Dick Francis - Wild Horses
Dying slowly of bone cancer the old man, shriveled now, sat as ever in his great armchair, tears of lonely pain sliding down crepuscular cheeks. That Tuesday, his last, his stringy grip on my wrist tightened convulsively in a long silence while I watched his mouth tremble and move in abortive struggles to speak. "Father. " The words finally wavered out; a whisper, desperate, driven by ultimate need.
"Father, I must make my confession. I must ask... absolution. " In great surprise and with compassion I said, "But... I'm not a priest. " He paid no attention. The feeble voice, a truer measure of affairs than the fiercely clutching hand, simply repeated, "Father... forgive me. "
"Valentine," I said reasonably, "I'm Thomas. Thomas Lyon.
Don't you remember? I come to read to you. " He could no longer see newsprint or anything straight ahead, though peripheral vision partly remained. I called in more or less every week, both to keep him up to date with the racing columns in the newspapers and also to let his beleaguered and chronically tired old sister go out for shopping and gossip. I hadn't actually read to him on that day. When I arrived he'd been suffering badly from one of his intermittent bouts of agony, with Dorothea, his sister, feeding him a teaspoon of liquid morphine and giving him whiskey and water to hel
"How long can you stay?" "Two hours. " She'd kissed me gratefully on the cheek, stretching on tiptoes, and had hurried away, plump in her late seventies, forthright in mind. I sat as usual on a tapestry stool right beside the old man, as he liked the physical contact, as if to make up for sight. The fluttery voice persisted, creeping effortfully into the quiet room, determined and intimate.
"I confess to God Almighty and to Thee, my Father, that I have sinned exceedingly... and I must confess... before... before... " "Valentine," I repeated more sharply, "I'm not a priest. " It was as if he hadn't heard. He seemed to be focusing all the energy left in him into one extraordinary spiritual gamble, a last throw of hell-defeating dice on the brink of the abyss. "I ask pardon for my mortal sin... I ask peace with God... " I protested no more. The old man knew he was dying; knew death was near. In earlier weeks he had discussed with equanimity, and even wit
"Valentine... " "I left the knife with Derry and I killed the Cornish boy and I've never said a word about that week and I accuse myself... and I lied about everything... mea culpa... I've done such harm... I destroyed their lives and they didn't know, they went on liking me I despise myself... all this time. Father, give me a penance... and say the words... say them... Ego te absolve I forgive your sins in the name of the Father I beg you... I beg you... " I had never heard of the sins he was talking about. His words tumbled out as if on the edge of
So I said what he wanted. Said the words, dredging them from memory. Said them in Latin, as he would clearly understand them, because they seemed less of a lie that way than in bald English. "Ego te absolve, "
I said. I felt a shiver through my body.
Superstition, I thought. I remembered more words.
They floated on my tongue. "Ego te absolve a peccatis tuis in nomine Patris et FiIii et Spiritus Sancti. Amen. "
I absolve you from your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. The greatest blasphemy of my life to date. God forgive me my sin, I thought. The dreadful tension subsided in the old man. The rheumy near-blind eyes closed. The grip on my wrist loosened: the old hand fell away. His face relaxed. He faintly smiled, and then grew still.
Alarmed, I felt for a pulse under his jaw and was relieved to feel the threadlike beat. He didn't move under my touch.
I shook him a little, but he didn't wake. After five minutes I shook him again, more strongly, without results.
Indecisively then I got up from my seat beside him and crossing to the telephone, dialed the number prominently written on a notepad nearby, to get through to his doctor.
The medicine man was less than pleased.
Ja "I've told the old fool he should be in hospital," he said. "I can't keep running out to hold his hand. Who are you, anyway? And where's Mrs. Pannier?" "I'm a visitor," I said. "Mrs. Pannier is out shopping. " "Is he groaning?" demanded the doctor. "He was, earlier. Mrs. Pannier gave him some painkiller before she went out. Then he was talking. Now he's in a sort of sleep from which I canit seem to wake him. " The doctor growled a smothered curse and crashed his receiver into its cradle, leaving me to guess his intentions. I hoped that he wouldn't send a wailing ambulance with b
The study-like room, intensely his own, charted an unusual journey through time that had be un in heavy manual labor and ended in Journalism. Born the son of a farrier, he'd been apprenticed to the forge in childhood, working the bellows for his father, skinny arms straining, young eyes excited by the noise and the fire.
There had never been any question that he would follow in the trade, nor had he in fact veered toward anything else until his working pattern had long been settled.
Framed, fading photographs on his walls showed a young Valentine with the biceps and pectorals of a giant, a prize-winning wielder of brute power with the wide happy grin of an innocent. But the idyll of the villa e smith under the chestnut tree had already long gone. Valentine in his maturity had driven from job to job with his tools and portable brazier in a mobile working van. He had for years shod a stableful of racehorses trained by my grandfather.
He'd looked after the feet of the ponies I'd been given to ride. He had seemed to me to be already a wise man of incredible age, though I knew now he'd been barely sixty-five when I was ten. His education had consisted of reading (the racing newspapers), writing (bills for his customers), and arithmetic (costing the work and materials so that he made a profit). Not until his forties had his mental capacity expanded to match his muscles. Not until, he'd told me during the past debilitated weeks, not decisively until in his job he was no longer expected to make individual shoes to fit
Nothing had changed from week to week: only the old man's tenure there was slipping away. One wall, shelved from floor to ceiling, held the books that I supposed would soon be mine. There were years and years of form books listing thousands upon thousands of by-gone races, with a small red dot inked in beside the name of every horse Valentine had fitted with racing shoes for the test.
Winners, hundreds of them, had been accorded an exclamation mark. Below the form books there were many volumes of an ancient encyclopedia and rows of glossily jacketed life stories of recently dead racing titans, their bustling, swearing vigor reduced to pale paper memories. I'd met many of those people. My grandfather was among them. Their world, their passions, their achievements were passing into oblivion and already the young jockeys I'd star-gazed at ten were grandfathers. I wondered who would write Valentine's life story, a worthy subject if ever there was one. He had steadfas
Dorothea came back apologetically half an hour late and tried without success to rouse her brother. I told her I'd phoned the doctor fruitelessly, which didn't surprise her. "He says Valentine should be in hospital," she said. "Valentine refuses to go. He and the doctor swear at each other. " She shrugged resignedly.
"I expect the doctor will come in time. He usually y does.
"I'll have to leave you," I said regretfully. "I'm already overdue at a meeting. " I hesitated. "Are you by any chance Roman Catholic?" I asked. "I mean... Valentine said something about wanting a priest. "
priest?" She looked astounded. "He was rambling on all morning... his mind is going.. but the old bugger would never ask for a priest.
"I just thought... perhaps... last rites?"
Dorothea gave me a look of sweet sisterly exasperation. "Our mother was Roman Catholic, but not Dad. Lot of nonsense, he used to say. Valentine and I grew up outside the church and were never the worse for it. Our mother died when he was sixteen and I was eleven. She had a mass said for her... Dad took us to that but it made him sweat, he said. Anyway, Valentine's not much of a sinner except for swearing and such, and I know that e being so weak as he is he wouldn't want to be e bothered by a priest. "I just thought I'd tell you," I said. "You're a dear to come here, Thomas, but
She paused. "My poor dear boy is very ill now, isn't he?"
She looked down at him in concern. "Much worse?" "I'm afraid so. "
"Going. " She nodded, and tears came into her eyes. "We've known it would come, but when it happens...
oh, dear. " "He's had a good life. " She disregarded the inadequate words and said forlornly, "I'll be so alone. " "Couldn't you live with your son?"
"No!" She straightened herself scornfully. "Paul is forty-five and pompous and domineering, though I hate to say it, and I don't get on with his wife. They have three obnoxious teenagers who switch on deafening radios all the time until the walls vibrate. " She broke off and smoothed her brother's unresponsive head fondly. "No. Me and Valentine, we set up home here together when his Cathy died and my Bill passed on... well, you know all that... and we always liked each other, Valentine and me, and I'll miss him. I'll miss him something awful, but I'll stay here. " She swallow
She sat down tiredly on the tapestry stool and held her brother's hand. He breathed slowly, shallowly, the sound rasping. Fading daylight from the window beside Valentine fell softly on it the aged couple, light and shadow emphasizing the rounded commitment of the one and the skeletal dependence of the other, the hovering aid imminence of death as plain as if the scythe had hung above their heads. I wished I had a camera. Wished indeed for a whole camera crew. My normal day-to-day life involved the catching of emotion on the wing, the recording of ephemeral images to illumine a bedr
On the desk. " I reached Ed, my earnest assistant, who as 55 usual sounded flustered in my absence. "It can't be helped," I said. "I'm running late. Is everyone there?
Well, get some drinks sent over. Keep them happy, but don't let Jimmy have more than two G and Ts, and make sure we have enough copies of the script alterations.
Right? Good. See you. "' I regretted having to leave Dorothea at such a nd time, but in fact I'd squeezed my visit into a day's he schedule that had made no provision for it, keepking the promise I'd given week after week.
Three months back, in the preliminary preproduction stage of the film I was currently engaged on, I'd called to see Valentine as a brief Y5 matter of courtesy, a gesture to tell him I remembered him in the old days in my grandfather's time, and had always admirecL5 cv,-LAdistance, his emergence as a sage.
"Sage my foot!" He'd disclaimed the flattery but enjoyed it all the same. "I can't see very well these days, boy. How about reading to me for a bit?
He lived on the outer edge of the town of Newmarket ' Suffolk England, the town long held to be the home and heart of the horseracing industry worldwide. "Headquarters" the racing press called it. Fifteen hundred of the thoroughbred elite rocketed there over the windswept training gallops and over the wide, difficult tracks, throwing up occasional prodigies that passed their glorious genes to flying generations of the future. An ancient wealth-producing business, the breeding of fast horses. I was on the point of leaving when the front doorbell rang, and to save Dorothea's tired fee
He gave me a brief glance and called past me, "Dorothea?"
Regardless of fatigue, she appeared from Valentine's room and said miserably, "He's in a coma, I think. Come in. This is Thomas Lyon, who's been reading to Valentine, like I told you. " As if on an afterthought, she finished the introduction, flapping a hand and saying,"Robbie Gill, our doctor. " b3 Robbie Gill had red hair, a Scots accent, no small talk, and a poor bedside manner. He carried a medical bag into Valentine's room and snapped it open. He rolled up the ill man's eyelids with his ry thumb and pensively held one of the fragile ell wrists.
Then he silently busied himself with a stethoscope, syringes, and swabs. "We'd better get him to bed," he said finally. of No mention, I was glad to notice, of transportation to hospital. "Is he... ?"
Dorothea asked anxiously, leaving 9 the question hovering, not wanting an affirmative answer.
"Dying?" Robbie Gill said it kindly enough in It his brusque way. "In a day or two, I'd say. Can't t tell. His old heart's still fairly strong. I don't really s think he'll wake again, but he might. It partly depends on what he wants. " "How do you mean, what he wants?" I asked, t surprised. He spent time answering me, chiefly, I thought, for Dorothea's sake, but also from a teacher'g Plenum in imparting technical ififormation.
"Old people," he said, "very often stay alive if there's something they particularly want to do, and then after they've done it they die quite quickly. This week I've lost a patient who wanted to see her grandson married.
She went to the wedding and enjoyed it, and she was dead two days later. Common occurrence. If Valentine has no unfinished business he may slip away very soon. If he were looking forward to receiving another award, something like that, it might be different. He's a strong-willed man, and amazingthings can happen even with cancer as advancedas this. " Dorothea shook her head sadly. "No awards. " "Then let's get him settled. I've arranged for Nurse Davies to pop in late this evening.
She'll give him another injection, which will keep him free from any pain he might feel in the night, and I'll come back first thing in the morning. The old codger's beaten me, dammit. He's got his way. I'll not move him now. He can die here at home. " Dorothea's tears thanked him.
"It's lucky he has you," the doctor told her, "and don't make yourself ill. " He looked from her to my height assessingly, and said, "You look bigger than both of us.
Can you carry him? Nurse Davies would help Dorothea move him, as she always does, but usually he's conscious and doing his best to walk. Can you manage him on your own?"
I nodded. He weighed pathetically little for a man once as strong as horses. I lifted the tall sleeping figure in my arms and carried him from his armchair, through the small hallway, and into his bedroom, putting him down gently on the white sheet, revealed by Dorothea peeling back the bed covers. Her brother's breathing rasped. I straightened his pajamas and helped Dorothea cover him. He didn't wake. He had died inside, I thought, from the moment he'd believed in his absolution. I didn't bring up the subject of a priest again with Dorothea, nor mention it to the doctor. I I was c
Life both real and imaginary, was loud and vigorous along in Newmarket, where the company I was working for had rented an empty racing stable for three months, paying the bankrupt owner-trainer enough to keep him in multiple k child-support forever. e Although a good hour late for the script conference I'd called for five-thirty, I did not apologize, having found that the bunch I was working with took regrets for weakness, chiefly because of their own personal insecurities. It was essential, a I understood, for them to regard me as rock, even if to myself sometimes the rock was no
They were gathered in what had earlier been the dining room of the trainer's cavernous house (all the furniture having passed under the bankruptcy hammer, satiny green and gold-striped paper still adhering richly to the walls) and were variously draped around a basic trestle table sit ting on collapsible white plastic garden chairs on the bare boards of the floor. The drinks provided by the catering unit had barely lasted the hour: no one on the production was wasting money on excess comfort.
"Right," I said, ousting Ed from the seat I wanted, halfway along one side of the table, "have you all read the alterations and additions?" They had.
Three were character actors, one a cinematographer, one a production manager, one a note-taker, one an assistant director, Ed, and one a scriptwriter that I would like to have done without. He had made the current changes at my reasonable insistence, but felt aggrieved. He believed I was intent on giving a slant to the story that departed at ninety degrees from his original vision. He was right. It was disastrously easy to make bad horseracing pictures and only possible to do it at bankable level, in my view, if racing became the framing background to human drama. I'd been given the
Cars 0arrive and leave through the gates. The local police will help with the town's regular traffic It from eleven to twelve only, so all of our arrivals a and departures will be condensed into that time. s The Jockey Club has agreed to our using their front door for entering and leaving shots. The internal sets have, of course, been built here in this house. You three," I said to the actors, "can e put some useful poison into your various encoun9ters. George, be sly. Iago stuff. You are now secretly engineering Cibber's downfall. " e The scriptwriter moaned, "That's not the right
Howard's fictional version purported to be the truth, but almost certainly wasn t, as none of the still living real participants had shown the slightest sign of indignant rebuttal. "You'll find you each have a plan of the jockey Club forecourt," I said to the meeting. They nodded, flicking over pages. "Also," I went on, "you've a list of the order of shooting, with approximate times. The three cars involved will be driven to the forecourt first thing in the morning. Get all the crews alerted so that lights and cameras can be set up where shown on the plan. If everyone's willing and
Fireworks. Cibber said, "Hallelujah," gratefully. George compressed his mouth. "But they were friends," Howard repeated stubbornly. "As we discussed," I said mildly, "if Cibber cracks, your motivation makes better sense. "
He opened his little mouth, saw everyone else nodding, folded his lips, and began to act as if Cibber's cracking was all his own idea. "If it rains tomorrow," I said, "we'll shoot the internal Jockey Club scenes instead and trust it will be fine on Thursday. We are due to complete the first Newmarket segment on Saturday. On Sunday, as I think you know, we're shifting the horses forty miles west to Huntingdon racecourse; to the stable block there.
Actors and technicians will travel early on Monday morning.
Rehearsals, Monday, from noon onward. Shooting Tuesday to Friday, return here the following weekend. Ed will distribute times and running order to everyone concerned.
OK? Oh, and by the way, the rushes from yesterday are fine.
Thought you'd like to know. It was a lot of hard work, but worth it. " The resulting sighs round the table came from relief. We'd spent the whole day in the stable yard, the human action in the foreground taking place against a background of routine equine life. Never could rows of horses have been mucked out, fed, watered, and groomed more times in any twelve hours before: but we had enough shots in the can to give the fictional stable unending life. The script meeting over, everyone dispersed except a tall, thin, disjointed-looking man in an untidy beard and unkempt clothes whose
"You wanted me to stay?" he asked. "Ed said. "
"Yes. 15 Every film with any hope of acclaimed success needed an eye that saw all life as through a camera lens. Someone to whom focus and light intensities were extrasensory dimensions taken for granted. His title on the credits might variously be "cinematographer" or "director of photography. " I'd had a mathematical friend once who said he thought in algebra; Moncrieff, director of photography, thought in moving light and shad ows. We were used to each other. This was our third film together. I'd been disconcerted the first time by his surrealist sense of humor, then seen that it
'Now" "Tall and black? Yes. " "I want a shot that emphasizes the barriers qualities. I want to establish the way the railings shut out everyone but the elite. Inside can be mandarins of racing. Outside, hoi polloi. " r Moncrieff nodded. I said, "I also want to give an impression that the people inside, Cibber and George, the jockey Club members, are themselves prisoners in their f own conventions. Behind bars, one might say. "
Moncrieff nodded. "And," I said, "take a five-second shot of the hinges of the gates as they open, also as they e close. Right.
"The scene between Cibber and George is shot to begin with from outside the bars. I'd like the zoo aspect made clear. Then track the lens forward between the railings to establish where they're standing. The rest of that conversation is in close-ups. " Moncrieff nodded. He seldom made notes while we talked, but he would write a meticulous worksheet before bedtime.
"We're not being judgmental," I said. "Not heavy-handed. No great social stance. just a fleeting impression. "
"A feather touch," Moncrieff said. "Got you. "
"Contributing to Cibber's crack-up," I said. He nodded.
"I'll get Howard to write that crack-up tomorrow,"
I said. "It's mainly a matter of a shift in intensity from the calm scene already in the script. Howard just needs to put some juice into it. "
"Howard's juice is watered cranberry. " Moncrieff picked up a vodka bottle from among the drinks clutter and squinted at it against the light. "Empty, 51 he commented morosely.
"Have you tried vodka and cranberry juice? It's disgusting. "Howard drank it all the time. "Howard,"
Moncrieff said, "is radioactive waste. You can't get rid of it safely. " He knew as well as I did that Howard Tyler's name on the billboards would bring to the film both the lending library audience and attention from upmarket critics. Howard Tyler won prestigious prizes and had received honorary doctorates on both sides of the Atlantic. Moncrieff and I were considered lucky to be working with such a luminous figure. Few authors could, or even wanted to, write screenplays of their own novels; Howard Tyler had been nominated for an Oscar at his first attempt and subsequently refused
O'Hara had taught me a lot about finance and Moncrieff a lot about illusion. I'd begun to feel recently that I finally understood my trade-but was realistic enough to know that at any minute I could judge everything wrong and come an artistic cropper. If public reaction could be reliably foretold, there would be no flops. No one could ever be sure about public taste: it was as fickle as horseracing luck. O'Hara, that Tuesday, was already in the Bedford Lodge hotel dining room when I joined him for dinner. The studio bosses liked him to keep an eye on what I was doing and report bac
"Yesterday's rushes were good, and this morning went well," O'Hara said objectively. "Where did you get to this afternoon? Ed couldn't find. I paused with a glass of studio-impressing Perrier halfway to my mouth, remembering vividly the rasping of Valentine's breath. "I was here in Newmarket I said, putting down the water. "I've a friend who's dying. I called to see him. "
"Oh. " O'Hara showed no censure, registering the explanation as a reason-, not an excuse. He knew anyway-and took it for granted-that I'd started work at six that morning and would put in eighteen hours most days until we'd completed the shooting. "Is he a film man?" O'Hara asked. "No.
Racing... a racing writer. " "Oh. Nothing to do with us, then. " "No," I said. Ah well. One can get things wrong.
Fortunately, Wednesday morning dawned bright and clear, and Moncrieff, his camera crew, and I attended sunrise beside the jockey Club's railings, filming atmospheric barred shadows without interruption. Rehearsals with Cibber and George went fine later on the forecourt, with Moncrieff opening his floods easily to supplement the sun, and with me peering through the camera eyepiece to be sure the angles brought out the spite developing between the erstwhile "best friends. " By eleven we were ready for the cars-inward, cars-outward sequences, the police cooperating efficiently in the
Our male mega-star, laconic as always, patiently made three arrivals behind the wheel of a car, and four times uncomplainingly repeated a marching to-execution type entrance through the hallowed front door, switching his fictional persona on and off with the confidence and expertise of a consummate pro. As if absentmindedly, he finally gave me an encouraging pat on the shoulder and left in his personal Rolls-Royce for the rest of the day.
At midday we broke for a well-earned hour for lunch.
O'Hara came in the afternoon to watch George's lago touch (which basically needed only an inoffensive "cool it just a bit" comment from myself) and sat smiling in a director's chair for most of the afternoon. O'Hara's hovering smile, though I was never sure he knew it, acted like oil on the actors and technical crews, getting things smoothly done; under his occasional slit-eyed disapproval, problems geometrically increased. After wrapping things up on the forecourt, O'Hara and I went together to Bedford Lodge for an early beverage (light on alcohol, following the film company's ove
"Untamed horses on a beach. " I answered him lightly, giving him the option of believing me or not. "Do you mean it?" he asked. "It's not in the script. " I said, "I can fit in the beach reconnaissance with the stuntman very early on Monday morning. Dawn, in fact. I'll be back in good time for rehearsals. But... " I paused indecisively. "But what?" "In the past you've given me an extra day here or there," I said. "What if I could use one this time? What if I get an idea?" Twice in the past, granted latitude, I'd slanted his productions into a dimension the public had liked. Witho
"If you hadn't asked," he said reflectively, "we'd be in trouble. " "Don't you think it's going well?" I had anxieties always. "It's going professionally," he said. "But I hired you for something more. " I didn t feel flattered so much as increasingly pressured. The days when not much had been expected had been relatively restful; success had brought an upward spiral of awaited miracles, and one of these days, I thought, I would fly off the top of the unsteady tower and crash down in Pisa, and no sane finance department would e consider my name again. On the doorstep of the hotel, w
"Stand or fall," he said. "It's your picture. "
I thought that if I were shooting this scene, it would be clear, whatever he said, that the real power lay in the older, craggily self-assured, livedin face atop a wide-shouldered gone-to-overweight but comfortable body, and not in the unremarkable thirty-year-old easily mistaken for an extra. "The power is yours," he said again. "Believe it. He gave me an uncompromising nod, allowing me no excuses, and went onward to his car, being driven away without a farewell glance. I walked thoughtfully across the drive to my own car and set off along the road to Valentine'shouse aware of bei
Valentine and Dorothea had bought a fourroomed single-story house, taking two rooms each as bedroom and sitting room, constructing an extra bathroom so that they had their privacy, and sharing one large kitchen furnished with a dining table. Living that way had, they had both told me, been an ideal solution to their widowed state-, a separate togetherness that gave them both company and retreat. Everything looked quiet there when I parked outside on the road and walked up the concrete path to the front door. Dorothea opened it before I could ring the bell, and she'd been crying. I
Valentine, yellowly pale, lay unmoving on the to bed, his heavy slow breath noisy, regular, and ity implacably terminal. at "He hasn't woken or said anything since you.
I went yesterday," Dorothea said. "We don't need ng to whisper in here, you know, we're not disturbing him.
Robbie Gill came at lunchtime, not that Y3 I had any lunch, can't eat, somehow. Anyway, I Robbie says Valentine is breathing with difficulty to because fluid is collecting in his lungs, and he's slipping away now and will go either tonight or tomorrow, and to be ready... How can I be ready?" s "What does he mean by ready?" 9 "Oh, just in my feelings, I think. He said to let 3 him know tomorrow morning how things are. He a more or less asked me not to phone him in the middle of the night. He said if Valentine dies, just d to phone him at home at seven. He isn't really heartless, y
We could hear Valentine breathing, the slow rasping almost a groan, though Nurse Davies, Dorothea said, had been an absolute brick, injecting painkiller so that her brother 29couldn't possibly suffer, not even in some deep brain recess below the coma. "Kind," I said. "She's fond of Valentine. "I drank the hot weak liquid, not liking it much. "It's an extraordinary thing," Dorothea said, sitting opposite me and sipping. "You know what you said about Valentine wanting a priest?"I nodded.
"Well, I told you he couldn't have meant it, but then, I would never have believed it, this morning a neighbor of ours-Betty from across the road, you've met her, dear-she came to see how he was and she said, did he get his priest all right? Well! I just stared at her, and she said, didn't I know that Valentine had been rambling on about some priest our mother had had to give her absolution before she died, and she said he'd asked her to fetch that priest. She said, what priest? I mean, she told me she never knew either of us ever saw a priest and I told her of course we hadn't, har
I said, "The doctor will know of a priest, if you want one. " "But it wouldn't be any good! Valentine wouldn't know. He can't hear anything. " "I don't think it matters that Valentine can't hear. I think that if you don't get a priest, you'll wonder for the rest of your life whether you should have done. So yes, either the doctor or I will find one for you at once, if you like. " Tears ran weakly down her cheeks as she nodded agreement. She was clearly grateful not to have had to make the decision herself. I went into Valentine's sitting room and used the phone there and went back t
"I mean... he may not be pleased to be called out by a lapsed nonpracticing Catholic. " He hadn't been, as it happened. I'd exhorted him as persuasively as I knew how; so without hesitation I agreed to stay with Dorothea, if only to see properly done what I'd done improperly. We waited barely half an hour, long enough only for evening to draw in, with Dorothea switching on the lights. Then the real priest, a tubby, slightly grubby-looking middle-aged man hopelessly lacking in charisma parked his car behind my own and walked up the concrete path unenthusiastically.
Dorothea let him in and brought him into Valentine's bedroom, where he wasted little time or emotion. From a bag reminiscent of the doctor's, he produced a purple stole which he hung 31fillround his neck-, a rich color against the faded black of his coat and the white band around his throat. He produced a small container, opened it, dipped in his thumb, and then made a small cross on Valentine's forehead, saying, "By this holy anointing oil... " "Oh!" Dorothea protested impulsively, as he began. "Can you say it in Latin? I mean, with our mother it was always in Latin. Valentine w
"Misereatur tui omnipotens Deus, et dimissis peccati. s tuis, perducat te ad vitam aetemam. Amen. " May Almighty God have mercy on you, forgive you your sins, and bring you to everlasting life. "Dominus noster Jesus Christus te absolvat. Our Lord Jesus Christ absolve you... He said the words without passion, a task undertaken for strangers, giving blanket absolution for he knew not what sins. He droned on and on-, finally repeating, more or less, the words I'd used, the real thing now but without the commitment I'd felt. "Ego te absolvo ab omnibus censun. s, etpeccatis z. n
"Is that all?" asked Dorothea blankly.
The priest said, "My daughter, in the authority his vested in me I have absolved him from all blame, ied from all his sins. He has received absolution. I tall can do no more. " his I went with him to the front door and gave him a generous donation for his church funds. He he thanked me tiredly, and he'd gone before I ur thought of asking him about a funeral service-a. Id requiem mass-within a week.
Dorothea had found no comfort in his visit. id "He didn't care about Valentine," she said. [is "He doesn't know him. "
"I wish he hadn't come. " @is "Don't feel like that," I said. "Valentine has truly received what he wanted. " ,e "But he doesn't know. " "I'm absolutely certain," I told her with conviction, "that Valentine is at peace. " She nodded relievedly. She thought so herself,
She stretched up to kiss my cheek in farewell, and I gave her a sympathetic hug. She hadn't lived in Newmarket when I'd been young, and I hadn't known her before coming back for the film, but she seemed already like a cozy old aunt I'd had forever.
33"15m always awake by siX- 55 1 said.
She sighed. "I'll let you know. "
I nodded and drove away, waving to her as she stood in Valentine's window, watching forlornly in her sorrowful vigil. I drove to the stable yard we were using in the film and stood in the dark there, deeply breathing cool March evening air and looking up at the night sky. The bright clear day had carried into darkness, the stars now in such brilliant 3-D that one could actually perceive the infinite depths and distances of space. Making a film about muddy passions on earth seemed frivolous in eternity's context, yet, as we were bodies, not spirits, we could do no more than reveal o
"Spiritus" meant breath in Latin. Holy breath. In nomine Spiiitus Sancti. In the name of the Holy Spirit, the Holy Breath, the Holy Ghost. As a schoolboy I'd liked the logic and discipline of Latin. As a man, I found in it mystery and majesty. As a film director I'd used it to instill terror. For Valentine, I'd usurped its power. God forgive me, I thought... if there is a God. The mega-star's Rolls whispered gently into the yard and out he popped, door opened for him as always by his attentive chauffeur. Male megastars came equipped normally with a driver, a valet, a secretary/as
Mega-stars were never e late, however overdue. Mega-stars were walking 9 green lights, the term that in the film world e denoted the capacity to bring finance and credence to a project, allied with the inability to do wrong. What green lights desired, they got. S This particular green light had so far belied his persnickety reputation and had delivered such goods that he'd been asked for in good humor e and with sufficient panache to please his fans. e He was fifty, looked forty, and stood eye to eye with me at a shade over six feet. Though his features off-screen were good but unre
Accordingly we walked together to the house's rear entrance, where the night watchman let us in and logged our arrival. "All quiet, Mr. Lyon," he reported.
"Good. Within the barn of a house the production manager with my and O'Hara's approval and input, had reconstructed a fictional drawing room within the original drawing room space, and also re-created the former trainer's office as it had been, looking out to the stable yard. Upstairs, removing a wall or two and using old photographs as well as a sight of the real thing, we had built a reproduction of the imposing room still to be found within the jockey Club headquarters in the High Street, the room where, in the historic past, enquiries had been held, with reputations and liveliho
"The man is accused, baffled, angry, and innocent. "
"Yes. "Yeah. Well, our friend, Howard Tyler, is driving me crazy. " Nash Rourke's accent, educated American, Boston overtones, didn't sit exactly with the Britishs upper-class racehorse trainer he was purporting to s be, a minor detail in almost everyone's eyes, including my own but excluding (unsurprisingly) Howard's. "Howard wants to change the way I say things, and for me to play the whole scene in a throttled whisper. " "Is that what he said?" I asked. Nash shrugged a partial negative. "He wants what he called 'a stiff upper lip. ' "And you?" "This guy would yell, for Christ's
Right. "Which he didn't do. And he's faced with a lot of stick-in-the-muds bent on ruining him one way or the other, right?" Right.
"And the chairman is married to his dead wife's sister, right?" I nodded. "The chairman, Cibber, eventually goes to pieces. We established that today. " "Which Howard is spitting blue murder about. "Tomorrow, here," I waved a hand around the make-believe courtroom, "you yell. "
Nash smiled. "Also you put a great deal of menace into the way you talk back to Chairman Cibber. You convince the Jockey Club members, and the audience, that you do have enough force of personality to kill. Sow a seed or two.
Don't be long-suffering and passive. " Nash leaned back in his chair, relaxing. "Howard will bust a gut. He's mad as hell with what you're doing. " "I'll soothe him. " Nash wore, as I did, unpressed trousers, an open-necked shirt, and a thick loose sweater. He picked up the sheets of script, shuffled them a bit, and asked a question. How different is the whole script than the one I saw originally?" "There's more action, more bitterness, and a lot more suspense. " "But my character-this guy-he still doesn't kill his wife, does he?"
"No. But there's doubt about it right to the end, now. " Nash looked philosophical. "O'Hara sweet talked me into this," he said. "I had three months free between projects. Fill them, he said. Nice little movie about horseracing. O'Hara knows I'm a sucker for the horses. An old real-life scandal, he tells me, written by our world-famous Howard, who of course I've heard of.
Prestige movie, not a sink-without-trace, O'Hara says.
Director? I ask. He's young, O'Hara says. You won't have worked with him before. Too damn right, I haven't. Trust me, O'Hara says. " "Trust me," I said.
Nash gave me one of the smiles an alligator would be proud of, the sort that in his Westerns had the baddies flinging themselves sideways in shoot-outs.
"Tomorrow," I said, "is the opening day of the main Flat racing season in England. " "I know it. "
"They run the Lincoln Handicap on Saturday.
Nash nodded. "At Doncaster. Where's Doncaster?" "Seventy miles north of here. Less than an hour by helicopter. Do you want to go?" Nash stared. "You're bribing me!" "Sure. )5 "What about insurance? "I cleared it with O'Hara. "
"Be damned!" he said. He stood up abruptly in amused good humor t and began measuring his distances in paces round the set.
39 Now"It says in the script," he said, "that I stand on the mat.
Is this the mat, this thing across the open end of the table?" "Yes. It's actually a bit of carpet. Historically the person accused at a Newmarket horse racing enquiry had to stand there on the carpet, and that's the origin of the phrase, to be carpeted. " "Poor bastards. " He stood on the carpet and quietly said his lines, repeating and memorizing them, putting in pauses and gestures, shifting his weight as if in frustration, and finally marching the inside distance of the horseshoe to lean menacingly over the top chair, which would contain Cibber, the inquisitor.
"And I yell," he said. "Yes," I agreed. With the fury at that point silent, he murmured the shout of protest, and in time returned to his former seat beside me.
"What happened to those people in real life?" he asked.
"Howard swears what he's written are the true events.
O'Hara tells me you're sure they're not, because no one's screaming foul. So what really did happen?" I sighed.
"Howard's guessing. Also he's playing safe. For a start, none of the people who were really involved are called by their real names in his book. And I don't honestly know more than anyone else, because it all happened in this town twenty-six years ago, when I was only four. I can't remember even hearing about it then, and in any case the whole thing fizzled out. The trainer you re playing was a man called Jackson Wells.
His wife was found hanged in one of the stalls in en his stable yard, and a lot of people thought he'd done it. His wife had had a lover. His wife's sister Ily was married to a member of the Jockey Club. ag That's about as far as the known facts go. No one id could ever prove Jackson Wells had hanged his wife, and he swore he hadn't. " "Howard says he's still alive. "I nodded. "The scandal finished him in racing. in He could never prove he hadn't hanged his wife @n and although the Jockey Club didn't actually 3take away his license, people stopped sending @r him horses. He sold his
There apparently hasn't been any reaction at all from him, and Howard's book's been out over a year. " s "So he won't come bursting onto the set here swinging a noose to lynch me. " "Believe in his innocence,"
I said. "Oh, I do. " "Our film is fiction," I said. "The real Jackson Wells was a middle-ability man with a middlesized training stable and no outstanding personality. He wasn't the upper-class powerful figure in Howard's book, still less was he the tough, wronged, resourceful conqueror we'll make of youre we're done. ' "O'Hara promised an up-beat ending. "
"He'll get it. " "But the script doesn't say who did hang the wife, only who didn't. "
I said, "That's because Howard doesn't know and can't make up his mind what to invent. Haven't you read Howard's book?" "I never read the books scripts are written from. I find it's too often confusing and contradictory. " "Just as well," I said, smiling. "In Howard's book your character is not having an affair with his wife's sister. " "Not?" He was astonished. He'd spent a whole busy day tumbling about in bedclothes half naked with the actress playing his wife's sister. "However did Howard agree to that?" I said, "Howard also agreed that Cibber, the sister-in-law's husband, should
"Or mine. "
Nash gave me a straight look verging on the ith suspicious and said, "What are you not telling me about more script changes?" le I liked him. I might even trust him. But I'd ed learned the hard way once that nothing was ever off the record. The urge to confide had to beiresisted. Even with O'Hara, I'd been reticent. e "Devious," O'Hara had called me. "An illusionist. "It's what's needed. " in"I'll not deny it.
But get the conjuring tight. Conjurors never explained their tricks. The as gasp of surprise was their best reward. "I'll always tell you," I said to Nash, "what your character would be feeling in any given scene. He perceived the evasion. He thought things over in silence for a long full minute while he th decided whether or not to demand details I might e, not give. In the end, what he said was, "Trust is d a lot to ask. " I didn't deny it. After a pause he sighed deeply as if in acceptance, and I supposed he'd embraced blind faith as a way out if the whole enterprise er should fa
"I ride on your coattails. " "You," he said, "do not need to grovel. " We left the set and the house and signed ourselves out with the night watchman. Nash was driven away in the Rolls by his chauffeur, and I returned to Bedford Lodge for a final long session with Moncrieff, discussing the visual impacts and camera angles of tomorrow's scene. I was in bed by midnight. At five, the telephone rang beside my head. "Thomas? only Dorothea's wavery voice, apologetic, the "I'm on my way," I said. lanceinger -1 the , the Valentine was dead. Talk when I arrived in his house I found not the b
"Then what do you want so early?"
A minor civil servant, I diagnosed: one of those who enjoyed saying no. His accent was distantly Norfolk prominently London-suburban and careful. "Mrs. Pannier asked me to come," I said without provocation. "She telephoned. " "At this hour? She can't have done. " "I'd like to speak to her," I said. "I'll tell her someone called. " Down in the hall behind him, Dorothea appeared from her bathroom and, seeing me, hurried toward the front door.
"Thomas! Come in, dear. " She beckoned me to sidle past the blockage. "This is my son, Paul," she explained to me. "And Paul, this is Valentine's friend Thomas, that I told you about. " "How is he?" I asked. "Valentine? "Her face told me. "He's slipped away, dear. Come in, do, I need your help. " She was flustered by this son whom she'd described as pompous and domineering; and nowhere had she exaggerated. Apart from his hard bossy stare he sported a thin dark moustache and a fleshy upturned nose with the nostrils showing from in front. The thrust-forward chin was intended to intimi
"He should be struck off. He said Valentine should have been in hospital and he would be here at seven, not before. " "He couldn't do anything by coming," Dorothea said miserably. "Dying here was what Valentine wanted. It was all right. " Paul mulishly repeated his contrary opinions.
Deeply bored with him, I asked Dorothea if I could pay my respects to Valentine. "Just go in, dear," she said, nodding. "He's very peaceful. " I left her listening dutifully to her offspring and went into Valentine's bedroom which was brightly and brutally lit by a center bulb hanging from the ceiling in an inadequate lampshade. A kinder lamp stood unlit on a bedside table, and I crossed to it and switched it on. Valentine's old face was pale and smoothed by death, his forehead already cooler to the touch than in life. The labored breathing had given way to eternal silence. His eyes
Dorothea was coming toward me from the kitchen, entering Valentine's room past me to look down fondly at her dead brother. "He died in the dark," she said, distressed.
"He wouldn't mind that. " "No... but... I switched off his bedside light so that people wouldn't see in, and I was sitting in that chair looking out of the window waiting for Paul to come, listening to Valentine breathing, and I went to sleep. I just drifted off. " Tears filled her eyes.
"I didn't know... I mean, I couldn't help it. "
"You've been very tired. " "Yes, but when I woke up it was so dark... and absolutely quiet, and I realized... it was awful, dear. I realized Valentine had stopped breathing... and he'd died while I was asleep, and I hadn't been there beside him to hold his hand or anything... " Her voice wavered into a sob and she wiped her eyes with her fist. I put an arm round her shoulders as we stood beside Valentine's bed. I thought it lucky on the. Awhole that she hadn't seen the jolt of her brother's d Iheart stopping, nor heard the last rattle of his breath. I'd watched my own mo
I only wanted someone to talk to, really, when I rang him, but he insisted off on coming... very good of him, dear, really. " ing "Yes," I said. e s "He closed the curtains of course, and ad switched on all the lights. He was quite cross with me for sitting in the dark, and for not getting Robbie Gill out. I mean, Robbie could only say officially that Valentine was dead... Paul didn't ght understand that I wanted just to be in the dark ing with Valentine. It was a sort of comfort, you see, ing dear. A sort of good-bye.
just the two of us, like thwhen we were children. " ars "Yes," I said. "Paul means well," she insisted, "but I do find him tiring. 15m sorry to wake you up so early. But Paul was so cross with me... so I phoned you when he went to the bathroom because he might as have stopped me, otherwise. I'm not myself ed somehow, I feel so weak. " P3 "I'm happy to be here," I assured her. "What his you need is to go to bed. " a "Oh, I couldn't. I'll have to be awake for Robbie. I'm so afraid Paul will be rude to him. " od A certainty, I thought. e 49The great Paul himself came into the room,
"You're almost eighty. I can't look after you properly when you live so far away from me. I've already arranged with a retirement home that when Valentine died you would rent a room there. I'll tell them you'll be coming within a week.
It's less than a mile from my house, so Janet will be able to drop in every day. " Dorothea looked almost frightened.
"I'm not going, Paul," she contradicted. "I'm staying here. "
Ignoring her, Paul said, "You may as well start packing your things at once. Why waste tim0 I'll put this house on the market tomorrow, and I'll move you immediately after the funeral. " "No Dorothea said. "I'll help you while I'm here," her son said grandly. "All Valentine's things will need sorting and disposing of, of course. In fact I may as well clear some of the books away at once. I brought two or three empty boxes. "
"Not the books," I said positively. "He left his dis books to me. "Ciful "Wl'hat?" Paul's mouth unattractively dropped talk open. "He can't have done," he said fiercely.
"He iade left everything to Mother. We all know that. "
"Everything to your mother except his books. " racDorothea nodded. "Valentine added a codicil and to his will about two months ago, leaving his @ack books to Thomas. "
"The old man was gaga. I'll contest it!" a as in "You can't contest it," I pointed out reasonably.
