Jenโs eyes open. She is in bed. And itโs the twenty-sixth.
Itโs Day Minus Three.
She goes to the picture window. Itโs raining outside. Where is this going to end? Cycling back โ what, for ever? Until she ceases to exist?
She needs to know the rules. That is what any lawyer would do.
Understand the statute, the framework, and then you can play the game. All she knows so far is that nothing has worked. She can only infer from travelling backwards that she hasnโt managed to stop the crime. Surely.
Stop the crime, stop the time loop. Thatย mustย be the key.
She hastily refreshes her email, looking for a reply from Andy Vettese, but thereโs nothing. She goes downstairs to find Todd hunting for something.
โOn the top of the TV unit,โ Jen says. She knows he will be looking for his physics folder. She knows because sheโs his mother, but she also knows because this has already happened.
โAh, thanks.โ He throws her a self-conscious grin. โQuantum today.โ God, he towers over her. He used to be many feet shorter than her, would reach
his arm right up vertically when he was on the school run, his warm hand always finding hers. Heโd get frustrated if she couldnโt take it, when she was fussing with her handbag or reaching to press the button on the traffic
lights. She had felt guilty each time. Itโs crazy the things mothers feel guilt over.
And now look, over a foot taller than her and refusing to meet her gaze.
Maybe she had been right to feel guilty, she thinks hopelessly. Maybe she should have never done anything except hold his hand. She could come up with a thousand maternal crimes: letting him watch too much television, sleep-training him โ the lot, she thinks bitterly.
โDo you know who Joseph Jones is?โ she says quietly, watching him carefully. Not to see if he tells her, but to see if he lies about it, which she thinks he will. A motherโs instincts are better than any lawyerโs.
Todd puffs air into his cheeks, then plugs his phone in the charger on the kitchen island. โNope,โ he says, a studied frown crossing his features. Heโs never once charged his phone there before school. He charges it overnight. โWhy?โ he asks.
Jen appraises him. Interesting. He could have easily said, โClioโs uncleโs friend,โ but he chose not to. Just as she expected.
She hesitates, not wanting to do something big, wanting to plan her moment. โDoesnโt matter,โ she says.
โAlrighty. Mysterious Jen. More a question than an axiom. Shower time.โ Todd leaves his phone charging. Jen stands there in the kitchen, without a theory, without a hope, and with the only person who might be able to help lying to her.
She glances at the stairs. Sheโs got between five and twenty minutes.
Todd sometimes takes long and contemplative showers, sometimes quick ones, rushing so much to get dressed afterwards that his clothes stick to his wet skin. She tries to get into his phone but fails the PIN request twice.
She dashes upstairs. Sheโll search his room instead. Sheโs got to find something useful.
Toddโs room is a dark cave, painted bottle green. Curtains closed. A double bed with a tartan cover on it sits underneath the window. A
television faces the bed. There is a desk in the corner, underneath the stairs that lead up to her and Kellyโs bedroom. Itโs neat but not cosy: the way many men keep their spaces. A black lamp and a MacBook sit on the
otherwise empty desk; an exercise bike leans against the far wall.
She opens his laptop, and fails that password log-in twice, too. She looks around his bedroom, thinking how best she can use the time.
Frantically, she opens his desk drawers and the ones in his bedside tables and looks under the bed. She pulls the duvet back and feels around in the bottom of the wardrobe. She just knows sheโs going to find something. She can feel it. Something damning. Something she can never forget.
She ransacks the room. Sheโll never be able to get it straight again, but she doesnโt care.
Sheโs already wasted six minutes. One unit of legal time: an hour divided into tenths. Her gaze lands on his Xbox. Heโs always on it. He must talk to some people on there. Itโs worth a shot.
She powers it up, listening out for the shower, then navigates to the messenger section. Itโs a dark world in there. Messages with random people about spooky games, fighting games, games where you earn enough points to buy knives to stab other players with โฆ
She goes to the recent sent items, which has two messages in. One to User78630 and one to Connor18. The first says:ย okay. The one to Connor says:ย 11pm Iโll drop it off?
