The Way Through The Woods (29 page)

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Authors: Colin Dexter

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BOOK: The Way Through The Woods
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Then the same men drove out to Blenheim where Daley, naturally, had easy access to any part of the Great Park, and where Karin Eriksson's body, wrapped in a blanket and weighed down with stones, was pushed into the lake there – again I never knew where.
Looking back, the whole thing seems so very crude and cruel. But some people act strangely when they are under stress – and we were all under tremendous stress that terrible day. Whether the others involved will be willing to corroborate this sequence of events, I don't know. What is to be believed is that this statement has been made of my own free will with no coercion or promptings, and that it is true.
The statement was dated i.viii.1992, and signed by Dr Alan Hardinge, Fellow of Lonsdale College, Oxford, in the presence of Detective Chief Inspector Morse, Detective Sergeant Lewis, and WPC Wright – no solicitor being present, at Dr Hardinge's request.

 

Whilst Hardinge was still only some halfway through his statement, George Daley, eager as ever to take advantage of overtime, was boxing some petunias in the walled garden at Blenheim Garden Centre. He had not heard the footsteps; but he felt the touch of a hand on his shoulder, and jerked nervously.
'Christ! You got 'ere quick.'
'You said it was urgent.'
'It
is
bloody urgent.'
'What is?'
'Now look-!'
'No,
you
look! The police'll have that statement some time this morning – probably got it already. And we've agreed – you've agreed – remember that!'
Daley took off the ever-present hat, and wiped the back of his right wrist across his sweaty forehead.
'Not any longer I haven't bloody agreed, mate. Look at this!' Daley took a letter from his pocket. 'Came in the post this morning, dinnit? That's why I rang. See what I could get done for? Me! Just for that fuckin' twerp o' mine. No, mate! What we agreed's no good no longer. We double it – or else no deal. Four, that's what I want. Not two. Four!'
"Four?
Where the hell do you reckon that's coming from?'
'Your problem, innit?'
'If I could find it,' said the other slowly, 'how do I know you're not going-'
'You don't. Trust, innit? I shan't ask nothin' more never though – not if we make it four.'
'I can't get anything, you know that – not till the bank opens Monday.'
There was a silence between them.
'You won't regret it, mate,' said Daley finally.
'You
will, though, if you ever come this sort of thing again.'
'Don't you threaten me!'
‘I’m not just threatening you, Daley – I'll bloody
kill
you if you try it on again.' There was a menace and a power now in his quiet voice, and he turned to go. 'Better if you come to me – fewer people about.'
'Don't mind.'
'About ten – no good any earlier. In my office, OK?'
'Make it
outside
your office.'
The other shrugged. 'Makes no difference to me.'
chapter fifty-two
Everything comes if a man will only wait
(Benjamin Disraeli,
Tancred)

 

