The Way Through The Woods (20 page)

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Authors: Colin Dexter

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BOOK: The Way Through The Woods
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And then, as Morse and Lewis were considering these things, the big discovery was made. One of the two DCs who had been given the job of searching the main lounge above had found, caught up against the top of one of the drawers in the escritoire, a list of names and addresses: a list of clients, surely! Clients who probably received their pornographic material in plain brown envelopes with the flap licked down so very firmly. And there, fourth from the top, was the name that both Morse and Lewis focused on immediately: George Daley, 2 Blenheim Villas, Begbroke, Oxon.
Morse had been delighted with the find – of course he had! And his praise for the DC had been profuse and (in Lewis's view) perhaps a trifle extravagant. Yet now as he sat on the settee, looking again at the unzippings and the unbuttonings of the models, reading through the list of names once more, he appeared to Lewis to be preoccupied and rather sad.
'Everything all right, sir?'
'What? Oh yes! Fine. We're making wonderful progress. Let's keep at it!'
But Morse himself was contributing little towards any further progress; and after desultorily walking around for ten minutes or so, he sat down yet again and picked up the sheet of addresses. He would have to tell Lewis, he decided – not just yet but… He looked again at the seventeenth name on the list: for he was never likely to forget the name that Kidlington HQ had given him when, from Lyme Regis, he'd phoned in the car registration H 35 LWL:
Dr Alan Hardinge.
He picked up the pictures of the models and looked again through their names and their vital statistics and their special proficiencies. Especially did he look again at one of the maturer models: the one who called herself 'Louisa'; the one who'd had all sorts of fun with her names at the Bay Hotel in Lyme Regis; the woman who was photographed here, quite naked and totally desirable.
Claire Osborne.

 

'Pity we've no address for – well, it must be a modelling agency of some sort, mustn't it?'
'No problem, Lewis. We can just ring up one of these johnnies on the list.'
'Perhaps
they
don't know.' '
‘I’ll give you the address in ten minutes if you really want it.'
'I don't want it for myself, you know.'
'Of course not!'
Picking up his sheets, Morse decided that his presence in Seckham Villa was no longer required; and bidding Lewis to give things another couple of hours or so he returned to HQ; where he tried her telephone number.
She was in.
'Claire?'
'Morse!' (She'd recognized him!)
'You could have told me you worked for an escort agency!'
'Why?'
Morse couldn't think of an answer.
'You thought I was wicked enough but not quite so wicked as that?'
'I suppose so.'
'Why don't you get yourself in your car and come over tonight? – I’d be happy if you did…’
Morse sighed deeply. 'You told me you had a daughter-'
'So?'
'Do you still keep in touch with the father?'
'The father? Christ, come off it! I couldn't tell you who the father
was!'
Like the veil of the Temple, Morse's heart was suddenly rent in twain; and after asking her for the name and address of the modeling? agency (which she refused to tell him) he rang off.
Ten minutes later, the phone went on Morse's desk, and it was Claire – though how she'd got his number he didn't know. She spoke for only about thirty seconds, ignoring Morse's interruptions.
‘Shut up, you silly bugger! You can't see more than two inches in front of your nose, can you? Don't you realize I'd have swapped all the lecherous sods I've ever had for you – and instead of trying
understand all you ask me – Christ! – is who fathered-'
‘Look, Claire-'
‘No!
You
bloody look! If you can't take what a woman tells you – about herself without picking over the past and asking bloody futile questions about why and who he was and-' But her voice broke down completely now.
'Look, please!'
'No! You just fuck off, Morse, and don't you ring me again because I'll probably be screwing somebody and enjoying it such a lot I won't want to be interrupted-'
'Claire!'
But the line was dead.
For the next hour Morse tried her number every five minutes, counting up to thirty double-purrs each time. But there was no answer.

