LLEWELLYN, STILL CONVINCED that Ivor Bignall was psychologically wrong for the role of back-stabbing murderer, was concentrating his investigatory efforts on those he believed did fit such a profile, and who were both psychologically capable of the crime and had the means and opportunity to commit it. In this category he had filed the Farraday twins and Randy Rawlins. Rafferty was more than happy to let him get on with it, relieved that he was, for the moment, concentrating all his energies away from Mickey and the photo-fit. Not that Llewellyn had much choice about this, because to Rafferty’s considerable surprise, the self-imposed form of ‘Ōmerta’ that Mickey’s friends had applied to themselves, seemed to be holding. Indeed, several of them, concerned by both the Mickey-inspired photo-

