'Not tonight, I'm afraid, sir. I'm taking part in the final of the pub quiz round at the Friar.'
‘I’m glad to hear others have got such confidence in your brains.'
‘I’m quite good, really - apart from Sport and Pop Music’
'Oh, I know that, Morse!' The Chief Constable was speaking
very slowly now. 'And I have every confidence in your brains,
as well.'
Morse sighed audibly into the phone and held his peace as the Chief Constable continued: 'We've got dozens of men here if you need 'em.'
‘Is Sergeant Lewis on duty?' asked a Morse now fully resigned.
'Lewis? Ah yes! As a matter of fact he's on his way to pick you up now. I thought, you know, that er...' 'You're very kind, sir.'
Morse put down the phone and walked to the window where he looked down on the strangely quiet, muffled road. The Corporation lorries had gritted for a second time late that afternoon, but only a few carefully driven cars were intermittently crawling past along the icy surfaces. Lewis wouldn't mind coming out, though. In fact, thought Morse, he'd probably be only too glad to escape the first night of the new year television.
And what of Morse himself? There was perhaps just a hint of grim delight to be observed on his features as he saw the police car pull into the gutter in a spurt of deep slush, and waved to the man who got out of it - a thick-set, slightly awkward-looking man, for whom the only blemishes on a life of unexciting virtuousness were a gluttonous partiality for egg and chips, and a passion for fast driving.
Sergeant Lewis looked up to the window of the flat, and acknowledged Morse's gesture of recognition. And had Lewis been able to observe more closely at that moment he might have seen that in the deep shadows of Morse's rather cold blue eyes there floated some reminiscences of an almost joyful satisfaction.
Chapter Eight
Wednesday, January 1st: p.m.
(AIR VICE-MARSHAL A. D, BUTTON)
Lewis pulled in behind the two other police cars outside the Haworth Hotel, where a uniformed constable in a black-and-white chequered hat stood outside the main entrance, with one of his colleagues, similarly attired, guarding the front door of the adjacent property further down the Banbury Road.
'Who's in charge?’ asked Morse, of the first constable, as he passed through into the foyer, stamping the snow from his shoes on the doormat.
'Inspector Morse, sir.'
'Know where he is?' asked Morse.
'Not sure, sir. I've only just got here.’
'Know him by sight, do you?’
'I don't know him at all’
Morse went on in, but Lewis tapped the constable on the shoulder and whispered in his ear: 'When you meet this Morse fellow, he's a
'Famous pair, we are!' murmured Morse as the two of them
stood at Reception, where in a small room at the back of the
desk Sergeant Phillips of the City CID (Morse recognized him)
stood talking to a pale-faced, worried-looking man who was
introduced as Mr John Binyon, the hotel proprietor. And very
soon Morse and Lewis knew as much - or as little - as anyone
about the tragedy so recently discovered in his own hotel by the
proprietor himself. t
The two Anderson children had been putting the finishing touches to their snowman just as it was getting dark that afternoon when they were joined by their father, Mr Gerald Anderson. And it had been he who had observed that one of the rear windows on the ground floor of the annexe was open; and who had been vaguely uneasy about this observation, since the weather was raw, with a cutting wind sweeping down from the north. He had finally walked closer and seen the half-drawn curtains flapping in the icy draught - although he had not gone all the way up to the window, under which (as he'd noticed) the snow was still completely undisturbed. He had mentioned this fact to his wife once he was back in the hotel, and it was at her instigation that he reported his disquiet to the proprietor himself - at about 5 p.m., that was; with the result that the pair of them, Anderson and Binyon, had walked across to the annexe and along the newly carpeted corridor to the second bedroom on the right, where over the doorknob was hooked a notice, written in English, French, and German, instructing potential intruders that the incumbent was not to be disturbed. After repeated knockings, Binyon had opened the door with his master-key, and had immediately discovered why the man they found there had been incapable (for some considerable time, it seemed) of responding to any knocking from within or to any icy blast from without.
For the man on the bed was dead and the room was cold as the grave.