Read Guns in the Gallery Online
Authors: Simon Brett
âI'd met her at other private views, arts functions, gallery openings. It's a smallish world, you know.'
âBefore your husband started having an affair with her?'
âYes, and after.' Nikki Green grinned again. âAnd I wish you could get that note of shock out of your voice. It really wasn't such a big deal.'
âBut at the Private View, when she started bawling Denzil out, did that embarrass you?'
âI was embarrassed for the girl . . . well, no, not embarrassed, sorry for her. She clearly had so much she needed to get off her chest. I wouldn't be surprised if letting it all out made her feel a whole lot better. You know, like lancing a boil.'
âYou're right, actually,' said Jude, not expecting such psychological perspicacity. âThat's what she said to me afterwards. She'd planned that public denunciation of Denzil, and letting it all out had been a very positive experience for her. But then within a few hours, she apparently killed herself.'
Nikki shrugged. âThat's mental illness for you. Sad, but you can't do a lot about it, I gather. Just bad luck, like being born ginger.'
âThat's how Fennel described it to me,' said Jude.
âThere you are then. Just an incredibly bum deal donated to you by your genes. I've been lucky. I may be a selfish cow, but at least, thank God, I've never had a negative thought in my life.'
Jude had frequently heard Carole make similar statements â well, without the âselfish cow' bit â and she knew how at odds with the truth they were. And she'd have put money on the fact that Nikki Green's carapace was equally fragile. But now wasn't the moment for psychoanalysis.
âI was just wondering,' Jude began casually, âwhether that diatribe of Fennel's at the Private View was only aimed at Denzil?'
âWhat do you mean?'
âWell, it was very public, wasn't it? I'd assumed the attack was aimed where it seemed to be â at Denzil. But at that stage I didn't know she had also had an affair with Giles.'
âOh, I see what you mean. Killing two birds with one stone.' The idea seemed to amuse Nikki Green. âI suppose it's possible. If so, bad luck for Fennel, if she thought she was going to make either of those bastards feel guilty. Giles and Denzil have two of the thickest skins I have ever encountered.'
Again Jude wondered how true that was. From the intimate communications of her healing sessions, she knew that everyone had their vulnerabilities. She also knew that the more rigidly people tried to deny their fallibility, the more destructive those vulnerabilities could be.
And the genuine distress shown by Denzil Willoughby at the news of his mother's death suggested that his skin was far from thick.
âIt's a thought, though,' said Carole. âFennel Whittaker did say some pretty odd things that evening.'
âSo? She was mentally ill.' Nikki Green said these words as though they put an end to the conversation.
âShe talked about someone “causing the death” of another person. If that was addressed to Denzil, do you have any idea what it could have meant?'
âPretty straightforward, I would imagine. She was intending to top herself and, when she did, she was saying it would be his fault.'
âYes, I suppose she could have meant that.'
âI can't see what else she could have meant.'
âNo, maybe not.'
âWould the words have meant anything different,' asked Jude, âif they'd been addressed to Giles rather than Denzil?'
Nikki Green looked genuinely puzzled by the question. âI can't see how.'
Carole tried another approach. âDid you represent Fennel Whittaker as an agent?'
âNo. I wouldn't have minded doing so. She was undoubtedly talented. But unreliable. It's difficult to represent an artist who's liable suddenly to destroy all her best work.'
Jude nodded, recalling what the girl had said about her violent reactions against her own paintings. Not to mention the torn-up watercolours by her body in the yurt. âGoing back to what you were saying about Denzil's mother . . .'
âYes.'
âHe seemed terribly shocked by the news of her death. Had she been ill?'
âHard to tell. Philomena was always a terrible hypochondriac.'
âBut did she live with Denzil's father?'
Nikki Green let out a snort of laughter. âNot for a long time. Addison Willoughby has always been totally preoccupied with his work.'
âLike his son?'
âI suppose so, but in a different way. Addison's full of bitterness.'
