โThe shock didnโt last long, not before the panic set in. Curdling in her stomach, rising up her spine, quick as insect legs or dead manโs fingers.
Pip stared at her headphones in the evidence bag and she didnโt understand. No, that couldnโt be right. Sheโd seen them in the last week, hadnโt she? When she was working on the audio of Jackieโs interview. No, no, she hadnโt been able to find them; she thought Josh had borrowed them again.
No, the last time sheโd had them was…ย thatย day. Sheโd taken them off, put them in her rucksack before knocking on Natโs door. But then Jason grabbed her.
โAre these yours?โ Hawkins asked, his gaze a physical sensation on her face, an itch she couldnโt ignore, watching her for any giveaway. She couldnโt give him one.
โThey look similar,โ Pip said, speaking slowly, assuredly over the panic and her hummingbird heart. โCan I see them closer?โ
Hawkins slid the evidence bag across the table, and Pip stared down at the headphones, pretending to study them while she bought herself time to think.
Jason had had her rucksack in his car. Sheโd checked before she and Ravi left the scene and she thought she had everything sheโd packed that afternoon. She did, except the headphones. She hadnโt been thinking about them because theyโd gone in after. But where, when…
No. That sick fuck.
Jason must have taken them out. When he left her there, wrapped up in tape, he went home. He looked through her bag. He found the headphones and he took them. Because they were his trophy. The symbol for his sixth
victim. The thing he would clutch close to relive the thrill of killing her. Her headphones were his trophy. Thatโs why he took them.
That sick fuck.
Hawkins cleared his throat.
Pip glanced up at him. How should she play this? How could she play this? Was there any play left to make? Heโd caught her in a lie, a direct link to the victim.
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
โYes,โ she said quietly. โThose are mine, of course. The sticker.โ
Hawkins nodded, and now Pip understood that look in his eyes and she hated him for it. Heโd trapped her. Heโd caught her. Spun a web she couldnโt see until it was wrapped around her, cutting off her air. Not free, not safe, not free.
โAnd why did a forensic team find your headphones inside Jason Bellโs house?โ
โI-I,โ Pip stuttered. โI honestly cannot tell you. I donโt know. Where were they?โ
โIn his bedroom,โ Hawkins said. โTop drawer of his bedside table.โ
โI donโt understand,โ Pip said, and that wasnโt true because she knew exactly why they were there, how they got there. But she couldnโt find any other words because her mind was busy, the plan shattering into a million pieces, cascading behind her eyes.
โYou said you use your headphones daily?ย All the time,โ he quoted her. โYet you havenโt had contact with Jason Bell since April. So how did your headphones get there?โ
โI donโt know,โ she said, shuffling in her seat. No, donโt shuffle, that makes you look guilty. Stay still, stare back. โI use them all the time, but I havenโt seen them lately โโ
โDefineย lately?โ
โI donโt know, maybe a week or more,โ she said. โMaybe I left them somewhere… I canโt really remember.โ
โNo?โ Hawkins said lightly.
โNo.โ Pip stared him down, but her eyes were weaker than his. Blood on her hands, gun in her heart, bile at the back of her throat and a cage tightening around her, squeezing the skin on her arms. Biting, like the duct tape had. โIโm as confused as you are.โ
โYou have no explanation?โ Hawkins said.
โNo, none,โ Pip said. โI didnโt realize they were missing.โ
โSo, they canโt have been gone long?โ he asked. โMaybe nine or ten days? Could you have lost them on the same day you lost your phone?โ
Pip knew then. He didnโt believe her. He wouldnโt follow the path sheโd created for him. She wasnโt a peripheral outsider to the case any more, there was a direct line between her and Jason. Hawkins had found her, the real her, not the one sheโd planted for him to find. Heโd won.
โI really donโt know,โ Pip said, and the terror was back, that cliff-edge inside her own head, breaths coming faster, throat narrowing. โI guess I can ask my family, see if they remember when they last saw me with the headphones. But I canโt think how this happened.โ
โRight,โ Hawkins said.
She needed to leave, get out before the panic took over her face and she couldnโt hide it any more. She had to leave โ and she could, this interview was voluntary. They couldnโt arrest her. Not yet. The headphones were only circumstantial; theyโd need more.
โIn fact, I probably need to get going. My mumโs taking me shopping for university supplies in a bit. Iโm going this weekend and Iโm not organized yet. Leaving everything to the last minute as sheโd say. Iโll ask my family if they remember when I last had those headphones, and Iโll get back to you on that.โ
She stood up.
โInterview terminated 11:57.โ Hawkins clicked stop on the tape and stood as well, picking up the evidence bag. โIโll walk you out,โ he said.
โNo,โ Pip said from the door. โNo, donโt worry. Been here enough times, I know the way.โ
Back out into that corridor, in the bad, bad place, blood on her hands, blood on her hands, blood on her face and everywhere, marking her out in red as she stumbled outside.
Flipped her laptop over. Panicked fingers, almost dropped it. A screwdriver from her dadโs toolkit. Pip could remove the hard drive, she knew exactly how, put it in the microwave and watch it explode. If they got a warrant and took her computer, they couldnโt see that sheโd been looking into Green Scene before Jason died, or Andieโs second email account, or any connection to Jason or the DT Killer. The time of death was nine thirty to midnight and she had an alibi, she had an alibi, the headphones were just circumstantial and she had an alibi.
She got one screw out before she realized the truth, before it crashed into her, solid and indisputable, stuck through the middle of her chest. She was in denial but the voice at the back of her mind knew, guided her out, slowly, slowly.
It was over.
Pip dropped everything and cried into her hands. But her alibi; the plan had worked, one last part of her protested. No, no. She couldnโt think like that any more, she couldnโt fight, she couldnโt see this through to the end. She could have, if it were just her, but she wasnโt the only one at risk here. Ravi, and Cara and Naomi, and Jamie and Connor and Nat. Theyโd helped her because sheโd asked, because they loved her and she loved them.
And there it was. She loved them, a simple and powerful truth. Pip loved them all and she couldnโt let them fall when she did.
That was the promise.
And if this was it, the beginning of the end, there was only one way Pip knew to protect them all now. She had to make sure they were removed from the narrative before it was uncovered. She had to create a new one, a new story, a new plan.
It hurt to even think of it, to know what it meant for her and the life that sheโd never live.
She had to confess.