Makes me sick.
Thatโs what the text said. From Naomi Ward.
Pip sat up on her bed, clicking on to the photo Naomi sent with the message.
It was a screenshot, from Facebook. A post from Nancy Tangotits: the name of Max Hastingsโ profile. A photo, of Max, his mum and dad and his lawyer, Christopher Epps. They were gathered around a table in a lavish- looking restaurant, white pillars and a giant powder-blue bird cage in the background. Max was holding up the phone to get them all in the frame. And they were smiling, all of them, glasses of champagne in their hands.
Heโd tagged them in at The Savoy Hotel in London, and the caption above read:ย celebratingย . . .
The room immediately started to shrink, closing in around Pip. The walls took an inward step and the shadows in the corners stretched out to take her. She couldnโt be here. She needed to get out before she suffocated inside this room.
She stumbled out of her door, phone in hand, tiptoeing past Joshโs room to the stairs. He was already in bed, but heโd come in to see her earlier, with a whispered, โThought you might be hungry,โ leaving her a packet of Pom- Bears heโd smuggled from the kitchen. โShhh, donโt tell Mum and Dad.โ
Pip could hear the sounds of her parents watching television in the living room, waiting for their programme to start at nine. They were talking, a muffled drone through the door, but she could hear one word clearly: her own name.
Quietly, she stepped into her trainers, scooped up her keys from the side, and slipped out of the front door, shutting it silently behind her.
It was raining, hard, spattering against the ground and up against her ankles. That was fine, that was OK. She needed to get out, clear her head.
And maybe the rain would help, water down the rage until she was no longer ablaze, just the charred parts left behind.
She ran across the road, into the woods on the other side. It was dark here, pitch dark, but it covered her from the worst of the rain. And that was fine too, until something unseen rustled through the undergrowth and scared her. She returned to the road, safe along the moonlit pavement, soaked through. She should have felt cold โ she was shivering โ but she couldnโt really feel it. And she didnโt know where to go. She just wanted to walk, to be outside where nothing could shut her in. So she walked, up to the end of Martinsend Way and back, stopping before she reached her house, turning and walking the road again. Up and down and back again, chasing her thoughts, trying to unravel their ends.
Her hair was dripping by her third time coming back. She stopped dead. There was movement. Someone walking down the front path of Zachโs house. But it wasnโt Zachโs house, not any more. The figure was Charlie Green, carrying a filled black sack towards the bin left out near the path.
He jumped when he saw her emerging from the dark.
โAh, Pip, sorry,โ he said, laughing, dropping the bag in the bin. โYou scared me. Are you โโ He paused, looking at her. โGod, youโre soaking. Why arenโt you wearing a jacket?โ
She didnโt have an answer.
โWell youโre almost home now. Get in and get dry,โ he said kindly.
โI-I . . .โ she stuttered, her teeth chattering. โI canโt go home. Not yet.โ Charlie tilted his head, his eyes searching out hers.
โOh, OK,โ he said awkwardly. โWell, do you want to come to ours, for a bit?โ
โNo. Thank you,โ she added hastily. โI donโt want to be inside.โ
โOh, right.โ Charlie shuffled, glancing back to his house. โWell, uh . . . do you want to sit under the porch, get out of the rain?โ
Pip was about to say no but, actually, maybe she was feeling cold now.
She nodded.
โOK, sure,โ Charlie said, beckoning for her to follow him down the path. They stepped under the covered front steps and he paused. โDo you want a drink or something? A towel?โ
โNo thank you,โ Pip said, sitting herself down on the dry middle step. โRight.โ Charlie nodded, pushing his reddish hair back from his face. โSo,
um, are you OK?โ
โI . . .โ Pip began. โIโve had a bad day.โ
โOh.โ He sat down, on the step below her. โDo you want to talk about it?โ โI donโt really know how,โ she said.
