âHelen, I haven't said this yet but I recognized the knife, the one which was sent to Harcourt.'
Helen sat straight up in bed.
âWhat!'
Tom had kept silent so far about the fact that the knife in the box and the Lucknow Dagger were one and the same. Now he rapidly explained that it was the very implement which Sebastian Marmont had shown to him in the County Hotel.
âMy God, Tom, why didn't you tell the superintendent?'
âBecause I sense that this business is more complicated than we realize, Helen. How do we know what passed between Flask and the magician last night after the performance? He made the medium disappear but what happened next? I must speak to the Major before doing anything. He is a client of Scott, Lye & Mackenzie, after all.'
âOh, so anything he says or does is privileged?'
âNot exactly,' said Tom, âbutâ'
âYou could not protect Major Marmont if he was the murderer.'
âOf course not. I will go and see him tomorrow.'
âYou will not go alone. I have a stake in this now.'
âThen both of us together will lay things out as fairly as we can to Marmont, mentioning the murder weapon and so on. If he cannot explain himself, then we will hand him over to Superintendent Harcourt. And, Helen, it's not only me . . . you too have held back a piece of information.'
âMe?'
âI could see that you recognized the bit of material in the box with the knife. I recognized it too. It was the same as the handkerchief which that man tried to give you on the riverbank.'
âThe very same. It was a woman's handkerchief although it was not mine. I suppose I was afraid that, if I drew attention to it in the Court office, then the Superintendent might have looked at me with even more suspicion.'
âBut you said nothing about the man either. You didn't even mention you saw someone running from the woods.'
âI know.'
Tom waited. Eventually Helen said, âThere was something rather . . . frightening about that man. Can you remember what he looked like?'
Tom struggled to recall the encounter on the river path the other morning. The man had been tall, dressed in a shabby coat and hat. He had deep furrows on his face and a thin mouth. Helen had said he reminded her of someone. Would Tom recognize him if he saw him again? Probably. Was he the murderer of Eustace Flask? Possibly.
âI can remember enough to give a description to the police if we need to.'
âCan we leave it for a time, Tom? Just as you are going to leave informing on Major Marmont. There's something else about the murder of Mr Flask, you see.'
âWhat is it?'
âIt is rather shameful to confess.'
âEven to me?'
âI cannot be altogether sorry that Mr Flask is dead. I had rather he had never arrived in Durham. I had rather my aunt had never taken such a shine to him. But he did arrive and she did take a shine and we cannot alter that. Now he is dead and, however it occurred and whoever did the deed, I cannot be wholly sorry. There, is that not a terrible thing to say?'
âYou want me to show you how it works? Nothing could be easier.'
Major Sebastian Marmont did not have the look or manner of a murderer. He welcomed Tom and Helen like old friends. He expressed his regret at the death of Eustace Flask even if he did so in a somewhat perfunctory manner. He explained that Superintendent Harcourt had already visited him. According to the magician, the policeman asked only a few questions and was soon satisfied by his answers. Marmont did not seem to be aware of the details of how Flask had died, the fatal wound to the throat, and the use of the Lucknow Dagger as a murder weapon. Either that or he was a good actor; not implausible considering that he performed on the stage for a living.
The magician was candid about the sequence of events on the evening when Flask had been made to disappear. In fact he was willing to demonstrate the mechanism of the disappearance to the Ansells.
âBut I thought all your tricks were secret,' said Helen.
âWe magicians do our best to keep them secret from each other but there are methods of finding out. Every fresh magic invention has to be patented, you see, otherwise any Tom, Dick or Harry could steal it. But the moment a patent is applied for, details must be provided and when those details are provided the secret is available to the same Tom, Dick & Co at the Patent Office. We magicians are caught in a bind. Which is my long-winded way of saying, Mrs Ansell, that I've no objection to showing you and your husband the secret of the Perseus Cabinet. Or may I call you Helen? I knew your father, you remember.'
