THE NEXT MORNING, RAFFERTY paid a flying visit to the station. He read the latest reports, instructed the team on the tasks he expected them to complete and then, before Llewellyn or anyone else could complain or remind him of the need to check out Nigel Blythe’s friends, family and acquaintances, he took off with Mary Carmody for the interviews with Jenny and Estelle’s friends and families. Rafferty decided he would speak first to Jenny’s flat-mate. The flat they had shared was conveniently-situated above a corner tobacconist in Elmhurst’s High Street. Being on the corner, it had a double aspect onto the High Street and Penance Way and was both bright and spacious. The furniture was mostly modern, but there was an attractive old roll-top desk and several other older pieces. And as Raffer