โThere was a kind of thrill in it; watching someone when they didnโt know you were there. Invisible to them. Disappeared.
Ravi was walking up the drive to her house, and she at her bedroom window where sheโd been for hours, watching. His hands were in his jacket pockets, his hair morning-messy, and a strange movement in his mouth like he was chewing the air. Or singing to himself. Sheโd never seen him do that before, never around her. This was a different Ravi, one who thought he was alone, unobserved. Pip studied him and all the subtle differences to the Ravi he was when he was around her. She smiled to herself, wondered what he was singing. Maybe she could love this Ravi just as much, but sheโd miss that look in his eyes when he was looking back at her.
And then the moment was over. Pip faintly heard his familiar knock, long-short-long, but she couldnโt move, she needed to stay here and watch the drive. Her dad was here, he would let Ravi in. He liked his small moments of time alone with Ravi anyway. Heโd make some sort of inappropriate joke, segue into a conversation about football or Raviโs work experience, finishing off with an affectionate pat on the back. All while Ravi took off his shoes and neatly lined them up by the door, stuffing the laces inside too, with that special laugh he saved for her dad. That was it, what she wanted: to live those small, normal moments again. The scene would change, somehow, if she were there to disturb it.
Pip blinked, her eyes watering from staring too long at that spot on the driveway, the sun glaring through the window. She couldnโt look away; she might miss it.
She heard Raviโs gentle tread up the steps, his clicking knees, and her heartbeat picked up. The good kind of fast heart, not like that other trigger-
happy kind. No, donโt think about that now. Why did she have to ruin every nice moment?
โHello, Sarge,โ he said, the creaking sound of him pushing the door fully open. โAgent Ravi here, reporting for boyfriending duties.โ
โHello, Agent Ravi,โ Pip said, her breath fogging up the glass in front of her. The smile was back, fighting her until she gave in.
โI see,โ he said. โNot even a glance back, or one of your scornful looks. Not a hug, not a kiss. Not anย Oh, Ravi, darling, you look devilishly handsome today and you smell like a spring dream. Oh, Pip, my dear, you are too kind to notice. Itโs a new deodorant Iโm trying.โ A pause. โNo, but seriously, what are you doing? Can you hear me? Am I a ghost? Pip?โ
โSorry,โ she said, eyes straight. โIโm just… Iโm watching the driveway.โ โYouโre what?โ
โWatching the drive,โ she said, her own reflection getting in the way.
She felt a weight on the bed next to her, gravity pulling her towards him as Ravi lowered to his knees on the far side of the mattress, his elbows up on the windowsill and eyes to the glass, just as Pip was.
โWatching for what?โ he said. Pip dared one fleeting look at him, at the sun lighting up his eyes.
โFor… for the birds. The pigeons,โ she said. โIโve put bits of bread out there on the drive, in the same spot I found those pigeons. And I put little pieces of ham in the grass either side of the drive too.โ
โRight,โ Ravi said, drawing out the word, confused. โAnd why have we done that?โ
She gave him a quick jab with her elbow. Wasnโt it obvious? โBecause,โ she said, over-emphasizing the word, โIโm trying to prove Hawkins wrong. It canโt be a neighbourโs cat. And Iโve laid the perfect bait to test that. Cats like ham, donโt they? Heโs wrong, Iโm not crazy.โ
The harsh light through the crack in her curtains had woken her earlier than sheโd planned, pulling her out of the after-pill fog. This experiment had seemed a good idea at the time, on three hoursโ sleep, although now, checking in with Raviโs uncertain eyes, she wasnโt sure. Lost her footing again.
She could feel his gaze on her, warm against her cheek. No, what was he doing? He should be watching out for the birds, helping her.
โHey,โ he said quietly, his voice hovering just above a whisper.
But Pip didnโt hear what he said next, because there was a dark shape in the sky, a winged shadow growing on the drive below. Pipโs eyes caught it as it swooped down, landing on its twig legs and hopping over to the scattered bread.
โNo,โ she breathed out. It wasnโt a pigeon. โStupid magpie,โ she said, watching as it scooped up a small square of bread in its beak, and then another.
โOne for sorrow,โ said Ravi.
