"Wha's this for?"
"I bought it for you."
"But like I say--"
"I want you to have it, that's all. I've never bought any-thing like that for anybody--and, as I say, I just want you to have it."
Ellie had been looking down at the pendant and suddenly. the tears began. "Oh god!" she whispered.
"Do you like it?"
"It's... it's the most wonderful..." But she could get no further. She stood up and walked round the desk, and kissed Morse fully and softly on the mouth; and Morse felt the wetness of her cheek against his own.
"I must go," said Morse. "My boss'Il be getting impa-tient.'
She nodded. "You know what I just said--about Ashley? That I couldn't marry him because I didn't love him? Well, that wasn't really the reason why I broke it off."
In his brain Morse had become convinced that Eleanor Smith must be guilty of her step-father's murder; but in his heart he felt grieved as he awaited her words, for he knew exactly what they would be. Yet he was wrong. Spectacularly wrong.
"The real reason is I've... I've fallen in love with somebody else."
Morse wondered if he'd heard correctly. "What?"
"You gettin' deaf or something?"
"Not--not with that charlatan from the modelling agency, surely?"
She shook her head crossly, like some unhappy, exasper-ated little girl who will stamp her foot until she can get her own way, her own selfish way. Now.
"Are you going to listen to me, or not? Can't you guess? Can't you see? Can't you see?" She was standing beside the door, her head held high, her sludgy-green eyes closed, trying so hard to hold back the brimming tears. "I've fallen in love with you, you stupid sod!"
Chapter Sixty-two dactyloscopy (n): the examination of fingerprintg (Early · Twentieth Century)
(The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary)
Always had Morse been a reluctant dactyloscopist, and throughout his police career all the arches and whorls and loops, all the peaks and the troughs and the ridges, had ever remained a deep mystery to him--like electricity, and the Wheatstone Bridge. He was therefore perfectly happy, on Friday, September 30, to delegate the fingerprinting of Mes-dames Brooks and Stevens to Sergeant Lewis--for the two overseas travellers had returned to Oxford early that after-noon.
Immigration officials at Heathrow, Gatwick, and Stansted airports had been alerted about them; and the phone-call from Heathrow had been received at Thames Valley HQ just after midday: the two had boarded the Ox-ford City Link coach, scheduled to arrive at its Gloucester Green terminus in Oxford at 2:30 '.M.
Neither had appeared to show any undue surprise or dis-comfiture when Lewis, accompanied by a fingerprint offi-cer, had taken them into the manager's office there, and trotted out the "purely for elimination" line.
After his colleague had left for the fingerprint bureau at St. Aldate's (where there was now a computerised search facility) Lewis had returned to Kidlington HQ, to find Morse dispiritedly scanning some of the documents in the Case.
But the Chief Inspector perked up with the return of his sergeant.
"No problems?"
"No problems, sir."
"You're a betting man, Lewis?"
"Only very occasionally: Derby, Grand National..."
"Will you have a bet with me?"
"50p?"
"Can't we be devils, and make it a quid?"
"All right. I've got to be careful with the money, though--we've got the decorators in."
Morse appeared surprised. "I thought you did all that sort of stuff yourself?'.'
"I used to, sir, when I had the time and the energy. Be fore I started working for you."
"Well, take your pick!"
"Pardon T'
"The fingerprints. Brenda Brooks or Julia Stevens---who do you go for?"
Lewis frowned. "I can't really see his wife doing it, you know that. I just don't think she'd have the strength for one thing."
"Really?" Morse seemed almost to be enjoying himself. "Mrs. Stevens, though... We! l, she's a much stronger person, a much stronger character, isn't she? And she's got the brains---"
"And she's got nothing to lose," added Morse more som-brely.
"Not much, no."
"So your money's on her, is it?"
Lewis hesitated. "You know, sir, in detective stories there are only two roles really, aren't there? It's never the butler; and it's never the person you think it is. So---so I'll go for "Leaving me with Mrs. Stevens."
"You'd have gone for her anyway, sir."
"You think so?"
But Lewis didn't know what he was thinking, anti changed the subject.
"Did you have any lunch earlier, sir?" rette.
"You're not hungry?"
"A bit."
"What about coming back and having a bite with us?
The missus'd be only too glad to knock something up for you."
Morse considered the proposition. "What do you nor-really have on Fridays? Fish?"
"No. It's egg and chips on Fridays."
"I thought that was on Wednesdays." Lewis nodded. "And Mondays."
"You're on," decided Morse. "Give her a ring and tell her to peel another few spuds."
"Only one thing, sir--as I said. We're in a bit of a pickle at home, I'm afraid--with the decorators in."
"Have you got the beer in, though? That's more to the point, surely."