LOGINThe quality of the silence that followed — not the library silence or the dinner table silence or the kitchen silence. The silence of a room that has just received too much at once, that is attempting to process simultaneous impacts, that needs a moment before it can do anything with what it has been given.“Bella,” she said.Her voice had changed.Not the flat emptied voice. The other one, the older one, the voice of my mother when she was frightened.“I know,” I said.“You were with him,” she said. “For eighteen months. While he—”“I didn’t know,” I said. “Mum. I didn’t know. I had no idea. If I had known—”“I know you didn’t know,” she said. Quickly. The quick clarification of a woman who was frightened and grieving and putting things in the right order with the discipline she always used when the alternative was falling apart. “I know that.”I looked at my hands.“Are you all right?” she said.I looked up.She was asking me. In the middle of receiving news about her husband’s deat
BELLA’S POVI was awake at five.Not the gradual wakefulness of recent days. The immediate kind, the eyes-open-and-already-knowing kind, the body having apparently decided that today required no transition between sleep and full consciousness.Monday.I lay in the dark for exactly four minutes.Then I got up.Dominic was in the study.I knew this without going to check — the line of light under the door visible from the corridor, the study occupied at five in the morning, the quality of a man who had also not transitioned gently into the day. I stood in the corridor for a moment and looked at the line of light.I did not knock.I went to the kitchen.I made coffee.I sat at the kitchen table and I thought about Reeves.He had said morning. He had said he’d call when it was done. He had said the police would need to move quickly once they had the file because the window between filing and Daniel finding out was not a large one.I thought about Daniel in his flat.The dark blue Volvo. T
He was looking at the bloom and his face was the morning face and the October light was the October light and we were crouching at the edge of the east bed on a Sunday morning one day before Monday with the house behind us and the fragile certain bloom in front of us.“Dominic,” I said.He looked at me.The close range.No table.No architecture.Just the bed and the bloom and the October morning.“After Monday,” I said. “After my mother knows about my father. After the police and Reeves and Daniel and all of it.” I kept my eyes on his. “What happens to us.”The question.Not the storage unit question — that had been the hypothetical, the if my mother wasn’t in the picture. This was the actual question. The real conditions, the real picture, all of it in place.What happens to us.He looked at the bloom.He was quiet for a long time.The garden around us. The fountain. The Sunday morning.“I don’t know,” he said.The honest answer. The same honest answer as the car — not the reassuran
BELLA’S POVDaniel replied at seven in the morning.I was still in bed, the specific Sunday morning wakefulness that had been arriving earlier every day this week, the body refusing to stay unconscious when there was this much happening in it. The phone lit up on the pillow beside me and I looked at it in the grey early light.Thank you. Where and when.Four words. The fear still in them but underneath the fear something else now — relief. The relief of a person who had been waiting for a response and had received one and could now move toward whatever they had decided they needed to do.I looked at the message.I did not reply.Not yet. Reeves had said Monday. Dominic had said don’t meet him alone. I had sent soon to keep Daniel contained, to stop the escalating messages, to give him enough to hold onto through the weekend without giving him anything real.It had worked.He was contained.I locked the phone and put it face down and looked at the ceiling.Sunday.The last day before M
“I thought about the worry more than the pride,” he said. “The worry interested me. Your mother worries about most things efficiently — she identifies the problem and she manages it. But the worry she described about you was different. It didn’t have a solution shape.”I looked at him.“What shape did it have?” I said.He looked at the candle.“The shape of someone who has too much interior life for the container they’re in,” he said. “The worry about a person who feels too much and thinks too much and hasn’t found the right size space yet.”The room.The candle.I looked at him across the six feet of table.“And when I arrived,” I said.“When you arrived,” he said, and stopped.“Say it,” I said.He looked at the wine.“The container you were in,” he said. “You were too much for all of it. The house and the situation and the arrival. Too much in the specific way your mother had described.” He paused. “I recognized it.”“From my father’s letter,” I said.“Yes,” he said. “And from.” He
BELLA’S POVI read the messages at five o’clock.Not because I was ready. Because the not-reading had become its own problem, the specific anxiety of an unread thing sitting in your pocket growing heavier with each hour of not-looking. I went to the upstairs bathroom, the one off the corridor, the one nobody used in the afternoons, and I locked the door and I sat on the edge of the bath and I read them.Third message, sent at eleven forty-seven.Bella I’m serious. I know this is out of nowhere but I need to talk to you. Not over text. In person. It’s about something important.Fourth message, sent at two-fifteen.I know you’ve seen these. Please.I read them twice.The quality of them.I had been right in the fourteenth floor room — there was fear in them. The specific texture of a person sending messages they would not have sent if they had any other option. The please at the end of the fourth one, which was not a Daniel Carr word. He had never said please in a message in eighteen mo
BELLA'S POVI should have walked away the moment I heard the sound.That was the smart thing to do. The right thing. The thing any normal person would have done, turned around, gone back to their room, closed the door, pretended they'd heard nothing.But I have never, apparently, been particularly
I looked at my phone. It was Jennifer, my friend. But Jennifer wasn't hearing me, in fact, the call kept cutting out. Neither of us could hear each other properly.The call ended.I dropped the phone in frustration and headed to the bathroom to take a bath.The bathroom was absolutely gorgeous. Mar
BELLA’S POV For a second, neither of us moved. He just stood there, holding my underwear, his dark eyes locked on mine.I snatched it from his hand and shoved it behind my back. "I, I'm sorry. My bad.""I'm just going to take this and leave," he said, his voice tight. He grabbed whatever he'd been
BELLA’S POVHis hands were still on my waist. His breath was warm against my neck.And for one insane, terrifying second, I wondered what it would feel like if he didn't let go.I forced myself to sit up straighter, pulling away from him."Sorry," I mumbled.He didn't respond.The car kept moving.







