I had had enough, as I saw it at the time, of people inviting themselves into our lives. All I could think was: ‘For heaven’s sake, can’t we even have Graham Hill to ourselves in death?’ I was angry about it, feeling that Dad had given himself to everyone – but not enough to us. Then he died and deprived us of the chance of ever making up that deficit. Who were these people to us, anyway? He belonged to us, not them. I was struggling with this emotion, and if I was angry, imagine what it must have been like for my mother. But people were just paying their last respects to the great man. We all grieved his loss, together. On the way to the crematorium with my mum, sisters and Fay Coakley, I thought I had come to some realization that helped with these feelings. I concluded that we should be grateful for the time we had had with him, not be angry about the times we’d been deprived of or the future we’d all lost. He had lost the most, after all.