But the alternatives are just as bad. Could Ryan have left the bar after them and run the long way round, around the other side of the chapel? It is just possible. He could even have been going up the stairs when Neville was coming down, and ducked into a bathroom to avoid being seen.
Fuck. Fuck. Is this really all she has accomplished? She wanted to bring a killer to justice, but instead all she’s done is drag two of her oldest friends into this.
Her phone is still in her hand, and now it lights up with a notification. It’s an email and she opens it, wondering for a minute if it’s Emily, messaging her with some strange telepathy.
It’s not. It’s someone called Lynn Bishop, subject line Hello Hannah!
Hi Hannah, hope you’re well! I’m a journalist with the Evening Mail. Following John Neville’s death, we’re doing a retrospective on April’s case and would love to speak to you about how it feels to have finally laid those demons to—
She doesn’t even transfer that one to Requests. She deletes it, feeling sick to her stomach. It’s not just the timing—it’s everything. The faux chumminess. The exclamation point. And using “April”—like they know her, like she’s a mate or a girl they went to school with, when in reality they have no idea what she was really like. “April”—when John Neville gets the dignity of his full name.
As Hannah shuts down her phone and lies staring into the dark she feels a surge of anger so strong it almost scares her. How dare they—the journalists, the public, the vultures who have picked over this case for years like they care, like they have a right to the truth just as much as Hannah does. They’ve stripped April of her identity, of her uniqueness, of everything that made her real and compelling and fascinating—they’ve reduced her to a cardboard cutout of a girl and a series of Instagram pictures. The perfect victim, in fact.
And as for the rest of the email—“laid those demons to rest”? She would be laughing if she didn’t feel so bitter. She has never felt more haunted—by what happened to April, and by what she, Hannah, may have done to an innocent man. And now haunted too by what she’s doing to her old friends—to Emily and to Ryan, who have suffered enough already. They’ve lived through April’s murder—is she really going to cast suspicion on them both by speaking up? But if she doesn’t…
She rolls over, faces the wall, fighting the urge to cover her face with her hands. She has a sudden, out-of-character urge for a drink—but that is out of the question.
She turns onto her back, puts her forearm over her eyes, shutting out the light filtering in from the street, trying to count her blessings. At least Hugh is out of it. And Will, far away at his mother’s house. Thank God. Thank God he was never a suspect. Geraint’s words to November whisper treacherously in her ear: Strangulation typically points to a domestic murder, usually a crime of passion. Hannah knows what he was trying to say—what that slippery euphemism domestic really means. It means a partner. It means that when strangulation is involved, it’s usually a man killing his wife or girlfriend.
All the mud Hannah has stirred up would look very, very bad for Will, if it weren’t for his alibi. April was cheating on Will. April was pregnant, possibly by another man. If the press wanted motives, she’s serving up a plethora, right here on a gilded plate. And they all point to her own husband.
If Will had not been out of college that night, things would have been pretty grim for him when April died, and they would be looking even grimmer right now.
But thank God he was not there.
So why can’t she sleep?
She opens her eyes and turns on her phone again. 2:01. She has to get some sleep. But the baby twists and turns inside her, and suddenly she wishes, powerfully, painfully, that Will were here. Her anger has evaporated, and now she can’t bear the way they left it.
She opens up WhatsApp and finds his last message. How did it go? Can you talk?
She feels a sudden rush of guilt. Her words in the taxi come back to her. I’m glad you find April’s death so funny… I care, Will, and I can’t believe that you don’t.
Not just unfair, but bitterly, vilely so. For Will does care—she has always known that. She has watched him building up his shell of defense around himself, listened to him crying out in the night, dreaming of April. She has seen his face as the news reports come on, watched him trying to protect the wounds left by what happened, winced as every newspaper article and request for comment reopened them.