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CHAPTER 4 Performance

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Early in the morning of the following day there was a change in the weather. A wind came up from the north-west, not a strong wind and not steady but rather it was a matter of occasional brushes of cooler air on the face and a vague stirring among the trees around the house. The sky was invaded by oncoming masses of cloud, turrets and castles that mounted and changed and multiplied. The lake was no longer glassy but wrinkled. Wavelets slapped gently at the shore.

At intervals throughout the morning new guests would arrive: some by chartered plane to the nearest airport and thence by helicopter to the Island, others by train and car, and a contingent of indigenous musical intelligentsia by bus. The launch would be very active.

A piano-tuner arrived and could be heard dabbing away at single notes and, to the unmusical ear, effecting no change in their pitch.

Sir David Baumgartner, the distinguished musicologist and critic, was to stay overnight at the Lodge, together with a Dr Carmichael, a celebrated consultant who was also President of the New Zealand Philharmonic Society. The remainder faced many dark hours in launch, bus and cars and in mid-morning would be returned wan and bemused to their homes in Canterbury.

The general idea, as far as the Sommita had concerned herself with their reaction to these formidable exertions, was that the guests would be so enraptured by their entertainment as to be perfectly oblivious of all physical discomfort. In the meantime she issued a command that the entire house party was to assemble outside the house for Mr Ben Ruby to take a mass photograph. They did so in chilly discomfort under a lowering sky.

‘Eyes and teeth to the camera, everybody,’ begged Mr Ruby.

The Sommita did not reappear at luncheon and was said to be resting. It was, on the whole, a quiet meal. Even Signor Lattienzo did little to enliven it. Rupert Bartholomew, looking anguished, ate nothing, muttered something to the effect that he was needed in the concert chamber and excused himself. Mr Reece made ponderous small talk with Troy, while Alleyn, finding himself next to Miss Hilda Dancy, did his best. He asked her if she found opening nights trying and she replied in vibrant contralto: ‘When they are important,’ clearly indicating that this one was not. After Rupert had left them she said, ‘It’s a crying shame.’

‘A crying shame?’ he ventured. ‘How?’

‘You’ll see,’ she prophesied. ‘Cannibal!’ she added, and apart from giving him a dark look which he was unable to interpret, though he thought he could make a fairly good guess, she was disinclined for any further conversation.

After luncheon the Alleyns went up to the studio where he related the story of the interloper and the camera cap. When he had finished and Troy had taken time to think it over, she said: ‘Rory, do you think he’s still on the Island? The photographer?’

‘The photographer? Yes,’ he said and something in his voice made her stare at him. ‘I think the photographer’s here. I’ll tell you why.’ And he did.

For the rest of the afternoon Troy brooded over her drawings and made some more. Sounds of arrival were heard from time to time. Beyond the great window the prospect steadily darkened and the forest on the far shore moved as if brushed by an invisible hand. ‘The arrivals by launch will have a rough trip,’ said Alleyn. The helicopter flapped down to its landing place and discharged an imposing personage in a black overcoat and hat. ‘Sir David Baumgartner, no less,’ said Alleyn, and then, ‘Troy, you saw me outside that window, didn’t you? Do you think you would have been bound to notice a photographer if one had operated through that same window?’

‘Oh no,’ she said, ‘not bound to at all. I was working.’

‘So you were,’ he agreed. ‘I think I’ll take a look.’

And he went downstairs to the concert chamber. When he arrived, there was no one to be seen but Hanley, who was evidently stage manager for the production, superintending three imported electricians in the management of the lights and seeming to be in a state of controlled dementia. Whatever the climate outside might be, inside it was electric.

Alleyn heard Hanley demand at large: ‘Well, where the hell is he? He ought to be here. I’ve never seen anything like it.’

The curtain that separated the apron from the stage proper was open and the acting areas were prepared for the performance. A realistic set had not been attempted. A blue cloth had been hung behind the pillars and the central entrance was flanked by two stylized sheaves of corn. Three sumptuously draped seats completed the decor.

Alleyn sat where Troy had sat to make her drawings. The window in question was still uncurtained and open. Such had been her concentration that he thought she would not have noticed him if he had not leant over the sill.