"Valentine left everything but the books to vas your mother' not to you. " I)re "Then Mother will contest it!"
"No, I won't, dear," Dorothea said gently. dy V7hen Valentine asked me what I thought about en him leaving his books and papers to Thomas, I 'e. told him it was a very nice idea. I would never read 'k. them or ever look at them much, and Valentine et knew Thomas would treasure them, so he got a solicitor to draw up the codicil, and Betty-a Dt friend of mine-and Robbie Gill-our doctorIg witnessed his signature with the solicitor watching. He signed it here in his own sitting room, and rt there was no question of Valentine being gaga, which both the solicitor and the doctor will agree
"The books are for Thomas," Dorothea repeated doughtily, "and I never heard Valentine suggest they were valuable.
He wanted Thomas to have them for old-time's sake, and for being so kind, coming to read to him. " "Ah-hah!" Paul almost shouted in triumph. "Valentine's codicil will be invalid, because he couldn't see what he was signing!"
Dorothea protested, "But he knew what he was signing. "
"How did he know? Tell me that. " "Excuse me," I said, halting the brewing bad temper. "If Valentine's codicil is judged invalid, which I think unlikely if his solicitor drew it up and witnessed its signing, then the books belong to Dorothea, who alone can decide what to do with them. "
"Oh, thank you, dear," she said, her expression relaxing, "then if they are mine, I will give them to you, Thomas, because I know that's what Valentine intended. "Paul looked aghast. "But you can't. "Why not, dear?"
"They... they may be valuable. "I'll get them valued," I said, "and if they really are worth an appreciable amount, I'll give that much to Dorothea. " "No, dear," she vehemently shook her head. 52"Hush," I said to her. "Let it lie for now. " n.
Paul paced up and down the kitchen in a fury e and came to a halt on the far side of the table from et where I sat with Dorothea beside me, demanding t. 5 forcefully, "Just who are you, anyway, apart from ingratiating yourself with a helpless, dying old ea man? I mean, it's criminaL " nI saw no need to explain myself to him, but ed Dorothea wearily informed him, "Thomas's d grandfather trained horses that Valentine shod.
Valentine's known Thomas for more than twenty h. years, and he's always liked him, he told me so. " he As if unable to stop himself, Paul marched his bulk away from this unwelcome news, abruptly as leaving the kitchen and disappearing down the hall. One might have written him off as a pompous ass were it not for the fugitive impression of ad an underlyin , heavy, half-glimpsed predator in 9 the undergrowth. I wouldn't want to be at a disadvantage with him, I thought. ng Dorothea said despairingly, "I don't want to 0live near Paul. I couldn't bear to have Janet coming to see me ever
" I paused, hesitating. "But what, dear?"
"Well, don't sign anything. "How do you mean?"
"I mean, don't sign anything. Ask your solicitor at friend first. " She gazed at me earnestly. "I may have to sign things, now Valentine's gone. "
"Yes, but... don't sign any paper just because Paul wants you to. " "All right," she said doubtfully. I asked her, "Do you know what a power of attorney is?" "Doesn't it give people permission to do things on your behalp" I nodded. She thought briefly and said-, "You're telling me not to sign a paper giving Paul permission to sell this house. Is that it?" "It sure is. " She patted my hand.
"Thank you, Thomas. I promise not to sign anything like that. I'll read everything carefully. I hate to say it, but Paul does try too hard sometimes to get his own way. " Paul, to my mind, had been quiet for a suspiciously long time.
I stood up and left the kitchen, going in search of him, and I found him in Valentine's sitting room taking books off the shelves and setting them in stacks on the floor.
"What are you doing?" I asked. "Please leave those alone. "
Paul said, "I'm looking for a book I loaned Valentine. I want it back. " "What's it called?" Paul's spur-of-the-occasion lie hadn't got as far as a title.
"I'll know it when I see it," he said. "If any book has your name in it," I said politely, "I'll make sure that you get it back. " "That's not good enough. " Dorothea appeared in the doorway, saw the books piled on the floor, and looked aghast and annoyed at the same time.
Because "Paul! Stop that! Those books are Thomas's. If you take them you'll be stealing. " Paul showed no sign of caring about such a wer of minor accusation. "He won't take them," I told her reassuringly. things Paul curled his lip at me, shouldered his way past, and opened the front door. "What is he doing, dear?" Dorothea asked, telling perplexed, watching her son's back go purposeion to fully down the path. "It seems," I said, "that he's fetching one of his boxes to pack the books in. " I closed the front nas. I door and shot its bolts, top and bottom. Then I read hurried throug
"And he's trying to steal Valentine's books. " the "Oh dear. or. Paul began hammering on the front door. eave "Mother, let me in at once. "Perhaps I should, " Dorothea worried. ined "He'll come to no harm out there. It's nowhere near freezing, and he can sit in his car. Or go home, of course. "t as "Sometimes Paul isn't likeable, Dorothea said sadly. I put the stacks of books back on Valentine's shelves. The ones that Paul had chosen to steal first were those with the glossiest covers, the recently published racing biographies, which and were, in commercial resale terms, almost wort
Dorothea said for about the tenth time, "I do wish he'd stop. " "Tell him you'll let him in if he promises to leave the books alone. " "Do you think he'll agree?" she asked dubiously. "A good chance," I said. He wouldn't want to lose too much face with the awakening neighbors, I reckoned; only a fool would allow himself to be seen to be shut out like a naughty boy by his aged mother. With evident relief she relayed the terms, to which her son with bad grace agreed. She unbolted the door and let him in, an entrance I carefully didn't watch, as the slightest smile on my face would be
When I'd mentioned the possibility of an autobiography and he'd vetoed the idea, he hadn't referred to any diaries or other raw material that could be used as sources by anyone else, but, sitting there, I wondered if by any chance Paul had made some sort of deal with a writer or publisher, to trade Valentine's papers for a share of the profits. No biography of Valentine's would make a fortune, but Paul, I guessed, would be content with modest pickings.
Anything was better than nothing, one might hear him say.
Howard Tyler's book was not on the shelves.
Valentine had asked me, the first time I'd called on him, what had brought me back to Newmarket, and when I'd explained about Howard's book-Unstable Times-and the film we were to make of it, he'd said he'd heard of the book but he hadn't bought it, since at the time of its publication his eyesight had been fast deteriorating. "I hear it's a load of rubbish," he said. "Is it?" "I knew Jacksy Wells. I often shod his horses. He never murdered that mousey wife of his, he hadn't got the guts. " "The book doesn 5 t say he did," I assured him. "And I hear it doesn 5 t say he didn't, neithe
Valentine said "I only shod the horses. The fuss died down pretty fast for lack of clues and evidence, but of course it did Jackson to Wells in as a trainer. I mean, would you send your out horses to a man who'd maybe killed his wife?" Im "No. " the "Nor did anyone else. " of "The book says she had a lover,"
I said. 0"Did she?" Valentine pondered. "First I've heard of it," he said. "But then, Dorothea could have a lover here under my nose and I wouldn't care. Good luck to her, if she did. " es. "You're a wicked old man, Valentine. " he "Nobody's an angel," he said. I looked at his empty chair and remembered M. his desperate half-whisper... I killed the Cornish boy...
Maybe The Cornish Boy was a horse. ste Steps sounded on the path outside and the doorbell rang, ding-dong. I waited so as not to IIappear to be usurping Paul's desired status as y head of the household, but it was in fact Dorothea who went to answer the summons. "Come in, Robbie," she said, the loud relief in her voice reaching me clearly. "How dear of you to come. " er "That son of yours!" The doctor's voice held es dislike.
"Sorry, sorry," Dorothea said placatingly. "Not your fault. "
Dorothea let him in and closed the front door le and I opened the door of Valentine's sitting room to say hello.
Robbie Gill shook my hand perfunctorily. "Glad you've got company," he told Dorothea. of "Now, about Valentine?"
All three of us went quietly into the old man's dimly lit room, followed importantly by Paul who immediately flooded the scene again with the overhead bulb. Perhaps it was only the director in me, I thought, that found this harsh insistence unpalatable. Certainly Robbie Gill made no pro test but set about establishing clinically what was evident to any eye, that Valentine-the he who had lived in that chemical shell-had left it. "What time did he die?" he asked Dorothea, his pen poised over a clipboard. "I don't know to the minute," she said unhappily. "Around one 5clock," I said. "M
"Leave it to me," Paul interrupted. "I'll take charge of all that. " No one demurred. Taking important charge of relatively minor matters suited Paul's character perfectly; and perhaps, I thought, he would be so fulfillingly involved that he would forget about the books.
There was no harm-, however, in seeking to give Dorothea a close line of defense. "How about," I suggested to her, "letting me go across to your friend Betty's house, and asking her to come over to keep you company. "Good idea," Robbie Gill agreed emphatically. "No need for that!" Paul objected. "It's a bit early, dear,"
Dorothea protested, looking at the clock, but seeming hopeful nevertheless. I crossed the road to the friend's house and woke the friend's husband, whose initial irritation turned to a resigned shrug. "Poor old sod," he said, apparently referring to Valentine. "We'll look after Dorothea. " "Her son Paul is with her," I told him.
"Betty," he said intensely, "will be over straight away. I smiled at the owner of the bristly chin and the crumpled pajamas and dressing gown. Paul had a galvanic effect on everyone else's good nature, it seemed. I waited until Betty had bustled across, plump and loving like Dorothea, and until Robbie Gill had left; during which period Paul half a dozen times told me I had no need to remain. While he was at one point busy patronizing the doctor, Dorothea confided to me guiltily that she had locked Valentine's sitting room door, dear, just in case, and had hidden the key in the pink
Owing to Nash's having rehearsed in private the evening before, the "Jockey Club members were not prepared for what they were going to see, and as I particularly wanted to record their spontaneous reactions in advance of their rehearsed en version, I announced that the first "take" was in own this case not to be considered to be a rehearsal, and but would be the real thing: that action, failing only the set falling to pieces, would continue d-in from start to finish, whatever was seeming to go ard wrong. zed.
"Continuous," I said. "No stops. Right?" ing Everyone nodded, even if doubt could be spotOvted here and there. Except for unrepeatable efold fects involving five hundred extras, first takes s of were rarely those seen on the screen. eir With the world-weariness of unlimited experiall ence, Nash understood what I wanted, but that ater didn't guarantee that he would deliver. That rner day, however, from some motive of his own, he or a decided generously to go along with the all-out on take one, and performed with such vibrating er, power that the mouths round the table fell open with
Say 'do it again. "'63 His eyes smiled. "Do it again," I said. We repositioned and reloaded the cameras and repeated the scene twice more. All three takes went miraculously without glitches, and all three were printable, but it wasn't only I who thought the first electric beyond insulation. "That man could murder," Moncrieff said of Nash thoughtfully.
"He was acting. " "No. " He shivered slightly. "I mean, in fact. "
Howard had heard that the enquiry scene had given a galvanizing, positively animating jolt to the whole production. He'd been told, by about ten different people, that Nash had said, "It's strongly written": and Howard knew that he hadn't written what Nash had yelled. "You," he said furiously, facing me after dinner across a small table in the Bedford Lodge Hotel bar, far too public a venue for his emotions, 44you changed the script. "
"Well," I said peaceably, "not very much. Most of it was your words exactly. " "But not the feeling," he complained.
"You willfully misinterpreted my intention. You told Nash to lose control and threaten Cibber. You told him to look like a killer, you must have done, otherwise he wouldn't have thought of it, not from what I wrote. "
"Look, Howard," I said with resignation, "we'd better come once and for all to an understanding. I don't want to quarrel with you. I want us to work together to produce a good film, but you did sign a contract... "
"What you think is a good film," he interrupted, "and what I think is a film truthful to my f book, are totally opposite. All you care about is how much money it makes. "
I took a large bracing mouthful of post prandial cognac (to hell with the non-alcohol ethos) and decided to explain a few basic facts of movie life to the unrealistic idealist opposite me, his prim round glasses gleaming over earnest brown eyes and his small mouth contracting further in pique. "I'm a name, " he insisted. "My readers expect subtlety, understatement, and psychological depth. What you're giving them is sex and violence. "Have another vodka and cranberry juice?" "No. 55 "Howard," I said. "Don't you understand what you agreed to?
O'Hara put together a package that brought finance from one of the top seven studios. However much one may regret it, they don't fund moody films to play in art houses. They are strictly in the business for profit. The bottom line, Howard. " "Obscene," he said, disapprovingly.
I said, "O'Hara's chief bargaining promise with the big-seven movie company was that we would, between us, produce a film that at least 65Awouldn't lose them money. Your own soft-focus view of an ancient scandal obviously worked fine as a novel, and there's much of that that I've insisted on retaining. I've fought for you, whatever you may think. " "What, precisely, have you retained?" he demanded, hurting. "You wrote the whole first quarter as a semighost story about the dream lovers of the wife who ended up hanged. "
"Yes. " "Her dreams and illusions are in the screenplay,"
I reminded him. "Her lovers are jockeys, the way you wrote them. But who were the real jockeys? Did they ride the horses her husband trained?" "They were in her mind. "
"But why did she hang, Howard? Was she topped by one of the dream lovers? Did she do it herself. Did her husband kill her? "After a pause he said, "No one knows. " "I know they don't," I said. "At least, no one ever told. But an ending of no explanation at all isn't going to get people paying to see the film. " He said sarcastically, "That bottom line again. " "I'll give you the dream lovers," I said. "And you'll allow me an earthly explanation. "
"That's not fair. " I gazed at him. He was old enough to know that few things were fair. Most five-year-olds had already discovered it. "What we are dealing with here," I said, changing tack, "is three versions of the same story. "
"What do you mean?" e "We have the story you wrote in your book. We have the story we're shooting in the film. And somewhere out of sight, way back in history, is what actually happened. Three views of the same e facts. " Howard didn't argue.
I said, "By Sunday, Howard, I'd like you to come up with a rational explanation of the wife's death. " "But it's already Thursday evening! " he exclaimed, horrified. "You've had literally years to work it out. " "But no one knows!" "Then guess. " "I can't," he protested belligerently. "I've tried. " "Then I'll do it," I said. "I'll work with you on the necessary scenes. We'll use most of your script as written, but your inconclusive ending is impossible. " "But it's what happened. There wasn't any ending to the story. "
"For the film, there has to be. "
"Don't you care about the facts?" "Perhaps, if we look closely enough," I said, only half meaning it, "we might ourselves uncover those facts. What if we actually could find out what really happened?"
"You can't," Howard said flatly. "No one knows. "
"No one's saying. That's different. " I paused. "What did Jackson Wells tell you, when you went to see him?"
Hara had asked Howard the same thing, he'd told me, and Howard, to O'Hara's utter disbelief, had said he hadn't consulted Jackson Wells at all. Howard hadn't thought it necessary. Howard didn't want to risk unwelcome anti-climactic disclosures from Jackson Wells that might upset his lyrical tale of the dream lovers and the semi-mystical death. Moncrieff, strolling into the bar, seeing us, and crossing without hesitation to join us, saved Howard from having to answer. Neither of them had the least understanding of the other's function. Moncrieff, endlessly creative within the effects
Moncrieff asked abrasively. Howard became predictably defensive. "The wife imagines them. You don't need to worry about it. "
"Oh, yes, he does," I corrected mildly. "She may be imagining the jockeys, but we, the onlookers, are going to see them standing in her bedroom.
Howard looked aghast, to Moncrieff's amusement.
"One at a time," I explained. "She sees one in her bedroom. Another time, she sees another. And another. We have three tall ultra-handsome unknowns coming to dress up as the dream lovers.
They won't look like real jockeys. They don't 9 speak, and don't worry, Howard, they won't get into bed. The wife watches her husband from her bedroom window as he rides out with his string of horses to their morning exercise, then she turns of into the room and conjures up her dream jockey lover.
Moncrieff will light the jockey to make it s clear that he's imaginary. Another day the wife will wave to her husband, and then turn and imagine a different lover. " Moncrieff nodded. "Easy. "
"She dances with the third lover. Slowly, orgasmically. She's transported," I said.
Moncrieff happily nodded again. r "So there you are, Howard," I said. "The lovers are how you wrote them. No sex. " 5 "All highly unlikely," Moncrieff laughed. "Any jockey worth his salt would have her nightie off before her husband was out of the stable yard. "
"She hanged," I said. "No dream. "
Both of them stared, silenced. Why did she hang, I wondered. The further we went with the filming, the more I wanted to know, 69yet until then it had been the results of that death, the accusations against her husband, and his handling of them, that had been the focus both of Howard's book and, more especially, of our film version. I gave a mental shrug. I hadn't time for any inept detective work, trying to unearth a secret twenty-six years buried. I had only to bully Howard into inventing a good reason and giving Nash a huge satisfactory last scene in which he discovered the truth
"I don't see that it matters. " Howard himself, in the ensuing pause, seemed to agree that he'd been unnecessarily ungracious. "The Daily Cable, " he said. "It was an obituary of the member of the jockey Club that I called Cibber in the book. " I nodded. That much I knew. "V7hat was Cibber's real name?" "Visborough. " He spelled it.
"And who wrote the obituary?" I asked. "I've no idea,"
Howard replied, still obstructively but this time with a surprise that gave his statement credence.
70course not... owarc mcame conc escending. "You've no idea how a creative author writes. The inconclusiveness of the obituary was its own inspiration. I received the idea from the obituary and the book grew in my mind. " "So,"
Moncrieff said, "you never even tried to find out what really happened?" "Of course not. But I didn't alter the account given in the obituary, not like O'Hara and Thomas have made me alter things for the film. " He was acridly bitter. "My readers will hate the film. "No they won't," I said, "and hundreds of thousands of new readers will buy your paperbacks. " He liked that idea, however he might carp. He preened, smirking. Moncrieff s dislike of him visibly grew. Howard had had enough of Moncrieff, and of me too, no doubt. He got to his feet and left us, making no pretense of social
71 "But can you?" Moncrieff asked with doubt. "There are prickly punitive clauses in his contract. I had a sight of it, so I'd know what I could ask of him, and what I couldn't. " Moncrieff whistled softly through his teeth.
"Did O'Hara write the contract?" "Among others. It's pretty standard in most respects. Howard's agent agreed to it, and Howard signed it. " I sighed. "I'll remind him tactfully tomorrow. " Moncrieff tired of the subject. "About tomor row," he said. "Still the six-thirty dawn call out in the stable yard?" "Definitely. The horses have to be exercised.
I told all the stable lads this evening we'd be shooting them mounting and riding out through the gate to the exercise ground. They'll be wearing their normal clothes: jeans, anoraks, crash helmets. I reminded them not to look at the cameras. We'll take the overall scene of the lads mounting. Nash will come out of the house and be given a leg-up onto his mount. We'll rehearse it a couple of times, not more. I don't want to keep the horses circling too long. When Nash is mounted and comfortable, the assistant trainer can lead the string out through the gate.
Nash waits for them to go, and follows, last. As he leaves, he'll look backward and up to the window from where his wife is supposedly watching. You've arranged for a camera crew up there to do the wife's point of view? Ed will be up there, supervising. "Moncrieff nodded. I said, "We'll cut the main shot once Nash is through the gate. I hope we won't have to do 72bt. many retakes, but when we're satisfied, the string on can go on and get their regular exercise, and Nash uld can come back and dismount. We're going to be repeating the whole thing on Saturday. We'll eth. need a new vie
"OK. Moncrieff and I finished our drinks and went our separate ways, I upstairs to my room to make an arranged phone call to O'Hara in London. "How did the jockey Club scene go?" he asked immediately. "Nash wowed them. " "Good, then. " "I think... well, we'll have to see the rushes tomorrow... but I think it was a sit-up-and-take notice performance. " "Good boy. "
"Yes, he was. " "No, I meant... well, never mind. How's everything else?" "All right, but," I paused, "we need a better ending. " "I agree that the proposed ending's too weak. Hasn't Howard any ideas?" "He likes the weak ending. " "Lean on him," O'Hara said. "Yes. Um, you know he based his book on the obituary of the man he called Cibber? His real name was Visborough. " I spelled it, as Howard had done. "Well, could you get me a copy of that obituary? It was published in the Daily Cable, Howard says.
It must have been at least three years ago. Howard doesn't know who wrote it. He never followed anything up in any way. He says simply that the obituary, and especially its inconclusiveness, was what jolted his imagination into writing the book. " "You don't ask much!"
"The Daily Cable must have a cuttings library. You'll certainly be able to get that obituary. Could you fax it to me here at Bedford Lodge? If I knew exactly what started Howard's imagination working in the first place, perhaps I could help him find an explosive denouement. )) "You'll have the obituary tomorrow," O'Hara promised.
"Thanks. " "How's your friend?" he asked. "What friend?" "The one who's dying. " "Oh. " I paused.
"He died during last night. " "Bad luck. " "He was old.
Eighty something. A blacksmith turned top racing journalist, grand old character, great unusual life. Pity we can't make a film of him. 55 "Films of good people don't have much appeal. )) "Ain't that the truth. "'"What was his name?"
"Valentine Clark," I said. "The Daily Cable might do an obituary of him too, you never know. He wrote for the Racing Gazette. Everyone in racing knew him. And... um... he knew the real trainer, Jackson Wells, the basis of the character that Nash is playing. " "Did he?" O'Hara's attention sharpened down the line. "So you surely asked him what he knew of the hanging?" "Yes, I did. He knew no more than anyone else. The police dropped the case for lack of leads.
Valentine said Jackson Wells's wife was an unmemorable mouse. He couldn't tell me anything helpful. It was all so very long ago. " O'Hara almost laughed. "It was very long ago for you, Thomas, because you're young. I'll bet twenty-six years is yesterday to Jackson Wells himself" "I... er... " I said diffidently, "I did think of going to see him. " "Jackson Wells?" "Yes. Well, Valentine, my dead friend, he was originally a blacksmith, as I told you.
He used to shoe any grandfather's horses regularly, and he did say he'd also sometimes shod the horses Jackson Wells trained. So perhaps I could make some excuse... following Valentine s death to make a nostalgic visit to Jackson Wells. What do you think?" "Go at once," O'Hara said.
"He won't want to talk about the wife who hanged. He has a new life now and a second wife. " "Try, anyway," O'Hara said. "Yes, I thought so. But he lives near Oxford.
it'll take me half a day. " "Worth it," O'Hara said.
"I'll OK the extra time. " "Good. 55 "Goodnight," he said. "I've a lady waiting. "
"Good luck. " He cursed me-"You son of a bitch"-and disconnected.
76unI'd always loved early mornings in racing stangbles. I'd been down in my grandfather's yard dawn by dawn for years, half my day lived before go the first school bell. I tended, for the film, to make bet the horses more of a priority in my attention than perhaps I should have, moving about the yard, in close contact with the creatures I'd grown up of among, and felt at home with. I'd ridden as an amateur jockey in jump races from the age of sixteen, with most of my family as expecting horses in some way to be my life forto ever, but fate and finance-or lack of it-had he found me
"Too expensive," he'd objected automatically.
"Not necessarily," I'd contradicted. "We can buy cheap horses. There are hundreds that have never done well in races, but they look like good thoroughbreds, and that's what's important. Also we wont have any problems with insurance or recompense for injuries, we can travel them where and when we like, and we can work them without anxious owners fluttering round to fuss about their feed or exercise. We can sell them again, at the end. " One of O'Hara's chief virtues, in my eyes, was his ability to evaluate facts very fast and come up with quick decisions. So "Buy them," he said, and
He himself had strategically planted his lighting. Ed, he reported, was already in position upstairs. The weather was cold and windy with dark scudding clouds. Moncrieff liked the moodiness, humming happily as he arranged for ominous shadows to fall across Nash's stand-in, who looked hopelessly un-trainerlike in riding gear. When Nash himself-in character-strode out of the house and yelled bad-tempered instructions to the lads, it was as real as any such bona fide moment I'd ever seen. There were annoyances with the camera truck-one of its wheels squeaked despite the felt path. Oil
"How did it go?" I asked Moncrieff. "Cameras OK?@) 440K. 55 "Print, then. " I walked among the horses to speak to their riders. "That was good," I said. "We'll do it again, now, though. Two snaps are better than one. "
They nodded. By then they all considered themselves expert film makers. The second take didn't go as smoothly-, but that didn't necessarily matter: we would use the version that looked more natural on film. I followed them on foot out of the gate to where Nash and all the lads were circling, awaiting my verdict. "Same again tomorrow morning," I said, patting horses' necks. "Different clothes. Off you all go, then. Remember not to get in the way of any real racehorses. Walk and trot only on the grounds we've been allotted. " The string filed off to exercise and Nash returned to the y
"Is it still on for tomorrow?" he asked, turning in my direction. "Doncaster, do you mean?He nodded.
"Of course it is," I said. "The Stewards have asked you to their lunch, so you can use their box all afternoon and have as much as or as little privacy as you want. They've sent tickets for two, for you to take a companion. "
"Who? )5 "Whoever you like. " "You, then. " "What? I meant a friend, or perhaps Silva?" Silva was the bewitching actress he'd tumbled around with in bed. "Not her," he said vehemently. "You. Why not? And don't say you'll still be doing close shots in the enquiry room. Let's make damned sure 80red they all get completed this afternoon. I want you ake because you know the drill on a British racerily course, and the racing people know you. " ked Green lights got what they wanted. Moreover, I discovered it was what I wanted also. ere "Fine, then," I said.
"Helicopter at elevenmy thirty. " Watching his familiar back walk off to his atever-waiting Rolls, I called Bedford Lodge from all my mobile phone and by persuasive perseverance anygot the staff to find Howard Tyler, who was in thethe bar. "Just a word, Howard,"
I said. re "Not more script changes?" He was acidly sarhiscastic. "No. Um... simply a word of warning. " ing "I don't need your words of warning. "
"Good, then. But... er... I just thought I might remind you, knowing how you feel, that you agreed not to bellyache about the film until ave after its release. " ox "I'll say what I damned well please. " ttle "It's your privilege. I don't suppose you care 03 about the penalties in your contract. " "What penalties?"
"Most film contracts include them," I said. "I'm sure yours does. Film companies routinely seek ways to stop a disgruntled writer from sabotaging the whole film just because he or she led dislikes the changes made to the original work. They put in clauses allowing themselves to recover substantial damages. " After a lengthy pause Howard said, "I never re signed such a contract. "
"Fine, then, but you might check with your agent. "
"You're trying to frighten me" he complained.
"I'm just suggesting you might want to be careful. "
Silence. Howard simply put down his receiver. So much for tactful advice! True to his intention, Nash did make damned sure that we completed the enquiry room shots that day, even if not until past eight in the evening. In want of a shower and a reviving drink, I drove back to Bedford Lodge and found waiting for me a long fax from O'Hara, starting with the Daily Cable's obituary.
Rupert Visborough's life was dedicated to serving his country, his neighbourhood, and the Sport of Kings.
Commissioned into the Scots Guards, he retired with the rank of major to enter local politics in his home county of Cambridgeshire. Many committees benefitted from his expert chairmanship, including...
The list was long, virtuous, and unexciting.
A landowner, he was elected a member of the Jockey Club following the death of his father, Sir Ralph Visborough, knighted for his patronage of many animal charities. Highly respected by all who knew him, Rupert Visborough felt obliged to remove jaiamc irom a shortlist of those being considered for selection as parliamentary ncandidate, a consequence of his having inadvertently been involved in an unexplained death closely touching his family. His wife's sister, married to Newmarket trainer Jackson Wells, was found hanged in one of the stalls in her husband's stable yard. d Exhaustiv
Jackson Wells. `jockey Club, conducting its own private enquiry, concluded there was no justification for withdrawing Wells's licence to train. Rupert Visborough, present at the enquiry, was justifiably bitter at the negative impact of the death on his own expectations. Reports that Jackson Wells's wife was entertaining lovers unknown to her husband could not be substantiated. Her sister Visborough's wife-described the dead woman as "fey" and "a daydreamer. "
She said that as she and her sister had not been close she could offer no useful suggestions. Who knows what Rupert Visborough might not have achieved in life had these events not happened? Conjectures that he himself knew more of the facts behind the tragedy than he felt willing to disclose clung to his despite his strongest denials to his name. The death of his sister-in-law is unresoto this day 83 his name from a shortlist of those being considered for selection as parliamentary candidate, a consequence of his having inadvertently been involved in an unexplained death closely tou
Exhaustive police enquiries failed to find either a reason for suicide, or any motive or suspect for murder. Jackson Wells maintained his innocence throughout. The jockey Club, conducting its own private enquiry, concluded there was no justification for withdrawing Wells's licence to train.
Rupert Visborough, present at the enquiry, was justifiably bitter at the negative impact of the death on his own expectations. Reports that Jackson Wells's wife was entertaining lovers unknown to her husband could not be substantiated. Her sister Visborough's wife, described the dead woman as "fey" and "a daydreamer. " She said that as she and her sister had not been close she could offer no useful suggestions. Who knows what Rupert Visborough might not have achieved in life had these events not happened?
Conjectures that he himself knew more of the facts behind the tragedy than he felt willing to disclose clung to his name despite his strongest denials. The death of his sister-in-law is unresolved to this day.
Visborough died last Wednesday of a cerebral haemorrhage, aged 76, with his great potential sadly unfulfilled. He is survived by his wife, and by their son and daughter.
O'Hara had handwritten across the bottom: "Pious load of shit! No one on the paper knows who wrote it. Their obits often come in from outside. The pages of fax continued, however. O'Hara's handwriting stated: "This paragraph appeared in the Cable's irreverent gossip column on the same day as the obituary. "
Secrets going to grave in the Visborough family? It seems Rupert (76), jockey Club member, dead Wednesday of a stroke, never discovered how his sister-in-law hanged twenty-three years ago in who-dunnit circs. Bereaved husband, Jackson Wells, now remarried and raising rape near Oxford, had 'no comment' re the Visborough demise.
Answers to the twenty-three-year-old mystery must exist.
Send us info.
O'Hara's handwriting: "The Cable got about 6 replies, all no good. End of story as far as they are concerned. But at reat expense they searched their microfilmed records and found these accounts, filed and printed at the time of the hanging. "
The first mention had earned a single minor paragraph: "Newmarket trainer's wife hanged. " For almost two weeks after that there had been daily revelations, many along the lines of "did she jump, or was she pushed?" and equally many about the unfairness-and personal bitternessof the nipping in the bud effect of Visborough's ambitions for a political career. A hanging in the family, it seemed, had discouraged not only racehorse owners; the blight had spread beyond Jackson Wells to canvassers and prospective voters. The story had extinguished itself from lack of fuel. The last mention
The basic question remained unansweredwhy did she hang?
I had dinner and went to bed and dreamed about them, Visborough as Cibber, his cuckolding wife as the pretty actress Silva, Nash as Jackson Wells, and the fey hanged woman as a wisp of muslin, a blowing curtain by the window.
No insight. No inspiration. No solution.
Delays plagued the going-out-to-exercise scene the next morning. One of the horses, feeling fractious, dumped his lad and kicked one of the camera operating crew. Light bulbs failed in midshot. One of the stable lads loudly asked a silly question while the cameras were rolling, and a sound engineer, who should have known better, strolled, smoking, into the next take. Nash, emerging from the house, forgot to bring with him the crash helmet he was supposed to put on before he mounted. He flicked his fingers in frustration and retraced his steps. By the time we finally achieved a print
I shouted generally. "And for Christ's sake get it right.
Don't come back, go on out to exercise. Everyone ready?"
"Cameras rolling," Moncrieff said. I yelled "Action," and yet again the lads led their suffering charges out of the loose stalls, hauled themselves into the saddle, formed a straggly line, and skittered out of the gate. Nash following them, forgot to look up at the window.
"Cut," and said to Moncrieff, "Print. "I yelled, Nash came back swearing.
"Never mind," I said. "We'll cut it in. Would you ride out again and turn and look up after you're through the gate, as if the other horses had gone out of shot ahead of you?
We'll also do a the close shot of that look. " ous-1 "Right now?" "Yes," I said. "Now, because of having the ,iera same light. And how about a touch of exasperation with the wife?" hile The close shot of the exasperation proved well worth the extra time taken in raising a camera ng, high. Even Moncrieff smiled. All Nash said was, "I hope the Doncaster to Stewards wait lunch. " ied He whisked off in the Rolls but when I followed iis a minute or two later I found him still standing in the hotel lobby reading a newspaper, rigidly concentrated.
"Nash?" I enquired tentatively. He lowered the paper, thrust it into my hands, at and in explosive fury said, "Shit. " Then he turned on his heel and stalked off, leaving me to discover what had upset him. I saw. I read, and felt equally murderous.
BUMMER OF A FILM ON THE TURF First reports of Unstable Times, now in front of cameras in Newmarket, speak of rows, discord, and screeching nerves.
Author Howard Tyler's vibrant tale, ten weeks on best-seller lists, is mangled beyond recognition, my sources tell me. Nash Rourke, superstar, rues his involvement: says "Director Thomas Lyon (30), ineffectual, arrogant, insists on disastrous last-minute script changes. " Lyon vows to solve a twenty-six-year-old real-life mystery, basis of Tyler's masterpiece. The police failed at the time. Who is Lyon kidding? Naturally those closely touched by the tragic unexplained hanging death of a leading Newmarket trainer's wife are distressed to have cold embers fanned to hurtful inaccurate
There was a large photograph of Nash, looking grim. Blindly angry I went up to my rooms and found the telephone ringing when I walked in. Before I could speak into the receiver, Nash's voice said, "I didn't say that, Thomas. "
"You wouldn't. " "I'll kill that son of a bitch Tyler. " "Leave him to O'Hara. " "Are we still going to Doncaster?" "We certainly are," I said. Anywhere but Newmarket, I thought. "Ready in half an hour?"
"I'll be down in the lobby. " I phoned O'Hara's mobile phone and reached only his message service. I said, "Read the Daily Drumbeat, page sixteen, feature column headed, 'Hot from the Stars. ' Nash and I are going to the sports. I'll have my mobile. Take Prozac. " Howard Tyler's phone rang and rang in his room-, unanswered. I showered in record time, put on Steward lunching clothes, and went down to ask questions of the helpful soul behind the reception desk.
"Mr. Tyler isn't here," she confirmed. "He left. "
"When did he leave?" "Actually," she said, "he picked up a newspaper from the desk here and went into the dining room to have breakfast, as he always does. It's so nice to have him here, and Mr. Rourke too we can hardly believe it... So Mr. Tyler hurried out of the dining room five minutes later, he didn't eat his breakfast, he went upstairs and came down with his suitcase and said he didn't know when he'd come back. " She looked worried. "I didn't ask him for payment. I hope I haven't done wrong, but I understood everything should be charged to the film company. "
"Don't worry about that," I reassured her. "Did Mr. Tyler say where he was going?" He hadn't of course. He'd been in a great hurry. The receptionist had asked him if he'd felt ill, but he hadn't answered. He'd taken the newspaper with him, but the staff had had another copy. They had all read the column. She'd thought it best to show it to Mr. Rourke. Her virtuousness nearly choked her. "What will happen, do you think?" Nash asked, ready for the races, listening to a repeat from the receptionist. "Short term, we've got Howard off our backs. " We went out to the Rolls and along to wh
"Saying I rue my involvement!" "Did you?" "Did I what?" "Say it. " "Shit, Thomas. I said I was sorry not to be staying home with my wife. And that was on day one. I don't in the least regret it now. " "She could have come with you. " He shrugged. We both knew why his wife had stayed at home: her insecurity in a four-months' pregnancy with complications. She'd been annoyed with him for agreeing to Newmarket. He'd made too public an apology.
"As for all that trash I was supposed to say about you personally... "Howard put his own words into your mouth," I said. "Forget it. "
The helicopter lifted off from the Newmarket grass and swung round northwest. However glibly I might say "forget it," I had felt uncomfortable suspicions that the parent movie Wscompany, our source of finance, would come ther thundering down like a posse to lynch me from e'd the nearest crossbeam. Any bad odor clinging to their investment called for dismissals to exorcise it. O'Hara might have to dump me: might even ash want to. eat Bye-bye career, I thought. It had been great while it lasted. I couldn't believe what was S. happening. ere Smart move on Howard's part to decamp out o
I accepted that in general the most disliked person in the making of any film was the director. The director required people to do things be they considered unnecessary/ridiculous/wrong. ay Directors (a) demanded too much from actors and (b) ignored their well-thought-out interpretations. Directors were never satisfied, wasted ad time on detail ' worked everyone to death, ignored S injured feelin s. made no allowance for technical 9 d difficulties, expected the impossible, screamed at de people. I accepted also on the other hand that a direcsay tor needed an overall vision of the w
"Thomas!" O'Hara's voice was loud with "Where are you?"
Nash could hear annoyance.
him shouting: he winced. "Doncaster racecourse. " "I've had Hollywood on the line. It's not yet five in the morning there but the company is already furious. Someone made a phone call and then sent a fax of the Drumbeat.
I said stupidly, "Afax?" 7"A fax," he confirmed.
"Who sent it?" "The mogul I talked to didn't say. " r I swallowed. My heart raced. The hand hold ing the instrument visibly trembled beside my eye. Calm down, I thought.
"Who did Tyler talk to?" O'Hara demanded furiously.
"I don't know. " "You don't know?"
"No. He was grumbling to everyone who would listen.
He may not have known he was spouting to a journalist-or to someone who knew a journalist. " "What does he say about it?" "The hotel says he blasted off the minute he saw the paper. No one knows where he's gone. "
"I tried his home number," O'Hara shouted. "They say he's in Newmarket. " "More likely the moon. " "The mogul I talked to is one of the very top guys, and he wants your head. " This was it, I thought numbly, and I couldn't think of anything to say. I needed an impassioned plea in mitigation. Drew a blank.
"Are you there, Thomas?" "Yes. 15 "He says you're fired. " I was silent.
"Hell's teeth, Thomas, defend yourself. "
"I warned Howard yesterday not to shoot his mouth off, but I think now that he'd already done it. "
"Two weeks ago he tried to get the moguls to fire you, if you remember. I pacified them then. But this!" Words failed him. I began finally to protest. "We're on target for time.
We're within budget. The company themselves insisted on story changes. I'm making a commercial motion picture, and it isn't true that there are rows and discord, except with Howard himself. " "What's he saying?" Nash demanded impatiently. "I'm sacked. "Nash snatched the phone out of my hand. "O'Hara? This is Nash. You tell those braindeads who are our masters that I did not say what the Drumbeat says I did. Your boy is doing an OK job on this movie and if you take him off it at this stage you will get a bummer of a film, and what's more, they can whistle for me to sign with them eve
"It never will.
"Bad reviews give me indigestion. " We walked with the patient official across the track and up to the Stewards' privacy. Heads turned sharply all the way as racegoer after racegoer did a double take at the sight of Nash. We had asked for no advance publicity-the parent film company was security hyper-conscious-so that only the top echelon knew whom to expect. I was glad, I found, to have an anonymous face. They hadn't waited lunch. Even for megastars, racing timetables couldn't be changed. About twenty Stewards and friends were at their roast beef and suitable Yorkshire pudding. F
I'd metaphorically approached him on my knees; and I'd found, not the temperamental perfectionist I'd been ominously told to expect, but essentially the man I'd seen him play over and over again on the screen, a man, whatever the role or the make-up, of sane intelligence, mentally tough.
I forlornly hoped that the Doncaster Stewards and their wives and other guests weren't avid readers of Drumbeat's "Hot from the Stars," and with relief I saw that the two papers most in evidence were the Racing Gazette and the Daily Cable, both of them lying open at the obituary page for Valentine. Nash and I shook a fair number of hands and were seated in prestigious places, and while Nash asked a dumbstruck waitress for fizzy mineral water, nearly causing her to faint from her proximity to the sexiest eyes in screendom, I read both farewells to Valentine, and found they'd done the
We're being bad-mouthed by a spiteful little man. I did not say what I am reported to have said, and I have complete confidence in Thomas here. I shall complain to the paper and demand they print a retraction. " "Sue them,"
someone said.
"Perhaps I will. "
"And as for you, Thomas," said one of the d Stewards whom I knew personally, '!you must n definitely sue. "
I said, "I'm not sure that I can. " "Of course you can!"
He stabbed at the pages with a forefinger. "This is defamatory in the d extreme. "
I said, "It's difficult to sue anyone for asking questions.
"What?"
"Those defamations are written carefully in the form of questions. The question marks tend to take the certainty out of the slurs. " a "I don't believe it!"
I A head further along the large table was gravely nodding.
