Read The silent world of Nicholas Quinn Online
Authors: Colin Dexter
EARLY ON SATURDAY evening Mr. Nigel Denniston decided to begin. He found that the
majority of his O-level English Language scripts had been delivered, and he began
his usual prelimina1ry task of putting the large buff-coloured envelopes into
alphabetical order, and of checking them against his allocated schedule. The
examiners' meeting was to be held in two days' time, and before then he had to look at
about twenty or so scripts, mark them provisionally in pencil, and present them for
scrutiny to the senior examiner, who would be interviewing each of his panel after the
main meeting. Al-jamara was the first school on his list, and he slit open the carefully-
sealed envelope and took out the contents. The attendance sheet was placed on top
of the scripts, and Denniston's eyes travelled automatically and hopefully down to the
'Absentee' column. It was always a cause of enormous joy to him if one or two of his
candidates had been smitten with some oriental malady; but Al-jamara was a
disappointment. According to the attendance sheet there were five candidates
entered, and all five were duly registered as 'present' by the distant invigilator. Never mind. There was always the chance of finding one or two of those delightful children
who knew nothing and who wrote nothing; children for whom the wells of inspiration
ran dry after only a couple of laboured sentences. But no. No luck there, either. None
of the five candidates had prematurely given up the ghost. Instead, it was the usual
business: page after page of ill-written, unidiomatic, irrelevant twaddle, which it was
his assignment to plough through (and almost certainly to plough), marking in red ink
the myriad errors of grammar, syntax, construction, spelling and punctuation. It was a
tedious chore, and he didn't really know why year after year he took it on. Yet he did
know. It was a bit of extra cash; and if he didn't mark, he would only be sitting in front of the TV, forever arguing with the family about which of the channels they should
watch . . . He flicked through the first few sheets. Oh dear! These foreigners might be
all right at Mathematics or Economics or that sort of thing. But they couldn't write
English
—that was a fact. Still, it wasn't really surprising. English was their second language, poor kids; and he felt a little less jaundiced as he took out his pencil and
started.
An hour later he had finished the first four scripts. The candidates had tried—of course
they had. But he felt quite unjustified in awarding the sort of marks that could bring
them anywhere near the pass range. Tentatively he had written his own provisional
percentages at the top right-hand corner of each script: 27%, 34%, 35%, 19%. He
decided to finish off the last one before supper.
This was a better script. My goodness, it was! And as he read on he realized that it
was very good indeed. He put aside his pencil and read through the essay with
genuine interest, bordering on delight. Whoever the boy was, he'd written beautifully.
There were a few awkward sentences, and a sprinkling of minor errors; but Denniston
doubted whether he himself could have written a better essay under examination
conditions. He had known the same sort of thing before, though. Sometimes a
candidate would memorize a whole essay and trot it out: beautiful stuff, lifted lock,
stock and paragraph from one of the great English prose stylists; but almost invariably
in such cases, the subject matter was so wildly divorced from the strict terms of the
question set as to be completely irrelevant. But not here. Either the lad was quite
exceptionally able, or else he had been extraordinarily fortunate. That wasn't for
Denniston to decide, though; his job was to reward what was on the script. He
pencilled in 90%; and then wondered why he hadn't given it 95%, or even 99%. But
like almost all examiners, he was always frightened of using the full range of marks.
The lad would fly through, anyway. Wonderful lad! Perfunctorily Denniston looked at
the name: Dubal. It meant nothing to him at all.
In Al-jamara itself, the last of the Autumn exa1minations, crowded into just the one
week, had finished the previous afternoon, and George Bland relaxed with an iced gin
and tonic in his air-conditioned flat. It had taken him only a few weeks to regret his
move. Better paid, certainly; but only away from Oxford had he begun fully to
appreciate the advantages of his strike-ridden, bankrupt, beautiful homeland. He
missed, above all, the feeling of belonging somewhere which, however loosely, he
could think of as his home: the pub at night; the Cotswold villages with their greens
and ancient churches; the concerts, the plays, the lectures, and the general air of
learning; the oddities forever padding their faddish, feckless paths around the groves
of the Muses. He'd never imagined how much it all meant to him . . . The climate of Al-
jamara was overwhelming, intolerable, endlessly enervating; the people alien—
ostensibly hospitable, but secretly watchful and suspicious . . . How he regretted the
move now!
The news had worried him; would have worried anyone. It was for information only,
really—no more; and it had been thoughtful of the Syndicate to keep him informed.
The International Telegram had arrived on Wednesday morning: TRAGIC NEWS
STOP QUINN DEAD STOP MURDER SUSPECTED STOP WILL WRITE STOP
BARTLETT. But there had been another telegram, received only that morning; and
this time it was unsigned. He had burned it immediately, although he realized that no
one could have suspected the true import of the brief, bleak lines. Yet it had always
been a possibility, and he was prepared. He walked over to his desk and took out his
passport once more. All was in order; and tucked safely inside was his ticket on the
scheduled flight to Cairo, due to leave at noon the following day.
