Authors: Simon Brett
âSo it doesn't change your cue, Ran. Line's a bit longer, that's all.'
âYoung Ms. Stone building up her part again,' said Ransome George, getting his laugh from the rest of the company. As usual, the line itself wasn't funny; but there was some alchemy in his timing and intonation.
âThen, Charles . . .'
Charles Paris looked up and tried to concentrate. He could no longer blame the booze for the fact that his mind kept wandering, but it did. It kept wandering back to Mark Lear and the circumstances of his death. It kept wandering back to the possibility â or even likelihood â that someone in the
not on your wife!
company had caused that death.
âYes, Bill?'
â“Brass Monkey Brigade” still not getting the laugh, is it?'
âNo. I just wonder whether the audience is catching on to the reference. “Cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey”. . . I mean, do people still use that expression?'
âI think they do,' said the playwright cautiously, âbut I've got another suggestion, anyway.'
âOh, right. Good.'
âTry . . . “And I was worried
something
might have dropped off. And let me tell you â it's a long time since I've sung soprano!” and make sure you hit the “I”. . . since
I
've sung soprano” â OK?'
âDo you really think that'll work any better?' asked Charles.
There was a rustle of reaction around the auditorium. This was bad form. Bill Blunden was the playwright, after all, he was the expert on farce. For a member of the company â except of course for Bernard Walton, who had star's privilege â to offer an opinion on a rewrite was simply not done.
But Bill Blunden didn't seem worried by the lapse of etiquette. âTry it tonight,' he said evenly.
âOK,' said Charles, and caught a grin from Cookie Stone. That caused him a pang of guilt. She kept catching his eyes these days, as though they shared something other than the coincidence of appearing in the same theatre programme. In Bath she'd kept her distance, respecting his state of shock following Mark Lear's death. But now they were in Norwich, she seemed to be drawing closer to him again, spurred on perhaps by the memory of some intimacy of which he had no recollection.
âThen I think we can sharpen up the exit sequence to the bedroom,' Bill Blunden droned on. âYou and Cookie, Charles . . . If Aubrey makes his line: “It wasn't actually âscratch' I was thinking of being up to, Gilly”. . . and then goes on: “Do you think we can still manage a little something?”. . . and, Cookie, as you lead him to the bedroom, you make your line simply:
“Don't worry, it'll all soon be in hand!”'
âOK, love,' said Cookie. âWhat, and cut the other lines?'
âMm. And then, Charles, you just come back with: “Sounds good to me!”'
âRight you are,' said Charles. âSounds good to me!'
But it didn't really. Charles Paris didn't enjoy this constant juggling with innuendoes; he liked comedy that came out of character, rather than the mechanical deployment of double entendres. Still, Bill Blunden's international royalties showed that he was doing something right. British farce was a distinct subgenre of the theatre; and, whether Charles Paris liked the medium or not, it was one over which Bill Blunden had complete mastery.
âNow, Bernard . . .' the playwright continued, turning his focus towards the star, âstill not quite getting the boffo on “. . . got your hands full”, are we?'
âNo. Got a woofer at the last Saturday matinée in Bath, but then I did the face.'
âHm, I think we can get it just with the line, actually . . .' said Bill Blunden.
âNot with the current line, we can't,' was Bernard Walton's tart response.
âNo, I agree. So I've got a suggestion which may sort it out. After Gilly's cue: “No, Ted, of course it's not inconvenient . . . try saying: “You weren't working, were you? I'd hate to have arrived when you were on the job.” Try that.'
Bernard Walton grimaced. âBit contrived, isn't it? I mean, obviously I can get the laugh with an expression or a take, but I'd like to feel I was getting a bit more help from the line.'
âTry it tonight,' Bill Blunden wheedled. âSee if it gets the boffo tonight, eh?'
âOh, all right,' said Bernard Walton. âFor want of anything better.'
âNow,' the playwright continued metronomically, âstill not getting as big a laugh on the word “banging” as we should be getting, are we?'