âOf course you may. But I shall continue to call you Major if you don't mind. I like the sound of it.'
Major Marmont and the Ansells were standing on the stage of the Assembly Rooms. According to Marmont, they were lucky to find him there since he did most of his magical rehearsals at a variety hall he was renting elsewhere in the city. It was mid-morning. The auditorium was empty and, in the absence of an audience and the full panoply of flaring gaslights, the place looked smaller but more ornate because the fine plasterwork was evident. By contrast, the stage was plain and workaday. The Perseus Cabinet stood in the centre, its double doors shut. The Hindoo servants, otherwise Marmont's three sons named after English kings and consorts, were busying themselves on the fringes of the stage.
âWhich of you is to disappear?'
âI will,' said Helen promptly.
âNo you won't,' said Tom.
âThomas, entering a cupboard holds no terrors for me. I trust the Major.'
âThank you, my dear.'
âThen it's settled.'
âHave a look at it first of all, Mr Ansell. Walk round it. Reassure yourself.'
Tom did so. Apart from the doors at the front, there was no other way out, no flaps or little exits he could detect. He returned to stand by the magician who had been in deep conversation with his wife.
Now Sebastian Marmont clapped his hands and pointed to the cabinet. Arthur and Alfred ran to their positions on either side of it. Tom watched, more than slightly apprehensive, as the Major clasped Helen's arm and walked her towards the cabinet. He whispered something else in her ear and Helen laughed. He left her standing a few feet in front of the doors. Marmont came back to where Tom was standing. Now he took Tom by the elbow.
âIf you'd just shift here, my dear chap, you'll get a better view, you know.'
Tom couldn't argue with that for he was now standing directly facing Helen who looked over her shoulder and smiled at him. Marmont nodded at the two boys who reached for the doors and swung them open with a simultaneous flourish. The interior of the Perseus Cabinet was just as it had been on the night of Flask's disappearance. There was the empty space within, apart from the vertical wooden pole in the centre supporting a gas lamp which threw a clear illumination on to the red and gold paper of the internal walls.
Tom recalled that the magician had accompanied Eustace Flask into the cabinet but this time it was enough for Marmont to say, âPlease step forward, my dear. Remember what I said.'
What was it the Major had said, Tom wondered, while he watched his wife step up and into the Perseus Cabinet. The âHindoos' promptly closed the doors after her and began to play on the flute and tambour.
Tom felt his mouth go dry. The Major continued to hold him by the upper arm. Was he doing that to show that he could not possibly be interfering with whatever was going on in the cabinet?
A few seconds went by. Without a word being said but as if at some unseen signal, the boy players put down their instruments and unfolded the doors once more. Tom saw the pole holding the gaslight, he saw the bright colours of the wallpaper. But of Helen there was no sign. He was standing about fifteen feet from the cabinet. He made to move forward, his unease turning to genuine anxiety. But the Major restrained him. He said, âWait. All shall be well.'
The process was repeated. The doors closed, the monotonously hypnotic music was replayed, the instruments laid down again, the doors opened once more. And out stepped Helen Ansell.
Tom laughed in relief. Not that he thought anything had really happened to his wife. But she had definitely disappeared. And hadn't they been toying with the possibility that the magician might also be a murderer?
âHow is it done?' he said.
Marmont, all smiles and affability, tugged his moustaches.
âI'll let your wife explain. She is in on the secret now.'
Helen drew Tom right to one side so that they were almost in the wings. She told him to look at the cabinet from this angle. Did he notice anything odd about it? Yes, there was something he couldn't quite put his finger on, an irregularity in the patterning of the wallpaper inside the booth. They walked back towards it at a diagonal. Helen said Tom should keep his eyes on the interior. There was an unexpected flicker of movement, a glimpse of a sleeve. When Tom stopped and stepped back a pace, the sleeve reappeared. It was his own sleeve, his own arm.
