Charles.â
âWhat, weâll be rehearsing as usual?â
âWe must. Ten oâclock call, as ever. Somehow Iâve got to get this show on.â
âWhat show is it youâre rehearsing on at the moment, Mr Scholes?â the policeman asked politely.
âMacbeth.â
âOh. Thatâs the play thatâs meant to be bad luck, isnât it?â
âYes,â said Gavin wryly. â
The Scottish Play
.â Then the implication of Warnockâs death struck him again. âOh Christ, Iâll have to get another Duncan.â He looked hopefully at Charles who was walking past him with concentrated caution. âCharles, I wonder if youâd mind . . .?
âSorry.â A shake of the head. âNot that I donât want to help out, but I am the Bleeding Sergeant, arenât I? I think Iâm as versatile as the next actor, but even I canât envisage standing up on the stage and saying, âWhat bloody man is that?â to myself.â
âNo. No,â said Gavin wistfully. âPity . . .â
The police kindly drove Charles back to his digs. When he got up to his room, and before he collapsed into the long-desired haven of bed, he looked through the curtains to the road outside.
The police car was still there.
A chill thought struck him.
Was the alcohol making him paranoid?
Or was he under surveillance?
Chapter Nine
THE NEXT morning the police car had gone, so Charles shrugged off his anxieties. Or at least he would have done, if shrugging hadnât been far too painful an activity for the delicately poised time-bomb which was now balanced on top of his neck. He had the worst hangover he could remember.
The gentle September light seemed to laser through his eyeballs into his brain. He took one look at his landladyâs bacon, eggs and fried bread and had to leave the dining room, thus causing irremediable damage to their relationship â his landlady was one of those women whose emotional life is conducted solely through the medium of food and for whom every unconsumed crust or potato-skin is a mortal affront.
He couldnât face the claustrophobia of a bus, so he walked to the Pinero, arriving a little after ten. But the fresh air didnât help.
And what greeted him at the theatre did little to improve his mood. He was met at the Stage Door by the policeman of the night before who, courteous as ever, said, âMr Paris, good morning. As I mentioned last night, I would like to talk to you a little further. Mr Scholes has kindly said that we may use his office, so if youâd care to come up with me straight away . . .â
âOh yes. Fine. But I am meant to be rehearsing. Perhaps Iâd better have a word with Gavin to ââ
âThatâs quite all right, Mr Paris. I have spoken to Mr Scholes. I wonât keep you any longer than necessary.â
âOh. All right.â
They didnât speak again until they were up in Gavinâs office. It was a crowded room, its every surface high with copies of
Spotlight,
scripts, set designs and the other impedimenta of theatre production.
The policeman sat at Gavinâs desk and indicated a low chair for Charles. âMr Scholesâ secretary was kind enough to offer to make us coffee if we wanted any.â
âIt would be very welcome. Black, please.â
âOf course.â
The policeman, like a good host, went to the door and arranged the order. Then he returned to the chair. He looked very alert, in good condition for someone who had presumably been up most of the night.
âSorry,â said Charles. âI didnât get your name in all the confusion.â
âDetective Inspector Dowling.â
âAh.â
The Detective Inspector looked up as someone entered the room. It wasnât the coffee. Instead, Charles was aware of the other plain-clothes policeman of the night before moving silently to take a chair in the corner
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