Morse pondered a while, and then told him. "We've got to find a motive for Quinn's murder, sir. There are a hundred and one possibilities, of course, but I was just wondering if — if perhaps he'd found some er some suggestion of jiggery-pokery, that's all. Anyway, you've been very helpful.'
Ogleby stood up to go, and Morse too rose from his chair. 'I've been asking the others what they were doing last Friday afternoon. I suppose I ought to ask you too. If you can remember, that is.'
'Oh, yes. That's easy enough. I went down to the Oxford University Press in the morning, had a pretty late lunch at the Berni place there with the chief printer, and got back here about, oh, about half past three, I should think.'
'And you spent the rest of the afternoon in the office here?'
'Yes.'
'Are you sure about that, sir?'
Ogleby looked at him with steady eyes. 'Quite sure.'
Morse hesitated, and debated whether to face it now or later.
'What is it, Inspector?'
'It's a bit awkward, sir. I understand from, er, from other sources that there was no one here in the latter part of Friday afternoon.'
'Well, your sources of information must be wrong.'
'You couldn't have slipped out for a while? Gone up to see the chief clerk or something?'
'I certainly didn't go out of the office. I might have gone upstairs, but I don't think so. And if I had, it would only have been for a minute or two, at the very outside.'
'What would you say, then, sir, if someone said there was no one here on Friday afternoon between a quarter past four and a quarter to five?'
'I'd say this someone was mistaken, Inspector.'
'But what if he insisted—?'
'He'd be a liar, then, wouldn't he?' Ogleby smiled serenly, and gently closed the door behind him.
Or
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE POLICE CAR, white with a broad, pale-blue stripe along its middle, stood parked by the pavement, and Constable Dickson knocked at the spruce detached bungalow in Old Marston. The door was immediately opened by a smartly-dressed, attractive woman.
'Miss Height?'
'Yes?'
'Is your daughter in?'
Miss Height's features crumpled into a girlish giggle. 'Don't be silly! 'I'm only sixteen!'
Dickson himself grinned oafishly, and accepted the young lady's invitation to step inside.
'It's about Mr. Quinn, isn't it? Ever so exciting. Coo. Just think. He worked in the same office as Mummy!'
'Did you ever meet him, miss?'
'No, worse luck.'
'He never came here?'
She giggled again. 'Not unless Mummy brought him here while I was slaving away at school!'
'She wouldn't do that, would she?'
She smiled happily. 'You don't know Mummy!'
'Why aren't you at school today, miss?'
'Oh, I'm taking some O-levels again. I took them in the summer but I'm afraid I didn't do too well in some of them.'
'What subjects are they?'
'Human Biology, French and Maths. Not that I've got much chance in Maths. We had Paper Two this morning — a real stinker. Would you like to see it?'
'Not now, miss. I er — I was just wondering why you weren't at school, that's all.' It wasn't very subtle.
'Oh, they let us off when we haven't got an exam. Great really. I've been off since lunchtime.'
'Do you always come home? When you're free, I mean?'
'Nothing else to do, is there?'
'You revise, I suppose?'
'A bit. But I usually watch telly. You know, the kiddies' programmes. Quite good, really. Sometimes I don't think I've grown up at all.'
Dickson felt he shouldn't argue. 'You've been here most days recently, then?'
'Most afternoons.' She looked at him innocently. 'I shall be here again tomorrow afternoon.'
Dickson coughed awkwardly. He'd done the bit of homework that Morse had told him to. 'I watched one of those kiddies' films, miss. About a dog. Last Friday afternoon, I think it was.'
'Oh yes. I watched that. I cried nearly all the way through. Did it make
'Bit of a tearjerker, I agree, miss. But I mustn't keep you from your revising. As I say, it was your mother I really wanted to see.'
'But you said — you said you wanted to see
'I got it a bit muddled, miss, I'm afraid. I sort of thought—' He gave it up and got to his feet. He hadn't done too badly at all really, and he thought the Chief Inspector would be pleased with him.