Inspector Morse 13 The Remorseful Day
Page 29
Monday morning would have been disappointed, since he had put in no
appearance by lunchtime. Yet he was not idle during those morning hours; and
any visitor to the bachelor flat would have found him seated at his desk for
much of the time; and for a fair proportion of that time found him writing
quite busily and (as we have seen) very neatly. His old typewriter (with its
defective 'e' and 't's) sat at his elbow; but he had never mastered the
keyboard-skills with any real confidence, and he wrote now in long-hand with
a medium-blue Biro.
For Priority Consideration Several things have happened these last few days
which have prompted me to put down in writing my own thoughts on the present
state of play.
First, I've been waking up every day recently, after some nightmarish nights,
with a premonition that some disaster is imminent. Whether death comes into
such a category, I'm not sure. I can't agree with Socrates, though, that
death is a blessing devoutly to be wished, even if it is (as I hope it is, as
I believe it is) one long completely dreamless sleep. For the very fact of
being alive is surely the best thing that's happened to (almost) all of us.
Second, the last murder case entrusted to the pair of us has been (one or two
loose ends though) satisfactorily resolved. Repp and Flynn were murdered by
Ban-on, and the murderer himself is now dead.
So any further insight into the original Harrison murder from their angles is
wholly precluded.
Third, I'm certain that Frank Harrison has been the pay- master. It's high
time we brought him into HQ for intensive questioning, either directly about
the murder of his wife, or at the very least about some culpable complicity
of her murder.
Fourth, I'm also convinced that Yvonne H was murdered by one of her own
family. Nothing else makes any sense at all, not to me anyway.
That murder was not premeditated: few of them are. It was committed
spontaneously, viciously, involuntarily perhaps, by whichever of the three it
was who found Yvonne Harrison in a situation that was utterly unexpected
kinkiness, perversion, degradation, all rolled up into one.
On the face of it, the husband is the outsider of the three, so you will
appreciate, Lewis, that in my book he's the favourite. It's the 'why' that
worries me, though. He wasn't and isn't anybody's fool, and he must have
known more than
enough about his wife's tastes in bondage and possibly masochism. So I just
can't see blazing jealousy as his motive, especially since, as I strongly
suspect, he regularly experienced the (reported) joys of extra-marital sex
himself.
A confession here.
Quite a few times I've found myself looking at the faces of people concerned
with this case and thinking I'd seen them somewhere before.
I thought it might be the result of inter- breeding in a small community no
wonder some of the villagers are pretty tight-lipped!
And I was right. That fruit- machine addict, for example: Alien Thomas.
That's how you spell his name by the way, Lewis. I found it in the village-
school records: Alien Alfred Thomas. Unusual these days, that spelling of
"Alien'. And
"Alfred' belongs more to the first half of the century, doesn't it? I also
found out (well, Dixon found out) that the Christian names of Elizabeth Jane
Thomas's father were
"Harold Alfred'; and that someone else in the village had a father with the
Christian names
"Joseph Alien'. That someone else was Frank Harrison. And (believe me!) he
was the father of the lad, and Elizabeth decided to give him a couple of
Christian names that, at least for herself, could confer some little pretence
of legitimacy of her illegitimate son. (I wonder if his father gives him a
fruit-machine allowance?) Let's turn to the Harrison children.
Either of them could have murdered their mother. What would be the motive,
though? I just can't see Sarah suddenly turning to murder because she finds
her mother abed with one of her many lovers. What does it really matter to
her that her mother enjoys a bit of biting and bondage occasionally? Shocked
and disgusted? Yes, she'd certainly have been both. But driven to murder?
No. There's something about her, though something that tells me that she's
up to her very smooth neck in things.
What about Simon Harrison? As we know he's always been 287
a bit of a
mummy's darling: a boy disadvantaged because of early deafness; a boy always
needing extra understanding and extra love, and who found it (hardly
surprisingly) from his mother. I'd guess myself that for Simon this
relationship had always been very precious. Sacrosanct almost. I'd also
guess that he had no notion whatsoever of his mother's idiosyncratic tastes
in sexual gratification. Then one night, the night of the murder, he'd
driven out to see her. And why not? Just to say hello, perhaps? Like his
sister, he had a key to the front door, and he entered the house and
disturbed the copulating couple copulating in the most extraordinary
circumstances; and he would have been shocked and disgusted (like his sister)
but heartbroken, too, and disillusioned and betrayed. His mother performing
those things with some plebeian local builder!
