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It was some small comfort that her parents hadn’t been burned. They had died of smoke inhalation in their sleep, and the closed bedroom door had kept the flames at bay.

The shop, staircase, kitchen and sitting room were all gutted only her parents’ room and Molly’s were intact because the doors had been closed, although they were badly smoke damaged. The whole building was unsafe and would have to be demolished.

George managed to find out where Molly’s sister, Emily, was living – Molly had no address or telephone number for her – and sent a telegram asking her to ring. Emily telephoned the Walshes’ house when she received it but, although she was as shocked and horrified as Molly, and concerned about her sister, she refused point blank to come back, even for the funeral.

‘What point would there be?’ she said in a cold voice. ‘I hated Dad. Have you forgotten that he threw me out just for seeing Tim? He put me through hell my whole childhood, and he stopped Mum and you contacting me once I’d gone.’

‘I know, but come back for Mum and me now,’ Molly pleaded.

‘No, I won’t. Mum should’ve stuck up for me. She didn’t even write to me more than once a year. I wrote and asked her to the wedding, said she could come with you. She never even replied.’

‘You married Tim?’ Molly was shocked to hear that. ‘I didn’t know. She told me you hadn’t written. You can bet your boots Dad took the letters! Oh God, Emily, if I’d’ve known I would have come to you, but I thought you didn’t want me or Mum in your life.’

‘I’m sure Dad did take the letters, but that doesn’t excuse Mum. What sort of a mother abandons one of her children?’

Molly was too upset to continue. George took the view that she couldn’t make Emily come to the funeral, and maybe it would be for the best if her sister stayed away if she was so bitter.

‘Write to her once it’s all over,’ he suggested. ‘Maybe you can salvage something then.’

Molly didn’t know what she would have done without George. He was everything she needed – adviser, confidant, brother, friend and sweetheart all rolled into one. He cuddled her when she cried, listened when she wanted to talk, took her for brisk walks when he felt that fresh air and exercise would help, and often made her laugh when she least expected it.

His parents and brother, Harry, were all kind, too, attentive but not intrusive, caring but not to the point of suffocation. They fended off nosy neighbours and gossip-mongers, too, because, as if the fire wasn’t enough for people, there was the trial, too, which the newspapers went to town reporting.

Miss Maud Gribble was found guilty of the murder of Reg Coleman and the manslaughter of Sylvia Coleman and sentenced to be hanged. But, for the locals, the real shock was that Petal had been Cassie’s sister, not her daughter, and she’d been trying to keep the child safe.

Suddenly, even those who had said the nastiest things about Cassie were admiring her courage and kindness. Mrs Walsh got quite angry that they couldn’t have been more tolerant and caring while she was alive.

‘I hate this about people,’ she ranted. ‘They can make a person desperately unhappy because of some blind prejudice and then, when something happens to change that opinion, they never admit they were wrong, or apologize. It makes me see red!’

Evelyn Bridgenorth had rung twice to offer her condolences, to keep Molly abreast of how Petal was, and to remind her she had a job and a home to come back to. ‘It’s crazy here at the moment, everyone talking about Miss Gribble and Christabel. If they don’t know anything, they make it up. I’m hoping that, after the hanging, it will all die down. It’s not good for Petal.’

Molly’s parents’ funeral took place on 18 December. It was raining heavily and very cold. The church was packed, giving Molly some comfort that, even if people had disliked her father, they chose to put that aside for her mother’s sake.

George held her hand firmly and, even if she had doubted his feelings for her before, she could now see his love for her in his face. She had chosen the hymn ‘Love Divine, All Loves Excelling’, because she knew her parents had chosen it for their wedding. She would never learn now what had turned her father into such a hard, cruel man but, for today, she tried not to think of him that way but to remember that her mother had loved him.

As for her mother, Molly could remember only good things. Being handed a buttered scone still hot from the oven and a cup of tea when she came home from school on a cold day. Picnics in the woods, going to Weston-super-Mare on the bus in the summer holidays, picking strawberries at a nearby farm and her mother teaching her to ride a bicycle.

She may have been weak, but she was so loving, and when Molly glanced around the church she saw many of her mother’s friends crying.

Some of them had laid on food and drink in the village hall after the interment. The cakes and tarts were all home-made, the tablecloths hand embroidered, brought out to honour Mary Heywood. Even the china was Sunday best. Molly noted it all, and knew her mother would have been very touched.

One by one, people came up to her and offered a hug or a loving little anecdote about her mother. Every one of them said how proud Mary had been of Molly. They also said how much they admired her for rescuing Petal.

No one asked why Emily wasn’t there, and they didn’t comment on her father either. Maybe they would discuss them when they got home, or in the pub over the next few days, but Molly didn’t care about that. She’d laid her parents to rest, and her mother, at least, had gone with everyone remembering her for her kindness and warmth.

Enoch Flowers even made her laugh. He’d put on a suit, which obviously passed in his eyes for ‘best’, but it was shiny with age, had mildew marks on the jacket and stank of it, too. He approached Molly to compliment her on getting justice for Cassie and rescuing Petal. He said Cassie would rest easy knowing she had such a good friend.

‘Yer ma was a kind soul, too,’ he said. ‘Many’s the time she slipped me a few rashers of bacon or a lump of cheese when the old man weren’t looking. She seemed to always know when I was skint. Now yer dad was a miserable bastard and no mistake. I can’t bring meself to lie about him just to cheer you. Wouldn’t be right, but you just make sure when you get the insurance money that you go over to his grave and pour a drop of whisky on it to thank him for sparing you the need to care for him when he was an old codger like me.’

A little black humour was just the lift she needed, and she planted a thank-you kiss on his heavily lined cheek. ‘I like it when people say what they really mean,’ she told him. ‘That would’ve made Cassie laugh, too.’

‘You and young Walsh oughtter get married,’ he said, wagging a very grubby finger at her. ‘Plain as the nose on me face you was meant for each other. And why don’t you adopt little Petal and give her a good home? You’ll have some brass coming from the insurance and, besides, I know you’ve always had a soft spot for her.’

George was just walking towards them, and he smiled because he’d heard what Enoch had said. As the old man moved away, George took her hand.

‘Sometimes old folk see things clearer than us,’ he said, still smiling. ‘And I know the only thing I want for Christmas is you.’

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CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

May 1955

‘Ready?’ Ted Bridgenorth asked as he opened the door of the limousine and reached in to take the wedding bouquet of pale-pink roses from Molly.

‘Willing, and able, too,’ she laughed, lowering her feet to the ground, then, scooping up the skirt and train of her dress, she stood up.