bread, cheese and one of his favourite boiled onions â well, microwaved, to be more accurate, but the result was much the same.
âWell thatâs the paperwork brought up to date,â he said, wiping his hands on the seat of his baggy cords as if theyâd been soiled by contact with bills and catalogues. âThe computerâs yours now if you want it, Sally. Just as long as you donât mess up what Iâve done.â
âI wonât, donât worry. I shanât go anywhere near your accounts. I just wish I had my laptop,â I added.
But of course, I didnât, because, strictly speaking, it wasnât mine. It belonged to my newspaper. Iâd had to leave it at the office when I went off on the skiing holiday and there it had been ever since, being used, I presumed, by whoever was doing my job in my absence.
âActually I think I might treat myself to one,â I said, and wondered why I hadnât done so before. It would certainly have gone some way to easing my boredom if Iâd been able to surf the net, and it was a measure of the depression that had descended on me these last months that I hadnât stirred myself to get a computer of my own. I had, of course, access to the Internet on my phone, but the 3G signal I could get in the countryside was so poor as to be useless in comparison to what was available at home.
I saw Mum and Dad exchanging satisfied glances.
âThis is doing you the world of good, Sally,â Mum said, and I had to agree.
When Iâd finished typing up my notes and transferred them on to a memory stick Dad lent me I started preparing a list of how I was going to proceed.
Top of the list, as Iâd said to Mum, was paying a visit to Brian Jenningsâs sister, Marion. Mum told me she lived in Newcombe, a village just a few miles from Stoke Compton. I found her address and telephone number in the phone book and added it to my notes. Since she was campaigning to try to prove her brotherâs innocence I hoped she would be glad enough of my help to share with me whatever information she had, including the name of Brianâs solicitor. It was my hope that he too would welcome any publicity I might be able to generate, and perhaps take me on board as an extra investigator who might be able to learn something to strengthen his clientâs case.
Number two on my list was talking to Lisa Curry and Dawn Burridge. They might be convinced that the arsonist who had almost cost them their lives was behind bars, of course. But they might also be able to tell me something that would give me an alternative explanation for what had happened.
I went on to transcribe the notes Iâd made from the newspaper cuttings â the names that had come up as witnesses when the case went to court, and the people who had been mentioned in the press reports â Paul Holder, the baker who had first spotted the fire and rescued the two girls, the captain of the fire brigade, the tenants of neighbouring flats. As something of a long shot I included the girlsâ employers at the time â the country house hotel where Lisa had been a sous chef and the estate agentâs office where Dawn had worked. I didnât hold out much hope that the hotel employees would be the same ones now as had been working there two years ago â it was my impression kitchen staff moved about pretty frequently. But estate agencies were a different matter. Staff often stayed with the same firm for a very long time. Two years would be nothing in their world.
Now that I had the use of the computer I took the opportunity of looking the girls up on Facebook but I couldnât find either of them. Chances were, then, that they were married and would be using their new names. Or perhaps after her experience of being stalked by Brian Jennings, Dawn wanted to keep a low profile. I did find a page for Muffins, Lisaâs teashop, but it wasnât very informative, just
Erin McCarthy, Donna Kauffman, Kate Angell