Authors: Anthony Quinn
âYou don't think she's deluding herself? I'm not sure Mr Dorsch is really the romantic type . . .'
âHe doesn't have to be romantic â he just has to marry her,' said Bee, with a cold practicality that took Nina by surprise. âIt'll all work out in the end.'
Nina was very far from being persuaded on the matter. It had also become clear to her that Bee wasn't going to budge about the house, being unable, or unwilling, to see the injustice of it. And further argument would cause the plaintiff more anguish than it would the defendant.
She took out a cigarette, offered one to Bee, and lit them up.
âThat's a nice lighter,' Bee remarked. âIs it actual gold?'
Nina nodded, feeling an absurd thrill of pleasure that it had been noticed. âA friend gave it to me.'
âMust be some friend.'
She allowed herself a pause before answering. âI suppose he is. Well, when you meet someone as irresistible as me . . .'
Bee's expression wavered, doubtful, until she realised that her sister was being droll, and merely raised her eyes to heaven in humourless reproof. Nina had a slight hope that Bee would enquire further, not that she would dream of naming Stephen but because she would enjoy being mysterious about him. The hope was disappointed: something had caught Bee's eye, eclipsing any curiosity about the friend.
âThis business with the American woman,' she said, gazing at an illustrated paper being read at the next table. âIs the King allowed to marry her?'
âNo. She's twice divorced. Unless they make it a morganatic marriage.'
âA what?'
âIt means he could marry her but she wouldn't be Queen, and his direct heirs would be excluded from the throne. The Crown would pass on his death to the Duke of York's eldest daughter instead. Elizabeth. But the government will fight him tooth and nail over it.' She had got all this, including âmorganatic', from Stephen a few days ago, and amused herself by sounding so authoritative on the matter. Bee was staring at her in undisguised wonder â she looked almost stunned by her tone of assurance.
âSo, do you think â what if they tell him he can't? Marry her, I mean.'
âThere'll be the most awful row,' said Nina, choosing her words pointedly. âAmong the family as well.'
âReally?' said Bee, wide-eyed now.
âOf course â if he abdicates. Poor old Albert. You don't expect your nearest and dearest to leave you in the lurch. What sort of behaviour is that?'
She watched her sister carefully as she said this, wondering if it was a little heavy-handed. Bee puckered her mouth in disapproval. âShameful, I'd call it.'
Interesting, thought Nina. Her sister had moral discrimination after all. A pity it should require the story of people known to her only through the headlines to exercise it. She thought she might have one more try, to see if she could awaken Bee to a parallel case. âIt'll cause bad blood. How would you resolve it?'
Bee gave this her most pettish frown, and for a moment Nina thought the penny had dropped. But what she said was, âI think the King should set an example â one must
do one's duty
.'
Nina tapped the ash off her cigarette, and looked away.
âOh, one must,' she murmured. âOne must.'
The following night before curtain-up she found Dolly smirking at her queerly. She sidled over to Nina's dressing screen and, with the proud flourish of a mayoress unveiling a plaque, plucked down a shimmering scarlet kimono.
âLook what I found,' Dolly crowed. It was a favourite item Nina believed had been lost, or stolen, weeks ago.
âWhere on earth â?'
âOnly down the back of that bleedin' sofa! If you weren't such a slattern I wouldn't 'ave lost an eye lookin' for it.'
Nina, cooing her delight, had taken the garment in her hands and pressed it to her nose. âBehind the sofa?'
And saying the words she now recalled when she had last taken it off. She had been late finishing up one night â Dolly had gone home â when Stephen dropped by unexpectedly. âI've only got an hour,' he'd said, and in the frantic fumble of clothes being shed she had tossed the kimono across the shoulder of a sofa already doing duty as a chaotic open wardrobe. As those hurried horizontal minutes came back to her she blushed, and turned away lest Dolly should read the guilty pleasure in her face.
âYou're so clever to have found it,' she cried, quickly stripping down to her underwear and wrapping the kimono about her neat figure. âOoh, this silk is like, it's like . . . cool water rippling over your skin!'
âFancy,' said Dolly, deadpan. At which Nina crossed her hands, grabbed a handful of silk in each and flashed a pose at her.