She will ask Pauline about Connor. See if heโs wrapped up in anything. It seems too much of a coincidence that they have started spending time together just as Todd goes off the rails. And 11 p.m. drop-offs โฆ that doesnโt sound good.
She turns off the console and leaves Toddโs room. Seconds later, he opens the bathroom door.
They meet on the landing. He has only a towel around his waist.
She meets his eyes, but he doesnโt hold her gaze for long. She canโt gauge his mood. She recalls his facial expression from the night of the murder. There wasnโt any remorse on it, not anywhere, not even a bit.
Whatโs the point in going to the office if, when she wakes up tomorrow, it will be yesterday? There is, for the first time in Jenโs adult life, no point in working at all. She muses on this while feeding Henry VIII.
She tries calling a number she finds listed for Andy Vettese but gets no answer. She googles him again. He won some science award yesterday, for a paper on black holes. She emails two more people who have written
theses on time travel.
She thinks about how to convince her husband of what is happening.
Jen sighs and eventually finds a legal pad full of notes on a case that doesnโt seem to matter much right now. All she can hear is the soft hum of the heating.
In the notebook, she writesย Day Minus Three.ย What I know, she writes underneath that.
Joseph Jonesโs name, his full address Clio may be involved
Connor drop-offs?
It isnโt a lot.
For the first time in years, Jen is on the school run. The green school gates are clotted with parents. Cliques, loners, people dressed up, people very much dressed down โ the lot. Jen would usually spend her time at the school gate paranoid everybody was talking about her but, today, she
wishes she had done this more often. For starters, itโs fascinating.
She spots Pauline immediately. She is alone, has lately been insisting on collecting Connor so she knows heโs been to school โ he was recently told off for skiving โ and then goes on to get her youngest, Theo. She is wearing a denim jacket and a huge scarf, is staring down at her phone, her legs crossed at the ankles.
โI thought Iโd try one of these school-run things,โ Jen says to her. โIโm genuinely honoured,โ Pauline says, looking up with a laugh.
โEveryone here is a dick. Honestly โ Marioโs mum has a Mulberry handbag with her. For the school run.โ
Pauline is one of Jenโs easiest friends. Jen did her divorce, three years ago, separating her neatly from her cheating husband, Eric. Pauline had turned up at Jenโs firm for an initial consultation, screenshots of Ericโs infidelity in hand. Jen had known of her from the school but had never spoken to her. She made Pauline a tea and very professionally looked at the damning texts, sent from Eric to his mistress, and said sheโd take Paulineโs case on.
โSorry you had to see them,โ Pauline had said in Jenโs office, pocketing her phone and sipping the tea.
โYes, well, itโs good to have the โ er โ evidence,โ Jen had said. And, despite herself โ her stiff suit, the corporate surrounds โ she felt her expression falter. โHowever โ um โฆ graphic.โ
Pauline met her eyes for just a second. โSo do you attach dick pics to the court petition?โ she had said and, right there in Jenโs office, they had exploded into laughter. โThat was the first time Iโd laughed since I found them,โ Pauline had said sincerely, later. And, just like that, a friendship was
born, out of tragedy and humour, as they often are. Jen had been so pleased when Connor and Todd had become friends, too. Until now.
โWell, youโve got me, here, unwashed,โ Jen says.
Pauline smiles and scuffs a Converse shoe on the floor. โYou not working today?โ
Todd appears in the distance, loping along with Connor, one of the only students who is taller than him. Thicker set, too, a unit of a kid.
โNo.โ
โHowโs things? Howโs your enigma of a husband?โ โListen,โ Jen says, skipping past the small talk.
โUh-oh,โ Pauline says. โI donโt like that lawyerlyย listen.โ
โNothing to worry about,โ she says lightly. โTodd is, I think โ maybe โ caught up in something โฆโ
โIn what?โ Pauline says, suddenly serious. For all her humour, she is a formidable mother where it matters. She will tolerate smoking and
swearing, Jen thinks, but nothing worse. Look at her here: checking Connor has made it to school.
