The Way Through The Woods (37 page)

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Authors: Colin Dexter

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BOOK: The Way Through The Woods
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Morse had pressed him on the point. 'You're
sure
about that?'
Williams breathed out noisily. He felt he was sure, yes. But it was a frightening business, this being questioned and giving evidence, and he was now far less sure than he had been about one or two of the things he'd said earlier. That shot he thought he'd heard, for example: he was less and less sure now that he'd heard it at
all.
So it was better, fairer too, to play it a bit more on the cautious side… that's what he thought. -
'Well, I think so. Trouble is really about the time. You see, it might have been a bit
later,
I think.'
But Morse appeared no longer interested in the time – or in the shot, for that matter.
'Mr Williams! I'm sorry to keep on about this but it's very important. I know that Mr Daley always wore his hat around the park, and I believe you when you say you
saw
his hat. But let's put it another way: are you sure it was
Mr Daley
who was wearing the hat on Monday morning?'
'You mean,' said Williams slowly, 'you mean it mightn't have been him – driving the van?'
'Exactly.'
Oh dear! Williams didn't know… hadn't even considered…
Two women joggers appeared at the lodge, twisted through the kissing-gate and continued their way into the park itself, their breasts bouncing, their legs (as viewed from the rear) betraying the slightly splay-footed run of the fairer sex. Morse followed them briefly with his eyes, and asked his last question:
'Did you notice any jogger coming
this
way,
out
of the park, on Monday morning? About, let's say, half-past ten? Eleven?'
Williams pondered the question. While everything else seemed to be getting more and more muddled in his mind, the chief inspector had just sparked off a fairly vivid recollection. He thought he
had
noticed someone, yes – a woman. There were always lots of joggers at weekends, but not many in the week; not many at all; and certainly not in the middle of the morning. He thought he
could
remember the woman though; could almost see her now, with the nipples of her breasts erect and pushing through the thin material of her T-shirt. Was that Monday
morning,
though? The simple truth was that he just couldn't be certain and again he was unwilling to commit himself too positively.
'I may have done, yes.'
'Thank you very much, sir.'
What exactly he was being thanked for, Mr Williams was not quite clear, and he was aware that he must have appeared a less-than-satisfactory witness. Yet the chief inspector had looked mightily pleased with himself as he'd left; and he'd said 'very much', hadn't he? It was all a bit beyond the gate-keeper of Combe Lodge in Blenheim Park.
chapter sixty-six
As when that divelish yron engin, wrought
In deepest hell, and framd by furies skill,
With windy nitre and quick sulphur fraught,
And ramd with bollett rownd, ordaind to kill,
Conceivcth fyre
(Edmund Spenser,
The Faerie Queene)

 

