â something heâd never done before. âYes, Waterhouse?â
âIâve read the book.â Which is why Iâm here, giving you another chance to be reasonable, instead of at Human Resources complaining about you . Except it wasnât a real chance; Simon couldnât pretend there was anything generous-spirited about it. He wanted to prove Helen Yardley wrong. It was ridiculous; embarrassing. Didnât he know Proust well enough after years of working with him?
âItâs a pity you never met Helen Yardley, Waterhouse. You might have learned a lot from her. She brought out the best in people.â
âWhat did she do with it once sheâd brought it out?â Simon asked. âBury it somewhere and leave clues?â He couldnât believe heâd said it, couldnât believe he wasnât being ejected from the room.
âWhatâs that?â Proust nodded at the sheet of paper in Simonâs hand. Was he stifling his anger in order to deny Simon a sense of achievement?
âI think thereâs an angle weâre neglecting, sir. Iâve made a list of names I think we ought to talk to. All those who had a vested interest in Helen Yardley being guilty, and others whoââ
âShe wasnât guilty.â
âThere are people who need to cling to the belief that she was innocent,â said Simon neutrally, âand people who need to cling to the belief that she did it because they canât live with themselves otherwise: the eleven jurors who voted guilty, the prosecuting lawyers, the social workers whoââ
âDr Judith Duffy,â the Snowman read aloud, having snatched the paper from Simonâs hand. âEven in my line of work, I havenât met many human beings Iâd describe as out-and-out evil, but that woman . . .â He frowned. âWho are all these others? I recognise a few: the Brownlees, Justice Wilson . . . Waterhouse, youâre surely not suggesting Helen Yardley was murdered by a high court judge?â
âNo, sir, of course not. I put him on the list for the sake of completeness.â
âAny more complete, itâd be a perishing telephone directory!â
âJustice Wilson played a part in sending Helen Yardley to prison. So did eleven jurors whose names are also on the list. Any of them might have reacted badly when her convictions were quashed. Iâm thinking . . . well, maybe someone reacted very badly.â Simon didnât want to use the word âvigilanteâ. âThatâs why Sarah Jaggard and Rachel Hines are on the list too. Chances are anyone who thinks Helen Yardley escaped justice will think Jaggard and Hines did too. We need to talk to them both, find out if anyoneâs been bothering them, if theyâve been threatened or noticed anything out of the ordinary.â âMake up your mind, Waterhouse. Is this a list of people who have a vested interest in Helen Yardley being guilty, or is it something else entirely?â Proust held the piece of paper between his thumb and forefinger, as if it hurt him to touch it. âBecause it seems to me that Sarah Jaggard and Rachel Hines might have a vested interest in her being not guilty, since they were the victims of similar miscarriages of justice, and Helen campaigned on their behalf.â
Helen. Helen and her friend Giles .
âSarah Jaggard was acquitted,â Simon said.
Proust glared at him. âYou donât think being charged with murder when all youâve done is look after your friendâs child to the best of your ability constitutes a miscarriage of justice? Then I feel sorry for you.â
As far as Simon knew, the Snowman had never met Sarah Jaggard. Did his outrage on behalf of Helen Yardley automatically extend to all women accused of the same crime? Or was it Helen Yardleyâs certainty that Jaggard was innocent that had convinced him? If Proust had been an approachable sort
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