âHow d'you like that for a poster at the Gaumont?'
Dolly gave her a once-over. âOh. Went well, then?'
âPretty well,' said Nina, who had done a screen test that afternoon for Ludo Talman at the Marlborough Studios. The reaction had been encouraging, though Ludo said he would first have to show the reels to âthe men with the money' â his producers. So it wasn't cut and dried quite yet.
She was imagining her first close-up when a knock sounded at the door. It was the call boy, whose muttered message Dolly relayed. âSomebody for you.'
Nina, who never allowed anyone in her dressing room before curtain-up, waved him away. âI can't possibly â'
âHe sez she wasn't stage-doorin'. A young lady â knows you.'
She paused, irritated yet curious. With a lift of her chin she indicated her acquiescence, and the call boy hurried off. A minute or so later she heard footsteps come to a halt, and a quiet tap on the door. The caller's was not a face she had expected to see again.
âHullo,' said Madeleine. âYou remember we â?'
âYes, yes, of course. Come in,' she said. âThis is Dolly, my dresser â it's, um, Madeleine, isn't it?'
Madeleine felt the fuggy warmth from the two-bar electric fire as she edged her way in; the place looked like a laundry room after a small tornado had whipped through it. Armchairs and sofa were heaped with clothes. Rainbow swipes of soft fabrics hung off every available upright. The bulb-fringed mirror overlooking the dressing table duplicated a wild landscape of pots and creams and brushes. Nina slyly took in her guest's polite survey of her quarters, and laughed.
âPardon the mess â here â' She picked up a bentwood chair on which a mound of scripts rested, tipped the contents onto the sofa and set it companionably next to her own. âI'd never make a secretary,' she said with a shrug.
Madeleine smiled and took the proffered seat, as Nina plumped herself down on her own chair. Ludo's screen test had put her in a cheerful mood, banishing the tension of yesterday's encounter with Bee. And perhaps it was also the thought of Stephen that night with his hands all over her, in this very room. She wondered now, as she often did, if he was thinking of her.
âSo . . .' she began, surveying her guest, attired for the evening in a black alpaca coat with a contrasting fur trim, and a felt cloche pulled low over her brow. She looked â what was the word? â
fetching
, which wasn't how you generally thought of tarts.
âI wanted to â what we talked about the other night â' she said, halting, and her eyes flicked across to Dolly, who had seated herself at the ancient black Singer where she did running repairs on Nina's clothes. She didn't bother making a pretence of not listening.
Nina, understanding at once, put on her sweetest smile as she said, âDolly, would you be a darling and make us a pot of tea?'
Dolly gave a fleeting twitch to her mouth. âAll part of the service, I'm sure.' She abandoned her sewing machine and, with a thwarted air, traipsed out of the room. When the door closed Nina tipped her head in invitation: they could now speak confidentially.
âThat drawing your friend did, the one you showed me the other night, of â him.' Madeleine paused, forcing herself to recall his face. âI think I made a mistake.'
âA mistake? What d'you mean?'
âWhen I looked at it, you remember I said â I thought it wasn't him.'
âYes, you said it couldn't have been the man you were with, because he wasn't bald. You seemed quite sure of it.'
âI know. That's what I thought. But something happened, recently â something that reminded me of that day, and I realised . . .' She gave her head a brief shake, as though in self-rebuke, â. . . that he probably
is
bald.'
Nina tucked in her chin, disbelieving. âProbably? The man â you were
there
with him â surely it's a straightforward thing if he's bald or not.'
âYes, but â I couldn't tell, because he was wearing a wig. When he was on top of me . . . at one point I managed to free my hand and grab his hair. And I felt it slip. I'd forgotten that â it was over in a moment, and all through I was panicking, trying to fight him off. By the time
you
entered the room he must have taken the thing off.'
âHmm. No wonder we couldn't agree . . . But his face, I mean in the sketch. D'you think it was his face?'
Madeleine gave a rueful grimace. âI do now.'