"A scurrilous suggestion, if it is expressed as a question, may or may not be considered libel. There are gray areas. "
My Steward friend said blankly, "That's not justice! 5'"It's the law. " "You knew that,"
Nash said to me. Mm. "Did Howard know it?" "Whoever wrote that piece certainly did. " Nash said, "Shit!" and not a single face objected. "What Nash really needs," I said, "is a reliable tip for the Lincoln. " They laughed and with relief turned to the serious business of the day. I half heard the knowledgeable form-talk and thought that five hours could be a long torture. Barely forty minutes of it had so far passed. My pulse still raced 97 71 from anxiety. My whole professional life probably hung on whether the moguls who would be bidden to the breakfast table were putting in a goo
"I'm a grown boy, you know. " Grinning, I turned away, walked to the Tote, and bet twenty pounds to win on the horse called Wasp. Nash, waiting for me to retrieve him, returned with me to the Stewards' room, from where we watched Wasp finish an unobtrusive fifth. "I owe you," Nash said. "Pick me one yourself for the next race. " The races as always were being shown on closed-circuit television on sets throughout the 98bars and the grandstands. A set in the Stewards' room was busy with a replay of the just-finished race, Wasp still finishing fifth, the jockey busy to the end. I star
"Television," I said. Nash said ironically-, "It's been around a while, you know. " "Yes, but... " I picked up a copy of the Racing Gazette that was lying on the table and turned from Valentine's obituary to the pages laying out the Doncaster program. Television coverage of the day's sport, I saw, was, as I'd hoped, by courtesy of a commercial station that provided full day-by-day racing for grateful millions. For the big-race opening of the Flat season, they would be there in force. "Thomas," Nash repeated. "Er... " I said. "How badly do you want to save our film? Or, in fact
He stared. I said, "What if you could say on television that we@re not making a bummer of a movie? Would you want to do it?" "Sure, " he said ca, Ay, "but it wouldn't reach every reader of the Drumbeat. " "No. But what if O'Hara could get the interview transmitted to Hollywood? How about the moguls seeing it at breakfast? Your own face on 99the screen might tip things where O'Hara's assurances might not. Only... how do you feel about trying?"
"Hell, Thomas, get on with it. " I went out onto the viewing balcony and pressed the buttons to get O'Hara; and let me not get his message service, I prayed. He answered immediately himself, as if waiting for calls. "It's Thomas," I said. "It's too early to hear from Hollywood. " "No. It's something else. " I told him what I'd suggested to Nash, and he put his finger at once on the snags. "First of all," he said doubtfully, "you'd have to get the TV company to interview Nash. " "I could do that.
It's getting the interview onto the screen in the Hollywood conference room that I'm not sure of Live pictures get transmitted regularly from England to the States, but I don't know the pathways. If we could get to an L. A. station we could have a tape rushed round for our moguls to play on a VCR... " "Thomas, stop. I can fix the L. A. end. The transmission from England... " he paused, sucking his teeth. "What station are we talking about?" I told him.
"The people they'll have here are an outside broadcast unit. They'll have engineers and camera crews and a producer or two and three or four interviewers and commentators, but they won't have the authority or the equipment to transmit overseas. The OK would have to come from their headquarters, which are in London.
They'll have Doncaster races on their screen there. They can transmit to anywhere. Their number will be in the phone book... " "And you need me to use my clout. " He sounded resigned, seeing difficulties. "Urn," I said, "if you want Unstable Times to reach the theaters, it might be worth trying. I mean, it's your picture too, you know. Your head on the block for engaging me. " "I see that. " He paused.
"All right, I'll start. It's a hell of a long shot. "
"They've been known to win. " "Is Nash with you?"
"Five paces away. " "Get him, would you?" Nash came outside and took the phone. "I'll do the interview. Thomas says he can fix it, no problem. " He listened. "Yeah. Yeah.
If he says he can, I guess he can. He doesn't promise what he can't deliver. O'Hara, you get off your ass and put Thomas and me into that meeting. It's damn stupid to let that son-of-a-bitch Tyler sink the ship. " He listened again, then said, "Get it done, O'Hara. Hang the expense.
I'll not be beaten by that scribbler. " I listened in awe to the switched-on power of the ultimate green light and humbly thanked the fates that he saw me as an ally, not villain. He disconnected, handed the phone back to me, and said, "Where do we find our interviewer?" "Follow me. " I tried to make it sound lighthearted, but I was no great actor. Nash silently came with me down to the unsaddling enclosure, from where the runners of the just-run race had already departed. "Do you know who you are looking for?" he asked, as I turned my head one way and another. "Can't you ask?"
"I don't need to," I said, conscious, even if Nash ignored it, of everyone looking at him. "This television company travels with a race-caller, a paddock commentator who talks about the runners for the next race, and someone who interviews the winning jockeys and trainers afterward, and it's him I'm looking for... and I know him. "
"That's something. " "And there he is," I said, spotting him. "Coming?" I slid then between the groups of people chatting in the railed area outside the weighing room, slid where the groups parted like the Red Sea to clear a path for Nash. My acquaintance the interviewer began to say hello to me, saw who I was with, and ended with his mouth open. "Nash," I introduced, "this is Greg Compass: Greg... Nash Rourke. " Greg came to his senses like any seasoned television performer should and with genuine welcome shook the hand that had fired a hundred harmless bullets. "He's here to se
Nash exclaimed. "Jump jockeys are mostly taller. Ex-jump jockeys get to be racing commentators or journalists, things like that. Live it first. Talk about it after. " He was comically self-deprecating, though in fact he'd been a top career jockey, not an amateur like me. He was forty, slender, striking, stylish. He took a breath. "Well... "
"You can certainly say I'm here," Nash assured him.
"Great... um... " He hesitated. "Ask him," I said, half smiling. Greg glanced at me and back to Nash. "I suppose... I couldn't get you in front of my camera?"
Nash gave me a dry sideways look and in his best slay-them gravelly bass said that he saw no reason why not. "I did hear you were in Newmarket, making a film," Greg said. "I suppose I can say so?" "Sure. Thomas is directing it. "
"Yes. Word gets around. " I pulled a folded Drumbeat page from my pocket and handed it to Greg. "If you'll let him," I said, "Nash would very briefly like to contradict what's written in that 'Hot from the Stars' column. "
Greg read it through quickly, his expression darkening from simple curiosity to indignation. "Difficult to sue," he exclaimed. "It's all questions. Is it true? "It's true the film story is different from the book," I said. Nash assured him, "I didn't say those things and I don't think them. The film is going well. All I'd like to say, if you'll let me, is that one shouldn't believe newspapers. "
"Thomas?" Greg raised his eyebrows at me. "You're using me, aren't you?" "Yes. But that column's assassinating me. If Nash can say on screen that it's not true, we can beam him to the moneymen in Hollywood and hope to prevent them from taking the column seriously. " He thought it over. He sighed. "All right, then-, but very casual, OK? I'll put you both together in shot. " "Innocence by association," I said gratefully. "Always a bright boy. " He looked at his watch. "How about after the Lincoln? An hour from now.
After I've talked to the winning trainer and jockey and the owners, if they're here. We could slot it in at that point.
I'll tell my producer. Thomas, you remember where the camera is? Come there after the Lincoln. And Thomas, you owe me. 55 "Two seats for the premier," I said. "Without you there may not be one. " "Four seats. " "A whole row," I said.
"Done. " Greg looked at Nash. "What is this over-hyped buffoon of an ineffectual bullyboy really like as a director?" "Worse," Nash said.
We did the interview, Nash and I side by side. Greg introduced us to the viewers, asked if Nash had backed the winner of the Lincoln-Gallico congratulated him, and said he hoped Nash was enjoying his visit to Britain. Nash said, "I'm making a film here. Very enjoyable. " He nodded affably. He added a few details casually, as Greg had wanted, but left no listeners in doubt that the racing film we were making in Newmarket was going well. "Didn't I read an uncomplimentary report. ?" Greg prompted quizzically.
"Yes," Nash agreed, nodding. "Words were put into my mouth that I never said. So what else is new? Never believe newspapers. " "You're playing a trainer, aren't you?" Greg asked the questions we had asked him to ask as if he'd just that minute thought of them. "How's it going with the riding?" "I can sit on a horse," Nash smiled. "I can't ride like Thomas. " "Do you ride in the film?" Greg asked me helpfully. "No, he doesn't," Nash said, "but he takes a horse out on the Heath to gallop it sometimes... Still, I can beat him at golf. " The affection in his voice said more than a th
O'Hara had watched the interview in the television company's headquarters in London, and he buzzed my telephone before I'd found a quiet spot for reaching him.
"Brilliant!" he said, almost laughing. "Brotherly love all over the screen. Not a dry eye in the house. " "Will it work?" "Of course it will work. " "Will it get to the meeting in time?" "Cancel the anxiety, Thomas. The people here have been real helpful. Their fee would launch a Hubble telescope, but the moguls will see the show with their Wheaties. " "Thanks, O'Hara. " "Give me Nash. " I handed the phone over and watched Nash deliver a series of nods and yeses. "Yes, of course he suggested my lines," Nash said, "and he got that pal of his to ask the right questions. How? Hell know
with still no further word from O'Hara. After breakfast time in Los Angeles. What were the moguls doing? "Stop biting your nails," Nash said. His chauffeured Rolls took us back to Bedford Lodge, where Nash suggested I join him in his rooms so that we might both hear what O'Hara might report. 'Me film company had engaged four comfortable suites in the hotel; the best for Nash, one for Silva, one for me, and one (often empty) for O'Hara or other visiting mogul. Rooms in the hotel were provided for Moncrieff and for Howard; the rest of the approximately sixty people working on the film
Actors, lengthily immobile, grew tired, while Moncrieff and I did not. Nash sank into his favorite armchair and for about the four hundredth time looked at his watch. Five hours had gone. Almost six. I'd spent a great deal of the time sweating. My mobile phone buzzed. My mouth went dry.
Buzz, buzz. "Answer it!" Nash commanded crossly, seeing my reluctance. I said, "Hello. " More of a croak.
"Thomas?" O'Hara said. "You're not fired. "Silence.
"Thomas? Did you hear? Get on with the film. "CCI...
er...
"For hell's sake! Is Nash there?" I handed the phone to the green light, whose reaction to the news was a robust "I should damn well think so. Yes, of course he's been worried, he's only human. " He gave me the phone back.
O'Hara said, "There are strings attached. I have to spend more time in Newmarket supervising you. One of the big boys is coming to visit, in order to be satisfied that their money is being spent reasonably. They waffled on for far too long about who they could put in to direct in your place. But in the end your television clip did the trick.
Nash convinced them. They still think he can do no wrong.
If Nash is happy, they'll keep you on. " "Thanks. "
"I'm coming back to Newmarket tomorrow. It's a goddam nuisance as I was planning to fly to L. A, but there it is. Like you said, it's my head r on the block alongside yours. What will you be s doing tomorrow morning?" "Horses galloping on the Heath. " a "And Nash?"
"Sitting on a horse, watching. In the afternoon, t we ferry the horses to Huntingdon racecourse. Monday we set up and rehearse the crowd scenes 9 at the races... Some of the crews are moving to motels around Huntingdon, but Nash and I, and a few others, are staying in our rooms here in Newmarket. " "How far is it?" e "Only about thirty-eight miles. Where do you want to sleep?"
"Newmarket. " No hesitation. "Get yourself a driver, Thomas.
I don't want you falling asleep at the wheel with those long hours you work. " "I like to drive myself, and it's not very far. " "Get a driver. " It was an order. I said OK. I was grateful to be still employed. He said, "See you, fellow, and I said, "Thanks, O'Hara. " And he left one further report, "Howard will have his claws well clipped.
Stupid son of a bitch. " "There you go," Nash said, smiling, when I switched the phone off. "Drink? Eat with me, why not?" Nash had most of his meals alone upstairs, brought by room service. Unlike most actors he had a solitary streak to which, because of his wife's absence, he had given free rein. Surprised 109 Owl therefore, but pleased not to be dining alone myself, I stayed for soup, lamb, and claret, and a step into a positive friendship that I wouldn't, a couple of weeks earlier, have thought likely. Relaxed after the day's troubles I decided to make a brief call on Dorothea,
A policemen barred my attempt to walk up the concrete path.
"What happened?" I asked. "Clear the path, please sir.
" He was young, big, businesslike, and unsympathetic with unknown members of the public. He had kept-and was keeping-a small crowd of onlookers from stepping too close to the goings-on. I tried again. "The people who live here are my friends. " "Stand back, if you please, sir. " He scarcely looked at me, unintentionally impressive, a large physical barrier that I had no inclination to fight. I retreated through the curious crowd and from behind them used my constant companion the portable telephone to ring Dorothea's number. After what seemed a very long time a distressed woman's vo
"Dorothea?" I said. "It's Thomas. "' d a "Oh. Oh no, I'm Betty. Where are you, a Thomas? Can you come?" I explained I was outside but obstructed, and to in a few seconds she was hurrying down the path ed to collect me. The large policeman stepped aside, shrugging, not caring one way or the other, and e I hastened with Betty toward the front door. "What's happened?" I asked her. e.
"Someone broke in. It's terrible... they've 9nearly killed Dorothea... how could they? Dr. Gill has just come and the police too and there's so much blood and they're taking photographs and it's all unbelievable... " We went into the house which looked inside as if it had been swept through by a tornado.
Valentine's bedroom by the front door had been wrecked: drawers were upturned on the floor, their contents scattered. The wardrobe stood open, empty. Pictures had been torn from the walls, their frames smashed. Mattress and s pillows were ripped, guts spilling. "It's all like this," Betty wailed. "Even the bathrooms and the kitchen. I must go back to y Dorothea... I'm afraid she'll die... "
She left me and vanished into Dorothea's bed room, where I with hesitation followed, stepping e round a wide drying sea of blood in the hall. I needn't have felt I might be intruding: the room was full of people. Robbie Gill obstructed my view of most of Dorothea, who was lying unspeaking but in shoes and stockings on the sliced ruins of her bed. Two ambulancemen filled half the available space with a stretcher on wheels.
A uniformed policewoman and a photographer were busy. Betty threaded a way into the throng, beckoning me to follow.
Robbie Gill glanced up, saw me, nodded recognition, and took a pace back with the result that I saw all of Dorothea, and became sickened and overwhelmingly angry. She was bleeding, swollen, and unconscious, with great gashes in the flesh of her cheek and forehead and a red mess where her mouth was. "Her right arm's broken," Robbie Gill dictated to the note-taking policewoman. "She has internal injuries. He stopped. Even for a doctor, it was too much. Dorothea's clothes were ripped open, her old breasts and stomach bare, two slashed wounds on her body bleeding copiously, one so deep
Her anxiety shook her. "She won't die, not like this. How could anyone do this?" I had imagined and I had filmed scenes as bad or worse, but the blood we'd used had often been lipstick dissolved in oil-to give it viscosity-and intestines made of inflated sausage skin, and sweat sprayed through an atomizer onto gray grease-painted faces. More people came, apparently plain-clothes policemen. Betty and I retreated to Dorothea's sitting room where again, comprehensive chaos paralyzed thought. "How could anyone do this?" Betty repeated numbly. " Wl'hy would anyone do it?"
"Did she have anything valuable?" I asked. "Of course she didn't. Just her little knickknacks. Trinkets and souvenirs. They've even torn the photo of her and Bill's wedding. How could they?" She picked up the ruins of a photo frame, crying for her friend's pain. "And her pretty pink vase... it's in splinters. She loved that vase. " I stared at the pink pieces, and then went down on one knee and fruitlessly searched the carpet around them. I've put the key in the pink vase in my sitting room. Dorothea's voice spoke clearly in my memory. The key of Valentine's study, in safekeeping
He went home yesterday. He doesn't know... And I don't know his number... " She swayed. "I can't bear it. " "Don't worry," I said. "Sit down. I'll find his number. I'll get you some tea. Where's your husband?" "It's his darts night... at the pub. " "Which pub?" "Oh dear...
The Dragon. " First things first, I thought, heading for the kitchen. Hot sweet tea prevented a lot of breakdowns from shock. No authority figure stopped me-, though the little house seemed crowded with them. I took the cup and saucer to Betty, who held them clattering in both hands as she sat in Valentine's room.
In the old man's fortunately unshredded phone book I looked up The Dragon's number and spoiled Betty's husband's treble twenty by asking him to come home quickly. Then I searched around for Paul's number and ran it to earth on the notepad attached to the extension phone in the kitchen. Paul answered, and I listened to his obnoxious voice with relief If he were at home in Surrey he couldn't have attacked his mother a hundred miles away in Newmarket, not with her wounds so recent and bleeding. Even if she lived, she couldn't have mentally recovered from being attacked by her own son.
Hold on for a bit and I'll get Dr. Gill to talk to you. "
"Useless man!" "Stay on the line," I said. "Wait. " I left the kitchen, found the plain-clothes men starting to blow dust on things for fingerprints and hovered until Dorothea's door opened to let out the policewoman, who was beckoning to the men with the stretcher. I said to her, "Mrs. Pannier's son is on the telephone. Please can Dr. Gill talk to him?" She looked at me vaguely and retreated into Dorothea's room with the ambulance people, but it seemed that she did pass on the message because presently Robbie Gill opened the bedroom door again and asked me if Paul were actually on
I relayed the message to Paul. He was impatiently displeased. I told him to wait and left him. Angry and anxious about Dorothea, and concerned about the missing books, I found reassuring Paul impossible. I couldn't even be decently sympathetic. I was sure he wouldn't give the books back unless I took him to court, and even then I had no list of what I'd lost. Robbie Gill accompanied Dorothea on the rolling stretcher right out to the ambulance, solicitously making sure she was gently treated. Then, looking stern, he came back into the house, strode down the hall to where I waited by
"Mr. Pannier," Robbie said forcefully, "your mother has been beaten about the head. She's unconscious from those blows. Her right arm is broken. In addition, she has knife wounds to her body. I am sending her to Cambridge... " he named the hospital "... where she will receive the best attention. I cannot tell you whether or not she will survive. " He listened with disgust to Paul's reply. "No, she was not sexually assaulted. I have done everything possible. I suggest you bedcheck with the hospital later. It is now out of were my hands. " He thrust the receiver back into its cr
I asked. ipaHe shrugged wearily, his expression relaxing.
"I don't know. She put up a fight, I should think. and Tried to defend herself with her arm. It's odd.. ind.
it's almost as if she had two assailants... one be that hit her arm and her head with something hard and jagged, and one that used a knife. Or art, perhaps there was only one assailant, but with two weapons. " he "It's a useless question," I said, "but why ,e, attack her?" d. "A dear good old lady! The world's grown. ie vicious. Old ladies get attacked. I detest that son @d of hers. I shouldn't say that. Pay no attention. He al wanted to know if she'd been raped. "
"He's the ultimate four-letter case. "'d "The police want to know why the whole house is in this state. " He waved an arm at the devastar tion around. "How do I know?
They weren't s poor, they weren't rich. Poor old bodies.
They S relied on you lately, you know. They loved you, in a way. Pity you weren't their son. "
"Valentine was part of my childhood. "
"Yes. He told me. " "Well... what happens next?" "The police are talking about attempted murder, because of the knife wounds. But... I don't know..
"What?" I prompted, as he hesitated. "It may be fanciful... I don't know if I'll say it to the police... but it would have taken so little to finish her off. just one stab in the right place. " He paused. "You saw her, didn't you?" "Yes, when you moved back from her bed. " He nodded. "I thought so. You saw those slashes. Two of them, one relatively superficial, one very deep. The first one cut her clothes open. Why wasn't there a third? You know what I think? I think it was an aborted murder. I think he changed his mind. "I stared. "You can call me crazy," he said. "No, I thin
"Frankly," he said dispiritedly, "quite a lot. Concussion's unpredictable. I don't think she has intracranial bleeding, but I can't be sure. But that abdominal wound... it's bad... it depends on infection... and she's eighty next month... but she's well in herself... healthy for her age, I mean. I've grown fond of them both, though I used to fight with Valentine on the surface, obstinate old cuss. " I thought Robbie Gill a good doctor, and I said so. He brushed off my words.
"Can I ask you something?" I said. "Of course. "
"Well... how long ago was Dorothea attacked?" "How long ago?" "Yes. I mean, was she attacked before the trashing of the house? All this damage must have taken quite a while to achieve. Or had she been out, and came back at the wrong moment? Or did someone try to beat some information out of her and go too far, and then pull the place apart looking for whatever he wanted?" "Hey, slow down," he protested. "You think like a policeman. " Like a film maker, I thought. I said again, "How long since she was attacked? "He pursed his lips. "The house was trashed first. We digested it in s
Summoned by Ed on my say-so, all available crews, technicians, wardrobe people, and actors (except Nash) gathered in the stable yard at dawn on Sunday morning. I mounted a wooden chair to address them, and in the fresh ever-moving East Anglian air wondered how Shakespeare could have expected Henry V's words before Agincourt to be heard by any but the nearest knights, given the clinking noises of armor on horseback and the absence of microphones. I at least had a megaphone, equipment perhaps over-familiar to my audience. "I expect," I said loudly, when movement in the company had di
Fortunately our producer assured them that you are all doing a very good job here. Some 120of you may like it, some may not, but Hollywood has confirmed that I continue to direct. Nash Rourke has told them he is in favor of this. In consequence, nothing has changed. Vvlhether or not you agree with the Drumbeat's assessment of my character, if you want to continue to be -employed on this enterprise, you will please make a private commitment to give this film your best shot. For all our sakes, the creation of a wellmade, visually exciting commercial motion picture should take priority
I lowered the megaphone, stepped off the chair, and turned my back to the company to join Moncrieff, who had been standing behind me in support.
"Socked it to them," he approved with irony. "We could make a film of making this film. " "Or a book," I said. Our female star, Silva Shawn, loped across the stable yard to join us. As usual when not dressed in character she wore flapping dark voluminous layers of clothes reaching to her ankles, with black Doc Marten boots below and a charcoal hat above, a hat that looked like a soft collapsed topper sitting on her eyebrows. She walked with long strides and arrived at most meetings with her shapely chin thrust forward in the body language of belittle-me-if-you-dare. O'Hara had stro
Silva, without self-consciousness ("bodies are natural") had allowed delicately lit shots of her nudity in the bathroom. The rushes had quickened many pulses, including my own. Whether she chose to admit it or not, there was a sensual quality in Silva's acting diametrically opposite to her chosen off-screen stance. She had been away from Newmarket for the past week fulfilling an unbreakable commitment somewhere else, but was due to ride a horse on the Heath that morning, making use of an equestrian skill she was proud of. As happened in almost all films, we were not shooting the sce
"He's fast," I said, nodding. n "And good-looking?"
"Of course. " "And well-trained?"
"I've been riding him myself. "
Without comment she transferred her nearuniversal disapproval to Moncrieff, whom she considered a male chauvinist despite his spectacular ability to make even ugly women look beautiful on screen. After so many years spent studying female curves one might have expected Moncrieff to have grown an impervious skin, but every time we'd worked together he had fallen in love with the leading lady, and Silva looked like being no exception.
"Platonic," I'd advised him. "Strictly hands off.
OK?" "She needs me," he'd pleaded.
"Light her and leave her. " "Such cheekbones!" Silva had fortunately so far given him the reverse of encouragement. I'd noticed from the first day I met her that she looked with more favor on men with suits, ties, short haircuts, and cleanshaven faces, an inclination that should ensure the comparative invisibility of straggle-bearded, shambling, sloppily dressed Moncrieff. "I think," I said to Silva politely, "they're expecting you in make-up. She demanded, "Are you telling me I'm late?" I shook my head. "The meeting has set everyone back. But I hope to finish the Heath scenes by l
Dangerous I said.
Nash arrived, yawning in his Rolls, and went into the house to the wardrobe and make-up departments. He was followed into the stable yard almost immediately by a man of very similar build, riding a bicycle which braked hard with a spraying of gravel beside Moncrieff and me. "Morning," the newcomer said briefly, dismounting. No deference in sight. "Good morning, Ivan," I answered. "Are we still in business?" "You're late," I said. He rightly took the comment as disapproval and wordlessly retreated, with his bicycle, into the house. "I don't like him,"
Moncrieff said. "Saucy bugger. "Never mind. Make him look like St. George, a shining champion. " Nash himself had great presence just sitting on a horse but any speed faster than a walk revealed deficiencies, so for distance shots of him trotting or cantering we were using a stuntman, Ivan, instead. Ivan made a living riding in front of cameras and had picked up a truculent manner that would prevent his ever getting further in his profession. He had a habit, I'd been told, of holding forth in pubs about how close he was to Nash Rourke, for whom he had doubled on an earlier picture.
Trainers in many other racing centers drove out in Land Rovers to watch their horses work, but on Newmarket's mainly roadless Heath it was still the norm to oversee everything from horseback, and there was no doubt Nash looked more imposing in the saddle than operating a four-wheel drive. The mega-star's sex appeal brought in the pennies. My job was to make it powerful while looking natural, which in Nash's case wasn't hard. Moncrieff was driven off up one of the few roads in a camera truck, with a second crew following, to positions we'd agreed the previous evening. The string of h
I'd asked him particularly not to waste the precious light slot by getting it wrong. He'd been insulted that I should expect him to get it wrong. "Don't then," I said. I joined Moncrieff by the truck positioned halfway up the hill, and breathed sighs of relief when Ivan obliged us with a beautifully ridden canter up the hill, stopping and turning at the right place, horse and rider stark and splendidly black against a halo of gold. "Holy Moses,"
Moncrieff said, intently looking through the lens. "It's a beaut. " He ran a long fifteen seconds' worth before cutting. "Again?" I suggested. Moncrieff checked that the film had run properly through the camera gate and shook his head. "It was about perfect. " "Great. Print.
Let's reload fresh stock for the next long shot of the rest of the horses. "
I called down to Ed on our walkie-talkie system, told him to stick to schedule, had the shot numbered as always by the clapper board operator, and watched while the string was filmed streaming uphill at a fast canter. I called up the out-of-sight camera over the brow of the hill to start rolling, but perfection was an elusive quality and it was only after I'd ridden over the hill myself to organize things from up there, only after some huffing and puffing and two retakes, that I got my flourish of trumpets. With the crowd shots at last in the can everyone on horseback milled around
"That madman," he said furiously, "came at me with a knife!" "He can't have done. " "Look, then. " He raised his left arm so that I could see his jacket, the tweed coat identical to that usually worn in the training scenes by Nash. At about waist level the cloth was cut open for seven or eight inches from front to back. "I'm telling you!" Ivan was rigid with fear on top of indignation. "He had a knife.
" Convinced and enormously alarmed I glanced instinctively to find the horse I'd been riding, but he was being led around a good way off. Nearest in the matter of transport stood one of the camera trucks, though pointing in the wrong direction. I scrambled behind its steering wheel, made a stunt-worthy three-point turn, and raced across the turf in the direction of Newmarket, coming into view of the fleeing horseman in the distance as soon as I was over the hilltop. He was too far ahead for me to have a realistic chance of catching up with him. Over grass, a horse was as fast as the
It crossed my mind that I should perhaps try to catch him on film, but the camera on the truck was bolted to face backward, as normally it was driven along in front of its subject, filming advancing cars, people, or horses. If I stopped to turn the truck and change places to operate the -camera my quarry would be too far off even for blowups, if not entirely out of sight. I was just about to give up when the distant horse was suddenly and violently reined to a halt, the rider reversing his direction and starting back toward me. The truck's engine raced. His head came up. He seemed t
If I were filming it... why might he stop?
Because he'd dropped something. The uphill stretch of well-grassed exercise ground was as wide as an airport runway and almost as long. I couldn't be sure I was in the right place. If the rider had dropped something small, I could search all day. If he had dropped something insignificant, I wouldn't see any importance in anything I might come across. Yet he had stopped. I took a few irresolute strides. There was simply too much space.
Grass all round; miles of it. I looked up the hill, to the brow, and saw all the film horses and riders standing there, like Indians appearing on the skyline in an old pioneer movie. The sun was rising behind them. I'd dropped my walkie-talkie up there in my hurry. I decided to drive the truck back up the hill, having left a mark where I was currently standing, and get all the lads to walk down in that strung-out sideways fashion, to see if they could find anything odd on the ground. I marked the spot by taking off my light blue sweater and dropping it in a heap: anything smaller co
The escaping rider had dropped his knife.
No wonder he'd tried to retrieve it. I stared down at the thing which lay on the turf in front of my toes, and felt both awed and repelled. It was no ordinary knife. It had a wide double-edged blade about eight inches long, joined to a handle consisting of a bar with four finger holes like substantial rings attached to one side of it. The blade was steel and the grip yellowish, like dulled brass. Overall the knife, about a foot long, was thick, strong, frightening, and infinitely deadly. I looked up the hill.
The lads still stood there, awaiting instructions. One behaves as one is, I suppose. I returned to the truck, climbed into it, and drove it round until it stood over the knife, so that no one could pick up that weapon or dislodge it; so that no horse could step on it and get cut. Then'I hopped into the back of the truck, set the camera rolling, and filmed the line of horsemen standing black against the risen sun. Even though I was again staring unemployment in its implacable face, it seemed a shame to waste such a shot.
I rearranged the day. Everyone returned to the stable yard except Moncrieff, whom I left stationed behind the steering wheel of the camera truck with strict instructions not to move the wheels even if it were demanded of him by irate men whose job it was to keep vehicles off the Heath. I had transgressed appallingly, I told him, by driving on the hallowed gallops. He was not to budge the truck an inch. "Why not?" I explained why not. "Knife?" he said disbelievingly. "Someone really did mean harm to Nash. " "Impossible!" Moncrieff exclaimed, though more in protest than disbelief "Ten
I wondered how odd it would strike the force eventually to have been called to two knife incidents within twenty-four hours, however unconnected the events might appear. I wondered if they would realize I'd been on the scene of both. Nash, beseeched by Ed, came out of the house in costume and make-up and stood side by side with Ivan. The policemen looked from one to the other and came, as we all had, to the only possible conclusion. In carefully matched riding breeches, tweed jacket, and large buckled crash helmet, they looked from ten paces identical. Only the 132slash along the si
I said to Nash, "This may put paid to the film. "No one is hurt. " "Someone was out to get you. " "They didn't manage it," he said. "You're pretty calm. " "Thomas, I've lived through years of danger of this sort. We all do.
The world's full of crazy fanatics. If you let it worry you, you'd never go out. " He looked across to where the police were writing down what the lads were telling them.
"Are we going on with today's work?"I hesitated. "How will Silva react?" "Tough. I smothered a smile.
"Do you want to come out on the Heath and see what someone intended to stick into you? And do you realize that from now on you have to have a bodyguard?" "No. I never have a bodyguard. " "No bodyguard, no film. Very likely, no film anyway, once Hollywood gets to hear of this. " He looked at his watch. "It's the middle of the night over there. " "You'll go on, then?" "Yes, I will. "
"In that case, as soon as we can," I said gratefully.
Ed came across and said the police wanted to speak to the person really in charge. I went over; they were both older than I and seemed to be looking around for a father figure to relate to. I was not, it appeared, their idea of authority. O'Hara would have fitted their bill.
The lads had told them that an extra horseman had joined their group while they were haphazardly circling after their third canter over the hill. They'd thought nothing much of it, as with film making the normal routine of training-stable life was not adhered to. The newcomer, dressed in jeans, anorak, and crash helmet, had blended in with themselves. It was only when Ivan's horse had reared away, and Ivan himself had shouted and fallen off, that they'd thought anything was wrong. No one seemed to have seen the slash of the blade. They couldn't do much toward describing the extra ma
We drove up the road to get as near as possible to the camera truck which still stuck out like an illegal sore thumb. Thanks only to its being Sunday, I guessed, no groundsmen were hopping up and down in rage. Leading the police vehicle, I took Nash with me in my car, breaking all the film company 5 s rigid insurance instructions. What with one thing and another, who cared? Moncrieff backed the camera truck ten feet. The police peered in silence at the revealed peril. Moncrieff looked shocked. Nash grew still.
"He dropped it," I explained. "He turned to come back for it. Then he saw me chasing him and decided on flight. "
Nash said, "He lunged at Ivan with that?" I nodded. "You'll have a bodyguard from now on. He looked at me and made no further protest. One of the policemen produced a large paper bag and with care not to smudge possible fingerprints lifted the knife from the grass. "There weren't any touts," I remarked.
"What?" asked Nash. "Every day except Sunday there are watchers down there on the edge of the town, with binoculars. " I pointed. "Information is their trade. They know every horse on the Heath. They pass titbits of training progress to newspapermen and to bookmakers. If they'd only been here today, our knifeman wouldn't have been able to vanish so easily. " One of the policemen nodded. "So who knew, sir, that Mr. Rourke would be out here this Sunday morning?"
135"About sixty people," I said. "Everyone working on the film knows the shooting schedule a couple of days in advance. " I paused. "There were a few people out watching, as there always are with film making, but we have staff moving them away as far as possible if we don't want them in shot. Then, too, we started work today before sunrise. "
I looked round the Heath. Despite our activity, few people were about. Cars went past us on the road without slowing.
The Heath looked wide and peaceful, the last place for death. As Nash had pointed out, no one had been hurt. The police took their notes, the knife, and their possible theories back into Newmarket, and, with a feeling of imminent doom sitting like vultures on our shoulders, I summoned the camera crews back to work and made the magical initial meeting of Nash and Silva come to life. It was nearly three in the afternoon by the time we'd finished on the Heath. Just as I returned to the stables, four large motor horsevans had arrived to transport to Huntingdon racecourse all the horses,
"Thomas. I'm not talking about goddam Huntingdon. It's on the car radio that some maniac attacked Nash with a knife.
What in buggery happened?" I tried to tell him but he was too agitated to listen. "Where's Nash?" he demanded.
"In the house getting his make-up off. " He strode impatiently away and through the house's rear door, leaving me to restart the transportation and set the wagon train rolling, even though the pioneers no longer sang. Moncrieff was supposed to be having a rare afternoon off. I told him he deserved it and to disappear, which he rapidly did, hoping O'Hara wouldn't reappear too soon. Alone for a change, I leaned against the bottom half of a stable door, listening to the unaccustomed silence and thinking of knives. Valentine's old voice murmured in my head... I left the knife with De
"In this case," O'Hara told him firmly, 'you said, if I remember, that if they sacked Thomas they sacked you too. "
"Yeah. Crazy. " O'Hara nodded. "Anyway, I'll be plugging the line that the attack on the stuntman is, positive publicity, not bad. By the time this movie gets to distribution, the public will be fired up to see it. " He sounded, I thought, as though he had had to convince himself first, but I was certainly not going to argue. I asked instead, "Do you need me around, then, for the next several hours?" "I guess not. " He sounded doubtful, stifling curiosity. "Late Sunday afternoon," I explained, "is a fairly mellow time for surprise calls on farmers. "
O'Hara worked it out. "Jackson Wells!" "Right. " I turned to Nash. "Do you want to meet the man you're playing?" "No, I do not," he said positively. "I do not want to pick up the crusty mannerisms of some bitter old grouch. " As I didn't want him to either, I felt relieved rather than regretful. I said, "I'll be back by ten this evening. I've a meeting scheduled then with Moncrieff and Ziggy Keene. "
"Ziggy who?" Nash asked. "Stuntman," I said. "No one better on a horse. "Better than Ivan?" I smiled. "He costs ten times as much and he's worth twenty. "
Bousiness?" O'Hara asked.
I nodded. "What beach business?"
Nash wanted to know. the "Don't ask," O'Hara told him humorously. tive "Our boy has visions. Sometimes they work. " 3 to "What vision?" Nash asked me. it. ' "He can't tell you," O'Hara answered for me. tad "But when he sees it, so will we. " Nash sighed. O'Hara went on, "Talking of i seeing, when will today's dailies be ready?" "Tomorrow morning, as usual.. " I assured him. "When the van comes back. " "Good. We were sending our exposed film to London a every day by courier, to have it processed there overnight in a laboratory specializing in Technicolor. The film traveled each way
I set off westward from Newmarket with only a vague idea of where I was headed and an even vaguer idea of what I would say when I got there. Perhaps postponing the moment, but anyway because the city lay on my route, I drove first into Cambridge and stopped at the hospital housing Dorothea.
Enquiries on the telephone had produced merely "she's comfortable" reports, which could mean anything from near death to doped to the eyeballs, and, predictably, my arrival at the nurses' desk gained me no access to their patient. "Sorry, no visitors. " Nothing would budge them. Positively no visitors, except for her son. I could probably speak to him, if I liked. "Is he here?" I asked, wondering why I should be surprised. Nothing, after all, would unstick Paul from a full-blown crisis. One of the nurses obligingly went to tell him of my presence, coming back with him in tow. "Mothe
We eyed each other in mutual dislike. "How is she?" I asked. "What do the doctors say?" "She is in intensive care. " His bulletin voice sounded over-pompous, even for him.
I waited. In the end he amplified, "Unless there are complications, she will recover. "
Great, I thought. "Has she said who attacked her?"
"She is not yet lucid. " I waited again, but this time without results. After he began to show signs of simply walking off to end the exchange, I said, "Have you seen the state of her house?" He answered with a frown, "I went there this morning. The police took my fingerprints!" He sounded outraged. "They took mine also," I said mildly.
"Please return my books. " "Do what?" "Return Valentine's books and papers. " He stared with a mixture of indignation and hatred. "I didn't take Valentine's books.
You did. " "I did not. " He glared righteously. "Mother locked the door and refused-refused-to give me the key. Her own son!" "The key was in the open door last night, I said. "And the books had gone. " "Because you had taken them. I certainly did not. I began to believe his protestations of innocence-, unlikely as they were: But if he hadn't taken the things, who on earth had? The damage inside the house and the attack on Dorothea spoke of violence and speed. Moving a wall of books and cupboardsful of papers out of the house spoke of thoroughness and time.
And Robbie Gill had been sure the rampage had happened before the attack on Dorothea. None of it made any sense. "Why," I asked, "were you so extremely anxious to get your hands on those books?" Somewhere in his brain warning bells sounded. I'd directed too many actors not to recognize the twitch of eye muscles that I'd so often prompted. Paul, I thought, had a motive beyond greed, but apart from seeing that it existed, I was not going to get any further. "It's best to keep family possessions in the family," he pontificated, and fired a final shot before stalking off. "In view of my
Obligingly, after a short pause for searching, she told me the numbers I'd forgotten, and I wrote them down and made my call. Paul answered curtly, "Yes?" I said nothing. Paul said, "Who are you? What do you want?" I didn't speak. "I can't hear you," he said crossly and switched off his instrument. So much for Surrey, I thought grimly. But even Paul-even Paul-couldn't have slashed open his mother. Sons had been known to murder their mothers...
But not fat forty-five-year-old men with inflated self-esteem. Disturbed, I drove westward to Oxfordshire and set about looking for Jackson Wells.
With again help from directory enquiries I discovered his general location, and, by asking at garages and from people out walking dogs, I arrived in the end at Batwillow Farm, south of Abingdon, south of Oxford, sleepy and peaceful in the late Sunday afternoon. I bumped slowly down a rutted unmade lane which ended in an untidy space outside a creeper-grown house. Weeds flourished. A set of old tires leaned against a rotting wooden shed. An unsteady-looking stack of fencing timber seemed to be weathering into disintegration. A crusty old grouch of a man leaned on a farm gate and sta
There was no gentle ding-dong as with Dorothea: the clamor of the bell inside Batwillow Farm set one's teeth rattling.
The door was soon opened by a fair young blonde girl with ponytailed hair and to-die-for skin. I said, "I'd like to talk to Mr. Jackson Wells. " "OK-," she nodded. "Hang on. "
She retreated into a hallway and turned left out of my sight, prompting the appearance presently of a lean loose-limbed blond man looking less than fifty. "You wanted me?" he enquired. I looked back to where the old deaf grump still leaned on the gate. "My father," the blond man said, following my gaze. "Mr. Jackson Wells?"
"That's me," he said. "Oh!" He grinned at my relief with a n easygoing lightheartedness a hundred miles from my expectations. He waited, untroubled, for me to introduce myself, and then said slowly, "Have I seen you somewhere before?" "I don't think so. " "On the television," he said doubtfully. "Oh. Well-were you watching the Lincoln at Doncaster yesterday?" "Yes, I was, but... " He wrinkled his forehead, not clearly remembering. "My name," I said, "is Thomas Lyon, and I was a friend of Valentine Clark. " A cloud crossed Jackson Wells's sunny landscape.
"Poor old bugger died this week," he said. My name finally registered. "Thomas Lyon. Not him that's making the film?"
"Him," I agreed. "I did see you on the TV yesterday, then, with Nash Rourke. " He summed me up in a short silence, and rubbed the top of his nose indecisively on the back of his hand. I said, "I don't want to do you any harm in the making of this film. I came to ask you if there is anything you particularly don't want said. Because sometimes," I explained, "one can invent things or think one invents them, that turn out to be damagingly true. " He thought it over and finally said, "You'd better come in, I reckon. " "Thank you. " He led me into a small room near the door; a room unliv
Your wife. " "Sonia," he said heavily. "Her name was Sonia.
"It was Yvonne in Howard Tyler's book. "
"Aye," he agreed. "Yvonne. I read it. The book. He seemed to feel no anger or grief, so I asked, "What did you think of it?" Unexpectedly, he laughed. "Load of rubbish. Dream lovers! And that upper-class wimp in the book, that was supposed to be me! Cobblers. " "You're going to be far from a wimp in the film. " "Is it true, then? Nash Rourke is me?"
"He's the man whose wife is found hanged, yes. "You know what?" The sunniness shone in his manner and the smile in his eyes surely couldn't be faked. "It's all so bloody long ago. I don't give a piss what you say in the film. I can hardly remember Sonia, and that's a fact. It was a different life. I left it behind. Did a bunk, if you like. I got fed up with the whole bloody shooting match. See, I was twenty-two when I married Sonia and not yet twenty-five when she died, and I was only a kid really.
