'Oh, it's all right! I quite like talking about him, really. We all -Philip and George -we all loved him. In fact he was about the only thing that'd get Philip out of bed sometimes.'
But Morse's attention appeared to have drifted far from dogs as he gazed through the french windows at the far end of the room, his eyes seemingly focused at some point towards the back of the garden -a garden just over the width of the house and stretching back about fifty feet to a wire fence at the bottom, separating the property from the open fields beyond. As with the patch of garden in the front, likewise here: George Daley, it had to be assumed, reckoned he did quite enough gardening in the course of earning his daily bread at Blenheim, and carried little if anything of his horticultural expertise into the rather neglected stretch of lawn which provided the immediate view from the rear of number 2.
'I don't believe it!' said Morse. 'Isn't that Asphodelina lutea?'
Mrs Daley walked over to the window.
There!' pointed Morse. 'Those yellow things, just across the fence.’
‘Butter cups!' said Lewis.
‘You’ve . er, not got a pair of binoculars handy, Mrs Daley?'
‘No - I - we haven't, I'm afraid.'
'Mind if we have a look?' asked Morse. 'Always contradicting me, my sergeant is!'
The three of them walked out through the kitchen door, past the (open) out-house door, and on to the back lawn where the daisies and dandelions and broad-leaf plantain had been allowed a generous freedom of movement. Morse himself stepped up to the fence, looking down at the ground around him; then, cursorily, at the yellow flowers he had spotted earlier, and which he now agreed to be nothing rarer than buttercups. Mrs Daley smiled vaguely at Lewis; but Lewis was now listening to Morse's apparently aimless chatter with far greater interest.
'No compost heap?'
‘No. George isn't much bothered with the garden here, as you can see. Says he's got enough, you know . . .' She pointed vaguely towards Blenheim, and led the way back in.
'How do you get rid of your rubbish then?'
'Sometimes we go down to the waste disposal with it. Or you can buy those special bags from the council. We used to burn it, but a couple of years ago we upset the neighbours -you know, bits all over the washing and-'
'Probably against the bye-laws, too,' added Lewis; and for once Morse appeared to appreciate the addendum.
It was Lewis too, as they were leaving, who spotted the rifle amid the umbrellas, the walking sticks, and the warped squash racket, in a stand just behind the front door.
'Does your husband do a bit of shooting?'
'Oh that! George occasionally . . . yes ...’
Gently, for a second time, Lewis reminded her of the law's demands: 'Ought to be under lock and key, that. Perhaps you'd remind your husband, Mrs Daley.'
Margaret Daley watched them through the front window as they walked away to their car. Just a bit of a stiff-shirt, the sergeant had been, about their legal responsibilities. Whereas the inspector -well, he'd seemed much nicer with his interest in dogs and flowers and the decoration in the lounge -her decoration. Yet during the last few minutes she'd begun to suspect her judgement a little, and she had the feeling that it would probably be Morse who would be returning that evening. Not that there was anything to worry about, really. Well, just the one thing, perhaps.
I n spite of that day being Saturday - and the first of the holidays -Mrs Julie Ireson, careers mistress at the Cherwell School, Oxford, had been quite willing to meet Lewis just after lunch; and Lewis was anxious to get the meeting over as soon as possible, for he was desperately tired and had been only too glad to accept Morse's strict directive for a long rest -certainly for the remainder of the day, and perhaps for the next day, Sunday, too - unless there occurred any dramatic development.
She was waiting in the deserted car park when Lewis arrived, and immediately took him up to her first-floor study, its walls and shelves festooned with literature on nursing, secretarial courses, apprenticeship schemes, industrial training, FE's, poly's, universities . . . For Lewis (whose only career advice had been his father's dictum that he could do worse than to keep his mouth mostly shut and his bowels always open), a school-based advice centre for pupils leaving school was an interesting novelty.
A buff-coloured folder containing the achievements of Philip Daley was on the table ready for him. Non-achievements rather He was now just seventeen years old, and had officially abandoned any potential advancement into further education w.e.f. 17 July -the previous day. The school was prepared to be not over-pessimistic about some minor success in the five GCSE subject; in which, the previous term, he had tried (though apparently not overhard) to satisfy his examiners: English; Technical Drawing; Geography; General Science; and Communication Studies. Over the years, however, the reports from his teachers, even in non academic subjects, had exhibited a marked lack of enthusiasm about his attitude and progress. Yet until fairly recently -appeared not to have posed any great problem to the school community: limited, clearly, in intellectual prowess; limited too in most technical and vocational skills; in general about average.
Current educational philosophy (Lewis learned) encouraged a measure of self-evaluation, and amongst other documents in folder was a sheet on which eighteen months previously, in own handwriting, Philip had filled in a questionnaire about his six main 'Leisure Interests/Pastimes', in order of preference. The list read thus:
1 Football
2 Pop music
3 Photography
4 Pets
5 Motorbikes
6 TV
'He can spell OK,' commented Lewis.
'Difficult to misspell "pets", Sergeant.'
'Yes. But - well, "photography" . . .'
'Probably had to look it up in the dictionary.'
'You didn't like him?' said Lewis slowly.
'No, I'm afraid I didn't. I'm glad he's gone, if you must know.' She was younger than Lewis had expected: perhaps more vulnerable too?
‘Any particular reason?'
‘Just general, really.'
‘Well, thanks very much, Mrs Ireson. If I could take the folder?'
‘Any particular reason you want to know about him?'
‘No. Just general, really,' echoed Lewis.
He slept from 6.30 that evening through until almost ten the following morning. When he finally awoke, he learned there had been a telephone message the previous evening from Morse: on no account was he to come in to HQ that Sunday; it would be a good idea though, to make sure his passport was in order.
Well, well!
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Every roof is agreeable to the eye, until it is lifted; then we find tragedy
and moaning women, and hard-eyed husbands
(Ralph Waldo Emerson, Experience)
IT WAS two minutes to seven by the Jaguar's fascia clock when Morse pulled up in the slip-road outside number 2 Blenheim Villas. He was fairly confident of his ground now, especially after reading through the folder that Lewis had left. Certain, of course, about the electric fire in the Daleys' main lounge; almost certain about the conversion of the old coal-house into a utility room, in which, as they'd walked out to the garden, he'd glimpsed the arrangement of washing-machine and tumble-drier on newly laid red tiles; not quite so certain about the treeless back garden though, for Morse was ridiculously proud about never having been a boy scout, and his knowledge of camp-fires and cocoa-barbecues, he had to admit, was almost nil.
For once he felt relieved to be on his own as he knocked at the front door. The police as a whole were going through a tough time in public esteem: allegations of corrupt officers, planted evidence, improper procedures -such allegations had inevitably created suspicion and some hostility. And -yes, Morse knew it -he himself was on occasion tempted to overstep the procedural boundaries a little -as shortly he would be doing again. It was a bit like a darts player standing a few inches in front of the oche as he threw for the treble-twenty. And Lewis would not have brooked this; and would have told him so.