โI donโt know โ I just โฆ Todd is acting strangely. And I just wondered โ has Connor?โ
Pauline tilts her head back just a fraction. โI see.โ โExactly.โ
More parents begin to gather around them by the gates. Eleven-year-olds and fifteen-year-olds greet their parents and Jen thinks how sheโs only done this a handful of times, instead choosing to sift through disclosure at the office, appraising trainees, making bundles of documents. Earning money. She wonders, now, quite what it was all for.
โHe seems fine โฆโ Pauline says slowly, and Jen is so thankful, suddenly, here, for her friend, who has understood the subtext and chosen not to take offence. โBut let me do some digging,โ she adds, right before Connor and Todd arrive.
โAll right,โ Connor says to Jen. He has a tattoo that looks like a necklace, rosary beads maybe, disappearing into the neck of his T-shirt. Tattoos are personal choice, Jen tells herself. Stop being snobby.
He takes his cigarettes out of his pocket, which Jen is relieved to see
Pauline wince at. He flares the lighter while still staring at Jen. The flame
illuminates his face for the briefest of moments. He gives her a wink, so fast youโd miss it if you werenโt looking for it.
Itโs been a difficult evening. Todd left as soon as he got home; โGoing to Clioโs,โ he said. He had been irritated by Jenโs appearance at the school pick-up, and annoyed with Kelly, too. โCan either of you two get hobbies?โ heโd said, when they were all at home by four oโclock.
After he left, Jen looked up Clio on Facebook. She is a couple of years older than Todd, but in education still. An art college nearby. Her page is meticulously curated. Model-like shots of her, a strangely high number of political memes, a lot of bunches of flowers. Pretty innocuous teenage stuff. Jen is going to go and see her, soon, she has decided. To talk to her.
She tidies up, thinking about what Pauline might find. Itโs useless to clean, she acknowledges, as she scrubs at the kitchen countertops and stacks the dishwasher. When she wakes up, yesterday, none of this will have been done, but isnโt that kind of always the way housework feels?
Pauline calls her twenty minutes later. โI have spoken to Connor,โ she says. She always speaks without any introduction at all, always gets straight to the point. โAnd Iโve done some digging.โ
โShoot.โ Her arms feel chilled as she draws the curtains across their patio doors.
โIโve checked Connorโs phone. Nothing suspicious. A few unfortunate photographs. Takes after his father.โ
โJesus.โ
โWhatโs going on with Todd?โ
โHe seems to know these older men โ an uncle and friend of his new girlfriend. Thereโs a weird vibe at their house. Plus, they own a company called Cutting & Sewing Ltd. Itโs brand new, no turnover, no accounts. I think itโs got to be a front. Pretty unusual for two blokes to set up a sewing company, right?โ
โRight. That โฆ all?โ
Jen sighs. Obviously not, but the rest is unbelievable. A dark underworld ending in a murder that sheโs got to crack open. She turns away from the patio doors, spooked.
And thatโs when it comes to her. Just like that. The news story she watched yesterday, the road traffic accident. It happens tonight, is on tomorrowโs news. She can use it. She can use it to convince the person she needs to confide in the most. If she can convince Kelly, maybe it will break the cycle, break the time loop, and sheโll wake up on tomorrow.
โIโll be in touch,โ she tells Pauline. โDonโt worry. Itโs โ itโs nothing, probably,โ she adds, wondering why she has always felt the need to do that. To be easy-going, not to worry people, to beย good.
โHope so,โ Pauline says.
Kelly wanders into the kitchen, much later, after ten at night. โWhat?โ Kelly says curiously, catching her expression. โWhatโs up?โ โWill you come somewhere with me?โ she says.
โNow?โ he asks. He looks at her for a beat. โYou in full madtown?โ he says with a small, wry smile. After they first met, and went travelling
around the UK in a little camper van, they lived for years in the Lancashire countryside, just the three of them, in a little white house with a grey slate roof at the bottom of a valley that caught the mist in the winter like a
candyfloss hat. Jenโs favourite ever house. Kelly had coined this term back then, when she used to come home and download her entire working day to him. Sheโd never needed anybody else.
โTotally,โ she says.
โCome on then. We can walk.โ
Their gazes meet, and Jen wonders what she might be about to set in motion, wonders whether the future is different, now. Wonders if, together, they might make it worse, if there is some alternative future unspooling as she stands here, motionless, in her kitchen, where Todd himself is murdered, where he runs away, where he attacks more than one person.