Light started to dawn. He went right up to the cabinet and, with Helen's encouragement, stepped inside. He saw now that there were two full-length, hinged panels on the interior which could be swung in and out from the back corners of the cabinet and which met at the central point provided by the pole. The panels were mirrored on one side and covered with the red and gilt paper on the other. When the the mirror-faces of the panels were flush against the side walls they were indistinguishable from them because the back âwallpaper' side was revealed. When they were opened at a diagonal angle the mirrors reflected the actual side walls, covered in the same paper.
He realized that the pole was necessary for the illusion. Its function was not to support the gaslight, which could have been suspended from the ceiling, but to hide the meeting point of the mirrored panels. If you looked at the Perseus Cabinet directly from the front or from any angle except the most oblique ones in the wings, the mirrored panels when in place gave viewers the illusion that they were looking at the
back
wall, patterned in identical red and gold swirls.
Behind the reflecting panels was a fairly confined area in the shape of a wide-angled V. It was big enough though to take one person. It was where Helen had been instructed to hide herself while the doors were shut, a process that would take only a matter of seconds, just as it would take only a fraction of a minute to make a reappearance.
âLike all the best tricks it is clever and simple at the same time. But now I am working on a new disappearing cabinet to beat all disappearing cabinets, something which will be superior even to the Perseus.'
This was Major Marmont who had come to stand next to Helen. Both were peering at Tom as he put his fingertips to the mirrors and admired the neat way in which each panel fitted snugly against the central pole.
âDon't touch the mirrors,' said Marmont. âThey have to be absolutely clean. Any smudges or smears will catch the light and the audience might notice.'
Tom stepped down from the Perseus Cabinet. Both Helen and Major Marmont were smiling, not exactly at Tom but at the cleverness of the deception.
âYou would make an accomplished performer on stage, my dear,' said the magician to Helen. âPerhaps you would be willing to help me prepare my tricks another time?'
âI would be delighted,' said Helen.
âHow did you persuade Eustace Flask to hide himself behind the mirrors?' cut in Tom. âWhy should he want to help you of all people, Major Marmont?'
âHe did not want to help me, not at all. But once I had him up on stage he couldn't back out without looking like a spoilsport or a milksop, though in my view he was both.'
âHe said something to you,' said Helen. âEverybody in the audience saw him whispering to you.'
âOh,' said the Major airily, âit was nothing, a threat, a warning which I dismissed. I couldn't tell him how the trick worked of course, otherwise he would probably have revealed it to the audience there and then. You'll remember that I accompanied him inside the Perseus Cabinet, something I did not have to do with you, dear lady, because you already knew what to do. When the outer doors were closed upon Flask and me, it was the work of an instant to give him a hearty shove into the area at the back and fasten the panels to the pole. If you look carefully you'll see that there are little catches at top and bottom to secure the panels. It wouldn't take much to break them down but usually, of course, we are dealing with those who are willing to disappear, those who are in on the secret. I counted on Flask being sufficiently confused not to kick up a fuss â or to try and kick his way out. The boys were playing their drum and flute, and the purpose of the music is not merely to set the scene but to conceal any untoward noises which may be emerging from the Perseus Cabinet. There, I think you have it all now.'
âNot really, Major,' said Tom. âI understand the trick but what happened to Flask afterwards?'
âNothing whatsoever. We came forward to take a bow, I and my Hindoo lads, and the sound of applause must have been gall to Flask's ears even while it was masking any fuss he was making. Then we wheeled the Perseus off stage in double-quick time and I personally released Flask from his captivity. He was looking mighty peeved, I can tell you, but slightly shamefaced as well. I'd certainly paid him back for his earlier deception at Miss Howlett's and he knew it. But what was he going to do? Announce how a magician had tricked him into disappearing? Lay a complaint that I had manhandled him and show himself up for a milksop in the process. He followed me back to the dressing room and judging by his expression he would have liked to make a scene. He might even have thought of raising his fist at me. But he saw the folly of it and he scarcely opened his mouth. In fact, he couldn't get out of the theatre fast enough.'