โThe sun lit up his eyes as he glanced back at her, dappled through the rising trees. Or maybe it was the other way, Pip wondered, maybe Raviโs eyes lit up the sun. A crooked smile creased his face.
โSarge?โ Ravi said lightly, trampling the fallen leaves of Lodge Wood, the sound crisp and fresh, sounding like home, and beginnings and endings. โSorry.โ Pip caught up to him, stepping in time with his feet. โWhat did
you say?โ
โI said,โ he drew out the word, nudging her in the ribs, โwhat time are your parents taking you tomorrow?โ He waited. โTo Cambridge?โ he reminded her. โHello? Is anyone there?โ
โOh, um, early I think,โ Pip said, shaking her head, bringing herself back. โProbably leave by ten.โ
She didnโt know how to do it, how to say it, how to even begin. There werenโt words for this, a pain that hummed through every part of her, stuck through her chest as her ribs caved in around it. Cracking bones and blood- wet hands, and a hurt that was worse than all of that.
โCool,โ Ravi said. โIโll come round before, help your dad load up the car.โ
Pipโs lip threatened to go, her throat tightening, cutting her off. Ravi didnโt see, picking their way through the woods, off the path.ย Exploring, heโd said, the two of them, Team Ravi and Pip, off in the wild.
โWhen should I come visit?โ he said, ducking under a branch, holding it up for her without looking back. โOriginally it was meant to be next weekend, so what about the weekend after? We could go out for dinner or something.โ
She couldnโt, she couldnโt do it. And she couldnโt take another step after him.
Her eyes spilled over, fast and hard, a knot in her chest that would never
go.
โRavi,โ she said quietly.
He heard it in her voice. He whipped around, his eyes wide, eyebrows
lowered.
โHey, hey,โ he came back, sliding his hands up her arms. โWhat is it? Whatโs wrong?โ He pulled her into him, wrapped her in his arms, one hand to the back of her head, holding her to his chest.
โNo.โ Pip twisted away, stepping back from him, and her body felt like it was peeling away from her, back to him, choosing him over her. โRavi, itโs… You canโt come tomorrow morning to help load up the car. You canโt come visit me in Cambridge. You canโt, we canโt…โ Her voice cracked, broken in half by the shudder in her chest.
โPip, what are you โโ
โThis is the last time,โ she said. โThis is the last time we can see each other.โ
The wind played through the trees, blowing her hair across her face, strands sticking to the tears.
The light was gone from Raviโs eyes, now darkened by fear.
โWhat are you talking about? No, itโs not,โ he said, his voice growing, fighting the whistling of the trees.
โItโs the only way,โ Pip said. โThe only way to keep you safe from me.โ โI donโt need to be safe from you,โ he said. โItโs over. We did it. Max has
been charged. Weโre free.โ
โWe arenโt,โ she cried. โHawkins knows, or he suspects. What he said to me outside the station. The idea is there, in his head.โ
โSo?โ Ravi said, angry now. โIt doesnโt matter. Theyโve charged Max; they have all the evidence. Thereโs none against you. Hawkins can think whatever he wants, it doesnโt matter.โ
โIt does.โ
โWhy?โ he shouted, voice desperate and clawing. โWhy does it matter?โ
โBecause,โ Pipโs voice picked up too, thick with the tears. โBecause it isnโt over. We didnโt think it through all the way to the very end. There has to be a trial first, Ravi. A jury of twelve peers has to find Max guilty beyond reasonable doubt. And if they do, then it will be over, truly over, and weโll be free. Hawkins wonโt have a reason to keep looking. Itโs near impossible to overturn a conviction once itโs made, just look at the statistics, at Billy Karras. Thatโs when weโre free.โ
โYes, and thatโs going to happen,โ he said.
โWe canโt know that,โ she sniffed, wiped her face on her sleeve. โHeโs got away with it once before. And what if the jury find him not guilty, what happens then? The case returns to the police to be re-investigated. They have to have a killer. And who do you think will be the very first person DI Hawkins looks into if Max is found to be innocent? It will be me, Ravi, heโll come for me, and everyone who helped me. Because thatโs the truth and thatโs his job.โ
โNo,โ Ravi shouted.
โYes.โ Pipโs breath stuttered. โIf the trial doesnโt go the right way, Iโm going down. And Iโm not having you go down with me, or any of the others.โ
โThatโs not your choice!โ he said, his voice catching, eyes glazing.
โYes, it is. You went to Hawkins about the headphones, which ties you into everything. But I know how to get you out.โ
โNo, Pip, Iโm not listening.โ He dropped his eyes.
โIf the verdict is not guilty, if the police ever come back to talk to you about it, you tell them I made you do it.โ
โNo.โ
โUnder duress. I threatened you. I made you take the fall for the headphones to save me. You suspected what Iโd done to Jason. You were scared for your life.โ
โNo, Pip. Stop talking!โ
โYou did it under duress, Ravi,โ she pleaded. โThatโs the phrase you have to use. Under duress. You were afraid for your life if you didnโt do what I said.โ
โNo! No one will believe that!โ
โMake them!โ she shouted back. โYou have to make them believe it.โ
โNo.โ Tears overran his eyes, catching at the crack in his lips. โI donโt want to. I donโt want this.โ
โYou tell them we havenโt had any contact since I left for Cambridge. It will be the truth. You got away from me. We havenโt spoken, havenโt seen each other, no communication. But you were still scared what would happen if you told the police the truth. What I would do to you.โ
โShut up, Pip. Stop it,โ he cried, cupping his hands over his face.
โWe canโt see each other. We canโt have any contact at all, otherwise the duress angle wonโt work โ the police will check our phone records. Youโre afraid of me, thatโs what it has to look like. So we canโt be together any more,โ she said, and the thing stuck through her chest cracked open, a thousand cuts.
