delights which are as
Please do give me a r
may be, at 01-417 808 30
you feel able to do
result, I shall give
able to enjoy, at no c
the most discreet er
ever imagined. 35
You
Morse sat back and studied the words with great joy. He’d been a lifelong addict of puzzles and of cryptograms, and this was exactly the sort of work his mind could cope with confidently. First he enumerated the lines in 5’s (as shown above); then he set his mind to work. It took
Dear Sir,
This is a most unusua l letter as I know you’ll
realize. But please re ad it with great care
because what I am pro posing can benefit
both you and me. My wa strel daughter at _
College has just take n (without much hope) her
final examination in G eography, and will get the result
in about ten or twelve days time. Now I am
an old man and I’m de speratly anxious to know
how she has got on ah ead of the official lists.
The reason for my r equest is that I am
ridiculously impatient, and in fact I am off
to America in a few dfays time where I may not be
able to be contacte d for some while. All I
want to know is how J -got on, if you can tell me
this. I have spent a great deal of money on her
education, and she is the only child I have.
I realize that this is a improper request. I ask
only that you should g ive a thought to stooping
to such an impropriet y. I think the official date for
publication of the cl ass list is-
July.
If you can possibly se e your way to this favour
I shall be in a positi t to pay you very well if
ununconventionally. You s ee I manage some of the
most select clubs, sa unas and parlours and I will
give you a completely free access to the sexual
delights which are as sociated with such places
Please do give me a r ing whatever your decision
May be at 01-417-808 -. If it so happens that
You fell able to do what I ask about J
Result I shall give you details about how you’ll be
Able to enjoy at no c ost at all to yourself,
The most discreet er otic thrills you can have
Ever imagined
You rs sincerely
Morse was reasonably pleased with the draft. It lacked polish here and there, but it wasn’t bad at all, really. Three specific problems, of course: the name of the college, the name of the girl, and the last bit of the telephone number. The college would be a bit more difficult now that almost all of them accepted women, but…
Suddenly Morse sat at his desk quite motionless, the blood tingling across his shoulders. Could it be that “G- “? It needn’t be Geography or Geology or Geophysics or whatever. And it wasn’t. It was
Phew!
The telephone number wouldn’t be much of a problem, either, since Lewis could soon sort that out. If it was a four-digit group, that would only mean ten possibilities; and if it was five digits, that was only a hundred; and Lewis was a very patient man…
But the tooth was jabbing its pain along his jaw once more, and he made his way home, where doubling (as he invariably did) the dosage of all medical nostrums he took six Aspros, washed them down well with whisky, and went to bed. But at 2 a.m. we find him sittingup in bed, his hand caressing his jaw, the pain jumping in his gum like some demented dervish. And at 8a.m. we find him standing outside a deserted dentist’s premises in North Oxford, an inordinately long scarf wrapped round his jaw, waiting desperately for one of the receptionists to arrive.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
‘You’ve not been looking after these too well, have you, Mr Morse?’
Since at this point, however, the dapperly dressed dentist had his patient’s mouth opened to its widest extremities, Morse was able only to produce a strained grunt from his swollen larynx.
‘You ought to cut out the sugar,’ continued the dentist, surveying so many signs of incipient decay, ‘and some dental floss wouldn’t come amiss with all this… Ah! I reckon that’s the little fellow that’s been causing you-’ He tapped one of the lower-left molars with a blunt instrument, and the recumbent Morse was almost levitated in agony. ‘Ye-es, you’ve got a nasty little infection there… does
Again Morse’s body jumped in agonizing pain, before the chair was raised to a semi-vertical slant and he was ordered to ‘rinse out”.
‘You’ve got a nasty little infection there, as I say…’
Everything with the dentist appeared to warrant the epithet ‘little’, and Morse would have been more gratified had it been suggested to him that he was the victim of a massive great bloody infection stemming from an equally massive great bloody tooth that even now was throbbing mightily. He continued to sit in the chair, but the dentist himself was writing something across at his desk.