She didnโt sit at the front any more. Thatโs where she used to sit, in this classroom, at this very time, when it was Elliot Ward standing at the front, talking them through the economic effects of World War II.
Now it was Mr Clark, the new history teacher whoโd come in after Christmas to take Mr Wardโs place. He was young, maybe not even thirty yet, brown feathered hair and a trimmed beard that was mostly ginger. He was eager, and more than a little enthusiastic about his PowerPoint slide transitions. Sound effects too. It was a bit too early on a Monday morning for exploding hand grenades, though.
Not that Pip was really listening. She was sitting in the back corner. This was her place now, and Connorโs was beside her: that hadnโt changed. Except heโd been late in today, and now he was jiggling his leg as he sat there, also not paying attention.
Pipโs textbook was standing up on her desk, open on page 237, but she wasnโt actually taking notes. The textbook was a shield, hiding her from Mr Clarkโs eyes. Her phone was propped up against the page, earphones plugged in and the cable tucked up the front of her jumper, the wire snaking down her sleeve so the earphone buds rested in her hand. Fully disguised. It must have looked to Mr Clark like Pip was resting her chin in her hand as she scribbled down dates and percentages but really, she was scrolling through calamity party files.
A new wave of emails with attachments had come in late last night and this morning. Word must have started to spread about Jamie. But still no
photos in the location and time-window she needed. Pip glanced up: five minutes until the bell, enough time to go through another email.
The next one was from Hannah Revens, from Pipโs English class.
Hey Pip, it said.ย Someone told me this morning youโre looking for Connorโs missing brother and that he was at the calamity on Friday. This video is super embarrassing โ apparently I sent it to my boyfriend at 9:49 when I was already super drunk โ please donโt show it to anyone. But thereโs a guy in the background I donโt recognize. See you at school x
A prickle of nervous energy crawled up the back of Pipโs neck. The time window, and a guy Hannah doesnโt recognize. This could be it: the break. She thumbed on to the attached file and pressed play.
The sound blared into her ear: loud music, a horde of chattering voices, bursts of jeering and cheering that must have come from the beer pong game in the dining room. But this video was taken in the living room. Hannahโs face took up most of the frame, pointing the phone down at herself from an outstretched arm. She was leaning against the back of a sofa, opposite the one Jasveen was sitting on at 9:38 p.m., the end of which was just visible in the background.
Hannah was alone, the dog filter from Instagram applied to her face, pointy brown ears buried in her hair, following her as she swung her head around. The new Ariana Grande song was playing, and Hannah was lip- synching to it.ย Veryย dramatically. Air grabs and eyes screwed shut when the song demanded it.
This wasnโt a joke, was it? Pip kept watching, searching the scene behind Hannahโs head. She recognized two of the faces back there: Joseph Powrie and Katya Juckes. And judging by the positions of the sofas, they must have been standing in front of the fireplace, which hadnโt quite made it into the shot. They were talking to another girl with her back to the camera. Long dark straightened hair, jeans. That could be dozens of people Pip knew.
The clip was almost finished, the blue line creeping along the progress bar towards the end. Six seconds to go. And thatโs when two things happened at the exact same time. The girl with the long brown hair turned, started to walk away from the fireplace, towards Hannahโs camera. Simultaneously, from the other side of the frame, a person crossed towards her, walking quickly so all you really catch is the blur of their shirt and a head floating above. A burgundy shirt.
As the two figures were about to collide, Jamie reached out to tap the girl on the shoulder.
The video ended.
โShit,โ Pip whispered into her sleeve, drawing Connorโs attention. She knew exactly who that girl was.
โWhat?โ he hissed. โ โSomeoneโ.โ โHuh?โ
The bell rang and the metallic sound sliced right through her, making her wince. Her hearing was always more sensitive on not-enough sleep.
โIn the hall,โ she said, packing her textbook into her bag and disentangling herself from the earphones. She stood up and shouldered her bag, missing whatever homework task Mr Clark was assigning them.
Being at the back meant being last to leave, waiting impatiently for everyone else to spill out of the classroom. Connor followed Pip into the corridor and she guided him over to the far wall.
โWhat is it?โ Connor asked.
Pip unwound her earphones, jamming them one by one into Connorโs pointy ears.
