BARTLETT KNEW THAT the man had been drinking and found himself feeling surprised and disappointed. He had been expecting the call all the afternoon, but it had not come through until half past three. The four of them had been seated in his office since lunchtime (the red light on outside) talking in hushed voices amongst themselves about the shattering news. Graphically Martin had recounted again and again the details of his morning discovery, and had taken some muted pleasure, even in these grim moments, at finding himself, quite unprecedentedly, at the centre of his colleagues' attention. But invariably the conversation had reverted to the perplexing question of who had been the last to see Quinn alive — and where. They all agreed, it seemed, that it had been on Friday, but exactly when and exactly where no one seemed able to remember. Or cared to tell.
Monica Height watched the Inspector carefully as he came in, and told herself, as they were briefly introduced, that his eyes held hers a fraction longer than was strictly necessary. She liked his voice, too; and when he informed them that each would be interviewed separately, either by himself or by Sergeant Lewis (standing silently by the door), she found herself hoping that in her case it would be him. Not that she need have worried on that score: Morse had already mentally allocated her to himself. But first he had to see what Bartlett could tell him.
'You've locked Quinn's door, I hope, sir.'
'Yes. Immediately I got your message.'
'Well, I think you'd better tell me something about this place: what you do, how you do it, anything at all you think may help. Quinn was murdered, sir — little doubt about that; and my job's to find out who murdered him. There's just a possibility, of course, that his murder's got nothing at all to do with this place, or with the people here; but it seems much more probable that I may be able to find something in the office here that will give me some sort of lead. So, I'm afraid I shall be having to badger you all for a few days — you realize that, don't you?'
Bartlett nodded. 'We shall all do our best to help you, Inspector. Please feel completely free to carry out whatever inquiries you think fit.'
'Thank you, sir. Now, what can you tell me?'
During the next half-hour Morse learned a great deal. Bartlett told him about the purpose, commitments, and organization of the Syndicate, about the personnel involved at all stages in the running of public examinations. And Morse found himself surprised and impressed: surprised by the unexpected complexities of the operations involved; and, above all, impressed by the extraordinary efficiency and grasp of the Pickwickian little Secretary sitting behind his desk.
'What about Quinn himself?'
Bartlett opened a drawer and took out a folder. 'I looked this out for you, Inspector. It's Quinn's application for the job here. It'll tell you more than I can.'
Morse opened the folder and his eyes hurriedly scanned the contents: curriculum vitae, testimonials, letters from three referees, and the application form itself, across the top of which Bartlett had written: 'Appointed w.e.f. 1st Sept'. But again Morse's mind remained infuriatingly blank. The cogs in the machine were beginning to turn all right, but somehow they refused to engage. He closed the folder, defensively mumbling something about studying it later, and looked again at Bartlett. He wondered how that clear and supremely efficient mind would be tackling the problem of Quinn's murder, and it appeared that Bartlett could almost read his thoughts.
'You know that he was deaf, don't you, Inspector?'
'Deaf? Oh yes.' The police surgeon had mentioned it, but Morse had taken little notice.
'We were all very impressed by the way he coped with his disability.'
'How deaf was he?'
'He would probably have gone completely deaf in a few years' time. That was the prognosis, anyway.'
For the first time since Bartlett had been talking the merest flicker of interest showed itself in Morse's eyes. 'Little surprising you appointed him, perhaps, sir?'
'I think it's you who would have been surprised, Inspector.
You could hardly tell he was deaf, you see. Apart from dealing with the phone, which was a problem, he was quite remarkable. He really was.'
'Did you, er, did you appoint him, you know, because he was deaf?'
'Did we feel sorry for him, you mean? Oh no. It seemed to the, er, the, er, committee that he was the best man in the field.'
'Which committee was that?'
Did Morse catch a hint of guardedness in Bartlett's eyes? He wasn't sure. What he did know was that the teeth of the smallest cog had now begun to bite. He sat back more happily in his chair.
'We, er, had all twelve Syndics on that committee — plus myself, of course.'
'Syndics? They're, er—?'
'They're like governors of a school, really.'
'They don't work here?'
'Good gracious, no. They're all university dons. They just meet here twice a term to see if we're doing our job properly.'
'Have you got their names here?'
