‘I’ve been thinking about it. The trouble is, Hugo’s an awkward age. Getting on for forty.’
‘Thirty-seven.’
‘Thirty-eight next month.’ She had it all down on the paper in front of her. ‘He’s not quite old enough for father of a problem family. We’ve got one or two series of that sort on the drawing-board.’
Sam shuddered. He said, ‘Teenage children. The pill. Student revolt. Pot. Generation gap. Inability to communicate. Do people really
want
that sort of thing after supper.’
‘Whether they want it or not, they’re going to get it. It’s the Company’s new image.’
‘I think it’s mad,’ said Sam. Real life is so bloody nowadays that no one wants it on the screen as well. If you have to live on stew all day, you don’t want it served up cold in the evening.’
‘We have got other slots. Has Hugo ever thought about the classics? We’re doing Trollope this autumn. A lot of good supporting characters in Trollope.’
‘Hugo isn’t a supporting character,’ said Sam. ‘He’s a star.’
As he said it, he seemed to be speaking some sort of epitaph.
Hugo went down in the lift with Geoffrey Larrimore, a big middle-aged man running comfortably to fat. Geoffrey had featured in most of the Tiger episodes. He played the big wheel, the man who spent his working day in a comfortable office, despatching other men on dangerous assignments.
As they crossed the entrance hall, George, the one-armed receptionist, said, ‘Good night, Mr. Larrimore. Good night, Mr. Greest. I’m sorry we shan’t be having any more of the Tiger. My family all looked forward to it.’
‘If you’ve heard that,’ said Hugo, ‘you’ve heard more than I have.’
‘George always gets things in advance,’ said Larrimore. ‘I believe he’s got all the conference rooms wired for sound.’
‘Well, I hope it’s wrong, sir. It was only a buzz.’
‘Your buzzes are never wrong,’ said Hugo.
As they stepped out of the television building, a group of boys, who had been waiting in the shadows, hurried forward, holding autograph books in front of them, but saying nothing. Each one wore, in his button-hole or pinned to his coat, the dull bronze tiger’s head which was the badge of the Tiger Fan Club.
Hugo scribbled his name on each page as it was offered to him.
He had devised a special signature, with a flourish at the end which looked like a tiger’s tall. Each boy, as his book was signed, muttered a word which might have been anything at all and slid off into the darkness.
‘What do you suppose they do with them?’ said Larrimore.
‘I’ve often wondered,’ said Hugo. ‘One boy, I recognised him because he had a terrific squint, I must have signed his book twenty times.’
‘Perhaps he used them as swaps. One actor for two politicians.’
‘Or three actors for one soccer player. I want a drink. What about it?’
‘Twist my arm hard enough.’
The saloon bar was not more than half full. The landlord recognised Hugo and gave him the big smile he reserved for ranking television personalities. The wall behind the bar was papered with signed photographs, place of honour being reserved for the landlord shaking hands with Bob Hope. He served them himself and they took their glasses to a table in the corner.
Larrimore said, ‘Do you think George is right? I hadn’t heard anything definite.”
‘George is always right,’ said Hugo. He finished his first whisky quickly, and fetched two more. ‘I haven’t heard anything myself, but I know Sam’s having a heart-to-heart with la Hayes-Borton this evening.’
‘Why they wanted to make that cow head of series passes my feeble comprehension. If ever there was a man’s job, I should have thought that was it.’
‘I don’t know. They say that nearly three-quarters of the viewers are women.’
‘Exactly. That’s why they need a man to cater for them. I’m going to get myself a sandwich. The corned beef and pickle are rather good.’
They ate corned beef and pickle sandwiches with their third drinks. The room was filling up now. Larrimore lit a cigarette, said, ‘I smoke too much,’ in the tone of voice of someone who hasn’t the slightest intention of stopping, and, ‘Just one more, if you insist,’ when Hugo looked at their empty glasses. ‘Only more water in mine this time.’
When Hugo came back with the drinks he had to push his way through the crowd. Quite a few of them were minor characters from the studios, who grinned at him. The rest were locals from the down-at-heels part of London in which, for no logical reason, the great television complex had sprung up. The two elements had not fused together very well, and there was a town-and-gown hostility which flared up from time to time.
