Authors: Winston Graham
âD'you think she's as innocent as she sounds, Foulsham?' the superintendent asked.
âNo, I'm certain she knows something of his business. But she may know nothing more about the killing â or be too frightened to say. We're still sifting through Colton's papers, and he's clearly been involved in the importation of drugs. It's all carefully disguised but you can read between the lines.'
âBut no nearer an arrest?'
âAfraid not, sir. The clues we have are minimal. We've so far picked up about two hundred prints. The wooden banister going up the stairs had been wiped clean, as you know. Two alien prints have been found under the rail, of a first and second finger, where a hand has grasped the rail tightly. They've not been matched with anyone yet. Oil spilled on the drive â engine oil on the pebbles â only a few drips, which indicate either a slow leak or that the visitor didn't stop long. A rubber heel mark on the outside step. A millimetre of fibre under one of Smith's fingernails; we thought he might have been grasping a coat or jacket, but it seems it came from the carpet he fell on. He didn't die instantly.'
Superintendent Willis said: âYou haven't been to see James Locke again?'
âNo, sir. I rather hope I shall not have to.'
âYou think he is quite innocent?'
âI don't think he could have done it himself.'
âHow old is he? Sixty-five? My father was playing cricket at sixty-five.'
âOh, it's not just age â¦'
âNo, I'm sure. How good is his alibi for the night?'
âHe says after making his statement to Sergeant Evans he went into the Randolph Hotel for a drink, and with his disabled sticker was able to park outside. This is confirmed by the barman, who remembered his lameness. Thereafter he says he drove straight home, arriving home about eight-thirty, and his housekeeper confirms this.'
âAnybody see him on the road? He probably had to drive through his village, and they'd know his car. It would still be full daylight.'
âNothing's come up so far. His housekeeper looks a reliable sort of woman.'
âThere's no such thing as a reliable woman where a man is concerned.'
âYou may be right ⦠D'you want me to bring him in?'
âOn what grounds? Lord, no. It's worth printing him, of course. But unless there's something more to go on ⦠Imagine him in the box â if we ever got him there. Earl's cousin. Elderly and badly crippled. War hero. Unshakable alibi. And of course a bereaved father ⦠But give me a print or some other solid fact, and it'll be a different story.'
âI wonder if he could have gone to the lengths of hiring a gunman? That's more feasible to me.'
âWhat's troubling me about the whole thing,' said the superintendent restlessly, âis that if it were a gang killing the two men would have been shot. If Locke had hired a gunman, ditto. Have you come up with no other suspects â lovers of the girl Locke at Oxford or anything of that sort?'
âBy all accounts she had had one or two affairs, but there seems to have been nothing serious before Colton.'
âYou see, Foulsham, I look on this as likely to have been a killing done almost on impulse. Neither of these men had been struck by a stick or a stone or any blunt instrument. They'd been killed by someone trained in unarmed combat. A policeman, perhaps, or a soldier, or a karate expert. In other words â¦'
âJames Locke?'
âOf course it doesn't follow. But could we find a record of his activities during the war? After all, many men as brave as he was only used guns. The vast majority, in fact.'
âSeeing him as crippled as he is, it's hard to believe â¦'
âI suppose it
could
have been a friend of his. Who
are
his particular friends? Find out. Does he keep in touch with his wartime colleagues?'
âWill do.'
The superintendent grunted. âI'd like to be able to settle for a gang killing.'
That Sunday evening a man called Crane, a dropout, making his way by devious routes to Aylesbury, was picked up for stealing eggs and a chicken from the back of a public house called the Old Dray near Wendover, and in the course of interrogation early on the Monday morning it transpired that on Tuesday the 22nd he had âhappened to be passing by' Partridge Manor about nine-thirty in the evening, had seen a light burning in one of the upstairs rooms and a car standing in the drive. He could not, he swore,
possibly
be sure of the colour in that light but he thought it was grey or pale blue. There was nobody in it and nobody about and he had not ventured more than a few yards inside the gate. The only thing he could be certain of was that it was a shooting brake.
As was his custom on Monday Henry Gaveston arrived at St Martin's just after eight, and before breakfast walked around chatting to a few of the scouts to see if anything untoward had occurred during the weekend. Nothing had; but after breakfast he was told that at dinner in college last night there had been a little fracas in which a student called Martin (naturally known as St Martin) had broken a chair, so Henry rang the Dean and suggested to him that they should impose a fine. Almost immediately after, the Clerk of Works, a notoriously lugubrious character, tapped at Henry's door to tell him that the boiler heating the library and situated under the library staircase was smoking and overheating. They went to the library to look at the trouble, the Clerk stout and middle-aged, the Bursar tall and sharp-angled and stooping, one foot turning in, his voice high-pitched and aristocratic, his thick grey hair, still showing signs of its original fairness, flopping from time to time over his brow. The Clerk of Works had always thought the Bursar an amiable character despite his reputation as a soldier, but these last weeks he had been short-tempered and uninterested in matters of importance, such as a faulty boiler. If he was still upset by Stephanie Locke's suicide â as they all had been â it was time he snapped out of it. Was something else fretting him?
On his way back from the library Henry was accosted by one of the younger Fellows, who taught Modern History, with a request to book a room for a party he wanted to give on Friday. Henry replied impatiently that he wasn't carrying his diary with him and would he ring him later in the day?
Back in his room Henry banged the door, picked up the telephone and dialled James's number. Then, after it had rung twice, he put the phone down. At this stage what had one to say?
Part of the rest of the morning, adding to his restlessness and irritability, was taken up by the chef, an Italian called Corsini, who arrived to say that one of the assistant chefs was ill, and, as they were short-staffed anyway, preparation of college meals was getting beyond him. Henry pacified him by saying he would persuade some of the other staff to work overtime, and meanwhile would the chef help him to prepare an advertisement for an assistant chef to be placed in the
Oxford Times
?