the semi-circular area where birdwatchers and the occasional loving couple were wont to park was packed with police cars and vans when, half an hour after leaving Blenheim, Lewis drove through the perimeter gate ('The woods are closed to Permit Holders until 10.00 a.m. every day except Sunday') and into the compound, on his left, marked off with its horizontal four-barred, black-creosoted fencing. Here, under the direction of Chief Inspector Johnson, some fifty or so policemen – some uniformed, some not – were systematically conducting their search.
'No luck yet?’ asked Morse.
'Give us a chance!' said Johnson. 'Lot of ground to cover, isn't there?'
The large wooden sheds, the stacks of logs and fencing-posts, the occasional clump of trees, the rank growth of untended bushes – all precluded any wholly scientific search-pattern. But there was plenty of time; there were plenty of men; they would find it, Johnson was confident of that.
Morse led the way up the curving track towards the furthest point from the compound entrance, towards the hut where David Michaels had his office, right up against the recently erected deer-fence. To the left of this track was a line of forty or so fir trees, about thirty feet high; and to the right, the hut itself, the main door standing padlocked now. On the wooden sides of this extensive hut. at the top, were six large bird-boxes, numbered 9-14; and at the bottom there grew rank clumps of nettles. Morse looked back down the sloping track; retraced his steps, counting as he went; then stopped at a smaller open-sided shed in which stood a large red tractor with a timber-lifting device fixed to it. For a minute or two he stood beside the tractor, behind the shed wall, and then, as if he were a young boy with an imaginary rifle, lifted both his arms, curled his right index-finger round an imaginary trigger, closed his left eye, and slowly turned the rifle in an arc from right to left, as if some imaginary vehicle were being driven past – the rifle finally remaining stationary as the vehicle's imaginary driver dismounted, in front of the head forester's hut.
'You reckon?' asked Lewis quietly.
Morse nodded.
That means we probably ought to be concentrating the search up there, sir.' Lewis pointed back towards Michaels' office.
'Give him a chance! He's not so bright as you,' whispered Morse.
'About fifty, fifty-five yards. I paced it too, sir.'
Again Morse nodded, and the two of them rejoined Johnson.
'Know much about rifles?' asked Morse.
'Enough.'
'Could you use a silencer on a seven-millimetre?''
' "Sound-moderator" -that's the word these days. No, not much good. It'd suppress the noise of the explosion, but it couldn't stop the noise of the bullet going through the sound-barrier. And incidentally, Morse, it might be a.243 – don't forget that!'
'Oh!'
'You were thinking it might be around here, weren't you?' Johnson kicked aside a few nettles along the bottom of the shed, and looked at Morse shrewdly, if a little sadly.
Morse shrugged. 'I'd be guessing, of course.'
Johnson looked down at the flattened nettles. 'You never did have much faith in me, did you?'
Morse didn't know what to say, and as Johnson walked away, he too looked down at the flattened nettles.
'You're quite wrong, you know, sir. He's a whole lot brighter than me, is Johnson.'
But again Morse made no reply, and the pair of them walked down to the low, stone-built cottage where until very lately Michaels and his Swedish wife had lived so happily together.
Just as they were entering, they heard a shot from fairly far off. But they paid little attention to it. As Michaels had informed them, no one was ever going to be too disturbed about hearing a gun-shot in Wytham: game-keepers shooting squirrels or rabbits, perhaps; farmworkers taking a pot at the pestilential pigeons.
Inside the cottage, just beside the main entrance, stood the steel security cabinet from which Michaels' rifle had been taken for forensic examination. But there was no longer any legal requirement for the cabinet to be locked, and it now stood open – and empty. Lewis bent down and looked carefully at the groove in which the rifle had stood, noting the scratches where the butt had rested; and beside it a second groove – with equally tell-tale signs.
'I'm sure you're right,' said Lewis.
'If you remember,' said Morse, 'he told us
himself,
Michaels did. When you told him you'd seen no rifles in the hut he said… he said "Oh, I couldn't keep 'em
there" –
those were his exact words, I think.'
'You're still certain he did it, sir?'
'Yes.'
'What about that "Uncertainty Principle" you were on about this morning?'
'What about it?' asked Morse. Infuriatingly.
'Forget it.'
'What's the time?'
'Nearly twelve.'
'Ah, the prick of noon!'
'Pardon?'
'Forget it.'
'We can walk down if you like, sir. A nice little ten-minute walk – do us good. We can work up a thirst.'
'Nonsense!'
'Don't you enjoy walking – occasionally?'
'Occasionally, yes.'
'So?'
'So drive me down to the White Hart, Lewis! What's the problem?'
chapter sixty-seven
Scire volunt secreta domus, atque inde timeri
(They watch for household secrets hour by hour
And feed therefrom their appetite for power)
(Juvenal,
Satire III)

 