โNo,โ Ravi sobbed into his hands. โNo, this canโt be it. There must be something we can…โ His hands dropped to his sides, a glint of hope in his eyes. โWe can get married.โ
โWhat?โ
โWe can get married,โ he said, taking a shuddering sniff and a step towards her. โSpousal privilege. We canโt be made to give evidence against each other if we are co-accused. We could get married.โ
โNo.โ
โWe can,โ he said, the hope growing in his eyes. โWe could do that.โ โNo.โ
โWhy not?!โ he said, the desperation back in his voice, the hope gone in a blink.
โBecause you didnโt kill a man, Ravi. I did!โ Pip took his hand, slid her fingers through his in the way they used to belong, gripping tight. โThat wonโt save you from this, that just ties you to me and whatever happens to me. If it gets to that point, they might not need our testimony to put us both away. That is unacceptable. Do you think Sal would want this for you? Do you think heโd want everyone to think youโd played a part in killing someone, just like they thought of him?โ
โStop it,โ he said, squeezing her hand too hard. โStop trying to make me
โโ
โItโs not just from you,โ she spoke across him, squeezing back. โItโs
everyone. Cara, Nat, Connor โ I have to cut myself off from everyone I care
about, everyone who helped me. To protect them. Even my family; I canโt have the police thinking they aided or abetted me in any way, I canโt have that. I need to go away from everyone, on my own. Cut off from everyone, until the trial. And even after, if the jury โโ
โNo,โ he said, but the fight was gone from his voice now, the tears falling faster.
โIโm a ticking time bomb, Ravi. I canโt have the people I love near me when it goes off. Especially not you.โ
โIfย it goes off,โ he said.
โIf,โ she agreed, reaching up to catch one of his tears. โUntil the trial. And if it goes our way, if the jury find Max guilty, then I can get it all back. My life. My family. You. We can find each other again, I promise. If thatโs still what you want.โ
Ravi pressed his cheek into her hand.
โThat could be months and months from now,โ he said. โYears even. Itโs a murder case, they can take years to go to trial.โ
โThen thatโs how long I have to wait,โ Pip cried. โAnd if, after the wait, the jury find him not guilty, you tell Hawkins you did it under duress. You werenโt ever at the scene, you didnโt know for sure Iโd killed Jason, but I made you tell him about the headphones. I made you. Say it, Ravi.โ
โUnder duress,โ he said quietly, his face breaking in half. โI donโt want this.โ He sobbed, his hand shaking in hers. โI donโt want to lose you. I donโt care, I donโt care what happens, I donโt want to not see you again, not speak to you. I donโt want to wait for the trial. I love you. I canโt… I canโt. Youโre my Pip and Iโm your Ravi. Weโre a team. I donโt want this.โ
Pip folded herself into him, tucking her face into that place it used to belong at the base of his neck. Her home, but it couldnโt be, not any more. His head fell against her shoulder and she held it there, her hand running through the back of his hair, slipping through her fingers.
โI donโt want this either,โ she said, and it hurt so much she didnโt think she could breathe. Nothing would heal this. Not time. Not space. Nothing. โI love you so much,โ she whispered. โThatโs why I have to do this, why I have to go and not come back. You would do it for me,โ she said, โyou know you would.โ An echo of Raviโs words when heโd saved her, just as heโd saved her back in that storeroom, without knowing it. Now Pip had to
save him back, that was her choice. And she knew, no shadow of a doubt, that it was the right one to make. Maybe the other choices sheโd made hadnโt been, maybe every decision up to this point had been wrong or bad, untravelled paths and other lives. This choice was the worst of them all, hurt the most, but it was right, it was good.
Ravi bawled into her shoulder and Pip stroked his hair, silent tears rolling down her cheeks.
โI should go,โ she said eventually.
โNo! No!โ Ravi grabbed her tighter, wouldnโt let her go, burying his face in her coat. โNo, donโt go,โ he begged her. โPlease donโt leave me. Please donโt go.โ
But one of them had to be the first to leave. The first to take that last look. The first one to say it for the final time.
It had to be her.
Pip unwrapped herself from him, let him go. She pushed up on to her toes, pressed her forehead against his, in the way he always did to her. She wished she could take half of it from him, the hurt. Take half of everything bad, leave room for some good.
โI love you,โ she said, stepping back. โI love you.โ
She looked into his eyes and he looked back into hers. Pip turned, and she walked away.
Ravi broke behind her, crying out into the trees, the wind carrying his sobs over to her, trying to pull her back. She kept going. Ten steps. Eleven. Her foot hesitated on the next step. She couldnโt. She couldnโt do this. This couldnโt be the last time. Pip looked back, over her shoulder, through the trees. Ravi was on his knees in the leaves, face hidden, bawling into his hands. It hurt more than anything, to see him that way, and her chest opened up, reaching out to him, trying to drive her back. Hold him, take the hurt away and let him take hers.
She wanted to go back. She wanted to run to him, fall into him, be Team Ravi and Pip and nothing more. Tell him she loved him in all those secret ways they had, hear him speak all those names he had for her in his butter- soft voice. But she couldnโt, that wasnโt fair. He couldnโt be her person and
she couldnโt be his right now. Pip had to be the strong one, the one to walk away when neither of them wanted it. The one who chose.
Pip looked at him one last time, then she tore her eyes away, stared ahead. The way forward was blurry, her eyes filling, streaming down her face. Maybe sheโd see him again, maybe she wouldnโt, but she couldnโt look back again, she couldnโt or she wouldnโt have the strength to go.
She walked away, a howl on the wind that could have been Ravi or the trees, she was too far to know. She left, and she didnโt look back.