Read The silent world of Nicholas Quinn Online
Authors: Colin Dexter
and Roman coins; and when he had come down from Cambridge with a brilliant first,
and when he had walked directly into a senior mathematics post in a prestigious
public school, life had seemed to promise a career of distinguished and enviable
achievement. But he had lacked ambition, even then; and at the age of thirty-nine he
had drifted into his present position for no other reason than the vague conviction that
he had been in one rut for so long that he might as well try to climb out and fall as
gently as possible into another. There remained but few joys in his life, and the chief of these was travel. Though his six weeks annual holiday allowed him less time than he
would have wished, at least his fairly handsome salary allowed him to venture far
afield, and only the previous summer he had managed a fortnight in Moscow. As well
as deputizing for Bartlett, he looked after Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry; and
since no one else in the office (not even Monica Height, the linguist) was his equal in
the unlikelier languages, he did his best to cope with Welsh and Russian as well.
Towards his colleagues he appeared supremely indifferent; even towards Monica his
attitude seemed that of a mildly tolerant husband towards his mother-in-law. For their
part, the rest of the staff accepted him for what he was: intellectually superior to them all; administratively more than competent; socially a nonentity. Only one another
person in Oxford was aware of a different side to his nature . . .
At twenty past three Bartlett rang extension five.
'Is that you, Quinn?'
'Hullo?'
'Come along to my office a minute, will you?'
'I'm sorry. I can't hear you very well.'
'It's Bartlett here.' He almost shouted it into the phone.
'Oh, sorry. Look, I can't quite hear you, Dr. Bartlett. I'll come along to your office right away.'
'That's what I asked you to do!'
'Pardon?'
Bartlett put the phone down and sighed heavily. He'd have to stop ringing the man;
and so would everybody else.
Quinn knocked and entered.
'Sit down,1 Quinn, and let me put you in the picture. When you were at your meeting
yesterday, I gave the others some details of our little, er, jamboree next week.'
Quinn could follow the words fairly easily. 'With the oil sheiks, you mean, sir?'
'Yes. It's going to be an important meeting. I want you to realize that. The Syndicate
has only just broken even these last few years, and—well, but for these links of ours
with some of the new oil states, we'd soon be bankrupt, like as not, and that's the truth of the matter. Now, we've been in touch with our schools out there, and one of the
things they'd like us to think about is a new History syllabus. O-level only for a start.
You know the sort of thing: Suez Canal, Lawrence of Arabia, colonialism, er, cultural
heritage, development of resources. That sort of thing. Hell of a sight more relevant
than Elizabeth the First, eh?'
Quinn nodded vaguely.
'The point is this. I want you to have a think about it before next week. Draft out a few ideas. Nothing too detailed. Just the outlines. And let me have 'em.'
'I'll try, sir. Could you just say one thing again, though? Better than "a list of
metaphors", did you say?'
'Elizabeth the First, man! Elizabeth the First!'
'Oh yes. Sorry.' Quinn smiled weakly and left the room deeply embarrassed. He
wished Bartlett would occasionally try to move his lips a little more.
When Quinn had gone, the Secretary half-closed his eyes, drew back his mouth as
though he had swallowed a cupful of vinegar, and bared his teeth. He thought of
Roope once more. Roope! What a bloody fool that man had been!
THROUGHOUT THE MONTH of October the health of the pound sterling was a topic of
universal, if melancholy, interest. Its effective devaluation against the dollar and
against other European currencies was solemnly reported (to two points of decimals)
in every radio and TV news bulletin: the pound had a poor morning, but recovered
slightly in later dealings; the pound had a better morning, but was later shaky against
its Continental competitors. The pound, it seemed, occasionally sat up in its sick bed
to prove to the world that reports of its death had been somewhat exaggerated; but
almost invariably the effort appeared to have been overtaxing and very soon it was
once more lying prostrate, relapsing, slipping, falling, collapsing almost—until finally it struggled up on to its elbow once more, blinked modestly around at the anxious
foreign financiers, and moved up a point or two in the international money market.
Yet although, during that autumn, the gap in the balance of payments grew ever wider;
although the huge oil deficit could be made up only by massive loans from the IMF;
although the number of the unemployed rose sickeningly to unpredicted heights;
although the bankruptcy courts were enjoying unprecedented business; although
foreign investors decided that London was no longer a worthy recipient for their ever-
accumulating cash surpluses—still, in spite of it all, there remained among our foreign
friends a firm and charming faith in the efficiency and efficacy of the British educational system; and, as a corollary to this, in the integrity and fair-mindedness of t1he British system of public examinations. Heigh-ho!