'what put you on it this time?' asked Lewis as they sat opposite each other in the small upstairs bar, Morse with a pint of real ale, Lewis himself with a much-iced orangeade.
'I think it wasn't so much finding Daley like he was – out at Blenheim. It was the photographs they took of him there. I don't think it hit me at the time; but when I looked at the photographs I got the idea somehow that he'd just been dumped there – that he hadn't been shot there at all.'
'You mean you just – well, sort of had a
feeling
about it?'
'No. I don't mean that. You may think I work that way, Lewis, but I don't. I don't believe in some unaccountable intuition that just happens occasionally to turn out right. There's got to be
something
there, however vague. And here we had the hat, didn't we? The hat Daley wore wherever he was, whatever the weather. Same bloody hat! He never took it
off,
Lewis!'
'Probably took it off in bed?'
'We don't even know that, do we?' Morse drained his beer. 'Plenty of time for another.'
Lewis nodded. 'Plenty of time! Your round though, sir. I'll have another orange. Lovely. Lots of ice, please!'
'You see,' resumed Morse, a couple of minutes later, 'he was almost certainly wearing his hat when he was shot, and I very much doubt myself that it would have fallen
off.
I'd seen the tight sweat-mark round his forehead when we met him earlier. And even if it
had
fallen off – when he dropped dead – I just had the feeling…'
Lewis lifted his eyebrows.
'… it wouldn't have fallen
far!
'So?'
'So, I reckon it was put down there deliberately, just beside his head –
after
he was shot. Remember where it was? Three or four feet
away
from his head. So the conclusion's firm and satisfactory, as I see it. He was wearing his hat when he was shot, and like as not it stayed on his head. Then when he was moved, and finally dumped, it had come off; and it was placed there beside him.'
'What a palaver!'
Morse nodded. 'But they had to do it. They had to establish an alibi -'
'For David Michaels, you mean?'
'Yes. It was Michaels who shot Daley – I've no doubts on that score. There was the agreement Hardinge told us about, wasn't there, the agreement the four of them made – a statement by the way that contains quite as much truth as falsehood, Lewis. Then something comes along and buggers it all up. Daley got a letter spelling out his financial responsibilities for his boy, and Daley knew that he was the one who had a hold over – well, over
all
the others, really. But particularly over David Michaels! I reckon Daley probably rang him and said he couldn't afford to stick by the agreement; said he was sorry – but he needed more money. And if he didn't get more money pretty soon…'
'Blackmail!'
'Exactly. And there may well have been a bit more of
that
than we think.'
'Quite a hold over Michaels, though, when you think of it: knowing he was married to… a murderess.'
'Quite a hold. So Michaels agrees –
pretends
he agrees – to go along with it. They'll meet at Wytham earlyish on Monday -quarter to ten, say. No one around much at that time. No birdwatchers allowed in the woods till ten – remember the notice?'
'The RSPB people were there.'
'They turned out to be a blessing in disguise, though.'
'Take it a bit slower, please!'
'Right. Let's just go back a minute. The rendezvous's settled. Daley drives up to Wytham. Michaels has said he'll have some money ready – in notes, no doubt – just after the bank's opened. He's ready. He waits for Daley to drive up to his office. He waits for a clear view of him as he gets out of his estate van. I don't know
exactly
where he was waiting, of course; what I
do
know is that someone as experienced as Michaels, with a telescopic sight, could hit
this' –
Morse picked up his empty glass – 'no problem! – from a hundred, let alone from fifty yards.'
But any further reconstruction of Daley's murder was temporarily curtailed, since Johnson had walked in, and now sat down beside them.
'What'll you have?' asked Morse. 'Lewis here is in the chair.'
'Nothing for me, thank you, er, Lewis. Look! There's this call for you from forensics about the van. I told 'em I wasn't
quite
sure where you were-'
'What'd they say?'
'They found prints all over the shop – mostly Daley's, of course. But like you said, they found other prints – on the tail-board, on the steering wheel.'
'And I was right about them?'
Johnson nodded. 'Yes. They're Karin Eriksson's.'

 

At lunch-time that same day, Alasdair McBryde came out of the tube station at Manor House and walked briskly down the Seven Sisters Road – finally turning into one of the parking-and-garage areas of a high-rise block of flats that flanks the Bethune Road. He had spotted the unmarked car immediately: the two men seated in the front, one of them reading the
Sun.
It was quite customary for him to spot danger a mile or so off; and he did so now. Number 14 was the garage he was interested in; but softly whistling the Prelude to Act Three
of Lohengrin,
he walked boldly into the nearest open garage (number 9), picked up a half-filled can of Mobiloil, before nonchalantly retracing his steps to the main road; where, still clutching the dirty can, he walked quietly and confidently away in the direction of Stamford Hill.

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