William, lived with them. He had Alzheimerâs.â
She waited for him to continue.
âSome time late last night fire broke out in the two front rooms downstairs, quickly spreading to the upstairs bedrooms.â
âTwo front rooms?â
âYou miss nothing.â
âItâs a big property?â
Alex Randall nodded. âA lovely old house. As you can imagine the scene is awful this morning, in broad daylight.â He folded his long frame into the wing armchair and kept his eye on Martha. âThereâs something about fires,â he mused. âIn the night theyâre dramatic, exciting, all flashing blue lights and activity.â
âCareful, Alex,â she said, smiling. âYouâre beginning to sound like an arsonist.â
Alex grimaced and continued. âBut in the daylight you see the home it once was so completely destroyed. Blackened timbers, soot-stained curtains, broken windows, wrecked furniture.â He met her eyes. âAll the damage in its ugly starkness.â
She stayed silent. He had seen this. She had not.
DI Randall leaned right back in the chair and half-closed his eyes. âBaldly, Martha,â he must have realized she was watching him because he gave her the ghost of a smile, âthe facts are this: the emergency services took the call at 11.38 p.m. from a Mrs Lissimore, a neighbour, who was returning home after a night at Theatre Severn. The play ended at eleven p.m. and she had driven home. As she turned into the road she saw smoke and flames coming out of a downstairs window. She dialled nine-nine-nine from her mobile phone. By the time the fire services arrived, four minutes later, the blaze had taken hold, engulfing the property. They were able to gain access but only to the rear without risk to life.â Another ghost of a smile. âAt least, the
firemen
didnât gain access. They were too well trained and sensible. It was one of our PCs. Gethin Roberts, everybodyâs hero.â
Martha looked at him warmly. âI seem to have heard that name before, Alex.â
âHe does seem to have a habit of stumbling right into things.â Alex returned her smile before continuing. âAs I said, a family lives â lived â there. Nigel Barton and his wife, Christie, their fifteen-year-old daughter, Adelaide, their son, Jude, aged fourteen and Nigel Bartonâs father, William. Mr William Barton was in his late eighties and has Alzheimerâs.â Alex hesitated, as though he was on the point of saying something. Martha waited but Randall didnât enlarge. It could wait, she decided, knowing Alexâs habit of holding information back until he was certain it was true. He disliked conjecture.
âNigel Barton was away from home, in York. He supplies shops with window advertising. Heâs worth quite a lot of money. The house is â was â lovely.â
She felt like prompting him again. She wanted him to tell her quickly. Get it over with. Who had died? Had anyone survived? Which of these unfortunate people had been burnt alive? But she held her tongue and waited. And got her answer.
âMrs Barton, William Barton and Adelaide are all unaccounted for.â
âAnd the son, Jude?â
âGethin Roberts,â DI Randall couldnât quite suppress a shadow of amusement, âquite against any advice, broke in through the back door and found him in the kitchen near the door. Jude Barton has ten per cent burns, mainly on his hands and arms.â He met her eyes. âItâs always puzzled me,â he said. âHow do they calculate the percentage?â
âItâs the rule of nines,â she supplied, almost absently.
âThat doesnât take me much further,â Alex responded with a tinge of another smile.
âThey divide the body into eleven areas, head, right arm, left arm and so on. Each one represents nine per cent. Thatâs how they calculate the