A kid playing at being a big Newmarket racehorse trainer.
After that business people started taking their horses away, so I packed it in and came here instead, and this life's OK, mate, no regrets. " As he seemed to discuss it quite easily I asked, "Why... er... why did your wife die?" "Call her Sonia. I don't think of her as my wife. My wife's here in this house. Lucy's mother. We've been wed twenty-three years now and we'll stay that way. "
There was an obvious self-contentment in his whole personality. He had the weathered complexion and thread-veined cheeks of an outdoors man, his eyebrows dramatically blond against the tanned skin. Blue eyes held no guile. His teeth looked naturally good, even and white.
No tension showed in his long limbs or sturdy neck. I thought him no great brain, but one of nature's lucky accidents, a person who could be happy with little. "Do you mind me asking about her?" I said. "Sonia? Not really. I can't tell you why she died, though, because I don't know. "
That was, I thought, the first lie he'd told me. "The police had me in," he smiled. "Helping with their enquiries, they told the press. So of course everyone thought I'd done it. Questions! Days of them. I just said I didn't know why she died. I said it over and over. They did go on a bit. They thought they'd get me to confess, see?"
He laughed. "Seems they do sometimes get fools to confess to things they haven't done. I can't see how that happens, can you? If you haven't done something, you just keep on saying it. In England, leastwise. No actual thumbscrews, see? They ban actual thumbscrews here, see?" He laughed again at his joke. "I told them to piss off and find out who really killed her, but they never managed that. They couldn't see farther than getting me to confess. I mean, it was daft. Would you confess to murdering someone if you hadn't?" "I don't think so. " "Course you wouldn't.
Hour after hour of it! I stopped listening. I wouldn't let them work me up into a state. I just sat there like a lump and told them to piss off at regular intervals. " "They must have loved it," I said dryly. "You're laughing at me. " "Indeed I'm not," I assured him. "I think you were great. " "I was young," he said cheerfully. "They kept waking me up in the night. Silly sods didn't realize I was often up half the night with sick horses. Colic. Stuff like that. I just nodded off when they frothed on about Sonia. It annoyed them no end. " "Mm," I agreed, and asked tentatively, "Did y
"So it wasn't you who found her?" "No. Reckon I was lucky, there. One of my stable lads found her while I was driving north to York races. The police drove me back, and they'd already decided I'd killed her. She'd been in a stall we weren't using at that point. The lad that found her brought his food up for a week after, poor sod. "
"Did you think she'd hanged herseIP" "It wasn't like her. "
He showed a very longlived old doubt. "There was a stack of hay bales there she could have jumped off of. " He shook his head. "No one ever did know the truth of it, and, tell you no lie, it's better that way. I read in that Drumbeat rag that you're trying to find out. Well, I'd just as soon you didn't, to be honest. I don't want my wife and Lucy stirred up. Not fair to them, it isn't. You just get on and make up what story you like for your film. As long as you don't make out I killed her, it'll be all right withme. 55 "In the film you do not kill her," I said. "That's fine, then.
"Yes, I know you did, but you must have thought about it. "
He gave me an unadulteratedly carefree smile and no information, and I had a clear picture of what the interrogating police had faced all those years ago; a happy unbroachable brick wall. "In Howard Tyler's book," I said, "Yvonne daydreams about jockey lovers. Where... I mean... have you any idea where he got that idea?" Internally this time, Jackson Wells laughed. "Howard Tyler didn't ask me about that. " "No," I agreed. "He told me he hadn't tried to see you at all. " "No, he didn't. First I knew of it, people were saying that that book, Unstable Times, was about me and Soni
"She might have done. That whole marriage, it was a sort of make-believe. We were kids playing at grown-ups. That writer, he got us dead wrong. I'm not complaining, mind. "
"But the dream lovers are so striking," I persisted.
"Where did he get the idea?"
Jackson Wells thought it over without any apparent anxiety.
"I reckon," he told me at length, 4C you should ask that stuck-up sister of hers. " "Sister... do you mean Rupert Visborough's widow?" He nodded. "Audrey. Sonia's sister.
Audrey was married to a member of the jockey Club and never let me forget it. Audrey told Sonia not to waste herself on me. I wasn't good enough for her, see?" He grinned, not caring. "When I read that book I heard Audrey's prissy voice all through it. " Stunned by the simple depth of that perception, I sat in silence wondering what to ask him next; wondering whether I should or could ask why the hanging death of an obscure young sister-in-law had so thoroughly and permanently blighted Rupert Visborough's chances of political life. How unacceptable in Westminster, in fact, were myst
I said, "Do you want to be in it?" "What do you mean? I explained that we were recruiting the local inhabitants of Huntingdon to be "crowd" at our version of a race meeting held on the course. "We need people to ooh and aah... "And scream 'shift your arse'@" she grinned. "Exactly. "
"Dad? Her father's instinct was to say no. As he shook his head I said, "No one needs to know who you are. Give your name as Batwillow... and incidentally, what is a batwillow?" "A tree you make cricket bats from," Lucy said, as if my question revealed my stupidity. "You're kidding me?" "Certainly not," her father said. "Where do you think cricket bats come from? They grow on trees. "
They watched my face. "We grow the willows in wet lands near the brook," he said. "This farm has grown batwillows for generations. " Growing cricket bats, it seemed to me, entirely fitted his nature: wide shoulders hitting carefree sixes over the boundary with fast balls solidly blocked to prevent the breaking of the wicket. Lucy's mother appeared with curiosity in the doorway, a friendly woman in fawn trousers and an enormous brown sweater over a cream turtleneck.
Unconscious style, I thought, just like her daughter.
Jackson Wells explained my presence. His wife enjoyed the tale. "Of course we'll all come," she said decisively, "if you promise we'll see Nash Rourke!" "How corny can you get?" Lucy demanded of her. I said, "Tomorrow at two o'clock we hold crowd rehearsals. Nash might be there, can't promise. On Tuesday and Wednesday we shoot the crowd scenes. We offer breakfast, lunch, and expenses to everyone who turns up, and Nash Rourke will definitely be there. "
"It's near a two-hour drive from here to Huntingdon racecourse," Jackson Wells protested. "You're outvoted, Dad," Lucy told him. "What time Tuesday? Is it OK if we miss the rehearsal?" I gave them one of my cards, writing on the back "Priority entry. Batwillow family. " "Nine in the morning, on Tuesday," I said. "Follow the crowd, who'll know what to do. When we break for lunch, use this card, and find me. " "Wow," Lucy said. She had freckles on her nose. Quizzical blue eyes. I wondered how mature she was on the piano. I said to her father, "Do you know why anyone would do violence
Total madman. To my knowledge, no one's afraid of your film. " I thought that that was probably the second lie he'd told me, or at least the second I'd noticed. Lucy said, "Can Dad's brother come as well?" Her father made a dismissive gesture and said, "He wouldn't want to. " "Yes, he would. " To me she said, "My Uncle Ridley lives in Newmarket. He goes to the cinema all the time, and he'd rave to be in a film with Nash Rourke. " "Then bring him in with you," I agreed. "We need the largest crowd we can get. " Her parents, I saw, didn't share her enthusiasm for her Uncle Ridley. "Is
Her father shook his head at her shortage of worldliness and amplified, "My brother Ridley breaks in horses and acts as a general nagsman. He's not exactly high powered, but he makes a living. " I smiled, half interested. "I'll be glad to meet him. " I paused and returned to what more closely concerned me. "Could you lend me a photo of... er...
Sonia? Just so we don't make Yvonne too like her in the film. " "Haven't got one," Jackson Wells said promptly. "Not even... Excuse me," I said to Mrs. Wells apologetically, not even a wedding photo?"
"No," Jackson Wells said. `Mey got lost when I moved here.
" His eyes were wide with innocence, and for the third time I didn't believe him.
Driving toward Newmarket and working out times, I thought I might squeeze in an empty half hour before my ten o'clock meeting, and accordingly telephoned Dr. Robbie Gill, whose number I did remember clearly from Dorothea's heavy black help-summoning handwriting.
"Do you feel," I asked, "like a quick jar somewhere?"
"When?
I'd worked it out. "I'm in my car. I'll hit Newmarket around nine-thirty. Any good? I have to be at Bedford Lodge at ten. " "Is it important?"
"Interesting," I said. "About Dorothea's attacker.
"I'll square it with my wife. " His voice smiled, as if that were no problem. "I'll come to Bedford Lodge at nine-thirty and wait in the lounge. " "Great. "
"I heard someone attacked Nash Rourke with a knife. "
"As good as. It was his stand-in, though. And no harm done. "
"So I gathered. Nine-thirty, then. " He clicked off, his Scottish voice as brusque as ever; and red-headed and terrier-like, he was 155patiently waiting in the entrance lounge when I got back to Bedford Lodge. "Come upstairs," I said, shaking his hand.
"What do you drink?" "Diet Coke. " I got room service to bring up his fizzy tipple and for myself poured cognac from a resident bottle. This film, I thought fleetingly, was driving me toward forty percent proof. "Well," I said, waving him to an armchair in the neat sitting room, "I went to see Dorothea in Cambridge this afternoon and found my way barred by our friend Paul. " Robbie Gill grimaced.
"She's basically my patient, and he's barring my way too, as far as possible. " "What can I do to preserve her from being shanghaied by him as soon as she's capable of being transported by ambulance? She told him, and me, that she didn't want to move into this retirement home he's arranging for her, but he pays no attention. " "He's a pest. " "Can't you slap a 'don't move this patient' notice on Dorothea?" He considered it doubtfully. "No one would move her at present. But a few days from now... "Any which way," I said. "How much do you care?"'"A good deal. " "I mean... moneywi
He replied forthrightly, as was his Scottish nature, "I'm saying that as her doctor I could, with her permission, shift her into a private nursing home of my choice if I could guarantee the bills would be paid. " "Would it break me?"
He mentioned an alarming sum and waited without censure for me to find it too much. "You have no obligation," he remarked.
"I'm not poor, either," I said. "Don't tell her who's paying. "
He nodded. "I'll say it's free on the National Health.
She'll accept that. "
"Go ahead, then. "He downed his Diet Coke. "Is that the lot?"
"No," I said. "If I draw something for you, tell me what you think. "
I took a large sheet of writing paper, laid it on the coffee table, and drew a picture of the knife I'd found on the Heath. A wickedly knobbed hand grip on eight sharp inches of steel.
He looked at the drawing in motionless silence.
"Well?" I asked.
"A knuckle-duster," he said, "that grew into a knife. "And Dorothea's injuries?" I suggested. He stared at me.
I said, "Not two assailants. Not two weapons. This one, that's both a blunt instrument and a blade. " "Dear God. "
"Who would own such a thing?" I asked him. He shook his head mutely. "Do you know anyone called Derry?"
He looked completely perplexed. I said, "Valentine once mentioned leaving a knife with someone called Derry. "
Robbie Gill frowned, thinking. "I don't know any Derry. "
I sighed. Too many people knew nothing. He said abruptly, "How old are you?" "Thirty. And you?"
"Thirty-six. " He smiled wryly. "Too old to conquer the world. " "So am I. " "Ridiculous!" "Steven Spielberg," I said, "was twenty-seven when he made laws.
I'm not him. Nor Visconti, nor Fellini, nor Lucas. Just a jobbing storyteller. " "And Alexander the Great died at thirty-three. " "Of Diet Coke?" I asked. He laughed.
"Is it true that in America, if you die of old age, it's your fault?" I nodded gravely. "You should have jogged more. Or not smoked, or checked your cholesterol, or abstained from the juice. " "And then what?" "And then you exist miserably for years with tubes. " He laughed and rose to go. "I'm embarrassed," he said, "but my wife wants Nash Rourke's autograph. " "Done," I promised. "How soon can you realistically move Dorothea?" He thought it over. "She was attacked yesterday evening. She's been sleepy from anesthetic all day today. It was a bad wound... they had to remove part o
"I'll fix it. Phone me tomorrow evening. "
Moncrieff, Ziggy Keene, and I set off at four-thirty the next morning, heading north and east to the Norfolk coast.
Ed, instructed by O'Hara, had found me a driver, a silent young man who took my car along smoothly and followed the instructions I gave him as I map-read beside him in the front passenger seat. Moncrieff and Ziggy slept in the back. Into the trunk we'd packed the heavy camera Moncrieff could carry on his shoulders like a toy, also a cold box full of raw film and a hot box full of coffee and breakfast. The outside air was cold; the warm car soporific. I was glad, after a while, for the driver. We cleared Norwich and headed across the flat lands toward the North Sea, skirting the Broa
Moncrieff and Ziggy climbed stiffly out of the car and shivered. It was still completely dark outside the range of the car's lights, and the coastal breeze was as unrelenting as ever.
"You said to bring warm clothes," Moncrieff complained, zipping himself into a fur-lined parka. "You said nothing about playing Inuits. " He pulled the fur-lined hood over his head and thrust his hands into Arctic-issue gauntlets.
Leaving the driver with his own separate breakfast in the car, the three of us walked onward through the sand dunes toward the open shore, Moncrieff carrying the camera and the film box, I leading with the hot box, and Ziggy between us toting polystyrene rectangles for sitting insulation on cold salt-laden ground. "How did you find this God-forsaken place?" Moncrieff grumbled. "I used to come here as a boy. " "Suppose it had sprouted casinos?" "I checked. " Beyond the range of the car's lights we paused to establish night vision, then went on slowly until the sand dunes fell away, t
Ziggy, tougher and taciturn, found a similar place near him. Ziggy, Ukrainian by birth, had from the nursery proved so spectacularly acrobatic on horses that he had been sent to the Moscow Circus school at the age of eight, and there, far from his rural roots, had received a first-class education along with endless practice in his special skill.
Every pupil in the school, boys and girls alike, received daily ballet lessons to teach graceful movement in the circus ring. Ziggy could in consequence have joined any ballet company anywhere, but nothing interested him except horses. Ziggy at twenty-two had left the circus behind: circuses everywhere had left town. Never political, though a favored son, he had somehow traveled with his trade to America, and it was there that I'd seen him first, turning somersaults on a cantering horse one afternoon in an ill-attended practice for the Ringling Brothers in Madison Square Garden. I'd
Slender light, and wiry, he took the Norfolk chill in his stride. Child's play, I supposed, after the Russian steppes. Alternately morose and laughing, he was intensely Ukrainian in temperament, and often told me he would return soon to his roots, a threat receding as years passed. His roots, as perhaps he acknowledged, were no longer there. At a fairly brief meeting the evening before, I'd outlined what we were looking for. "Film the sunrise!"
Moncrieff exclaimed lugubriously. "We don't have to drive seventy miles for that! What's wrong with the Heath outside the door?"
"You'll see. " "And the weather forecast?"
"Cold windy, and clear. " His objections, I knew, were not from the heart. Every lighting cameraman knew that directors could be both unreasonable and unmovable when it came to specific locations. If I'd demanded the slopes of K23 he would have sworn and strapped on his crampons. I said, "As it's the time of the vernal equinox, the sun will rise due east. And that"-I consulted the small compass I'd brought is straight over there. " I pointed. "At the moment, looking directly out to sea, we are facing a bit further north. The coast runs from northwest to southeast, so when the sun ri
"Can you catch gleams of sun in their eyes?" "Close?"
"Heads, necks, and manes in shot. " "Thomas," Ziggy said, the bass notes in his voice always a surprise from the slightness of his body. "You ask for wild horses. " I'd asked him the previous evening to picture them and to suggest where we might find some. The trouble with sudden visions was that I'd had no idea of the scene while we were at the pre-production stage, and so had not arranged a wild herd in advance. Wild horses didn't grow on batwillows.
Circus horses, Ziggy had said. Too fat and sleek, I'd objected. Moorland ponies no good, he'd said: too slow and stupid. Think, I'd urged him. Tell me in the morning. "Thomas," Ziggy said, as always emphasizing the second syllable of my name, "I think it must be Viking horses, from Norway. " I gazed at him. "Did you know that Viking ships once regularly raided this coast?" "Yes, Thomas. " Viking horses. Perfect. Where on earth could I get any? From Norway, of course. So easy.
I asked him, "Have you ever worked with Norwegian horses?"
"No, Thomas. But I think they are not true wild. They are not ridden, but they are, I think, handled. " "Could you ride one without a saddle?" "Of course. " There wasn't a horse alive, his expression said, that wouldn't do what he asked.
"You could ride one in a nightgown and a long blond wig?"
"Of course. " "Bare feet?"He nodded.
"The woman is dreaming she is riding the wild horse. It must be romantic, not real. " "Thomas, she will float on the horse. " I believed him. He was simply the best. Even Moncrieff stopped grumbling about our mission. We ate our hot vacuum-packed bacon breakfast rolls and drank steaming coffee while the black sky slowly grayed and lightened and grew softly crimson far out at sea. With adjusted eyes we watched the world take shape. Around us and at our backs the irregularly heaped sand dunes were revealed as being patches of scrubby marram grass, fringes of long dried stalks leaning
One week ahead, the tide at dawn would be high, covering the sand. We needed, I thought, to arrange to film the horses on a midtide day: better, I supposed, during an ebb tide, as a flooding tide could race over these flat sands and maroon the cameras. Say ten days to the next mid-tide ebb at dawn. Too soon. Add two weeks to the next opportunity; twenty-four days. Perhaps. I told Ziggy the time frame. "We need the horses here on the beach twenty-four days from now. Or else fourteen days later; thirty-eight days. OK" "I understand," he agreed.
"I'll send an agent to Norway to arrange the horses and the transport. Will you go with him, to make sure we get the sort of horses we need?" He nodded. "Best to have ten," he said. "Or twelve. " "See what you can find. " Moncrieff stirred, abandoning breakfast in favor of art. Faint horizontal threads of clouds were growing a fiercer red against the still gray sky, and as he busied himself with camera speed and focus the streaks intensified to scarlet and to orange and to gold, until the whole sky was a breath-gripping symphony of sizzling color, the prelude to the earth's daily sp
Too much background music, I decided, would ruin the atmospheric quality of this historic shore. All we would need would be the wind, the waves, the clip of the horses' hooves, and perhaps Ziggy's own distant song, or maybe a haunting plaintive chant from Norway. This was to be a dream: did one ever hear whole orchestras in dreams?
Fulfilled in all sorts of ways, the three of us were driven back to Newmarket where everyday reality returned to the hotel lobby in the unwelcome shape of our author, Howard Tyler. Howard was not repentant but incensed. The round glasses flashed as if with their own anger. The prissy little mouth puckered with injured feelings of injustice.
Howard the great writer could produce temper tantrums like a toddler. Moncrieff, at the sight of him, evaporated into the woodwork. Ziggy, communing only with himself, loped off on foot toward the Heath and horses. Howard stood in my path, flushed with grievance. "O'Hara says the company will sue me for breach of contract!" he complained. "It's not fair.. I said reasonably, "But you did breach your contract. "
"No, I didn't!" "Where did the Drumbeat get its opinions from?" Howard opened his baby lips and closed them again.
"Your contract," I reminded him, "forbids you to talk about the film to outsiders. I did warn you.
"But O'Hara can't sue me!" I sighed. "You signed with a major business corporation, not personally with O'Hara.
The corporation has lawyers with flints for souls whose job it is to recover for the company any money they can squeeze from the most minor breaches of contract. They are not kind, compassionate fellows who will pat you forgivingly on the back. They can imagine damages you never thought of.
You opened your undisciplined mouth to some avidly listening ear, and whether you've done any real box-office damage or not, they're going to act as if you've cost the company Millions, and they'll try to recover every penny they are contracted to pay you, and if you're really unlucky, more. " It seemed finally to get through to him that his gripe would prove expensive. "Then do something,"
he insisted. "Tell them no harm was done. " "You as near as dammit cost me not just this job but any work in the future. " "All I said was... " his voice died. "All you said was that I was a tyrannical buffoon wasting the film company's money. " "Well... I didn't mean it. "
"That's almost worse. " "Yes... but... you've mangled my book. And as an author I have moral rights. " The air of triumph accompanying these last words made my next statement sound perhaps more brutal than I would have let it if he'd shown the slightest regret.
With vanishing patience I said, "Moral rights give an author the right to object to derogatory alterations being made to his work. Moral rights can be waived, and invariably this waiver is included in agreements between screenplay writers and film production companies. Often the screenplay writer is given the right to remove his name from the credits if he hates the film enough, but in your case, Howard, it's your name they're specifically paying for, and you waived that right also. "Stunned, he asked, "How do you know?" "I was given a sight of your contract. I had to know where we
what can I do?" "Pray," I said dryly. "But for a start, you can say who you talked to. You can say how you got in touch with the writer of 'Hot from the Stars. ' Who did you reach?" "But I... " He seemed not far from tears. "I didn't. I mean, I didn't tell the Drumbeat. I didn't. "
"Who, then?" "Well, just a friend. " "A friend?
And the friend told the Drumbeat?"He said miserably, "I suppose so. " We had been standing all this time in the lobby with Monday morning coming and going around us. I waved him now toward the lounge area and found a pair of convenient armchairs. "I want some coffee," he said, looking round for a waiter. "Have some later, I haven't got time. Who did you talk to?" "I don't think I should say. " I felt like shaking him. "Howard, I'll throw you to the corporation wolves. And besides that, I'll sue you personally for defamation. " "She said questions weren't libelous. " "She, whoever sh
"Who?" "Alison Vis.. "Yes, yes," I interrupted. "I thought her name was Audrey. " "That's her mother. " I shook my head to clear it feeling Id left my senses back on Happisburgh beach. "Let's get this straight," I said. "You poured out your grudges to Alison Visborough, whose mother is Audrey Visborough, who is the widow of the deceased Rupert Visborough, known in your book as Cibber. Right so far?" He unhappily nodded. "And," I said, "when you read Rupert Visborough's obituary, and got the idea for your book, you did not go to see Jackson Wells, whose wife hanged, but you did go
"Who's Roddy?" "Alison's brother. " Give me strength, I thought. I said, "Is this right? Rupert Visborough married Audrey; they had a daughter Alison and a son Roddy?" "I don't see why you make it sound so difficult. "But you didn't put the children in your book.
"They're not children," Howard objected. "They're as old as I am. 55 Howard was forty-five. "When you bitched to Alison," I asked, "why did she get your complaints printed in the Dnimbeat? And how?" He stood up abruptly. "I didn't know she was going to do it. I didn't ask her to. If you want to know, I was shocked when I read the paper. didn't mean what I said to her to be published like that. "
"Have you talked to her since?"
He said defensively, "She thought she was helping me. "
"Shit," I said.
He took offense and stalked off, heading for the way out to the world.
With a feeling of medium irritation I went upstairs and found my message light flashing. O'Hara, it seemed, would be pleased by my appearance in his suite. I walked the carpeted passages. "Did you know," he asked.
opening his door to my knock, "that Howard is back?"
We discussed Howard. O'Hara's use of words was profligate.
"Howard told me," I said, only half successfully damming O'Hara's flow, "that he poured out his woes to a lady friend who promptly relayed them to the Drumbeat, but without his knowledge. "
"What? told O'Hara about the Visboroughs.
He repeated in disbelief, 'Audrey, Alison, and Roddy? "
"And God knows who else. "
"Howard," he pronounced heavily, "is off his trolley. "
"He's naive. Doesn't make him a bad writer. " O'Hara agreed gloomily. "Dream lovers are naive. " He thought things over.
"I'll have to discuss his breach of contract again with the moguls. I suppose you've never met this disastrous Alison?"I shook my head. "Someone will have to switch on her lights. "
55 "Mm," I paused. "You? O'Hara ducked it. "What time do you have, yourself?" "Oh no," I protested. "We know her opinion of me. " "All the same," O'Hara smiled, "if you want to, you can charm the birds off the trees. " "I don't know where she lives. " "I'll find out," he promised, "and you can do the damage control. " He seemed all of a sudden happier. Suing Howard would have dragged on and on and could well have alienated the very lending-library customers his name was supposed to attract into the cinema.
Never attack anyone, old Valentine had once written, unless you've counted the cost of winning. O'Hara asked if I'd found Jackson Wells, but seemed disappointed in the sweetness and light of his household. "Do you think he murdered his wife?" he asked curiously. "No one could ever prove it. "But do you think he did?"I paused. "I don't know. " O'Hara shrugged the thought away and, as he wanted to see the previous day's rushes, we drove along to the stable yard. There, in the vast house, one small room had been rigged for projection, with a screen and six chairs but no luxury. The win
Howard, goaded into writing this scene, which had of course not appeared in the book, had nevertheless written exchanges of a quality entirely to justify his high placing in the film's credits. Moncrieff had lit the faces with creative skill and had, as agreed, shot the horses slightly out of focus to give sharp prominence to each human figure in close-up. Somehow the uncaring, oblivious nature of the horses lent contrast and comment to the vivid emotion developing near them. A brief, fleeting impression, but an addition to the mood. Not bad, overall.
The reel ended, I switched the projector off and the regular lights on, and waited for O'Hara's verdict. "Tell you something," he said casually. "If you're not careful, we'll have a success on our hands. " "A bit early to say. " I was pleased, all the same, at his compliment. "How do you get on personally with Silva?" O'Hara asked, standing and stretching, preparing to leave.
"She does ride very well," I said. "I told her that I thought so. " "And you did not, I hope, tell her she rides as well as any man. "I laughed. "I'm not suicidal. "
"She looks good on screen. " I nodded. "You were right, she can act. She knows where the camera is. She's professional, she listens to me, she did the nude scene on the closed set last week with cool naturalness, she's ambitious in a sensible way, and I can tiptoe round the feminism. " "And do you like her?" "It's not necessary. " "No, but do you?"
I smiled. "If I told her I liked her, she'd smack my face. "
"That's no answer. " "Then yes, I do like her.
Actually, very much. But she doesn't want to be liked, she wants to be thought a good actress. Which she is. A merry go-round, don't you think?" "She's sleeping with me, O'Hara said. I looked, in a moment of stillness, at the craggy strength of his face and physique, understood the magnetic sexual quality of power, and said without resentment, "Are you telling me, hands of. "He calmly nodded. "Hands off. " "OK. "
He made no more of it. It altered little. We went upstairs to see how far the art director and his department had gone with dismantling the Jockey Club enquiry room set, ready to construct an approximation of the Athenaeum dining room in the space.
Several of the upstairs walls had earlier been removed, with steel joists now holding up the roof. Many of the ceilings also had been cut out to allow for overhead lights and cameras. The house's owner was warming himself with his nicely stuffed bank account while trusting his beams and plaster would reassert themselves later. The Athenaeum dining room remained embryonic but would be ready with tables, waiters, and roast beef on our return from Huntingdon. O'Hara said, "I met Moncrieff in the passage at the hotel this morning after you returned from the ocean.
Incredibly, he was humming. He said he'd seen a revelation and that you were sending Ziggy to import a herd of wild horses from Norway. Say it's not true. " I laughed. "It's true. Viking horses. If we have ten or twelve, we can make them look like fifty. I'll send Ziggy with an agent to find some. They'll come over in horsevans on the ferry from Bergen. " "But," O'Hara asked reasonably, "wouldn't it be cheaper to use local wild horses?" "First of all," I said, "there aren't any. Second, genuine Viking horses will be worth their weight in publicity. " O'Hara picked his way across wob
"I'll arrange it," he said. "I'll send Ziggy. You just get on with the movie. " I said with satisfaction, "Right," and we made our way as colleagues down to the stable yard, signing out as usual with the guard on the outer door and crossing to the car. "Did you know, " I said conversationally, "that they used to hang witches." O'Hara stopped in mid-stride and after a pause said, "Howard didn't suggest such a thing in the book, did he?" "No. I'm surprised, really, that he didn't. It would have jelled with the dream lovers, don't you think?" O'Hara blinked. "The last witch was hanged
Witchcraft itself went on for a long time after that. Goya was painting witches flying, around the year eighteen hundred. People still follow the old practices to this day.
I'd think it improbable that a witch-hanging took place in Newmarket only twenty-six years ago, but there's no harm in Howard inserting a scene or two to sow doubt. "
Unexpectedly glad after all to have a driver, I traveled to Huntingdon making notes for the rehearsals ahead and thinking over my second conversation with Howard. He had been in his room when I returned with O'Hara and had agreed to come along to my sitting room, but with bad grace.
"Howard," I pointed out-, "your name is immovable on this film. You can write brilliantly. Whether or not you disapprove of its plot, the words in this film are mostly yours, and you'll be judged by them. " "Some are yours," he objected. "I prefer yours. I only write what you won't. "He could glare, but not dispute it.
"So," I said without fuss, "please will you write a scene suggesting that the dead wife was hanged for being a witch. "He was outraged. "But she wasn't a witch. "
"How do you know?" "She was Audrey Visborough's sister!"
His tone said that that settled matters beyond doubt.
"Think it over, Howard. Put the thought into someone's mouth. Into someone's head. Just a shot of a magazine article might do the trick. Headline. 'Is witchcraft dead?' Something like that. But don't place your scene in the Jockey Club enquiry room, they've already struck that set.
MHoward looked as if he might comply: he even looked interested. "Her real name was Sonia," I said.
"Yes, I know. " "Did the Visboroughs tell you?" "Why shouldn't they?" His prickles rose protectively. "They were all very helpful. " I forbore to say that the Dnimbeat was as unhelpful as one could get, and went on my way.
My assistant director, Ed, who normally had one assistant of his own, now had, as usual for crowd scenes, several extra deputized helpers. The townspeople of Huntingdon, having streamed to the racecourse in highly satisfactory numbers, were being divided, positioned, and enerallv ollied along by Ed, who had been given, 9 and had passed on, my emphatic instruction that the people who had come should be happy, and should want to return the next day, and the next. Lollipops were to be dangled. Fun was to be had. Nash-ah, Nash himself' would sign autographs now and then. The people in
I prayed for it not to rain. Ed chose people to stand in the parade ring in groups, looking like owners and trainers. Others were directed to crowd round and stare.
Genuine professional steeplechase jockeys appeared in the parade ring in racing colors and scattered to each group.
They weren't the absolute top jockeys, but tough, reliably expert, and being well paid. Our lads led round the horses, saddled 5 rugged, and carrying number cloths. It all began to look like a race meeting. The real thing, of course, would be filmed separately on the following Monday, with Ed in charge of wide establishing shots of full stands, large crowd movement, and bookmakers shouting the odds. Cut in with our own scenes, the joins of real to acted would be invisible, given no rain. Cibber stood in the parade ring with his wife (Silva), and I positioned Nash's stand-in within e
One of them almost belligerently interrupted, "Is it true you raced once as an amateur? "Well, yes, for three seasons. " e "Why did you stop?" e I frowned. It wasn't their business to ask such questions-, and certainly not like an inquisition, t but I needed their cooperation, so I said mildly, r "I went to Hollywood to make films of horses instead. " e Silence. "What's the matter?" I asked.
After a long pause, one of them told me, "It says in the Drumbeat... " "Ah. " Light arrived. I looked at the cool faces, all highly cynical. I needed these jockeys to ride f their hearts out the next day; and I could see with absolute clarity that they weren't going to. e How odd, I thought, that I'd feared losing my authority over the film crews, but in fact had had little difficulty in reestablishing it, only to find now that I'd lost it among men I thought I Zs understood. I asked if they'd watched the Lincoln and seen me talking to Greg Compass. None had.
They'd been too busy working, they said. They'd been riding in races. I said, "If any of you has doubts about doing a good job for me tomorrow... I'll race him here and now. " I didn't know I was going to say it until I did. Once said, there was no going back.
They stared. I said, "I'm not incompetent or a buffoon or a tyrant. Newspapers tell lies. Surely you know?"
They loosened up a little and a few began staring at their boots instead of my face, but one of them slowly and silently unbuttoned his shiny green and white striped shirt. He took it off and held it out. Underneath he wore the usual thin blue sweater, with a white stock round his neck. I unclipped the walkie-talkie from my belt and whistled up Ed. "Where are you?" I asked. "In the stables. " "Good. Send three of the horses back, will you, with racing saddles and bridles, each led by a lad.
"Sure. Which three?" "The three fastest," I said. "And find the doctor we brought with us. Ask him to come to the parade ring,, "You don't have to be an effing hero," one of the jockeys said. "We get your point. " The one who'd removed his colors, however, still held them out as a challenge. I unzipped my navy windproof jacket, took it off, and dropped it on the grass. I pulled off my sweater, ditto, and unbuttoned my shirt, which followed. I wore no jersey underneath, but I didn't feel my bare skin chill in the wind: too much else to think about. I put on the offered green and whit
Silently, it was handed over, and I tied it neatly, thanking my stars that I remembered how. As it had been only a rehearsal that afternoon, and all on foot, no one carried a whip and none of the jockeys was wearing the normal shock-absorbing body-protector that shielded fallen riders from horses'hooves. No one mentioned this absence. I buttoned the shirt and pushed the tails down inside my trousers; and I was passed a crash helmet with a scarlet cap. Ed, in the distance, was walking back with three horses. Moncrieff suddenly arrived at my elbow and demanded, "What in hell are you d
Tell him to stop. " "They've read the Drumbeat," I said succinctly. "And do we want one hell of a race tomorrow, or do we not?" Moncrieff understood all right, but made inef fectual noises about insurance, and moguls, and O'Hara, and what would happen to the movie if I broke my neck. "Do shut up," I said. Thomas!" I grinned at him. I said to the jockeys, "Two of you might care to race with me. Sorry I can't take you all on, but we have to race the whole string tomorrow and they'll need to be fresh. So just two.
Whoever you like. We'll go one circuit over the fences, not the hurdles, just as long as there's no one roaming about on the course where they shouldn't be. " Silence.
Privately amused, I waited until Ed had drawn near with the horses and had got over his shock at my explicit clothes.
"Ed, get a car out onto that road along beside the far rails," I showed him where, "and drive round behind us.
Take our doctor with you in case one of us falls. " I pointed. "There he is. He's coming now. " Ed looked stricken. I unclipped both the walkie-talkie and my mobile phone from my belt, and gave them to him to look after.
"I don't believe this," Moncrieff said. A jockey said, "We could lose our licenses, racing you. " "No, you can't," I contradicted. "You're employed by the film company, and you're out here for a rehearsal. We have permission from everyone for you to jump round the course. You're just doing it a day earlier than planned. There's a doctor in attendance, as we promised in your agreements. Who'll come with me?" They had lost the worst of their antagonism but I'd thrown the challenge back in their faces, and they weren't having that. Two of them started for the horses and left me the th
"The horse won't mind," I said. A little light-headedness, I thought, wasn't a bad idea in the circumstances. The horse's lad gave me a leg up, as he'd done many times. I tightened the girth and lengthened the stirrup leathers, and buckled the strap of my helmet. The two jockeys holding me to my word were mounted and ready. I laughed down at the ring of other faces that had suddenly reverted to a better humor. "You're a right lot of bastards," I said; and I got several grins back. As none of the gates was locked we walked the horses without hindrance out to the track. The one-and-a-
I was crazy. It felt great. Nasty long words like "irresponsibility swam like worms into the saner regions of my mind. I did carry this multi-million-dollar motion picture on my shoulders. I did know, arrogance aside, that the souffle' I was building would collapse if the cooker were switched off. All the same, it seemed to me somehow that I'd grown old a long time ago after too brief a youth.
For perhaps three minutes I would go back to my teens. Ed, car, and doctor followed us onto the course. One of my opponents asked me, "How much do you weigh?" "Enough to give me an excuse for losing. "
"Bugger that," he said, and he pointed his horse toward the task and dug him in the flanks with his heels. I followed him immediately. I'd have no second chance; and I felt the old controlled recklessness swamp through brain and body as if I'd never been away. I thought of the man in front as Blue, because of his colors, and the one behind me as Red.
We'd had all the shiny shirts especially made for the film for eye-appeal and distinguishability, and the wardrobe people had given us the goods. Both Blue and Red were younger than I and had not yet started their careers by the time I'd left. They were intent, I saw at once, on making no allowances, and indeed, if they had done so, the whole enterprise would have been without purpose. I simply dredged my memory for a skill that had once come naturally, and judged my horse's stride before the first of the fences with an easy practice I'd thought long forgotten. There was speed and t
Which of course it might.
With this last mordant thought, and with straining muscles and laboring lungs, I reached the long last bend toward home: two more fences to jump, and the run-in and winning post after. Experienced jockeys that they were, Blue and Red had waited for that last bend before piling on the ultimate pressure. I quickened with them, determined only not to be ignominiously tailedoff, and my mount responded, as most thoroughbreds do, with an inbred compulsion to put his head in front. I don't know about the others, but I rode over the last two fences as if it mattered like the Grand National
With Blue and Red leading the way we rejoined the other jockeys. No one said much. We dismounted and gave the reins to the lads. I could feel my fingers tremblin as I unbuckled the helmet and hoped the jockeys couldn't see. I took off the helmet, returning it to the man who'd lent it, and brushed sweat off my forehead with my thumb. Still no sound above half-heard murmurs. I unbuttoned the striped colors, forcing my hands to the task, and fumbled too much over untying the stock. Still with breaths heaving in my belly, I handed shirt and stock back, and took my own clothes from som
It struck me that what everyone was feeling, including myself, was chiefly embarrassment, so I made my best stab at lightness.
"OK!" I said. "Tomorrow, then? You'll race? "Blue said, "Yes," and the others nodded. "Fine. See you. " I raised a smile that was genuine, even if only half wattage, and turned away to walk over to where Moncrieff, curse him, was trying to pretend he hadn't had a video camera on his shoulder the whole time. A voice behind me called, "Mr. Lyon. " I paused and turned. Mr. Lyon, indeed! A surprise. The one with the green and white stripes said, "You did make your point. " I managed a better smile and a flap of a hand and plodded across the grass to Moncrieff.
"Shit," he said. "Anything but. We might now get a brilliant race tomorrow. They're not going to let themselves do worse than a panting amateur. " "Put your shirt on, you'll die of cold. " But not of a broken neck, I thought, and felt warm and spent and thunderously happy.
Ed gave me back the mobile phone, saying that O'Hara had called while he, Ed, was driving round the course, and had wanted to know where I was. "What did you tell him?" I asked. "I said you were riding. He wants you to call him back. "Right. I set off toward my car and its driver and called O'Hara as I went. He had spent time with Howard, it seemed, who was now enthusiastic over the witchcraft angle and wanted it emphasized. Scenes were positively dripping off his pen. "Yeah," I said, "but restrain him. Witches do not hang themselves, and we still need our designated murderer. " "Y
She's expecting you. "Now! Can't someone else do it?"
I'd been up since four that morning and it was by now five-forty in the afternoon and I needed a shower and I felt knackered, to put it politely. Leicestershire began a lot of miles in the wrong direction. O'Hara said, "I thought you'd be interested to meet her, and she has her mother living with her. " "The Audrey?" O'Hara confirmed it. "Silva's character in the movie. " "Well..
yes, I'm interested. OK, IT go. What's the address?" He told it to me in detail, phone number included. "Howard's busting a gut trying to be helpful. "
"I'll bet. " O'Hara said, changing the subject, "Ed said you were riding?" Amused by his oblique question, I answered, I rode round the course with a couple of the jockeys for them to see what we'll be needing tomorrow. "You take care. " "Sure," I said. "Always. " We said good-bye and I walked onward to the car, making another phone call, this time to Robbie Gill.
"Thomas Lyon," I said, when I reached him. "How's my girl?"
"Still in intensive care. I've liaised with her surgeon.
He's slapped a 'do not move' notice on her, which should hold while she needs drip feeds. Two or three days, anyway.
I can't stand that son of hers. What a bully!" "What's he been doing?"
"The nurses threaten a mutiny. He's so bloody lordly. "Is Dorothea awake yet?" "Yes, she's talked briefly to the police. Apparently the last thing she remembers is setting off to walk home from supper with a widowed friend who lives only a quarter of a mile away. They watch TV together sometimes, and she felt like company with Valentine gone. Lucky she wasn't at home earlier. " "I guess so. Perhaps. " "Perhaps," he agreed. "Anything else?" I asked.
"Nothing. I asked the police. They gave me the sort of guff which means they haven't a clue. " "I'd like to see her. " "I told her that you'd been asking. She was obviously pleased. Perhaps tomorrow evening, or the next day. "
"I'll phone you," I said. I reached the car, delivered the change of plans to the driver, and consulted the road map.
A matter of turn right onto the A 14, go northWest, skirt Kettering, press onward. Forty miles perhaps to Market Harborough. "Wake me when we reach that point," I said, and went to sleep on the back seat.
Alison Visborough's hideaway proclaimed her personality from the gateposts onward. A crumbling tarmac drive led to an old two-story house, brick built' possibly eighteenth century, but without distinction. Fields near the house were divided into many paddocks, all fenced with weathered wooden rails, some occupied by wellmuscled but plain horses. A larger paddock to one side held a variety of flakily painted gates, poles, and fake walls, the paraphernalia of show jumping. At the far end a man in a tweed jacket and high-domed black riding hat cantered a horse slowly round in a circle
A child, watching him, held a workaday pony by the reins.
Lesson, it appeared, being given and received.
