Read Murder in the Title Online
Authors: Simon Brett
Herbie Inchbald addressed the eleven o'clock meeting. The little man with the mane of hair took his responsibilities as Chairman of the Regent Board seriously, and obviously enjoyed giving his team-talks, even under such clouded circumstances.
âI think you'll all have heard by now what happened last night. I was one of the first to hear the news backstage, and if you're feeling the same sort of shock as I'm still feeling, I know you must be pretty shaken.
âI'm sure I speak for all of us when I say how upset I am about Tony's death. We all appreciated him as a director and friend, and I only wish that we had recognized the symptoms of the breakdown which was coming and which led him to . . . do what he did. But Tony was a reticent chap, didn't talk a lot about his feelings.
âBut we can't look to the past. The time will come for a memorial service for Tony, when we can all voice our appreciation of him, but at the moment our first priority is to get on with the work of the theatre.
âYou probably know by now â and I'm not pretending otherwise â that the Regent has been going through a fairly rough time recently, and this new disaster couldn't have come at a worse moment. This town's full of people who don't give a damn about the Arts, and, if we have to close the theatre down, they'll do their level best to see that it doesn't reopen.
âSo we must keep going.
Shove It
will open, don't worry. May take us a day or two to find a new director, but it will open â you take my word.
âSo I must ask you all to be patient and co-operative, and we'll let you know as soon as there's anything to let you know. Meanwhile, there's a performance tonight and two more tomorrow of
The Message Is Murder
. And the best tribute you can all give to the memory of Tony Wensleigh is to make sure that all three performances of his last production are real little crackers!'
The Councillor's experience again told, and he secured his required round of applause.
There was no question about the commitment of the General Manager and the Chairman of the Board. Charles wondered whether, after all, Tony's death might not prove a blessing to the Regent Theatre. His financial irregularities would probably now never be investigated, and his departure had cleared the air. The new Artistic Director, when he was appointed, would start with a clean slate and, given the back-up of Donald's efficiency and, presumably, better judgement than Tony had demonstrated, might well be able to lead the theatre into a new era of success.
Assuming, of course, that the Regent could survive the hazardous period of interregnum.
He had given his all (insofar as a dead body is capable of giving its all) in the Friday night performance and was unscrewing the sword from his chest, when there was a tap on the dressing room door and Nella entered.
âCharles, there's a lady at the Stage Door who would like to speak to you.'
âOh?'
âShe looks upset. Could you come down?'
âDo you know who it is?'
âI'm not sure, but I think it's Tony's widow.'
She did look upset, but seemed to be in control. She introduced herself as Martha Wensleigh, and agreed to his suggestion that they should go over to the pub and have a drink. Even on Friday night, he assured her, it would be pretty empty at this time.
As they crossed the bar, the old lady with the Guinness, who seemed as much a fixture as the dart-board, claimed to recognize them both, but Charles ushered the new widow past to a sheltered corner. He had a large Bell's and she agreed to his suggestion of a large brandy.
âI'm very sorry,' he began conventionally.
âThank you. I haven't really started to feel yet.'
âNo. It'll take time. He was a fine man.' The clichés jolted out uneasily. He wondered how much Martha knew of what had brought her husband to his death. It struck him that in the three weeks he had been in Rugland Spa, he had never heard Tony's wife even mentioned. She hadn't been at the first night party, and the fact that Nella had been uncertain in identifying her suggested that she was not often at the theatre. This was unusual; in most of the provincial theatres he had worked where the Artistic Director had a wife, Charles had been aware of her presence. (In one particular company he couldn't avoid it, because she played all the female leads.) Maybe the Wensleighs' marriage was breaking up.
Martha scotched that idea straight away. âTony and I were very close.'
âAh.'
âHe wasn't very outgoing to people he didn't know, but he talked to me. Whenever he got the time, he talked.'
âYes.' The conversation wasn't really flowing. âHe can't have had much time. The Regent was a very demanding job.'
She nodded. âSometimes it seemed he only came home to sleep. Sometimes not even that. All-night lighting, that sort of thing.'
âOf course.' Charles wondered if she had disliked the theatre, kept away from it deliberately as some mark of disapproval.
Again she answered his unspoken question. âTony liked to keep his work and his home life separate. He gave a lot of himself during the days; and then at home I like to think he could relax, recharge his batteries.'
âYes.'
âWhen we first started living together, I thought he wanted me as part of his work. I used to do Wardrobe. But then it was clear he valued me more as someone outside it all, someone who could be objective, who wasn't involved in all the ups and downs of productions and politics.'
Charles nodded. He knew a lot of people in the business who kept their marriages and sanity intact that way. Choose a partner outside the theatre and you've got someone with whom you can laugh about the obsessive dramas and crises of rehearsal and performance. If you ever see them . . . That had been the problem with Frances all those years before. He was never there, always off in the alien single beds of the nation's Mimis. Acting and marriage had different imperatives, which were hard to reconcile.
Martha Wensleigh broke into his maudlin reverie with an abrupt change of subject. âI thought of you because of something I heard from a man called Spike.'
âSpike?'
âHis real name was Gareth Warden. He stage-managed at the Regent a few years back.'
âOh, I remember him.' It came back. Spike had worked on the pre-London tour of the musical,
Lumpkin!,
a show whose progress had been bedevilled by a series of unexplained crimes.
âSpike talked about you one night when he was a bit drunk. Said you were not above a bit of detective investigation.'
âWhat a nice way of putting it.'
âI want you to undertake an investigation for me.'
âInto Tony's death?'
âYes.'
Charles looked at the widow with pity. âI think I'm unlikely to unearth a satisfying murderer. There seems to be little doubt that he did kill himself.'
