Authors: Simon Brett
The threat of withdrawal of publicity had the desired effect. Or rather one desired effect, in that the tallest boy gave Janine's address. Since it was the old one, the effect was also undesired.
And left Charles no further forward. He puzzled as to how he could continue his questioning about Janine and remain in character.
But he was saved by the intervention of the girl called Polly. âNo, that's no good. Mike said she had moved from there.'
âAny idea where she might have gone?'
They all shook their heads blankly.
âYou mentioned a boy-friend. Maybe I could trace her through him.'
âNone of us ever met him. She kept herself to herself. I think it must've been one of those very tight neurotic sort of relationships. Just the two of them in the flat, they never seemed to go out together.'
âHmm. So you have no other possible contact for her?'
They all shook their heads again. Then the girl called Cookie said, âI did once meet her mother. We were doing a date down in Croydon and had a free afternoon, so Janine suggested we went and had a cup of tea with her Mum.'
âDo you remember the address?'
âYes, but I don't think she'd have gone there now. I got the impression they've had a row of some sort. I think it was about the boy-friend. Janine only once mentioned him to me. Said her mother didn't like him and, if it came to a choice between her mother and her man, it'd have to be the man.'
âShe didn't say his name?'
âNo.'
âWell, could you give me her mother's address? It might be a great help.'
âI don't think she'd be there if they didn't get on.'
âIf she's broken off with the boy-friend, they might be friends again, she and her Mum.'
âPossible.' Cookie gave the address.
The tallest boy and the others were getting restless. âLook, what is all this about Janine? I thought your article was meant to be about the group as it is now.'
âYes, of course,' Bob Cherry assured them. âNow tell me, what are your ambitions for the group over the next year?'
And, to allay their suspicions, Charles Paris condemned himself to another half-hour of corybantic aspirations.
He caught a bus from East Croydon Station. The investigation was beginning to get rather costly in travel. After paying off a few debts and building up his stock of Bell's whiskey, the fee for
The Alexander Harvey Show
was almost gone. Soon he'd have to get some more work. He'd call Maurice. It wouldn't get him a job, but it would make him feel he was doing something about it.
On the bus he thought about Janine Bentley. Strange how different people's views of her were. From almost everyone there came this picture of the quiet little girl, possibly rather repressed, living in a claustrophobic and private relationship with the unknown boy-friend. But how did that tally with Carla Pratt's description of the phone call to her, of this unbalanced âspooky' character? Maybe Janine did have a split personality, her quiet manner hiding the seethings of a sick mind. That would make her motivation for murdering Bill Peaky much more comprehensible.
But Charles still had difficulty in relating this image of her with her appearance. He had only seen her on stage and in the publicity photographs (and had recent cause to remember how much the skills of make-up and hairdressing could falsify in such circumstances), but he had got an impression of a certain honesty in her, something that made a direct appeal to him. Not just a sexual attraction, but a warmth.
He also got the feeling that she was naturally beautiful. Though hairdressing had helped her long blonde hair to its bounce and sparkle, its luxurious abundance owed nothing to artifice. And her large blue eyes could not have been faked; they were God-given.
Yet he was looking for this girl as a murderer. All the evidence and logic pointed towards her guilt. Well, he was too old to be side-tracked by a pretty face.
The face, when he saw it, was not pretty.
He had rung the door chimes of the suburban semi where Mrs. Bentley lived and been greeted by a voice from the other side of the door. A young voice, frightened, strained. âWhat do you want?'
âHello, I've come to see Mrs. Bentley.'
âWhat about?'
âAbout her daughter, Janine.'
There was a pause for some reaction which he could not see. Then âMrs. Bentley's out. What was it about exactly?'
Time for a risk, or at least a shock tactic. âIt's about Bill Peaky.'
This time the sound of the reaction was unmistakable. A little whimper of fear.
Another silence, then the door opened a crack. It was held inside with a chain. Charles could not see the face of the person who opened it.
