The Dead of Jericho Read online

Page 3


  Footfalls echo in the memory

  Down the passage which we did not take

  Towards the door we never opened.

  That was writing for you! Christ, ah!

  Morse recognized no one at the bar and took his beer over to the corner. He would have a couple of pints and get home reasonably early.

  The siren of a police car (or was it an ambulance?) whined past outside in Walton Street, reminding him tantalizingly of the opening of one of the Chopin nocturnes. An accident somewhere, no doubt: shaken, white-faced witnesses and passengers; words slowly recorded in constables’ notebooks; the white doors of the open ambulance with the glutinous gouts of dark blood on the upholstery. Ugh! How Morse hated traffic accidents!

  ‘You look lonely. Mind if I join you?’ She was a tall, slim, attractive woman in her early thirties.

  ‘Delighted!’ said a delighted Morse.

  ‘Good, wasn’t she?’

  ‘Excellent!’

  For several minutes they chatted happily about the Dame, and Morse, watching her large, vivacious eyes, found himself hoping she might not go away.

  ‘I’m afraid I don’t know you,’ he said.

  She smiled bewitchingly. ‘I know you, though. You’re Inspector Morse.’

  ‘How—?’

  ‘It’s all right. I’m Annabel, the chairman’s wife.’

  ‘Oh!’ The monosyllable was weighted flat with disappointment.

  Another siren wailed its way outside on Walton Street, and Morse found himself trying to decide in which direction it was travelling. Difficult to tell though . . .

  A few minutes later the bearded chairman pushed his way through from the crowded bar to join them. ‘Ready for another drink, Inspector?’

  ‘No – no. Let me get you one. My pleasure. What will you have—?’

  ‘You’re not getting anything, Inspector. I would have bought you a drink earlier but I had to take our distinguished speaker back to Eynsham.’

  When the chairman came back with the drinks, he turned immediately to Morse. ‘Bit of a traffic jam outside. Some sort of trouble down in Jericho, it seems. Police cars, ambulance, people stopping to see what’s up. Still, you must know all about that sort of thing, Inspector.’

  But Morse was listening no longer. He got to his feet, mumbling something about perhaps being needed; and leaving his replenished pint completely ungulped walked swiftly out of the Clarendon Press Institute.

  Turning left into Richmond Road, he noticed with a curiously disengaged mind how the street lights, set on alternate sides at intervals of thirty yards, bent their heads over the street like guardsmen at a catafalque, and how the houses not directly illuminated by the hard white glow assumed a huddled, almost cowering appearance, as if somehow they feared the night. His throat was dry and suddenly he felt like running. Yet with a sense of the inevitable, he knew that he was already far too late; guessed, with a heavy heart, that probably he’d always been too late. As he turned into Canal Street – where the keen wind at the intersection tugged at his thinning hair – there, about one hundred yards ahead of him, there, beneath the looming, ominous bulk of St Barnabas’ great tower, was an ambulance, its blue light flashing in the dark, and two white police cars pulled over on to the pavement. Some three or four deep, a ring of local residents circled the entrance to the street, where a tall, uniformed policeman stood guard against the central bollard.

  ‘I’m afraid you can’t—’ But then he recognized Morse. ‘Sorry, sir, I didn’t—’

  ‘Who’s looking after things?’ asked Morse quietly.

  ‘Chief Inspector Bell, sir.’

  Morse nodded, his eyes lowered, his thoughts as tangled as his hair. He walked along Canal Reach, tapped lightly on the door of number 9, and entered.

  The room seemed strangely familiar to him: the settee immediately on the right, the electric fire along the right-hand wall; then the TV set on its octagonal mahogany table, with the two armchairs facing it; on the left the heavy-looking sideboard with the plates upon it, gleaming white with cherry-coloured rings around their sides; and then the back door immediately facing him, just to the right of the stairs and exactly as he had seen it earlier that very day. All these details flashed across Morse’s mind in a fraction of a second and the two sets of photographs seemed to fit perfectly. Or almost so. But before he had time to analyse his recollections, Morse was aware of a very considerable addition to the room in the form of a bulky, plain-clothes man whom Morse thought he vaguely remembered seeing very recently.

