Read The Dead Side of the Mike Online
Authors: Simon Brett
âWho's a clever boy then?' said Frances.
Charles began to think that the Swedish girls' spelling was deliberately perverse. No one could abuse the English language so consistently without conscious effort. The latest offering, which was affixed to the telephone when he got back, read:
YOUR AJINT SKOLLIN RINK RINK HIM.
He deduced from this that his agent Maurice Skellern had rung and, though still in his damp clothes, could not resist the reflex to ring back straight away. The actor's motto rang through his head â âIt might be work'.
âMaurice Skellern Artistes,' said a bad impression of Noel Coward.
âOh come on, Maurice. It's one thing pretending you have hundreds of people to answer your telephone, but claiming Noel Coward's one of them comes under the heading of false pretences.'
âCharles. Sorry you don't like it. Next time I answer the phone, I'll do my Jimmy Cagney.'
âI can't wait. What is it, Maurice? Work?'
âYes, yes, all in good time . . . “you dirty rat”. Recognise it? Cagney to the life, isn't it?'
âSounds nothing like him.'
âOh, come on. You can't see what I'm doing with my hands.'
âNo, I can't.'
âProbably just as well, eh?' Maurice went into a spasm of his gasping laugh.
âMaurice, Maurice, what is it? I am standing here in wet clothes, I have incipient gangrene in my right leg and I want to have a bath. What is it?'
âAll right, all right, don't lose your sense of humour. It's good news. It's a booking. My policy's paying off.'
âPolicy?'
âYou know, keeping your presence more in the vanguard of the public eye. This is another radio booking.'
âWhat, a return to
Dad's the Word
by popular demand?'
âNo, no, this is a quiz programme. Same producer, though, Monckton? Thing called
The Showbiz Quiz
. I've never heard of it.'
Charles felt a little flutter of excitement. Was this the moment when he became recognised as Personality rather than just as an actor? Would he soon be invited to open supermarkets and describe his bathroom to the TV Times? âYou mean, they want me as a panellist?'
âNo, no. They want you to be the Mystery Voice.'
âThe Mystery Voice? What, you mean “And the next object is Queen Mary's Umbrella. Queen â Mary's â Umbrella.” That sort of thing?'
âThat sort of thing, yes.'
No, not the big breakthrough into personality broadcasting. Just another benefit of Nick Monckton's shyness and desperate habit of booking people he knew.
Nita Lawson wasn't in her office later on that afternoon, but the ever-efficient Brenda was more than happy to supply Charles with the information he required. To have found someone as interested in P as Bs as she was herself was more than she had dared hope from life. She became quite frisky, even coquettish. For a ghastly moment, Charles feared that she thought the motive of his visit to be ulterior. Oh well, there was nothing he could do about it. He remained resolutely charming, though the various aches of his body, particularly of his right shin, were beginning to nag.
With another deft demonstration of her filing efficiency, Brenda produced the P as B for the night of Klinger's death.
The first item was an immediate disappointment.
Island in the Sun
â Harry Belafonte.
âThat can't be right,' said Charles involuntarily.
âPdn?' Brenda had perfected a way of saying âPardon' which completely eliminated vowels.
âWell, I just . . . I mean, it seems unlikely that that could have been the opening number.'
âBut it's on the P as B,' she objected devoutly, as if he were questioning the authenticity of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
âYes, but isn't it possible that they changed the number after the running order had been arranged?'
She shook her blonde head. âBut then I'd have done an amendment. Like I did on the last one you were talking about.'
âBut mightn't they have changed it and then not told you?'
âOh no, there'd have to be an amendment. The P as B has a very wide distribution list.' Again she chided his heresy.
Charles saw his rather finely constructed theories begin to topple. âBut did you actually hear the programme go out?'
âOh no, I do go out some nights, you know. Not every night, though,' she added, simpering.
Oh dear, she did fancy him. Charles put on his most debonair smile. âNo, have to fight off the boyfriends sometimes and wash your hair, eh?' She simpered further. âTell me, who would be responsible for telling you if the number was changed?'
