Drysdale frowned. 'Anyone could have done it… a nurse, a plumber, a television repair man.'
'Would there have been much blood, doc?'
Drysdale pursed his lips and shook his head. 'Very little. You would get more blood cutting yourself shaving.' He nodded to his secretary who flipped over her
notebook. 'Let's get on.' He glanced up at the clock. 'Examination of the body of Robert Kirby commenced at 1.57,' he dictated.
'Oh!' interrupted Frost. 'Sorry, doc should have told you. This isn't Bobby. We don't know who he is.'
Drysdale glowered, his lips tight. 'Thank you for sharing that information, inspector. I find these little details rather important.' As he turned back to the table, Frost thumbed his nose at him.
Very slowly, Drysdale inspected the body, lifting the hands to examine the fingernails, searching for cuts, abrasions, any marks of injury. He raised the head and his fingers explored the scalp.
'If you could hurry it up, doc,' urged Frost. 'We don't know who the poor little sod is yet, and we want to get photographs off to the media.'
Ignoring him, Drysdale dictated his findings to his secretary. 'Little finger of right hand severed, but no other signs of external injuries.' He bent over the face. 'Vomit exuding from nose.' He took samples and passed them over to Harding. 'Mouth and eyes covered with brown plastic masking tape approximately 50mm wide.' He moved to one side. 'You may remove the tape now.'
Harding carefully eased it off with tweezers, first from the eyes, then the mouth. A sour smell of vomit and chloroform. The boy's mouth, distorted by the tape, had been frozen into a grotesque teeth-baring grin. The flash gun crackled and the film-winding motor whirred as Evans took pictures.
Drysdale studied the area around the lips and nostrils, pointing out where small fibres of cotton wool still adhered. He tweeze red them off and passed them over to Harding. 'The anaesthetic was poured on a pad of cotton wool and clamped over the mouth, causing a slight burning of the flesh… here… and here.' He forced open the uiouth and shone a small pen torch inside. 'Particles of undigested food and vomit. looks like ground meat, onion…' Then he tweeze red out a piece of sodden cloth and held it aloft before dropping it into the large glass container Harding was holding out for him. 'The gag,' he announced. Then, with agonizing slowness, he extracted more samples from the mouth and nose.
'Any sign of sexual interference, doc?' asked Frost impatiently.
'I'll jtell you when I'm ready,' murmured Drysdale, 'and not before.' He then proceeded to work even more slowly.
Frost sighed. The man was a bastard. He wandered off to a side room and helped himself to a mug of coffee from a thermos he found on the table. He had no wish to see the body opened and the organs removed and weighed. All he wanted was the findings… He sipped the coffee and smoked and tried to think of anything he should have done, but hadn't. He poured another mug of coffee, then wandered back to the autopsy room. The pathologist had finished and was washing his hands at the sink, while the mortuary attendant was busily suturing the gaping wounds. 'Brief findings, doc?' He stressed the 'brief. Drysdale was inclined to be long-winded.
Drysdale tugged at the automatic towel dispenser. 'No sign of sexual assault. If that was the intention, then it wasn't carried out.'
'Good,' nodded Frost, although this meant there was no way of knowing if they were looking for a sex attacker or not.
'His last meal was a proprietary hamburger sesanu seed bread roll, ground beef, onion rings, eaten verj shortly before death.'
'How shortly?' Frost asked.
'Half an hour at the most.'
Frost thought this over as he tried to rub some life intc his cheek. It was freezing cold in the autopsy room and his scar was starting to ache. The kid had a hamburger half an hour before he died. They'd have to check all the likely places McDonald's, Burger King in the hope someone might remember serving him amongst their hundreds of other customers… You're bound to remember him, he bought a hamburger! A forlorn, bloody hope, he knew.
'There's a very faint mark around the hair-line,' said Drysdale, leading him back to the body. 'You can hardly see it.' He slipped a finger under the hair to lift it and showed Frost what he meant… a barely perceptible white mark, just under an eighth of an inch wide, running across the forehead.
'What do you make of it, doc?'
'Something elasticated pulled over the hair. My secretary suggested a shower cap.' He nodded to the woman, who blushed and went back to writing out labels for the specimen jars.
'A shower cap?'
'Doesn't make much sense, but something like that. You'll get my fuller report in the morning.'
'Send it to Mr. Allen,' said Frost. 'Not me it's not my case, thank God!' Then he remembered what he meant to ask. 'Chloroform. Do they still use it in hospitals?'
Drysdale shook his head. 'Not for many years. It's been superseded.'
'So where would you get it a chemist?'
Another shake of the head. 'Only if they've got some very old stock they haven't got around to throwing away yet. Years ago it was used in certain prescribed medicines, but not any more. Anything else?'
Frost scratched his head. 'That's all I can think of, doc.'
'I'll bid you good night then.' He jerked his head to his secretary, who followed him out.
Evans began to bag up the materials removed from the body… the masking tape, the cotton wool and sticking plaster… The mortuary attendant came out to take the body back to the storage area, but Frost held up a hand to delay him. 'Take a couple of Polaroid shots of the face,' he instructed Evans. 'I want them faxed out to all forces in the hope someone can identify the poor little git.' He moved out of the way as the flash gun fired. One last look at the body. He lifted the hand with the severed finger. 'Why the hell would anyone want to do this?'
'Liz Maud has got a weirdo breaking into houses and stabbing kids,' said Burton. 'Could be him.'
'Could be,' said Frost, not sounding very convinced. 'I'll have a word with her.'
On the way out they passed Drysdale and his secretary in the midst of an angry exchange with the mortuary attendant who was hotly denying helping himself to coffee from their thermos flask.
In the car Frost settled back into the passenger seat and offered his cigarettes to Burton. 'I want you to check up on that little Chinese nurse. Find out where she was from four o'clock onwards, today.'
Burton frowned. 'You surely don't suspect her?'
'Sticking plaster, cotton wool, chloroform, things you'd find in a hospital. And she'd certainly know how to lop off a finger.'
'But what on earth would her motive be?'
'I don't know, son.' The cigarette waggled in his mouth as he spoke and sent a shower of ash down the front of his mac. 'Perhaps she was jealous of Kirby's son perhaps he was spoiling their relationship.'
'But this is a different boy.'
'They all look the same to us maybe our kids all look the same to them. Perhaps she got the wrong kid.' Even as he said it, it sounded weak. 'Just check her out, son. It'll give us something to do. We've got no other leads at the moment.'
A disgruntled Bill Wells grabbed Frost as soon as he entered the station. 'If you want me to do anything for you, Jack, like organize a search party, do me the courtesy of talking to me direct. I'm not having that stuck-up tart telling me what to do.'
'Sorry,' said Frost, knowing how prickly Wells could be. 'Have one of Mullett's fags and we'll say no more about it.' Wells took one and let the inspector light it for him. He was still not mollified.
'And where is the good lady in question?' asked Frost.
'Lording it up in the murder incident room.'
Frost nodded and breezed off down the corridor. 'I'll give her your love,' he called.
He sailed into the incident room. Liz had done a good job gel ling it organized, and under way. The fax machine in the corner was chirping away, spewing out yards of messages; two uniformed men were taking calls and another phone was ringing on an unoccupied desk. As Burton followed Frost in, she yelled, 'Answer that phone.'
Sullenly, Burton snatched it up. Like Wells, he wasn't happy taking orders from a woman.
'Be with you in a minute,' she called to Frost, putting down her phone and galloping over to the fax machine.