an hour after Hardinge had left – had been allowed to leave -Lewis came back into Morse's office with three photocopies of the document.
Morse picked up one set of the sheets and looked fairly cursorily, – appeared, at the transcript of Hardinge's statement. 'What did you make of things?'
'One or two things a bit odd, sir.'
'Only one or two?'
'Well, there's two things, really. I mean, there's this fellow Daley, isn't there? He's at Park Town that afternoon and that night he shoves the girl's body into the lake at Blenheim.'
‘Yes?'
'Well, then he leaves the girl's rucksack in a hedge-bottom at Begbroke. I mean-'
'I wish you'd stop saying "I mean", Lewis.'
‘Well, you'd think he'd have left it miles away, wouldn't you? He could easily have dumped it out at Burford or Bicester or somewhere. I me – '
'Why not put it in the blanket? With the body?'
'Well, yes. Anywhere – except where he left it.'
'I think you're right.'
'Why don't we ask him then?'
'All in good time, Lewis! You just said
two
things, didn't you?'
'Ah, well. It's the same sort of thing, really. They decided to put Myton's body in Wytham Woods, agreed? And they
did
put it there, because we've found it. What I can't understand is why Michaels told you where it
was.
I mean- Sorry, sir!'
'But he didn't, did he? He didn't exactly give us a six-figure grid-reference.'
'He told you about Pasticks, though.'
'Among other places, yes.' For a while Morse looked out across the tarmac yard, unseeing it seemed, though nodding gravely. 'Ye-es! Very good, Lewis! You've put your finger – two fingers -on the parts of that statement that would worry anyone; anyone even
half
as intelligent as you are.'
Lewis was unsure whether this was exactly the compliment that Morse had intended; but the master was beginning his own analysis:
'You see – ask yourself this. Why did Daley have to dump the rucksack, and then find it
himself?
As you rightly say, why so close to the place they'd just dumped her body? What's the reason? What
could
be the reason? Any reason? Then, again just as you say, why was Michaels prepared to be so helpful to us? Crackers, isn't it – if he didn't want anyone to find the body? So why? Why give us
any
chance of finding it? Why not give us a duff list of utterly improbable sites? God! Wytham's as big as…' (Morse had difficulty with the simile) 'as the pond out at Blenheim.'
' "Lake", sir – about two hundred acres of it. Take a bit of dragging, that.'
'Take a
lot
of dragging.'
'Forget it, then?'
'Yes, forget it! I think so. As I told you yesterday, Lewis…’
'You still think you were right about that?'
'Oh, yes! No doubt about it. All we've got to do is to sit back and wait. We're going to have people come to
us,
Lewis. We're losing nothing. You can take it from me there'll be no more casualties in this case unless… unless it's that silly young sod, Philip Daley.'
'We might as well take a bit of a breather then, sir.'
'Why not? Just one thing you can do on your way home, though.’
Look in at Lonsdale, will you? See who was on duty at the Porters' Lodge last night, and try to find out if our friend Hardinge had any visitors in his rooms. And if so, how many, and who they were.
For the moment, however, Lewis seemed reluctant to leave.
'You sure you don't want me to go and pick up Daley and Michaels?'
'I just told you. They'll be coming to
us.
One of 'em will, anyway, unless I'm very much mistaken.'
'Which you seldom are.'
‘Which I seldom am.'
'You don't want to tell me which one?'
‘Why
shouldn't
I want to tell you which one?'
‘Well?'
'All right. I'll bet you a fiver to a cracked piss-pot that the Head Warden, the Lone Ranger, or whatever his name is, will call here – in person or on the phone – before you sit watching the six o'clock news on the telly.'
‘Earlier than that, sir – on a Saturday – the TV news.'
‘Oh, and before you go, leave these on Johnson's desk, will you? He won't be in till Monday, I shouldn't think, but I promised to keep him fully informed.' He handed over the third set of photocopied pages, and Lewis rose to depart.
'Do you want me to ring you if I find anything?'
'If it's interesting, yes,' said Morse, with apparent indifference.

 

Earlier that day, Lewis thought he'd had a pretty clear idea of what the case was all about; or what Morse had told him the case was all about. But now on leaving Kidlington HQ his mind was far more confused, as if whatever else had been the purpose of Hardinge's statement it had certainly muddled the waters of
his,
Lewis's, mind, though apparently not that of his chief's.
As it happened (had he remembered it) Morse would have lost any bet that might have been made, for no one, either in person or on the telephone, was to call on him that afternoon. In fact he did nothing after Lewis left. At one point he almost decided to attend the last night of
The Mikado
at Wytham. But he hadn't got a ticket, and it would probably be a sell-out; and in any case he'd bought a CD of Mozart's
Requiem.

 

Cathy saw him there that final evening, ten minutes before the curtain was scheduled to rise: the bearded, thick-set, independent soul she'd been so happy to marry in spite of the difference in their ages. He was talking quite animatedly to an attractive woman on the row in front of him, doubtless flirting with her just a little, with that dry, easy, confidential tone he could so easily assume. Yet Cathy felt not the slightest spasm of jealousy – for she knew that it was she who meant almost everything to him.
She let the drape fall back across her line of vision, and went back to the ladies' dressing room where, over her left shoulder, she surveyed herself in the full-length mirror. The simple, short black dresses, with their white collars and red belts, and the suspender-held black stockings, had proved one of the greatest attractions of the show; and each of the three perhaps not-so-little maids, if truth were known, was enjoying the slightly titillating exhibitionism of it all. Cathy had omitted to ask David if he really approved; or if he might be just a teeny bit jealous. She hoped he
was, of
course; but, no, he needn't be. Oh no, he needn't ever be.