Everything about the place looked tidy and efficient and spoke of a possible shortage of funds. My driver drew up outside the undemonstrative front door. He had said he would check that we had arrived at the right place, but he had no need to. The door opened before he could reach it, to reveal a full-bosomed middle-aged woman dressed in jodhpurs, shirt, and dull green sweater, accompanied by two half-grown Labrador dogs. "Mr. Lyon?" Her voice reached me, loud, imperious, displeased. My driver gestured to the car, out of which I unenthusiastically climbed. "I'm Thomas Lyon," I said,
The dogs had been unceremoniously left in the hall. "You are younger than I expected," she pronounced, her vowels unself-consciously plummy. "Are you sure you are who you say?" "Quite often. "She stared. I said, "I'm not the ogre you described to the Drumbeat.
"You were driving Howard to despair," she said crisply.
"Something had to be done. I did not expect all this fuss.
Still less did I intend to bring trouble to Howard. He has explained that your wretched film company is angry with me, but when I perceive an injustice, I must speak out. "
"Always?" I asked with interest. "Of course. " "And does it often get you into trouble?" "I am not to be deterred by opposition. " "For Howard's sake," I said, "could you write a short apology to the film company?" She shook her head indignantly, then thought it over, and finally looked indecisive, an unusual state for her, I guessed. She had short dark hair with gray advancing, also unafraid brown eyes, weathered skin, no lipstick, and ringless work-roughened hands. A woman hard on herself and on everyone else, but admired by Howard. I asked, "Who did you talk to, who works for the
"She?" "She's an old acquaintance. We went to the same school. She works on the 'Hot from the Stars' team, and I thought it would help Howard in his fight against you. She didn't write what was printed. She just passed on the information to one of the columnists, as she always does.
She gathers the material, you see, and then it gets sensationafized, she explained to me, by someone whose job it is to do that. " Sensationalized. What a process! Yet without it, I supposed, Howard's gripe wouldn't have been worth the space. "How long," I enquired, "have you known Howard?" "Why do you want to know?" "I only wondered about the length of your commitment to him. " With a touch of the belligerence I was coming to expect, she said, "I can be committed to a good cause within five minutes. "
"I'm sure. " "Actually, we've known Howard since he came to visit us after Daddy died. " The word Daddy came naturally: it was only I who found it odd and incongruous in someone of her age. "He came to see your mother?"
"Principally, I suppose so. " "Because of the obituary?"She nodded. "Howard found it interesting. "
"Mm. " I paused. "Have you any idea who wrote that obituary?" "Why do you want to know?" I shrugged.
"Interest. It seemed to me it was written from personal feelings. " "I see. " She let seconds pass, then said, "I wrote that myself. It was edited by the paper, but the gist of it was mine. "Was it?" I was noncommittal. "You wrote about your father's potential career being blighted by Sonia's death?"
"Yes, I did. " "You wrote as if you cared. " "Of course I cared," she said vehemently. "Daddy wouldn't discuss it with me, but I knew he was bitter. " "Uh," I said, "but why did Sonia's death make him give up politics?" Impatiently, as if it were self-evident, she said, Scandal, of course. But he would never talk about it.
He would never have let this film be made. Rodbury and I were also against it, but we were powerless. The book was Howard's, not ours. Our name, Daddy's name, doesn't appear in it. Howard says you forced him to make the ridiculously untrue changes to his work, so of course I felt someone had to stop you. For Howard's sake and yes, for Daddy's memory, I had to do it. "And nearly succeeded, I thought. I said, without trying to defend either myself or film company policy, "Excuse me, but who is Rodbury?" "My brother, Roddy. "Roddy, of course. "Could I possibly,"
I asked, "meet your mother?" "What for?" "To pay my respects. " It hung in the balance, but it wasn't left to her to decide. The half-closed door was pushed open by a walking stick in the hands of a thin seventyish lady with a limp. She advanced slowly and forbiddingly and, while I rose to my feet, informed me that I was a monster.
"You are the person, aren't you," she accused with tight lips, "who says I was unfaithful to my husband with Jackson Wells? Jackson Wells!" There was a world of outraged class-distinction in her thin voice. "Dreadful man! I warned my sister not to marry him, but she was headstrong and wouldn't listen. He wasn't good enough for her. And as for you thinking that I... I Words almost failed her. "I could hardly even be civil to the man, and he was almost twenty years younger than I. She shook with vibrant disapproval. Her daughter rose, took her mother's arm, and helped her toward on
"Disapproval, then. But as your own name is nowhere used, and as the film is fiction, not many will connect you to it. " "Don't be ridiculous. We are the laughing stock of Newmarket. " "I don't think so," I said. "It was all so long ago. But I would like to ask you a question, and I do hope you will help with the answer, as it might soften for you your understandable outrage. Did your sister Sonia lead the strong fantasy life that Howard gave her in the book? Was she a dreamy young woman in real life?" While the older woman hesitated, Alison said, "I've never met her husband, and I
"Sixteen her mother corrected sharply. Alison darted a barb of irritation at her mother, who looked faintly complacent. An uneasy mother-daughter friction existed, I saw, that was only half stifled by good manners. Alison, odd though it seemed for one of her disposition, was woman enough to want me to believe her younger. "Dreams?" I prompted. "My sister," Audrey Visborough pronounced repressively, "tended to fall for any man in breeches. She would drool over men she could never have. Very silly. I daresay I mentioned it to Howard when he first came here.
Jackson Wells looked good in breeches and of course he was flattered when Sonia made eyes at him. It was no basis for a marriage. "I said, "Er... without opinion.
"I at least prevented my daughter from making the same mistake. " Alison, the unmarried daughter, flashed her a glance full of old and bitter resentment. I cleared my throat diplomatically and asked, "Do you by any chance have a photograph of your sister?" "I don't think so. "
"Not even from when you were both young?" Audrey said severely, "Sonia was a late and unexpected child, born when I was already grown. She was pleasant enough to begin with, I Suppose. I didn't see much of her. Then I married Rupert, and really... ! Sonia's behavior became insupportable. She wouldn't listen to me. " "But... when she died in that way... ?" I left the question open, ready for any response. Audrey shuddered a little. "Horrible,"
she said, but the word and the shudder were automatic, the emotion dead from age. "Do you have any idea why she died?" I asked. "We have said over and over again that we do not. " "And," Alison added in the same manner, "it is disgraceful that you and your film should be intruding on our lives. " Audrey nodded vigorously: mother and daughter were agreed on that at least. I asked Alison, "For Howard's sake, then, will you write the short note of explanation to the film company?" With asperity she countered, "You don't care about Howard. You just care about yourself. "
With patience I spoke the truth. "Howard writes a good screenplay. His name is on the film. If he is worried about being sued by the film company, he will not do himself justice in scenes which still need expanding. He admires you, Miss Visborough. Give him a chance to do his best work. " She blinked, rose to her sturdy feet, and left the room, closing the door behind her. Her mother gave a cough of implacable distrust and said, "May I ask why you want a photograph of my sister?" "It would help because then I could be sure the actress who plays her in the film will not look like her
She said however, "My sister had naturally mousey brown hair. She disliked it and dyed it any color she could think of. My husband had a fierce disagreement with her once when she came here with a green crewcut. " I managed not to smile. "Upsetting," I said. "I do not care what you say about Sonia," she went on, "but I mind very much that you are denigrating my husband's achievements. Gaga! He was never gaga. He was a man of sense and wisdom, with a spotless reputation. " And I had no need to wonder what he'd looked like, as there were photographs of Rupert Visborough at various age
"Oh, him. " Roddy Visborough smiled superciliously. "Seems keen on Alison. I can't think what he sees in her. "
His mother made no comment. I thought that what Howard saw in Alison was a staunch woman who took a realistic but none too happy view of the world. There had been unlikelier alliances. Alison herself returned with a white envelope which she held out for me to take. I thanked her; she nodded unenthusiastically and turned to her brother, asking, "How did the lesson go?" "The child's stupid.
"We need her custom. " "I do not need your criticism. " Alison looked as if this level of brotherly love was customary. To me, rather to my surprise, she explained, "We prepare horses and riders for eventing and show-jumping. We keep horses and ponies here at livery. " I see,, "I don't live here," Roddy said with a sort of throttled grudge. "I have a cottage down the road. I only work here. "
"He's the show-jumper," Alison said, as if I should have heard of him. "I employ him to teach. "iPth I said vaguely. "This house is mine," Alison said. "Daddy left our family home to me in his will. Mummy, of course is now my guest. I looked carefully at Alison's face. Under the no-nonsense exterior she let me see a buried but definite glimmer of mischief, of extreme satisfaction, of perhaps the sweetest revenge for a lifetime ofsnubs.
Next morning I awoke with a groan, every muscle stiffly lecturing me on the folly of proving points. I winced down toward my car but was stopped in the lobby by Nash, O'Hara, and Moncrieff, who seemed to have been holding a conference. O'Hara didn't say good morning, he said, "You're goddam crazy, you know that. " I turned disillusioned eyes on Moncrieff, who said, "Yeah, well, nothing's off the record, you're always saying so yourself. " Nash said, "Midnight last night, when you'd gone to bed, Moncrieff played us the video. " I pinched sleepy eyes between finger and thumb and asked
He nodded. "If Howard stays in line, he's off the hook. "
"Good. " I paused. "OK. Today, then. It's not raining. We can shoot the race as planned. We can only do it once, so anyone loading fogged film or getting his f-stops wrong will be blindfolded for the firing squad. Moncrieff, I'll sincerely kill you if your crews bugger it up. " O'Hara said, "Did you phone that TV guy Greg Compass yesterday?"
I thought back and nodded. "From Huntingdon. I couldn't reach him. " "He sent a message. The reception desk says you didn't call down for it. " He handed me a piece of paper on which a phone number was written, and a time, 9 A. M. By nine o'clock, each of us traveling in his own car with driver, we had long reached Huntingdon racecourse. Greg, as good as his message, answered immediately when I phoned.
I said, "I wanted to thank you for Saturday. " "No sweat.
I gather you're still running things. " "Sort of" I explained about the Huntingdon scenes and invited him to come and drape his familiar figure in shot, if he cared to.
"When? 55 "Today, tomorrow, or Thursday. Any or all. " "Too busy," he said. "Never mind, then. " "Fee?"
"Of course. " "I'll be with you tomorrow. " He laughed and clicked off, and I wondered if it would cost me another row of seats. I drove round the track with Moncrieff to check the positions of the cameras and, in places, lights. Apart from our own two usual crews, we had rented three more cameras on dollies and planted two others, unmanned, in the fences for close action. Moncrieff himself would be on the camera truck, driving round ahead of the horses, filming them from head on. The last of the rented 204equipment was high on the stands from where it would follow the action from s
Ed having briefed the jockeys to wait for me, I found them gathered in the jockeys' changing room, kitted as for an ordinary race. Fourteen of them. Every single one.
"Morning," I said, matter-of-factly. "Morning. "
No one referred to the day before. I said, "I know Ed's given you the gen but we'll just go over it once more. From your point of view, it will be a race like most others. Two miles over fences. You'll circle around at the starting gate, and the starter will call you into line. The starter is an actor. He's been well rehearsed, but if he makes a balls of it, don't stop and go back. Just keep on racing. "
I paused. "Same as usual, there's a groundsman and an ambulanceman at every fence. The groundsman and the ambulancemen are the real thing. The ambulance is real. So is the doctor. So is the vet. All the spectators out on the course and at the fences will be professional extras. All the crowds on the stands will be townspeople. OK so far?"
They nodded. "Our fourteen horses are all fairly fit but, as you know, they were chosen for a safe jumping record and bought cheaply. They won't break any sound barriers, and the three of them that raced yesterday may not stay the course today. If you want to, you can draw lots in a minute to see who gets which horse; one to fourteen on the number cloths. " The faces were businesslike. They agreed to draw lots. "This race won't work," I said, "unless you yourselves make it good. You want to be able to show the video of it all to your families, let alone see it in the cinema. You'll
When you pull up, come off the course through the usual gate. All the also-rans can unsaddle in the usual place.
There'll be some extras there acting as owners and trainers. The lads will take the horses. Just behave as normal. The first four will be led off toward the winners' enclosure. Any questions?" "What if we fall?" It was Blue who asked. "Why did you all turn up?" Some laughed and some swore. No tension any more. "Have fun," I said.
One asked, "And where will you be?"I said with audible regret, "I'll be watching from the ground. " I paused. "If you can possibly avoid it, don't give us any flagrant grounds for an enquiry. There's no enquiry in the script. Try not to cross. OK? "I went outdoors through the deserted weighing room that on a real race day would have been crowded with officials and trainers, and I watched for a moment the helpful people of Huntingdon arrive in droves, all dressed in race-going clothes and carrvin in impressive numbers, binoculars.
Ed, I saw, had done a fine job. One of the film personnel came up to me and handed me an envelope, saying it was urgent. I thanked him perfunctorily, and he'd gone before I'd opened the message.
I unfolded the inside sheet of contents, and read the words.
Stop making this film or you will die by the knife today.
Oh, delightful. It looked like a computer printout on anonymous white office paper. O'Hara appeared, wanting to discuss a detail or two, and asked what was the matter. "Why are you frozen?"I gave him the missive. "I've had death threats before," I pointed out. "Those were after the movie had been distributed. But we have to take this seriously. He flicked the page with a fingernail. "What are we going to do about it?" "What do you suggest?" "If you leave the set," O'Hara said plainly, "the movie automatically goes into recess. It would give us all time to find this bozo and slap him
"Thomas... you're no good to us dead. " "What strikes me," I said, half smiling at his pragmatism, "is that whoever sent this note doesn't actually want to kill me, he wants to stop the film without being driven to drastic action. If he or I suppose, she meant to stop the film by killing me, why not just do it? Why the preliminary melodrama? We'll ignore it and press on. " " at least get you a bodyguard, like Nash. " Nash, that day, had not one but two bodyguards in attendance but, as I reminded O'Hara, both of these bodyguards were well known to us. "If you bring in a stranger,
"Keep the paper," I told him, "and keep the envelope. " I gave it to him. "And let's get on with the film. " "I still don't like it. " Nor did I, much; but delivering a death threat took little organization or courage, and delivering a death by knife took both. The knife intended for Nash had been incompetently dropped. Cling to that.
Forget for Christ's sake forget the intestines spilling out of Dorothea. "Who gave you the letter?" O'Hara asked.
"One of the grips. I've seen him around but I don't know his name. " There was never time to know the names of the between sixty and a hundred people working on a film on location. I hadn't learned even the names of the horses, neither their registered names nor the names the lads called them, nor their invented names for the film. I didn't know the jockeys' names, nor those of the bit-part actors. It was faces I remembered, horses' faces, jockeys' faces, actors' faces from way back: my memory had always been chiefly visual. I did forget for a while about the death threat: too much
I decided to ride on the camera truck with Moncrieff, to be nearer the action: and to guard my back, I cravenly and privately acknowledged.
Ed, equipped with loudspeaker, alerted the Huntingdon multitude to put on race-day faces AL and cheer the finish. The commentary, we had explained, would be missing; we had to record it separately and afterward. Nevertheless, Ed urged, cheer whoever won.
Eventually it was he who shouted "Action," the command reverberating through the stands, and I, with raised pulse, who found myself begging unknown deities for perfection.
There were flaws, of course. One of the rented cameras jammed, and one of the two planted in fences got kicked to oblivion by a horse, but the race started tidily, and it was joyously clear from the first that my quasi-colleagues were playing fair.
They had seen me on the truck, when it was positioned for the start, seen me sitting on the edge of the roof of the cab, to get the best of views. They'd waved, in a way, I thought, to reassure me, and I'd waved back; and they did indeed ride their hearts out all the way round. We had the truck driven for a lot of the way so that the camera was barely six feet from the leading horses' heads, then speeded it up to give a longer view, then slowed again, varying the angles.
Two horses fell on the backstretch second time round. I looked back with anxiety, but both jockeys got to their feet, the loose horses adding the unpremeditated facets that in the end proved the contest real.
The other riders again piled on the pressure rounding the last bend, and again they rode flat out over the last two fences and stretched every sinew to win. The finish was even faster and closer than the day before, but distinguishably Blue, Green with White stripes, and Yellow crossed the line in the first three places; and as the truck slowed I could hear the crowd shouting them home as if they'd gambled their shirts. Those jockeys had ridden with an outpouring of courage that left me dry mouthed and breathless, grateful beyond expression, bursting with admiration.
As agreed, when they trotted the tired horses back to unsaddle, another of Moncrieff cameras continued to film them. I couldn't walk into shot to thank them, and thanks, in any form, would have been inadequate. "Hell's teeth,"
Moncrieff exclaimed, moved by the proximity to the speed and sweating commitment. "And they do that for a living?"
"Day in, day out, several times an afternoon.
"Crazy. "
"There's nothing like it," I said.
We changed the actor-jockey into Blue's colors and had him led into the winners' enclosure " to applause from a throng of mixed extras and townspeople. We had to do the unsaddling at that point, while the horses still steamed and sweated and stamped from the excitement of racing. We filmed Nash patting the winner's neck. We filmed the actor-jockey unbuckling the saddle while showing, to my mind, unprofessional clumsiness. We filmed the four horses being rugged and led away by the lads; and we broke for lunch. Nash, bodyguard close, signed a host of good natured autographs, mostly o
"You're having it in the Stewards' box with Nash and me. Do you realize I could have come up behind you just now and put a knife through your ribs?
Do you realize we have roughly three hundred strangers here wandering around?"
I did realize. I went with him and lunched high up in safety.
By the time we returned to ground level and to work, one of Ed's assistants had found the grip who'd passed on the letter. Some kid had given it to him. What kid? He looked around, bewildered. Kids were all over the place. The grip had no recollection of age, sex, or clothes. He'd been busy with the unloading of equipment for the following day.
"Shit," O'Hara said.
Another of the film personnel approached as if apologetically and held out a card toward me. Some people called Batwillow say you're expecting them. " He looked across to where the little group stood. Jackson Wells, his wife, and Lucy, and a man I didn't know. I took the card and waved them over and had time only to say to O'Hara, "This is our hanged lady's real husband-," before shaking their hands. They had come dressed for the races and Jackson Wells himself, in tweeds and trilby, looked indefinably more a trainer than a farmer. He introduced the stranger as "Ridley Wells, my br
He blinked a lot. He was dressed in riding clothes as if he had come straight from his work, which JJackson described to O'Hara as "teaching difficult horses better manners. " Ridley nodded, and in an accent stronger than his brother's, said self-pityingly, "Im out in all weathers on Newmarket Heath, but it's a thankless sort of job. I can ride better than most, but no one pays me enough. How about employing me in this film?" Jackson resignedly shook his head at Ridley's underlying chip-on-the-shoulder attitude. O'Hara said sorry, no job.
Ridley looked as if he'd been badly treated; a habitual expression, I guessed. I could see why Jackson hadn't welcomed Ridley's inclusion in the day's proceedings.
Jackson still had, it seemed, the old professional trainers eye, because after a few "nice days" and so on, he said, "That was some race those jocks rode. More electrifying than most of the real thing. " "Could you see that?" O'Hara asked interestedly. "Didn't you hear the cheering? That was no act, either. 'Cheer the winner,' we were told, but the cheers came easy as pie. " "Be darned,"
O'Hara said, no horseman himself. He looked at my guests thoughtfully and said impulsively to me, "Keep the Batwillow family around you, why not?" He meant, use them as bodyguards. He hadn't heard Jackson Wells tell me he'd have preferred not to have the film made. I felt safe, though, with his wife and daughter, so I wrapped them as a living shield around me, Mrs. Wells on one arm,.
Lucy on the other, and walked them all off to meet Nash.
Although Nash hadn't wanted to meet the man he was playing, I introduced them straightforwardly, "Jackson Wells, Nash Rourke," and watched them shake hands with mutual reservations. They were in several ways superficially alike: same build, same age bracket, same firm facial muscles. Jackson was blond where Nash was darker, and sunnily open, where Nash, from long mega-star status, had grown self-protectively wary. Easier with the women, Nash autographed race cards for wife and daughter and effortlessly melted their hearts. He signed for Ridley also, and didn't take to him. We were d
"It hasn't occurred to your wife," I said. "What hasn't?"
he said, but he knew what I meant.
"That's she standing next to you, twenty-six years ago.
"They're the wrong age," he said brusquely. "We were all kids at the time. And you're right, I don't like it. "
He bore it, however, standing rigid but quiet, while Nash, taking over from his stand-in, walked up the steps and turned on exactly the right spot to bring his face into Moncrieff s careful lighting. We shot the scene three times and I marked the first and third takes to be printed: and O'Hara stood all the while at my left elbow, riding shot gun, so to speak. I grinned at him. "I could get me some armor," I said. "It's no laughing matter. " "No.
One can't somehow believe in one's own imminent death. I hadn't stopped the film and I went on shooting bits of it all afternoon; and for ages at a time, like ten minutes, I stopped thinking about steel. At one point, waiting as ever for lights and camera to be ready, I found myself a little apart from the center of activity, standing beside Lucy, gazing into her amazing blue eyes and wondering how old she was. She said suddenly, "You asked Dad for a photo of Sonia so that you didn't copy her exactly in the film. "
"That's right. He hadn't kept any. " "No," she agreed. "But... well... I've got one. I found it one day jammed at the back of a drawer. I meant to give it to Dad, but he won't talk about Sonia. He won't let us mention her, ever. So I just kept it. " She opened the small handbag swinging from her shoulder and handed me a creased but clearly distinguishable snapshot of a pretty girl and a good-looking young man, not Jackson.
"You won't make Yvonne look like her, will you?" Shaking my head, I turned the photo over and read the penciled information on the back: "Sonia and Pig. " "Who is Pig?" I asked. "No idea," Lucy said. "I've never heard Dad mention him. But that's Dad's handwriting, so he must have known him, long ago. " "Long ago before you were born. "
"I'm eighteen," she said. I felt old. I said, "Could I borrow the photo for a while? "She looked doubtful. "I don't want to lose it. " "Until tomorrow?" I suggested. "If you came here again tomorrow... " "I don't think there's a chance. Dad didn't really want to come at all. He only gave in to Mum so that she could meet Nash Rourke. "
"Could you and your mother come tomorrow?" "She won't do anything if Dad doesn't like it. " "And you?" "I don't have a car of my own. " "Lend me the photo for an hour, then. " She brightened and agreed, and I gave the photo to Moncrieff with an on-my-knees expression, begging him to do me a clear negative from which we could get a positive print. It would take the usual day for traveling to London to the laboratory for development, but with reasonable luck I'd have it back in the morning. In the morning. Die today.
Shut up, I thought.
"Do you," I asked Lucy later, "have a computer and a printer at home?" "Of course we do," she answered, puzzled.
"No one can farm without one, nowadays. The paperwork drives Dad loco. Why do you ask?" "Just wondered. We use one here all the time. " I enlarged on it, defusing my enquiry. "Every inch of film, every lens used, every focal stop... we have a script supervisor entering the lot. We can lay our hands on any frame of film that way, and also make sure we have continuity if we shoot the next scene days later. " She nodded in partial understanding and said, "And who are all those odd people you see on the credits?
Grips, gaffers... who are they?" "Grips move equipment.
The gaffer is in charge of the lighting equipment. The most important chap at the moment is the production manager.
He's the person who arranges for vehicles and scenery and props and all sorts of things to be in the right place when we need them. " "And you," she said with unflattering doubt, are in overall charge of the whole thing?' "I and the producer. " I pointed to 0'Hara. "No us, no film. She said baldly, "Dad said so, but Mum thought you were too young.
"Are you always so frank?" "Sixteen was hell," she said.
"Tongue-tied. Not long ago I broke out of the egg. "
"Congratulations. " "Dad says I talk nonsense. " "No better time for it. Stay and have dinner. I'll take you home later. "
"Sorry. " The response was automatic, the blue eyes full of the warnings she'd been given about date rape and such.
"Not on our own. " I smiled wryly. I'd thought only of not being knifed, not of bed. I'm losing it, I thought, wanting my life saved by an eighteen-year-old still half in the cradle. I fetched her snap from Moncrief thumbs up, he said-and returned it to her. "I didn't mean," she said awkwardly, sixteen surfacing again after all. "I mean, I don't want to offend you.. "But no casting couches.
It's all right. " She blushed and retreated, sane and confused, to her parents, and I thought bed wouldn't have been such a bad idea after all. The trouble with making films, I acknowledged, was the way the occupation gobbled time. For the three months of any pre-production, I worked flat out to put the film together, choosing locations, getting the feel the vision-in place, altering the screenplay, living with the characters. During production, like now, I worked seven days a week with little sleep.
Post-production the recording of music and sound effects, the cutting together of scenes and parts of scenes to make an impact and tell a story, the debates and the meetings and the previews-all of those often had to be scrambled into just a further three months. And with one film done, another crowded on my heels. I'd made three films lately in under two years. This new one had by far the biggest budget. I loved the work, I was lucky to be wanted, I felt no flicker of regret: I just didn't seem to have time to look for a wife.
One day, I guessed, it might happen like a thunderbolt. The skies, however, had to date vouchsafed only scattered showers, and Lucy looked like a continuing drought. Someone unexpectedly knocked my elbow. I whirled round with surging heartbeat and found mystlf face-to-face with Moncrieff. "Jumpy!"
he said, watching me reach for composure. "What were you expecting? A tiger?" "With claws," I agreed.
I got things under control and we discussed the next scene.
"Are you all right?" Moncrieff asked, puzzled. "Not ill?" Not ill, I thought, but plain scared. I said, "Everything's fine. But... er...
some nutter wants to get the film stopped, and if you see anyone in my area raising a blunt instrument, give me a holler. " His eyebrows rose. "Is that why O'Hara has been standing behind you whenever he can?"
"I guess so. "He thought it over. "Nasty knife, that, on the gallops. " A pause.
"It got effing close to Ivan. " "Do me a favor and don't remind me. " "Just keep my eyes open?"
"Got it. " We lit and shot some nonspeaking takes of Nash's emotions during the race. The block of crowd behind him, mostly bona fide extras but some townspeople, also Mrs. Wells, Lucy, Ridley, and Nash's bodyguards, responded faithfully to Ed's exhortations, looking for each shot to where he pointed, oohing and aahing, showing anxiety, showing excitement, and finally cheering220 Lwildly as they watched in memory the horses racing to the finish. All of the faces except Nash's would be very slightly out of focus, thanks to Moncrieff s wizardry with lenses. One of his favorite lenses
Ed through his megaphone thanked the citizens of Huntingdon for their work and invited them back for the morrow. They clapped. Happy faces all round. Nash signed autographs with the bodyguards at his shoulders. Lucy, glowing with the day's pleasures, walked to where I was checking through the following day's schedule with O'Hara, and handed me a flat white box about a foot long by three inches wide, fastened shut with a rubber band. "What is it?" I asked.
"I don't know," she said. "A boy asked me to give it to you. "
"What boy?" "Just a boy. A present, he said. Aren't you going to open it?" O'Hara took it out of my hands, stripped off the rubber band, and cautiously opened the box himself. Inside, on a bed of crunched up white office paper, lay a knife. I swallowed. The knife had a handle of dark polished wood, ridged round and round to give a 221good grip. There was a businesslike black hilt and a narrow black blade nearly six inches long: all in all, good-looking and efficient. "Wow," Lucy said. "It's beautiful. " O'Hara closed the box without touching the knife and, restoring the rubber band,
"Spectacular!" I kissed her cheek. In public, she allowed it. She said, "I'd better go, Dad's waiting," and made a carefree departure, waving. O'Hara took the white box from his pocket and carefully opened it again, picking out of the raised lid a folded strip of the same white paper. He handed it to me and I looked at its message. Again a computer print-out, it said: Tomorrow.
O'Hara and I walked out together toward the cars and I told him about Dorothea and her injuries. I described again for him, as I had two days earlier, the knife that had been dropped on the Heath.
222He stopped dead in mid-stride. "Are you saying," he demanded, "that your ftiend was attacked with that knife?
The one on the Heath?" "I don't know. " "But," he protested, bemused, "what possible connection could there be between her and our film?" "I don't know. " "It can't have been the same knife. " He walked on, troubled but certain. "The only connection," I said, going with him, "is the fact that long ago Dorothea's brother Valentine put shoes on Jackson Wells's racehorses. " "Much too distant to have any significance. " "And Valentine said he once gave a knife to someone called Derry. " "Hell's teeth, Thomas, you're rambling. " "Yes. Valentine was at the time. " "Valentine was what?" "
Too many knives. "You are not," O'Hara said strongly, "going to get knifed tomorrow. " "Good. He laughed. "You're a jackass, Thomas. " He wanted me to travel in his car, but I called Robbie Gill's mobile and found I could briefly see Dorothea, if I arrived by seven. At the hospital the egregious Paul had positioned himself in a chair outside the single room into which Dorothea had been moved. He rose heavily to his feet at the sight of me; but to my surprise made none of the objections I was expecting. "My mother wants to see you," he said disapprovingly. "I've told her I don't want
"It's Thomas. I've come. Very faintly, she smiled.
Paul's loud voice broke her peace. "I've told him, Mother, that he has five minutes. And of course I will remain here at hand. "
Dorothea, murmuring, said she wanted to talk to me alone.
"Don't be silly, Mother. " Two tears appeared below her eyelids and trembled in the lashes. "Oh, for heaven's sake," Paul said brusquely. "She does that all the time. "
He turned on his heel and gave her her wish, seeming hurt at her rejection. "Five minutes," he threatened as a parting shot. "Paul's gone," I said, as the door closed behind him. "How are you feeling?" "So tired, dear. " Her voice, though still a murmur, was perfectly clear. "I don't remember how I got here. " "No, I've been told. Robbie Gill told me. " "Robbie Gill is very kind. "
"Yes. "Hold my hand, dear. " I pulled the visitor's chair to her side and did as she asked, vividly remembering Valentine's grasp of my wrist, exactly a week ago. Dorothea, however, had no sins to confess. "Paul told me," she said, "that someone tore my house apart, looking for something. " "I'm afraid so. Yes, I saw it. "
"What were they looking for?" "Don't you know?" "No, dear. The police asked me. It must have been something Valentine had. Sometimes I think I know. Sometimes I think I hear him shouting at me, to tell him. Then it all goes away again.
"Who was shouting?" She said doubtfully, "Paul was shouting. " "Oh no. "He does shout, you know.
He means well. He's my son, my sweet baby. " Tears of weakness and regret ran down her cheeks. "Why do precious little babies grow... ?" Her question ended in a quiet sob, unanswerable. "He wants to look after me. " I said, "Did Robbie Gill talk to you about a nursing home?" "So kind. I'd like to go there. But Paul says.. She stopped, fluttering a white hand exhaustedly. "I haven't the strength to argue. " "Let Robbie Gill move you," I urged. "In a day or two, when you're stronger. " "Paul says She stopped, the effort of opposing him too much. "Just rest, I said. "Don't worry. J
"So kind, dear. " She lay quiet for a long minute, then said, "I'm sure I know what he was looking for, but I can't remember it. " "What Paul was looking for?" "No, dear.
Not Paul. " She frowned. "It's all jumbled up. " After another pause she said, "How many knives did I have?"
"How many... ?" "The police asked me. How many knives in the kitchen. I can't remember. " "No one knows how many knives they have in the kitchen. " "No... they said there weren't any knives in the house with blood on them. "
"Yes, I see. " "Perhaps when I go home I'll see which knife is missing. " "Yes, perhaps. Would you like me to tidy your house up a bit?" "I can't ask you. " "I'd like to do it. " "Paul wants to. He keeps asking. He gets so angry with me, but I don't know who has the key. So silly, isn't it? I can't go home because I haven't got the key. "
"I'll find the key," I said. "Is there anything you want from there?" "No, dear. I just want to be at home with Valentine. " The slow tears came. "Valentine's dead. "
I stroked her soft hand. "It was a photo album," she said suddenly, opening her eyes. "What was?"
"What they were looking for. " She looked at me worriedly, pale blue shadows round her eyes. "What photo album?"
"I don't know. I haven't got one, just some old snaps I keep in a box. Some pictures of Paul when he was little. I never had a camera, but friends gave me snaps..
"Where's the box?" "In my bedroom, but it's not an album... I didn't think of it before. Everything's so confusing.
"Mm. Don't let it worry you. And Robbie Gill will be cross if I tire you, let alone Paul. "
A smile shone briefly in the old eyes. "I might as well be tired. I've nothing else to do. " I laughed. "It's just a shame," I said, "that Paul took Valentine's books after all. He swears he didn't, but he must have done, because they arent in the house. " Dorothea frowned. "No, dear, Paul didn't take them. " "Didn't he?" I was skeptical. "Did he send someone else? "No, dear. " Her forehead wrinkled further. "Valentine wanted you to have his books and I know he would have been furious if Paul had taken them, because he wasn't very fond of Paul, only put up with him for my sake, such
"Bill. "
"Who? "Bill Robinson, dear. He has them safe. " "But Dorothea... who is Bill Robinson, and where and why does he have the books?" She smiled guiltily. "I was afraid, you see, dear, that Paul would come back and persuade me to let him take them. He tires me out sometimes until I do what he wants, but he's my son, dear, after all... So I asked Bill Robinson to come and pick them all up and put them in his garage, and he's a chum of mine, dear, so he came and took them, and they'll be quite safe, dear, he's a nice young man, he mends motorbikes. "
I went to bed after midnight, thinking that although I had not died today, it was now already tomorrow.
Nash and I had eaten dinner together in harmony over his scenes-to-come in the parade ring, where his jockey would be wearing blue, while Cibber's would be in the green and white stripes. After the evening preparation for the jockey Club enquiry scene, Nash had, without baldly saying so, let me realize that he much preferred to rehearse everything with me in private, so that on set little needed to be asked or answered, his performances being already clear in his mind. I didn't know if he worked in this way with every director, but between the two of us it was notably fruitful in r
Multiple cameras, though not cheap in themselves, also saved time: I would later cut together, from several lengthy shots, the snippets and pieces that in shorthand would give an overall impression of the 229 Akvwhole pre-race tension. The slap of leather straps into buckles, the brushing of oil to gloss the hoof, the close shots of muscle moving below shining coat... It needed only two seconds of graphic visual image to flash an impression of urgency and intent, but it took maybe ten long minutes of filming to capture each. Pace had a lot to do with good film making. There would
Well... so I hoped. While my silent young driver took me toward Huntingdon in the morning I thought of Dorothea's preservation of Valentine's books, and of the new uncertainty beneath Paul's bluster. He hadn't tried to cut short my visit to the patient: the five allowed minutes had stretched to ten, until I myself thought that she'd talked enough. Paul had walked with me from her room to the hospital exit, his breath agitated and deep as if he wanted to say something but couldn't bring himself entirely to the point. I gave him time and opportunity, but he was not, as his uncle ha
Paul was shouting, Dorothea had said. For her sake, I hoped to God she'd got things mixed up. At Huntingdon racecourse, before eight 0'clock, the gates were already wide open to admit the local inhabitants. Breakfast, provided free for all comers via the film's caterers, ran to endless hot dogs out of a raised-sided van. The weather, though cold, still smiled. Cheerful faces abounded. I needn't have worried that the townspeople would be too bored to return: word of mouth had acted positively and we ended with an even larger crowd than on the day before. The publicity department of t
The Huntingdon racecourse officials having been generous and helpful throughout, we had had unlimited access to everything we'd wanted. I was so keen not to abuse their welcome that I'd screwed O'Hara's arm to provide an army of scavengers to clean up all trash left by us. "They'll have their own cleaning staff," he'd protested. "We're paying them, after all. " "Goodwill is beyond price. " He'd instructed the production manager to have the place left spotless. The weighing room and the jockeys' changing rooms were already unlocked when I arrived on the course, and the wardrobe peopl
When I was in the changing rooms I found none of the jockeys had already arrived, they'd been called for nine o'clock and I had no difficulty at all in scooping up what I wanted and locking myself privately into the bathroom. I had taken with me two of the body protectors designed to save fallen jockeys from the worst effects of kicks.
Stripped down to shirt and underpants I put on the first and zipped it up the front. In essence the body protector was a blue cotton lightweight vest padded throughout with flat polystyrene oblongs, about six inches by four, by half an inch thick. The polystyrene pieces, stitched into place, covered the trunk from the neck to below the waist, with a further extension at the back to cover the coccyx at the base of the spine. From there a soft wide belt led forward between the legs to fasten to the vest in front, a scheme which prevented the protector from being displaced.
Extra pieces led like epaulettes over the shoulders and down the upper arms, to be fastened round the arm with Velcro. Although I'd taken the largest available, the protector fitted tight and snugly. When I put the second on top, the front zip wouldn't meet to fasten across my chest; a problem I half solved by straining my trousers over both protectors and cinching my waist with my belt to hold everything together. I ended feeling like a hunch-shouldered quarterback, but with my ordinary sweater on top 232 and my windproof blue jacket fastened over all, I didn't in the mirror look m
I had no idea how a jockey's kick protector would stand up to a knife, but psychologically an inch of polystyrene and four layers of sturdy cotton cloth was better than nothing, and I couldn't afford to spend the whole busy day worrying about something that would probably not happen. I'd happily ridden flat out over jumps round the racecourse without a body protector, risking my neck. I would as happily have done it again. Odd how fear had different faces. Outside, Moncrieff had already positioned his camera on its dolly for the first scene of the day, which was the exodus of the jo
Nash's main two bodyguards, dressed as owners, carried binoculars as if they would rather have had guns. The apparently elderly lady completing that group was a twenty-eight-year-old martial arts champion with lioness instincts. Cibber's group included Silva dressed as befitted a jockey Club member's wife in well-cut woolcoat, knee-high boots, and fur hat; warm and pretty in the chill wind. Cibber's "trainer," offcourse-, taught judo.
O'Hara had taken these precautions. My own shadow, the one he'd insisted on the evening before, stood beside me in the ring, looking dim. He was supposed to be a black belt but I had more faith in polystyrene. Later in the day we would do close-ups of Cibber's acrid fury at having to suffer Nash, his wife's lover, in unbearable proximity: close-ups of Silva looking lovingly at Nash, goading poor Cibber further; close-ups of Nash behaving with good manners, neutral toward Cibber, circumspect with Silva; short essential close shots that would take an age to light. Meanwhile, with the
"Hallelujah," Moncrieff breathed, sweating beside me when Ed yelled "Cut. " "And print," I added. "And do it again. " We broke for lunch. Nash, in the center of the parade ring, signed autographs one by one for a well-behaved but apparently endless single line of people, shepherded closely by one of Ed's assistants. O'Hara, the bodyguard, and the lioness formed a human wall round the mega-star's back.
We ate again, Nash, O'Hara, and 1, up high in the Stewards' box. Threats to the film apart, it had been a satisfactory morning; we all knew that the scenes had gone well.
O'Hara said, "Howard's here, did you know?"
"Howard!" Nash exclaimed with disgust. "A very quiet Howard," O'Hara amplified, grimly amused. "Howard is putty in our hands. " "I don't think his views have changed," I said. "He's been frightened. He'll keep his mouth shut. I'd describe it as a plug in a volcano. There's no doubt he passionately meant what he said to Alison Visborough. He stirred her up enough to relay his gripes to her friend on the Drumbeat, and what he said to her, that's how he still feels. " "But," O'Hara protested, "he wouldn't want the film actually stopped... would he?" "His full screenplay fee became p
Slow down. " He listened a brief moment more and passed the instrument to me. "It's Ziggy," he said. "You talk to him He goes too fast for me. " "Where is he?" I asked.
O'Hara shrugged. "He went to Norway yesterday morning. I outlined what you wanted to an agent, who whisked him off at once. " Ziggy's voice on the telephone was as staccato as automatic rifle fire, and just as fast. "Hey," I said after a while, "have I got this straight? You've found ten wild Viking horses but they must come at once. "
"They cannot come at twenty-four days, or at thirty-eight days. They are not free. They are free only next week, for the right tides. They are coming on the ferry on Monday from Bergen to Immingham. " "Newcastle," I corrected.
"No. The Bergen ferry goes usually to Newcastle, but for horses it must be Immingham. It is better for us, they say. It is on the River Humber. They will leave Bergen on Sunday. They have a trainer and five grooms. They are all coming in big horse vans. They will bring the horses' food.
They can work on Wednesday and Thursday and on Friday they must return to Immingham. It is all arranged, Thomas. Is it good?" "Brilliant," I said. He laughed happily. "Good horses. They will run wild without bridles, but they are trained. I have ridden one without a saddle, as you want.
They are perfect. " "Fantastic, Ziggy. "
"The trainer must know where we are to go from Immingham. " "Er... are you meaning to travel with them" "Yes, Thomas. This week I work with the trainer. I learn his ways with the horses.
They get to know me. I will practice with a blond wig and a nightgown. It is arranged. The horses will not then panic.
Is it good?" I was practically speechless.
Good hardly described it. "You're a genius, I said.
He said modestly, "Yes, Thomas, I am. "I'll arrange where the horses are to go. Telephone again on Saturday. " He said good-bye excitedly without giving me a number where I could call him back, but I supposed the agent might help in an emergency. I relayed Ziggy's news to O'Hara and Nash and said we would have to rearrange the following week's schedule, but that it shouldn't be much problem. "We have the hanged-wife actress working next week," O'Hara reminded me.