âI know that. I don't want you to unearth a murderer. I just want to know what drove him to . . . do what he did.'
Strange, that she should use exactly the same euphemism as Herbie Inchbald. Or perhaps not strange. Anything rather than define the unpalatable truth too closely.
âTony had been under a lot of pressure for a long time,' said Charles gently. âI think he was very confused.'
âYou don't have to tell me that, Charles. I lived with him.'
âYes. Of course. What I'm saying is, I think that confusion impaired his judgement. He had done a series of strange things recently. I'm afraid taking his own life may have been the culmination of those. What's the phrase â “while the balance of his mind was disturbed”?'
âYes, but what disturbed it?'
Charles shrugged. âAs I say, a series of things. The Regent's been under threat for a long time, you know that â that was one continuing pressure. Then . . .' Charles fought shy of mentioning the financial fiddles and the attempted murders. âThere were other things,' he ended lamely.
âBut he used to be able to cope with pressure.'
âOne day it just gets too much. He had been getting worse â forgetting he had done things, not doing things he thought he'd done.'
âHe talked about that. It worried him a lot. There were letters he swore he had written, and then it turned out he hadn't . . . very strange . . .'
âHe was always at rehearsal,' Charles explained soothingly. âAdministration was never one of his strengths.'
âI know that. But what I do want to find out is what the final pressure was. What made him . . . do it?'
âDidn't he talk to you about it?'
âOnly in general terms. He said he didn't want to go into details until he'd sorted everything out. And I thought he had. He rang me the evening he died.'
âDid he?' Charles was instantly alert. Have you told the police?'
âOh yes,' she replied wearily.
âWhat time did he ring?'
âAbout eight.'
Before Charles had met him in the prop store. âAnd what did he say?'
âHe said he'd finally sorted it out. He said it had all been very confusing, but he was getting there. Soon he'd have it all taped and the pressure would be off.'
Charles grimaced ruefully. âThat's pretty much what he said to me later on. It's ambiguous, to say the least.'
âYes. The police . . .'
âI can imagine. Took it as further evidence that he intended to do away with himself.'
âYes.' Martha Wensleigh looked discouraged and, for the first time, as if she was about to break down.
âHe didn't say anything else, anything more specific?'
âHe said something rather strange. I can't remember the exact words, but, more or less, he said, “At least I'm not paranoid. A paranoid
thinks
he's being persecuted, but now I
know
I've been being persecuted”.'
âI'm afraid that's exactly what a paranoid would say.'
He hadn't said it gently enough. Martha Wensleigh flared up. âOh, for God's sake! Can't you say anything more helpful than that?
âI'm sorry.'
She looked at him. Her eyes had the same dark vulnerability as her husband's. Grey-haired lady in her fifties, not particularly attractive. And now a widow. What did the rest of her life hold for her?
She swallowed down a sob as she spoke carefully. âI'm sony too. It's just that Tony was convinced someone was out to get him, that someone at the Regent was trying to ruin his career. He said it more than once. He didn't say who, and he didn't say how â just that someone was out to destroy him and the theatre.'
âI'm sorry to have to say it, Martha, but that again sounds very like paranoia.'
âYes, I agree. It could. But I sort of got the impression that Tony was building up some sort of case against his . . . enemy. When he rang last night, I thought he meant his case was complete.'
Charles looked sufficiently dubious for her to lose her temper again. âOh, you're just like everyone else! You don't want to help and â'
âI do. It's just . . .'
âForgive me.' Once again she made a supreme effort to control herself. âAs I said, I'm not feeling properly yet. Not feeling the things I will feel. Soon I'm going to break down and weep for a year. But at the moment all that's coming out is anger, anger and the need to do something. I can't bring Tony back, but at least I can find out who persecuted him so much that he killed himself. Or if I can't . . .' She softened, and for the first time Charles was aware of her as a woman, as someone with a sexual identity, âperhaps you can.'
The appeal was strong, and he would have liked to agree to what she asked. But he felt certain that she was going to be disappointed in her quest, and thought it better that that disappointment came sooner rather than later.
âMartha, from what I can gather, Tony had been cracking up for some long time. His artistic judgement seemed to have gone.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âWell, I don't know when the season's programme is decided . . .'
âOh, about eight months back. Has to be finalized round June.'
âThen I reckon he had started to crack back in June. Do you really think that choosing
The Message Is Murder
, followed by
Shove It
, is the action of someone whose artistic judgement is intact?'
Martha Wensleigh stared at him, surprise so dominating her face that it drove out the pain and distress. âBut he didn't want to do those plays.'
âWhat?'
âTony thought they were both awful. Directing them made him utterly miserable.'
âThen why on earth did he choose them?'
âHe didn't. That's done by the Play Selection Committee.'
âIsn't he even on the committee?'
âOh yes, but he could be overruled by the others.'
âWho are the others?'
âThe Chairman of the Theatre Board, the General Manager, and there's always a Creative Consultant. This year it was Leslie Blatt.'
CHARLES HAD TO
parry offers of tea, coffee, cocoa and rock cakes from Mimi before he could get to bed and look at the file that Martha Wensleigh had given him.
It was her revelation about Tony's dislike of the plays that had persuaded him to go further. So much of his thinking about the collapse of the Artistic Director's judgement had been based on the two choices, that he now felt the whole case needed re-examination. Also, the knowledge that Wensleigh's opinion of
The Message Is Murder
and
Shove It
coincided with his own made him feel closer to the dead man than he ever had during their acquaintance.
So he had agreed that he would investigate, but with no very lively hope of success. It was the nakedness in Martha Wensleigh's eyes that had swayed him, though deep down he suspected he would find out nothing that was not already obvious.