  ‘Bell’s here?’

  ‘In there, sir.’ The man pointed to the back door, and Morse felt the old familiar sensation of the blood draining down to his shoulders. ‘In there?’ he asked feebly.

  ‘Leads to the kitchen.’

  Of course it did, Morse saw that now. And doubtless there would be a small bathroom and WC behind that, where the rear of the small house had been progressively extended down into the garden plot at the rear, like so many homes he knew. He shook his head weakly and wondered what to do or say. Oh, god! What was he to do?

  ‘Do you want to go in, sir?’

  ‘No-o. No. I just happened to be around here – er, at the Clarendon Institute, actually. Talk, you know. We, er, we’ve just had a talk and I just happened . . .’

  ‘Nothing we can do, I’m afraid, sir.’

  ‘Is she – is she dead?’

  ‘Been dead a long time. The doc’s in there now and he’ll probably—’

  ‘How did she die?’

  ‘Hanged herself. Stood on a—’

  ‘How did you hear about it?’

  ‘Phone call – anonymous one, sir. That’s about the only thing that’s at all odd if you ask me. You couldn’t have seen her from the back unless—’

  ‘She leave a note?’

  ‘Not found one yet. Haven’t looked much upstairs, though.’ What do you do, Morse? What do you do?

  ‘Was – er – was the front door open?’

  The constable (Morse remembered him now – Detective Constable Walters) looked interested. ‘Funny you should ask that, sir, because it was open. We just walked straight in – same as anybody else could’ve done.’

  ‘Was that door locked?’ asked Morse, pointing to the kitchen.

  ‘No. We thought it was though, first of all. As you can see, sir, it’s sagging on its hinges and what with the damp and all that it must have stuck even more. A real push, it needed!’

  He took a step towards the door as though about to illustrate the aforesaid exertion, but Morse gestured him to stop. ‘Have you moved anything in here?’

  ‘Not a thing, sir – well, except the key that was on the middle of the doormat there.’

  Morse looked up sharply. ‘Key?’

  ‘Yes, sir. Newish-looking sort of key. Looked as if someone had just pushed it through the letter box. It was the first thing we saw, really.’

  Morse turned to go, and on the light green Marley tiles beside the front door saw a few spots of brownish rain-water. But the black gentleman’s umbrella he’d seen there earlier had gone.

  ‘Have you moved anything here, Constable?’

  ‘You just asked me that, sir.’

  ‘Oh yes. I – I was just thinking, er – well, you know, just thinking.’

  ‘Sure you don’t want to have a word with Chief Inspector Bell, sir?’

  ‘No. As I say, I just happened . . .’ Morse’s words trailed off into feeble mumblings as he opened the door on to the street and stood there hesitantly over the door-sill. ‘You haven’t been upstairs yet, you say?’

  ‘Well, not really, sir. You know, we just looked in—’

  ‘Were there any lights on?’

  ‘No, sir. Black as night up there, it was. There’s two rooms leading off the little landing . . .’

  Morse nodded. He could visualize the first-floor geography of the house as well as if he’d stayed there – as he might well have stayed there once, not all that long ago; might well ha
ve made love in one of the rooms up there himself in the arms of a woman who was now stretched out on the cold, tiled floor of the kitchen. Dead, dead, dead. And – oh Christ! – she’d hanged herself, they said. A warm, attractive, living, loving woman – and she’d hanged herself. Why? Why? Why? For Christ’s sake why?

  As he stood in the middle of the narrow street, Morse was conscious that his brain had virtually seized up, barely capable for the moment of putting two consecutive thoughts together. Lights were blazing behind all the windows except for that of number 10, immediately opposite, against which darkened house there stood an ancient bicycle, with a low saddle and upright handlebars, firmly chained to the sagging drainpipe. Three slow paces and Morse stood beside it, where he turned and looked up again at the front bedroom of number 9. No light, just as the constable had said. No light at all . . . Suddenly, Morse found himself sniffing slightly. Fish? He heard a disturbance in the canal behind the Reach as some mallard splashed down into the water. And then he turned and sniffed specifically at the cycle. Fish! Yes, quite certainly it was fish. Someone had brought some fish home from somewhere.