‘If George is right,’ said Hugo, returning to the subject which was on both their minds, ‘what are you going to do about it?’
‘What I’d like to do,’ said Larrimore, ‘is a season in rep. But that’s what almost everyone wants when he gets slung out of television, so I don’t suppose I shall get it. Failing that, I’m going to have a shot at this Trollope lark. I’ve always fancied myself as an archdeacon.’
‘It’s all very well for you,’ said Hugo. ‘You’ve got plenty of options. I’m stuck. To the public, I’m the Tiger. If I turned up as a curate at Barchester, they’d think it was a gag.’
‘Sam will work the oracle.’
‘Sam Maxfeldt’s a bloody good agent. He saved my bacon when I got into the top line. I made the mistake everyone makes when that happens to them. Stop me if I’m boring you.’
‘When I get bored, I yawn. When you see me yawning, you can stop.’
‘Well, you know how it is. For a long time, even if you get the breaks, you’re lucky to make more than a thousand a year.’
‘You’re bloody lucky if you make that.’
‘Then, for no particular reason, you go clear up through the stratosphere, and make twenty thousand.’
‘Go on. I like hearing about it.’
‘That’s when the trouble starts. The first year, you spend it. Every gorgeous penny of it. The second year, you spend most of it, but you’ve got a niggling feeling that you ought to put something by. The third year, you wake up. The dream’s over. That’s when you have to pay tax on the previous year
and
surtax on the year before. And you haven’t got it.’
‘So what do you do?’
‘Well, there’s several things you can do. You can shoot yourself, or file your bankruptcy petition – or put yourself into Sam’s hands and do exactly what he tells you. For the next three years, I never touched a penny of what I earned. It all went straight to Sam, and he doled me out a weekly allowance. I gave up my flat in Albany, my Jack Barclay Bentley and about six clubs. I stopped buying a new suit every week, and I went home to share a house with my mother. It was like coming off a drug jag. I didn’t like it, but it’s beginning to work. Sam got the tax people off my back, and one more Tiger series would have cleared me. That’s why it’s such a bore they have to stop right now. Time for one more?’
He squeezed his way slowly back to the bar, and Larrimore watched him go. A professional himself, he knew exactly what Hugo was up against. His reputation and fame were great, but they were very flimsy. They rested on one successful series. To the public, he was the Tiger. The hero of ninety-one half-hour episodes. Easy to view, and easy to forget. The steep bit of the road lay ahead. The road that led to real stardom. Top billing, a choice of good parts, the centre table at the Garrick Club, the New Year’s Honours. Between these delectable uplands and the deceptive foothills of television popularity there was a great gulf fixed. A gulf full of hero’s friends and heroine’s fathers, comic uncles, wedding guests and second murderers.
Hugo arrived back with most of the drink he had been carrying still in the glasses. He said, ‘You look bloody solemn all of a sudden, Geoff.’
‘I’ve been thinking about life.’
‘A mistake. Keep your mind firmly on fantasy. It’s the only safe course. Cheers!’
One of the group standing near them had been staring at Hugo for some time. He was a thick-set, red-faced character with sloping shoulders and a barrel of a chest. He said, ‘Well, well, well. Do my eyes deceive me, or is it the old Tiger himself?’
He edged his way forward until he was standing shoulder to shoulder with Hugo, who put down the drinks he was carrying, and smiled politely.
‘I always wanted to meet you. I seen those things you do, like karate and things like that, and I often thought, I bet he fakes ’em. I bet the other chap falls down. Right?’
‘That’s right.’
‘And I thought to myself, suppose he came up against someone his own size and weight. Someone like me, frinstance. Who’d win then, frinstance?’
‘I’ve no idea,’ said Hugo.
‘Care to try?’
‘Certainly not.’
‘Yellow as well?’
One of the man’s friends said, ‘Lay off. Cliff. You’re tight.’
‘Not too tight to take a poke at this big phoney.’
The swing came so slowly that Hugo had no difficulty in avoiding it. The only thing it upset was the table. As the glasses on it hit the floor, the landlord and one of his assistants arrived, splitting the crowd like tanks going through undergrowth. They got the red-faced man by an arm each, holding him with one hand behind the elbow and the other by his collar, which they twisted, until they choked him. Then they ran him to the door. A path opened before them. One of the bystanders opened the door. The red-faced man disappeared through it with a lovely crash. The landlord came back, and said, ‘I’m sorry about that, sir. Get that broken glass swept up, Ted. We don’t want anyone hurt. I’ll fetch you two more drinks.’
