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In the picture, she is standing right next to me. I might have known her once, must at least have met her. I try desperately to remember, but the memories don’t come. Judging from the age of this girl, she’s much too old to have been a camper. Most likely, she was a fellow play leader. I wish I could ask Kate – she was there too, after all. But I don’t dare in case it gets back to Alicia.

I need something to calm my nerves.

I go into the kitchen and twist the top off a bottle of wine. I’m about to pour a glass when I think better of it. No, I mustn’t drink. Not now. Not when I need to keep a clear head. My mind is whirling. Who sets the fires? Alicia or her double? And why, just to frame me? It seems such a reckless crime. People could get hurt. People could die.

Are they equal partners in all this, the two of them, or is one of them in charge? I think of the word ‘FRY’, branded into Alicia’s back. I can’t imagine anyone choosing to have such a thing done. Could it be that Alicia’s not the one in the driving seat? Even though she seems so very, very creepy. Has she been tutored, coerced? It’s impossible to say.

More than ever, I yearn to know the true meaning of FRY. What is it? And what does it have to do with me? I sit back down at the computer and go through the rest of the Camp Windylake album, examining each picture in turn, but none of the others show anything out of the ordinary.

What to do? What to do?

If only I could ask the other members of this group. Someone must remember something. Maybe they can help me? But how do I broach the subject, without raising suspicion or looking like a complete weirdo? I click my fingers. What if… What if I pretend to be organising a staff reunion for Camp Windylake? I could ask the other members of the group to send me names and contact details of all the play leaders who worked there. Someone’s bound to remember this girl, surely?

Seized with inspiration, I start typing. I am deliberately vague about exactly when and where the reunion will be. The only person I don’t invite is Kate. Luckily, she doesn’t really use her Facebook account, so she won’t have seen this group, and I want to keep it that way. I can’t risk this getting back to Alicia. I just hope I get some responses. And fast. Because who knows what she and her evil double have in store for me next.

My message sent, I wait anxiously for a reply. After a few minutes, I hit refresh, but there are no responses. Full of impatience, I drum my fingers on the table top and refresh again.

It’s like watching a kettle boil.

In an effort to distract myself, I google FRY, and get an array of confounding hits, from the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, to a group offering tax and financial aid, none of which bring me any closer to the truth. I flit back to Facebook, but there are still no responses. I drum my fingers on the table top.

Now what?

I’m quite hungry, actually, pipes up a little voice inside my head.

I glance at the table, where I had some fruit, but the peaches and plums have turned sour in the bowl. Maybe I should nip down the chippy and get myself some dinner? Someone might have responded by the time I get back.

The chip shop is only a fifteen minute walk from my house, but I’m too creeped out to walk, so I take the car and drive into the centre of Queensbeach. I hadn’t expected there to be so many people out, talking and laughing in loud, booming voices, enjoying themselves as if nothing has happened. I see girls dressed up in… well, not very much, considering it’s winter, shivering in the queue for the nightclub. But it’s just another ordinary night for them, I suppose.

“One portion of fish and chips please,” I tell the man at the fish bar. “No mushy peas.”

I hand over my money and sit down to wait, my tummy growling at the smell of the hot chips frying. Idly, I pick up a copy of the local gazette someone’s left lying around. Thumbing through it, I notice an article on the recent spate of fires in the area, including the one at the caravan park. There have been blazes at several businesses around the town over the last few weeks. Apparently, the police are following up a number of leads, whatever that means. I bet they have no idea.

I am so engrossed in the article that I barely register the presence of another customer walking up to the counter.

“Four portions of fish and chips, please.”

It’s Deacon.

I watch out of the corner of my eye as he takes out his wallet and pays with crisp, new notes. He hasn’t clocked me yet, and I’m not sure I want him to. We haven’t spoken since the night he introduced me to Jim. The night I overheard him saying those awful things about me. So I keep my head ducked down low, try not to listen as he discusses football with the owner.

“Fish and chips, no mushy peas,” the server calls out when my order is ready.

Deacon whirls round.

“Isabel? How long have you been sitting there?”

“A little while.”

“Great minds think alike, hey? Why don’t you come back to the Beach House and eat with us?”

His face is kind and earnest, but I can’t forgive him. Can’t ever forget those terrible things he said.

“No thanks.”

I reach over him for my parcel of chips, try not to notice the hurt and confusion in his eyes. See, the thing is, I’m not sure we can be friends anymore. I’m not sure we can be anything.

* * *

I check the computer as soon as I get in, but still no responses. I’m going to have to be patient. Maybe someone will post something in the morning. I pick at my chips while I try to figure out my next move. Absent-mindedly, I break off a piece of fish and hold it out for Fluffy, but of course, he’s not there to take it.

What am I going to do, Fluffy?

I could confront Alicia about her doppelganger. But, damning as it seems, I have a feeling she’d be able to talk her way out of it like she has everything else. And I can’t afford not to be believed. Not again. No, I need to keep this quiet. Do some digging.

What I need is help, professional help and not the kind Deacon’s friend Jim was offering. Like it or not, I’m going to have to ask Holly – again. The trouble is, how can I get her to take my call? I’ve been hassling her so much lately that the only conversation I’m likely to have with her now is with her answering machine – or Julio. But I really need her, more than ever. There must be some way.

* * *

Mr Krinkle is outside, watering his plants as I set off the next morning.

“Hello, Isabel,” he says, eyeing my overnight bag, nosily. “Going away for the weekend?”

“Just visiting my brother.”

“That’s nice. Do you want me to water your plants while you’re away?”

“Oh no, I won’t be gone that long. But thanks for the offer.”

He looks disappointed. I bet he would just love to have a snoop around my house, tell Mrs Norris at number nineteen about all the washing-up left in the sink.

“There is something you could do for me though.”

“Yes?”

“Well…” I hesitate – is this really a good idea? “I did read something in the paper about there being a rise in burglaries in this area.”

“Really?” A look of concern etches itself onto his face.

I’m a terrible person, worrying an old man like this.

“Yeah, and I was just wondering if you wouldn’t mind keeping a bit of an eye on my house while I’m away? I wouldn’t want to come back to find an intruder.”

“Yes, of course,” he says, nodding solemnly. “I’ll mention it to Mrs Norris opposite. I’m sure we can keep a look out between the two of us.”

“That’s really good of you, thanks.”

I start to back towards my car before he can ask me any more about the burglaries. I don’t feel good lying to him, but what is the world coming to if you can’t harness the power of nosy parkers for your own good?