âI don't recognize you.' There was still an undercurrent of fear, but a new note of fatalism flattened the tone.
âMay I come in and talk?'
âI suppose it was only A matter of time before someone came,' the voice went on. âI couldn't hope to hide here forever.'
âMay I come in?'
âWhy not? You can't do any worse.' The door nearly closed as the chain was released, then opened.
And Charles saw the face.
It was Janine. He could recognize that. But it was a distorted Janine, almost a cartoon version. One cheek bulged sideways, pulling the face out of true. The memorable blue eyes glinted pinkly through the slits which were all the bruised eyelids left to open. The lips, puffy and cut, were slightly parted, stiff with pain, revealing the stump of a broken front tooth. Scratches carved straight roads over the irregular terrain of bruises.
But worst of all was the hair. The splendid opulence he remembered was gone. In some places it was bare to the scalp where it had been pulled out, in others straight edges showed where scissors had been enlisted to complete the destruction.
âGood God,' said Charles. âWhatever happened to you?'
âThere's no need to make it worse by pretending you don't know. Come inside. My mother will be back in half an hour, so you won't have long.'
Charles stepped inside the door and the girl closed it quickly. Then she stood back. He could not take his eyes off the ruin of her face.
âAll right,' she said defiantly. âDo your worst. I can't believe that anything can hurt me more than I've been hurt already.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âHe said he would kill me. Is that why you've come? If it is, just make it quick.'
âWhat are you talking about? I haven't come to hurt you.'
âDon't play with me.'
âListen, my name is Charles Paris. I was in Hunstanton when Bill Peaky died. I have reason to believe that his death was not as straight-forward as it may have appeared.'
âThen you haven't come to hurt me?'
Charles shook his head gently. Slowly the girl sagged as the fierce tension left her. Then the first wave of crying struck and her body shook as the emotion took over. Charles took her gently by the shoulders and led her into the sitting room.
After about five minutes the weeping subsided and she lay back in her chair, limp as a rag doll.
Charles felt an enormous weight of pity for the girl, but at the same time he knew that while she was weak and relaxed was a good time to tackle her about Peaky's death. âJanine, I think someone tampered with the wiring of Bill Peaky's guitar and killed him deliberately.'
âOh.' The inflated face looked at him vaguely. âYou mean he was murdered?'
Charles nodded.
âI never thought of that,' said the girl, still bemused. But then she seemed to see some logical consequence of the premise and became animated. âNo. He couldn't have been. You must be wrong.'
âI don't think so.' Charles didn't like bullying this poor ruined child but, having started, he pressed on. Make the conclusion swift. âI know quite a lot about you, Janine. I know you were having an affair with Bill Peaky and I know he broke it off the day he died. I also know that you were ill, or pretended to be ill, after that scene with him. I am suggesting that you took your revenge on him by changing the wiring on his amplifier lead and thus causing his death.'
The girl's expression had altered subtly. Now it looked as if a smile might be on the broken lips. Charles knew that his speech didn't have the rhetorical force he had hoped for and he added, rather feebly, âWell, what do you say?'
âI've no idea what you're talking about.' Her surprise sounded genuine. âI changed the wires on his amplifier? I don't know what an amplifier looks like and I can't even change a plug. I think you are giving me credit for technical abilities I just don't possess. Where am I supposed to have picked up all this electrical knowledge?'
âYou learned it from your guitarist boy-friend.'
âWho, Bill?'
âNo, the one before. The one in the rock group.'
âI never had a boy-friend in a rock group.'
He felt an enormous desire to believe her. She looked so vulnerable, poised gingerly on the armchair. But he knew he must not be swayed by sentiment. If the girl were really mentally ill, with homicidal tendencies, then he must take no risks.
âListen, Janine, I've been through it all and the evidence against you is pretty convincing. Unless you can persuade me that you have an alibi for the time when the wiring was tampered with, then I think you had better start explaining a few things.'