  Morse was conscious of many eyes upon him as he edged his way through the little crowd conversing quietly with one another about the excitement of the night. He turned right to retrace his steps and spotted the telephone kiosk – empty. For no apparent reason he pulled open the stiff door and stepped inside. The floor was littered with waste paper and cigarette stubs, but the instrument itself appeared unvandalized. Picking up the receiver, he heard the buzzing tone, and was quietly replacing it when he noticed that the blue telephone directory was lying open on the little shelf to his right. His eyes were no longer as keen as they once had been, and the light was poor; but the bold black print stood out clearly along the top of the pages: Plumeridge – Pollard – Pollard – Popper. And then – he saw the big capitals in the middle of the right-hand page: POLICE. And under the Police entries he could just make out the familiar details, including one that caught and held his eye: Oxford Central, St Aldates, Oxford 49881. And there was something else, too – or was he imagining it? He sniffed closely at the open pages, and again the blood was tingling across his shoulders. He was right – he knew it! There was the smell offish.

  Morse walked away from Jericho then, across Walton Street, across Woodstock Road, and thence into Banbury Road and up to his bachelor apartment in North Oxford, where he slumped into an armchair and sat unmoving for almost an hour. He then selected the Barenboim recording of the Mozart Piano Concerto number 21, switched on the gramophone to ‘play’, and sought to switch his mind away from all terrestrial troubles as the ethereal Andante opened. Sometimes, this way, he almost managed to forget.

  But not tonight.

  CHAPTER THREE

  We saw a knotted pendulum, a noose: and a strangled woman swinging there

  Sophocles, Oedipus Rex

  WHEN CONSTABLE WALTERS closed the door, his eyes were puzzled, and the slight frown on his forehead was perpetuated for several minutes as he recalled the strange things that Morse had asked him. He’d heard of Morse many times, of course, albeit Morse worked up at the Thames Valley HQ in Kidlington whilst he himself was attached to the City force in St Aldates. Indeed, that very morning he’d heard Morse giving a lecture: just a little disappointing that had been, though. People said what an eccentric, irascible old sod he could be; they also said that he’d solved more murders than anyone else for many leagues around, and that the gods had blessed him with a brain that worked as swiftly and as cleanly as lightning.

  ‘Chief Inspector Morse was here a few minutes ago.’

  Bell, a tall, black-haired man, looked across at Walters with a mixture of suspicion and distaste. ‘What the ’ell did he want?’

  ‘Nothing really, sir. He just asked—’

  ‘What the ’ell was he doing here?’

  ‘Said he’d been to some do at the Clarendon Institute or something. I suppose he must have heard about it.’

  Bell’s somewhat dour features relaxed into a hint of a grin, but he said nothing.

  ‘Do you know him well, sir?’

  ‘Morse? Ye-es, I suppose you could say that. We’ve worked together once or twice.’

  ‘They say he’s an odd sort of chap.’

  ‘Bloody odd!’ Bell shook his head slowly from side to side.

  ‘They say he’s clever, though.’

  ‘Clever?’ The tone of voice suggested that Bell was not firmly convinced of the allegation; but he was an honest man. ‘Cleverest bugger I’ve ever met. I’m not saying he’s always right, though – God, no! But he usually seems to be able to see things, I don’t know, half a dozen moves ahead of most of us.’

  ‘Perhaps he’s a good chess player.’

  ‘Morse? He’s never pushed a pawn in his life! Spends most of his free time in the pubs – or listening to his beloved Wagner.’

  ‘He never got married, did he?’

  ‘Too lazy and selfish to be a family man, I reckon. But—’ Bell stopped and his eyes suddenly looked sharp. ‘Perhaps you’d like to tell me, would you, Walters, exactly what this sudden interest in Morse is all about?’