โWe have plenty of that in Little Kilton already,โ Pip replied, as the bird helped itself to a third piece of bread. โHey,โ she shouted suddenly, surprising herself too, banging on the window with her fist. โHey, go away! Youโre ruining it!โ Her knuckles hit against the glass so hard, she didnโt know which would crack first. โGo away!โ The magpie jumped into the air and flew off.
โWhoa, whoa, whoa,โ Ravi said quickly, grabbing her hands away from the window, holding them tightly inside his grip. โWhoa, hey,โ he said, shaking his head at her. His voice hard, but his thumb soft as he ran it against her wrist.
โRavi, I canโt see the window, the birds,โ she said, straining her neck to try to look outside and not at him.
โNo, you donโt need to look outside.โ He tucked his finger under her chin, guided it back. โLook at me, please. Pip.โ He sighed. โThis isnโt good for you. It really isnโt.โ
โIโm just trying โโ
โI know what youโre trying, I understand.โ
โHe didnโt believe me,โ she said quietly. โHawkins didnโt believe me. No one believes me.โ Not even her sometimes, a new wave of doubts after her dream last night, wondering again whether it was possible she was doing this to herself.
โHey, thatโs not true.โ Ravi held her hands even tighter in his. โI believe you. I will always believe you, whatever it is. Thatโs my job, OK?โ He held her eyes, and that was good because hers suddenly felt wet and heavy, too heavy to hold alone. โItโs me and you, trouble. Team Ravi and Pip.
Someone left those birds for you, and the chalk, you donโt have to try prove otherwise. Trust yourself.โ
She shrugged.
โAnd Hawkins is an idiot, frankly,โ Ravi said with a small smile. โIf he hasnโt learned by now that youโre โ annoyingly โย alwaysย right, then he never will.โ
โNever,โ Pip repeated.
โItโs going to be OK,โ he said, drawing lines in the valleys between her knuckles. โEverything will be OK, I promise.โ He paused, staring at the space below her eyes a little too long. โDid you get much sleep last night?โ
โYes,โ she lied.
โRight.โ He clapped his hands together. โI think we need to get you out of the house. Come on. Up, up. Socks on.โ
โWhy?โ she said, sinking into the bed as Ravi got off.
โWeโre going out for a walk.ย Oh, what a fantastic idea, Ravi, youโre so smart and handsome. Oh, Pip, I know I am, but do try to keep it in your pants, your father is downstairs.โ
She threw a pillow at him.
โCome on.โ He dragged her out of bed by her ankles, giggling as she and the duvet slid to the floor. โCome on, Sporty Spice, you can put your trainers on and run circles around me if you really want.โ
โI already do,โ Pip quipped, fighting her feet into a pair of discarded socks.
โOoohhhh, sick burn, Sarge.โ He clapped her on the backside as she stood up. โLetโs go.โ
It worked. Whatever Ravi was doing, it worked. Pip didnโt think about disappearing or dead birds or chalk lines or DI Hawkins, not on the way down the stairs, not when her dad stopped them to ask her where all the wafer-thin ham had gone, not even as they walked down the driveway, Raviโs fingers hooked on to her jeans, heading for the woods. No pigeons, no chalk, no six gunshots disguised in the beating of her heart. It was just the two of them. Team Ravi and Pip. No thoughts beyond the first inane things that came into her head. No deeper, no darker. Ravi was the fence in her head that kept it all back.
up.
A grumpy-faced tree that she insisted looked like Ravi when he woke
Planning when he would first come to stay with her in Cambridge;
maybe the weekend after Freshersโ Week? Was she nervous to go? What books did she still need to buy?
They followed the winding path of the woods. Ravi recreating their first walk together through these same trees, a high-pitched impression of Pip as she took him through her initial theories on the Andie Bell case. Pip laughed. Heโd remembered almost every word. Barney had been with them on that first walk, a golden flash through the trees. Herding them together. Tail wagging as Ravi had teased him with a stick. Thinking back on it now, maybe that was the moment Pip knew. Had it been a tightening in her gut, or maybe that drunk feeling behind the eyes, or could it have been that glow below her skin? She hadnโt realized it at the time, hadnโt known what it was, but maybe some part of her had already decided she would love him. Right then. In a conversation about his dead brother and a murdered girl. It all came back to death, in the end. Oh, there you go, sheโd gone and ruined it. The fence was down.