 

Lewis had discovered nothing new in Seckham Villa, and he rang through to HQ at 6 p.m., as Morse had wished.
'All right. Well, you get off home early, Lewis. And get some sleep. And good luck tomorrow!'
Lewis was due to catch the 7.30 plane to Stockholm the following morning.
chapter thirty-seven
To be buried while alive is, beyond question, the most terrifying of those extremes which has ever fallen to the lot of mere mortality
(Edgar Allan Poe,
Tales of Mystery and Imagination)

 

the death of Max was still casting a cloak of gloom round Morse as he sat in his office the following morning. During the previous night his thoughts had been much preoccupied with death, and the mood persisted now. As a boy, he had been moved by those words of the dying Socrates, suggesting that if death were just one long, unbroken, dreamless sleep, then a greater boon could hardly be bestowed upon mankind. But what about the body? The soul might be able to look after itself all right, but what about the physical body? In Morse's favourite episode from
The Iliad,
the brethren and kinsfolk of Sarpedon had buried his body, with mound and pillar, in the rich, wide land of Lycia. Yes! It was fitting to have a gravestone and a name inscribed on it. But there were those stories that were ever frightening – stories about people prematurely interred who had awoken in infinite and palpitating terror with the immovable lid of the coffin only a few inches above them. No! Burning was better than burying, surely… Morse was wholly ignorant of the immediate procedures effected once the curtains closed over the light-wooded coffins at the crematoria… like the curtains closing at the end of
Götterdämmerung,
though minus the clapping, of course. All done and finished quickly, and if somebody wanted to sprinkle your mortal dust over the memorial gardens, well, it might be OK for the roses, too. He wouldn't mind a couple of hymns either: 'The day thou gavest', perhaps. Good tune, that. So long as they didn't have any prayers, or any departures from the Authorized Version of Holy Writ… Perhaps Max had got it right, neatly side-stepping the choice of interment or -incineration: the clever old sod had left his body to the hospital, and the odds were strongly on one or two of his organs giving them plenty to think about. Huh!
Morse smiled to himself, and suddenly looked up to see Strange standing in the doorway.
'Private joke, Morse?'
'Oh, nothing, sir.'
'C'mon! Life's grim enough.'
'I was just thinking of Max's liver-'
'Not a pretty sight!'
‘No.
!
'You're taking it a bit hard, aren't you? Max, I mean.'
'A bit. perhaps.'
'You seen the latest?'
Strange pushed a copy of
The Times
across the desk, with a brief paragraph on the front page informing its readers that 'the bones discovered in Wytham Woods are quite certainly not those of the Swedish student whose disappearance occasioned the original verses and their subsequent analysis in this newspaper. (See Letters, page 13):
'Anything to help us there?' asked Morse dubiously, opening the paper.
'Scraping the barrel, if you ask me,' said Strange.
Morse looked down at page 13:

 

From Mr Anthony Beaulah
Sir, Like the text of some early Greek love-lyric, the lines on the Swedish student would appear to have been pondered over in such exhaustive fashion that there is perhaps little left to say. And it may be that the search is already over. Yet there is one significant (surely?) aspect of the verses which has hitherto received scant attention. The collocation of 'the tiger' with 'the burning of the night' (lines 9 and 12) has indeed been commented upon, but in no
specific
context. In my view, sir, one should perhaps interpret the tiger (the cat) as staring back at drivers
in the darkness. And the brilliantly simple invention which has long steered the benighted driver through the metaphorical forest of the night? Cat's eyes!
I myself live too far away from Oxford to be able to test such a thesis. But might the police not interpret this as a genuine clue, and look for some stretch of road (in or around Wytham?) where cat's eyes have recently been installed?

 

Yours,
ANTHONY BEAULAH,
Felsted School,
Essex.

 

'Worth getting Lewis on it?' queried Strange, when Morse had finished reading.
.'Not this morning, sir. If you remember he's, er, on his holidays.' Morse looked at his wrist-watch. 'At this minute he's probably looking out of the window down at Jutland.'
'Why
didn't you
go, Morse? With all these Swedish blondes and that…'
'I thought it'd be good experience for him.'
'Mm.'
For a while the two were silent. Then Strange picked up his paper and made to leave.
'You made a will yet, Morse?'
'Not much to leave, really.'
'All those records of yours, surely?'
'Bit out of date, I'm afraid. We're all buying CDs now.'
'Perhaps
they'll
be out of date soon.'
Morse nodded. Strange was not in the habit of saying anything quite so perceptive.
chapter thirty-eight
Men are made stronger on realization that the helping hand they need is at the end of their own right arm
(Sidney J. Phillips, speech, July 1953)

