Authors: Simon Brett
Charles felt breathlessly excited. Here at last was evidence. Though every other apparent crime could have been an accident or the work of a vindictive outsider, the bottle was evidence of deliberate misdoing, committed within the company.
He had to keep it. In a case where facts were so thin on the ground he couldn't afford not to. Winifred Tuke was far too genteel to report its disappearance and, considering the bottle's contents, he was doing her a favour by removing it.
His holdall was in the green room, so he set off there, gin bottle in hand. Stealth was unnecessary; nobody would be in for the evening performance for at least an hour. He trod heavily on the stairs, awaking the echoes of the old building. He pushed open the green room door with a flourish and realised that he had forgotten the stage staff.
Spike and some others were slumped on sofas, reading newspapers. Charles made an involuntary movement to hide the bottle.
He needn't have worried. Spike was the only one who stirred. He looked up mildly and said, âDidn't think that was your usual tipple, Charles.'
Charles made some half-joke about ringing the changes, put the bottle in his holdall and went out to the pub. He gave himself a mental rap over the knuckles for bad security. It didn't really matter, because only Spike had seen him. But it could have been someone else and it was his job as investigator to keep a low profile.
Still, he'd got the bottle. Perhaps a diarrhoea weapon lacked the glamour of a murder weapon, but it certainly warranted a large whisky.
Now all he had to do was find a link between the bottle and his chief suspect. Difficult. Dickie Peck had returned to London that afternoon. Never mind, the investigation would keep until he rejoined the company.
Significantly, with the agent away, in spite of occasional flashes of temper from Christopher Milton, there were no more incidents while
Lumpkin!
was in Leeds.
PART III
Bristol
CHAPTER NINE
CHARLES WAS GLAD to get to Bristol. He hadn't enjoyed the previous few days. Investigations apart, Leeds had ended in scenes of cynical recrimination with Ruth. After a final fierce coupling on the Sunday morning and a silent drive to the station, he had had a long slow journey to King's Cross for her unspoken accusation to fester in his mind. He couldn't just laugh it off. As many times before, he cried out for the ability to say, that was good while it lasted, or that didn't work, oh well, time to move on. But he was bad at the sort of insouciance that should have accompanied his style of sex life. Feelings kept snagging, he kept feeling sorry for people, kept feeling he was using them. And, as always, lacking the self-righteousness necessary for anger, he ended up feeling self-disgust.
A half-day in London hadn't helped his mood. The bed-sitter in Hereford Road had not got less depressing in his absence. With the change in the weather it was as cold as a morgue when he opened the door. Nor did Sunday papers he'd bought offer any cheer. Bombs in London restaurants and the continuing apparent hopelessness of the Herrema siege led to fears of the imminent collapse of society, that terrible plunging feeling that tomorrow everything will stop and animal chaos will reign.
He rang his wife Frances in an attempt to shift the mood. But her phone just rang and rang and he stood, his finger dented by the twopence in the coin-box and his mind drifting, trying to remember what she had said in their last conversation about this new man she was seeing, forming silly fantasies of her with the new man, even of her upstairs in their bed with him, hearing the phone and saying, âShall we answer it?' and him saying, âNo'. It was stupid, childish; it was as if he were again a sixteen-year-old, his stomach churning as he asked his first girl out to the pictures. And this was Frances, for God's sake, Frances whom he knew so well, who was so ordinary he had left her. But his feelings swirled around, unanchored. He put the phone down.
Back in his room (the telephone was outside on the landing) he had turned immediately to the obvious solace, a half-full (or, in his current mood, hall-empty) bottle of Bell's. He drank with the kamikaze spirit of self-pity, sadly identifying with Everard Austick.
So Bristol, by comparison, was pleasant. He got a lift down on the Monday morning with a couple of the dancers who lived in Notting Hill and, apart from the fact of being in company, the staged sparkle of their camp chatter put him in a good mood. Then there was where he was staying. Julian Paddon, an actor friend from way back, was a member of the resident company at the Old Vic and had issued an immediate invitation when he heard
Lumpkin!
was coming to Bristol. His wife Helen was charming and had the enormous advantage after Ruth that Charles didn't fancy her at all (and even if he had, she was eight months pregnant and thus satisfactorily
hors de combat
).