Morse looked with interest down the typed list that Bartlett handed to him. Printed beside the name of each of the Syndics were full details of university, college, degrees, doctorates and other academic honours, and one name in the list jumped out at him. 'Most of them Oxford men, I see, sir.'
'Natural enough, isn't it?'
'Just one or two from Cambridge.'
'Ye-es.'
'Wasn't Quinn at Magdalene College, Cambridge?' Morse began to reach for the folder, but Bartlett immediately confirmed the fact.
'I see that Mr. Roope was at the same college, sir.'
'Was he? I'd never noticed that before.'
'You notice most things, if I may say so.'
'I always associate Roope with Christ Church, I suppose. He's been appointed a fellow there: "student", rather, if we want to be pedantic, Inspector.' His eyes were utterly guileless now, and Morse wondered if he might earlier have been mistaken.
'What's Roope's subject?'
'He's a chemist.'
'Well, well.' Morse tried to suppress the note of excitement in his voice, but realized that he wasn't succeeding. 'How old is he? Do you know?'
'Youngish. Thirty or so.'
'About Quinn's age, then?'
'About that.'
'Now, sir. Just one more thing.' He looked at his watch and found that it was already a quarter to five. 'When did you last see Quinn? Can you remember?'
'Last Friday, sometime. I know that. But it's a funny thing. Before you came in, we were all trying to think when we'd last seen him. Very difficult, you know, to pinpoint it exactly. I certainly saw him late on Friday morning; but I can't be sure about Friday afternoon. I had to go to a meeting in Banbury at three o'clock, and I'm just not sure if I saw him before I went.'
'What time did you leave the office, sir?'
'About a quarter past two.'
'You must drive pretty fast.'
'I've got a fast car.'
'Twenty-two, twenty-three miles?'
Bartlett's eyes twinkled. 'We've all got our little weaknesses, Inspector, but I try to keep within the speed limits.'
Morse heard himself say he hoped so, and decided it was high time he saw Miss Monica Height. But before he did so he had a very much more urgent call to pay. 'Where's the nearest Gents? I'm dying for—'
'There's one right here, Inspector.' He got up and opened the door to the right of his desk. Inside was a tiny lavatory with a small wash basin tucked away behind the door; and as Morse blissfully emptied his aching bladder, Bartlett was reminded of the mighty outpourings of Niagara.
After only a few minutes with Monica Height, Morse found himself wondering how the rest of the staff could ever manage to keep their hands off her, and cynically suspected that perhaps they didn't. The bright-green, flower-patterned dress she wore was stretched too tightly across her wide thighs, yet somehow managed to mould itself sofdy and suggestively around her full breasts. Biddable, by the look of it — and eminently beddable. She wore little make-up, but her habit of passing her tongue round her mouth imparted a moist sheen to her slightly pouting lips; and she exuded a perfume that seemed to invite instant and glorious gratification. Morse felt quite sure that at certain times and in certain moods she must have proved well-nigh irresistible to the young and the susceptible. To Martin, perhaps? To Quinn? Yes, surely the temptation must always have been there. Morse knew that he himself, the middle-aged and the susceptible. But he pushed the thought to the back of his mind. What about Ogleby? Or even Bartlett, perhaps? Whew! It was a thought! Morse recalled the passage from Gibbon about one of the tests designed for the young novitiate: stick him in a sack all night with a naked nun and see if. Morse shook his head abruptly and passed his hand over his eyes. It was always the same when he'd had a lot of beer.
'Do you mind if I just ring my daughter, Inspector? (Daughter?) 'I'm usually on my way home by this time, and she'll probably wonder where I've got to.' Morse listened as she rang a number and explained her whereabouts.
'How old is your daughter, Miss, er, er, Miss Height?'
She smiled understandingly. 'It's all right, Inspector. I'm divorced, and Sally's sixteen.'
'You must have married young.' (Sixteen!)
'I was foolish enough to marry at eighteen, Inspector. I'm sure you had much more sense than that.'
'Me? Oh yes, em, no, I mean. I'm not married myself, you see.' Their eyes held again for a brief second and Morse sensed he could be living dangerously. It was time he asked the fair Monica a few important questions.
"When did you last see Mr. Quinn?'
'It's funny you should ask that. We were only. ' It was like listening to a familiar record. She'd seen him on Friday morning — quite sure of that. But Friday afternoon? She couldn't quite remember. It was difficult. After all, Friday was — what? — five days ago now. ('Could have been four, five days' hadn't the police surgeon said?)