Charles Paris had reviewed the circumstances of Mark Lear's death on the train up to Norwich the Sunday afternoon after the Bath run finished. He'd talked a bit about it with Lisa Wilson during the preceding week, but they hadn't had much opportunity for detailed discussion. At the studio their days had been full; they'd been deeply involved in recording yet more Thesaurus words and phrases; and then he'd had to rush off to do the show in the evenings. The one night he had organised a ticket for Lisa to see
Not On Your Wife!
, though she'd come for a drink afterwards, they'd been joined by Cookie Stone and some other company members, so they couldn't talk about Mark's death, except in general terms.
The after-show drink had, incidentally, been a mineral water for Charles. Though he had deeply regretted the bold pledge he had given to Lisa, he had stuck to it.
His reasons had been mixed. For a start, the abstinence was the result of a long-held conviction that his drinking was getting out of hand; considerations of health alone suggested a cutback was in order.
Then there was the fact of Mark Lear's death. Whether he had died by accident or by murder, in either case alcohol had been a contributory factor. If he hadn't been so drunk, he would have been in a better condition to protect himself. His example loomed like a dark shadow over Charles. Mark Lear's death had been a warning, a final warning. Get your act together, Charles Paris, or you could be next.
Not drinking because of Mark's death also presented a horizon, something to work towards.
When
I've found out the truth of how Mark died, Charles comforted himself,
then
I'll allow myself to drink again. Somehow making the term of trial finite made it seem marginally more tolerable.
There was also Lisa, the fact that it was to Lisa that he had made his promise. The more Charles saw of her, the more he liked her. He didn't exactly have sexual ambitions in her direction â or if he did, he managed to convince himself they were inappropriate. She was his friend's girl, after all, currently traumatised by that friend's death. Charles Paris was far too old for her, anyway. Given the shattered state of his relationship with Frances â not to mention the totally undefined nature of his relationship with Cookie Stone â he was in no position to be entertaining any kind of sexual ambitions.
But it was the little spark of desire that kept him off the booze. If he hadn't fancied Lisa Wilson, he could never have done it. Because it was hard. God, it was hard,. That first Sunday had been awful, his hangover had screamed out for the relief of a little top-up. He'd survived the lunch-time â when Lisa was actually there, the danger of backsliding was very much less â but after they'd finished their recording session and he'd gone back alone to his digs, the pain had been almost intolerable. That Sunday evening had been one of the longest he had ever experienced.
The knowledge that there was a third of a bottle of Bell's sitting in the bottom of his wardrobe made the pain all the more excruciating. Just a little sip was all he wanted. Just one little sip, and then he'd screw the cap on again and put the bottle away.
But something in him knew the sipping wouldn't stop there. And something else in him managed to resist the urge. The reward for his abstinence was one of the best nights' sleep Charles Paris had had for years. So, but for the dark shadow cast by Mark Lear's death, Charles had faced the Monday ahead with more optimism than he could usually muster. He actually enjoyed â rather than just managing to get through â his landlady's breakfast.
But the two major alcoholic pressure points of that day had occurred before and after the show. Before was not so difficult. The biorhythmic urge to have a drink between six and seven was diminished by the fact that he had a show to do. Though recently he had been slipping into the habit, the professional in Charles Paris knew that drinking before a performance was a bad thing. So getting through that night's
not on your wife!
without alcohol had not been too arduous.
Not having any alcohol after the show, however, had been agonising. There was no righteous reason not to drink then. He'd just done a performance, for God's sake! He'd given of himself in the role of Aubrey. He deserved a bloody drink! And everyone else in the company was going off to have a drink after the show. It would have been positively antisocial not to join them.
So he did join them and, somehow, with physical pain, he managed not to drink anything other than mineral water. Not wanting to admit the real reason for his abstinence, he invented a stomach upset to explain it away. The session in the pub was purgatory, but he managed to survive.