âPdn?'
âWho would tell you about the change?'
âLook, there wasn't any change. If there were, there would be an amendment on the P as B and there is no amendment on the P as B.' She was now talking to him with impatient precision, as she did to the least intelligent trainee production secretaries.
âYes, but in general terms â I mean, not in this specific instance â if a number were changed, who would give the information to you?'
âThe producer.'
âWho on that date was . . .?'
âKelly Nicholls.'
Good. The one person who would not want to draw attention to the substitution. âTell me, is your filing system for listeners' letters as efficient as the one you have for the P as Bs?'
Brenda preened herself. âOf course.'
âDo you remember, when I was last in here, Nita mentioned a letter from a man complaining about the constant use of
The Londonderry Air
on the programme?'
âOf course.' She reached down a file with studied efficiency and opened it with a flourish at the right page.
Charles read the letter and looked at the date. Exactly right. 12th July. The day after Klinger's death. In other words, the listener wrote it the day after hearing the music on the programme. Charles flicked through the P as Bs for the rest of that week. No, no sign of
Danny Boy,
unless he went right back to the night of Andrea's death. And surely no one would wait a whole week to register that kind of complaint. Anyway, the objection was to the âcontinued' use of the tune.
Ah well, it could all be checked with Mrs Moxon's personal archive.
âBrenda, you've been wonderful. Full marks. Immediate nomination for Secretary of the Year.'
âOnly too happy to have been of service. Call any time, day or night, if I can help again.'
Yes, he felt sure she meant it. He shrugged ingenuously. â“Beggar that I am, I am even poor in thanks.”'
âPdn?'
Mrs Moxon did not appear surprised by his visit, but she seemed to him changed, vaguer. The grooming was still immaculate, but he was more aware of her real age. He felt perhaps she had not much longer to live, that soon she would leave the confusion of her hallucinations and go to join Teddy.
Neither did she seem surprised by his request to hear another specific tape. She found it more slowly than she had the previous one and when she sat down after switching it on, looked abstracted and old.
The signature tune started and dipped in the prescribed place.
âGood evening, one and all. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. This is Dave Sheridan welcoming you to my Late Night Show. I hope you'll stay with me for the next two hours, when you'll hear all kinds of good sounds and fun things. There's the Vintage Spot, there's our Ten for a Tune Competition on the telephone, there's a Bouquet of records from one of our listeners â and of course the very best of music. Like this from Mr â Harry â Belafonte!'
âOh dear,' said Charles.
But then the lyric started.
Oh, Danny Boy
,
The pipes, the pipes are ca-alling
. . .
Charles Paris smiled. Sacrilege though the idea would seem to Brenda, even P as Bs could lie.
âCOULD I SPEAK to Mr Venables, please? This is Charles Paris.'
âCertainly, Mr Paris,' said Polly, the solicitor's secretary, and put him through.
âCharles. What a pleasure to hear from you.'
âNice to hear you too. How's crime?'
âAs I have told you many times before, Charles, I have very few dealings with the criminal side of the Law. Most of my work is in â'
âNo, I just meant your own crime, the regular solicitor's crimes of procrastination, misrepresentation and extortion.'
âMustn't grumble,' Gerald Venables replied smugly. âBut what about you? How's crime with you? Are you on to another case?'
âYes, I think I may be.'
âCan I help? Gimme the low-down.' At the mention of a possible criminal investigation, Gerald regressed from solicitor to eager schoolboy.
âThere is something you could do for me, if you've got a free day and a car.'
âOf course I've got a car, Charles. And a free day can be organised. Polly, what's in the diary for tomorrow? Oh well, cancel that, move Margolis to Thursday and tell Lady Harker I have to be in court. Yes, I'm free tomorrow.'
âGood. I was going to ask Frances, but she's off staying with some school friend for a couple of days.'
âAre you and Frances back together again?'
âOccasionally. Not very often.'
âOh really. I wish you'd get that sorted out. It's very difficult for Kate and me always having to send two Christmas cards.'