Where does all this lead us? First and foremost to an early, long-overdue,
full-scale interview with Frank Harrison. Not too early though. Our
colleagues got nowhere with him and we, Lewis, are a pair of bloodhounds very
late on the scene, with the scent gone very cold.
Fifth, there's this business of the letter you found in the Harrison file.
As I told you, I take full responsibility for the fact that some items
originally discovered at the Harrison murder scene were subsequently, as they
say, found to be missing. It was embarrassing for me to talk to you about
this and I know that you in turn found it equally embarrassing to-Morse laid
down his pen and answered the phone: "Lewis! What do you want?"
"You OK, sir?" "Why shouldn't I be?"
"It's just that well, you know that animal charity shop on the corner of
South Parade and Middle Way . .."
"I am not wa animal-lover, Lewis."
"Well, people leave things there, by the door, things for the shop to sell
for charity ' " Get orawith it! "
"Guess what one of the shop assistants found when she got to work this
morning?"
"Pair of handcuffs?"
"Pair of something, sir. Pair of red trainers! Almost brand new. This
woman had read in the Oxford Mail about the Burford jogger and she thought.
.."
"You know something, Lewis? That's very interesting. Very interesting
indeed. I'll be with you straightaway."
289
chapter sixty-three With much talk will they tempt thee, and smiling
upon thee will get out thy secrets (fcclesiasticus, ch. XIII, vII "You know,
come to think of it, Lewis, we could do all of this now, couldn't we? Just
the two of us."
"No Dixon?"
"No Dixon."
Lewis smiled outwardly and inwardly as he looked down at the action plan. It
seem
ed to him a sensible and fair division of a good deal of labour. For
example, he himself had spoken only very briefly with Sarah Harrison; Morse
had not as yet spoken at all with Simon Harrison. Both matters now to be
dealt with. And all leading up to the two of them, Morse and Lewis, meeting
Frank Harrison asap.
after these and a few other checks and visits had been made.
Harrison! - 'the corner-stone, the kingpin, the pivot', as Morse had
asserted, before running out of synonyms.
"We've got plenty of time for all this well, no, perhaps we haven't. So we
can be pretty direct, but not sharp. Smile occasionally. No aggressiveness,
no hostility, no belligerence," Morse had asserted, before running out of
synonyms again.
It all suited Lewis nicely. If Morse's philosophy in life was to aim high
even if the target was altogether missed, he personally preferred to aim low
in the hope at least of hitting something.
The voluntary (mornings only) help at the Oxford Animal Sanctuary Shop (Gifts
Welcome) lived only a few hundred yards away in Osberton Road: a widow, a
cat-lover, an intelligent witness Mrs Gerrard. It was just that, as every
weekday morning, she'd walked down to South Parade to buy the Daily Tekgraph,
about 8 o'clock before opening the shop, and she'd seen this "Yes?" Lewis
smiled.
' - well, this youngish fellow smartly dressed, suit and tie and he put this
Sainsbury's plastic bag in the doorway there. She couldn't describe him any
better than that really; but she remembered his car, parked for a few seconds
on the double- yellows alongside the shop. She wouldn't have noticed that
either except that it was the same make as hers, a Toyota Carina, P-Reg, a
different colour though: hers was a turquoisy colour, his was silvery-grey.
The trainers she had put carefully aside, under the counter in the shop.
No one in North Oxford with a Toyota was likely to drive unnecessarily far
afield for any servicing and repairs, since there was a specialist garage in
Summertown itself; and it took Lewis only a few minutes to learn that the
owner of a silvery- grey P-Reg Carina was a regular and esteemed customer of
the company, a man named Simon Harrison.
Simultaneously Morse was driving himself in the Jaguar through the low range
of open hills that border Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire.
His old pathologist friend. Max, had once told him that two pleasures grew
ever deeper with advancing age, the pleasures of the belly and the pleasures
of natural beauty. And Morse found himself concurring with the latter
proposition as he turned right at the roundabout and drove down into Burfbrd.
Christine Coverley was clearly surprised to see him, and clearly not happy.
"It's all a bit untidy--' 291
Morse smiled.
"Can I come in?"
"I haven't got long, I'm afraid."
"It won't take long, I promise."
"How can I. . .?"
"What were you doing last Monday morning? Between, say, nine and eleven?"
"Not the faintest, have I? Nobody could remember exactly ' " Did you go out
for a newspaper, shopping, seeing someone? "
"I don't know. Like I say ' " Can you have a look in your diary for me? "
"That wouldn't help."
