It is the duty of all local authorities under section 46 of the
Public Health Act to dispose of the bodies of anyone destitute with
no known relatives. This is normally an easy if sad task, but when
Ros Green, a slap-happy temporary junior, is given the job of
arranging the funeral of Cyril Porter, The Laurels, Brickfield
Terraces, she immediately connects him with the book Diary of a
Nobody. It is enough to intrigue her and she begins to make further
enquiries to find out more about the man. Back at work she is told
to 'get a move on and get the burial over' . Stubbornly, and with
the help of her partner Detective Sergeant Jack Russell she
persists with her enquiries until she reaches back into wartime
days - then the attempts to stop her become more serious. She has
sewerage dumped on her garden, her brake cables are cut and finally
a shot is fired but she is undaunted, and her efforts are rewarded
when she discovers the man's true identity and, in doing so, also
uncovers a wartime scandal which will now threaten the lives of
many prominent people in the town.
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