round because she thought it was upside down and turned it back when she realised it wasn't.
'That's what I want to save them from,' I said very quietly.
Mrs. Quigley's eyes scanned rapidly from one picture to the other and her hands began to shake. 'Oh my God!' she gasped, and was sick into the wastepaper bin at the side of her desk. Unfortunately it was at the end where I was sitting. School dinners haven't changed much since my day they'd had shepherd's pie, broccoli, and jam sponge pudding.
I grabbed her coffee cup and nipped out to the cloakroom I'd noticed earlier. After giving her a moment to compose herself I went back in with a cup of water. She accepted it gratefully.
'Mrs. Quigley,' I said. She looked at me. Her face was the colour of an old man's legs. 'Please may I send a photographer and a lady police officer round to photograph your children?'
'I think you'd better,' she whispered between sips.
It wasn't as difficult as we'd expected. On some jobs you learn as you go along. When we briefed the WPCs who would be acting as secretaries to the photographers we realised that they would be able to eliminate most of the kids there and then. With luck they might be able to make a positive identification.
I was with Gilbert. 'Your fortnight's up, Charlie,' he told me.
'Partridge travels to the conference at Bramshill on Monday and wants his moment of glory on Tuesday. Where's this pornography job taking us?'
'It's taking us to court with a bunch of paedophiles, Gilbert, but it's nothing to do with the Georgina case.'
'Mmm, pity. So do you think we should spin Dewhurst?'
'You know I don't.'
'Right. Do you still want taking off the case?'
'You couldn't manage without me.'
'Once I couldn't manage without sugar in my coffee, but I do now. Tell you what, let's have a cup.'
Gilbert has a secretary, but he brews his own tea and coffee in the office. He doesn't make a political song and dance about it, just gets on with it. It's one of the little touches that makes him popular.
He turned round, coffee jar in one hand, spoon in the other. 'Well, if you're staying I suppose we'd better play it your way. The ACC will just have to make do with a smashed paedophile ring to impress the conference. Now then; if I put all the sugar in yours and all the milk in mine they should be somewhere near.'
The phone and the kettle started making the appropriate noises at the same instant. I grabbed the phone. 'Superintendent Wood's office.'
'Is that Mr. Priest?'
'Yes.' It was me they wanted. I listened. And listened.
Gilbert appeared at my elbow with two steaming mugs. 'They've positively identified one of the little girls in the photographs,' I whispered to him. I pulled his writing pad towards me. 'Give me the address again.' It was a block of flats, but one of the more respectable ones. They are not all disaster areas. 'What time does school finish?'
'A quarter to four.'
'OK, that gives us… just over an hour. That's enough. You carry on there, I'll organise a posse and see if her dad is at home. Well done.'
I put the phone down and told Gilbert the details. 'A little girl called Anne-Marie Briggs matches the fair girl in the photographs. She has pierced ears and identical jewellery, plus a mole over her eye in exactly the right place. The WPC says she appears shy and withdrawn.
She'd have picked her out as a contender without a description. Sorry about the coffee, Gilbert, but I have promises to keep, and miles to go before I sleep; and miles to go before I sleep.'
'Stuff the coffee, I'm coming with you.'
We rang the Child Protection Unit at Divisional HQ and arranged to meet one of their specialists near the flats. I also alerted Social Services.
The flats were not as tidy as I remembered them. The downward spiral that started with general neglect and went through graffiti to vandalism and ultimately abandonment was well underway. Gilbert knocked so hard he nearly broke the window.
The door was answered by a woman wearing tiger-striped leggings and a top that said Armani across the front, although I think Georgio would have sued for defamation had he seen the state it was in. Her hair was the colour of dead cabbage leaves, and a look of fear flashed across her face as she surveyed us.
'Superintendent Wood,' said Gilbert, 'and this is Acting DCI Priest and WPC Rawcliffe. May we come in?'
I'd forgotten I was supposed to be an Acting Chief! We didn't wait for an answer and marched straight past her.
'Ere, what's going on?' said a voice in the dismal recesses of the flat, and a skinny figure appeared from one of the rooms.
'It's the police,' the woman told him.
'What the 'ell do you want?' His T-shirt advertised the Dallas Cowboys and the gold chain round his neck could have anchored a respectable liner. His hair was cropped short on top but was long at the back.
'Mr. Briggs?' I asked.
'What of it?'
'We'd like to ask you a few questions, and have a look around.'
'You got a warrant?'
'No, but I could have one in fifteen minutes. I'd prefer not to wait until Anne-Marie comes home from school, though.'
Mrs. Briggs sank on to the sofa and her putty complexion moved several little squares towards the pale end of the colour chart.
'Questions about what?' she murmured, dreading the answer.
'Child abuse,' I said, confirming her fears.
We didn't find anything. The flat was cheaply furnished but clean and tidy. It was nearly four o'clock and our search had not been particularly thorough, but the little girl would be coming in through the door any moment. Gilbert and WPC Rawcliffe were uncertain, but I wasn't.
'Paul Briggs, I'm arresting you on suspicion of being involved in paedophilia. You are not obliged to say anything unless you wish to do so, but anything you do say may be put in writing and given in evidence against you. Do you understand?'
He didn't reply. Back at the station he wasn't any more talkative. We tried an interview but it was a waste of time. It was like talking to a donkey with ear muffs on. I told him that we'd keep him in police custody overnight and have him in front of a nice, upstanding lady magistrate next morning, to be remanded. All we had, though, was a collection of photos, some bearing a likeness to him, others to his daughter. It wasn't an impressive case.
'Put him in number four,' the custody officer told me when all the paperwork was completed and Briggs had been informed of his rights.
I grabbed him under the arm and lifted him off his chair. 'This way,'
I said, propelling him forwards. He tried to shrug off my grip but I didn't let him. WPC Rawcliffe was hovering nearby, about to go back to Division, or, more likely, her husband and kids. I caught her eye and signalled for her to follow me.
In the cell I said: 'Shoelaces, please.'
'Shoelaces?'
'That's right. We don't want you making a rope ladder and escaping, do we? Or, heaven forbid, doing yourself a mischief.'
He removed the laces and thrust them towards me. 'Right, on your feet and face the wall,' I ordered. I went through the motions of frisking him. 'Better take your belt, too,' I said. I extended my arms around his waist, skinny as a girl's but not a zillionth as alluring, and undid his belt buckle. Before he knew what was happening I'd flicked open the top button of his jeans, hooked both thumbs over the top and yanked the lot down.
He yelled a curse and tried to turn on me, but it's difficult with your pants round your knees. I grabbed his shoulders and pinned him against the wall.
On his arse was the distinctive tattoo with the Union flag and the number 18.