โOuch, be careful, would you?โ He closed his hands around his ears to keep the sound in as Pip held up her phone for him and pressed play. A tiny smirk flickered across his face. โWow, thatโs embarrassing,โ he said after a few seconds. โIs that why you wanted to show mโโ
โObviously not,โ she said. โWait for the end.โ
And when it came, his eyes narrowed and he said, โStella Chapman?โ โYep.โ Pip tugged the earphones out of his ears too hard, making him
ouchย again. โStella Chapman must be the โsomeoneโ he spotted at the memorial and followed to the party.โ
Connor nodded. โSo what do we do now?โ
โFind her at lunch and talk to her. Ask how they know each other, what they talked about. Why Jamie followed her.โ
โOK, good,โ Connor said, and his face changed slightly, like the muscles beneath had shifted, loosened. โThis is good, right?โ
โYeah,โ she said, thoughย goodย might not be the right word. But at least they were finally getting somewhere.
โStella?โ
โOh, hi,โ Stella replied, mid-mouthful of Twix. She narrowed her brown almond-shaped eyes, her perfect cheekbones made even sharper by the bronzer sheโd swiped over her tanned skin.
Pip had known exactly where to wait for her. They were locker neighbours, Chapman just six doors over from Fitz-Amobi, and they greeted each other most mornings, their hellos always book-ended by the awful screech of Stellaโs locker door. Pip was ready for it this time, as Stella opened the door and deposited some books inside.
โWhatโs up?โ Stellaโs eyes trailed away, over Pipโs shoulder to where Connor was standing, boxing her in. He looked ridiculous, hands on his hips like he was some kind of bodyguard. Pip flashed him an angry look until he stepped back and relaxed.
โYou on the way to lunch?โ asked Pip. โI was wondering if I could talk to you about something.โ
โEr, yeah, Iโm heading to the cafeteria. Whatโs wrong?โ
โNothing,โ Pip said, casually, walking Stella down the hall. โJust wondered whether I could borrow you for a few minutes first. In here?โ Pip halted, pushing open the door of a maths classroom sheโd already checked was empty.
โWhy?โ The suspicion was clear in Stellaโs voice.
โMy brotherโs missing,โ Connor butted in, hands going to his hips again. Was he trying to look intimidating? Because it wasnโt working for him at all. Pip glared at him again; normally he was good at reading her eyes.
โYou mightโve heard that Iโm looking into his disappearance?โ Pip said. โI just have a few questions for you about Jamie Reynolds.โ
โIโm sorry.โ Stella shuffled uncomfortably, picking at the ends of her hair. โI donโt know him.โ
โBuโโ Connor started but Pip cut him off.
โJamie was at the calamity party on Friday. Itโs currently the last time he was seen,โ she said. โIโve found a video in which Jamie comes over to talk to you at the party. I just want to know what you talked about, how you know each other. Thatโs all.โ
Stella didnโt answer, but her face said everything she wouldnโt: her eyes widened, lines disturbing her smooth forehead.
โWe really need to find him, Stella,โ Pip said gently. โHe could be in trouble, real trouble, and anything that happened that night might help us
work out where heโs gone. Itโs . . . itโs life or death,โ she said, refusing to look Connorโs way.
Stella chewed her lip, eyes spooling as she made up her mind. โOK,โ she said.
Stella: Is this OK?
Pip: Yes, great, I can hear you perfectly. So can we just go over how you know Jamie Reynolds?
Stella: I . . . um, I donโt . . . know him.
Connor:ย [INAUDIBLE]
Pip: Connor, you canโt talk while weโre recording.
Connor:ย [INAUDIBLE]
Stella: Um . . . I . . . I . . .
Pip: Actually, Connor, why donโt you go on ahead to lunch? Iโll see you there. Connor:ย [INAUDIBLE]
Pip: Oh no, really, I insist.ย Connor. Iโll meet you there. Go on. Oh, close the door please. Thank you. Sorry about that, heโs just worried about his brother.
Stella: Yeah, thatโs OK, I get it. I just didnโt want to talk about his brother right in front of him, yโknow? Itโs weird.
Pip: I understand. Itโs better this way. So, how do you know Jamie?
Stella: Iย reallyย donโt know him. At all. That time on Friday, that was the first time I ever spoke to him. I didnโt know who he was until I saw the posters on my way to school this morning.
Pip: Let me play this clip for you. Ignore Hannahโs face. You see, in the background, you walk away from Katya and then Jamie comes over to you.
Stella: Yeah, he did. It was, um . . . strange. Really strange. I think there must have been a misunderstanding or something. Or he was confused.