âDenzil said that was because he'd never fulfilled himself as an artist, taken the easy commercial route.'
âYes, I know he always says that. And there may be a bit of truth in it. But I don't think Addison's route has been easy. That's the last word I'd choose. He's worked unbelievably hard to make a success of the advertising agency.'
âAnd was it because he was a workaholic that the marriage didn't work out?' asked Jude.
âProbably that had something to do with it. Philomena has lived apart from him for years. He's got a big place in the Boltons. She has â or she had â a nice flat of her own in Highgate. And she was always telling Denzil how ill she was. I thought it was just her way of keeping control over him . . . but now she seems to have been proved right.' The woman chuckled. âShe'll have to have the Hypochondriac's Epitaph on her tombstone: “I told you I was ill”.'
âYou don't seem very upset by the news of her death.'
Once again, Nikki Green was completely unembarrassed as she said, âI'm not. I never liked her. And I think maybe now she's gone, it'll be a good thing for Denzil. Not straight away, of course. He'll be very cut up. But in a few years I think he'll realize that she was an impossible woman to please and he no longer has to expend so much effort trying to please her.'
âDid Denzil talk to you about us?' asked Carole suddenly.
Nikki Green looked astonished at the question. âNo. Why the hell should he? He hardly knows you. He didn't know you were going to appear on his doorstep this morning.'
âWell, he seemed to know about us, even seemed to be expecting us. He'd somehow got the impression from Giles's mother that we were showing too much interest in Fennel Whittaker's death.'
âHow do you mean, “too much interest”?'
âDenzil had got the idea we might have thought Fennel's death wasn't suicide at all.'
âWell, if it wasn't, it was a pretty unusual accident.'
âNot an accident. Murder.'
That did stop Nikki Green in her tracks. Her eyes widened as she looked from one woman to the other. âAnd is that what you think? That Fennel was murdered?'
âWe think it's a possibility,' said Jude.
Nikki didn't ask why they thought that. She was silent while she assessed the idea, mentally testing it for feasibility. Then she asked, âIf you're talking about murder, then that means that you must have cast someone in the role of murderer.'
âWe haven't quite got that far,' said Jude. âWe are still kind of considering the possibilities.'
âAnd Denzil was one of them?'
âHe was the person Fennel bawled out at the Private View.'
âYes, but for someone like Denzil that was just water off a duck's back. It didn't get to him at all. He'd regard it just as an endorsement of his self-image as the Great Lover.'
âThere was something else,' said Carole. âWe also heard a rumour that Denzil had a habit of being violent towards his girlfriends.'
She didn't attribute the rumour to Sam Torino, but it had a strong effect on Nikki Green. For the first time in their conversation she was really angry. âThat is complete nonsense!' she snapped. âDenzil may be capable of all kinds of mental cruelty â he's totally self-centred â but there's no way he'd ever physically hurt anyone. Now, if you were talking about Giles, that would be a different matter altogether . . .'
On the train back to Fethering, Carole and Jude were as puzzled as each other. âI was inclined to believe Nikki,' said Jude.
âAbout Denzil's violence towards women?'
âYes.'
âThen why would Sam Torino have mentioned it? This friend of hers he was supposed to have beaten up?'
Jude tapped her chin pensively. âThat's what I'm trying to work out.'
âOn the other hand, Nikki was pretty categorical about Giles having a tendency towards violence. And with her being married to him, you'd have to believe her on that.'
âHm . . . I sort of get the feeling that somebody's covering up for someone, but I can't work out who's covering up for who.'
âNo,' said Carole thoughtfully. âAnd I keep coming back to that mutual alibi of Denzil and Giles for the night of Fennel's death. Is that where the cover-up was?'
That evening Carole Seddon sat in front of her laptop and googled âAddison Willoughby'. There were plenty of results. His agency's official website chronicled his phenomenal success, building up a small company by skilful acquisitions into one of the world's most successful advertising agencies. Their client list embraced a wide range of global companies.
