you caught it from.'

Trevor certainly hadn't bargained for this. He couldn't tell the truth, he couldn't name anyone he knew, and he certainly couldn't answer, 'Nobody.'

'A prostitute,' he replied quickly. It was the first thing that came into his mind.

The doctor raised his thin eyebrows. 'A prostitute? Where was this, Peter?'

'Here.'

'In York?'

'Yes.'

'When?'

'About a week ago.'

'What was her name?'

'Jane.'

'Where does she live?'

It was all going too fast for Trevor. He began to stumble over his answers. 'I… I… don't know. I was with some other boys. We'd had a bit too much to drink, then we walked around and she just came up to us.'

'In the street?'

'Yes.'

'But you must have gone somewhere.'

'No. I mean yes.'

The doctor stared at him.

'In an alley,' Trevor went on. 'We went in an alley. There was nobody around. We stood up, leaning against a wall.'

'What about your friends? Did they… er?'

'No,' Trevor assured him hastily. He realized that he would be asked to name anybody else he implicated.

The doctor frowned. 'Are you sure?'

'Yes. It was only me. It was my birthday.'

'Ah,' the doctor said, smiling benignly. 'I understand. But you don't know where this woman lived?'

'No.'

'Have you been with anyone else since it happened?'

'No.'

'Very well, Peter. If you'll just walk down the corridor to the room at the end, you'll find a nurse there. She'll take a blood sample-just to make sure. After that, come back here and we'll get on with it.'

The room was like the school chemistry laboratory, with glass-fronted cupboards full of labelled jars and long tables covered with retorts, bunsen burners, pipettes and racks of test tubes. It made Trevor nervous.

The nurse was quite pretty. 'Relax,' she said, rolling up his sleeve. 'It won't hurt.'

And it didn't. He couldn't feel the needle going in at all, but he turned his head away so he wouldn't see the blood running into the syringe. He felt a slight prick as it came out.

'There,' the nurse said, smiling and wiping the spot with cotton-wool soaked in alcohol. 'All done. You can go back to Doctor Willis now.' Trevor went back to the small examination room, where Doctor Willis greeted him.

'I want you to sit back on that chair over there and relax, Peter,' he said in a soft hypnotic voice. 'This won't take very long. Just another little test.'

Willis turned his back to Trevor and picked up something shiny from a white kidney-shaped tray.

'Just remove your trousers, Peter. Underpants, too. That's right,' the doctor said, and came toward him. Willis held in his hand what looked like a sewing-needle. He seemed to be holding it by the point, though, and the angled eye was larger than normal.

Trevor tensed as Willis came closer. For a moment the doctor seemed to be wearing a dirty smock, and his National Health glasses were held together at the bridge by Elastoplast.

'Now, relax, Peter,' he said, bending forward. 'I'm just going to insert this gently inside…'

IV

The phone call came through at 4:17.

'Chief Inspector Banks?' It was an unfamiliar voice.

'Yes.'

'This is Inspector MacLean here. York CID.'

Banks tightened his grip on the receiver, his palms sweating, slippery against the black bakelite: 'Yes, go on.'

'It's about your request. The local clap-shop called us a few minutes ago. Seems they've got a kid down there. Looks about eighteen but could be younger and doesn't appear to know York very well. He was very vague about how he picked up the disease. Some clap-trap- excuse the pun-about having a prossie in a back alley. Doctor got the distinct impression that he was making it up as he went along. Sound like your laddie?'

'It certainly does,' Banks said, drumming on his desk with excitement. 'Tell me more.'

'Not a lot more to tell,' MacLean went on in his deadpan voice. 'Some decay between the front teeth, all right, but most kids have rotten teeth these days. I was over in the States two years ago on an exchange, and they think it's criminal there the way the British treat their teeth-or don't treat them, if you catch my drift. They say you can always spot a Brit by his teeth. You know-'

'Inspector…' Banks cut in.

'Sorry,' MacLean said. 'You must be eager to get your mitts on him.'

'I am, rather. Where is he?'

'Still at the clap-shop. We're holding him there. Got a couple of uniforms on the job. We let him have his treatment, of course. You realize he'll need a few more shots yet? Do you want him delivered?'

'No, thanks, I'll pick him up myself.'

'I'm glad you said that. We're a bit short of staff down here.'

'What name did he give?'

'Upshaw. Peter Upshaw. Ring a bell?' 'No, but it'd be false, wouldn't it?' Banks took down the address of the clinic. 'Be there in about an hour- and thank you, Inspector MacLean.'

'You're welcome,' MacLean said, and hung up.

'Sergeant Hatchley!' Banks bellowed, jumping up and flinging open his door.

For the second time that day, Hatchley arrived red faced and breathless. But Banks made no comment on his physical condition. His dark eyes glittering with success, he clapped his hand gleefully on the sergeant's broad, well-padded shoulder and said, 'Fancy a ride to York?'

Trevor, meanwhile, sat glumly in the examination room under the bored eyes of a fresh-faced constable no more than three or four years his senior. The other officer, of similar age and appearance (so much so that locals on their beat called them the Bobbie Twins), stood in the reception area waiting for the CID bigwig.

After the slight discomfort and great humiliation of his examination, Trevor had been told to await the test results. He felt edgy and afraid, but not of the police; there was room only for one worry at a time in his youthful mind. It was with great surprise, then, that he noted the arrival of Constable Parker, who preceded Dr. Willis through the door.

'Sorry about this,' Willis said embarrassedly, taking off his glasses and cleaning them on his smock. 'A little misunderstanding, I'm sure. Soon have it straightened out, eh?' And under the policeman's eyes, he administered the first injection in Trevor's course of treatment. After that, there was nothing to do but wait, and one worry very quickly replaced another in Trevor's mind.

It was closer to six o'clock when Banks and Hatchley arrived at the clinic. They hadn't reckoned on the rush-hour snarl-up in York's maze of one-way streets. Constable Spinks led them to the examination room, and Trevor sneered when he saw Banks walk in.

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