โI, er, I listened to your podcast, and the new episodes about Jamie Reynolds,โ he said. โYouโre really good at what you do. And brave. Whatever it is thatโs bothering you, Iโm sure youโll find a way.โ
โThey found Max Hastings not guilty today.โ
โOh.โ Charlie sighed, stretching out his legs. โShit. Thatโs not good.โ
โTo put it lightly,โ she sniffed, wiping rainwater from the end of her nose. โYou know,โ he said, โfor what itโs worth, the justice system is supposed to be this purveyor of right and wrong, good and bad. But sometimes, I
think it gets it wrong almost as much as it gets it right. Iโve had to learn that, too, and itโs hard to accept. What do you do when the things that are supposed to protect you, fail you like that?โ
โI was so naรฏve,โ Pip said. โI practically handed Max Hastings to them, after everything came out last year. And I truly believed it was some kind of victory, that the bad would be punished. Because it was the truth, and the truth was the most important thing to me. Itโs all I believed in, all I cared about: finding the truth, no matter the cost. And the truth was that Max was guilty and he would face justice. But justice doesnโt exist, and the truth doesnโt matter, not in the real world, and now theyโve just handed him right back.โ
โOh, justice exists,โ Charlie said, looking up at the rain. โMaybe not the kind that happens in police stations and courtrooms, but it does exist. And when you really think about it, those words โ good and bad, right and wrong โ they donโt really matter in the real world. Who gets to decide what they mean: those people who just got it wrong and let Max walk free? No,โ he shook his head. โI think we all get to decide what good and bad and right and wrong mean to us, not what weโre told to accept. You did nothing wrong. Donโt beat yourself up for other peopleโs mistakes.โ
She turned to him, her stomach clenching. โBut that doesnโt matter now.
Max has won.โ
โHe only wins if you let him.โ โWhat can I do about it?โ she asked.
โFrom listening to your podcast, sounds to me like thereโs not much you canโt do.โ
โI havenโt found Jamie.โ She picked at her nails. โAnd now people think heโs not really missing, that I made it all up. That Iโm a liar and Iโm bad and โโ
โDo you care?โ Charlie asked. โDo you care what people think, if you know youโre right?โ
She paused, her answer sliding back down her throat. Why did she care? She was about to say she didnโt care at all, but hadnโt that been the feeling in the pit of her stomach all along? The pit that had been growing these last six months. Guilt about what she did last time, about her dog dying, about not being good, about putting her family in danger, and every day reading the disappointment in her mumโs eyes. Feeling bad about the secrets she was keeping to protect Cara and Naomi. Sheย wasย a liar, that part was true.
And worse, to make herself feel better about it all, sheโd said it wasnโt really her and sheโd never be that person again. That she was different now .
. . good. That sheโd almost lost herself last time and it wouldnโt happen again. But that wasnโt it, was it? She hadnโt almost lost herself, maybe sheโd actually been meeting herself for the very first time. And she was tired of feeling guilty about it. Tired of feeling shame about who she was. She bet Max Hastings had never felt ashamed a day in his life.
โYouโre right,โ she said. And as she straightened up, untwisted, she realized that the pit in her stomach, the one that had been swallowing her from inside out, it was starting to go. Filling in until it was hardly there at all. โMaybe I donโt have to be good, or other peopleโs versions of good. And maybe I donโt have to be likeable.โ She turned to him, her movements quick and light despite her water-heavy clothes. โFuck likeable. You know whoโs likeable? People like Max Hastings who walk into a courtroom with fake glasses and charm their way out. I donโt want to be like that.โ
โSo donโt,โ Charlie said. โAnd donโt give up because of him. Someoneโs life might depend on you. And I know you can find him, find Jamie.โ He turned a smile to her. โOther people might not believe in you but, for what itโs worth, your neighbour from four doors down does.โ
She felt it grow on her face: a smile. Small, flickering out after a moment, but it had been there. And it had been real. โThank you, Charlie.โ Sheโd needed to hear that. All of it. Maybe she wouldnโt have listened, it if had come from anyone close to her. Thereโd been too much anger, too much guilt, too many voices. But she was listening now. โThank you.โ She meant it. And the voice in her head thanked him too.
โNo problem.โ
Pip stood up, out into the downpour, staring up at the moon, its light quivering through the sheets of rain. โI have to go and do something.โ