‘Don’t bother,’ said Hugo. ‘We’re going.’
When they got outside the red-faced man had disappeared.
Larrimore said, ‘Do you often get trouble like that?’
‘Every now and then,’ said Hugo. He sounded very tired suddenly.
The house he shared with his mother was on the river above Richmond. She had the ground floor, on account of her legs, and he had the rest of it. It was a nice house, with a garden down to the river and a view of Eel Pie Island, and was worth three times what he had given for it five years before.
When he got there, all the ground-floor lights were out, and he let himself in quietly. On the hall table there was a single letter, which must have come with the afternoon post. The envelope was buff, and square, and he thought at first that it was a tax demand, but it wasn’t.
The letter inside was from the Foreign Office, Whitehall, and dated that day.
It invited Mr. Hugo Greest to call at the Foreign Office on the following afternoon, at two thirty, if convenient, and ask for a Mr. Taverner.
There were three grey-haired ladies. They sat, like judges in the Court of Appeal, side by side at the broad counter which blocked one end of the spacious entrance hall. Behind them frosted-glass windows obscured what would otherwise have been a view of Downing Street. From the wall on their left a gentleman in full court dress looked down.
(Fine film set, thought Hugo. A party of terrorists set out to kidnap the Foreign Secretary. Three of them leap the counter and overpower the secretaries. In the film they would be younger, of course, and much prettier—)
‘Can I help you?’ said the central lady sharply.
‘I beg your pardon,’ said Hugo. ‘I have an appointment with Mr. Taverner. The Arabian Department.’
‘Fill out this form, please.’
Hugo studied the pink form. Some of it was easy. His name? He could do that. And the date. But what about ‘Nature of business’?
‘I’m afraid,’ he said, ‘that I’ve no idea what the nature of my business is.’
The central lady looked at him with increased suspicion. She said, ‘You must have some idea.’
‘I’m afraid not. You see, I got a letter asking me to call. Mr. Taverner didn’t say what it was about.’
‘That’s very unusual,’ said the right-hand lady.
‘Perhaps you could ring him up, and ask him what he wants to see me about. Then I could put it on the form.’
‘We can’t do that,’ said the left-hand lady. ‘If you weren’t told what you were here for, it’s probably confidential, you see.’
It was deadlock.
The right-hand lady, who seemed to be the most helpful of the three, had an idea. She said, ‘Why don’t you put “business”?’
This seemed a neat solution. The Bench considered it and concurred.
In the space opposite the word ‘Business’, Hugo wrote down ‘business’. The form was then passed back over the counter, approved by the Court of Appeal, and handed to a veteran of the Crimean War who had hobbled up.
‘Follow me, sir,’ said the veteran.
Hugo followed him. Into a lift, out of the lift, along a short passage, into a much longer passage. The veteran was in no hurry. After a hundred years of combat he had come to rest, in this dim but comfortable mansion, full of enormous faded portraits, lined with cupboards full of documents which were once secret, topped by bookshelves of unreadable and unread reports. The ghosts of an imperial past moved softly ahead of them, prowling down the corridors, lurking in the galleries, whispering in the shadows.
A long time later they came to a door. The veteran knocked at it, and a polite voice bade them enter. The veteran entered, laid the pink form on the edge of the desk, saluted and withdrew, closing the door softly behind him.
‘So glad you could come, Mr. Greest,’ said Taverner. He was tall, and thin, and appeared to be dressed for a funeral. ‘Let me take your coat.’ He took Hugo’s raincoat and suspended it from an apparatus like a small gallows which stood behind the door. Whilst he was doing so, Hugo took stock of the room.
It was a narrow room; so narrow that in its original design it might have been a passage. A strip of Turkish carpet covered some of the floor. The rest was brown linoleum. A tiny coal fire smouldered in the old-fashioned grate. The furniture was waiting-room mahogany. It was not at all his idea of an appropriate room for the head of the Arabian Department. A television producer, even on a minimum budget, would have rejected it out of hand.
‘You must have been surprised to get my note,’ said Mr. Taverner.’