door. She laid the paint pot on the ground, bending down to use the end of the hammer to pry open the lid. It was half full, the paint a dull green as she pulled out the brush and dipped it inside, spooling off the excess.
No going back. She took one breath and then stepped up, pressing the brush against the front door. She reached high, looping it up and down, crouching to pick up more paint when her lines ran dry.
The letters were shaky and dripping, spreading out from the door to the light-coloured bricks either side. She went back over the words, deeper and darker, and when she was done, she dropped the brush on the path, a small spatter of paint where it landed. She picked up the hammer, twirling it between her fingers, feeling its weight in her hands.
She crossed to the left side of the house, to the window there. She readied her arm and the hammer, held it back. Then she swung with full force into the window.
It shattered. A sprinkling of broken glass fell inside and out, like glitter, like rain, dusting the tops of her trainers. She tightened her grip on the hammer, glass crunching under her feet as she approached the next window. Pulled back and smashed it, the sound of the tinkling glass lost beneath the rain. And the next window. First swing, cracked. Second swing, exploded. Past the front door and the words sheโd painted there, to the windows on the other side. One. Two. Three. Until all six windows at the front of the house were destroyed. Broken open. Exposed.
Pipโs breath was heavy in her chest now, right arm aching as she back- stepped down the drive. Her hair was matted and wet, whipping across her face as she looked up at the destruction. Her destruction.
And painted across the front, in the same forest-green shade as the Amobisโ new garden shed, were the words:
Rapist
I will get you
Pip read them, and read them again; looked around at what sheโd done.
And she checked, down inside herself, under her skin, but she couldnโt find it. The scream was no longer there, waiting for her. Sheโd beaten it.
*
Can you come outside?ย she texted him, the rain pattering against her screen, the phone no longer recognizing her thumb.
Read, it said beneath her message a few seconds later.
She watched from outside as the light in Raviโs bedroom window clicked on, and the curtain twitched for just a second.
Pip followed his progress as the hall light turned on in the upper middle window, and then the downstairs hall light, glowing through the glass in the front door. Broken up now by Raviโs silhouette as he made his way towards it.
It opened and he stood there against the light, wearing just a white T-shirt and navy joggers. He looked at her, then up at the rain in the sky, and he walked outside, his feet bare, slapping against the path.
โNice night,โ he said, squinting against the droplets now running down his face.
โIโm sorry.โ Pip looked at him, her hair sticking to her face in long dark streaks. โIโm sorry I took it out on you.โ
โThatโs OK,โ he said.
โNo, itโs not.โ She shook her head. โI had no right to be angry at you. I think I was angry at me, mostly. And itโs not just everything that happened today. I mean, itย isย that, but also Iโve been lying to myself for a while now, trying to separate myself from that person who became so obsessed with finding Andie Bellโs killer. Trying to convince everyone else it wasnโt really me so I could convince myself. But I think, now, that thatย isย me. And maybe Iโm selfish and maybe Iโm a liar and maybe Iโm reckless and obsessive and Iโm OK with doing bad things when itโs me doing them and maybe Iโm a hypocrite, and maybe none of that is good, but it feels good. It feels like me, and I hope youโre OK with all that because . . . I love you too.โ
She had barely finished speaking, but Raviโs hand was against her face, cupped around her cheek, his thumb rubbing the rain from her bottom lip.
He moved his fingers down to lift her chin and then he kissed her. Long and hard, their faces wet against each other, both trying to fight a smile.
But the smile broke eventually, and Ravi drew back. โYou should have just asked me. I know exactly who you are. And I love her. I love you. Oh, by the way, I said it first.โ
โYeah, in anger,โ said Pip.
โAh, thatโs just because Iโm so brooding and mysterious.โ He pulled a face with puckered lips and too-serious eyes.
โUm, Ravi?โ
โYes, Um Pip.โ
โI need to tell you something. Something I just did.โ
โWhat did you do?โ He dropped the face into one that was actually serious. โPip, what did you just do?โ