Poor Butterfly (11 page)

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Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky

BOOK: Poor Butterfly
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“Amusing,” said Lundeen.

“I’ll make a deal with you, John,” I said. “I don’t think much of Passacaglia. You send him home and I’ll let you pick out one of my men to send home.”

Lundeen sighed deeply. “I’ve told you I need Martin.”

“And I need my team.”

“I give up,” he said dramatically, putting his handkerchief back in his pocket, tears moistening his eyes. “Keep your clowns. You are the Maestro’s choice. It will be his responsibility. I wash my hands of it all. My life is total misery. I leave myself in the hands of the gods.”

“Very convincing, John,” I said. “That from an opera?”

The look of despair suddenly left Lundeen’s face. “I think so,” he said, “but I’ll be damned if I can remember which one. Toby, can I be honest?”

“Try,” I said.

“Leave Vera alone and please concentrate on the job. I need you. We need you.”

I was going to argue, but he was right. I nodded. He clapped a heavy hand on my shoulder.

“I was really convincing, eh?” he said, guiding me toward the auditorium.

“Beautiful performance,” I said.

“Acting, that’s a talent you never lose,” he said. “Martin is safe. He’s never had the talent. I’m invigorated. A few hours’ sleep and I’ll be ready to go out to lunches and sell tickets to the tone deaf and ancient who think of opera as a deadly responsibility. There are but a few, a precious few, in this country who really appreciate the art. I remember …”

There was a sudden noise, as if a bomb had exploded through the ceiling. Lundeen looked at me for an opinion. I didn’t have one. I left him and ran down the hall toward the auditorium. I could hear him panting after me.

As I ran through the rear door toward the stage, the entire orchestra, Stokowski, Vera, and Martin Passacaglia were looking up the aisle toward me. Shelly was turned in his seat in the front row, and Jeremy was running up the aisle in my direction. A man-sized grasshopper shape lay just in front of me. I reached it at the same time as Jeremy. Lundeen came up behind me and stopped suddenly.

“It fell from there,” Jeremy said, pointing upward.

There was nothing up there but a darkened balcony. I considered running like hell up to the balcony, but there was no hurry. I turned instead to the twisted mass that had crushed an aisle seat and lay in front of me.

“What is it?” called Stokowski from the stage.

“A projector,” Lundeen called back. “A rusty old movie projector.”

“Lorna!” Vera cried.

There was a movement to my right and Lorna Bartholomew sat up between the seats, her eyes open wide, blood on her forehead.

“… tried again,” she whimpered, looking at Lundeen.

Lundeen moved to help her.

“Don’t you touch me! Why is he trying to kill me?” she wailed. “Where is Miguelito?”

Vera was hurrying down the aisle, followed by Passacaglia. Shelly waddled behind them, Miguelito yapping in his arms.

“Lorna!” Vera cried again.

“Is she hurt?” Stokowski called as he strode toward us.

“No,” said Lundeen. “Just frightened.”

“I quit,” screamed Lorna. “I’m not dying for an opera.”

She put out her arms for the dog, and Shelly let the animal leap to her. The impact almost knocked her over.

“A good symphony, perhaps,” said Stokowski, “but I agree with you: not for an opera.”

Lorna looked at him as if he were mad and saw a small mischievous smile on the Maestro’s face.

Stokowski touched the shoulder of a woman with glasses who had moved up the aisle carrying a flute. She handed the flute to Lundeen and put her arm around Lorna.

“Let’s take her up to my office,” Lundeen said.

“No,” Lorna said, suddenly calm, suddenly sober. “I wish to leave this building. I wish never to return to this building. I wish to live. Some may think I have little to live for, but that is not my view. The person responsible for this will regret it.”

The woman who had handed Lundeen her flute helped Vera guide Lorna and her dog into the aisle and past the twisted mass of the projector.

“Am I being calm, Maestro?” Lorna asked, a trickle of blood winding down her nose and around her mouth.

“Perfectly,” Stokowski assured her.

“Good,” she said. “That’s all I want to know.”

And she was ushered out the door and into the lobby.