"We have to complete all her scenes in fourteen days. "
I would take her to the beach, I thought. I'd have the nightgown diaphanously blowing against the sunrise. I'd have her standing on the shore, and have Ziggy galloping for her on the horse. Insubstantial. Unreal. All in her mind.
Pray for a sunrise.
"Sonia," I said. "Yvonne," O'Hara corrected. "We have to call her Yvonne. That's her name in the book and in the script. "
I nodded. "Howard wrote the usual hanging cliche of legs and shoes swaying unsupported, with onlookers displaying shock. But I've ideas for that. "O'Hara was silent.
Nash shuddered. "Don't get us an NC17 certificate," Nash finally said. "We'll have to cut that scene, if you do. "I'm to make it tastefully horrifying?"
They laughed. "She did hang," I said. Downstairs again, one of the first people I saw was Lucy Wells, who was arguing with a man obstructing her way. I walked over and asked what was the matter. "This man," Lucy said heatedly, "says he has instructions not to let anyone near you. "
O'Hara's order, the man explained. I reassured him about Lucy and bore her off, holding her arm. "I thought you weren't coming today," I said. "Dad changed his mind. He and Mum are both here again. So is Uncle Ridley. Wild horses wouldn't keep him away, he said. " "I'm glad to see you. "Sorry I was so uncouth. "I smiled at her blue eyes. "A wise child," I said. "I am not a child. "Stay beside me," I said. "I'll tell Moncrieff it's OK. "Who's MoncriefP" "The director of photography. Very important man.
She looked at me dubiously when I introduced her to the untidy beard and the earthquake-victim clothes, but after allowing us one old-fashioned sideways look, he took a fancy to her and let her get in his way without cursing. She looked colorfully bright in scarlet short coat over clean new blue jeans, and mentally bright with noticing eyes and a firm calm mouth. She watched the proceedings without senseless chatter. "I told Dad about that knife," she told me after a while. "What did he say?" "Funny, that's exactly what he said.
He said, 'What did he say?' " "Did he?" I considered her guileless expression. "And what did you say I said?" Her forehead wrinkled. "I told him the knife looked beautiful, but you hadn't said much at all. I told Dad it hadn't pleased the producer, O'Hara, and I didn't know why. " "O'Hara doesn't like knives," I said, dismissing it.
"Oh, I see. Dad said it might be because someone had tried to cut Nash Rourke, like he'd heard on the radio, but it was his stand-in, not Nash himself "
"That too," I agreed. "Dad said directors don't have a stand-in," she was teasing, unaware, "and you don't know which they are until someone points them out. "
"Or when they come to your home. "
"Goodness, yes. Did the photo of Sonia come out all right?"
"I'm sure it did, but I won't see it until I go back to Newmarket this evening. " She said hesitantly, "I didn't tell Dad. He really wouldn't like it. " "I won't mention it.
The actress playing Yvonne, that's Nash's wife, in the film-starts work on set next week. I promise she won't look like the photo. She won't upset your father. " She smiled her appreciation and thanks, exonerated from her deception. I hoped no deadly harm would come to her, but in so many lives, it did. First on the afternoon's schedule was the last of the wide crowd shots round the parade ring; the mounting of the jockeys onto their horses and their walk out toward the course. Even though the action would in the end be peripheral to the human story, we had to get the race-day seque
"Greg Compass?" He nodded. "Outside the weighing room.
He's been yacking with the jockeys. He'll meet you there, he said. " "Great. "
We rehearsed the mounting scene twice and shot it three times from two camera angles until the horses grew restive, and then asked all the townspeople to go round to the course side of the stands, to watch the string cantering down to the start. During the inevitable delay for camera positioning I left Lucy with Moncrieff and walked over to the weighing room to meet Greg, whom I found in a milk-of-human-kindness mood, dressed in an expensive gray suit and wide open to suggestions from me that he might like to earn an unexpected fee by briefly taking on his usual persona and intervie
"Done. "Incidentally, do you yourself remember anything about the trainer whose wife was hanged, who we're making this saga about?" "Jackson Wells?" "Yes. He's here, himself, today. So is his present wife. So's his daughter.
And his brother. " "Before my time, old lad. " "Not much," I assured him. "You must have been about sixteen when Jackson stopped training. You rode in your first race not long after that. So... did you hear anything from the older jockeys about... well... anything?"
He looked at me quizzically. "I can't say I haven't thought about this since last Saturday, because of course I have.
As far as I know, the book, Unstable Times, is sentimental balls. The jockeys who knew the real Yvonne were not dream lovers, they were a randy lot of activists. "I smiled.
"You knew?" he asked. "It sort of stands to reason.
But they're still going to be dream lovers in the film. " I paused. "Do you remember any names? Do you by any chance know who?" "By the time I'd dried behind the ears in the changing room, no one was saying anything. All scared at being sucked into a murder. Clams werent in it. " He paused. "If Jackson Wells himself is truly here today, I'd like to meet him. " "His daughter says he's here. " I refrained from asking him why he wanted to meet Jackson Wells but he told me anyway. "Good television. Rivet the couch potatoes. Good publicity for your film. " "Jackson Wells isn't keen on th
I walked with drained energy back toward the weighing room and found O'Hara there, talking to Howard. Howard, to my complete astonishment, had brought with him his three friends: Mrs. Audrey Visborough; her daughter, Alison; and her son, Roddy. O'Hara gave me a wild look and said, "Mrs. Visborough wants us to stop making the film. I said to Howard, "Are you mad?" which might not have been tactful but summed up my exasperation. I'd been afraid of a stiletto through the heart, and Howard had brought clowns.
All three of them, however, wore unremarkable race-going clothes, not white cone hats, bobbles, and red noses.
Audrey Visborough leaned on her cane and continued with her complaint. "Your director, Thomas Lyon," she flicked me a venomous glance, "has obviously no intention whatever of either returning to the facts or of stopping making this travesty of a film. I demand that you order him to cease at once. " Howard shuffled from foot to foot and ineffectually said, "Er... Audrey. " O'Hara, restraining himself amazingly, told her that he hadn't the power to stop the film himself (which I guessed he actually had) and that she should write her objections directly to the moguls of the film com
244She announced that she would do that and demanded names and addresses. O'Hara obligingly handed her two or three business cards with helpful and soothing advice that slid over her consciousness without sticking. Audrey Visborough felt personally and implacably insulted by the film's plot, and 'nothing would satisfy her short of preventing its completion. Alison stood to one side of her, nodding. Roddy looked weakly supportive but from the glances he gave his mother I would have guessed he cared a good deal less than she did about the scurrilous suggestion that she would ever have
"Me?" She was surprised and glanced at her mother before answering. "It won't change our minds. This film is a disgrace. " When I moved a pace away in irritation, how ever, she took a pace after me. "Where are you going?" her mother demanded sharply. "I need you here. " Alison gave me a dark look and said, "I'll work on Mr. Lyon. " She walked resolutely beside me, sensible in tweed suit and flat shoes, earnestly committed to just causes. "Daddy,"
she said, "was a good man. " "I'm sure. " "Not easygoing," she went on with approbation. "A man of principle. Some people found him boring, I know, but he was a good father to me. He believed that women are very badly treated by the English system of leaving family inheritances chiefly to sons, which is why he left his house to me. " She paused. "Rodbury was furious. He's three years older than I am, and he'd taken it for granted he would inherit everything. He had been generously treated all his life. Daddy bought all his show jumpers for him, and only insisted that Rodbury should
I said, "Think of this film as being about fictional people, not about your father and mother. The people in the film are not in the least like your parents. They are not them. They are inventions. "Mummy will never be persuaded. " I took her with me into the parade ring, where Moncrieff as ever was busy with lights. "I'm going to show you two people," I said to Alison. "Tell me what you think. " She looked puzzled, but her gaze followed where I pointed to a nearby couple, and she looked without emotion at Cibber, a sober fifty, and at lovely young Silva in her well-cut coat and pol
"These people," I told Alison, "are Greg Compass, who interviews racing people on TV. "Alison briefly nodded in recognition. "This family," I said neutrally, "are Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Wells and their daughter, Lucy. " Alison's mouth opened but no words came out. Jackson Wells, good-looking and smiling, stood between his two wholesome, well-groomed women, waiting for me to complete the introduction. "Alison Visborough," I said. Jackson Wells's sunny face darkened. He said, almost spitting, "Her daughter!" "You see," I said to Alison, "Jackson Wells dislikes your mother as intensely a
The people in this film are not them. " Alison remained dumb. I took her arm, wheeling her away. "Your mother," I said, "is making herself ill. Persuade her to turn her back on what we are doing. Make her interested in something else, and don't let her see the completed film. Believe that I mean no disrespect to her or to your father's memory. I am making a movie about fictional people. I have some sympathy with your mother's feelings, but she will not get the film abandoned. " Alison found her voice. "You are ruthless," she said. "Quite likely. However, I admire you, Miss Visboroug
first roomed lesson of film making. Anyway, I apologize to you troducand your mother and brother, but until last week I hardly knew you existed. " "Oh, Roddy!" she said without affection. e said, "Don't worry about him. He doesn't care very much. He and Daddy were pretty cold to each Wells other. Too different, I suppose. Rodbury... and slikes I call him by his full name because Roddy sounds @ had like a nice little boy, but he would never let me em. 11 join in his games when we were children, and @Jing other girls were so wrong when they said I was lucky having an older brother.
Particularly not to people I tnd disapprove of. Anyway, Rodbury wouldn't care 'lat what you said about Daddy as long as he didn't r) s lose money over it. He only pretends to Mummy @al that he cares, because he's always conning her 13S into buying things for him. "
"He's not married?"
She shook her head. "He boasts about girls. More talk than action, I sometimes think. "I smiled at her forthright opinion and thought of her unfulfilled life: the disappointing brother, the adored but distant father, the mother who'd prevented a perhaps unsuitable match. An admirable woman overall. "I like you, Miss Visborough," I said. She gave me a straight look. "Stop the film, then. " I thought of her feelings, and I thought of knives. "I can't," I said.
We completed the day's shooting schedule in time to hold the semi-planned good-public-relations final autographing session outside the weighing room. Nash, Silva, and Cibber scribbled there with maximum charm. Many Huntingdon residents were already wearing their Unstable (at all) Times T-shirts. Good humor abounded all around. The envisaged orderly line of autograph hunters dissolved into a friendly scrum. O'Hara signed books and race cards presented to him by people who knew a producer when they saw one, and I, too, signed my share. Howard modestly wrote in proffered copies of his
of O'Hara, laughing, stretched his hand down to help me up. I took his hand in my right, and reflexly accepted ie his assistance, and he saw the strong wince round al my eyes and stopped laughing. "Did you hurt yourself?. "No. " His pull had lifted me back to my knees. I said, "Lend me your jacket. " He wore an old flying type of jacket, army colored, zip fronts hanging open. "Jacket," I repeated. "What?" He leaned down toward me from his craggy height. "Lend me your jacket. " I swallowed, making myself calm. "Lend me your jacket and get my driver to bring my car right up here to th
Drape your jacket over my right shoulder, to hide it. Don't make a fuss. Don't frighten the moguls. Not a word to the press. Don't tell the police. I am not dead, and the film will go on. "
251He listened and understood but could hardly believe it.
"Where's the knife?" he asked as if bewildered. "You look all right. " "It's somewhere under my arm, above my elbow.
Do lend me your jacket. " "I'll get our doctor. "
"No, O'Hara. No. Just the jacket. " I put, I suppose, every scrap of the authority he'd given me into the words that were half plea, half order. In any case, without further objection, he took off his windproof jacket and draped it over my shoulder, revealing the heavy-knit armycolored sweater he wore underneath. Other eyes looked curiously our way. I put my left hand on O'Hara's arm, as he was facing me, and managed the endless inches to my feet. I concentrated on his eyes, at the same height as my own.
"The bastard," I said carefully with obvious anger, "is not going to succeed. " "Right," O'Hara said. I relaxed infinitesimally, but in fact bloodymindedness was the best anesthetic invented, and too much sympathy would defeat me quicker than any pain from invaded ribs. O'Hara sent one of Ed's assistants to bring my car and reassuringly told a few enquirers that I'd fallen and wrenched my shoulder but that it was nothing to worry about. I saw a jumbled panorama of familiar faces and couldn't remember any of them having been near enough for attack. But crowd movement had been nonstop
"Let me get the doctor. " "You'll get Greg Compass and television coverage, if you do. "He was silent. "I know a different doctor," I promised. "Where's the car?" Ed returned with it pretty soon, though it seemed an age to me. I asked him to thank everyone and see to general security, and said we would complete the close-ups the next day. He nodded merely and took over, and I edged gingerly into the rear seat of the car. O'Hara climbed in on the other side. "You don't need to," I said. "Yes, I do. "
I was glad enough of his company, and I gave him a number to call on his telephone, taking the mobile from him after he'd pressed buttons. "Robbie?" I said, grateful not to get his message service. "Thomas Lyon. Where are you?"
"Newmarket. "
"Um... could you come to the hotel in an hour? Fairly urgent. " "What sort of urgent?" "Can't say, right now. " O'Hara looked surprised, but I nodded toward our driver, who might be economical with words, but was far from deaf. O'Hara looked understanding, but also worried.
"One of the moguls from L. A. has arrived at the hotel and will be waiting for us. " "Oh. " I hesitated, then said, "Robbie... can you make it Dorothea's house instead? It's for a Dorothea sort of job, though not so radical. " "You've got someone with you, listening, that you don't want to know what you're talking about? And it's a knife wound?"
"Right," I said, grateful for his quickness.
"Who's the patient?"I am. "Dear God... Have you got a key to Dorothea's house?" "I'm sure her friend Betty must have one. She lives nearly opposite. 55 "I know her," he said briefly. "One hour.
Dorothea's house. How bad is it?" "I don't know the internal geography well enough, but not too bad, I don't think. " "Abdomen?" he asked worriedly. "No.
Higher, and to one side. " "See you," he said. "Don't cough. " I gave the phone back to O'Hara, who stifled all his questions with worry and difficulty. I sat sideways, propping myself as firmly as possible 254against the motion of the car, but all the same it was a long thirty-eight miles that time from Huntingdon to Newmarket. I gave the driver directions to Dorothea's house. Robbie Gill's car was there already. Robbie himself opening the front door from inside when we pulled up, and coming down the path to meet us. O'Hara arranged with the driver to return for us in half an hour
I said, "We're not keen for publicity over this. " "So I gathered. I haven't told anyone. " He watched O'Hara get out of the car and give the driver a signal to depart, and I said briefly, "O'Hara... Robbie Gill," which seemed enough for them both.
We walked up the path slowly and into the empty but still ravaged house. Dorothea, Robbie said, had told him of my offer to start tidying up. We went into the kitchen, where I sat on one of the chairs.
"Did you see the knife?" Robbie asked. "How long was the blade?" "It's still in me. 5' He looked shocked.
O'Hara said, "This is some crazy boy. " "O'Hara's producing the film," I said. "He would like me stitched up and back on set tomorrow morning. " Robbie took O'Hara's jacket off my shoulder and knelt on the floor to take a closer look at the problem.
"This is like no knife I ever saw," he pronounced.
"Like the one of the Heath?" I asked. "Different. "
"Pull it out," I said. "It hurts. " Instead he stood up and said something to O'Hara about anesthetics. "For Christ's sake," I said impatiently, "just. pull... it... out. " Robbie said, "Let's take an inside look at the damage, then. " He unzipped my dark blue windcheater and cut open my sweater with Dorothea's kitchen scissors, and came to the body protectors underneath. "What on earth... ?" "We had death threats," I explained, "so I thought.
. " I closed my eyes briefly and opened them again. "I borrowed two of the jockeys'body protectors. In case of kicks. " "Death threats?" O'Hara explained and asked me, "What made you think of these padded jackets?"
"Fear," I said truthfully. They almost laughed.
"Look," I said reasonably, "this knife had to go through my windproof jacket, a thick sweater, two body protectors designed to minimize impact, and also one shirt in order to reach my skin. It has cut into me a bit but I'm not coughing blood and I don't feel any worse than I did an hour ago, so... Robbie... a bit of your well-known toughness... please.. "Yes, all right," he said.
He spread open the front of the body protectors and found my white shirt wet and scarlet. He pulled the shirt apart until he could see the blade itself, and he raised his eyes to me in what could only be called horror. to"What is it?" I said.
"This blade... it's inches wide. It's pinning all the layers into your side. " "Go on then," I said, "get it out. " ie He opened the bag he'd brought with him and picked out a pre-prepared disposable syringe, td which he described briefly, sticking the needle, into me, as a painkiller. After that he sorted out a surgical dressing in a sterile wrapping. The same as for Dorothea, I thought. He checked his watch to give the injection time to work, then tore off the wrapping and positioned the dressing I ready inside my shirt and with his left hand tugged on the protruding handle of
It didn't budge, and in spite of the injection it felt terrible. "I can't get enough leverage from this angle," Robbie said. He looked at O'Hara. "You're strong," he said. "You pull it out. " O'Hara stared at him, and then at me. "Think of moguls," I said. He smiled twistedly and said to Robbie, "Tell me when. " "Now,"
Robbie said, and O'Hara grasped the knife's handle and pulled until the blade came free. Robbie quickly put the dressing in place and O'Hara stood as if stunned, holding in disbelief the object that had caused me such trouble.
"Sorry,"-Robbie said to me. I shook my head, dry mouthed. O'Hara laid the knife on the kitchen table, on the discarded wrapping from the dressing, and we all spent a fairly long silence simply looking at it. Overall it was about eight inches long, and half of that was handle. The flat blade was almost three inches wide at the handle end, tapering to a sharp point. One long side of the triangular blade was a plain sharp cutting edge: the other was wickedly serrated. At its wide end the blade extended smoothly into a handle which had a space through it big enough to accommodate a whol
I nodded. It was necessary to talk to him. Necessary to convince him that the company's money was safe in my hands.
Necessary to confound all suggestion of "jinx. " I said, "We do, all the same, have to find out just who is so fanatical about stopping the film that he-or she-will murder to achieve it. It's possible, I suppose, that the knife was meant only to frighten us, like yesterday's dagger, but if I hadn't been wearing the protectors... "
"No protection and an inch either way," Robbie nodded, "and you would likely have been history. " "So," I said, "if we take it that my death was in fact intended, I absolutely must find out who and why. Find it out among ourselves, I mean, if were not bringing in the police. Otherwise.. I hesitated, then went on, "... if the reason for the attack on me still exists, which we have to assume is the case, they-he or she or they-may try again. " I had the feeling that the thought had already occurred to both of them, but that to save my peace of mind they hadn't liked to say it alou
"The film has stirred up mud that's been lying quiet for twenty-six years," I said. "That's what's happened. No point in regretting it. So now we have the choice of either pulling the plug on the film and retiring in disarray-and where is my future if I do that?-or... er... sifting through the mud for the facts. " "But," Robbie said doubtfully, "could you really find any? I mean, when it all happened, when it was fresh, the police got nowhere. " "The police are ordinary people," I said. "Not infallible supermen. If we try, and get nowhere also, then so be it. "
"But how do you start?" "Like I said, we look for someone who knows about knives. " It had been growing dark while we spoke. As Robbie crossed to flip the light switch, we heard the front door open and close, and footsteps coming heavily along the passage toward us. It was Paul who appeared in the kitchen doorway: Paul annoyed, Paul suspicious, Paul's attention latching with furious astonishment onto my face. The indecisiveness of our last meeting had vanished. The bluster was back.
"And what do you think you're doing here?" he demanded.
"I've told you to stay away, you're not wanted. "
"I told Dorothea I would tidy up a bit. " "I will tidy the house. I don't want you here. And as for you, Doctor Gill, your services aren't needed. Clear out, all of you. "
It was O'Hara's first encounter with Paul Pannier; always a learning experience. "And where did you get a key from?"
he demanded aggrievedly. "Or did you break in?" He looked at O'Hara directly for the first time and said, "Who the hell are you? I want you all out of here at once. "
I said neutrally, "It's your mother's house, and I'm here with her permission. " Paul wasn't listening. Paul's gaze had fallen on the table, and he was staring at the knife.
There was barely a smear of blood on it as it had been more or less wiped clean by its outward passage through many layers of olystyrene and p cloth, so it seemed to be the knife itself, not its use, that was rendering Paul temporarily speechless. He raised his eyes to meet my gaze, and there was no disguising his shock. His eyes looked as dark as his pudgy features were pale. His mouth had opened. He found nothing at all to say but turned on one foot and stamped away out of the kitchen down the hall and out through the front door, leaving it open behind him.
"Who was he?" O'Hara asked. "And what was that all about?"
"His mother," Robbie explained, "was savagely cut with a knife in this house last Saturday.
He may think that somehow we've found the weapon. " "And have you?" O'Hara turned to me. "What was it you were trying to tell me yesterday? But this isn't the knife you found on the Heath, is it?" "No. He frowned.
"I don't understand any of it. " That made two of us; but somewhere there had to be an explanation. Nothing happened without cause. I asked Robbie Gill, who was tidying and closing his medical case, "Do you know anyone called Bill Robinson who mends motorbikes?" "Are you feeling all right?" "Not a hundred percent. Do you?" "Bill Robinson who mends motorbikes? No. " "You know the town. Who would know?" "Are you serious?" "He may have," I explained briefly, "what this house was torn apart for. " "And that's all you're telling me?"I nodded. Robbie pulled the telephone toward him, consu
"Knives," I said, "and Valentind Clark knew Jackson Wells. "
"Good luck with the mud," Robbie said.
The mogul proved to be a hard-nosed thin businessman in his forties with no desire even to look at the growing reels of printed film. He didn't like movies, he said. He despised film actors. He thought directors should be held in financial handcuffs. Venture capital was his field, he said with every risk underwritten. Wrong field, I thought. He had demanded in advance to have an accounting for every cent disbursed or committed since the first day of principal photography, with the result that O'Hara's production department had spent the whole day itemizing such things as food, tran
Robbie had stuck only a light dressing over the mended damage. I felt still a shade trembly, but apparently nothing showed. I concentrated on justifying Ziggy's fare and expenses in Norway, while sipping mineral water and longing for brandy. "Wild horses!" the mogul exclaimed in nearoutrage to O'Hara. "You surely didn't sanction bringing horses all the way from Norway! They're not in the script. "
"They're in the hanged woman's fantasy," O'Hara explained flatly. "Her dream life is what the company thought best about the plot, and what you expect on the screen. Viking horses hold glamor for publicity, and will earn more than they cost. " O'Hara's clout silenced the mogul, who scowled but seemed to realize that if he antagonized his high-grade producer beyond bearing, he would lose him and sink the whole investment. In any event, he moderated his aggressive approach and nodded through the bonus for the winning jockey with barely a grimace. The accounts audited, he wanted to dis
No crowd scenes, though, they're in the can. No jockeys, they've finished also. The horses will be shipped back here tomorrow afternoon. Thanks to fine weather and Thomas's good management, we'll be through with the racetrack scenes a day early. "
The mogul looked as if he'd bitten a wasp. I wondered, as I left, just what would make him happy. The Moncrieff session swelled with the arrival of both Nash and Silva, each wanting to continue with the private rehearsals. Nash had brought his script. Silva wore no lipstick and a feminist expression. I wondered what she and O'Hara were like together in bed, a speculation that didn't advance my work any, but couldn't be helped. We went through the scenes.
Moncrieff and Nash discussed lighting. Silva thrust forward her divine jaw and to her pleasure Moncrieff assessed her facial bones in terms of planes and shadows. I drank brandy and painkillers with dedication: possibly medicinally a bad combination, but a great distancer from tribulation. When everyone left I went to bed half sitting up, and stayed awake through a lot of o'clocks, throbbing and thinking and deciding that in the near future I would stand with my back to a wall at all times. O'Hara woke me from a troubled sleep by phoning at seven-thirty. Late. "How are you doing?" h
"Is it?" I yawned. "That"s good. "
"Moncrieff phoned the weather people. It should be dry this afternoon. So we could watch all the Huntingdon rushes this morning, when the van comes from London. " "Yes... I thought the mogul couldn't be bothered.
"He's going to London himself. He's not keen on waiting for Huntingdon this afternoon. He told me everything seems to be going all right with the movie now, and he'll report back to that effect. "
"Jeez. O'Hara chuckled. "He thought you were businesslike.
That's his highest word of praise. He says I can go back to L. A. " "Oh. " I was surprised by the strength of my dismay.
"And are you going?" "It's your movie," he said.
I said, "Stay. " After a pause he said, "If I go, it shows you're totally in command. " Another pause. "Think it over.
We'll decide after the dailies. See you at eleven o'clock in the screening room... will you be fit enough?"
"Yes. " "I sure as hell wouldn't be," he said and disconnected. By nine I'd decided against the great British breakfast and had located Wrigley's garage on a town road map: by nine-fifteen my driver had found it in reality.
There was a canopy over the gas pumps: shelter from rain.
Bill Robinson had long hair, a couple of pimples, a strong East Anglian accent, a short black leather jacket covered in gold studs, and a belt of heavy tools strung round his small hips. He took in the fact that I had a chauffeur and offered opportunist respect. "Wha' can I do for yer?" he enquired, chewing gum.
I grinned. "Mrs. Dorothea Pannier thinks you're a great guy. "
"Yeah?" He moved his head in pleasure, nodding. "Not such a bad old duck herself" "Did you know she's in hospital?"
His good humor vanished. "I heard some bastard carved her up. "
"I'm Thomas Lyon," I said. "She gave me your name. "
"Yeah?" He was wary. "You're not from that son of hers?
Right turd, that son of hers. " I shook my head. "Her brother Valentine left me his books in his will. She told me she'd trusted them to you for safe keeping. " "Don't give them to no one, that's what she said. " His manner was determined and straightforward. I judged it would be a bad mistake to offer him money, which conferred on him saintly status in the modern scheme of things.
"How about," I said, "if we could get her on the phone."
He could see nothing wrong in that, so I used the mobile to reach the hospital and then, with many clicks and delays, Dorothea herself.
She talked to Bill Robinson in his heavy leather gear and studs, and Bill Robinson's face shone with goodness and pleasure. Hope for the old world yet.
"She says," he announced, giving me my phone back, "that the sun shines out of your arse and the books are yours. "
"Great. "
"But they aren't here," he said. "They're in the garage at home. " "When could I pick them up?" "I could go home midday in my lunch hour. " He gazed briefly aside at a gleaming monster of a motorbike, heavily wheel-chained to confound would-be thieves. "I don't usually, but I could. "
I suggested buying an hour of his time at once from his boss and not waiting for lunch. "Cor," he said, awestruck; but his boss, a realist, accepted the suggestion, and the money, with alacrity, and Bill Robinson rode to his house in my car with undoubted enjoyment. "How do you know Dorothea?" I asked on the way. "My girlfriend lives next door to her," he explained simply. "We do errands sometimes for the old luv. Carry her shopping, and such. She gives us sweets like we were kids. " "Er... " I said, "how old are you, then?" "Eighteen. What did you think of my bike?"
"I envy you. " His smile was complacent, and none the worse for that. When we reached his home ("Ma will be out at work, the key's in this thing what looks like a stone") he unlocked a padlock on the solid doors of a brick-built garage and revealed his true vocation, the care and construction of bikes. "I buy wrecks and rebuild them," he explained, as I stood inside the garage gazing at wheels, handlebars, twisted tubing, shining fragments. "I rebuild them as good as new and then I sell them. " "Brilliant," I said absently. "Do you want to be in a film?" "Do I what?" I explained tha
"Mrs. Pannier did say you were the one making the film they're talking about. It was in the Drumbeat. " "The tyrannical bullyboy? Yes, that's me. " He smiled broadly.
"Your books are in all those boxes. " He pointed to a large random row of cartons that announced their original contents as TV sets, electrical office equipment, micro wave ovens, and bread-making machines. "A ton of paper, I shouldn't wonder. It took me the whole of Saturday morning to pack it all and shift it here, but Mrs. Pannier, dear old duck, she made it worth my while. " It was approbation rather than a hint, but I said I would do the same, particularly if he could tell me which box held what.
Not a snowball's chance, he said cheerfully. Why didn't I look? The task was too much, both for the available time and my own depleted stamina. I said I'd wrenched my shoulder and couldn't lift the boxes, so asked him to stow as many as possible in the trunk of the car. He looked resignedly at the rain but splashed backward and forward efficiently, joined after hesitation by my driver who buttoned his jacket closely and turned up his collar. The car, including the front passenger seat, absorbed half of the boxes. I asked what he'd used to transport them on Saturday. "My dad's little
Nash, Silva, and Moncrieff all joined O'Hara and me to watch the Huntingdon rushes. Even without much sound the crowd scenes looked like an everyday race meeting and the race itself was still remarkable for the Victoria Cross riding of the jockeys. The race had been filmed @e successfully by five cameras and semi-successdfully by another. There was easily enough to cut e together a contest to stir the pulses of people e who'd never seen jump-racing at close quarters: t even Silva gasped at one sequence, and Nash looked thoughtful. Moncrieff fussed about shadows in the wrong places,
"Who are they?" O'Hara asked, perplexed. "The girl on the left," I said, "is Yvonne. Or rather, she was Sonia Wells, the girl who hanged. The real one. "
"Christ," O'Hara said. "And who's the man?" Nash asked. "His name is Pig, I think. " I explained about Lucy's photo. "I promised her that Yvonne wouldn't look like Sonia. " The girl on the screen had curly light-brown hair, not a green crewcut or other weirdness. We would give Yvonne a long straight blond wig and hope for the best.
271The screen ran clear. We switched on the lights, talked about what we'd seen and, as always, went 77back to work.
At Huntingdon a photographer, who'd been engaged by the company to chart progress for the publicity department, brought a set of eight-byten-inch prints for O'Hara to see. He and I took them into the weighing room and sat at a table there, minutely searching the snapshots with a magnifying glass. We saw nothing of any help. There were photos of Nash signing in the end-of-the-day autograph session. A shot of Howard looking smug, inscribing his own book. Silva being filmstar charming. Greg signing race cards. A shot of O'Hara and myself standing together. The lens had been focused ev
RUbbie Gill wanted me to phone him, urgently. I got his message service: he would be available at seven. To fill in the time I opened the tops of a few of the cartons of Valentine's books, which now took up a good deal of the floorspace, as I'd particularly asked for them not to be put one on top of another. I'd forgotten, of course, that bending down used chest muscles also. On my knees, therefore, I began to inspect my inheritance. There was too much of it. After the first three boxes had proved to hold part of the collection of biographies and racing histories, after I'd painstak
"I am not trying to seduce you," I said. "You can bring a chaperone, you can stay anywhere you like, you can drive home every day to Oxfordshire if you prefer. I'll pay you fairly. If you don't want to do it, I'll get someone local. " She said a shade breathlessly, "Would I see Nash Rourke again?"
Wryly, I promised that she would, "Every day. "He's... he's.. "Yes," I agreed, "and he's married. " "It's not that," she said disgustedly, "he's just... nice. "
"True. What about the job?" "I could start tomorrow. "
The boxes could wait that long, I thought. At seven I phoned Robbie Gill's number again and reached him promptly.
"Which do you want first," he asked, "the good news or the appalling?" "The good. I'm tired. " "You don't surprise me. The good news is a list of names of knife experts.
Three in London, two in Glasgow, four in Sheffield, and one in Cambridge. " He read them all out and took away what little breath I could manage with a broken rib. I said weakly, "Say that Cambridge one again. " He repeated it distinctly, "Professor Meredith Derry, lecturer in medieval history, late of Trinity College, retired. "Deny.
Knives... "Do you want the appalling?" Robbie asked.
"I suppose I have to hear it?" "Afraid so. Paul Pannier has been murdered. "
"Murdered?" " 'Fraid so. "
"Where? And... er... how?" As if it were inevitable, the Scot's voice informed me, "He was killed in Dorothea's house... with a knife. 55I sighed; a groan. "Does Dorothea know?"
"The police sent a policewoman to the hospital. "
"Poor, poor Dorothea. " He said bluntly, "She won't be bullied any more. 3@ "But she loved him," I protested. "She loved the baby he'd been. She loved her little son. She will be devastated. "
"Go and see her," Robbie said. "You seem to understand her.
I never could see why she put up with him. "
She needed a hug, I thought. She needed someone to hold her while she wept. I said, "What about Paul's wife, Janet?"
. "The police have told her. She's on her way here now, I think. "
I looked at my watch. Five past seven. I was sore and hungry and had tomorrow's shots to discuss with Nash and Moncrieff. Still...
"Robbie," I said, "does Professor Derry have an address?"
"There's a phone number. " He read it out. "What about Dorothea?"
I'll go to see her now. I could be at the hospital in about forty minutes. Can you fix it that they'll let me see her?"
He could and would. Who had discovered Paul's murder, I asked. "I did, damn it. At about three o'clock this afternoon I went to pick up a notebook that I left in Dorothea's kitchen last night. I called to get the key again from her friend Betty, but she said she didn't have the key any more; she'd given it to Paul this morning early. I went across to Dorothea's house and rang the bell-that ruddy quiet ding-dong-and no one came, so I went round the back and tried the kitchen door, and it was open. " He paused. "Paul was lying in the hall on almost the exact spot where Betty found Dor
Almost the same place as you. The handle was sticking out.
An ordinary chefs knife handle, nothing fancy. No Fury. So I phoned the police and they kept me hanging about in that house all afternoon, but I couldn't tell them why Paul had gone there. How could I know? I couldn't tell them anything except that it looked to me as if the knife had reached his heart and stopped it. " I cleared my throat.
"You didn't tell them about... me?" "No. You didn't want me to, did you?" "I did not. " "But things are different now," he said dubiously. "Not if the police find Paul's killer quickly. " "I've got the impression that they don't know where to look. They'll be setting up an incident room, though. There will be all sorts of questions. You'd better be ready for them, because you were there in that house after Dorothea was attacked, and they have your fingerprints. " "So they have. " I thought a bit and asked, "Is it against the law not to report havin a knife stuck 9 into you?" "I d
"No. There are fierce laws now about carrying offensive weapons, and you can't get anything much more offensive than a Fury. " "Forget you ever saw it. " "So easy. " We had cleaned the kitchen the evening before by bundling the body protectors, my shirt, my sweater, and Robbie's medical debris into a trash bag, knotting the top; and we'd taken it with us, casually adding it to the heap of similar bags to one side of Bedford Lodge, from where mountains of rubbish and empty bottles were cleared daily.
Robbie in farewell said again he would tell the nurses it was OK to let me in to see Dorothea, and asked me to phone him back later. Promising I would, I said good-bye to him and dialed the number of Professor Meredith Derry who, to my relief, could be brought to the phone and who would acquiesce to a half-hour's worth of knife expertise, especially if I were paying a consultancy fee. "Of course,"
I said heartily. "Double, if it can be this evening. " "Come when you like," the professor said, and he gave me an address and directions.
Dorothea's grief was as deep and pulverizing as I'd feared.
The tears flowed the minute she saw me, weak endless silent tears, not howls and sobs of pain, but an intense mourning as much for times past as for present loss. I put my arm round her for a while and then simply held her hand and sat there in that fashion until she fumbled for a tissue lying on the bed and weakly blew her nose. "Thomas. "
"Yes, I know. I'm so sorry. " "He wanted what was best for me. He was a good son. " "Yes-," I said. "I didn't appreciate him enough... "Don't feel guilty," I said. "But I do. I can't help it. I should have let him take me with him as soon as Valentine died. "
"No," I said. "Stop it, dearest Dorothea. You are not to blame for anything. You mustn't blame yourself "But why?
Why would anyone want to kill my Paul?" "The police will find out. " "I can't bear it. " The tears came again, preventing speech. I went out of her room to ask the nurses to give Dorothea a sedative. She had already been given one. No more without a doctor's say-so, they said.
"Then get a doctor," I told them irritably. "Her son's been murdered. She's feeling guilty. " "Guilty? Why?" It was too difficult to explain. "She will be seriously ill by morning if you don't do something. " I went back to Dorothea thinking I'd wasted my breath, but ten minutes later one of the nurses came in brightly and gave her an injection, which almost immediately sent her to sleep.
"That satisfy you?" the nurse asked me with a hint of sarcasm. "Couldn't be better. " I left the hospital and helped my driver find the way to Professor Derry. The driver was on time-and-a-half for evening work and said he was in no hurry at all to take me home. Professor Derry's retirement was no goldplated affair. He lived on the ground floor of a tall house divided horizontally into apartments, himself occupying, it transpired, a study, a bedroom, a bathroom, and a screened-off kitchen alcove, all small and heavy-looking in brown wood, all the fading domain of an ancient academic
"I came for information about knives. " "Yes, yes," he interrupted. "You said that on the phone. " I looked around but could see no phone in his room. There had, however, been one-a pay phone, out in the hallway, shared with the upstairs tenants. I said, "If I show you a drawing of a knife, could you tell me about it?" "I can try. " I took the drawing of the Heath knife out of my jacket pocket and handed it to him folded. He opened it, flattened it out, and laid it aside on his desk. "I have to tell you, he said with many small, rapid lip movements, "that I have recently already bee
"You are an acknowledged expert, sir. " "Yes. " He studied my face. "Why do you not ask who consulted me? Have you no curiosity? I don't like students who have no curiosity. "
"I imagine it was the police. " The old voice cackled in a wheezy sort of laugh. "I see I have to reassess. "No, sir. It was I who found the knife on Newmarket Heath. The police took it into custody. I didn't know they had consulted you. It was curiosity, strong and undiluted, that brought me here. " "What did you read?" "I never went to university. Pity. "Thank you, sir. " "I was going to have some coffee. Do you want some coffee?" "Yes. Thank you, I'd like some. " He nodded busily, pulled aside the screen, and in his kitchen alcove heated water, spooned instant powder into cups,
"Yes. The shell grows old, but not the inhabiting intellect. People see the shell and call me Granddad. And deatie. What do you think of dearie?" "I'd kill 'em. "
"Quite right. " He cackled again. We carried the cups across to the chairs. "The knife the police brought here," he said, "is a modern replica of a trench knife issued to American soldiers in France in the first World War. "
"Wow.. " I said. "Don't use that ridiculous word. "
"No, sir. "
"The policemen asked why I thought it was a replica and not the real thing. I told them to open their eyes. They didn't like it. " "Well... er... how did you know?" He cackled. "It had 'Made in Taiwan'stamped into the metal. Go on, say it. " I said, "Taiwan wasn't called Taiwan in World War One. " "Correct. It was Formosa. And at that point in its history, it was not an industrial island. " He sat and tasted his coffee, which, like mine, was weak. "The police wanted to know who owned the knife. How could I possibly know? I said it wasn't legal in England to carry such a knife
The room, neat and orderly, smelled of old books, of old leather, of old coffee, of old pipe smoke, of old man.
There was no heating, despite the chilly evening. An old three-barred electric fire stood black and cold. The professor wore a sweater, a scarf, a shabby tweed jacket with elbow patches, and indoor slippers of brown checked wool. Bifocals gave him sight, and he had meticulously shaved: he might be old and short of cash, but standards had nowhere slipped. On the desk, in a silver frame, there was an indistinct old photograph of a younger himself standing beside a woman, both of them smiling. "My wife," he explained, seeing where I was looking. "She died. "I'm sorry. "
"It happens," he said. "It was long ago. " I drank my unexciting coffee, and he delicately brought up the subject of his fee. "I haven't forgotten," I said, "but there's another knife I'd like to ask you about. " "What knife?" "Two knives, actually. " I paused. "One has a handle of polished striped wood that I think may be rosewood. It has a black hilt and a black double-edged blade an inch wide and almost six inches long. " "A black blade?" I confirmed it. "It's a strong, purposeful, and good-looking weapon. Would you know it from that description?" He put his empty cup carefully o
I nearly said "wow" again, not so much at the content of what he said, but at his acceptance that the purpose of such knives was death. "They usually come in olive-khaki webbing sheaths," he said 5 "with a slot for a belt and cords for tying the bottom of the sheath round the leg. " "The one I saw had no sheath," I said. "Pity. Was it authentic, or a replica?" "I don't know. " "Where did you see it?"
"It was given to me, in a box. I don't know who gave it, but I know where it is. I'll look for 'Made in Taiwan. ' " "There were thousands made in World War Two, but they are collector's items now. And of course, in Britain one can no longer buy, sell, advertise, or even give such knives since the criminal justice act of 1988.
A collection can be confiscated. No one who owns a collection will have it on display these days. "
"Really?" He smiled dimly at my surprise. "Where have you been, young man?"
"I live in California. " "Ah. That explains it. Knives of all sorts are legal in the United States. Over there they have clubs for aficionados, and monthly magazines, and shops and shows, and also one can buy almost any knife by mail order. Here, it is illegal to make or import any knife with a point where the blade has two cutting edges and is over three inches long. " He paused. "I would guess that284 Vv`both the trench knife the police showed me and your putative commando knife came here illegally from America. " I waited a few seconds, thinking things over, and then said, "I'd
"Do you," I asked carefully, without inflection, 66own a collection? A collection left over, perhaps, from when it was legal?" "You can't ask that," he said. A silence. "The Armadillo," he said, "comes in a heavy black leather protective sheath with a button closure. The sheath is intended to be worn on a belt. " "The one I saw had no sheath. " "It isn't safe, let alone legal, to carry it without a sheath. " "I don't think safety was of prime importance. " "You talk in riddles, young man. " "So do you, Professor. The subject is one of innuendo and mistrust. " "I don't know that you
"Extremely unlikely," he said. "They didn't know where to begin, and I couldn't help them. " "And the Armadillo's owner?" He shook his head. "Thousands will have been made.