On the night of Monday, 3rd November, many were making their ways to hotel rooms
in Oxford: commercial travellers and small business men; visitors from abroad and
visitors from home—each selecting his hotel with an eye to business expenses,
subsistence allowances, travellers' cheques or holiday savings. Cheap hotels and
posh hotels; but mostly of the cheaper kind, though they (Lord knew) were dear
enough. Rooms where the cisterns groaned and gurgled through the night; rooms
where the window sashes sagged and the floorboards creaked beneath the flimsy
matting. But the five emissaries from the Sheikdom of Al-jamara were safely settled in
the finest rooms that even the Sheridan had to offer. Earlier in the evening they had
eaten gloriously, imbibed modestly, tipped liberally; and each in turn had made his
way upstairs and slipped between the crisp white sheets. Domestic problems,
personal problems, health problems—certainly any or all of these might ruffle the
waters of their silent dreams; but money was a problem which worried none of them. In
the years immediately after the Second World War, oil, of high quality and in large
accessible deposits, had been discovered beneath their seemingly barren sands; and
a benevolent and comparatively scrupulous despot, in the person of the uncle of Sheik
Ahmed Dubai, had not only secured American capital for the exploitation of the wells,
but had immeasurably enriched the lives of most of the inhabitants of Al-jamara.
Roads, hospitals, shopping centres, swimming pools and schools had not only been
planned—but built; and in such an increasingly westernized society the great demand
of the wealthier citizens was for the better education of their children; and it was now
five years since the first links with the Foreign Examinations Syndicate had been
forged.
The two-day conference started at 10.30 a.m. on Tuesday, 4th, and at the coffee
session beforehand there was much shaking of hands, many introductions, and all
was mutual smiles and general bonhomie. The deeply-tanned Arabs were dressed
almost identically in dark-blue suits, with sparklingly laundered white shirts and sober
ties. Quinn had earlier viewed the day with considerable misgivings, but soon he
found to his very great relief that the Arabs spoke a beautifully precise and fluent
brand of English, marred, it was true, by the occasional lapse from purest idiom, but
distinct and (to Quinn) almost childishly comprehensible. In all, the two days passed
rapidly and delightfully: plenary sessions, individual sessions, general discussions,
private discussions, lively conversations, good food, coffee, sherry, wine. The whole
thing had been an enormous success.
On Wednesday evening the Arabs had booked the Disraeli suite at the Sheridan for a
farewell party, and all the Syndicate's permanent staff, together with wives and
sweethearts, and all the Syndicate's governing council, were invited to the junketing.
Sheik Ahmed himself, resplendent in his middle-eastern robes, took his seat beside a
radiant Monica Height, exquisitely dressed in a pale-lilac trouser-suit; and Donald
Martin, as he sat next to his plain-looking little wife, her white skirt creased and her
black jumper covered with dandruff, was feeling progressively more miserable. The
Sheik had clearly commandeered the fair Monica for the evening and was regularly
flashing his white and golden smile as he leaned towards her—intimate, confiding.
And she was smiling back at him—attentive, flattered, inviting . . . Quinn noticed them,
of course, and as he finished his shrimp cocktail he watched them more closely. The
Sheik was in full flow, but whether his words were meant for Monica alone, Quinn was
quite unable to tell.
'As one of your own Englishmen told me one day, Miss Height,
"Oysters is amorous,
Lobsters is lecherous,
But Shrimps—Christ!" '
Monica laughed and said something close beside the Sheik's ear which Quinn could
not follow. How foolish he had been to harbour any hope! And then he was able to
follow another brief passage of their conversation, and he knew that the words must
certainly have been whispered
pianissimo
. He felt his heart beat thicker and faster. He must surely have been mistaken . . .
Towards midnight the party had dwindled to about a third of its original number. Philip
Ogleby, who had drunk more than anyone, seemed the only obviously sober one
amongst them; the Martins had left for home some time ago; Monica and Sheik Ahmed
suddenly reappeared after an unexplained absence of over half an hour; Bartlett was
talking rather too loudly, and his large solicitous wife had already several times
reminded him that gin always made him slur his words; one of the Arabs was in
earnest negotiation with one of the barmaids; and of the Syndics, only the Dean, Voss,
and Roope appeared capable of sustaining the lively pace for very much longer.
At half past midnight Quinn decided that he must go. He felt hot and vaguely sick, and
he walked into the Gentlemen's, where he leaned his head against the coolness of the
wall mirror. He knew he would feel rough in the morning, and he still had to drive back
to his bachelor home in Kidlington. Why hadn't he been sensible and ordered a taxi?
He slapped water over his face, turned on the cold tap over his wrists, combed his
hair, and felt slightly better. He would say his thank-yous and goodbyes, and be off.
Only a few were left now, and he felt almost an interloper as he re-entered the suite.
He tried to catch Bartlett's eye, but the Secretary was deep in conversation with Sheik
Ahmed, and Quinn stared rather fecklessly around for a few minutes before finally
sitting down and looking again towards his hosts. But still they talked. And then
Ogleby joined them; and then Roope walked over, and Bartlett and Ogleby moved
away; and men the Dean and Voss went across; and finally Monica. Quinn felt almost
mesmerized as he watched the changing groupings and tried to catch the drift of what
they were talking about. He felt a simultaneous sense of guilt and fascination as he