was a bad fire in a supermarket â several bodies could not be identified. All comes our way. Also, I had a moral obligation to let the archaeologist have a brief look to draw, map and photograph before anything was touched.â
But the forensics expert on what might now be called late-night duty, Dr George Hazzard, had delivered a tentative judgement. Dr Hazzard and Phoebe met professionally with some regularity. There had been a short but intense relationship between them when Phoebe first came to the Second City, the memory of which still hung over them like a cloud. A thundery one.
Almost put me off men for life, she thought. Almost. The question was still open, she was working on it. She did not count the Chief Commander as a man. He was sui generis , himself, unique. And just as well, possibly, as the possessor of precognitive powers.
Or the Chief Commander might just be a good guesser.
Without inspecting it closely, he had guessed that the âdifferentâ skull was not as old as the others.
âNot by a long way,â said Dr Hazzard. âI canât give a precise date. Weâll need the pathologists and the medical chaps to help there.â
He was staring down at the skull, which had been carefully abstracted, under the watchful eye of one of the junior archaeologists, who took photographs and drew diagrams, leaving the other skulls in situ. The water was slowly draining away. And yes, Coffin had been right, there was a touch of blood on it, caught in a crack in the bone and therefore not washed away.
âMedical?â Phoebe was surprised. âHow new is it?â
Dr Hazzard smiled and shrugged. He liked to see his police colleagues taken aback.
Phoebe sought for words. âNot contemporary?â
He shrugged again. âItâs an interesting question. Age and provenance. Where did it come from, and how? I like that sort of a problem.â
âItâs not a game.â
âWho said it was?â
âYou know what I mean: if the skull is beyond a certain age, then thereâs no case to worry CID.â She looked hopefully, then speculatively, at Hazzard who appeared to be thinking. Provoking bugger, she thought.
After a quiet second, taking a deep breath, he said: âI think CID might have a case.â
âWhat was the age of the owner of this skull? It is a babyâs skull, I suppose.â
âOh yes, I think so. But we will have to get the medical pathologist in on this to help us date and age the skull.â
âSo how long has it been in the water?â
âPossibly not so very long. I am still guessing a bit.â
âYes, I can see that.â And enjoying it. âI suppose I shouldnât call the skull âitâ. A person once. A baby person. Maybe not so long ago either.â
She looked at Hazzard, a nice man at heart, even if the heart had to be excavated. âCouldnât you make a guess?â
âI could guess . . . donât hold me to it.â
âOut with it. Let me have it.â
âThe skull might be recent,â Hazzard said carefully. âContemporary, possibly. Tests will show.â
âHow contemporary?â
Hazzard was silent.
âWhere did the hair and flesh go? The child had hair and flesh.â
Hazzard remained silent. Then he said hesitantly, âIt could have been . . . treated.â
Weâll have to talk about this, thought Phoebe. Meanwhile, a cold shiver ran through her.
âSo what was the age of this dead child?â She was determined to get more of an answer than she had done so far.
Hazzard put his head on one side. âNot my sphere. Youâll have to ask a paediatrician or some such.â
He kept saying that; she was getting tetchy.
âGuess.â
âVery young,â he allowed. âWeeks only.â
âInfanticide then.â Phoebe said heavily.
âWe donât know that. The child may have died naturally.