โThe Reynoldsesโ house on Cedar Way looked like a face. Pip had always thought so, ever since she was little. It still did now, as she walked up the path towards its toothy front door, windows staring down at her. The steadfast guardian of the family inside. The house shouldnโt let her in, it should turn her away. But the people inside wouldnโt, Pip knew it in her gut.
She knocked, hard, watching the outline of someone approach through the stained-glass of the door.
โHellโOh, hi Pip,โ Jamie said, a wide smile stretching into his face as he pulled the door open. โDidnโt know you were coming round. The three of us were just going to order pizza, if you want to join?โ
Pipโs voice stalled in her throat. She didnโt know how to begin, but she didnโt have to, because Nat appeared in the hallway behind Jamie, the ceiling lights gliding off her white-blonde hair, making it glow.
โPip,โ she said, walking over, slotting in beside Jamie. โAre you OK? Ravi called me a while ago and said he couldnโt get hold of you. He said you were coming round to my house to talk to me about something, but you never showed.โ Her eyes narrowed, flicking across Pipโs face. Nat might see behind the mask; sheโd had to learn to wear one herself. โAre you OK?โ she asked again, confusion making way for concern.
โUm…โ Pip said, her voice still gravelly and raw in her throat. โI โโ
โOh, hey, Pip,โ said a new voice, one she knew well. Connor had emerged from the kitchen, eyes flicking from the gathering at the door and down to his phone. โWe were just going to order pizza if โโ
โConnor, shush,โ Jamie cut him off, and Pip could see the same look in his eyes as Natโs. They knew. They could tell. They could read it on her face. โWhatโs wrong?โ he asked her. โAre you OK?โ
Connor sidled in behind, staring at her too.
โUm.โ Pip took a breath to steady herself. โNo. No, Iโm not OK.โ โWhatโs โโ Nat began.
โSomethingโs happened. Something bad,โ Pip said, glancing down and noticing that her fingers were shaking. They were clean, but blood was leaking out the ends, and she didnโt know if it was Stanleyโs or Jason Bellโs or her own. She hid them inside her pocket, alongside the bag of powder and one burner phone. โAnd… I need to ask you for help. All of you. And you can say no, you can say no to me and I promise I will understand.โ
โYeah, anything,โ Connor said, his eyes picking up on her fear, darkening with it.
โNo, Connor, wait,โ Pip said, glancing between the three of them. Three of the people sheโd thought would look for her if she disappeared. Three people sheโd been with through the fire and back. And she realized, then, that those same people, the ones who would look for you when you disappeared, they were the same people you could turn to, if you needed to get away with murder. โYou canโt say yes yet, because you donโt… you donโt…โ She paused. โI need to ask you for your help, but you can never ask me why, or what happened. And I can never tell you.โ
They all stared at her.
โNever,โ Pip reiterated. โYou have to have plausible deniability. You can never know why. But, itโs… itโs something I think we all want. Make someone pay, get what they deserved all along. But you can never know, you can never…โ
Nat stepped forward, over the threshold, and placed her hand on Pipโs shoulder. Her grip tight and warm and quieting.
โPip,โ she said gently, eyes hooking on. โDo you need us to call the police?โ
โNo,โ Pip sniffed. โNot the police. Ever.โ
โWhat do you meanย make someone pay?โ Connor asked. โDo you mean Max, Max Hastings?โ
Nat stiffened, passing it down through the bone in Pipโs shoulder. Pip lifted her head and nodded, ever so slightly.
โPut him away, forever,โ she whispered, pulling out one hand and resting it on top of Natโs, stealing its warmth. โIf it works. But you can never know,
I canโt tell you, and you can never tell anyone โโ
โIโll do it,โ Jamie said, his face hardening, a determined set to his jaw. โIโll do it, whatever it is. You saved me, Pip. You saved me, so Iโll save you. I donโt need to know why. Only that you need my help, and you have it. Anything to put him away.โ His gaze softened as his eyes moved from Pip to the back of Natโs head.
โYes,โ Connor nodded, dark blonde hair falling into his freckled face. A face sheโd watch grow up, shifting with the years, just as he had with her. โMe too. You were there when I needed you.โ He stretched out his angular arms in an awkward shrug. โOf course Iโll help.โ
Pip felt her eyes filling up as she glanced between the Reynolds brothers. Two faces sheโd known as far as memory would take her, two players in the history of who she was. Part of her wished theyโd said no, for their own sake. But sheโd make sure they were safe. The plan would work, and if it didnโt, she would be the only one to pay. Her silent promise to them all. This never happened; Pip never stood at their door and asked them for help. None of them were here right now.
Pipโs gaze trailed over to Nat, seeing her own face reflected in the brilliant blue orbs of Natโs eyes. Nat was the one who truly mattered. They hadnโt believed her as many times as they hadnโt believed Pip; that unthinkable violence of not-believing. They shared that darkness, and Pip had taken on Natโs scream that day, the day of the verdict, as though it were hers, binding them together. They looked at each other, past the masks.
โWill this get you into trouble?โ Nat asked. โIโm already in trouble,โ Pip replied quietly.
Nat breathed in, slowly. She let go of Pipโs shoulder and took her hand instead, gripping hard, fingers interlocked in hers.
โWhat do you need us to do?โ she said.