âAn alibi? What is this?'
âLet me refresh your memory about that afternoon. You danced with the rest of the group in the opening number of the show. Then you went to see Bill Peaky, who told you he didn't want to marry you. You had a row and then started to feel ill, either genuinely or for tactical reasons. As a result you didn't dance in the first-half closer. A taxi was summoned to take you home, but I happen to know that it didn't arrive until the second half had started. That gave you plenty of time to fix the wiring. The old cable had been broken during Lennie Barber's act, but the new one was checked out at the beginning of the interval. So during the interval you crept backstage and changed the wiring.'
She leaned back, all tension gone, exhausted. âI think you must be mad. Or is this another of his elaborate games?'
âWhose?'
She looked piercingly at him for a moment. âNever mind. So you are asking me for an alibi, are you? For the interval?'
âThat's right.'
âAs it happens, by coincidence, I have one.' The words were spoken without irony, just with infinite weariness. âI sat with the theatre St. John's Ambulance man right through the interval until my taxi arrived. His name's Harry. You can check with him. He's at the theatre for most performances. So many old bods go to the shows there, they need someone standing by with the oxygen mask.'
âOh. I will check,' said Charles assertively. But even as he said it, he knew she was telling the truth. As so often in his detective career, he felt his paper house tumbling around him at the first seismic tremor of logic. There was a pause. Then he asked, âWho beat you up?'
âIt's not your business.'
âWas it your boy-friend?'
A tremble of her features betrayed the truth, but she repeated, âI told you, it's none of your business.'
âAnd that's why you left the group so suddenly?'
âI could hardly turn up and dance sexily like this, could I? Assuming I could even move at the time, which I couldn't.' Her retort had a spark of character that suggested a warmer, livelier Janine who would be nice to know in happier times.
âAnd you thought your boy-friend had sent me to duff you up some more?'
âHe said he'd kill me.' In her fear she forgot to deny that the beating-up was her boy-friend's work.
âWhen he found out about you and Peaky?'
âYes. Oh, it was all such a mess. I had been with him for two years and, I don't know, I suppose I thought all relationships were like that, all the anger and the silences, seeing no one else when we were together, all that. Then when I met Bill, he was nice to me, sort of jolly, didn't seem to take life seriously. And I thought it'd work.'
Poor kid. She was one of those girls doomed from the cradle only to get mixed up with men who were bastards. Gently Charles asked, âHow old are you, Janine?'
âNineteen.' As she said it, she looked ten years younger, a child who had fallen over in the playground.
He felt a surge of anger. âGood God. What kind of bastard does that to a girl?'
âYou don't know him. He can be so kind, so gentle. He gets these black moods, though, and, well, he's got problems.'
âHe certainly has.'
She looked at him, puzzled, then seemed suddenly to see an implication of his remark that worried her. âMr. Paris, are you sure Bill was murdered?'
âPretty sure.'
âI see. I think you'd better go.' She rose painfully to her feet.
Charles' reasoning was a few seconds behind her's, but now he understood what had caused her anxiety. âI suppose,' he began casually, âthat your boyfriend's revenge might not have stopped with you.'
âI said I think you had better go.'
âHe might see Peaky as equally guilty. Possibly more guilty.'
âMy mother will be back soon.'
âAnd the kind of guy who would beat you up like that's not going to be too squeamish about murder.'
âI said go.'
âNo. You tell me who he is. Who is your boy-friend?'
She stood before him, battered but defiant. âI'll never tell you. And you won't find out from anyone else, because nobody knew.'
The second part of her assertion he doubted. If they had lived together for two years, even in the anonymous world of London flatland, someone must have seen them together.
But the first part he accepted. She wouldn't tell him. In spite of her injuries, she had an indomitable will. And Charles was feeling so depressed by the waste of her beauty that he could not bring himself to try to bully it out of her.