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Willowby, Tandy

Appeared in Born in Death (January, 2060) and mentioned in Innocent in Death (February 9-15, 2060)

Personal Information[]

Description[]

  • She was tea and roses blonde, with pale blue eyes and a blunt-tipped nose.[2]
  • Pregnant and due about a week before Mavis.[3]
  • She had a shy smile and was nice, stable, and sensible.[4]

History[]

  • According to Tandy, she was from Devon and moved to London as a teenager with her father.[2]
  • When Dallas runs her data, she reads that Tandy was born in London to Annalee and Nigel Willowby (no siblings). Mother deceased, 2044; father remarried in 2049 to Candide Marrow who had one daughter, Briar Rose (born 2035). Her father died in 2051 in a car crash.[5]

Interesting Facts[]

  • Worked at a baby boutique, the White Stork.[2]
  • Previously employed as a manager at a dress shop on Carnaby Street in London.[6]
  • She was supposed to be at Mavis’s baby shower but was missing. Mavis asked Dallas to investigate her disappearance.[7]
  • Randa Tillas was her midwife.[8]
  • Sunday’s Child was on the list of agencies Tandy contacted when she was considering giving her baby up for adoption.[9]
  • She was abducted and held by Winfield Chase and Madeline Bullock so that they could take her baby.
  • Tandy and Mavis both gave birth at the same Birthing Center.[10]
  • She and Aaron named their son Quentin Dallas Applebee as they said he wouldn’t have been with them if it hadn’t been for Eve.[11]
  • Nadine interviewed Tandy, Aaron, and Quentin Dallas Applebee for a segment on Now, along with Mavis, Leonardo, and Bella, and asked Eve how she felt, since she saved Tandy’s life and prevented their baby from being sold into the black market; Eve said she felt like she did her job.[12]

YANNI[]

  • ”No one’s seen her, as far as we can tell, since Thursday, at around six o’clock... four forty-eight on a bloody Sunday morning...” Eve said “Tandy was seventy-one hours missing[13]
    • Thursday 6:00 p.m. to Sunday 4:48 a.m. = roughly 58 hours and 48 minutes missing, not seventy-one hours

References[]

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