âKnock me off the list. I don't mind.'
âI might just do that. Well, are you going to fill me in on the action?'
âI'll tell you in the car tomorrow. Pick me up here, can you? We've got to start from the Kensington Hilton.'
âKensington Hilton? What is all this about, Charles?'
âI'll tell you tomorrow. Actually, lucky I've remembered. I must go down to the Kensington Hilton now to check something out.'
âOh, very well. Perhaps it's better if you don't tell me over the phone. I'll pick you up at â I say, do you still live in that awful hole in Bayswater?'
âYup.'
âI'll pick you up there . . . what, about ten?'
âFine. Have you still got the same car? The Mercedes?'
âCharles, that was three years ago. No,' he confided complacently, âI've just taken delivery of a new one.'
âHas it got a cassette player?'
âOh, really, Charles, what do you take me for? Of course it has.'
Not only did it have a cassette player, it also had a telephone, air conditioning and a fridge. It was in fact a brand new Rolls Royce, discreetly dark blue, which looked in Hereford Road like the Queen going walkabout in the slums.
âWhy on earth did you get this?' asked Charles, as he sank into the upholstery.
âOh, there are certain tax reasons,' replied Gerald vaguely. âAnd of course it's an investment.'
âSo soliciting really is doing well, is it?'
âCharles, soliciting is what loose women do in small rooms, extorting money from and denying satisfaction to the ignorant and the innocent. Whereas what I do . . .'
âYes?'
âWhere are we going?' Gerald asked abruptly.
âKensington Hilton, for a start.'
âAnd then?'
âIf my hunch is right, out along the M4 towards Wallingford.'
âOh excellent.'
âWhy?'
âA client of mine, Sir Arnold Fleishman, lives near Henley. That means I can put the day in my books as a visit to him.'
âDoes it also mean we actually have to go and see him?'
âOh Charles, don't be childish. Of course not.'
They started from the Kensington Hilton and the clues did lead to the M4. Having followed the previous tape, Charles found the directions much easier to recognise this time. He explained the system with glee, indicating how
Sitting on the Dock of the Bay
by Otis Redding must inevitably lead them to Reading, and so on. In the gaps between the clues he filled in the background to the case.
Gerald got boyishly excited about it all and that, coupled with his transparent pride in his new car, made him a very giggly and good companion.
It was only when the final musical clue,
A Walk in the Black Forest,
led them into the dark little wood off Greenmoor Hill near Woodcote that their mood of adolescent euphoria was dampened. There is always something desolate about the scene of a murder.
Gerald parked on the roadside; he wouldn't drive into the wood for fear of spotting his car's immaculate paintwork. (âYou've no idea how many coats of paint they put on,' he kept saying.) They got out of the car in silence, their change of mood reflected by the tall trees' sudden switching off of the sunlight.
âWe don't really even need to get out,' said Charles. âThe fact that the clues brought us here is sufficient proof of my thesis.'
âYes, but we might find something, some evidence or . . . I mean, look, those tracks could well have been made by the car he was driving.' Gerald pulled up the perfect creases of his cream linen trousers as he crouched to point.
âThey could, but even if they were, so what? The police will have been over this whole area with a fine-tooth comb. I think we're pretty unlikely to find anything they missed.' Charles shivered slightly. âStrange, how cold and damp it is in here. I suppose the sunlight never penetrates through the trees. Must take a long time to dry out.'
âYes.' Gerald spoke briskly to halt the descent into morbidity. âSo what do you reckon happened here three weeks ago? Klinger followed the instructions and arrived . . . what, just before midnight?'
âThat'd be about it. The last clue was in the closing number of the programme.'
âAnd found Keith Nicholls here waiting for him?'
âOh, how convenient that would be if it were so . . . But no, it can't be. Keith Nicholls was producing Dave Sheridan. That means he was in Broadcasting House until midnight. If he leapt straight into a car and drove like a maniac down the M4, there is still no way he could have been here before one.'