She had meant to throw it out.
Thatโs what sheโd told herself. The murder board needed to be thrown out because she was finished here. It was time to dismantle the Andie Bell scaffolding and see what remained of the Pip beneath. Sheโd made a good start, unpinning some of the pages and putting them in piles by a bin bag sheโd brought up.
And then, without realizing what she was doing or how it happened, sheโd found herself looking through it all again: rereading log entries, tracing her finger across the red string lines, staring into the suspectsโ photos, searching for the face of a killer.
Sheโd been so sure she was out. She hadnโt let herself think about it all day as sheโd played board games with Josh, as sheโd watched back-to-back episodes of American sitcoms, as sheโd baked brownies with Mum, sneaking dollops of raw batter into her mouth when unwatched. But with half a second and an unplanned glance Andie had found a way to suck her in again.
She was supposed to be getting dressed for the fireworks but now she was on her knees hunched over the murder board. Some of it really did go in the bin bag: all the clues that had pointed to Elliot Ward. Everything about the Ivy House Hotel, the phone number in the planner, the hit-and-run, Salโs stolen alibi, Andieโs nude photo that Max found at the back of a classroom and the printed notes and texts from Unknownย .
But the board also needed adding to, because she now knew more about
Andieโs whereabouts on the night she disappeared. She grabbed a printout of a map of Kilton and started scribbling in a blue marker pen.
Andie went to the Wardsโ house and left not long after with a potentially serious head injury. Pip circled the Wardsโ house on Hogg Hill. Elliot had said it was around ten-ish, but he must have been slightly off with that guess.
His and Becca Bellโs statements of time did not match, yet Beccaโs was backed up by CCTV: Andie had driven up the high street at 10:40 p.m.
Thatโs when she must have headed to the Wardsโ house. Pip drew a dotted line and scribbled in the time. Yes, Elliot had to be mistaken, she realized, otherwise it meant that Andie had returned home with an injured head before leaving again. And if that had been the case, Becca would have told the police those details. So Becca was no longer the last person to see Andie alive, Elliot was.
But then . . . Pip chewed the end of the pen, thinking. Elliot said that Andie hadnโt driven to his house; he thought sheโd walked. And, looking at the map, Pip saw why that made sense. The Bellsโ and the Wardsโ houses were very close; on foot you just had to cut through the church and over the pedestrian bridge. It was probably a quicker walk than a drive. Pip scratched her head. But that didnโt fit: Andieโs car was picked up by CCTV so she must have driven. Maybe sheโd parked somewhere near Elliotโs but not near enough for him to notice.
So how did Andie go from that point into non-existence? From Hogg Hill to her blood in the boot of her car ditched near Howieโs house?
Pip tapped the end of the pen against the map, her eyes flitting from Howie to Max to Nat to Daniel to Jason. There had been two different killers in Little Kilton: one who thought heโd killed Andie and then murdered Sal to cover it up, and another whoโd actually killed Andie Bell. And which of these faces staring up at her could it be?
Two killers, and yet only one of them had tried to get Pip to stop which meant that . . .
Wait.
Pip held her face as she closed her eyes to think, thoughts firing off and then coming back altered and new and smoking. And one image: Elliotโs face, just as the police stepped in. His face when Pip said sheโd never forgive him for killing Barney. It had crumpled, his brows tensed. But, picturing it now, it hadnโt been remorse on his face. No, it was confusion.
And the words heโd spoken, Pip finished them off for him now: Pip, I donโt know what youโre talking about. I didnโt โย kill Barney.
Pip swore under her breath, scrabbling over to the slumped bin bag. She pulled out the discarded pages and hunted through them, scattering paper all around her. And then they were in her hands; the notes from the camping trip and her locker in one hand, the printed texts from Unknown in the other.
They were from two different people. It was so obvious now, looking at them.
The differences werenโt only in form, it was in their tone. In the printed notes, Elliot had referred to her as Pippa and the threats were subtle, implied.
Even the one typed into her EPQ log. But Unknown had called her a โStupid bitch,โ and the threats werenโt just implied: theyโd made her smash her laptop up and then theyโd killed her dog.