“Mr. Peters,” Stokowski said, “I’m going to call a short break and then have the orchestra continue to rehearse with the cast. Do you think you and your fellows can keep death at bay long enough to let us get through the first act?”

Passacaglia grinned over Stokowski’s shoulder.

“Jeremy, Shelly, get every light in this place on and sit on the stage with your eyes open,” I said.

Jeremy nodded.

“She said she had to go to the toilet, Toby,” Shelly whimpered. He turned to Stokowski. “She gave me the dog. I couldn’t follow her into the toilet could I?”

“You could,” Stokowski said, “but I wouldn’t advise it.”

“See,” said Shelly. “Even Toscanini says I couldn’t help it.”

The place went dead. Eyes turned to the Maestro. He shook his head, turned his back, and moved back toward the stage.

“Five minutes, ladies and gentlemen,” he said softly.

“What did I say?” whined Shelly, sensing blunder, a sensation familiar to him. “I said something?”

“Jeremy will explain,” I said. “I’m going to find Raymond.”

“Raymond?” asked Shelly. “Who the hell is Raymond?”

“The man who knows where everything is around here,” I said, moving toward the exit. “Might know something about projectors.”

8

F
inding Raymond left me tired, dirty, and a little confused. I got lost in dusty corridors and dead ends. Then I borrowed a flashlight from a reluctant painter. Raymond had said something about living in the tower. There were five towers in the Opera. All of them were up wooden stairways.

The first stairway I tried was at the end of a narrow corridor. The walls were decorated with blue and white plaster drapes that wouldn’t have fooled Shelly with his glasses off, even if there weren’t chunks gouged out of the plaster. Between the plaster drapes were paintings of overstuffed horses and guys dressed in red uniforms, little hats, and boots. Shelly would have liked the horses. They all had big teeth and looked as if they were familiar with bad breath. The corridor looked like the lobby of the Chinese Theater in L.A. in the middle of a renovation.

The stairway was rotten, but I made it to the top and found a padlocked room. The lock was rusty. I pulled at it and it came off. It took two kicks to get the door open wide enough for me to get in.

Enough light got through the dirty windows to show me that someone back in the bad old days had used the place to entertain himself and whatever ladies he could lure to his red velvet lair. There were mirrors as high as a basketball net at angles surrounding a big square bed. The mirrors were smoked and dirty but showed the image of the bed behind their cloud cover. There were indentations in the ancient mattress, the memory of bodies, proving that sex wasn’t invented in the Roaring Twenties. The couch and two chairs were covered in red velvet, and on the wall hung the portrait of a man with his hands on his hips, his long hair combed back, his head cocked to one side. He was a little on the heavy side, but he made up for it in confidence. His smile was all teeth and phony.

The second tower had fewer ghosts and no portraits. It took me a while to get there, but I finally found a hallway with statues of old men draped in stone robes. I half-expected to run into Billy Batson. The steps to this tower were in no better shape than the first one I’d tried, but the room at the top wasn’t locked. It was filled with magazines—piles of magazines, magazines toppled over, magazines scattered. All covered with a layer of gray dust.

I picked up a
Popular Mechanics
from 1913 and discovered that submarines would be the most important weapon of the twentieth century and that someone was planning a cruise ship with more space inside it than Yankee Stadium. A 1905
Police Gazette
with the cover missing had a story about how much it would cost to keep the Chinese out of the U.S.A., and suggested that it would be worth every penny. I tried one more magazine. It was
Casket and Sunnyside
, the undertakers’ journal. I threw it in a corner, hoping the tower I was looking for wouldn’t be the fifth one.

It wasn’t.

The third tower was Raymond’s. I could tell because the stairs were not as covered with dust, and the door at the top was locked.

Music was coming from behind the door, a violin. I knocked and the music stopped. I knocked again. No answer.

“Raymond,” I called. “I know you’re in there.”

“No you don’t,” he said.

“I heard you playing,” I said. “And besides, you just answered me.”

“You’re smart. I’ll give you that,” he said.

“I appreciate your praise,” I said. “Let me in. Someone tried to kill Lorna Bartholomew again.”