 

on the forty-kilometre bus ride from Arlanda airport southwards towards Stockholm, Lewis enjoyed what for him was the fairly uncommon view of a foreign country. After a while the tracts of large pine and fir woods changed to smaller coppices and open fields; then farmhouses, red, with barns that were red too, and a few yellow, wooden, Dutch-roofed manor houses, just before the outskirts of Stockholm, with its factories and tidy, newish buildings -and all so very clean and litter-free. In wooded surroundings within the city itself, three- and four-storeyed blocks of flats took over; and finally the end of the journey, at the Central Station terminal.
Lewis had never studied a foreign language at school, and his travel abroad had hitherto been restricted to three weeks in Australia, two weeks in Italy, and one afternoon in a Calais supermarket. The fact that he had no difficulty therefore in summoning a taxi was wholly due to the excellent English of the young driver, who soon brought Lewis into the suburb of Bromma -more specifically to an eight-storey block of white flats in Bergsvägen.
The Stockholm CID had offered to send one of its own men to meet him, but Lewis had not taken advantage of this when he'd arranged the details of his visit the previous morning. Seldom was it that he could assert any independent judgement in an investigation; and here was his chance.
The entrance hall was of polished pink granite, with the long list of tenants' named displayed there:

 

ANDREASSON 8A
ENGSTROM 8B
FASTEN 7A
OLSSON 7B
KRAFT 6A
ERIKSSON 6B

 

Sixth floor!
Lewis felt excited at the sight of the name; it was almost as if… as if he felt he was going to make some significant discovery.
The door, bearing the name-plate eriksson, was opened by a woman in her mid-forties, of medium height, plumply figured, hazel-eyed, and with short, brownish-blonde hair.
'Mrs Eriksson?'
'Irma Eriksson,' she insisted as he shook her hand, and entered the apartment.
The small hallway was lined with cupboards, with what looked like a home-woven mat on one wall and a large mirror on the other. Through the open door to the right Lewis glimpsed a beautifully fitted kitchen, fresh and gleaming, with a copper kettle and old plates on its walls.
'In here, Mr Lewis.' She pointed smilingly to the left and led the way.
Her English was very good, utterly fluent and idiomatic, with only a hint of a foreign accent, just noticeable perhaps in the slight lengthening of the short T vowels ('Meester Lewis').
The place was all so
clean;
and so particularly clean was the parquet flooring that Lewis wondered whether he should offer to take off his shoes, for she herself stood there in her stockinged feet as she gestured him to a seat on a low, brown-striped settee.
As he later tried to describe the furnishings to Morse, he felt more conscious than anything about the huge amount of stuff that had been packed into this living room: two coffee tables of heavy, dark wood; lots of indoor plants; groups of family portraits and photographs all around; dozens of candle holders; a large TV set; pretty cushions everywhere; vases of flowers; a set of Dala horses; two crucifixes; and (as Lewis learned later) a set of Carl Larsson prints above the bricked fireplace. Yet in spite of all the clutter, the whole room was light and airy, the thin curtains pulled completely back from the south-facing window.
Conversation was easy and, for Lewis, interesting. He learned something of the typical middle-class housing in Swedish cities; learned how and why the Erikssons had moved from Uppsala down to Bergsvagen almost a year ago after… after Karin had, well, whatever had happened. As Lewis went briefly through the statement she had made a year ago, Irma Eriksson was watching him closely (he could see that), nodding here and there, and at one or two points staring down sadly at a small oriental carpet at her feet. But yes, it was all there; and no, there was nothing she could add. From that day to this she had received no further news of her daughter – none. At first, she admitted, she'd hoped and hoped, and couldn't bring herself to believe that Karin was dead. But gradually she had been forced to such a conclusion; and it was better that way, really – to accept the virtual certainty that Karin had been murdered. She was grateful – how not? – for the recent efforts the English police had made – again! – and she had been following the newspaper correspondence of course, receiving cuttings regularly from an English friend.

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