Authors: Simon Brett
Also, he was into one of those cycles of cumulative drinking when the only way he could achieve all he had to was by continuous topping-up. The sequence of half-bottles of Bell's at his digs became a sequence of full bottles. On the Friday and Saturday nights â when he'd woken up at three, his thoughts too troubled for further sleep â he'd had recourse to the whisky. And he'd even taken a couple of solid slugs in the mornings before going down to face his landlady's breakfast.
Charles Paris knew he must stop, but he wasn't quite ready yet to do that. His current dosage was necessary, medicinal even. Wait till he was feeling a bit stronger, then he'd really take the drinking in hand.
The result of his mounting intake was that when, according to prearrangement with Lisa Wilson, he arrived at the studio at eleven o'clock on the Sunday morning, he was in the grips of another stinking hangover.
She too looked in a dreadful state, but presumably for different reasons. There were dark circles under her eyes, and her mouth was a thin line of tension.
Though he had never touched her before, it was instinctive for Charles to wrap an avuncular arm around her shoulders and put his lips to her cheek. She gave no sign of objecting.
âI'm sorry,' he said. âYou must have had a terrible couple of days.'
She grinned wryly. âKnown better. Would you like some coffee?'
âPlease.' While she crossed to switch on the kettle, Charles looked around the studio space. âNo police tape or seals or anything like that. Does that mean they've finished their investigations?'
âI guess so,' she replied from the other side of the room. âWe'll find out for sure at the inquest, but they seemed fairly confident it was an accident . . . though one of them was asking about the possibilities of suicide.'
âWould you say Mark had a death-wish?'
She crossed to the table with two mugs of coffee. âAt times.'
âYes.'
Something in Charles's intonation made her look up sharply. âWhat do you mean? What did he say on Thursday?'
âWell . . . we had lunch in the Queen's Head.'
âHe told me he wasn't going to drink.'
Charles shrugged. âYou said so on the phone. I'm sorry. At the time I didn't know he'd promised you to lay off.'
âNo reason why you should have done. So what did he say?'
âHe was just in a maudlin mood. Self-pitying. I'm sure you know what he could be like . . .' Lisa Wilson nodded with feeling. âWell, Mark was saying that life was a mess and that kind of stuff. But I don't know that that would qualify as having a death-wish. I mean, he didn't talk about suicide or . . . He was just gloomy, depressed if you like.'
âHm . . .' Lisa fiddled with the handle of her coffee mug. Charles hadn't seen her in a state like this before. He suddenly realised it wasn't simply shock she was suffering from; she was actually nervous of something. Not of him, surely?
âDid Mark say anything about me?' Lisa asked diffidently.
âHe did mention you, yes.'
âWhat did he say?'
âHe implied that . . . that things weren't . . . Look, I'm sorry, the state of your relationship is none of my business. I â'
âWhat did he say?' she insisted.
âHe, sort of, said that he was too old for you and that things weren't going too well.'
Lisa nodded her head slowly. âDid he say anything about other men?'
âOther men?'
âOther boyfriends of mine.'
âYes, he did, um . . . he said that you must have had other boyfriends in the past.'
âAnd
?'
âAnd perhaps you still kept in touch with some of them.'
âOh. Oh God.' Her blonde head sank down on to the table, and her shoulders shook with sobs. âI should have come back. I could have saved him. I shouldn't have stayed in London overnight.'
âCome on, Lisa, you had things to do. You were having that meeting with the publishers, trying to get work.'
She looked up at him, her eyes smudged with tears. âMy meeting with the publishers finished at five o'clock. I spent the rest of the evening â and the night â with an ex-boyfriend.'
âAh. Did Mark know that was what you were doing?'
âYes, otherwise he wouldn't have . . .' She recovered herself, and shook her head. âI think he may have suspected.'
Charles nodded. That would certainly make sense of some of the things that had been said in the pub. âBut you can't blame yourself for that,' he urged. âIt was just bad luck that you were away when he passed out in the studio, just incredibly bad luck.'
She shook her blonde head decisively. âNo, it was more than bad luck.'