Pipโs attention was drawn up and away as a dog from here and now crashed through the undergrowth towards them, barking as it jumped up to plant its paws on her legs. A beagle. She recognized this dog, just as he had recognized her.
โOh no,โ she muttered, giving him one quick stroke, as the other sound reached them: a double set of footsteps through the early fallen leaves. Two voices she knew.
Pip stopped as they walked around a knot of trees and finally came into view.
Ant-and-Lauren, arm in arm. Eyes widening in unison when they realized who she was.
Pip didnโt imagine it. Lauren actually gasped, coughing into her hand to cover it. They stopped too. Ant and Lauren over there, Pip and Ravi back here.
โRufus!โ Lauren screamed, her wild voice echoing through the trees. โRufus, come here! Get away from her!โ
The dog turned and tilted his head.
โIโm not going to hurt your dog, Lauren,โ Pip said, levelling her voice. โWho knows, with you,โ Ant said darkly, stuffing his hands into his
pockets.
โOh, come on,โ Pip sniffed. One part of her itched to stroke Rufus again, just to really set Lauren off. Go on,ย do it.
It was as though Lauren had read her mind and the glint in her eye. She screamed for the dog again until he bounded back over to her on his unsure little legs.
โNo!โ Lauren turned her voice on him now, giving him a one-fingered tap on the nose. โYou donโt go up to strangers!โ
โRidiculous,โ Pip said, with a hollow laugh, swapping a look with Ravi. โWhat was that?โ Ant barked, straightening up. Pointless, really because
Pip was still taller than him; she could take him. She already had once
before, and she was stronger now.
โI said that your girlfriend was ridiculous. Should I repeat it a third time?โ she said.
Pip could feel Raviโs arm tensing against hers. He hated confrontation, hated it, and even so, Pip knew he would go to war for her if she ever asked. She didnโt need him now though, she had this. Almost like sheโd been waiting for this encounter, felt herself coming alive with it.
โWell, donโt talk about her like that.โ Ant brought his hands back out, flexed them at his sides. โWhy havenโt you gone to uni yet? Thought Cambridge started earlier.โ
โLater, actually,โ Pip said. โWhy, are you waiting for me to…
disappear?โ
She studied their faces carefully. The wind whipped Laurenโs red hair across her forehead, strands catching across her narrowed eyes. She blinked. One side of Antโs mouth pulled up in a sneer.
โThe fuck are you talking about?โ he said.
โNo, I know.โ Pip nodded. โYou must feel really embarrassed. You accused me, Connor and Jamie of orchestrating his disappearance for money, just hours after we all found out a serial rapist walked free. Are you the ones who spoke to that reporter? I guess it doesnโt matter any more. And now Jamieโs alive but another man is dead, and you must feel really quite stupid about the whole thing.โ
โDeserved to die though, didnโt he, so I guess it all worked out nicely in the end.โ
He winked.
He fucking winked at her.
The gun was back in Pipโs heart, pointing through her chest at Ant. Backbone curling and her teeth bared. โDonโt you ever say that again,โ she pushed the words through her teeth, dark and dangerous. โDonโt you ever say that in front of me.โ
Ravi re-took her hand, but she didnโt feel it. She wasnโt in her body any more, she was standing over there, that same hand around Antโs throat. Tightening, tightening, squeezing it all out into Raviโs fingers.
Ant seemed to sense this, taking one step back from her, almost tripping over the dog. Lauren hooked her arm through Antโs again and locked their elbows together. A shield. But that wouldnโt stop Pip.
โWe used to be friends. Do you really hate me enough to want me to die?โ she said, the wind carrying her voice away from her.
โWhat the fuck are you on about?โ Lauren spat, drawing more strength from Ant. โYouโre a psycho.โ
โHey,โ Raviโs voice floated in from somewhere beside her. โCome on now, thatโs not nice.โ
But Pip had an answer of her own. โMaybe,โ she said. โSo, you should make sure your doors are locked up real nice and tight at night.โ
โOK,โ Ravi said, taking charge. โWeโre going this way.โ He pointed beyond Ant and Lauren. โYou go that way. See you around.โ
Ravi led her off-path, his fingers tight around hers, anchoring her to him. Pipโs feet were moving, but her eyes were on Ant and Lauren, blinking the moment they passed, shooting them with the gun in her chest. She watched over her shoulder as they moved away through the trees, in the direction of her house.