Julian, whose nesting instinct, always strong, had been intensified by regular employment and the prospect of an addition to his family, had rented a flat in a Victorian house in Clifton and Charles was made to feel genuinely welcome.
Lumpkin!
too responded to the new town. The day's break after the heavy rehearsal schedule in Leeds meant that everyone came to it with renewed vigour. The makeshift musical arrangement for
I Beg Yours?
had been improved and expanded by Leon Schultz, an American arranger flown over at enormous expense by an edgy management. The song was greatly enhanced and on the first night in Bristol it stopped the show. Once again Christopher Milton's theatrical instinct had been vindicated. The management was so pleased with the song that they asked Schultz to do new arrangements for all other numbers in the show. It would mean a lot more rehearsal, but in the new mood of confidence no one complained.
Away from the gloom of Leeds, Charles found it difficult to believe in thoughts of sabotage. The long sequence of crimes he had rationalised became unreal, another part of the general confusion over the show and Ruth which Leeds had meant for him. When he unpacked at Julian's flat, he had to look closely at the Gordon's gin bottle to convince himself that anything criminal had ever happened.
Part of his relaxation was due to Dickie Peck's absence. His suspicions had now homed in firmly and until the agent rejoined the company, he did not fear further incidents. What he should do when another occurred was something he tried not to think about.
Anyway, rehearsals kept him busy. Desmond Porton from Amulet Productions was to come and see the show on the Thursday and give the final all-clear for the scheduled first night at the King's Theatre on Thursday, November 27th. That gave a sense of urgency and a healthy edge of determination to everyone in the show.
The first two nights made Charles begin to think he was, for possibly the first time in his life, about to be connected with a success. Apart from reflections on the irony of a fate which withheld major triumph from shows he had cared about in favour of the commercial banality of
Lumpkin!
, it was a pleasant feeling.
He was sitting in the pub during the Tuesday performance (having dutifully checked in for the âhalf' and let the stage manager know where he'd be) when the girl approached him. Her pale blue eyes had the unfocused stare of contact lenses, but there was nothing vague about her manner. âAre you in
Lumpkin!
?' she asked, the directness of the question emphasised by an American accent.
âFame at last,' he replied with irony. âYes, I am.'
âGood, I thought I recognised you. I saw the show last night.'
âAh.' Charles left the pause for comment on his performance which no actor can resist.
But the girl didn't pick up the cue. âMy name's Suzanne Horst,' she said. âI'm a free-lance journalist.'
He emitted another âAh', again succumbing to an actor's instinctive reaction that the girl wanted to write something about him.
She soon put him right on that. âI'm trying to make contact with Christopher Milton.'
Of course. He blushed for having suspected anything else, and let out another multi-purpose âAh'.
âWould you introduce me to him?'
âWell . . .' This was rather difficult. The past month with Christopher Milton had revealed to Charles how carefully the star's contact with the press and media was regulated by his agent. To introduce an unexpected journalist could be a serious breach of professional etiquette. âI think probably the best thing you could do would be to make contact with his agent. It's Dickie Peck of Creative Artists.'
âI don't want to mess about with agents. Anyway, I'm here in Bristol. What's the point of contacting a guy in London about someone who's only a hundred yards away at this moment?'
There wasn't a great deal of logic about it, but that was the way stars worked, Charles explained.
She was not put down. âYes, I know that's the correct way to go about things, but I don't want to go the correct way. I want to go the way that'll get me the interviews I'm after.'
âWell, I don't know what to suggest.' Charles felt churlish, but thought he was probably doing the right thing. âWhat are these interviews you are after?'
âOne's for radio. Only got Radio Brighton interested at the moment, but I'm sure I'll be able to get it on one of the networks. That's only secondary, anyway. The main thing I want him for is an article I'm doing on the nature of stardom. Want to know what makes him tick, you know.'