There was a silence. Charles's head was still drumming with a dull, low pain. He took a long swallow from his coffee. It had gone cold. Oh, he needed a drink.
Lisa Wilson sat up straight and flicked her head briskly from side to side, as if to flush out morbid thoughts. âIncidentally, do you want some work, Charles?'
Her question got every actor's knee-jerk response. âYes.' Then, âWhat? Not another finely chiselled literary gem from the deathless Madeleine Eglantine canon?'
âNo. It's what I went to London about. This CD-ROM thing. The Thesaurus.'
âI remember you mentioning it. I didn't quite understand what it was about.' The advances of computers and the information revolution they had brought about had rather passed Charles by.
âA lot of CD-ROM reference works these days are multimedia,' Lisa explained patiently. âSo when you look up a word or phrase, you hear it as well as seeing it.'
âI think I'm with you so far.'
âWell, to get all those words and phrases so that they can be heard, someone has to record them.'
âAnd that's the contract you've got?'
âExactly. Does recording that kind of thing appeal to you?'
âI am gobsmacked,' said Charles, âchuffed, over the moon, delighted, ecstatic, jumping for joy, happy as Larry, glad all over, jumping for â'
âYes, all right. You've got the idea. Well, the publishers need a whole Thesaurus recorded â and pretty damned quickly. I was thinking . . . now your show's up and running, you'll be free during the days, won't you?'
âMost of the time, yes. May have the odd call for rewrites and extra rehearsal of bits and pieces, but basically I should be free.'
âWell, in that case, we should be able to get the whole lot recorded before you move on to . . . where's your next port of call?'
âNorwich.'
âBe good if we could get it all done, wouldn't it?'
âYes,' said Charles, thinking of the money. âHow many words and phrases are there in a whole Thesaurus?'
âAbout a hundred thousand in this one.'
âJesus,' said Charles Paris. âAnd they all have to be spoken absolutely straight? No inflection, no vocal colouring?'
âNone at all.' There was a gleam of amusement in her voice as she asked, âDo you think you could do it, Charles?'
âWell, I could have a go.' He grimaced. âRemember, though, you're dealing with someone who couldn't say, “Side One â End of Side One” without sounding “actorish”.'
âDead,' said Charles Paris into the microphone. Then he left a two-second pause, and went on, âDeceased' â two-second pause â âDefunct' â two-second pause â âDied out' â two-second pause â âDead and gone' â two-second pause â âInert' â two-second pause â âLost and gone for ever' â
Lisa Wilson's voice came through the talkback before he completed the next two-second pause. âNo, I'm sorry, that had intonation in it.'
âWhat?'
â“Lost and gone for ever”.'
âWhat kind of intonation?'
âWell, you were almost singing it.'
â
Singing it
?'
âYes. Like in
Clementine
. “Thou art lost and gone for ever, dreadful sorry, Clementine.”'
âOh, sorry, yes. I wasn't aware I was doing it. It's something so deep and atavistic, it's almost impossible to get it out of my mind.'
âWell, you must
try
,' said Lisa's voice firmly.
âYes, OK.'
They had started recording more or less straight away. For one thing, the publishers' deadline was tight, but also Lisa Wilson was in need of displacement activity. Work, any kind of work, might stop the repetitive churning of guilt and horror in her mind. She'd quickly agreed an hourly rate with Charles and, as soon as she'd set up the small studio, they had started recording. They reckoned they could get an hour in before they broke for lunch.
It was still stuffy in the little dead room. Lisa had arranged for the air conditioning engineers to come the next day, and the police had offered no objection, which presumably confirmed that their investigations were at an end. But the airlessness in the studio cast a shadow over Charles. It did not allow him to forget that he was sitting in the very seat where Mark Lear had breathed his last.