Hanley said to the electricians, ‘It’s easy, really. You’ve marked the areas where Madame Sommita stands and you’ve got them covered. Fade up when she’s there and fade down when she moves away. Otherwise there are no lights cues: they stay as set throughout. Cover the windows and we’ll run it through once more.’

He turned to Alleyn. ‘Have you seen Rupert?’ he asked. ‘He was to be here half an hour ago to give the music cues. They went all to blazes at the dress rehearsal. Honestly, it’s too much.’

‘I’ll see if I can find him,’ he volunteered.

‘Super of you,’ gushed Hanley with a desperate return to his secretarial manner. ‘Thank you so much.’

Alleyn thought that a hunt for the unhappy Rupert might well turn out to be as fruitless as the one for a problematical photographer but he struck it lucky, if that was the appropriate word, at the first cast, which was Mr Reece’s spectacular study.

He wondered if a visitor was expected to knock or even to make an appointment before venturing upon this sanctum but decided to effect an entrance in the normal manner. He opened the door and walked in.

The actual entrance was shut off from the room by a large leather screen, the work of a decorator much in vogue. Alleyn came in to the sound of Mr Reece’s voice.

‘– remind you of the favours you have taken at her hands. And this is how you would choose to repay them. By making her a laughing stock. You allow us to engage celebrated artistes, to issue invitations, to bring people of the utmost distinction halfway across the world to hear this thing and now propose to tell them that after all there will be no performance and they can turn round and go back again.’

‘I know. Do you think I haven’t thought of all this! Do you think – Please, please believe me – Bella, I beg you –’

‘Stop!’

Alleyn, behind the screen and about to beat a retreat, fetched up short as if the command had been directed at him. It was the Sommita.

‘The performance,’ she announced, ‘will take place. The violin is competent. He will lead. And you, you who have determined to break my heart, will sulk in your room. And when it is over you will come to me and weep your repentance. And it will be too late. Too late. You will have murdered my love for you. Ingrate!’ shouted the Sommita. ‘Poltroon! So!’

Alleyn heard her masterful tread. As he had no time to get away, he stepped boldly out of cover and encountered her face to face.

Her own face might have been a mask for one of the Furies. She made a complicated gesture and for a moment he thought that actually she might haul off and hit him, blameless as he was, but she ended up by grasping him by his coat collar, giving him a ferocious précis of their predicament and ordering him to bring Rupert to his senses. When he hesitated she shook him like a cocktail, burst into tears and departed.

Mr Reece, standing with authority on his own hearthrug, had not attempted to stem the tide of his dear one’s wrath nor was it possible to guess at his reaction to it. Rupert sat with his head in his hands, raising it momentarily to present a stricken face.

‘I’m so sorry,’ Alleyn said, ‘I’ve blundered in with what is clearly an inappropriate message.’

‘Don’t go,’ said Mr Reece. ‘A message? For me?’

‘For Bartholomew. From your secretary.’

‘Yes? He had better hear it.’

Alleyn delivered it. Rupert was wanted to set the lights.

Mr Reece asked coldly, ‘Will you do this? Or is it going too far to expect it?’

Rupert got to his feet. ‘Well,’ he asked Alleyn, ‘what do you think now? Do you say I should refuse?’

Allen said: ‘I’m not sure. It’s a case of divided loyalties, isn’t it?’

‘I would have thought,’ said Mr Reece, ‘that any question of loyalty was entirely on one side. To whom is he loyal if he betrays his patrons?’

‘Oh,’ Alleyn said. ‘To his art.’

‘According to him, he has no “art”.’

‘I’m not sure,’ Alleyn said slowly, ‘whether, in making his decision, it really matters. It’s a question of aesthetic integrity.’

Rupert was on his feet and walking towards the door.

‘Where are you going?’ Mr Reece said sharply.

‘To set the lights. I’ve decided,’ said Rupert loudly. ‘I can’t stick this out any longer. I’m sorry I’ve given so much trouble. I’ll see it through.’

Inspector Alleyn 3-Book Collection 11: Photo-Finish, Light Thickens, Black Beech and Honeydew

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