  As well as he could remember them, Walters repeated the questions that Morse had asked him; and Bell listened in silence, his face showing no outward sign of interest or surprise. The fact of the front door being open was certainly a bit unusual, he realized that; and there was, of course, the question of who it was who’d rung the police and how it was that he (or she?) had come to find the grim little tragedy enacted in the kitchen behind him. Still, these were early hours yet, and many things would soon be clear. And what if they weren’t? It could hardly matter very much either way, for everything was so pathetically simple. She’d made a neatly womanish job of fashioning a noose from strands of household twine, fastened the end to a ceiling-hook, fixed deep into the joist above to support a clothes-rack; then stood on a cheap-looking plastic-covered stool – and hanged herself, immediately behind the kitchen door. It wasn’t all that uncommon. Bell had read the reports some dozens of times: ‘Death due to asphyxia caused by hanging. Verdict: suicide’. And he was an experienced enough officer – a good enough one, too – to know exactly what had happened here. No note, this time; but sometimes there was, and sometimes there wasn’t. Anyway, he’d not yet had the opportunity of searching the other rooms at all thoroughly; and there was every chance, especially in that back bedroom, that he’d find something to help explain it all. Just the one thing that was really worrying – just the one thing; and he was going to keep that to himself for the present. He’d said nothing to Walters about it, nothing to the police surgeon, nothing to the ambulance men – and, for the last hour, as things were slowly straightened out inside the kitchen, nothing much to himself either. But it was very strange: how in heaven’s name does a woman stand on a flimsy kitchen stool and then, at that terrible, irrevocable second of decision, kick it away from under her so that it lands, still standing four-square and upright, about two yards (well, 1.72 metres, according to his own careful measurement) from the suspended woman’s left foot, itself dangling no more than a few inches above the white and orange floor-tiles? And that’s where it had been for it was Bell himself who had exerted his bulk against the sticking door, and there had been no stool immediately behind it: only a body, swaying slightly under the glaring light of the neon strip that stretched across the ceiling. A fluke, perhaps? Not that it affected matters unduly, though, since Bell was utterly convinced in his own mind (and the post-mortem held the next morning was to corroborate his conviction) that Ms Anne Scott had died of asphyxiation caused by hanging. ‘The police,’ as the Oxford Mail was soon to report, ‘do not suspect foul play.’

  ‘C’mon,’ said Bell, as he walked over to the narrow, carpeted stairs. ‘Don’t touch anything until I tell you, right? Let’s just hope we find a note or something in one of the rooms. It’d pull the threads together all nice and tidy like, wouldn’t it?’

  Bell h
imself, however, was to find no suicide note in the house that evening, nor any other note in any other place on any other evening. Yet there was at least one note which Anne Scott had written on the night before she died – a note which had been duly delivered and received . . .

  From number 10 Canal Reach, George Jackson continued to watch the house opposite. He was now 66 years old, a sparely built man, short in stature, with a sharp-featured face, and rheumy, faded-blue eyes. For forty-two years he had worked at Lucy’s iron foundry in neighbouring Juxon Street and then, three years since, with the foundry’s order books half empty and with little prospect of any boom in the general economy, he had accepted a moderately generous redundancy settlement, and come to live in the Reach. He had a few local acquaintances – mostly one or two of his former work-mates; but no real friends. To many he appeared to exude an excessive meanness of soul, creating (as he did) the impression of being perpetually preoccupied with his own rather squalid self-interest. But he was not a particularly unpopular man, if only because he was good with his hands and had undertaken a good many little odd jobs for his Jericho neighbours; and if the charges he made were distinctly on the steep side, nevertheless he was punctual, passably expeditious, and quite certainly satisfactory in his workmanship.

  He was a fisherman, too.

  Although he seldom drank much, Jackson stood at the back of his darkened front room that evening with a half-bottle of Teacher’s whisky on the cupboard beside him and a tiny, grimy glass in his right hand. He had seen the police arrive: first two of them; then a doctor-looking man with a bag; then two other policemen; and after them a middle-aged man wearing a raincoat, a man with windswept, thinning hair, who was almost certainly a policeman, too, since he’d been admitted readily enough through the front door of the house opposite. A man Jackson had seen before. He’d seen him that very afternoon, and he felt more than a little puzzled . . . After that there’d been the ambulance men; then a good deal of activity with the lights throughout the house flicking on and off, and on and off again. And still he watched, slowly sipping the unwatered whisky and feeling far more relaxed, far less anxious than he’d felt a few hours earlier. Had anyone seen him? – that was his one big worry. But even that was now receding, and in any case he’d fabricated a neat enough little lie to cover himself.