THEY HAD YET TO PAY a visit to Ainsley’s home and Rafferty decided they’d return to the station, collect the keys and see if the place yielded up any clues to his death. His bank statements would at least tell him something about his financial health even if they yielded up no clues about his emotional wellbeing. Ainsley had lived in Elmhurst; he’d had a flat around the corner from the Norman castle. It was a quiet neighbourhood and while he searched through the late Adam Ainsley’s possessions, Rafferty deputed Llewellyn to learn what he could from the neighbours. It was a small, two-room flat, with a shower room and galley kitchen, not at all the style of home that Rafferty had imagined, and it indicated that Ainsley’s finances hadn’t been of the healthiest. It was furnished in a modern