She sat back and let out her too-full breath. Two different people. Elliot wasnโt Unknown and he hadnโt killed Barney. No, that had been Andieโs real killer.
โPip, come on! Theyโll have already lit the bonfire,โ her dad called upstairs.
She bounded over to her door and opened it a crack. โUm, you guys go on ahead. Iโll find you there.โ
โWhat? No. Get down here, Pipsy.โ
โIโm just . . . I just want to try to call Cara a few more times, Dad. I really need to speak to her. I wonโt be long. Please. Iโll find you there.โ
โOK, pickle,โ he called.
โIโll leave in twenty minutes, I promise,โ she said. โOK, call me if you canโt find us.โ
As the front door crashed shut Pip sat back beside the murder board, the texts from Unknown shaking in her hands. She scanned through her log entries, trying to work out when in her investigation she had received them.
The first had come just after she found Howie Bowers, after she and Ravi had spoken to him and learned about Andieโs dealing, about Max buying Rohypnol. And then Barney had been taken in half-term week. A lot had happened just before that: sheโd bumped into Stanley Forbes twice, sheโd gone to see Becca, and sheโd spoken to Daniel at the police meeting.
She scrunched up the pieces of paper and threw them across the room with a growl sheโd never heard from herself. There were just too many suspects still. And now that Elliotโs secrets were out and Sal was to be exonerated, would the killer be looking for revenge? Would they make good on their threats? Should Pip really be in the house on her own?
She scowled down at all their photos. And with the blue marker she drew a big cross through Jason Bellโs face. It couldnโt be him. Sheโd seen the look on his face in the car, once the detective must have called them. Both he and Dawn: crying, angry, confused. But thereโd been something else in both of
their eyes too, the smallest glimmer of hope alongside their tears. Maybe, even though theyโd been told she wasnโt, some small part of them had hoped it would still be their daughter. Jason couldnโt have faked that reaction. The truth was in his face.
The truth was in the face . . .
Pip picked up the photo of Andie with her parents and Becca, and she stared at it. Into those eyes.
It didnโt come all at once.
It came in little blips, lighting up across her memory. The pieces dropped and fell in a line.
From the murder board she grabbed all the relevant pages. Log entry 3: the interview with Stanley Forbes. Entry 10: the first interview with Emma Hutton. Entry 20: the interview with Jess Walker about the Bells. 21 about Max buying drugs from Andie. 23 about Howie and what he supplied her with. Entry 28 and 29 about drink spiking at calamities. The paper on which Ravi had written:ย who could have taken the burner phone???ย in large, capital letters. And the time Elliot said Andie left his house.
She looked them over and she knew who it was. The killer had a face and a name.
The last person to see Andie alive.
But there was just one last thing to confirm. Pip pulled out her phone, scrolled down her contacts and dialled the number.
โHello?โ
โMax?โ she said. โIโm going to ask you a question.โ
โIโm not interested. See, you were wrong about me. Iโve heard what happened, that it was Mr Ward.โ
โGood,โ Pip said, โthen you know that right now I have a lot of credibility with the police. I told Mr Ward to cover up the hit-and-run, but if you donโt answer my question, I will ring the police now and tell them everything.โ
โYou wouldnโt.โ
โI will. Naomiโs life is already destroyed; donโt think that will stop me any more,โ she bluffed.
โWhat do you want?โ he spat.
Pip paused. She put the phone on speaker and scrolled to her recording app. She pressed the red record button and sniffed loudly to hide the beep.
โMax, at a calamity party in March 2012,โ she said, โdid you drug and rape Becca Bell?โ
โWhat? No, I fucking didnโt.โ
โMAX,โ Pip roared down the phone, โdo 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
He coughed.
โYes, but, like . . . it wasnโt rape. She didnโt say no.โ
โBecause you drugged her, you vile rapist gargoyle,โ Pip shouted. โYou have no idea what youโve done.โ
She hung up, stopped the recording and pressed the lock button. Her sharp eyes encased in the darkened screen stared right back into her.
The last person to see Andie alive? It had been Becca. It had always been Becca.
Pipโs eyes blinked back at her and the decision was made.