The Fury Armadillo does, I believe, have 286a serial number. It would identify when a particular knife was made and one might even trace it to its first owner. But from there it could be sold, stolen, or given several times. I cannot envisage these knives you've seen being allowed into the light of day if they were traceable. "Depressing, I thought. I said "Professor, please show me your collection. " "Certainly not. "
A pause. I said, "I'll tell you where I saw the Armadillo. " "Go on, then. " His old face was firm-, his eyes unblinking. He promised nothing, but I needed more. "A man I knew was murdered today," I said. "He was killed in a house in Newmarket with an ordinary kitchen knife. It is his mother's house. Last Saturday, in the same house, his mother was badly slashed by a knife, but no weapons were found. She lived, and she's recovering in hospital. On the Heath, as I told you, we believe the star of our picture was an intended victim. The police are investigating all three of these thi
"A feeling. Too many knives all at once. And... well... do you remember Valentine Clark? He died of cancer a week ago today. " Derry's stare grew ever more intense. When he didn't answer, I said, "It was Valentine's sister, Dorothea Pannier, who was slashed last Saturday, in the house she shared with Valentine. The house was ransacked. Today her son Paul, Valentine's nephew, went to the house and was killed there. There is indeed someone very dangerous roaming around and if the police find him-or her-quickly... great. " Unguessable thoughts occupied the professors mind for
but as I grew older-, I collected more, not less. I rationalized my feelings. I was a student, making a serious study, or so I thought.
selt-connclence. I became an acknowledged expert. I am, as you know, consulted. "Yes. "
"Slowly, some years ago, my need for knives vanished. You may say that at about sixty-five I finally grew up. Even so, I've kept my knowledge of knives current, because consultancy fees, though infrequent, are welcome. "
"I do still own a collection, as you realize, but I seldom look at it. I have left it to a museum in my will. If those young policemen had known of its existence, they had the power to take it away. " "I can't believe it. " With the long-suffering smile of a tutor for a dim student, he pulled open a drawer in his desk, fumbled around a little, and produced a photo copied sheet of paper, finely printed, which he handed to me. I read the heading. "Prevention of Crime Act 1953. Offensive Weapons. " "Take it and read it later," he said. "I give this to everyone who asks about knives. An
His mouth opened. I had really surprised him. He recovered a little and said, "Was this a game?"
"I think I was supposed to die. The knife hit a rib, and here I am. " "Great God. " He thought. "Then the police have the Armadillo also?"
"No," I said. "I've good reasons for not going to the police. So I'm trusting you, Professor. " "Tell me the reasons. " I explained about the moguls and their horror of jinxes. I said I wanted to complete the film, which I couldn't do with police intervention. "You are as obsessed as anybody," Derry judged. "Very likely. " He wanted to know where and how I had-er, acquired-my firsthand knowledge of the knife in question, and I told him. I told him about the body protectors, and all about Robbie Gill's ministrations; all except the doctor's name. When I stopped, I waited another long
Inside there was an expanse of green baize, and below that, when he removed it, row upon row of thin brown cardboard boxes, each bearing a neat white label with typewritten words identifying the contents. He looked them over, muttering that he hadn't inspected them for months, and picked out one of them, very much not at random. "This," he said, opening the narrow brown box, "is a genuine commando knife, not a replica. " The professor's commando knife was kept safe in bubble packing but, unwrapped, looked identical to the one sent me as a warning, except that this one did have its s
"It's amazing!" "It stops law-abiding people in their tracks, but criminals take no notice. The world is as medieval as ever. Didn't you know?" "I suspected it. "
His laugh cackled. "Help me lift the top tray onto the bed.
I'll show you some curiosities. 55 The top tray had a rope handle at each end. He grasped one end, I the other, and, at his say-so, we lifted together. The tray was heavy. Not good, from my point of view. ")What's the matter?" he demanded. "Did that hurt you?" "Just the Armadillo," I apologized. "Do you want to sit down?" "No, I want to see your knives. " He knelt on the floor again and opened more boxes, removing the bubble wrapping and putting each trophy into my hand for me to "feel the balance. " His "curiosities" tended to be ever more fearsome. There were several knives along
"I'm beginning to. " He nodded several times and asked if I would be able to help him replace the top tray. "Before we do that, Professor, would you show me one more knife?"
"Well, yes, of course. " He looked vaguely at the sea of boxes. "What sort of thing do you want?" "Can I see the knife that Valentine Clark once gave you?" After another of his telltale pauses, he said, "I don't know what you're talking about. " "You did know Valentine, didn't you?" I asked. He levered himself to his feet and headed back into his study, switching off the bedroom light as he went to save electricity, I supposed. I followed him, and we resumed our former positions in his wooden armchairs. He asked for my connection with Valentine, and I told him about my childhood, an
I waited through his wave of regret and loneliness, unable to comfort the nostalgia. "Thirty years ago, it must be," he said 5 "since we met Valentine. They were raising funds to stop the shipment of live horses to the Continent to be killed for meat. Valentine was one of the speakers.
He and I just liked each other... and we came from such different backgrounds. I began reading his column in the newspapers, though I wasn't much interested in racing. But Valentine was so wise... and still an active blacksmith... a gust of fresh air, you see, when I was more used to the claustrophobia of university life. My dear wife liked him, and we met him and his wife several times, but it was Valentine and I who talked. He came from one sort of world and I from another, and it was perhaps because of that that we could discuss things with each other that we couldn't ha
Such a dreadful word!
She wanted people to admire me, she said. " He shook his head in love and sorrow. "Valentine told me a doctor to go to. He himself knew of all sorts of ways to deal with impotence. He told me he'd learned a lot of them from stud farms! He said I must be more light-hearted and not think of impotence as an embarrassment or a tragedy. He told me it wasn't the end of the world. " He paused. "Because of Valentine, I learned to be content. " "He was great to so many people," I said. The professor nodded, still reminiscing. "He told me something I've never been able to verify. He swore it
"Of course. " "You may be too young. " "Try me. " "In confidence. " "Yes. Nothing, I'd told Moncrieff, was ever off the record. But confessions were, surely? The professor said, "Valentine told me that restricting the flow of oxygen to the brain could result in an erection. 55 He waited for my comment, which took a while to materialize. I hesitantly said, "Er... I've heard of it. " "Tell me, then. " "I believe it's a perversion that comes under the general heading of auto-erotic mania, in this case self-inflicted partial asphyxia. "
He said impatiently, "Valentine told me that thirty years ago. What I'm asking you is, does it work?"
"Firsthand, I don't know. " He said with a touch of bitterness, "Because you've never needed to find out?"
"Well, not yet, no. " "Then... has anyone told you?"
"Not firsthand. " He sighed. "I could never face doing it. It's one of those things I'm never going to know. "
"There are others?" "Don't be stupid, Thomas. I am a medievalist. I know the facts that were written down. I try to feel my way into that lost world. I cannot smell it, hear it, live it. I can't know its secret fears and its assumptions. I've spent a lifetime learning and teaching it secondhand. If I went to sleep now and awoke in the year fourteen hundred, I wouldn't understand the language or know how to cook a meal. You've heard the old saying that if Jesus returned to do a replay of the sermon on the mount, no one now living would understand him, as he would be speaking ancient
I ran "Please go on talking," I said. "Go on about Valentine. "
"These last years, I haven't seen him much. His wife died.
So did mine. You might think it would have drawn us together, but it didn't. I suppose it was our wives who had arranged our meetings. Valentine and I just drifted apart. "
"But," I said, "years ago... he knew you were interested in knives?" "Oh yes, of course. He was enthusiastic about my collection. He and his wife used to come over to our house and the women would chat together and I would show Valentine the knives. "
"He told me he gave you one. 55 "He told you... ?"
"Yes. 11 The professor frowned. "I remember him saying I wasn't ever to say who had given me that knife. He said just to keep it in case he asked for it back... but he never asked. I haven't thought about it. I'd forgotten it. "
He paused. "Why do you want to see it?" "Just curiosity... and fondness for my old friend. " The professor thought it over, and said, "I suppose if he told you, he wouldn't mind. " He got to his feet and returned to the bedroom, with me on his heels. The light went on dimly; an economical bulb. "I'm afraid," my host said doubtfully, "that there are three levels of knives in this chest, and we have to lift out the second tray to reach the knife you want to see. Are you able to lift it out onto the floor? It doesn't have to go up onto the bed. "
I assured him I could, and did it left-handed, a shade better. The third layer, revealed, proved not to be of brown cardboard boxes but of longer parcels, each wrapped only in bubble plastic, and labeled.
"These are mostly swords," Derry said. "And swordsticks, and a couple of umbrellas with swords in the handles They were a defense against thieves a hundred or two hundred years ago. Now, of course, they are illegal. One has nowadays to allow oneself to be mugged. " He cackled gently.
"You mustn't hurt the poor robber, you know. "
He surveyed the labels, running his fingers along the rows.
"Here we are. 'Present from V. C. ' " He lifted out a bubble-wrapped package, snapped open a taped fastening, and unrolled the parcel to reveal the contents.
"There you are," Professor Derry said. "That's Valentine's knife. "
I looked at it. It was like no knife I'd ever seen. It was at least fifteen inches long, possibly eighteen. Its blade, double-edged and clearly sharp, took up barely a third of the overall length and was of an elongated flat oval like a spear, with a sharp spear's point. The long handle was narrow and was twisted throughout its length in a close spiral. The end of the spiral had been flattened into a circular embellishment, perforated with several holes.
"It's not a knife," I said. "It's a spear. "
299 Derry smiled. "It's not meant for throwing. "
"What was it for?" "I don't know. Valentine simply asked me if I'd like to put it in my collection. It's hammered steel. Unique. " "But where would he buy such a thing?"
"Buy it?" The full cackle rang out. "Have you forgotten Valentine's trade? He was a smith. He didn't buy it. He made it. "
Early Friday morning I worked in peace from four O'clock to six-thirty in the projection room, cutting scenes into rough order, a process that apart from anything else always told me what necessary establishing shots hadn't been provided for in the screenplay. A five-second shot here and there could replace, also, patches of dialogue that hadn't gone well. I made notes, fiddled about, hummed with contentment, clarified the vision. By six-thirty Moncrieff was setting up the cameras in the stable yard, by seven the horses (back from Huntingdon) were out at exercise on the Heath, by se
Satisfied, O'Hara borrowed Ed's megaphone and announced that the Hollywood company was pleased with the way things were going, and that as he himself was now leaving for Los Angeles, Thomas Lyon would be in sole charge of the production. He handed the megaphone back to Ed, waved everyone away to resume work, and gave me a challenging stare. "Well?" he said. "I'd rather you stayed. "
"It's your film," he insisted. "But you will please not go anywhere without your driver and your bodyguard. " He looked around. "Where are they, anyway?" "I'm safe here," I said.
"You are not to think you're safe anywhere, Thomas. " He handed me a key, explaining it was his hotel rooms' key.
"Use my rooms if you need them. The two knives are in the safe in there. The combination is four five four five. Got it?" "Yes... but how will I reach you?" "Phone my secretary in L. A. She'll know. " "Don't go,,. He smiled.
"My airplane leaves at noon. See you, guy. " He climbed into his car with finality and was driven away, and I felt like a junior general left in charge of a major battlefield, apprehensive, half confident, emotionally naked. The schedule that morning was for some of the earliest scenes of the film, the arrival of the police to investigate the hanging. Moncrieff set about lighting the actors-some in and some out of 301police uniform-explaining exactly where he wanted them to stop and turn toward the camera. He and they would be working from the plans and diagrams we'd drawn the eveni
"Your day starts in an hour. " "Mr. O'Hara said.. "One hour," I reiterated and went upstairs thinking that as they hadn't saved me from the Armadillo I might do equally well on my own. Room service brought my breakfast and a visitor, Robbie Gill. "I should be listening to chests and prescribing cough mixture," he said. "My receptionist is dealing with a seething line of disgruntled patients. Take your clothes off. " "Do what?" "Sweater and shirt off,"' he repeated. "Undo your trousers. 15ve come to save your unworthy life. 55 Busily he unpacked things from his case, moving my crois
"Starving. " "Too bad. Get undressed. " "Er...
what for?" "Number one, fresh dressing. Number two, knife-proof vest. I tried to get a proper bullet-and 302 knife-proof vest but neither the police nor the army would let me have one without bureaucracy, so we'll have to trust to homemade. "
I took off my sweater and shirt and he removed the dressing, raising his eyebrows at the revealed scenery but appearing not displeased.
"You're healing. Is it sore?" "The broken rib is. "
"Only to be expected," he added and stuck on a new dressing. "Now," he said, "what do you know about Delta-cast?" "Nothing. "
"It's used instead of the old plaster of paris for fractured arms and legs. It's rigid. It's a polymer, actually, and porous, so you won't itch. A knife won5t go through it. " "A bullet?"
"That's another matter. " He worked for half an hour, during which time we discussed Dorothea and Paul, and came to no useful conclusions, though I explained how, via Bill Robinson, I was now surrounded by the army of boxes containing Valentine's books. At the end of Robbie's work I was encased from chin to waist in a hard sleeveless jacket that I could take off and put on in two halves and fasten with strips of Velcro.. When I protested at its height round my neck he said merely, "Do you want your throat cut? Wear a turtle-necked sweater. I brought you this thin white one, in case
"Thanks, Robbie," I said, and he could hear I meant it.
He nodded briefly. "I'd better get back to my mob of coughers, or they'll lynch me. " He packed things away. "Do you think your hanged lady was lynched?" "No, I don't think so. " "Did you trawl any useful mud with Professor Derry?" "The knife that bust my rib is called an Armadillo.
The one with the finger holes, from the Heath, is a replica from World War One. The police had already asked the professor about it. "
"The professor's about eighty-five. He told me not to say wow. " "He sounds a riot. " "We got on fine, but he doesn't know who owns the Armadillo. " "Take care," he said, leaving. "I'm around if you need me. " I ate what was left of my breakfast, dressed slowly, shaved, and got gradually used to living like a turtle inside a carapace. At about the time I was ready to leave again the people at the reception desk phoned up to tell me that a young woman was asking for me. She thought I was expecting her. A Miss Lucy Wells. "Oh, yes. " I'd temporarily forgotten her. "Please send her up.
I gave her a laptop computer, a notebook, a I ballpoint, and a big black marker pen. "Give each box a big number,"
I said, writing 1. with the marker pen on a microwave oven carton. "Empty it out. Write a list of the contents r on the pad, enter the list on the little computer, and then put everything back, topping each box with the list of contents. On another page, write me a general list, saying, for example, 'Box one, books, biographies of owners and trainers. ' OK?" "Yes. "Shake out each book in case it has loose papers inside its pages, and don't throw anything away, not even pointless scraps. "
"All right. " She seemed puzzled, but I didn't amplify.
"Order lunch from room service," I said. "Don't leave any papers or books lying around when the waiter comes. OK?" "Yes, but why?" "Just do the job, Lucy. Here's the room key for here. " I gave it to her. "If you leave this room, use the key to return.
When I come back, I'll bring Nash Rourke in for a drink. "
Her blue eyes widened. She wasn't a fool. She looked at the boxes and settled for the package I'd offered. I went back to work, driver and bodyguard giving me a lot less confidence than Delta-cast.
We spent all morning in the stable yard, with Nash patiently (both in and out of character) dealing with the actors playing at police.
The initial police doubts, called for in the script, took an age to get right. "I don't want these policemen to appear thick," I pleaded, but it was the actors, I concluded, who were slow. I'd had no hand in casting minor characters; the trick was to make the dumbest poodle jump through the hoops. Moncrieff swore nonstop. Nash could turn and get the light across his forehead right every time, but Nash, I reminded my fuming director of photography, wasn't called a mega-star for nothing. The level of muddle was not helped by the arrival of the real police asking why my fresh fingerpri
They had a room free and Dad agreed. I hope that's all right?" "It's splendid," I said moderately, knowing enthusiasm would frighten her. "What about Sunday, day after tomorrow?" "I can stay until the job's finished," she said. "Dad said it was better. " "Good for Dad," Nash smiled.
"He's awfully interested," Lucy said, and after a pause added, "It's really odd, Mr. Rourke, imagining you as my dad. " Nash smiled, the eyelids crinkling. Despite his pregnant wife, he didn't look at all like anyone's dad, certainly not Lucy's. We drank briefly together and split up, Nash yawning as he went and saying the slave driver (T. Lyon) wanted him out working again in a couple of hours.
Lucy, without making an issue of it, excused herself at the same time. Staying in the hotel, she was telling me, meant no more than convenience. When she'd gone I looked at her master list of the boxes' contents. Since they had been well jumbled up on the journeys, and since she had started methodically at one end, the six boxes she'd worked on held mixed and random contents.
Box 1. Form books. Flat racing. Box IL Biographies, trainers, owners, and jockeys.
Box III. Form books. National Hunt racing.
Box IV. Weekly columns, Racing Gazette. Box V. Books, annuals, racing history.
With unstoppable curiosity I knelt on the floor and opened Box III, National Hunt form books, and found that by happy chance it contained the records of two of the years when I'd been racing. A British racing form book, built up week by week throughout the season with loose-leaf inserts tied between soft leather covers, contained details of every single race run, identifying each runner by name, trainer, jockey, weight carried, age, and sex, and giving a start-to-finish commentary of performance.
There was no gainsaying the form book. If the form books said Mr. T. Lyon (the Mr. denoting amateur status) had finished fifth a long way back, it was no good Mr. T. Lyon in memory thinking he'd ridden a close contest to be beaten by half a length. Mr. T. Lyon, I read with nostalgia, had won a three-mile steeplechase by two lengths at Newbury racecourse, the horse carrying 146 pounds. The underfoot conditions that day had been classified as "soft," and the starting price had been a hundred to six, Mr. T. Lyon's mount having unaccountably beaten the hot favorite (weighted out of it,
Lyon, I remembered, had been ecstatic. The crowd who'd mostly lost their bets, had been unenthusiastically silent.
I smiled. Here I was, twelve years later, clad in Delta-cast and trying not to be killed: and I didn't think I'd ever been happier than on that cold long-ago afternoon.
Valentine had put a red exclamation mark against my winner, which meant that he personally had fitted the horse with shoes especially for racing, probably on the morning of the race. Horses wore thin aluminum shoes for racing, much lighter and thinner than the steel shoes they needed in the stable and out at exercise. Farriers would routinely change the shoes before and after a race.
Owing to chance the form books in Box III went back only as far as my seventeenth birthday. For the Mr. T. Lyon debut at sixteen to turn up, I would have to wait for Lucy. I opened Box I, Flat racing form books, and found that in this instance the books were older. These, indeed, covered the few years when Jackson Wells had been training in Newmarket: one of them covered the year of Sonia's death.
Fascinated, I looked for Valentine's red dots (runners) and red exclamation marks (winners) and found my grandfather's name as trainer all over the place. Twenty-six years ago, when I'd been four. A whole generation ago. So many of them gone. So many horses, so many races, lost and forgotten.
Jackson Wells hadn't had large numbers of runners and precious few winners, as far as I could see. Jackson Wells hadn't had a regular jockey either: only successful wealthy stables could afford to retain a top-flighter. Several of the Wells horses had been ridden by a P. Falmouth, several others by D. Carsington, neither of whom I'd heard of, which wasn't surprising. On the day of his wife's death Jackson Wells had set off to York races, where a horse from his stable had been entered. I looked up the actual day and found his horse hadn't started but was listed as a nonrunner. Traine
I spent most time in her bedroom, looking for the photographs she said she kept in a box. I couldn't find them. I told Betty's husband what I was looking for-Dorothea's only mementos of Paul when young but neither of us succeeded. "Poor love," Betty's husband said. "That son of hers was a brute, but she would never hear a strong word against him. Between you and me, he's no loss. " "No...
but who killed him?" "Yeah... I see what you mean. Gives you a nasty feeling, doesn't it, some geezer running around with a knife?" "Yes," I said. "It does. "
I stood in the dark street outside Bill Robinsons garage, with the black belt at my back facing the crowd that had inevitably collected. There were bright lights inside the garage where Bill Robinson himself stood, dressed in his accustomed black leather and studs and looking selfconscious. The monster Harley-Davidson stood to one side. Pieces of a second, that Bill was rebuilding, lay in clumps on the drive. Moncrieff was busy pointing arc lamps and spots to give dramatic shadows and gleams, and Nash's stand-in walked to the designated point and looked toward the garage. Moncrieff
He nodded. He waved a hand toward the scene. "It's striking," he said, "but why a bike?" "It's what our movie is about. " "How do you mean? There aren't any bikes in it, are there?" "Fantasy," I said. "Our movie is about the need for fantasy. " "The dream lovers?" he suggested doubtfully. "Fantasy supplies what life doesn't," I said casually. "That boy there with his bike is eighteen, good-natured, has a regular job, carries his elderly neighbor's shopping home for her, and in his fantasy life he's a hell raiser with roaring 312power between his legs and the gear and the studs...
he's playing at what he wouldn't really like to be, but the imagining of it fills and satisfies him. " Nash stood without moving. "You sound as though you approve," he said.
"Yes, I do. A good strong fantasy life, I'd guess, saves countless people from boredom and depression. It gives them a feeling of being individual. They invent themselves. You know it perfectly well. You are a fantasy to most people. " "What about serial killers? Aren't they fantasists?" "There's a hell to every heaven. "
Moncrieff called, "Ready, Thomas," and Nash, without comment, went to the place from where he would walk into shot, and pause, and turn his head, and watch Bill Robinson live in his courage-inducing dreamland. Ed went round explaining the necessity of silence to the neighbors. He shouted, "Turn over. " The cameras reached speed. Ed yelled, "Action. " Nash walked, stopped, turned his head. Perfect.
Bill Robinson dropped a piece of exhaust pipe out of nervousness and said, "Sorry. @5"Cut," Ed said, disgusted. "Don't say sorry," I told Bill Robinson, walking toward the garage to join him. "It doesn't matter if you drop something. It doesn't matter if you swear. It's normal. Just don't say 'sorry. 5 5' He grinned. We shot the scene again and he fitted two shining pieces of metal together as if he hadn't got fifty people watching.
313"Cut," Ed yelled with approval, and the neighbors cheered.
Nash shook Bill Robinson's hand and signed autographs. We sold a lot of future cinema tickets, and no one stuck a knife in my back. Not a bad evening, overall. Returning to Bedford Lodge, Nash and I ate room service dinner together.
"Go on," he said, "about the need for fantasy. " "Oh... I... " I hesitated, and stopped, unwilling to sound a fool.
"Go on," he urged. "People say... in fact I say... that playacting isn't a suitable occupation for a serious man.
So tell me why it is. " "You don't need me to tell you. " "Tell me why you make fantasies, then. "
"Have some wine. "Don't duck the issue, dammit. "
"Well," I said, pouring lavishly, "I wanted to be a jockey but I grew too big. Anyway, one day I went to see a doctor about some damage I'd done to my shoulder in a racing fall, and she asked me what I wanted to do with my life. I said 'be a jockey' and she lectured me crossly on wasting my time on earth frivolously. I asked her what occupation she would recommend and she sternly told me that the only profession truly helpful and worthwhile was medicine. "
"Rubbish!" "She scorned me for wanting to be merely an entertainers. Nash shook his head. "So," I said, "I rationalized it, I suppose. I'm still an entertainer and always will be, I guess, and I've persuaded myself that I do at least as much good as tranquilizers. Everyone can go where f their mind takes them. You can live in imaginary places without feeling the real terror or the real pain. I make the images. I open the door. I can inflame... and I can heal... and comfort... and get people to understand... and for God's sake don't remember a word of this. I've just made i
. and her revenge. "He smiled twistedly. "My character's a shit, isn't he?" "Human," I said.
"And are you going to sell Howard on her suicide?"
I shook my head. "I'm sure she didn't kill herself But don't worry, your character will avenge her death and come up smelling of roses. " "Has Howard written those extra scenes?" "Not yet. " "You're a rogue, Thomas, you know that? "We finished dinner peaceably, and together with Moncrieff mapped out the next day's scenes, which were due to take place in the Athenaeum's look-alike dining room, happily by now built and ready. After that meeting I un-Velcroed my restricting knife repeller with relief and washed without soaking the dressing, and in sleeping shorts thought I'd just take
I looked at the Delta-cast jacket standing empty and mute on a table and felt a strong urge to fasten it on again, even at two in the morning.
In describing Sonia to me, Valentine had called her a mouse, but that couldn't have been how he'd thought of her when she was alive. The folder of clippings about her held two large photographs, both the likenesses of a vividly pretty young woman with a carefree spirit and, I would have said, considerable carnal knowledge. One of the photographs was an expert, glossy, eight-by-ten black-and-white version of the colored photo Lucy had lent me of "Sonia and Pig. "
In Valentine's photo the young man's presence had been deleted. Sonia smiled alone. The second photo was of Sonia in her bridal gown, again alone, and again with nothing virginal about her eyes. My mother, of all people, had once instructed me about the difference: once a woman had slept with a man, she said, the woman would develop little pouches in her lower eyelids which would show when she smiled. Sonia was smiling in both pictures, and the small pouches were there unmistakably. Valentine had said the book made her out to be a poor little bitch, and, in saying that, he'd intende
Poor old sod, I thought. He had been sixty, nearly, when she died. I was young enough to have considered sixty the far side of acute sexual obsession: Valentine enlightened even from beyond the grave. The emotional vigor of the thick Sonia file blinded me for a long while to the slim folder underneath which lay at the bottom of the box: but this folder proved, when I read the contents carefully, to be raw explosive material in search of a detonator. In search of myself.
I slept for five hours, put on the carapace, went back to work. Saturday morning. I struck it off in my mind's calendar as day nineteen of production, or almost a third of my time allowed. It rained all day, which didn't matter as we were engaged indoors in the Athenaeum dining room, shooting the scene where Cibber's suspicions of his wife's canoodling jelled into inescapable certainty. Cibber and Silva endlessly said "yes, please" and "no, thank you" to actor-waiters, chewed endless mouthfuls of food, and in Silva's case spitting them out immediately when I said "cut"; drank endle
Breaking for lunch, with the close-ups to do in the afternoon, I returned for a respite to Bedford Lodge and found Nash in my rooms sprawling in an armchair and having an easy time with Lucy. She, in consequence, had, as her morning's work, itemized the contents of barely one and a half cartons. "Oh, hallo," she greeted me from her knees, "what would you like me to do with three boxfuls of huge old encyclopedias?" "How old?" She pulled out one large volume and investigated. "Forty years!" Her voice made forty years unimaginable. Nash reflexively winced.
"Just label them and leave them," I said. "Right. Oh... and I haven't come across any photo albums, that you wanted me to look for, but I did find a lot of snaps in an old chocolate box. What do you want me to do with those?"
"In a chocolate box... ?" "Well, yes. It's got flowers on the lid. Pretty old. " "Er... Where's the box?" She opened a carton that had once held a fax machine, and from it produced several box files full of ancient race cards and newspaper clippings of winners that Valentine had regularly shod. "Here's the chocolate box," Lucy said, lifting out and handing me a faded and battered gold-colored cardboard box with flowers like dahlias on the lid. "I didn't make a list of the photos. Do you want me to?" "No," I said absently, taking off the lid and finding small ancient pictures i
Pictures when life was fine, before time loused it up. "How about ordering us all some lunch? I said. Nash did the ordering. "What do you want to drink, Thomas?"
"Le the," I said. "Not until you've finished the movie. " "What's Lethe?" Lucy asked. Nash said, "The river in the underworld that, if you drink it, makes you sleep and forget about living. "
"Oh. " "Forever," Nash added. "But Thomas doesn't mean that. " Lucy covered noncomprehension in activity with the marker pen. At the bottom of the chocolate box I came across a larger print, the colors still not razor sharp, but in a better state of preservation. It was of a group of young people, all looking about twenty. On the back of the photo were two simple words: The Gang.
The Gang. The Gang consisted of five young men and a girl. I sat staring at it for long enough for the other two to notice. "What is it?" Nash asked. "What have you found?"
I handed the photo to Lucy, who glanced at it, did a double take, and then exclaimed, "Why, that's Dad, isn't it? How young he looks. " She turned the photo over. "The Gang," she read aloud. "That's his handwriting, isn't it" "You'd know better than I would. " "I'm sure of it. " "Who are the people with him? Who are the Gang?" I asked. She studied the picture. "That's Sonia, isn't it? It must be. "
Nash took the photo out of Lucy's hand and peered at it himself, nodding. "That's definitely your father, and the girl looks like the photo you lent us and that boy next to her, that's the 35 other one in that photo... that's surely 'Pig. ' "I suppose so," Lucy said doubtfully. "And that one on the end, he looks like She stopped, both unsure and disturbed.
"Like who?" I asked. "He's not like that any more. He's well... bloated... now. That's my Uncle Ridley. He looks lovely there. How awful, what time does to people. "
"Yes. " Nash and I said it in unison. An endless host of barely recognizable old actors and actresses lived on in Hollywood in elastic skins, everything sagging but the memory of glamor, their youthful selves mocking them relentlessly from rented videos and movie channels. "Who are the others?" I asked. "I don't know them," Lucy said, handing the photo back to me. I said, "They look people of your age. " "Yes, they do. " She found it unremarkable. "Do you want me to repack this box?"
"Yes, please. But leave out the chocolate box. "
Lunch came and we ate. Ziggy phoned the hotel from Norway. "I cannot reach O'Hara's number," he complained. "He's gone back to L. A. "I said. "How are the horses?" "Working well. " "Good. The production department has found a disused stable yard for them to stay in, only ten miles from our beach. " I fished a piece of paper out of an inner pocket and spelled the address for him patiently, letter by letter. "Phone me after you've landed at Immingham on Monday if you have any problems. "
"Yes, Thomas. " "Well done, Ziggy. "He laughed, pleased, and departed. I left Nash and Lucy drinking coffee and, taking with me both the Gang photo and the lower file from the previous night's reading, went along to OHara's suite, let myself in with his key, and stowed Valentine's mementos in the safe, with the knives. All the rooms in the hotel were equipped with individual small safes, which each guest could set to open to his own choice of combination. I hardly liked to acknowledge the instinct for extra security that led me to use O'Hara's safe instead of my own, but anyway, I
Still in O'Hara's rooms I looked up the number of Ridley Wells in the local phone directory, and tried it, but there was no answer. On returning to my own rooms I found Nash, on the point of leaving, announcing that he was going to spend the afternoon watching racing on TV while betting by phone with a bookmaker I'd arranged for him. "Is it still on, for tonight?" he asked, pausing in the doorway.
"Certainly is, if the rain stops, which it is supposed to. "
"How do you expect me to ride a horse in the goddam dark?"
"There will be moonlight. Moncrieffs arranging it. "
"What about goddam rabbit holes?" "There aren't any on Newmarket's gallops," I assured him. "But what if I fall of" "We'll pick you up and put you back in the saddle. " "I hate you sometimes, Thomas. " He grinned and went on his way. I left Lucy up to her elbows in decades of form books, collected my minders in the lobby, and was driven the short mile back to the stables.
On my way back to The Athenaeum I detoured into the downstairs office, used chiefly by Ed, where we had the business paraphernalia of telephones, faxes, and large-capacity copier, and asked the young woman operating everything there to keep on trying Ridley Wells's number for me, and if he returned home and answered the summons, to put the call through to me upstairs immediately. "But you said never to do that, in case the phone rang during a shot. " "We can reshoot," I said. "I want to catch this man.
OK?" She nodded, reassured, and I went upstairs to recoax Cibber and Silva into their most venomous faces. Ridley Wells answered his telephone at three-thirty, and sounded drunk. I said, "Do you remember you asked our producer, O'Hara, if we had any riding work for you in our film?"
"He said you hadn't. " "Right. But now we have. Are you still interested?" I mentioned a fee for a morning's work large enough to hook a bigger fish than Ridley, and he didn't even ask what the job entailed. I said, "We'll send a car for you tomorrow morning at seven. It will bring you to the stables where we're keeping our horses. You don't need to bring anything with you. We'll supply you with clothes from our wardrobe department. We'll supply the horse for you to ride. We don't want you to do anything out of the ordinary or dangerous on the horse. We're just short of a rider for
"Don't forget," I insisted. "Mum's the word, old boy. " "No," I said. "Mum's not the word. If you're not sober in the morning, then no job and no fee. " After a pause he said, "Got you," again, and I hoped he meant it.
When we'd finished the close-ups and the day's work was safely on its way to London for processing, I ran the previous day's rushes in the screening room, happy for Bill Robinson's sake that he and his monster bike positively quivered with shining power, filling Nash's character with the determination he needed if he were to take action. From fantasy, courage, I thought. I wanted the film to assert that old idea, but without ramming it down anyone's throat.
I wanted people to see that they had always known it. To open doors.. A door-opener; that was my function. It stopped raining more or less at the time forecast-miraculous-and Moncrieff busied himself in the stable yard supervising the loading of cameras, films, lights, and crews onto trucks for the "moonlit" shots of Nash on the Heath. Nash arrived to the minute, no surprise, and came out of the house half an hour later in riding clothes and nighttime make-up, carrying his helmet and demanding a thoroughly tranquilized mount. "If your fans could only hear you!" I remarked dryly.
"You, Thomas," he said, smiling, "can go try 6G in a brake turn at low level. " I shook my head. Nash could fly fast jet aircraft-when not under a restrictive contract in mid-film-and I couldn't. Nash's premega-star hair-raising C. V. included air force service in fighters, all part of his mystique. "The scene comes a night or two before the motorbikes," I said. "You have been accused. You are worried. OK?" He nodded. The screenplay had included the night-on-the-horse scene from the beginning, and he was prepared. We drove the camera truck slowly up the road by the hill, Nash in the
The long day ended. Back at Bedford Lodge, I found three more boxes itemized, plus a note from Lucy saying she hoped I didn't mind but her parents wanted her home for Sunday after all. Back Monday, she wrote.
Box VIII. Form books, Flat racing. Box IX.
Horseshoes.
Box X. Encyclopedias, AR The horseshoes were actual horseshoes, each saved in a plastic bag and labeled with the name of the horse that had worn it, complete with winning date, racecourse, and event.
Valentine had been a true collector, squirreling his successes away. I pulled out the first of the encyclopedias without anything particular in mind and, finding a slip of paper in it acting as a bookmark, opened it there.
Autocrat: an absolute ruler. Multiple examples followed.
I closed the book, rested my head against the back of my armchair, decided it was time to take 0ff the Delta-cast, and drifted toward sleep. The thought that galvanized me to full wakefulness seemed to come from nowhere but was a word seen peripherally, unconsidered. Autocrat... Further down the page came Auto-eroticism. I picked the volume out of the box and read the long entry. I learned much more than I wanted to about various forms of masturbation, though I could find nothing of much significance. Vaguely disappointed I started to replace the bookmarker, but glanced at it and
The P volume also had a bookmark, this time in the page for paraphilia. Paraphilia, I read, consisted of many manifestations of perverted love. One of them was listed as "erotic strangulation, the starvation of blood to the brain to stimulate sexual arousal. " Valentine's knowledge of self-asphyxia, the process he had described to Professor Derry, had come from this book. "In 1791 in London," I read, "in the time of Haydn, a well-known musician died as a result of his leaning toward paraphilia. One Friday afternoon he engaged a prostitute to tie a leash round his neck which he could
Before throwing them both away I glanced at Valentine's second bookmark. On the strip of white paper he'd written, "Tell Derry this" and, lower down, "Showed this to Pig. " I went along to O'Hara's room, retrieved the folder and the gang photograph from the safe, and sat in his armchair looking at them and thinking long and hard. Eventually, I slept in his bed, as it was safer.
The film company's car brought Ridley Wells to the stables on time and sober the next morning. We sent him into the house to the wardrobe department, and I took the opportunity to telephone Robbie Gill on my mobile. I expected to get his message service at that early hour, but in fact he was awake and answered my summons himself "Still alive?" he asked chattily. "Yes, thank you. "
"So what do you need? "As always with Robbie, straight to the point. "First," I said, "who gave you the list of knife specialists?" "My professional colleague in the police force," he said promptly. "The doctor they call out locally. He's a randy joker, ex-rugger, good for a laugh and a jar in the pub. I asked him for known knife specialists. He said the force had drawn up the list themselves recently and asked him if he could add to it. He couldn't. The people he knows who carry knives tend to be behind bars. " "Did he attend Dorothea?" "No, he was away. Anything else?" "How is sh
Still sedated. Now Paul's gone, do you still want to pay for the nursing home?" "Yes, I do, and I want to see her soon, like this afternoon.
"No problem. just go. She's still in a side ward because of Paul, but physically she's healing well. We could move her by Tuesday, I should think. " "Good," I said.
"Take care. "I said wryly, "I do. " In the stable yard the lads were readying for morning exercise, saddling and bridling the horses. As it was Sunday, I told them, we would again have the Heath gallops more or less to ourselves, but we wouldn't be filming exactly the same scenes as the week before. "You were all asked to wear what you did last Sunday," I said. "Did you all check with our continuity girl if you couldn't remember? "I got nods.
"Fine. Then all of you will canter up the hill and stop where you stopped and circled last week. OK? More nods. "You remember the rider who came from nowhere and made a slash at Ivan? "They laughed. They wouldn't forget it. "Right," I said. "Today we don't have Ivan, but we're going to stage that attack ourselves, and put it into the film. Today it will be a fictional affair.
OK? The knife used will not be a real knife but one that's been made out of wood by our production department. What I want you to do is exactly the sort of thing you were doing last Sunday-circling, talking, paying not much attention to the stranger. Right?"
trouble. Our young, said, "Who is going to stand in for Ivan?" "I am," I said. "I'm not as broadshouldered as him or as Nash, but I'll be wearing a jacket like the one Nash usually wears as the trainer. I'll be for riding the horse Ivan rode. When we're ready the with the cameras, the man playing the knife attacker will mount and ride that slow old bay to that finished last in our race at Huntingdon. The the lad who usually rides him will be standing behind the cameras, out of shot. Any questions?" One asked, "Are you going to chase him down, the hill on the camera truck, like last
"What we need," I told Ridley, "is for you to ride into the group from somewhere over there... " I pointed.
"Trot into the group, draw a make-believe knife from a sheath on your belt, slash at one of the group as if you intended to wound him badly, and then, in the ensuing melee, canter off over the brow of the hill and down the wide training ground toward the town. OK?"
Ridley stared, his eyes darkly intense.
"You will slash at me, OK? I'm standing in for Nash. "Ridley said nothing.
"Of course," I told him pleasantly, "when this scene appears in the finished film it will not look like one smooth sequence. There will be flashes of the knife, of horses rearing, of jumbled movement and confusion. There will be a wound. There will be blood. We will fake those later. " Ed brought various props across to where I stood with Ridley, and handed them to him one by one.
"Make-believe knife in sheath on belt," Ed said, as if reading from a list. "Please put on the belt. "As if mesmerized, Ridley obeyed.
"Please practice drawing the knife," I said. Ridley drew the knife and looked at it in horror. The production department had faithfully reproduced the American trench knife from my drawing, and although the object Ridley held was light-weight and of painted wood, from three paces it looked like a heavy knuckle-duster with a long blade attached to its index finger side. "Fine," I said noncommittally.
"Put it back in its sheath. "Ridley fumbled the knife back into place.
"Helmet," Ed said, holding it out.
Ridley buckled on the helmet.
"Goggles," Ed offered. Ridley put them on slowly. "Gloves. "
Ridley hesitated. "Anything the matter?" I asked.
"Great," I said. "Off you go, then. When Ed yells 'action,' just trot straight toward me, draw en this the knife, take a slash, and canter away fast it look toward Newmarket. Do you want a rehearsal, or lashes do you think you can get it right first time?" noveThe helmeted, begoggled, gloved figure didn't :)und. respond. Ed "We'll take a bet you can get it right," I said.
Ridley seemed incapable of action. I asked ;tood one. the lad whose horse he was riding to lead him ' Ed over to the starting point, and then let go and i the clear the shot. While the lad intelligently followed the instruction, the lad on Nash's horse dismounted and gave me a leg-up. The cracked rib tugged sharply. I lengthened the stirrup in leathers. Moncrieff opened his floodlights to thbathe the scene and augment the daylight. )m Ed yelled, "Action. "
Ridley Wells kicked his horse into a canter, not t1d M a trot. He tugged the knife free with his right hand 'er while holding the reins with his left. He steered his mount with his legs, expert that he was, and e. he aimed himself straight at me, as murderously in intent as one could have hoped. The "knife" hit my coat and the carapace beneath and because the imitation blade had no slicing power, the impact knocked the weapon flying out of Ridley's grasp.
"I dropped it," he shouted, and I pointed to the brow of the hill and yelled at him, "Never mind. Gallop.