Jen pushes open the front door. Sheโs excited for it. To present him with actual, tangible proof.
The night air is chilly and damp, the same as it was on that first night. It smells of the mildew of autumn.
โI have something to say to you, and I know how youโre going to react, because Iโve already told you,โ she says. Kellyโs hand is warm in hers. The road is slick with rain. Jenโs getting better at this explanation.
โIs this about work?โ Kelly is used to Jen asking him about work, theorizing at him, though mostly all he does is listen. Just last week, she asked him about Mr Mahoney, who wanted to give his ex-wife his entire pension, just to save the battle. Kelly had shrugged and said avoiding pain was priceless to some.
โNo.โ And there, in the darkness, she tells him everything in total detail.
Again. She tells him about the first time, and then the day before it, and then the day before that. He listens, his eyes on her, the way he always has.
He doesnโt speak for a few moments after sheโs finished. Just leans there, against the road sign, close to where the accident is due to happen, appearing to be lost in thought. Eventually, he seems to come to a conclusion, and says, โWould you believe this, if it were me?โ
โNo.โ
He barks out a laugh. โRight.โ
โI promise,โ she says, โon everything we stand for, all our history โ that I am telling you the truth. Todd murders somebody this Saturday โ late. And Iโm moving back in time to stop it.โ
Kelly is silent for a minute. It begins to drizzle again. He pushes his hair off his forehead as it gets wet. โWhy are we here?โ
โFor me to prove it to you. A carโs going to come along here, soon,โ she says, gesturing to the dark, quiet street. โItโll lose control and flip on to its side. It was just on the news last night. My tomorrow. The owner escapes, totally unharmed. Itโs a black Audi. It flips over there. It wonโt go near us.โ
Kelly rubs a hand along his jaw. โOkay,โ he says again, dismissive, confused. Together, they lean back on the road sign, side by side.
Just as she is beginning to think the car wonโt come, it does. Jen hears it first. A distant, speeding rumble. โHere it is.โ
Kelly looks at her. The rain has intensified. His hair begins to drip.
And then it rounds the corner. A black Audi, fast, out of control. The driver clearly reckless, drunk, both. Its engine sounds like gunfire as it passes them. Kelly watches it, his eyes fixed on it. His expression inscrutable.
Kelly pulls his hood up with one hand, against the downpour, just as the car flips. A metallic crunch and skid. The horn goes.
Then nothing. A beat of silence while the car smokes, then the owner emerges, wide-eyed. Heโs maybe fifty, ambles across the road to them.
โYouโre lucky to be out of that,โ Jen says. Kellyโs eyes are back on her.
Disbelief, but also a weird kind of panic seems to radiate from him.
โI know,โ the man says to Jen. He pats his legs, like heโs unable to believe that heโs really fine.
Kelly shakes his head. โI donโt understand this.โ
โA neighbour is about to come out, to offer help,โ Jen commentates. Kelly waits, saying nothing, one foot against the leg of the street sign,
arms folded. A door slams somewhere.
โIโve called an ambulance,โ a voice says a few houses down.
โDo you believe me yet?โ she says to Kelly.
โI canโt think of any other explanation,โ he says after a few seconds. โBut this is โ this isย mental.โ
โI know that. Of course I know that.โ She squares herself in front of him so she can look directly into his eyes. โBut I promise. I promise, I promise, Iย promiseย itโs true.โ
Kelly makes a gesture, down the street, and they walk, but not home.
They stroll aimlessly, together, in the rain. Jen thinks he might believe her. Truly. And wonโt that do something, surely? If Toddโs other parent believes it. Maybe Kelly will wake up with her, yesterday for him, too. Itโs a long shot, but she has to try it.
โThis is completely batshit,โ he says. His eyes catch the overhead lights as they move. โThere is no way you couldโve known about that car. Is there?โ She can see him trying to work it out.
โNo. I mean โ literally, no.โ
โI canโt see how โฆโ His breath mists up the air in front of him. โI just donโt โฆโ
โI know.โ
They take a left, then walk down an alleyway, past their favourite Indian takeaway, then start a slow loop back towards home.
