Morse read the review with mixed feelings. Clearly, the critics hadn't yet gone metric, and this particular aficionado couldn't even spell the word. Yet big Inga seemed to Morse a most inviting prospect; and doubtless to many another like him. Especially perhaps when the boss was away one Friday afternoon. .? He flicked through the telephone directory, found the number, and asked to speak to the manager who surprisingly turned out to be the manageress.
'Oh yes, sir. All our tickets are traceable. Buff, you say? Rear circle? Oh yes. We should be able to help you. You see all the blocks of tickets are numbered and a record is kept at the start of each matinee, and then at six o'clock, and then at tea o'clock. Have you got the number?'
Morse read out the number and felt curiously excited.
'Just one minute, sir.' It turned into three or four, and Morse fiddled nervously with the directory. 'Are you there, sir? Yes; that's right. Last Friday. It's one of the first tickets issued. The doors opened at 1.15 and the programme started at 1.30. The first rear lounge number is 93543, so it must have been issued in the first five or ten minutes, I should think. There's usually half a dozen or so waiting for the doors to open.'
'You quite sure about this?'
'Quite sure, sir. You could come down and check if you wanted to.' She sounded young and pretty.
'Perhaps I will. What film have you got on?' He thought it sounded innocent enough.
'Not quite your cup of tea, I don't think, Inspector.'
'I wouldn't be too sure about that, miss.'
'
Morse wondered sadly how many, more gift horses he'd be looking in the mouth. But it wasn't that at all really. He was just frightened of being seen. Now if she'd said. .
But she said something else, and Morse jolted upright in his chair. 'I think I ought to mention, Inspector, that someone else asked me the very same sort of thing last week and. .'
'
'I said someone else had—'
'When was this, do you remember?'
'I'm not quite sure; sometime — let's see, now. I ought to remember. It's not very often—'
'Was it Friday?' Morse was excited and impatient.
'I don't know. I'm trying to remember. It was in the afternoon, I remember that, because I was doing a stint in the ticket office when the phone rang, and I answered it myself.'
'Beginning of the afternoon?'
'No, it was much later than that. Just a minute. I think it was. . Just a minute.' Morse heard some chattering in the background, and then the manageress's voice spoke in his ear once more. Inspector, I think it was in the late afternoon, sometime. About five, perhaps. I'm sorry I can't—'
'Could have been Friday, you think?'
'Ye-es. Or Saturday, perhaps. I just—'
'A man, was it?'
'Yes. He had a nice sort of voice. Educated — you know what I mean.'
'What did he ask you?'
'Well, it was funny really. He said he was a detective-story writer and he wanted to check up on some details.'
'What details?'
'Well, I remember he said he'd got to put some numbers on a ticket his detective had found, and he wanted to know how many figures there were — that sort of thing.'
'And you told him?'
'No, I didn't. I told him he could come round to see me, if he liked: but I felt a bit — well, you know, you can't be too careful these days.'
Morse breathed heavily down the phone. 'I see. Well, thank you very much. You've been extremely kind. I think, as I say, I shall probably have to bother you again—'
'No bother, Inspector.'
Morse put down the phone, and whistled softly to himself. Whew! Had someone else found Quinn's body and the cinema ticket before Tuesday morning? Long before? Saturday; the manageress had said it might have been Saturday. And it couldn't have been Friday, could it? About five, she'd said. Morse looked quickly again at the
CHAPTER THIRTEEN