I heard his steps move toward the door, and a bolt pulled.

“Why do you keep the door bolted if you’ve been the only one in the building for years?” I asked, stepping into the room and looking around.

“Lived a lot of years being cautious,” he replied.

“Can’t argue with that,” I said, looking around.

The room was lighted with three fancy, turn-of-the century lamps. Two plush couches faced each other in the center of the room. Behind them was a massive four-poster bed. The walls were draped with tapestries—one a scene of men in feathered hats about to shoot a deer, another a scene of two men with feathered hats whispering while two young women stood giggling at a fountain. A violin lay on one of the couches. A phonograph, an old wind-up thing with a megaphone speaker, sat on an ornate table. The chest of drawers in the corner looked as if it had been designed for a giant with a taste for fancy wedding cakes.

“Props,” he said. “Pulled ’em up here years ago. Gonna turn me in?”

“No,” I said. “You play the violin.”

“Play every damned instrument man invented,” he said proudly. “Even the lyre. Nothing else to do. One instrument a year, night after night. Plenty of music. Plenty of instruments. And I can repair them all. Can play any tune. You name it. Name the instrument and I’ll play the song on it. Even do ragtime on a French horn.”

“‘Sheik of Araby’ on a tuba,” I said.

“Hell, I can do that,” he said. “Do it sitting on a toilet.”

“Projectors,” I said as he looked around the room for either a toilet or a tuba or both. He stopped looking.

“Projectors,” he repeated, turning to me.

“Movie projectors,” I said. “One of them almost killed Miss Bartholomew.”

“Couple of old Edison projectors in the balcony,” he said, picking up his violin. “Can play this thing like a guitar. Listen.”

He started to plunk, and I put my hand out to stop him.

“Where were you fifteen minutes ago?” I asked.

“Where? Here practicing.”

“No one can be as eccentric as you pretend to be.” I looked him directly in the eye.

“Son,” he said, “it is not easy. I’m the harmless old coot. The character every good theater needs. If I didn’t exist, they’d have to go out and cast me.”

“I thought so,” I said.

“Thought so, hell,” Raymond said. “I’m the genuine article. Been playing this role so long I
am
it. Don’t know where my act begins and ends. Danger of playing any role too long. You want my secret? I was an actor. When this place was a theater, I was an actor in the last show. Quake came and went and I stayed. Didn’t have much money. Didn’t plan to stay. Went out for some roles. Didn’t get them. It just happened.”

“Someone who knows this place has killed a man, tried to kill me and Miss Bartholomew,” I said. “You’re the only one who knows this place that well.”

“Miss Bartholomew,” he said. “Tell my old Granny. I was with the fat guy when she came screaming. Ask him.”

He was right. He had come down the hall with Lundeen seconds after Lorna had come up the stairs after the Phantom … or someone … had tried to strangle her.

“Coming to you, son?” he asked.

“Yeah, but I don’t give up easy.”

“No man worth a brass turd would,” he said.

“Cut it out, Raymond,” I said.

“Told you, I can’t. Lots of people have been nosing around this place since they decided to open it up again,” Raymond said. “That fat guy.”

“He was with you when Miss Bartholomew was attacked, remember?” I said. “Lose him and you lose your alibi.”

“I see what you mean,” he acknowledged, reaching a bony finger to touch an itch just under his nose. “I’ve spent too damn much time alone to make sense. Want a sandwich? I got Prem and stuff in an icebox.”

“No, thanks,” I said. “We’ll be talking again.”

“I’ll practice up for it,” said Raymond with a snaggle-toothed grin.

I was down the second step of the tower when the violin began to play ragtime behind me. I was on the way to the third step when I saw Jesus Ortiz standing in front of me.

“Lost?” I asked pleasantry.

I would have liked an answer, something to bounce off of, but the Deacon Jesus Ortiz did the one thing I would have preferred not to see. He grinned, and the grin was not pretty. His teeth were large and close to white and he looked happy. The bridge of his nose was raw from where it had met the hood of my Crosley the night before. I backed up a step. He didn’t follow.

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