Eventually, he takes her hand in his. โIf itโs true, it must be horrible,โ he says.
Thatย if. Jen loves it. It is a small step, a small concession from husband to wife. โIt is horrible,โ she says thickly. As she thinks over the past few days of panic and alienation, her eyes moisten and a tear tracks its way down her cheek. She stares at their feet as they walk the streets in perfect sync. Kelly must be watching her, because he stops and wipes the tear away with a thumb.
โIโll try,โ he says simply, softly, to her. โIโll try to believe you.โ
When they get in, he pulls up a stool at the breakfast bar, sitting at it with his knees spread, his elbows on the counter, his eyes on her, brows raised.
โDo you have a theory? On this โ Joseph?โ Kelly says.
Henry VIII jumps on to the kitchen island and Jen gathers him to her, his fur soft, his body so fat and yielding, and puts her hands around him, like cupping a bowl. Sheโs so glad to be here. With Kelly. Sharing the same spot in the universe together, confiding in him.
โI mean โ no. But the night Todd stabbed him. Itโs like he sees this Joseph, then just โ he just panics. And does it.โ
โSo heโs afraid of him.โ
โYes!โ Jen says. โThatโs exactly it.โ She looks at her husband. โSo you believe me?โ
โMaybe Iโm humouring you,โ he says languidly, but she doesnโt think so. โLook โ I made these notes,โ she says, jumping up and grabbing the
notepad. Kelly joins her on the sofa in their kitchen. โTheyโre โ I mean, theyโre pretty scant.โ
Kelly looks at the page, then laughs, a tiny exhale of a sound. โOh dear, oh dear. These areย veryย scant.โ
โStop it, or I wonโt tell you the lottery numbers,โ Jen says, and itโs so nice, itโs so nice to laugh about it. Itโs so nice to be back here, in their easy dynamic.
โOh yeah โ all right. Look. Letโs write down every possible reason he could have for doing this. Even the mad ones.โ
โSelf-defence, loss of control, conspiracy,โ Jen says. โWorking as a โ I donโt know, a hitman.โ
โThis isnโt James Bond.โ
โAll right, cross that one out.โ
Kelly laughs as he scratches a line throughย hitman. โAliens?โ โStop it,โ Jen says, through laughter.
They make more and more and more lists as the night draws on. All his friends, all his acquaintances that she could speak to.
On the dimly lit sofa, Jenโs body sags. She leans into Kelly, whose arm immediately snakes around her.
โWhen will you โ I donโt know. Go?โ โWhen I sleep.โ
โSo letโs stay up.โ โTried that one.โ
She stays there, listening to his breathing slow. She can feel hers slowing, too. But sheโs happy to go, today. Sheโs happy she got today, with him.
โWhat would you do?โ she asks, turning to look at him.
Kelly folds his lips in on themselves, an expression on his face that Jen canโt read. โYou sure you want to know that?โ
โOf course I do,โ she says, though, for just a second, she wonders if she really does. Kellyโs sense of humour can be dark but โ just sometimes โ his
very core self can seem this way, too. If Jen had to describe it, sheโd say she expects the best of people, and Kelly expects the worst.
โIโd kill him,โ he says softly. โJoseph?โ Jen says, her jaw slack.
โYeah.โ He pulls his eyes away from whatever heโs looking at and meets her gaze. โYeah, Iโd kill him myself, this Joseph, if I could get away with it.โ
โSo that Todd couldnโt,โ she says in almost a whisper. โExactly.โ
She shivers, totally chilled by this incisive thought, this edge her husband sometimes exhibits. โBut could you?โ
Kelly shrugs, looking out at the dark garden. He doesnโt intend to answer this question, Jen can tell.
โSo tomorrow,โ he murmurs, pulling her back close to him, against his body. โItโll be yesterday for you, tomorrow for me?โ
โThatโs right,โ she says sadly, but thinking privately that maybe it wonโt be, that maybe telling him has avoided that fate, somehow. Kellyโs quiet; heโs falling asleep. Jenโs blinks get longer.
They are here, tonight, together, even if they might part again tomorrow, like two passengers on two trains going in opposite directions.