Pip: What do you mean? What did he want to talk to you about?
Stella: Well, like you can see there, he tapped me on the shoulder, so I turned to him and he said, โLeila, itโs you.โ And so I was like, โNo, Iโm Stella.โ But he carried on, he was like: โLeila, itโs really you,โ and he wasnโt listening when I said, โNo, thatโs not me.โ
Pip: Leila?
Stella: Yeah. He was pretty insistent so then I was like, โSorry, I donโt know you,โ and began to walk away and he said something like, โLeila, itโs me, Jamie. I almost didnโt recognize you because youโve changed your hair.โ So, I was really confused at this point. And he also looked really confused, and then he asked me what I was doing at a high-school party anyway. By this point he was freaking me out a bit, so I said to him, โIโm not called Leila, my nameโs Stella and I donโt know who you are or what youโre talking about. Leave me alone or Iโll scream.โ And then I walked away. That was it. He didnโt say anything else or follow me. He actually looked really sad when I left, but I donโt know why. I still donโt understand what was going on, what he meant. If it was some like weird creepy pick-up tactic, I dunno. Heโs older, right?
Pip: Yes, heโs twenty-four. So wait, let me get this straight: he calls you Leila, multiple times, saying, โItโs me, Jamie,โ when you donโt seem to recognize him. Then he comments that youโve changed your hair โ
Stella: Which I havenโt, my hairโs been the same since, like, forever.
Pip: Right, and then he also asks you: โWhat are you doing at a high-school party?โ Stella: Yeah, basically those exact words. Why? What are you thinking?
Pip: Stella . . . on your social media, like on Insta, do you have a lot of pictures of yourself? Like selfies, or photos where itโs just you in the shot?
Stella: Well, yeah, I do. Most of them. Whatโs wrong with that? Pip: Nothing. How many photos have you posted of just you? Stella: I donโt know, loads. Why?
Pip: How many followers do you have?
Stella: Not that many. Around eight hundred-ish? Why, Pip? Whatโs wrong?
Pip: I, um, I think . . . it sounds to me like Jamie might have been talking to a catfish. Stella: A catfish?
Pip: Someone whoโs been using your photos, calls themselves Leila.
Stella: Oh. You know, that actually makes a lot of sense, now youโve said it. Yeah, it definitely seemed as though Jamie thought he knew me, and the way he was talking like he expected me to know him too. As if weโd spoken many times before. Clearly never in real life, though.
Pip: Yes. And if it is a catfish, maybe theyโve edited your photos somehow, hence the โchanged your hairโ comment. I think Jamie spotted you at the memorial, well . . . he spotted who he thought was Leila, and it was the first time heโd seen her in real life, but he was confused because you looked different. I think he then followed you when you walked to the calamity party, waiting for an opportunity to speak to you. But he was also confused about why you were there, at a high-school party, hanging round with eighteen-year-olds, so Iโm guessing this Leila told him she was older, in her twenties.
Stella: Yes, that makes total sense. That all fits. A catfish. Thatโs so obvious now. Oh god, I feel bad about what I said, now I know he wasnโt trying to be creepy. And he looked so crushed afterwards. He must have worked it out, right? Realized then that Leila wasnโt real, that sheโd been lying to him?
Pip: Seems like it.
Stella: So, heโs missing now? Likeย missingย missing?
Pip: Yeah, heโsย missingย missing. Right after he found out someoneโs been catfishing him.
Dear Pippa Fitz-Amobi
Hello, my nameโs Harry Scythe. Iโm a big fan of your podcast
โ great job with the first season! So I live in Kilton and currently work at the bookshop (where Iโm emailing from now). I was working Friday afternoon and after we closed up, me and a few work friends went to the memorial โ didnโt really know Andie or Sal, but itโs nice to show up, I think. And then we went to my mateโs house on Wyvil Road for some takeaway / beers.
Anyway, when we were leaving at the end of the night, Iโm pretty sure we saw your guy, Jamie Reynolds, walking past. Iโm like, 98% sure it was him, and since seeing your posters up this morning, I spoke to my friends and they think it was him too.
So I thought I should let you know ASAP. Me and two of my friends who were also there are working now, so feel free to contact us / come in and talk, if this information is at all useful to your investigation.
Yours sincerely, Harry
Subject: Sighting of Jamie Reynolds
To:ย [email protected]
2:41 p.m.