Images of Addison Willoughby showed him to be a handsome man in his sixties, dressed in expensively casual tieless style.
There appeared to be no reference to his private life. Even on Wikipedia his wife Philomena was not mentioned. Nor was there anything about his relationship to challenging contemporary artist Denzil Willoughby.
Carole Seddon found that rather odd.
TWENTY-THREE
â
I
'm afraid my parents always regarded Elvis Presley as rather common,' said Carole Seddon.
âAh,' said Jude, wondering why somehow she wasn't surprised, and also trying not to smile.
âAnyway, I'm rather too young for him to have been a major influence on my life. I'm more of the Beatles generation.' Though the idea of Carole having been part of the Swinging Sixties was an incongruous one. âI don't think this evening at the Crown and Anchor really sounds my sort of thing.'
âIt may not be your sort of thing, but I think we should be there to support Ted.'
âTed can manage perfectly well without me. He won't notice whether I'm there or not.'
âThat's not the point. I should think there's also a strong chance that Bonita Green will be there. Spider works for her, after all. We might get an opportunity to find out more about Fennel Whittaker.'
That argument clinched it, of course. To Carole Seddon's mind, Elvis Presley would always remain common, but one could even put up with commonness in the cause of an investigation.
There was a surprisingly large turnout in the Crown and Anchor's function room that Wednesday evening. Elvis Presley had a wider fan-base in Fethering than Carole might have imagined. And Spider's performance was certainly unlike anything she had ever seen before.
She wasn't quite sure what she had been expecting, but what impressed her about the framer was his total seriousness. His routine was like some religious rite, an act of transubstantiation whereby he actually became Elvis Presley. Carole had vaguely anticipated that he might sing, but he didn't. He simply mimed to The King of Rock 'n' Roll's songs. And he did do it brilliantly.
He'd got all the gear too. Carole didn't know it, but Jude recognized that Spider was wearing a perfect facsimile of the white suit with a sunburst motif that Elvis had worn for his final concert at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis on 26 June 1977. And the set he performed included many of the songs that had been sung on that iconic occasion. âJailhouse Rock' was there, âHound Dog', âTeddy Bear, âI Can't Stop Loving You', along with other classics from the canon: âMy Way', âUnchained Melody' and âLove Me Tender'.
But Spider had somehow improved on the original. Though he had the physical bulk of the grotesquely bloated Elvis of his later years, the versions he did of the songs, based on the studio recordings, had a musical purity rarely evident onstage at that time. The effect was strangely disconcerting for
aficionados
of The King, but nonetheless impressive. The Crown and Anchor crowd gave each number an ecstatic reaction and at the end, before his carefully choreographed encores, Spider got a standing ovation.
Clearly every facial tic, every bodily swivel, every hand gesture had been rehearsed in exhaustive detail. Each time the act was performed it would be exactly the same. To Carole and Jude, who had inevitably been preoccupied with such matters, it raised interesting speculations about the nature of art. What Spider did was far from original, and yet it had an integrity of its own. Was a man who duplicated exactly the movements of a long-dead singer any less of an artist than someone who had the idea of sticking photographs of dead black teenagers on to a fibreglass cannon?
The other detail about the evening that surprised them was the involvement of Bonita Green. They had expected her to be there to support her employee, but they didn't think she'd be part of the act. It was Bonita, however, who controlled the pacing of the show. She was in charge of the CD player from which the Elvis numbers were played. She judged how long the applause after each number should be allowed to continue before she started the next track. She was, in fact, a very efficient stage-manager.
Into both Carole and Jude's minds came the question as to how close the relationship between gallery-owner and framer actually was. There was between them during the performance a practised ease, but after the final ovation they still seemed very relaxed in each other's company. Again Spider's manner was protective, almost proprietorial. Perhaps this was simply the result of the two of them working together in the Cornelian Gallery for so long, but both Carole and Jude suspected there might be something more to it.