'He didn't find the letter?'
'So he says-and I'm inclined to believe him.'
'What about the change of date for the meeting? Was that deliberate?'
'I don't really see how it could have been, sir: there wasn't the time, I don't think. No. Charles had to go to Spain on business some time this month, and it so happened that one of his girl friends told him that she could get away, too, and join him. But only during that week. So Charles pleaded urgent business, the meeting was changed, and the brothers took full advantage of-'
'Lucky for them, wasn't it? Keeping the audience down, I mean.'
'Luckier than you realise, sir. Miss Universe or World or something was on the telly that night and-'
'I’m surprised
'Did they pick the right girl, sir?'
'Well, personally I'd have gone for Miss- Go on!'
'I should think things must have looked pretty black as they went home that night and talked over what had happened. But very soon one thing must have become increasingly clear to the pair of them. Perhaps all would be well,
The ACC nodded. 'Ye-es. You'd better tell me how they worked that.'
'To an outsider, sir, I think that one thing about this case would seem particularly odd: the fact that Sergeant Lewis and myself had never been
'Then we were a bit unlucky. Lewis and myself paid a
'But why all the clever-clever stuff, Morse? Why didn't you just arrest him there and then and get it over with?'
'We'd have run the risk of letting the big fish get away, sir, and that was the second reason for my going that day. I had to lay the bait to get Charles Richards back in England, and so I told Conrad that we had to have a statement from him and that it was going to be
'And he walked into our men at Gatwick-and then you walked
'Yes. Once I'd mentioned that we needed to take his prints again and that Sergeant Lewis was going to try to do a better job this time, he realised the game was finally up. Lewis had never taken
'How kind of you, Morse! I suppose, by the way, the prints
'Er, well, as a matter of fact they weren't, sir. I'm afraid I must have been just a little careless er myself when I examined the head-board and-'
The ACC got to his feet and his face showed pained incredulity. 'Don't-don't tell me they were-'
Morse nodded guiltily. 'I'm afraid so-yes, sir:
Chapter Thirty-Nine
The troubles of our proud and angry dust
Are from eternity, and shall not fail.
Bear them we can, and if we can we must.
Shoulder the sky, my lad, and drink your ale
– A. E. Housman,
Apart from a few small details the case of the Jericho killings was solved, but Morse knew as he sat in his office the following morning that it wasn't yet quite the time to pack away the two box files on the shelves of the Record Office. There were two things really that still nagged at his brain. The first was the realisation that his Sophoclean hypothesis about Anne Scott's suicide had been largely undermined by Lewis's patient inquiries… (Where was Lewis, by the way? Not like Lewis to be late…) The second thing was that the letter Charles Richards had written to Anne Scott had still not been found. Was that important, though? Beyond much doubt it had led directly to Anne's death, but it wasn't difficult to guess at its contents: not difficult to reconstruct the events of that morning when Anne had received one letter from the clinic saying, yes, she
Morse nodded to himself: it had been the post that morning that had been the final catalyst-not the previous