âWhatâs my favourite girl doing?â I run my fingers through Poppyâs hair. Sheâs the spitting image of my twin sisters when they were kids. Long glossy brown hair and dark brown eyes.
Sometimes I think my heart will burst when I look at Poppy. Sheâs the first of the grandkids as Mum constantly reminds me. According to her, I should have knocked out at least three Knight babies by now.
I thought I was moving in the right direction.
Poppyâs feet dangle on the edge of the chair and her brow is set in deep concentration as she leans over a large piece of paper with a marker in hand.
âUncle Jack, you know youâre not allowed to touch my hair,â she says crossly. âMummy rang when you were upstairs. I told her you were in the toilet. For ages and ages.â
I chuckle, leaning over her small frame at the table. âThanks, Poppy. Whatâs that?â
âItâs a letter to Santa to say sorry. Mummy says if I donât, I wonât get all my presents.â She pouts. âAnd Mummy says I wonât even get any presents from you.â
âIs that so?â I quirk my lips. âWhat am I getting you?â
âA pony,â she says firmly, with a confident smile.
âA toy pony?â
âNo, a pony,â she repeats indignantly, like Iâm a moron. Who the hell taught her to roll her eyes like that?
Shit.
âIâm not sure youâre ready for livestock yet,â I negotiate. âMaybe we could start you off with a, uh, goldfish?â
âFine.â She rolls her eyes again. âIâll put it on the list for Santa.â
I smile. âHe might not be able to deliver a pony either. Logistics of the sleigh. Whatâs this letter about? Why do you need to say sorry?â
She bites her lip tentatively. âOkay, Iâll tell you. I told a lie and Mummy is really mad at me and Mrs. Magee says that liars go to the place for the naughty people.â
Her little face turns grim.
âUh-huh.â I nod, seriously. âAnd where is this place? The naughty corner?â
âNo, silly.â She tuts. âHell.â
âI think youâre probably safe, Poppy.â I chuckle. âWhy did you lie?â
Her lips quiver. âBecause I tried on Mummyâs dress and ripped it and I was scared that Mummy wouldnât love me anymore if I told the truth. So, I said Minnie did it.â
I try not to grin. âThe cat? You didnât stand a chance with that lie, love.â I pick her up and prop her on my knee. âYour mummy will always love you unconditionally. No matter what you do. Your Uncle Jack too.â
She shakes her head and pouts again. âBut your bunny lied, and you donât love her anymore.â
I stiffen. âWhat are you talking about?â
She shrugs as she writes large wonky letters with the marker. âMr. Danny said so. I think Iâll marry Mr. Danny instead of you.â
I grimace. Poppy heard us talking from the garden. How much did she hear? Jesus, how much did we say about Dadâs murder?
I canât remember if any of us cursed. My sister is paying a small fortune to send Poppy to some bullshit âetiquette after-school classâ and will kill me if I teach her bad language.
My phone buzzes on the table.
âIs it Mummy?â she asks.
I glance at the name flashing. âNo.â
âHi,â I say, answering the phone.
âJack,â McKenzie, the copper on my dadâs case replies. âI have news.â
I change the phone to my other ear, away from Poppy. âGo on.â
âWeâve got a pretty safe tip on the second guy.â
Fuck.
He pauses. âBut you already knew that, didnât you?â
No point denying it. âYeah, I found out a few days ago.â
He clears his throat. âBit of a tricky situation for you.â
âDid Frank Casey contact the station?
âNo. Your girlfriend and her mum came in.â
I swallow thickly. âThanks. Iâll call you later.â
I hang up and stare in silence as Poppy adds invisible dog under pony.
âThatâs not true, love,â I whisper into her hair. âWhat you said about Bunny. I still love her, no matter what sheâs done.â