Nina nodded. This put a new perspective on the matter. She thought again of the drawing she had presented to the police. It was hardly surprising that they hadn't caught the man, given the unreliable picture they had of him. Even this woman who had been in his company couldn't tell if he had hair or not. Oh, that she had ever got herself involved . . .
A silence intervened before Madeleine spoke again. âThere's another thing. Someone I know â from the club â met a man recently who was â she said he was asking about me. I'm pretty sure it was him.'
âOh God. How could you tell?'
âJust from her description. He kept making knots with his tie â which is what he did when he was with me.'
âDid she say anything else?'
âOnly one thing â he told her his name was Rusk.'
âRusk?' The name unaccountably rang a bell in her consciousness. She stood and began to rummage through a heap of discarded
Chronicle
s on her dresser. Somehow, through her own idiosyncratic filing system, she located the one she wanted, and riffled its pages.
âHere!' She spread out the paper for Madeleine to look at. It was a news story on the Tiepin Killer from a week ago, when the police first released a photograph of his face as sketched by âa member of the public'. Nina pointed to the reporter's byline:
Barry Rusk, crime correspondent
.
Alice was right, thought Madeleine â they never gave their own name. âSo he just took it from a reporter,' she said.
But now a gleam had come into Nina's eye. âYes, but not just any reporter. He took the name of the one who'd written this story, as if it were a kind of joke. D'you not see what that means? Before we weren't sure, but now we know the man has seen his own face in the newspaper â so the man we saw must be the killer!'
Madeleine, staring at the newsprint, slowly nodded her head. She was thinking about Alice, about why âMr Rusk' had not done her in like the others. And now it seemed obvious;
he will use her to get to me
. Of course. âThey usually come back for more,' Alice had said, and she would know. Madeleine had got her to promise to go to the police if she met him again, but what with her being half crazed on drugs, as Rita said, it was more than likely she'd forget, or wouldn't bother.
Just then they heard Dolly's shuffling steps, returning with the tea, and Nina quickly took Madeleine's hand in hers. âDon't worry,' she said in a conspirator's undertone, âI think I know what to do.'
âThere you are!'
Stephen looked up from his luncheon omelette to find Ludo Talman bearing down on him. He had been working on the mural since eight in the morning, and hoped to snatch a quiet moment in the smaller of the Nines' dining rooms. But there was to be no peace here. Ludo was accompanied by a tall, well-dressed man whom he introduced with a hushed respect.
âStephen, this is Everett Druce, one of our sainted patrons at the Marlborough.'
Stephen made to rise, but Druce suavely held up his hands to stop him. âPlease â we've interrupted your lunch. Talman said you were on the premises, and I was curious to meet you.'
âWell, you'll get to know one another soon enough. Druce is one of those to be immortalised on the mural. We've just been upstairs to have a look at it â you're making good progress.'
Stephen nodded, wondering where he had seen the man before. âWe should arrange a time for you to sit.'
Druce made an apologetic grimace. âI'm sorry to say my time is at a premium. If I don't manage to see you here, perhaps you'd call at the house one afternoon â I've a few nice paintings you might care to look at.'
âI'm sure I would,' said Stephen, catching Ludo's enthusiastic mumming in the background.
âExcellent.' He glanced at his watch. âAnd now I must away. Talman, a pleasure, as always. Mr Wyley,' he said, dipping his head in farewell.
When he had gone, Ludo slid into the chair facing Stephen. He took out a cigar, dark and stubby as a turd, and lit it.
âYou're looking rather pleased with yourself,' said Stephen, blowing the smoke away from his omelette.
âSo would you be if you'd just renewed a contract with our Mr Druce. He's a kind of sleeping partner at the Marlborough. Attends the occasional meeting, watches the odd screen test, never interferes â and invests a fortune in the company.'
âWhat's in it for him?'
âA small return on his money. But mostly prestige. He loves movies, of course.'
âAnd he's rich, by the sound of it.'
âOh, rich as stink, as my mother used to say. Lives in one of those huge old Georgian houses down by the Embankment. When he mentioned those “nice” paintings he was being modest. He's a serious collector â Cézanne, Monet, early Braque, you name it, and that's just the moderns. There's a Poussin in his drawing room that's worth a visit all by itself.'