Then there was the question of half a dozen students who had not settled their battels, and three were badly in debt. Two of them were reading science, and he knew it wasn't much use calling them in, because science men always had lectures on a Monday morning. The third, Wayford, a second year PPE student, had reported sick.
Henry sat for twenty minutes filling his pipe but not lighting it, wondering how best he might approach the superintendent of police, whom he played golf with and with whom he had had various minor dealings over the students in his care. It was an unwritten agreement between the Oxford police and the colleges that minor offences occurring within a college were dealt with by the college authorities (in practice the Dean or the Bursar) and only in serious cases was police help invoked. So Henry and Superintendent Willis knew each other's territory well. But that hardly covered the sort of inquiry he now wished to make. âThe murders at Partridge Manor; what sort of progress is being made? Are you any nearer an arrest?' Willis wouldn't reply: âWhat business is it of yours, Colonel?' but he might well think it. The only way in which it could affect the college would be if Stephanie's death were involved, and that was precisely what Henry did not wish to suggest.
Henry had other and more secret friends at Scotland Yard and in the security services, but the circumstances of last Tuesday night made him wary of doing anything to draw attention to himself.
He remembered with annoyance that he should have rung his son, Charles, who had been giving a concert last night in Manchester; he had promised to ring early this morning to see how it had gone. By now Charles would be on his way back to York. He'd have to remember to ring about five when Charles would be likely to be in.
Just before he went to lunch the telephone went again. It was Professor Jenkins.
âOh, Henry, can you tell me what on earth has happened to Arun Jiva? I have tried the Senior Tutor, but he didn't know, and I thought you might.'
Henry frowned at the phone. âJiva? I've seen nothing of him for about ten days. Isn't he out of the country?'
âThat's what I'd like to know.' Jenkins was Arun Jiva's supervisor at the School of Pathology. âI had a brief note dated â dated the twenty-second of May â saying he had been urgently called away. Nothing more than that. It's a bit thick to work the way he has been working and then mess everything up at the last moment.'
âHe didn't bother to tell me at all, but the Principal got the same sort of note. Has he finished his D.Phil.?'
âHe's submitted it but the problem is his viva is due a week on Wednesday. If he misses that he'll be in the soup.'
âI suppose it's been advertised.'
âOh yes, and we can't change that now. The external examiner is flying in from Dublin especially for this case.'
âAh,' said Henry.
âFunny character altogether, Jiva. Don't you find him so? Monumental chip on his shoulder. But no one could accuse him of not taking life seriously. That's what makes this so strange. And he's extremely good. Shouldn't have any difficulty with his viva.'
âIf he's here to take it.'
âQuite. I sent round to his house but the woman next door said no one had been near for a week. She did say the police had been there. I hope he's not run into some damn fool trouble.'
âI hope not,' Henry replied enigmatically.
âWell, I suppose we shall have to wait and see. But the examiners will be mad if he's not there ⦠Mrs Gaveston home yet?'
âWeek after next. I gather it's been pretty exhausting.'
âAmerica always is. Bye.'
Henry remembered to ring Charles at five and found him in. The concert, it seemed, had been a success and Henry apologised for his delay in inquiring. Charles, being in a euphoric mood, waved this defection away, and they discussed plans for his academic and musical future. Before they rang off Charles said something that pleased his father greatly: â Thank you for being such an understanding chap.'
That evening and the following day Henry still did not speak to James. On the Wednesday morning James rang him.
âAh, Henry, we haven't been in touch.'
âMy fault. But I'm delighted to hear from you ⦠I felt I should have come over again, but it's difficult in the circumstances to â¦'
âTo know what to say?'
âWell, what there was to say was said on Sunday. There isn't much mileage left.'
âThere's some â of a sort. Incidentally, I'm in a call box in the village, so you must get used to the clatter of coins.'
âGood man. I hope you haven't felt that my not ringing you has shown any lack of sympathy for your position.' In fact, by private arrangement, Mary Aldershot had telephoned him every night. Henry had been afraid that the gun he had lent James might have been used to follow Stephanie's example.
âThe way things look at the moment I would not blame you,' James said. â By the way, the police came again this morning. They asked if they might look at my car. They also asked if I would mind having my fingerprints taken.'
âMy God. Well, I suppose it isn't surprising. Citizen's duty to assist the police, et cetera.'
âThey said, of course, it was for purposes of elimination. I didn't go out to the garage with them, but Mary went. She said they were chiefly interested in the tyres and the undercarriage. They put a sheet under the car and asked permission to start it up. Looking perhaps for an oil leak, she thought. If so, no luck for them. Has your car got an oil leak?'
âThe Mini? I don't think so. That reminds me, it's due for a service and I said I'd have it seen to while Evelyn was away. I'd forgotten.'
âGet it done.' James put more money in the slot.
âAnd the fingerprinting?'
âThey went away with a fine set. Henry, I've decided to go to Corfu this weekend.'
âGood God ⦠whatever for? ⦠You mean those photographs?'
âYes. The fastigiate cypress trees almost certainly identify the place as Corfu. It isn't a very large island and there can't be many houses like that one. I particularly want to find out while I'm free, since my movements might become restricted any time.'
âI hope not. But look â this move, this visit is being taken on in spite of â of Stephanie's note?'
âYes.'
âI think I should come with you.'
âNo.'
âWill you take Mary?'
âI think not. There are wheelchairs at airports, and plenty of taxis.'
âShall you try to see Errol's first wife?'
âI don't know.'
âI think you have to keep it firmly in mind that Colton
still
bears the moral responsibility for what happened. If not the physical.'
âIf not the physical ⦠I think my present intention is simply to identify the house.'