âWho's that for?'
âDon't know who I'll offer it to yet.
Cosmopolitan
, maybe.'
âIt hasn't been commissioned?'
âNo, but I'll sell it all right.' Whatever Miss Horst lacked, it was not confidence.
In fact she didn't lack much. Certainly not looks. Her shoulder-length hair was that streaky yellow which might be the natural result of sun on brown hair or the unnatural result of hairdressers on any colour. Her belted Burberry formalised but did not disguise her lithe figure, and though her overpowering confidence might be a slight deterrent, the general effect was distinctly tangible. âCan I get you a drink?'
âThank you. A vodka and tonic, please.' The barman eyed Charles knowingly as he supplied the drink. Suzanne didn't seem to notice. âAre you sure you can't introduce me?'
âHonestly, it is difficult. You know, people like Christopher Milton have to guard their privacy very carefully. I'm afraid they tend to be a bit resistant to journalists.'
âBut, look, I'm not going to do a big exposé or anything. It'll be an appreciative piece. I mean, I'm a fan.'
âI don't think that's really the point. It's rather difficult to get near him.'
âBut you see him at rehearsal, don't you?'
âWell, yes, but â'
âThen you could ask him if he'd be prepared to do an interview with me.'
Her persistence didn't make it easy. Charles cringed with embarrassment at the thought of putting the girl's request to Christopher Milton. It was difficult to explain to someone outside the closely defined relationship that exists between actors in a working context. âLook, I'm sorry, I really don't think I can.'
âWhy not? You do know him, don't you?'
âYes, I do, but â'
âWell then,' she said, as if that concluded the syllogism.
âYes.' Under normal circumstances he would have given a categorical âNo', but under normal circumstances the people who made this kind of request didn't look like Suzanne Horst. He said something about seeing if he had a chance to raise the matter at rehearsal (which he had no intention of doing) and asked the girl how much journalism she had done.
âOh, quite a lot in the States. I got a degree in it, but the scene over there isn't very interesting, so I decided to check it out over here.'
âWhat, you've given yourself a sort of time limit to see if you can make it?'
âOh, I'll make it.'
Charles was beginning to find this self-conviction a little wearying, so he brought in a damper. âYes, unfortunately it's a bad time to get started in that sort of area at the moment. Journalism's getting more and more of a closed shop. It's like acting, getting increasingly difficult to make the initial break into the business.'
âDon't worry,' said Suzanne, as though explaining to a child, âPeople with talent always get through.'
He couldn't think of anything to say after that.
But Suzanne suddenly got an idea. âHey, you could actually be quite useful on this stardom article.'
âIn what way?'
âWell, you could give me a bit of background on Christopher Milton. After all, you're working with him.'
Charles was hesitant, but overruled. She had whipped out a new shorthand notebook and a freshly-sharpened pencil and was poised in the attitude of someone who had taken a degree in journalism. The question came out formal and rehearsed. âTell me, as an actor, what do you think it is that makes some people stars?'
âAnd some dreary old hacks like me? Hmm. Well now â' dropping into an American accent â âwhat is a star? What is it that picks out one from the myriad throng of the moderately talented and gives him that magic name? What is it that sets one talent glowing in the limelight, that scatters the moondust of stardom on that one chosen head? Is it of the earth or is it made in heaven? Perhaps in that Great Casting Agency in the Sky, there sits the one Eternal Agent who â'
âLook, are you taking the rise out of me?'
He lapsed back into his normal voice. âNo, sorry. I was just getting my bearings. Stardom? I don't know really. In the sort of theatre I normally do it's rarely an issue.'
âBut I suppose, if I had to give an opinion . . . Well, talent certainly, that must be there. Not necessarily a great deal of it, nor anything very versatile. In fact, there should be no versatility. The star must always be recognisable â if he puts on voices, he must put them on almost badly, so that everyone knows it's him. That's talent. Okay. What else? Dedication certainly, the conviction that what he does is more important than anything else in the world.'