watched irate motorists, already late for work, messing with kettles and de-icer spray. He saw how many of them left the keys in the ignition when they went back to their houses to replace the cloths and kettles and cans. Some of them even left the engine running. It would be child’s play, John thought, to steal a car like that from right under the bastards’ noses. Not that most of them were worth nicking. The majority were tiny Japanese hatchbacks or clapped-out family saloons.
He walked on, crossing Hallowgate Square to the grocer’s shop on the corner to buy a Mars bar for his breakfast. The car park of the Grace Darling Centre was still roped off and policemen were searching the garden in the middle of the square and the bushes by the drive. He pretended to take no notice and continued down Anchor Street, past the shop and Joe Fenwick’s flat, to the college. When he got there he felt fit and healthy and ready for anything.
His first lesson was history and everyone was talking about Gabby. They sat in a small group around the radiator, warming their hands as they waited for the teacher, speculating wildly about what might have happened to her. He was the centre of attention because he had been at the Grace Darling the night before.
‘Come on!’ they said. ‘Didn’t you notice anything?’
‘No,’ he said. He was beginning to enjoy the interest. He wished he had something to tell them.
‘Weren’t you there when they found the body?’
‘No,’ he said again, smiling, remembering. ‘I left early. I didn’t see a thing.’
The sense of excitement and wellbeing remained with him all morning.
Gordon Hunter arrived at Hallowgate Sixth-Form College at lunch time. He was met at the main door by a mute adolescent with greased black hair and acne and taken to the staff room. A maternal woman made him tea and introduced him to Ellie Smith, Gabriella Paston’s personal tutor. Hunter looked around him and thought that teachers had never been like this when he was a lad. Ellie had long red hair and wore a very short skirt and black tights. She sat in a low chair with her legs stretched ahead of her, crossed at the ankle, and ate coleslaw from a plastic tub with a fork. Perhaps, Hunter thought, there was something in further education after all.
‘Personal tutor?’ he asked. ‘ I don’t understand. What does that mean?’
‘I monitored her general progress,’ the teacher said, ‘ in all the subjects she was taking.’ She pressed the lid on the coleslaw tub and bit into an apple. Hunter saw the stain of red lipstick on the apple’s green skin. He was finding it hard to concentrate on the woman’s words. Ellie munched and continued: ‘In a college this size we felt it’s important that there’s a member of staff responsible for the pastoral care of the young people. We all supervise a small group of students. They’re not necessarily the people we teach, although Gabby was in my English group.’
‘And what was it like?’ Hunter asked. ‘Her general progress.’
Ellie shrugged. ‘She wasn’t a star academically,’ she said, ‘though I think with a lot of work she would have scraped through English and Art at ‘A’ level. Her real enthusiasm was drama and by all accounts she was outstanding at that. She was preparing to audition for RADA and the Central School. There was no guarantee, of course, that she’d be able to take up a place even if she was offered one. The grants for drama courses are discretionary. I tried to make her see that she might have to consider an alternative but she was so keen I don’t think she really took it in.’
‘How did she get on with the other kids?’
‘Very well. She was lively, popular, always at the centre of the action.’
I bet she was, Hunter thought.
‘She was very attractive,’ he said. ‘That didn’t cause jealousy?’
‘I don’t think so,’ Ellie said. ‘Not in this case.’
‘Did she ever talk about her family, her