That wasn't the cure, though. If he'd imagined that, having cracked one night, he'd broken the back of the problem, Charles Paris would have been wrong. It was still agony for him not to have a drink. The urge for a quick restorative injection of alcohol did not leave him. And, after that first blissful night, his old disrupted sleeping pattern reasserted itself. So it wasn't just the booze that kept him awake.
Still, Charles Paris thought to himself on the train to Norwich, I am managing. My health and my wallet must be feeling the benefit of not drinking. Perhaps my mind's clearer . . .? Possibly I'm even giving a better performance as Aubrey . . .
But he wasn't entirely convinced. All he really knew about not drinking was the fact that he hated it.
It was to take his mind off the gnawing ache for a drink that Charles Paris had started reviewing the circumstances of Mark Lear's death.
On his mental video he reran the tape of the Thursday in the recording studio. If the death had been murder, then there were two significant moments during that afternoon. The first had been his own doing. It had been he, Charles Paris, who had drawn attention to the stuffiness of the small dead room and perhaps inadvertently suggested part of a murder method to the perpetrator. Mark's unlocking of the dead-bolts on the studio doors had supplied the other necessary element.
The other significant moment had arisen when Mark started on about the book he was going to write that would âtake the lid off the BBC'. At the time Charles had put this down as drunken rambling, but with hindsight he realised that Mark's words could have been seen as a challenge, and a challenge to one individual person in the studio. What was it he'd said exactly? âYou'd be surprised the unlikely things unlikely people got involved in. Some they certainly wouldn't want to be reminded of now, I'm sure.' If someone present that afternoon, someone with a dark secret connected with the BBC, had recognised the challenge that was being thrown out, then it was entirely possible they might have contemplated silencing Mark Lear for good.
Charles again went through the list of people who'd been present when Mark issued his ultimatum (if that was indeed what it had been). The list ran: Bernard Walton, David J. Girton, Tony Delaunay, Ransome George, Cookie Stone and Pippa Trewin. Which one of them had Mark Lear been threatening?
The person with the most obvious BBC connections had been David J. Girton â and Mark had mentioned some financial malpractice that concerned the director. On the other hand, David J. Girton was the one person who couldn't have gone back to the studio to lock Mark Lear in the dead room. Any of the others might have done, but he had the perfect alibi: Charles Paris. He'd spent the afternoon drinking with Charles, and they'd shared a cab back to the Vanbrugh Theatre.
So it had to be one of the others. Once again, Charles concentrated on the list. Ransome George. Yes. As well as fingering David J. Girton, Mark had also implied that there was a skeleton in Ransome George's cupboard.
And then of course there was the strange fragment of conversation Charles had overheard between Ran and Bernard Walton in the Green Room after the Bath technical rehearsal. âYour secret is absolutely safe with me.' That's what Ran had said. And then he'd gone on to imply that he'd be angry if anyone else knew about the secret.
There was something odd going on between Bernard Walton and Ransome George. And given the dearth of other candidates, perhaps they'd have to be promoted to prime suspect status.
But what was the âsecret' they had mentioned? How was Charles going to find out more about their murky pasts? Gossip was what he needed, good old-fashioned dirty theatrical gossip.
By the time his train had reached Norwich, Charles had made a decision. He needed to ring his agent.
âMAURICE SKELLERN Artistes.'
âMaurice, it's Charles.'
âLong time no hear.'
Charles bit back the instinctive response â And whose fault is
that
, Maurice?, as his agent went on, âSo how you doing, Charles? Enjoying that tour I set up for you?'
âYou didn't set it up for me. I was interviewed for it by Parrott Fashion Productions because Bernard Walton had mentioned my name. All you had to do was negotiate the contract. And then you accepted the first figures they mentioned without any argument. That is not my idea of “setting things up”.'
âDon't be picky, Charles. Anyway, how's it going? It's the
Romeo and Juliet
, isn't it? And don't tell me, don't tell me â you're playing Friar Tuck.'
âI think Friar Lawrence is the character you have in mind, Maurice.'