CBC on a metal tray. I sat in my usual place, pulled up my sleeves, and tried to remember which arm I should offer today.
âLeft,â the doctor prompted, and I held it out for the rubber tourniquet.
âMiss Landlow.â The officerâs eyes were on the needle Dr. Castillo was assembling. âYou were the one to find your brother, correct?â
âYes,â I whispered.
âAround what time?â
âA little after noon. It was during lunch.â
âWhy were you by the fence?â
âI was going for a walk. I called him, and I heard his phoneâhis ringtone for me. I followed it and found â¦â
I felt Garrettâs eyes on me tooâhis anguished gaze heavier than the policemenâs.
âWhen did you last see him alive?â
âAround midnight. He said he had to go somewhere.â
âWhere?â The cops were taking turns asking the questions; it left me uneasy, not quite sure where to aim my answers.
âI donât know. Sorry. We made plans to meet for breakfastâI was going to ask him thenâbut he never showed up.â
The shorter cop steepled his fingers and pointed them at me. âMiss Landlow, it seems you were the last person to talk to himâwe donât know what happened in the twelve hours before you found his body. I need you to think. Did he seem agitated at all? Worried?â
âI-I-I donât know,â I sputtered, shaking so much that Dr. Castillo paused and pulled the tip of the needle back from where he was about to plunge it through my skin. I hadnât been paying enough attention that night, hadnât known it would matter. Hadnât known it was the last time Iâd see him, the last conversation weâd have.
Garrett took over. âCarter would never have willingly exposed his baby sister to any danger. Or to this either.â He paused to point slowly between the two men.
The cops swallowed and looked chastised, but it didnât stop them from asking, âWhat about the Zhu familyâhad he mentioned them to you recently? Said anything that would lead you to believe he perceived them as a threat?â
âThe Zhus? No. What do theyââ
Garrett put a hand on my chair, the backs of his fingers grazing my shirt. âPenelope Landlow is a very sick girl. She doesnât leave the estate. She has no contact with the Zhus or anyone outside these gates, and she doesnât know who killed her older brother. Finding those answers is your job. Itâs been six days; why donât you have any? Youâre not going to find them in here.â
Iâd stilled enough for Dr. Castillo to insert the needle in my vein. Blood flowed into the test tube and everyoneâs eyes were on the red. Were they picturing the crimson of Carterâs blood on the ground, the way it pooled around him, seeped into his shirt, and stained the ends of his blond hair, or was that just me?
I whimpered.
An officer reached for my hand, probably in apology or comfort.
Garrett lunged in front of my chair. âDonât touch her!â
âHold this, please, Penelope,â Dr. Castillo said as he placed gauze on my arm. He turned to the officers with a face of calm fury. âA simple touch like that will harm my patient, causing her platelets to degrade and contusions or ecchymosis to form. I cannot stress how fragile Penelope is, so do your job, but do it quickly, sensitively, and there is absolutely no reason grown men like you need to be touching this girl.â
I understood his words were deliberate, that Garrettâs hadbeen tooâchosen to make me seem as young and delicate as possible and make the officersâ sympathy and duty seem inappropriate. I understood theyâd been effective, because the cops squirmed and apologized and handed over cards and more apologies along with requests that I call them if I thought of anything and even more apologies and sympathy for
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