He galloped. He sat down low in the saddle and galloped as if it were a genuine escape. The lads on their horses crowded to the top of the hill to watch, just as before, and this time I went after the fugitive on a horse, not in a truck. The truck was being driven down the road, camera whirring. The sequence I finally cut together for the film showed "Nash" closely chasing his assailant; Nash with a deep bleeding wound; Nash losing his quarry, blood dripping everywhere; Nash in pain. "Lovely stuff," O'Hara breathed when he saw it. "God, Thomas... " On this Sunday morning, however
Loin the hill chattering OLunings, wide-eyed. "That man looked just the same!" "He was the same!" "He looked like that man last week!" ruck. "Didn't he look just like the same man?" "Yes," I said. cut sely From the wardrobe department, where I shed ding Nash's coat and helmet, I paid a brief visit )ing upstairs to where the production people were stacking the Athenaeum scenery to one side and ;aw filling the space instead with a reproduction of any horse's stall in the stable yard.
As a real natural stall was far too small for I I camera, crew, lights, and technicians, let alone a to couple of actors, we were fabricating our own version. It was as if a stall had been divided into te thirds, then spread apart, leaving a large center V area for camera maneuvering. One third had the e split door to the outer world (back projection of the stable yard), one portion contained a manger and water bucket. One, the largest, encompassed the place where a horse would normally stand.
The walls of the stall were being constructed of actual whitewashed breeze blocks with an open ceiling of heavy rafters. Bales of hay, at present neatly stacked, would be placed on a platform on the rafters above the action. A floor of concrete sections, covered with straw, was being slotted into each setting. Artistic hoof marks and other signs of wear and habitation showed that this was a stall often in use.
"How's it going?" I asked, looking round with approval.
"Ready in the morning," they assured me. "It'll be as solid as a rock, like you asked. " "Great. "
Dorothea's cheeks were faintly pink; a great advance. We had a few tears on my arrival, but not the racking distress of two days earlier. As her physical state had grown stronger, so had her strength of mind resurfaced. She thanked me for the flowers I'd brought her and said she was sick of a diet of tomato soup. "'They say it's good for me but I'm growing to hate it. It's true I can't eat meat and salad-have you ever endured a hospital salad?-but why not mushroom or chicken soup?-and none of it's homemade, of course. " She was longing, she said, to go to the nursing home dear Robb
"We don't like each other," Dorothea confessed, sighing.
"Such a pity. " "Mm," I agreed. "When you're well, will you go back to your house?" Tears quivered in her eyes. "'Paul died there. "Valentine also, I thought. "Thomas...
I've been remembering things. " She sounded almost anxious.
"That night when I was attacked...
What do Paul was shouting. "
"Yes, you told me. " "There was another man there. "I drew the visitor's chair to beside her bed and sat peacefully holding her hand, not wanting to alarm her and smothering my own urgent the thoughts. I said gently, "Do you remember what he sort of looked like?" "I didn't know him. He was there with Paul of when I got home from Mona's house... I'd been watching television with her, you see, but we to didn't like the program and I went home early.. 7e. and I went in by the kitchen door as usual and I )t was so surprised and, well-pleased, of course-to S see Paul, but he was s
Why should he have been frightened?"
"Perhaps because you'd come home while he and the other man were ransacking your house. " "Well, dear, Paul shouted... where was Valentine's photo album, and I'm sure I said he didn't have one, he just kept a few old snaps in a chocolate box, the same as I did, and Paul wouldn't believe me, he kept going on about an album. "
"So," Isaid, "did Valentine ever have an album?" "No. dear, I'm sure he didn't. We were never a great family for photos, not like some people who don't believe a thing's happened unless they take snaps of it. Valentine has dozens of pictures of horses, but it was horses, you see, dear, that were his life. Always horses. He never had any children, his Cathy couldn't, you see. He might have been keener on photos if he'd had children. I keep quite a lot of photos in a box in my bedroom. Photos of us all, long ago. Pictures of Paul.
" Tears came again, and I didn't tell her I hadn't been able to find those pathetically few mementos in her bedroom. I would give her Valentine's chocolate box instead. "Did Paul say why he wanted the photo album?" I asked. "I don't think so, dear. Everything was happening so fast and the other man was so angry, and shouting too, and Paul said to me, so frightening, dear, but he said, 'Tell him where the album is, he's got a knife."
I asked quietly, "Are you sure about that?" "I believed it was a dream. " "And now?" "Well, now... I think he must have said it. I can hear my Paul's voice...
oh dear... oh my darling little boy. "I hugged her while she sobbed. "That other man hit me, she said, gulping. "Hit my head... and Paul was shouting, 'Tell him, tell him,' and I saw... he really did have a knife, that man... or at least he was holding something shiny, but it wasn5t a real knife, he had his fingers through it...
dirty fingernails. it was horrid... and Paul was shouting, 'Stop it... don't... ' and I woke up in the hospital and I didn't know what had happened, but last it night... well, dear, when I was waking up this y morning and thinking about Paul, well, I sort of t remembered. " "Yes,"
I said. I paused, consolidating earlier impressions.
"Dearest Dorothea," I said. "I think Paul saved your life. " "Oh! Oh!" She was still crying, but after a while it was from radiant joy, not grinding regret.
"I think," I said, "that Paul was so horrified by seeing you attacked with that knife, that he prevented a fatal blow. Robbie Gill thought that the attack on you looked like an interrupted murder. He said that people who inflicted such awful knife wounds were usually in a frenzy, and simply couldn't stop. I think Paul stopped him. "
"Oh, Thomas!" "But I'm afraid," I said regretfully, "that it means that Paul knew the man who attacked you, and he didn't identify him to the police. In fact, Paul pretended he was in Surrey when you were attacked. " "Oh dear. " "And," I said, "Paul tried hard to prevent you from talking to me or to Robbie, or anyone else, until he was sure you remembered nothing about the attack. Dorothea's joy faded somewhat but, underneath, remained. "He changed a bit," I said. "I think at one point he almost told me something, but I don't know what. I do believe, though, that he was feeling rem
"Oh, Thomas, I do hope so. "
339 "I'm sure of it," I said, more positively than I felt.
She thought things over quietly for a while and then said, "Paul would burst out sometimes with opinions as if he couldn't hold them in any more. )@"Did he?" "He said... I didn't like to tell you, Thomas, but the other day-when he was here with me, he burst out with, Why did you ever have to make your film? He was bitter. He said I would never have been attacked if you hadn't stirred every thing up. Of course I asked what you had stirred up and he said it was all in the Drumbeat, but I was to forget what he'd said, only if anything happened to you it would be your own fault. He s
I turned and asked Dorothea, "While you've been here in the hospital, did Paul ask you about a photo album?"
"I don't think so, dear. Everything gets so muddled, though. " She paused. "He said something about you having taken Valentine's books away, and I didn't tell him you hadn't. I didn't want to argue, you see, dear. I felt too tired. " I told her I'd found a photo among Valentine's possessions-which I had retrieved from her nice young friend, Bill Robinson-but I couldn't see that it was worth the damage to her house or to herself "If I show it to you," I said, "will you tell me who the people are?"
"Of course, dear, if I can. "
I took the Gang photo out of my pocket and put it into her hand.
"I need my reading glasses," she said, peering at it. "That red case on the bedside table. " I gave her her glasses and she looked without much reaction at the picture. "Did one of those people attack you?" I asked. "Oh no, none of those. He was much older. All these people are so young.
Why!" she exclaimed. "'That's Paul! That one at the end, isn't that Paul? How young he was! So handsome, then. " She let the hand holding the photo rest on the sheet. "I don't know any of the others. I wish Paul was here. " Sighing, I took back the photo, replaced it in my pocket, and produced the small memo pad I habitually carried.
I said, "I don't want to upset you, but if I draw a knife will you tell me if it's the one that might have been used on you?" "I don't want to see it. " "Please, Dorothea. " "Paul was killed with a knife," she wailed and cried for her son. "Dearest Dorothea," I said after a while. " "If it will help to find Paul's killer, will you look at my drawing?" She shook her head. I put the drawing close to her hand and, after a long minute, she picked it up. "How horrid," she said, looking at it, "I didn't see a knife like that. " She sounded extremely relieved. "It wasn't anything like that
I said helplessly. "But you didn't die. Paul loved you...
He saved your life. " I thought of the cataclysmic shock in Paul's face when he'd come to Dorothea's house and seen the Armadillo lying on the kitchen table. When he'd seen me sitting there, alive. He'd blundered out of the house and gone away, and it was pointless now to speculate that if we'd stopped him, if we'd sat him down and made him talk, he might have lived. Paul had been near, once, to breaking open. Paul, I thought, had become a fra ile dan er, likely to crumble, likely to confess. Paul, overbearing, pompous, unlikable, had lost his nerve and died of repentance.
My driver, with the black belt beside him, aimed my car toward Oxfordshire while consulting from time to time my written directions, and I sat in the back seat looking again at the Gang photo and remembering what both Dorothea and Lucy had said about it. "They're so young. "
Young. Jackson Wells, Ridley Wells, Paul Pannier, were all at least twenty-six years younger in the photo than the living men I'd met. Sonia had died twenty-six years earlier, and Sonia was alive in the picture. Say the photo had been taken twenty-seven years ago-that made Jackson Wells about twenty-three, with all the others younger than that. Eighteen, nineteen, twenty: that sort of age. Sonia had died at twenty-one. I had been four when she died and I hadn't heard of her, and I'd come back at thirty and wanted to know why she had died, and I had said I might try and find out, and
My driver found Batwillow Farm and delivered me to Jackson Wells's door. Lucy again answered the summons of the overloud bell, her blue eyes widening with astonishment. "I say," she said, "you didn't mind my coming home for the day, did you? You haven't come to drag me back by my ponytail?" "No," I smiled. "I really wanted to talk to your father. " "Oh, sure. Come in. " I shook my head. "I wonder if he would come out?" "Oh? Well, I'll ask him. " Faintly puzzled, she disappeared into the house, to return soon with her blond, lean, farm-tanned enquiring parent looking exactly as he ha
"Oh. We crossed from the house and came to rest by the five-barred gate on which deaf old Wells senior had been leaning the week before. "Lucy's doing a good job," I said.
"Did she tell you? "She likes talking to Nash Rourke. " "They get on fine," I agreed. "I told her to be careful. " 1 smiled.
"You've taught her well. " Too well, I thought. I said, "Did she mention a photograph?" He looked as if he didn't know whether to say yes or no, but in the end said, "What photograph?" "This one. " I brought it out of my pocket and gave it to him. He looked at the front briefly and at the back, and met my eyes expressionlessly. "Lucy says that's your handwriting," I commented, taking the picture back.
"What if it is?" "I'm not the police," I said, "and I haven't brought thumbscrews. " He laughed, but the totally carefree manner of a week earlier had been undermined by wariness. I said, "Last week you told me no one knew why Sonia had died. " "That's right. " The blue eyes shone, as ever, with innocence. I shook my head. "Everyone in that photo," I said, "knew why Sonia died. " His utter stillness lasted until he'd manufactured a smile and a suitably scornful expression. "Sonia is in that photo; what you said is codswollop. " "Sonia knew," I said. "Are you saying she killed hersel
"Not really. She didn't intend to die. No one intended to kill her. She died by accident. " "You know bloody nothing about it. " I knew too much about it. I didn't want to do any more harm, and I didn't want to get myself killed, but Paul Pannier's death couldn't simply be ignored; and apart from considerations of justice, until his murderer had been caught I would be wearing Delta-cast.
"You all look so young in that photo," I said. "Golden girl, golden boys, all smiling, all with bright lives ahead. You were all kids then, like you told me. All playing at living, everything a game. 5' I named the light-hearted gang in the photo. "There's you and Sonia, and your younger brother, Ridley. There's Paul Pannier, your blacksmith's nephew. There's Roddy Visborough, the son of Sonia's sister, which made Sonia actually his aunt. And there's your jockey, P. Falmouth, known as Pig. " I paused.
"You were the eldest, twenty-two or twenty-three. Ridley, Paul, Roddy, and Pig were all eighteen, nineteen, or twenty when Sonia died, and she was only twenty-one. "Jackson Wells said blankly, "How do you know?" "Newspaper reports.
Doing sums. It hardly matters. What does matter is the immaturity of you all... and the feeling some people have at that age that youth is eternal, caution is for oldies, and responsibility a dirty word. You went off to York and the others played a game... and I think this whole gang, except you, were there when she died. "
"No," he said sharply. "It wasn't a gang thing. You're meaning gang rape. That didn't happen. " "I know it didn't. The autopsy made it quite 0 clear that there'd been no intercourse. The newsif papers all pointed it out. " y "Well, then. " )f I said carefully, "I think one of those boys in some way throttled her, not meaning to do her harm, and they were all so frightened that they tried to make it look like suicide, by hanging her. A And then they just-ran away. "
"No," Jackson said numbly. "I think," I said, "that to begin with you truly didn't know what had happened. When you talked to the police, when they tried to get you to confess, you could deal blithely with their questions f because you knew you weren't guilty. You truly didn't know at that point whether or not she'd hanged herself, though you knew-and said-that it wasn't like her.
I think that for quite a while it was a true mystery to you, but what is also evident is that you weren't psychologically pulverized by it. None of the newspaper reports-and I've now read a lot of them-not one says anything about a distraught young husband. "
"Well... I.. "By then," I suggested, "you knew she had lovers. Not dream lovers. Real ones. The Gang. All casual. A joke. A game. I'd guess she never thought the sex act more than a passing delight, like ice cream, and there are plenty of people like that, though it's not them but the intense and the jealous that sell the tabloids. When Sonia died, your playing-at-marriage was already over. You told me so. You might have felt shock and regret at her death, but you were young and healthy and blessed with a resilient nature, and your grief was short. " "You can't possibly know. "
"You're right. " He sighed heavily. "They were all there, and I didn't find out for weeks. " I let time pass. He had taken the first great step; the rest would follow. "Weeks afterward, they began to unravel," he said at length.
"They'd sworn to each other they would never say a word.
Never. But it got too much for them. Pig pissed off to Australia and left me with only Derek Carsington to ride my nags; not that it mattered much, the owners were leaving as if I had the pox, and then Ridley... " He paused.
"Ridley got drunk, which wasn't a rarity even in those days, and spilled his guts from every possible orifice... Ridley disgusts me but Lucy still thinks he's a la
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ugh, which won't last much longer as he'd have his hand up her skirt by now except that I've told her always to wear jeans, no fun being a girl these days, not like Sonia, she loved skirts down to her ankles and no bra most of the time and a green crewcut-and why the hell am I telling you this?"
I thought he might be mourning Sonia twentysix years too late; but maybe nothing was ever too late in that way.
"She was fun," he said. "Always good for a laugh. "
"Yes. 55 "Ridley told me what they'd done. " The pain of the revelation showed sharply in the sunny face. "I as good as killed him. I thrashed him. Hit him. Beat him with a riding whip. Anything I could lay my hands on. I kicked him unconscious. "
"That was grief," I said. "Anger. "
"Same thing. "Jackson stared unseeingly at time past. "I went to see Valentine to ask him what to do," he said. "Valentine was like a father to all of us. A better father than any of us had. Valentine loved Sonia like a daughter. " I said nothing. The way Valentine had loved Sonia had had nothing to do with fatherhood. "What did Valentine say?" I asked.
349RM"He already knew! He said Paul had told him. Paul was in pieces, like Ridley. Paul had told his uncle everything.
Valentine said they could all either live with what they'd done or go to the police... and he wouldn't choose for them. " "Did Valentine know that Roddy Visborough had been there?" "I told him," Jackson said frankly. "Sonia was Roddy's aunt. And whatever sort of sex orgy they'd all been planning-I mean, of course, it was nothing like that, forget I said it-Roddy couldn't be dragged in, they said it was impossible. She was his aunt!" "You all knew Valentine well," I said. "Yes, of course. His old smithy was only just down the road from my yard. He was always in and out with the ho
Better than a father. But everything broke up. Training died on me, and Paul left Newmarket and moved away with his mother and father, and Roddy went off to go on the show-jumping circuit... he'd been wanting to be an assistant racehorse trainer only he hadn't yet got a job, and Pig, like I said, he'd already gone off. And then Valentine was moving too. The old smithy needed impossible roof repairs, so he had it torn down and sold the land for building. I was there one day when he was watching the builders throw the junk of a lifetime down to fill up an old well that he had in th
"Well, yes, they did. " He couldn't repress his grin for long. "And Valentine became the Grand Old Man of racing, and Roddy Visborough's won enough silver cups for an avalanche. Ridley's still le bumming about and I help him out from time to time, and Paul got married He stopped uncertainly. "And Paul got killed," I said baldly. He was silent. it "Do you know who killed him?" I asked. "No. " He stared. "Do you?" I didn't answer directly.
I said, "Did any of them tell Valentine-or you-which of the four of them throttled Sonia?" "It was an accident. "
"Whose accident?" "She was going to let them put their hands round her neck. She was laughing, they all agreed about that. They were sort of high, but not on drugs. " "On excitement," I said. His blue eyes widened. "They were all going to... that's what broke them up... they were all going to have a turn with her, and she wanted it... she bet they couldn't all manage it, not like that when the lads had all ridden out for second morning exercise, not before they came back again in an hour, and not with all of the gang watching and cheering each other on, and not in a stall o
"Do you realize," I asked, "that it's almost always men who die in that sort of asphyxia?" "Oh God... They wanted to see if it worked the same for women. " The total foolishness of it blankly silenced us both. I took a breath. I said, "The Drumbeat said I couldn't solve Sonia's death, and I have. So now I'll find out who killed Paul Pannier. " He pushed himself away from the gate explosively, shouting back at me, "How? Leave it alone. Leave all of us alone.
Don't make this pissing film. " His raised voice brought my judo keeper out of the car like an uncoiling eel. Jackson looked both surprised and alarmed, even as I made soothing hand gestures to calm my minder's reflexes. I said to Jackson, "My bodyguard's like a growling dog. Pay no attention. The film company insists on him because others besides you want this movie stopped. " "That bitch Audrey, Sonia's sneering sister, I bet she does, for one. "
"She above all," I agreed. Lucy reappeared at the front door and called to her father, "Dad, Uncle Ridley's on the phone. "
and "Tell him I'll come in a minute. " areI said, as she dernaterialized, "Your brother rode on the Heath this morning, for the film. He won 5 t be pleased with me. " iey? "Why not?"
"He'll tell you. "
"I wish you'd never come,"he said bitterly and strode off toward his house, his safe haven his two normal nice women. I spent the journey back to Newmarket knowing I'd been rash, but not really regretting it. I might think I knew who'd killed Paul, but proving it was different. The police would have to prove it, but I could at least direct their gaze. I thought of one particular newspaper clipping that I'd found in the file now resting in O'Hara's safe. ag Valentine had written it for his occasional gossip column. The paper was dated six weeks after Sonia's death, and didn't mention
Born. and raised near the town of his name in Cornwall, Pig Falmouth moved to Newmarket two years ago, where his attractive personality and dedication to winning soon earned him many friends. Undoubtedly he would have prospered in England as his experience increased, but we wish him great success in his new venture overseas.
This item was accompanied by a smiling picture of a fresh-faced good-looking young man in jockey's helmet and colors; but it was the headline of the section that had been for me the drench of ice-cold understanding.
"Exit," it said, "of the Cornish boy. "
We filmed the hanging scene the following morning, Monday, in the cut-and-separated stable stall upstairs in the house. Moncrieff flung a rope over the rafters and swung on it himself to test the set's robustness, but owing to the solid breeze blocks and huge metal angle-iron braces anchoring the new walls to the old floor, there wasn't the slightest quiver in the scenery, to the audible relief of the production department. The straw-covered concrete in the set sections deadened all hollow give-away underfoot echoing noises, those reality-destroying clatterings across the floors of
Well, I'm here now. "
"I told Howard you would he Pure to behere ng "Thanks so much. " ng Moncrieff grinned. "Howard was anxious. " 'as "Mm. Did the Yvonne girl get here?" ne "Down in make-up," Moncrieff nodded las civiously.
"And is she a dish. " "Long blond hair?"
He nodded. "The wig you ordered. Where did you get to, in fact?" "Around," I said vaguely. I'd slipped my mind and walked a roundabout way, via the Heath, to the stables, booking in with the guard on the house door and telling him I wanted to work undisturbed, and, if anyone asked, to say I wasn't there. d "Sure thing, Mr. Lyon," he promised, used to It my vagaries, so I'd gone privately into the downstairs office and phoned Robbie Gill. e "Sorry to bother you on Sunday evening," I e apologized. 'i "I was only watching the TV. How can I help?" t I said, "Is Dorothea well enough to
"She's longing to go to the nursing home, she said, and a lot of her toughness of spirit is back. But medically...
could she go?" "Hm... "She's remembered a good deal more about being stabbed," I said.
"She saw the attacker's face, but she doesn't know him. She also saw the knife that cut her. "
God," Robbie exclaimed. "That knuc kleduster thing?"
"No. It was the one that ended in me. " "Chiist. 5. ) "So, move her tomorrow if you can. Give her a false name in the nursing home. She's at risk. " "Bloody hell. " "She remembers that Paul interrupted the attack on her and effectively saved her life. It's comforting her. She's amazing. She's had three terrible things happen, but she'll be all right, I think. " "Spunky old woman. Don't worry, I'll shift her. " "Great. " I paused. "You remember the police took our fingerprints to match them with the prints in Dorothea's house?" "Of course I do. They took Dorothea's and her friend Be
"When he went to her house he didn't expect her to be there. He didn't plan in advance to attack her. He went to search with Paul for some thing Valentine might have had, and I guess they ripped the place to bits from fury and frustration that they couldn't find anything. Anyway, his prints must be all over the place. "
Robbie, perplexed, asked, "Whose?" "I'll tell you when I'm sure. " "Don't get yourself killed. " "Of course not," I said.
Yvonne came upstairs at the required time, and proved to be the regulation issue semi-anorexic California waif beloved of moguls, a culture concept a cosmos away from the real laughing reckless Sonia. Sonia, at her death, had worn, according to the more conservative newspapers, "a rose-red satin slip," and, according to the titillators, in blackest type, "a shiny scarlet mini with shoestring shoulder straps, and black finely strapped sandals with high rhinestone heels. " No wonder, I'd thought, that suicide had been in doubt.
Yvonne of the dream lovers was wearing a loose white day dress described in American fashion circles as a "float": that is to say, it softly outlined only what it touched.
She also wore, at my request, chandelier pearl and gold earrings and a long pearl necklace nearly to her waist.
She looked beautifully ethereal and spoke like Texas.
"This morning," I said, "we're shooting the scenes in the right sequence. That's to say, first you enter through that split door. " I pointed. "There will be backlighting. When Moncrieff is ready, I'd like you to stand in the doorway and turn your head slowly until we say stop, then if you'll remember that position and stop your head right there for the take, we will get a dramatic effect. You will be entering but looking back. OK? I expect you know your lines. " She gave me a limpid unintelligent wide-eyed look: great for the film, not so good for technical speed while we made it.
"Absolutely so. " "Guess I'd better concentrate, then. "
"Honey child," I said in her accent. "You do just that and I'll earn you talk-show spots. " "The Today Show?"
"Nothing's impossible. " Calculation clouded the peerless violet eyes, and she went quietly off to one side and studied her script. Battle lines drawn, we proceeded. When Moncrieff was satisfied with his light placement, we stood Yvonne in the doorway and moved her inch by inch until the light outside the door shone through her flimsy float to reveal her body to the camera inside: too flat-chested for my interest, but of the dreamy other-world unreality I'd hoped for. "Jeez," Moncrieff murmured, looking through his lens.
I said, "Can you put a glint on those earrings?"
"You don't ask much!" He positioned an inkie-an inkie-dinkie, meaning a very small spotlight-to give a glitter below her ears. "Great," I said. "Everyone ready?
We'll do a rehearsal. Yvonne, don't forget you're being followed by an earthy man who is parsecs away from a dream lover. You are already laughing at him in your mind, though not openly, as he has power to make Nash's life-that's to say, your film husband's life-very difficult. just imagine you're being followed by a man you sexually despise but cant be rude to... " Yvonne giggled. "Who needs to act? I meet them every day. " "I'll bet you do," Moncrieff said under his breath. "Right, then," I said, trying not to laugh. "We'll do a walk-through. Ready? And a pause, "Go. " Yvonne g
We gave Yvonne a rest for lunch, while Moncrieff and I filmed the crews slapping heavy ropes sharply over the rafters, and tying frightful knots -' to show the violence, the speed, the lack of mercy that I wanted. Naturally each segment took many minutes to stage and get right, but later, in cinemas, with every successful impression strung together-slap, slap, slap-the horror of the hanging would strike the popcorn crunchers silent.
I sat beside Yvonne on a hay bale. I said, "This afternoon we are going to tie your wrists together with that thick rope now hanging free from that rafter. "
She took it easily. "The man has by now frightened you so much that you are almost relieved that it is your wrists he has tied. "She nodded.
"But suddenly he pulls some slack into the rope leading from the rafter, and he loops the slack round your neck, and does it a second time, and pulls the rope tight until your pearls break and slide down inside your dress, and he leans all his weight on the free end of rope swinging from the rafter, and... er... he lifts you off your feet...
and hangs you. "
Big-eyed, she said, "What do I say? Do I beg? It doesn't say this. "
"You don't say anything," I said. "You scream. @5 "Scream?"
"Yes. Can you?" She opened her mouth and screamed up a hair-raising scale, alarming everyone on set and bringing them galloping to her rescue. She giggled. "No one rescued Yvonne," I said regretfully, "but no one will forget that scream. " We filmed a brutal hanging, but short of the dreaded NC 17 or 18 certificates. We showed no black asphyxiated face, no terrible bloating. I got Yvonne to wriggle frantically while we suspended her from the wrists, but I filmed her only from the roped neck to her feet that frantically stretched down to the out-of-reach floor. We arranged for one of
He patted Yvonne's bottom. Silly old buffoon, I thought, and set about turning him into a lecherous bull. Y3 I positioned him in the manger section, and gave him an ashtray to prevent him setting fire to ie the straw. We placed Yvonne so that her white dress, on the edge of the frame and out of focus from being too near the camera, nonetheless, established her presence. n Moncrieff, concentrating on the lighting, I added a sheet of blue gelatine across one of the e spots. He looked through the lens and smiled, e and I looked also, and there it was, the actor e blinking, bored, waiti
"The lust I want is uncontrollable. It's out of control, frenetic, frantic, raging, berserk. It's murderous. "
"And you expect me to show all that?" "No, I don't. I don't think you can. I don't think you have the technique.
I don't think you're a good enough actor. " Cibber froze. He stubbed out the cigar; and he produced for the camera that day a conception of 364lust that made one understand and pity his ungovernable compulsion even while he killed for having it mocked. He would never be a grandee type-cast actor again. "I hate you," he said.
Lucy was busy with the boxes when, on returning to the hotel, I opened the door of my sitting room and went in, leaving it ajar. She was on her knees among the boxes and looked up as if guiltily, faintly blushing. "Sorry for the mess," she said, flustered. "I didn't think you'd be back before six o'clock, as usual. I'll just tidy this lot away.
And shall I close the door?" "No, leave it open. "
Books and papers were scattered over much of the floor, and many of them, I was interested to see, had come out of boxes she had already investigated and itemized. The folder of clippings about Sonia's death lay open on the table: the harmless clippings only, as Valentine's totally revealing souvenirs were out of sight in O'Hara's safe. "You had some messages," Lucy said jerkily, picking up and reading from a notebook. "Howard Tyler wants to see you. Someone called Ziggy-I think-wanted you to know the horses had come without trouble through Immingham and had reached their stable. Do
"Thanks. " I viewed the general clutter on the floor and mildly asked, "What are you looking for?" "Oh. " The blush deepened. "Dad said... I mean, I hope you won't mind, but my Uncle Ridley came in to see me. " "In here?" "Yes. I didn't know he was coming. He just knocked on the door and walked straight in when I opened it. I said you might not be pleased, and he said he didn't care a f-, I mean, he didn't care what you thought. " "Did your father send him?" "I don't know if he sent him. He told him where I was and what I was doing. " I hid from her my inner satisfaction. I had
well... he told me to wheedle out of you the combination you're using for the safe here. He tried to open it, you see... " She stopped miserably. "I know I should never have let him in. What is it all about?" "Cheer up," I said, "while I think. " "Shall I tidy the boxes?"
"Yes, do. "First catch your sprat... "Lucy," I said, "why did you tell me what Ridley wanted?" She looked uncomfortable. "Do you mean, why am I not loyal to my uncle?" "Yes, I do mean that. " "I didn't like him saying wheedle. And... well... he's not as nice as he used to be. " I smiled. "Good. Well, if I tell you the combination number, will you please tell Ridley? And also tell him how clever you were, the way you wheedled it out of me! And tell him you do think I have knives in the safe. "She hesitated. I said, "Give your allegiance one way or the other, but stick to one
She said solemnly, "I give it to you. " "Then the combination is seven three five two. 55 "Now?" she asked, stretching toward the telephone.
"Now. She spoke to her uncle. She blushed deeply while she lied, but she would have convinced me, let alone Ridley. When she put down the telephone I said, "When I've finished all the work on this film, which will be in another four and a half months, I should think, would you like to spend a holiday in California? Not," I went on hastily, "with any conditions or expectations attached. Just a holiday. You could bring your mother, if you like. I thought you might find it interesting, that's all. " Her uncertainty over this suggestion was endearing. I was everything she'd been taught
I'd been forever bombarded by actresses. An Oxfordshire farmer's freckled-nosed blue-eyed daughter who played the piano and lapsed occasionally into 368sixteen-year-old awkwardness seemed in contrast an unrealistic and unlikely future. There was no thunderbolt: just an insidious hungry delight that never went away. Her first response was abrupt and typical. I can t afford it. " "Never mind, then. " "But... er... yes.
"Lucy! The blush persisted. "You'll turn out to be a frog. 55 "Kermit's not bad," I said, assessingly.
She giggled. "What do you want me to do with the boxes?"
Her work on the boxes had been originally my pathway to her father. I might not need her to work on them any longer, but I'd grown to like finding her here in my rooms.
"I hope you'll go on with the cataloging tomorrow, I said.
"All right. " "But this evening I have to work on the film, alone. " She seemed slightly disappointed but mostly relieved. A daring step forward... half a cautious step back. But we would get there one day, I thought, and was content and even reassured by the wait.
We left through the still slightly open doorway, and I walked down the passage a little way before waving her down the stairs; and, returning, I stopped to talk to my bodyguard whom O'Hara, for the company, had by now installed in the room opposite my own. My bodyguard, half Asian, had straight black hair, black shiny eyes, and no visible feelings. He might be young, agile, well trained, and fast on his feet, but he was also unimaginative and hadn't saved me from the Armadillo. When I pushed open his unlocked door to reveal him sitting wide awake in an upright chair facing me, he s
"Cibber told me you've made him the murderer! It's impossible! You can't do it. I won't allow it! What will the Visboroughs say?" I pointed out that we could slot in a different murderer, if we wanted to. Cibber says you tore him to shreds. "
"Cibber gave the performance of his life," I contradicted; and indeed, of the film's eventual, four Oscar nominations, Cibber won the award le for Best Supporting Actor-graciously forgiving @n me about a year later. )t I promised Howard, "We'll hold a full script conference tomorrow morning; you, me, Nash, 0 and Moncrieff. " ir "I want you to stop the film!" e "I don't have that authority. " "What if you're deadl?" he demanded. V I said after a moment, "The company will r finish the movie with another director. Killing a me, believe me, Howard, would give this film massive publicity
And I said, "See you in the morning," and disconnected in despair. The safe in my sitting room, as in O'Hara's, was out of casual sight in a fitment that housed a large TV set above and a mini-bar as well as the safe below. The mini-bar held small quantities of drinks for needy travelers-spirits, wine, champagne, and beer, also chocolate and nuts. The safe-my safe-held nothing. I programmed it to open at seven three five two, entrusted the Gang photo into its safekeeping, and closed it.
I sat then in the armchair in my bedroom and waited for a long time, and thought about the obligations of the confessional, and about how totally, or how little, I myself was bound by Valentine's dying and frantic admissions.
371I felt the weight of the obligation of priesthood that so many priests themselves took lightly, knowing that their role absolved them from any dire responsibility, even while they dispensed regular indulgences. I had had no right to hear Valentine 5 s confession nor to pardon his sins, and I had done both. I'd absolved him. In nomine PaMs... ego te absolve. I could not evade feeling an absolute obligation to the spirit of those words. I should not-and could not-save myself with the knowledge Valentine had entrusted to me as a priest when he was dying. On the other hand, I cou
I ambled to my bedroom door and greeted Y5 him. ay "Hello, Roddy. He was dressed in blazer, shirt, and tie. He looked a pillar of show-jumping rectitude; and he held the Gang photo. te "Looking for something?" I asked.
"Er... " Roddy Visborough said civilly, "Yes, actually. Bit of an imposition, I'm afraid, but one of the children I teach has begged me to get Nash Rourke's autograph. Howard swears you'll ask him for it. "
He laid the photo on the table and came toward me holding out an autograph album and a pen. It was so very unexpected that I forgot Professor Derry's warning-anything he possesses may hide a knife-and I let him get too close. He dropped the autograph book at my feet, and when I automatically looked down at it, he pulled his gold-colored pen apart with a movement too fast for me to follow, and lunged at me with it.
The revealed stiletto point went straight through my jersey and shirt and hit solid polymer over my heart.
Himself flummoxed, disbelieving, Roddy dropped the pen and reached for his tie, and with a tug produced from under it a much larger knife, fearsomely lethal, which I later saw to be a triangular blade like a flat trowel fixed to a bar which led between his fingers to a grip within his hand. At the time I saw only the triangular blade that seemed to grow like an integral part of his fist, the wide end across his knuckles, the point protruding five or more inches ahead. He slashed at my throat instantly and found Robbie's handiwork foiling him there also, and with one quick movement f
I hadn't meant to have to fight him. I wasn't good at it.
And how could anyone fight an opponent so appallingly armed when one had no defense except fists. He meant to kill me. I saw it in his face. He was going to get blood on his elegant clothes. One thinks such stupid nonsequiturs at moments of maximum peril. He worked out that I wore a body protector from neck to waist and aimed at more vulnerable areas and punched his awful triangular blade into my left arm several times as I tried to shield my eyes from damage while unsuccessfully trying to get behind him to put my right arm round his throat. I tried to evade him. We circled the bedr
Lyon?" I was past answering him sensibly. I said, "Fetch someone. " Hardly a Nash Rourke hero sort of speech.
He took me literally, anyway. I vaguely heard him talking on the sitting room telephone and soon my rooms seemed full of people. Moncrieff, Nash himself, large men from the Bedford Lodge kitchen staff who sat on the wriggling bedspread, and eventually people saying they were policemen and paramedics and so on. I apologized to the hotel manager for the blood. Oh well.
"Where the hell were you?" I asked my bodyguard. "Didn't you see that my door was shut?" "Yes, Mr. Lyon. " "Well then?" "But Mr. Lyon," he said in righteous selfjustification, "sometimes I have to go to the bathroom.
Early on Thursday morning I sat on a windy sand dune waiting for the sun to rise over Happisburgh beach. O'Hara, back in a panic from L. A, sat shivering beside me. About forty people, the various location crews, came and went from the vehicles parked close behind the dunes, and out on the wet expanse of firm sand left clean and unmarked by the ebbing tide, Moncrieff worked on the cameras, lights, and gantry that had been taken out there bolted onto a caterpillar-tracked orange beach-cleaning monster that could bulldoze wrecks if need be. Far off to the left, Ziggy waited with the V
Ziggy was confident, Moncrieff was confident, O'Hara was confident: I fidgeted. We needed a decent sunrise. We could fudge together an impression by using the blazing shots of the sky from the previous week; we could shine lights to get gleams in the horses' eyes, but we needed luck and the real thing to get the effect I truly wanted. I thought over the events of the past few days. There had been a microsurgeon in the Cambridge 376hospital who'd sewn up my face with a hundred tiny black stitches that at present looked as if a millipede was climbing from my chin to my hairline, but w
Alison looked in disbelief at the long millipede track up my face. "Rodbury wouldn't have done that! " "Rodbury did," I said dryly. "Did he always have knives?" She hesitated. She was fair-minded under the outrage. "I suppose... perhaps.. he was secretive... " "And he wouldn't let you join in his games. " She said "Oh," blankly, and began reevaluating her brother's psyche.
Sitting on the Norfolk dunes I thought of her father, Rupert, and of his aborted political career. I thought it almost certain that the scandal that had caused his retreat was not that his sister-in-law had been mysteriously hanged, but that he'd learned-perhaps from Valentine or even from Jackson Wells-that his own son had been present at the mid-morning cover-up hanging, having intended to have sexual relations with his aunt. Rupert, upright man, had given his son show-jumpers with which to redeem himself, but had stopped short of loving forgiveness and had left his own house to h
Poor Rupert Visborough... he hadn't deserved to become Cibber, but at least he would never know.
O'Hara, huddling into his padded ex-army jacket, said that while I'd been out on the beach rehearsing the previous evening, he'd got the projectionist to show him the rushes of the hanging. "What sort of certificate did we earn?" I asked. "PG 1 3? That's what we ideally want. "
"Depends on the cutting. What gave you that one view of her death?" "Howard holds forth on the catharsis of the, primal scream. " "Shit, Thomas. That death wasn't any sort of the therapy. That hanging had gut-churning vigor. " "Good. " "
O'Hara blew on his fingers. "I hope these damn horses are worth this frigging cold. "The eastern sky turned from black to gray. I picked up the walkie-talkie and spoke again to Ed er and also to Ziggy. Everything was ready. I wasn't to worry. All would be well. al I thought of Valentine's powerful muscles, is years ago. 15 I had kept faith with his confession. No one te through me would ever learn his truth. n I left the knife with Derry... PValentine's strength had fashioned for his great friend Professor Derry a unique knife to add to his collection: a steel knife with a spear
I killed the Cornish boy... One of the Gang, perhaps even Pig Falmouth himself, had told Valentine how Sonia had died, and in an overwhelming, towering tidal wave of anger and grief and guilt he had snatched up the spear and plunged it deep into the jockey's body. It had to have happened in some way like that. Valentine had loved Sonia in secret... e earne about paraphilia to solve Derry s impotence problem, and he'd shown the encyclopedia article 381to Pig, no doubt light-heartedly-"I say, Pig, just look at this! "-and Pig had told his friends.
I destroyed all their lives... I guessed he might have meant he ruined their lives by giving them the idea of their fatal game. They had destroyed their own lives, but guilt could lack logic. Valentine had killed Pig Falmouth in the wild uncontainable sort of anger and grief that had caused Jackson Wells to beat his brother Ridley near to death; and Valentine himself had then written the gossip column that reported Pig's departure to work in Australia, that everyone had believed.
Pig Falmouth, I guessed, had lain for twenty-six years at the bottom of the well that Valentine had had a firm of builders fill in to make it safe for children. Valentine had stood with Jackson Wells and watched them throw the junk ofyears down the hole to obliterate the carefree boy who had kissed and killed his golden girl. Valentine had at the end unloaded his soul's burden of murder. I laid them both to rest.
The sky's amorphous gray was slowly suffused with a dull soft crimson in the east.
Moncrieff was holding a light meter to measure the changing intensity in minutes with the dedication that won him Unstable Times's second Oscar, for Cinematography. Howard, nominated for best adapted screenplay, lost the award by inches, as did our fourth nominee, the art director. O'Hara and the moguls were happy, however, 382 MUM-iustand I got allotted a big-budget epic with mega star Nash.
Over Happisburgh beach the crimson in the em sky blossomed to scarlet and colored the waves Ted pink. There were fewer cloud streaks than the week before, fewer brilliant gold halos against theild Vermillion. We would merge the two sunrises, I'd thought.
Away to our right, far behind Moncrieff and en his cameras, the trainer of the Viking horses had ),)S spread out on the sands great bowls of horse nuts: 5 the wild horses would race, on our signal, to reach ad their breakfast, as they had been trained. ;ix Moncrieff, raising light meters high, greeted the id dawn like an ancient prophet. When he lowered his x arms, I was to cue the action. [Is The blinding sun swam upward. Moncrieff s le arms swept down. Id I said, "Action, Ed," and "Now, Ziggy," into my walkie-talkie, and away down the beach the )S horses began their run.
We had dressed Ziggy in an all-over body suit of gray Lycra, to which, ballet trained, he'd adapted instantly. Over the body suit he wore a floating shapeless gown of translucent white silk voile, and on his head the light blond wig. His own dark features had been transformed to blandness by the make-up department, and he was riding, as he'd promised, without shoes, saddle, or reins.
The horses accelerated, bursting into the wide silence of the deserted seascape with the thud and suction of their galloping hooves. Ziggy knelt on his horse's withers, his head forward above the horse's straining neck. Gown and hair streamed out, gathering to themselves all the light, the gray-clad man inside seeming almost invisible, a misty shadow. Moncrieff ran two head-on cameras, one set for a speed of thirty-six frames a second, slow motion. The rising sun shone in the horses' eyes. Light gleamed on the flying manes. The heads of the wild herd plunged forward in the urgency.
The End