"What would help?"
"I don't know what you're getting at. Look, Inspector." She glanced down at
her wristwatch with what appeared incipient panic.
"Could we talk some other time, please:' You see I've got ' But it was too
late.
There was the scratch of a key in the Yale lock and the front door was
quickly opened and as quickly closed, and a youth entered from the narrow
hallway to stand in the doorway of the single bed-sit room.
With staring eyes he looked first at Morse and then at Christine Coverley:
"What the fuck?"
"You haven't increased your word-power much since we last began Morse. But
Roy Holmes had disappeared even more rapidly than he'd appeared.
In the stillness that followed the crash of the front door closing.
Morse sat down in one of the armchairs, and gestured the speechless
schoolmistress to seat herself in the other.
"Please tell me all about it," he said, with no hint of aggressiveness or any
of its synonyms.
"If you don't, I'm sorry but I shall have to take you down to Police
HQ. "
After his twinkling Trish eyes had scrutinized Lewis's ID, Mr Tony Marrinan,
the manager of The Randolph, was wholly cooperative; and very soon the
outline of Frank Harrison's recent stay was revealed.
Double-room booked with, as staff recalled her, a sultrily attractive if less
than attractively mannered partner late twenties, perhaps; meals taken
together quite regularly in the Spires Restaurant details available, if
Sergeant Lewis wanted to see them.
As Sergeant Lewis did.
The pair had breakfasted together on each morning except the Monday, and
Lewis was fairly soon looking at that day's Good Morning Breakfast chit, its
details having been transferred immediately to the hotel's computer before
being placed on a spike and then at the end of the day transferred to the
accounts department upstairs for a limited period, as a check if any guest
should query an entry on the final bill.
Interesting! Especially the bottom half of the chit: Continental |7f Full n
Date ^/S/^ Time -g. 2-0 Table No. -7 Covers | Room No. 2-)o Waiter c. <^.
Room Charge 0 Other
D
Guest Name: HA^^iSo^ Signature: "Covers', as Lewis learned, signified how
many had been at the table: on the other chits it had the figure '2' beside
it. But on the Monday morning just the one of them, and the restaurant
manager remembered which one of them: Tt was the lady. I think Mr Harrison
may have been feeling a little tired."
Before he left the hotel, Lewis had a word with the chamber- maid who had
looked after Room 210, discovering that for 293
much of the time over the
period in question the do not disturb notice had hung over the outside
door-knob.
"And the bed looked as if it had been slept in each night?" (Lewis tried to
smile knowingly. ) "Oh yes, sir. Oh yes."
Perhaps the restaurant manager was right. Perhaps Mr Harrison's stay in
Oxford had been a busy and tiring one.
For one reason or another.
Before driving back to HQ, Morse called in at the Maiden's Arms, in the hope
of finding Alf and Bert, Lower Swinstead's answer to
"Bill and Ben'. The time was now just after 2.30 p.m.; and Morse expected
that they would be gone by then. But he was lucky; or at least half-lucky.
Bert, it seemed, had 'got the screws', and Alf was sitting alone by the
window, slowly sipping the last of his beer, and readily accepting Morse's
offer of 'one for the road'.
"Lost his nerve!" confided Alf.
"Lost the last five times we've a' been playing. Lost his nerve!"
"Like me to give you a quick game? Just the one?"
Morse had determined to lose the challenge in as swift and incompetent a
manner as possible. But unfortunately the gods were smiling broadly on his
hands; and very soon, malgre
lui, he had won the single encounter by the
proverbial street.
Unfortunately
Oh no. For Alf appeared to recognize in his opponent a player of supreme
skills; and instead of his wonted sullen silence on such occasions, he was
soon speaking with unprecedented candour about life there in the village in
general, and in particular about the Harrisons -with the result that after
twenty minutes Morse had learned more than any other police officer before
him from any of the locals in Lower Swinstead.
"Did Frank ever come in the pub here with other women?"
"Never. In London most of his time, weren't he?"
"What about Simon?"
"He come in sometimes, but he never had no reg'lar girl- friend. Bit of a
loner, Simon."
"What about Sarah?"
"Lovely, she were not seen her though this last coupla years. In fact, last
time I seen her was here in the pub sort of guest appearance singing with a
pop group. Nice voice, she had, young Sarah."
"Did she come in with any boyfriends?"
"Did she? I'll tell you sum mat - she did. Could've had anybody she wanted,