Trying to blank that memory â and indeed all received memory â out of his mind, he once again pronounced, âLost and gone for ever.' He must've got it right, because there was no further interruption. âNon-existent' â two-second pause â âObsolete' â two-second pause â âPassed away' â two-second pause â âReleased' â two-second pause â âSix feet under' â two-second pause â âDead as a dodo' â two-second pause â âDead as a doornail' â two-second pause â âDead as mutton' â two-second pause â âDead as â'
âNo, sorry, Charles,' Lisa's voice broke in again. âYou're getting a rhythm to the words. You're making them sound like a catalogue.'
âWell, it's bloody difficult not to,' Charles Paris complained. âBloody hard â bloody tough â bloody arduous â bloody challenging â bloody problematic . . .'
They broke at one. âShall we go to the pub?' Charles suggested.
One look at Lisa's face told him it was a bad idea. âNot if we're going to do any more recording this afternoon.'
âNo, no, OK.' But, God, how his body screamed out for a quick injection of alcohol. âDon't you drink at all, Lisa?'
She shook her head.
âHealth reasons? Or don't you like the taste?'
âNo. No, I like the taste all right. I like the taste very much indeed. Too much.'
âAh.'
âI used to drink a lot, but then . . . I stopped.'
âWas that after your father was killed?'
She nodded. The recollection was still powerful enough to deprive her of words. âYes, I stopped then completely. I could see the way I was going. I didn't want history to repeat itself.'
âNo. Was it easy to stop?'
She let out a harsh little laugh. âEasy? No, it wasn't easy. It still isn't easy. Still, when I see people drinking on television, when I smell a glass of wine, when I . . . No, it's not easy.'
âCohabiting with Mark can't have made it any less difficult.'
âTrue.' She grinned wryly. âMind you, compared to the other difficulties of cohabiting with Mark, the booze was kind of a detail.'
âAh. So how did you give up? Just will-power? Or did you go to Alcoholics Anonymous or something like that?'
âNo, I suppose it was just will-power. Well, I say “just willpower”. Shock helped too.'
âShock?'
She nodded. âMy father's death. We were very close. He did mean an enormous amount to me.'
âPresumably part of the appeal of someone like Mark? The older man?'
âI didn't have you down as an amateur psychologist, Charles.'
âNo, well, most actors . . . it's kind of part of the job.'
âI didn't need Alcoholics Anonymous,' Lisa continued. âWhen I'd seen how destructive the booze could be, when I'd seen what it'd done to my father . . . I didn't need any Twelve-Step programme. I was there in one step.'
âSo presumably you tried to stop Mark drinking too?'
âTried. Early on in our relationship, anyway.' She jutted out a rueful lower lip. âHuh. I think I probably made it worse in his case. He drank more to get back at me.'
âWhat do you mean â “get back at you”?'
âWell, increasingly he kind of couldn't hold his own with me in the normal ways. I mean, the break-up of his marriage and being kicked out of the BBC . . . I didn't realise, when we first met, how much those two events had taken out of him. They'd totally destroyed his confidence. So, in our business venture here, I'm afraid Mark was really just a passenger.'
âThat was rather the impression I got.'
âAnd then, in our private life . . .' She coloured. âWell, I guess that wasn't very equal either, not after the first flush of meeting each other, anyway. And the booze was the one thing that Mark felt gave him a kind of power over me.'
âPower?'
âYes. Constantly challenging me. Challenging me to have a go at him about it, to become the stereotype of the nagging little woman. And he knew how strong my taste for the stuff was too, so he was challenging me to keep off it. Yes, it was the only area in which Mark felt he had power over me.'
âHm. If you don't mind my saying so, you don't paint a very rosy picture of your relationship.'
âNo, Charles, I don't. It started, as many of these things do, quite romantically. There were warning signs, but I made that classic woman's mistake of recognising certain qualities I didn't like about a man, and imagining that I could change them. Things didn't get really bad until we moved down here. I suppose I'd changed too. Over buying this place and getting it converted . . . well, somebody had to be assertive or nothing would have got done.'
âAnd that person wasn't Mark?'
âNo. I made all the important decisions. I had to. So I guess he felt he was being even further marginalised. But I struggled on, trying to make the relationship work. We were in it together, I thought things would improve.' She sighed. âBut they didn't. They were never going to, so long as he went on drinking that much.'