One Small Mistake

‘Ada,’ he greeted me, his smile forced.

‘Jack,’ I returned with a short nod. Only then did I notice the yellowing bruise around his eye. ‘What happened to your face?’

‘Bike accident.’

‘I didn’t know you had a motorcycle.’ Though I wouldn’t be surprised.

‘No motorcycle, those days are long gone.’

Of course they are, seeing as the image he plumps for now is squeaky-clean golden boy. ‘Just a regular old push bike then?’

He nodded. ‘That’s right. What’re you doing out this way?’

I was flustered; I hadn’t even thought to prepare an answer to this question, so sure I wouldn’t bump into anyone I knew. ‘I’m avoiding people,’ I said honestly. ‘With what’s happened to Elodie and with Dad being arrested, it’s just easier to drive that little bit further out.’

‘And how is Martin?’

‘Fine. With Mum in Kent, taking a little break.’

‘Well, Richard got what was coming to him. I warned him not to sell any stories on Elodie, but he did it anyway.’

I frowned. ‘You knew before the article came out?’

‘I went to school with the editor of The Crosshaven Herald. He mentioned it.’

And then it hit me: that day at my house when I caught Dad and Jack talking in the hallway right before Dad stormed off, it was because Jack told him Richard was going to the papers. Jack wound our dad up like one of those clapping monkeys and let him march directly into the line of fire. ‘You used my dad,’ I levelled at him.

‘I’m sorry?’

‘You couldn’t stop Richard from selling his story, so you used my dad to get revenge.’

I caught the surprise on his face that I’d put it together, then the quirk to his lips as he realised I couldn’t prove my theory even though I was right.

‘You did, didn’t you?’ I pressed. He didn’t answer. He turned and started browsing the products as though I wasn’t even there. ‘Come on, Jack, it’s not like you to avoid confrontation.’ He started walking away. I followed. ‘Well?’

‘He deserved to know.’

We turned past the bakery, the inviting aroma of fresh bread doing nothing to soothe my rage. ‘How could you do that to my family?’

He stopped just before the checkout and said, ‘Ada, I can’t take responsibility for Martin’s behaviour. He’s an adult – what he did with that information was his choice.’

God, Elodie, he’s a condescending, arrogant bastard. As he turned to dismiss me once more, I reached out and snatched his basket from him. ‘I see you, Jack. Don’t think I don’t because I do.’

He smirked, then reached out and took the basket from my hand. As he did, I looked at it and saw, among a few ready meals, was a bag of cherry cola bottles and a box of tampons. An alarm went off in my head: SOMETHING’S NOT RIGHT! SOMETHING’S NOT RIGHT! He saw me eyeing the contents of his shopping and smoothly dropped the basket to his side, out of view. Too late. I’d already seen. It occurred to me then, I’d been so distracted by my own panic at being asked why I was so far out of town that I hadn’t returned the question.

‘So why aren’t you shopping locally, Jack?’ I asked evenly, detecting just the briefest flicker of nerves.

‘I’ve really got to get on, Ada,’ he said, already joining the queue.

Heart racing, I dropped my basket and left.

Tampons and cherry cola bottles. The only person I know over the age of twelve who still enjoys cherry cola bottles is you. Jack can’t keep a woman longer than the night he acquires her, so it was unlikely the tampons were for a secret girlfriend. And what about that black eye? Was I really supposed to believe he’d fallen off a bike? Something was off and if I could catch him out in one lie, maybe I could catch him out in others.

I broke the speed limit a few times to get to Jack’s house before he did. Parking haphazardly outside, I jumped out of the car, hurried up the drive and around the side of the house. I’ve only been to his a few times for family parties and such, but it’s enough to know that his garage was reserved for Jeffrey’s vintage cars, and if Jack owned a bike, it was bound to be in his shed. My heels sank into the grass as I moved quickly across the lawn. Knowing I didn’t have much time, I wrenched the door open, gaze zeroing in on the distinctly bike-shaped object beneath a dusty old sheet. I lifted it up to reveal a blue and black bike with a missing front wheel and a rusty old chain. It hadn’t been touched in months and his bruise was probably only a week old. He’d lied to me about that black eye, Elodie. I knew it, didn’t I tell you I knew it? Why lie about it if he had nothing to hide? I looked back towards the house, my heart slamming against my ribs. Were you in there? Was he keeping you in his house?

At the sound of a car pulling up outside, my blood ran cold. Instinctively, I dropped the sheet and reached for my phone only to realise I’d left it on the passenger seat. Jack would see my car and come looking for me. Without my phone, what could I do if he went berserk and attacked me? Backing out of the shed, I slammed the door shut, then turned and raced back across the garden. I drew in a breath, preparing to scream for help if I needed to. Emerging from the side of the house, I was relieved to see it was a neighbour’s Ford I’d heard. I hurried towards my car and got inside. As I looked up, I caught sight of Jack in my rear-view mirror, and I pulled out of there as fast as possible.

I needed to tell Christopher about the black eye, the lie, the tampons and cherry cola bottles. As I neared my house, I was momentarily bewildered by the swarm of paparazzi outside, camera bags slung over shoulders. They looked inhuman, just bodies with Nikons for heads.

As I got out of the car, there was an obnoxious flash of cameras. Some reporters dropped to their knees in the grey puddles for better angles. They circled me, firing questions so fast I couldn’t understand them. It made me think of screeching seagulls aggressively jostling for scraps. The front door flew open and Ethan stepped out, shielding me from the press, and guiding me inside.

‘I’ve been calling you,’ he said, locking the door behind us.

‘What’s going on?’ I asked shakily, sure he was about to tell me they’d found your body.

Ethan took me softly by the shoulders. ‘Your mum called an hour ago. David Taylor’s car has been found … and Elodie’s blood-soaked pyjamas were inside.’





Chapter Thirty-Six


56 Days Missing


Adaline Archer

I met with Christopher on a chilly October morning. It wasn’t the kind of crisp autumn day we loved as children where we would crash through piles of leaves outside, it was the kind of grey autumn day where the sky was fat with the promise of rain, and we’d cosy up indoors with our Tamagotchis and Disney videos.

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