 

Like most amateur and indeed professional productions,
The Mikado
had been put together in disparate bits, with almost all chronological sequencing impossible until the dress rehearsal. Thus it was that David Michaels, though attending a good many practices during the previous month, had little idea of what, perhaps rather grandly, was sometimes called the opera's 'plot'. Nor had his understanding been much forwarded as a result of the first night's performance, for his mind was dwelling then on more important matters. And now, on this final night, his mind was even further distanced, while he watched the on-stage action as if through some semi-opaque gauze; while he listened to the squeaky orchestra as if his ears were stuffed with cotton wool…
He recalled that phone call the previous evening, after which he'd driven down to Oxford, had luckily found a parking place just beside Blackwell's bookshop in the Broad, and then walked through Radcliffe Square and across the cobbles into Lonsdale College, where he'd followed his instructions, walked straight past the Porters' Lodge as if on some high behest, and then into Hardinge's rooms in the front quad, where McBryde had already arrived, and where Daley was to appear within minutes.
Over a year it had been since they'd last met – a year in which virtually nothing had occurred; a year during which the police files had been kept open (he assumed); but a year in which he and the others, the quartet of them, would have assumed with ever-growing relief and confidence that no one would, or ever could, now discover the truth about that hot and distant sunny day.
It was that bloody letter in the paper that had stirred it all up again – as well as that man Morse. What a shock it had been then they'd found the body – since he, Michaels, had no idea watsoever it had been
there
at all. Bad luck, certainly. What a slice
of good
luck though that he'd found the antler-handled knife, because no one was ever going to find
that
again, lying deep as it was in the lake at Blenheim Park. Yes, the last vestige of evidence was at last obliterated, and the situation was beginning to right itself again; or rather
had
been so beginning… until he'd taken the second phone call, early that very morning; the call from that cesspit of a specimen out at Begbroke. But Daley could wait for a while; Daley would play along with them for a little longer yet. The one thing Michaels was quite unable to understand was why
Morse
was waiting. And that made him very uneasy. Perhaps every-body was waiting…
Suddenly he was conscious of the applause all around him, as the curtain moved jerkily across to mark the end of Act I of
The Mikado.
chapter fifty-three
As we passed through the entrance archway, Randolph said with pardonable pride, 'This is the finest view in England'
(Lady Randolph Churchill, on her first visit to Blenheim)

 

on monday, 3 August, Chief Inspector Harold Johnson had spent much of the morning with his City colleagues in St Aldate's, and it was not until just gone 11 a.m. that he was in his own office back at Kidlington HQ – where he immediately read the transcript of Hardinge's evidence. Then re-read it. It was all new to him, except the bits about the rucksack, of course. Naturally he had to admit that since Morse had been on the case the whole complexion of things had changed dramatically: clues, cars, corpses – why hadn't
he
found any of them? Odd really, though: Morse's obsession had been with Wytham; and his, Johnson's, with Blenheim. And according to the statement Hardinge had made,
both
of them had been right all along. He rang through on the internal extension to Morse's office, but learned that he had just left, with Lewis – destination undisclosed.
Blenheim! He found the glossy brochure on Blenheim Palace still on his shelves, and he turned to the map of the House and Grounds. There it was – the lake! The River Glyme flowed into the estate from the east, first into the Queen Pool, then under Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge into the lake beyond: some two hundred odd acres in extent, so they'd told him, when first he'd mooted the suggestion of dragging the waters. Too vast an undertaking, though; still was. The Queen Pool was fairly shallow, certainly, and there had been a very thorough search of the ground at its periphery. But nothing had been found, and Johnson had always suspected (rightly, it seemed!) that if Karin Eriksson's body had been disposed of in any stretch of Blenheim there, it had to be in the far deeper, far more extensive waters of the lake; had to be well weighted down too, so the locals had told him, since otherwise it would pretty certainly have surfaced soon after immersion, and floated down to the Grand Cascade, at the southern end of the lake, where the waters resume their narrow flow within the banks of the Glyme.

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