Or it could be someone we haven’t found yet, someone waiting in the wings, preparing for their starring role in this project. Someone like Stanley Forbes, maybe? I know there’s no direct link between him and Andie so he doesn’t make thePOIlist. But doesn’t it seem a little fluky that he’s the journalist who wrote scathing articles about Andie’s ‘killer boyfriend’ and now he’s dating her little sisterandI saw him giving money to the same drug dealer who had supplied Andie? Or are these coincidences? I don’t trust coincidences.
Persons of Interest
Jason Bell
Naomi Ward
Secret Older Guy
Nat da Silva
Daniel da Silva
Max Hastings
Howie Bowers
Twenty-One
‘Barney-Barney-Barney plops,’ Pip sang, both the dog’s front paws in her hands as they danced around the dining table. Then her mum’s old CD got stuck in a surface scratch, telling them tohit the road, Ja-Ja-Ja-Ja-Ja. . .
‘Awful sound.’ Pip’s mum, Leanne, entered with a dish of roasted potatoes, placing them on a trivet on the table. ‘Skip to the next one, Pips,’ she said, leaving the room again.
Pip set Barney down and prodded the button on the CD player; that last relic of the twentieth century that her mum was not ready to give up for touch screens and Bluetooth speakers. Fair enough; even watching her use the TV remote was painful.
‘Have you carved, Vic?’ Leanne shouted, backing into the room with a bowl of steaming broccoli and peas, a small knob of butter melting on top.
‘The poultry is pared, my fair lady,’ came his response.
‘Josh! Dinner’s ready,’ Leanne called.
Pip went to help her dad carry in the plates and the roast chicken, Josh sidling in behind them.
‘You finished your homework, sweetie?’ Mum asked Josh as they all took their acknowledged seats at the table. Barney’s place was on the floor beside Pip, a co-conspirator in her mission to drop small bits of meat when her parents weren’t looking.
Pip nipped in and grabbed the potato dish before her dad could beat her to it. He, like Pip, was a spud connoisseur.
‘Joshua, may you bestow the Bisto upon your father?’
When each of their plates were loaded up and everyone had dug in, Leanne turned to Pip, her fork pointed at her. ‘When’s the deadline for sending in your UCAS application then?’
‘The fifteenth,’ Pip said. ‘I’m going to try to send it in a couple of days. Be a tad early.’
‘Have you spent enough time on your personal statement? All you ever seem to be doing is that EPQ at the moment.’
‘When am I ever not on top of things?’ Pip said, spearing a particularly overgrown broccoli stump, theSequoiadendron giganteumtree of the broccoli world. ‘If I ever miss a deadline, it will be because the apocalypse has started.’
‘OK, well, Dad and I can read it through after dinner if you want?’
‘Yep, I’ll print a copy.’
The train whistle of Pip’s phone blared, making Barney jump and her mum scowl.
‘No phones at the table,’ she said.
‘Sorry,’ Pip said. ‘I’m just putting it on silent.’
It could very well be the start of one of Cara’s lengthy monologues sent line by line, where Pip’s phone became a station out of hell, all the trains in a frenzied scram screaming over each other. Or maybe it was Ravi. She pulled out the phone and looked down at the screen in her lap to flick the ringer button.