'Yes,' said Frost.

'Surely, even anyone with the minimum of common sense-'

'Yes,' snapped Frost, biting off the end of Mullett's pointless reprimand. 'I was wrong. I know I was wrong. I felt sorry for the poor sod. His mother was dying.'

'He claims he is innocent.'

'So did Crippen. Every murderer I've arrested has claimed to be innocent, it's par for the course.'

Mullett waved this to one side. 'I've listened to the tapes of your last interview. As he says, you bullied him. He was weeping.'

'I bet that poor kid was weeping when he raped her.'

Mullett glared. This was not how he expected people to accept reprimands. 'A bungled, incompetent, mishandled investigation, with tragic consequences.'

'Nothing was bungled,' snapped Frost. 'If the silly bastard hadn't topped himself it would have been an ongoing investigation. If we found he didn't do it — and it's a bloody big 'if' — we would have let him go.'

'If, if, if!' countered Mullett. 'A death in custody and an innocent man. The press will be down on us like a ton of bricks.'

'Innocent my arse!' exploded Frost. 'He killed that kid and dumped the body.'

Mullett flushed angrily. 'I've said all I intend to say for the moment, Frost. There will be an investigation of this death in custody and I am going to put in a strong recommendation that you be suspended from duty.'

'Thank you very much,' said Frost, scraping the chair across the carpet as he stood up. 'For a moment I was terrified you'd be on my side.'

He left Mullett glowering at the slammed door.

Police Sergeant Wells wriggled uncomfortably and ran a finger round the tight collar of the brand new shirt which was chewing into his neck. His new shoes were pinching his feet, but the scuffed, old ones would have looked incongruous against his best, newly pressed, uniform.

Barely half-past eight the next morning, but already Mullett had arrived with Chief Superintendent Bailey and Chief Inspector Hopley, the two senior officers from County. They had swept past the front desk and straight into Mullett's office, not bothering to acknowledge his presence. A grim-looking lot of bastards, he thought, like the prison governor and the hangman on their way to wake some poor sod up on his final morning.

The internal phone buzzed and he was ordered to bring in three coffees. Pre-warned by Mullett not to use chipped enamel mugs — as if he flaming well would — he put the china cups on their matching saucers and carried them into the old log cabin. The conversation stopped dead and all eyes followed him as he lifted the tray over and set it on the desk at the precise spot indicated by Mullett's finger.

He backed out as if leaving royalty.

'You are Sergeant Wells?' barked Chief Superintendent Bailey, thickset and beetle-browed, breaking the silence. 'The custody sergeant?'

'Yes, sir,' replied Wells eagerly, glad of the chance to get his story in early. 'I checked him regularly. I went by the book-'

Bailey's hand chopped him short. 'Later, Sergeant, later — we're having coffee.'

Mullett, deeming a glower was called for, glowered Wells out of the room. He beat a hasty retreat and dashed down the corridor to Frost's office to make his report.

Frost leant back in his chair and surveyed the new uniform in amazement. 'Very smart, Bill… are you on a promise tonight?' He, himself, had made no effort to dress up for the inquiry, the same shiny suit and greasy tie.

'The inquiry, Jack. I'd have thought you might have tarted yourself up.'

Frost brushed ash from the front of his jacket. 'If they're going to hang you, they don't give a toss if you're wearing a smart suit or not.'

Wells moved some files and sat in the spare chair. 'Bailey and Hopley are here. They look a right pair of bastards.'

'Everyone from County are bastards,' murmured Frost.

'We've got to get our stories straight, Jack,' said Wells for the hundredth time. 'I searched him — you saw me — and I checked that cell regularly.'

'Every other second,' nodded Frost. 'Don't worry, it's my blood they're after, not yours. Just tell them the truth — it'll throw them off their guard.'

Both heads turned as the office door creaked open and Morgan, looking much the worse for wear, lumbered in, rubbing his eyes and yawning.

'Look what the cat's sicked up!' said Frost.

A sheepish grin from Morgan. 'Sorry I'm late, guv.' A painful nod to Wells as he tottered over to his desk and shook a couple of paracetamol tablets into his hand. He swallowed them dry.

'Where the hell were you yesterday afternoon?' demanded the inspector.

Morgan frowned. Frost knew where he was. 'With the search party, guv.'

'After that? We were all looking for you.'

'I felt rough, guv, shagged out after flogging my gut out looking for that little girl. I didn't go back to the station. I went straight to my digs, took some painkillers, then went to bed.'

'I phoned you. I sent someone round to your place,' put in Wells. 'They nearly kicked the door in. No-one answered.'

'Ah!' Morgan looked shamefaced. 'I felt a bit better after a while, so I went out. Spent the night at a friend's place.'

'A female?' asked Frost.

'Er… yes.' He rubbed a hand across his forehead. 'I think we overdid the drink.'

'I think you overdid the other as well,' snapped Frost. He lit up. 'So you flogged your guts out looking for the girl?'

'Yes, guv.'

Frost riffled through the pile of roneoed forms filled in by the search parties. 'You searched that old garden shed in the hospital grounds?'

The DC's brow creased as he tried to remember. 'Did I, guv?'

Frost waved the form at him. 'You've ticked it to say you did.'

'If I ticked it, then I searched it.' He frowned. 'What's the problem?'

'The problem,' Frost told him, 'is that the shed you thoroughly searched is where we found the girl.'

Morgan blinked, wincing as he firmly shook his head. 'No, guv, that's not possible.'

Frost glared. 'Yes, guv, it is bloody possible, because that's where I found her.'

'Then Weaver must have put it there after I searched.'

'That was clever of him, seeing as how he was in our custody all day.'

'Then someone else dumped it for him.'

'Just to oblige him? The man's a loner, he's got no friends. Don't let's beat about the bush. You ticked it off, but you didn't search it.'

Morgan loosened his tie and flapped the front of his shirt to cool himself. 'We are talking about the same place, guv — little shed, fertilizer sacks, a sort of shelf thing on the wall?'

'Yes.'

'I searched it, guv,' insisted Morgan. 'She wasn't there.'

'And what about when you searched it the second time?'

Morgan now looked embarrassed. 'A second time, guv?'

'You were told to go back and search again.' Frost waved the form. 'You've ticked it to say you did.'

Morgan's head sank. 'There was no point in searching it a second time, guv. It was a tiny place, no room to hide anything. She wasn't there.'

A derisive snort from Wells, who had been listening intently.

Morgan flushed. 'Look, guv, I may be all sorts of a shit, but if I'm looking for a kid, then I flaming well look. I lifted the sacks, each one. She wasn't there, I swear it.'

Frost looked hard at him, smoke dribbling from his nose. 'Weaver topped himself last night, left a note saying he didn't do it and I had hounded him to death.'

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