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Published: 20 November 1976 – 22 January 1977
Episodes: 10
Artist: Keith Robson
Writer: Unknown
Translations/reprints: None known
Plot
Hetty Blake is a popular athlete until she drives Carol too hard at an athletics club for an upcoming relay race, not listening to Carol’s protests that she is not well. Carol collapses, and Hetty discovers too late that Carol had a terminal heart condition she had not told her about. Carol dies in hospital, urging Hetty to win the relay name and to look after her younger sister Jo.
But there is one big problem with looking after Jo – Jo blames Hetty for Carol’s death, and everywhere she goes, she spreads the word that Hetty killed her sister by driving her too hard, and turns everyone against Hetty, starting with the athletics club. Despite the club ostracising her, Hetty refuses to give up on the relay event, as it was Carol’s dying wish that she win it.
So far, Jo has concealed her hatred from Hetty, but her vendetta grows worse and worse. At the relay event, she fills Hetty’s running shoes with drawing pins, which slashes her feet, and then diverts her with a fake message that almost costs her the race. Despite everything, Hetty wins the event, but her victory is greeted with icy silence. When she confronts the club over the sabotage, Jo reveals her hatred of Hetty and declares that she was the culprit. Later, she forces her way into Hetty’s flat, saying she’s going to live with her, where she can make her life an utter misery. She won’t listen to Hetty’s protests that Carol died of a heart condition that she wouldn’t tell anyone about.
Jo now proceeds to turn the whole town against Hetty, and the persecution gets so bad that she is forced out of the town, with hate-crazed Jo in tow. They have to rough it as they search for a new home on foot, get caught in a storm, and shout at each other over who is to blame for their situation, which catches the attention of the police. The police tell Hetty that if she can’t find a job, Jo will have to go into a home. Hetty finds a job as a relief P.E. teacher at a school, but Jo soon turns up again, hating Hetty as much as ever. Despite Hetty making clear attempts to help Jo and even save her from a nasty accident, Jo continues to hate her and, as she had done at their old town, spreads the word to turn everyone against Hetty.
As a result, the best athletes who had agreed to a sports event suddenly change their minds. Fortunately, not everyone has gone against Hetty. An alternate team agrees to compete. But on the day, there is a change of venue – to Jo’s old school, where everyone knows about Hetty, and they arrange a nasty demonstration against her. At this, Hetty finally cracks and runs off in tears. Jo, who is having a change of heart about Hetty and wants to forgive, runs after her, but she almost gets hit by a motorbike. Hetty pushes her aside but takes the brunt. In hospital, Jo tells Hetty she has discovered a page in Carol’s diary that confirms Hetty was telling the truth, and they are reconciled.
Thoughts
There have been countless stories where misguided protagonists make trouble for others because they wrongly blame them for something, but this is one of the most disturbing of them all. After all, it’s bad enough having someone hate you and make trouble for you at every turn, but being forced to look after the little hatemonger, being stuck with them with no hope of release and trying to survive, make a living and take care of them while they keep wrecking everything with their vendetta against you is a whole new level. And Jo is so consumed with hate and making Hetty’s life a living hell that she can’t see she’s biting the only hand that feeds her and will end up in the home she dreads if she keeps destroying her only guardian with hatred.
Keith Robson’s cross-hatching and sometimes grotesque facial artwork does an unsettling job of bringing the ugliness of it all to life, from the hate-crazed expressions of Jo and others to the persecution itself. And all it takes is the word of one girl, without anyone asking questions. There are the odd voices of sanity, some who do not believe the story, and even some people who show Hetty pity and kindness. They offer some relief and balance against the persecution, but against the seemingly unstoppable tide of hatred, they are largely voices lost in the wilderness. It is something we seem to see all too often in real life. It is not until Jo herself begins to turn, finding herself beginning to like Hetty, wondering if she’s been a bit hard on her, and then finding she was mistaken the whole time, that the tide of hatred finally begins to turn.

