'Did you like Mr. Quinn?' Morse watched her reaction carefully, and suspected that this was one question for which she hadn't quite prepared herself.
'I haven't known him all that long, of course. What is it? Two or three months? But I liked him, yes. Very nice sort of person.'
'Did he like you?'
'What do you mean by that, Inspector?'
What did he mean? 'I just thought — well, I just thought—'
'You mean did he find me attractive?'
'I don't suppose he could help that.'
'You're very nice, Inspector.'
'Did he ever ask you out with him?'
'He asked me out to the pub once or twice at lunchtimes.'
'And you went?'
'Why not?'
'What did he drink?'
'Sherry, I think.'
'What about you?'
Her tongue moistened her lips once more. 'I've got slightly more expensive tastes myself.'
'Where did you go?'
'The Horse and Trumpet — just at the end of the road. Nice, cosy little place. You'd love it.'
'Perhaps I'll see you in there one day.'
'Why not?'
'Your tastes are expensive, you say?'
'We could work something out.'
Again their eyes met and the danger bells were ringing in Morse's brain. He stood up: 'I'm sorry to have kept you so long, Miss Height. I hope you'll apologize for me to your daughter.'
'Oh, she'll be all right. She's been home a lot of the time recently. She's retaking a few O-levels, and the school lets her go home when she hasn't got an examination.'
'I see.' Morse stood at the door, and seemed reluctant to leave. 'We shall be seeing each other again, no doubt.'
'I hope so, Inspector.' She spoke pleasantly and quietly and — damn it, yes! — sexily.
Her last words re-echoed in Morse's mind as he walked abstractedly down the corridor.
'At last!' muttered Lewis to himself. He had been sitting in the entrance foyer for the past twenty minutes with Bartlett, Ogleby and Martin. All three had their overcoats and briefcases with them but were obviously reluctant to depart until Morse came and said the word. The death of Quinn had obviously thrown a pall of gloom over everything, and they had little to say to each other. Lewis had liked Ogleby, but had learned little from him: he'd remembered seeing Quinn the previous Friday morning, but not in the early afternoon; and to each of Lewis's other questions he had appeared to answer frankly, if uninformatively. Martin, though, had seemed a completely different proposition: intense and nervous now, as the shock of the whole business seemed to catch up with him, he'd said he couldn't really remember seeing Quinn at all on Friday.
Rather awkwardly, Morse thanked them for their cooperation, and gathered from Bartlett that it would be perfectly in order for himself and Lewis to stay in the building: the caretaker would be on the premises until at least 7.30 p.m., and naturally the building would be kept open for them as long as they wished. But before handing over the keys to Quinn's office and to his filing cabinets, Bartlett gave the policemen a stern-faced little lecture on the strictly confidential nature of most of the material they would find; it was of the greatest importance therefore that they should remember. Yes, yes, yes, yes. Morse realized how he would have hated working under Bartlett, a man for whom the sin against the Holy Ghost was clearly that of leaving filing cabinets unlocked whilst nipping out to pee.
After they had gone, Morse suggested a quick stroll round the block, and Lewis responded willingly. The building was far too hot, and the cool night air was clean and refreshing. On the corner of the Woodstock Road they passed the Horse and Trumpet and Morse automatically, consulted his watch.
'Nice little pub, I should think, Lewis. Ever been in?'
'No, sir, and I've had enough beer, anyway. I'd much rather have a cup o' tea.' Relieved that it still wanted ten minutes to opening time, he told Morse of his interviews, and Morse in turn told Lewis of his. Neither of them, it seemed, felt unequivocally convinced that he had stared into the eyes of a murderer.
'Nice-looker, isn't she, sir?'
'Uh? Who do you mean, Lewis?'
'Come off it, sir!'
'I suppose she is — if you go for that sort.'
'I notice you kept her all to yourself.'
'One o' the perks, isn't it?'
'I'm a bit surprised you didn't get a bit more out of her, though. Of the lot of 'em she seemed to me the one most likely to drop her inhibitions pretty quickly.'
'Drop her knickers pretty smartish, too, I shouldn't wonder.'
Lewis sometimes felt that Morse was quite unnecessarily crude.