Naomi was fragile and Pip was trying her hardest not to tread on any cracks. In the corner of her eye she could see the ever-scrolling timer on her voice recorder app.
‘So, can you tell me what you were all doing at Max’s that night?’ she said gently.
Naomi shifted, eyes moving down to circle her knees.
‘Um, we were just, like, drinking, talking, playing some Xbox, nothing too exciting.’
‘And taking pictures? There’s a few on Facebook from that night.’
‘Yeah, taking silly pictures. Just messing around really,’ Naomi said.
‘There aren’t any pictures of Sal from that night, though.’
‘No, well, I guess he left before we started taking them.’
‘And was Sal acting strangely before he left?’ said Pip.
‘Um, I . . . no, I don’t think he was really.’
‘Did he talk about Andie at all?’
‘I, err . . . yeah, maybe a bit.’ Naomi shuffled in her seat and the leather made a loud, rumbling sound as she unstuck herself from it. Something Pip’s little brother would have found very funny and, under other circumstances, she might have too.
‘What did he say about her?’ Pip asked.
‘Um.’ Naomi paused for a moment, picking at a ripped cuticle by her thumb. ‘He, erm . . . I think maybe they were having a disagreement. Sal said he wasn’t going to talk to her for a bit.’
‘Why?’
‘I don’t remember specifically. But Andie was . . . she was a bit of a nightmare. She was always trying to pick fights with Sal over the smallest things. Sal preferred to give her the silent treatment rather than argue.’
‘What kind of things were these fights about?’
‘Like the stupidest things. Like him not texting her back quick enough. Things like that. I . . . I never said it to him, but I always thought Andie was trouble. If I had said something, I don’t know, maybe everything would have turned out differently.’
Looking at Naomi’s downcast face, at the telling tremble of her upper lip, Pip knew she needed to bring them up from this particular rabbit hole, before Naomi closed up entirely.
‘Had Sal said at any point in the evening that he would be leaving early?’
‘No, he didn’t.’
‘And what time did he leave Max’s?’
‘We’re pretty sure it was close to ten thirty.’
‘And did he say anything before he left?’
Naomi shuffled and closed her eyes for a moment, the lids pressed so tightly that Pip could see them vibrating, even from across the room. ‘Yeah,’ she said. ‘He just said that he wasn’t really feeling it and was going to walk home and get an early night.’
‘And what time did you leave Max’s?’
‘I didn’t, I . . . me and Millie stayed over in the spare room. Dad came and got me in the morning.’
‘What time did you go up to bed?’
‘Um, I think it was a bit before half twelve. Not sure really.’
There was a sudden triad of knocks on the study door and Cara poked her head in, squeaking when her messy topknot got caught on the frame.