THERE WAS A CAR outside No 1 Pinewood Close as Frank Greenaway pulled into the
crescent; but he didn't recognize it and gave it no second thought. He could fully
understand Joyce's point of view, of course. He wasn't too keen to go back there
himself, and it wasn't right to expect her to be there on her own while he was out at
work. She'd have the baby to keep her company, but—No. He agreed with her. They
would find somewhere else, and in the meantime his parents were being very kind.
Not that he wanted to stay with them too long. Like somebody said, fish and visitors
began to smell after three days . . . They could leave most of their possessions at
Pinewood Close for a week or two, but he had to pick up a few things for Joyce (who
would be leaving the John Radcliffe the next morning), and the police had said it
would be all right.
As he got out of his car, he noticed that the streetlamp had been repaired, and the
house where he and Joyce had lived, and wherein Quinn had been found murdered,
seemed almost ordinary again. The front gate stood open, and he walked up to the
front door, selecting the correct key from his ring. The garage doors stood open,
propped back by a couple of house bricks. Frank opened the front door very quietly.
He was not a nervous man, but he felt a slight involuntary shudder as he stepped into
the darkened hallway, the two doors on his right, the stairs almost directly in front of
him. He would hurry it up a bit; he didn't much fancy staying there too long on his own.
As he put his hand on the banister he noticed the slim line of light under the kitchen
door: the police must have forgotten . . . But then he heard it, quite distinctly. Someone was in the kitchen. Someone was quietly moving around in there . . . The demon fear
laid its electrifyin1g hand upon his shoulder, and without conscious volition he found
himself a few seconds later scurrying hurriedly along the concrete drive towards his
car.
Morse heard the click of the front door, and looked out into the passageway. But no
one. He was imagining things again. He returned to the kitchen, and bent down once
more beside the back door. Yes, he
had
been right. There was no mud on the carpets in the other downstairs rooms, and they had been hoovered only an hour or so before
Quinn was due to return. But beside the back door there
were
signs of mud, and
Morse knew that someone had taken off his shoes, or her shoes, and left them beside
the doormat. And even as he had stood there his own shoes crunched upon the gritty,
dried mud with the noise of someone trampling on corn flakes.
He left the house and got into the Lancia. But then he got out again, walked back,
closed the garage doors, and finally the garden gate behind him.
Ten minutes later he drew up outside the darkened house in Walton Street, where a
City constable stood guard before the door.
'No one's tried to get in, Constable?'
'No, sir. Few sightseers always hanging around, but no one's been in.'
'Good. I'll only be ten minutes.'
Ogleby's bedroom seemed lonely and bleak. No pictures on the walls, no books on
the bedside table, no ornaments on the dressing table, no visible signs of heating. The
large double-bed monopolized the confined space, and Morse turned back the
coverlet. Two head pillows lay there, side by side, and a pair of pale-yellow pyjamas
were tucked just beneath the top sheet Morse picked up the nearer pillow, and there
he found a neatly-folded négligé—black, flimsy, almost transparent, with a label
proclaiming 'St. Michael'.
No one had yet bothered to clean up the other room, and the fire which had blazed
merrily the night before was nothing now but cold, fine ash into which some of the
detectives had thrown the dropped butts of their cigarettes. It looked almost obscene.
Morse turned his attention to the books which lined the high shelves on each side of
the fireplace. The vast majority of them were technical treatises on Ogleby's
specialisms, and Morse was interested in only one:
Medical Jurisprudence and
Toxicology
, by Glaister and Rentoul. It was an old friend. A folded sheet of paper protruded from the top, and Morse opened the book at that point: page 566. In heavy
type, a quarter of the way down the page, stood the heading 'Hydrocyanic Acid'.
At the Summertown Health Clinic, Morse was shown immediately into Dr Parker's
consulting room.
' 'Yes, Inspector, I'd looked after Mr. Ogleby for—oh, seven or eight years now. Very
sad really. Something may have turned up, but I very much doubt it. Extremely rare
blood disease—nobody knows much about it.'
'You gave him about a year, you say?'
'Eighteen months, perhaps. No longer.'
'He knew this?'
'Oh yes. He insisted on knowing everything. Anyway, it would have been useless
trying to keep it from him. Medically speaking, he was a very well-informed man. Knew
more about his illness than I did. Or the specialists at the Radcliffe, come to that.'
'Do you think he told anybody?'
'I doubt it. Might have told one or two clos1e friends, I suppose. But I knew nothing
about his private life. For all I know, he didn't have any close friends.'
'Why do you say that?'
'I don't know. He was a—a bit of a loner, I think. Bit uncommunicative.'
'Did he have much pain?'
'I don't think so. He never said so, anyway.'
'He wasn't the suicidal sort, was he?'
'I don't think so. Seemed a pretty balanced sort of chap. If he
were
going to kill himself, he would have done it simply and quickly, I should have thought. He would certainly