โMy dad said she was fucked up now,โ Ant said to Lauren, loud enough for them to hear, turning back to meet Pipโs eyes.
She tensed, her heels turning in the crisped-up leaves. But Raviโs arm folded around her waist, holding her into him. His mouth brushing the hair at her temple. โNo,โ he whispered. โYouโre OK. They arenโt worth it. Really. Just breathe.โ
So, she did. Concentrated only on air in, air out. One step, two step, in, out. Every step carrying her further away from them, the gun retreating back into its hiding place.
โShould we go home?โ she said when it was gone, between breaths, between steps.
โNo,โ Ravi shook his head, staring straight ahead. โForget about them.
You need some fresh air.โ
Pip circled his hot palm with her trigger finger, one way then the other. She didnโt want to say, but maybe there was no such thing in Little Kilton. No fresh air. It was all tainted, every breath of it.
They looked both ways and crossed the road to her house, the sun finding them again, warming their backs.
โAnything?โ Pip smiled at Ravi.
โYes, anything you want,โ he said. โThis is a full-on cheer-up Pip day.
No true crime documentaries, though. Those are banned.โ
โAnd what if I said I really wanted a Scrabble tournament?โ she said, sticking her finger through his jumper into his ribs, their steps winding in and out of each otherโs clumsily across the drive.
โIโd say,ย Game on, bitch. You underestimate my powโโ Ravi stopped suddenly, and Pip collided into him. โOh fuck,โ he said, little more than a whisper.
โWhat?โ she laughed, coming round to face him. โIโll go easy on you.โ โNo, Pip.โ He pointed behind her.
She turned and followed his eyes.
There, on the driveway, beyond the pile of breadcrumbs, were three little chalk figures.
Her heart turned cold, dropped into her stomach.
โThey were here,โ Pip said, letting go of Raviโs hand and darting forward. โThey were just here,โ she said, standing over the little chalk people. The figures had almost reached the house now, scattered in front of the potted shrubs that lined the left side. โWe shouldnโt have left, Ravi! I was watching. I would have seen them.โ Seen them, caught them, saved herself.
โThey only came because they knew you werenโt here.โ Ravi joined her, his breath fast in his chest. โAnd those definitely arenโt tyre marks.โ This was the first time heโd seen them. Time and rain had taken the last ones away before sheโd had a chance to show him. But he could see them. He saw them and that made them real. She hadnโt made them up, Hawkins.
โThank you,โ Pip said, glad that he was here with her.
โLooks like something out of theย Blair Witch,โ he said, bending to get a closer look, drawing the criss-cross shapes with his finger, hovering a few inches above.
โNo.โ Pip studied them. โThis isnโt right. Thereโs supposed to be five of them. There were five both other times. Why three now?โ she asked of Ravi. โDoesnโt make sense.โ
โI donโt think any of this makes sense, Pip.โ
Pip held her breath, scouring the driveway for the two lost figures. They were here, somewhere. They had to be. Those were the rules in this game between her and them.
โWait!โ she said, catching something in the corner of her eye. No, it couldnโt be, was it? She stepped forward, up to one of her mumโs potted plants โย pots come all the way from Vietnam, can you believe? –ย and brushed the leaves aside.
Behind it, against the wall of her house. Two little headless figures. So faint they were hardly there at all, hidden almost entirely among the mortar between the bricks.
โFound you,โ Pip said with an outward breath. Her skin was alive and electric as she pushed her face right up close to the chalk, some of the white dust scattering from her breath. But was she pleased or was she scared? She couldnโt, in this moment, tell the difference.
โUp on the wall?โ Ravi said behind her. โWhy?โ
Pip knew the answer before he did. She understood this game, now that she was playing. She stepped back from the two headless figures, the leaders of their pack, and looked directly up, following their journey. Theyโd mounted the wall to climb, up past the study and up and up, towards her bedroom window.
The bones cracked in her neck as she turned back to Ravi. โTheyโre coming for me.โ
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