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Charles didn’t know which of the fighters was which, but he felt it only appropriate that Nick the punkophile must be the drummer with the broken bottle.

‘Yeah,’ Mixed Bathing’s keyboard player agreed gloomily. ‘Like from the start I’ve always thought we ought to have been into a funkier sound anyway. More kind of laid-back, less up-front, know what I mean?’

Disconcertingly, Charles found that this remark seemed to be addressed to him. ‘Sort of,’ he offered hopefully.

‘Still, now Nick and Phil’ve split that’s really screwed the whole scene. Been a heavy trip last few months, anyway. Guess we’ll all just get back to our musical roots now.’

‘How do you mean?’ asked Charles, intrigued in spite of himself.

‘Well, like I’m really into good old fifties R and B. Wiggy — ’ he indicated the rhythm guitarist, ‘Country’s really his scene. You know, I guess we’ll get it together in our own ways, go back to basics, from the top, no hassles, know what I mean?’

This time Charles felt that to nod or agree that he did know what the keyboard player meant would be dishonest, so he said nothing.

‘But you mean it’s the end of the road for the group?’ Chox Morton’s voice was small and anxious. He sat nervously forward on his stool, impossibly thin, fingering his glass of Coke.

‘Gotta be, hasn’t it, Chox? I mean, I don’t reckon we could have stuck together long anyway. The vibes were getting really heavy. But after this. .’

‘Yes, Mixed Bathing’s finished.’ Miffy Turtle spoke with authority and a kind of realistic gloom.

‘No more Mixed Bathing. The boys will be taken down to the Baths with their costumes on Monday and the girls will be taken down on Tuesday. Which means the Gym Master will have his hands full.’ Steve Clinton laughed immoderately at his innuendo. To give everyone else their due, they ignored him.

‘But what about tomorrow night at the club?’ the manager asked Miffy. ‘I mean, the group’s booked in to the end of the week.’

‘Well, come on, use your loaf. They won’t be here, will they? One of them’ll be in bleeding hospital and the other will be in the bleeding nick. You’ll have to make do with records for the kids to bop to.’

‘Be a darned sight cheaper.’ The manager spoke with venom festered by an old grievance.

‘Look, if you want a decent group to come to a hole like this, you have to bloody pay for it. We ain’t bloody amateurs.’

‘You’ll be in breach of contract if the group doesn’t turn up tomorrow.’

‘Stuff it, Mr. DeMille. There’s bugger all you can do about it.’ Miffy spoke with impressive force and the manager was silenced.

‘Hear about the Irish rapist who tied the girl’s legs together?’ asked Steve Clinton, incapable of leaving silence unfilled and equally incapable of filling it with anything but a joke.

Again company solidarity prevailed and nobody took any notice of him. Charles looked across at Paul Royce, who was gazing morosely into his Scotch. The young man seemed even less amused by Steve Clinton than the rest of them. Maybe it was the prospect of writing with this walking Bumper Fun Book that depressed him. Walter Proud may have had his theories about introverts and extroverts complementing each other, but Charles couldn’t see it working out for long with such extremes of facetiousness and gloom.

As he looked across at Paul Royce, he caught Virginia Moult’s eye. She was staring at him hard, appraisingly. He felt an uneasy excitement.

Walter Proud sat next to her. Charles shifted his gaze to the producer. The gin was getting through and, as it relaxed the face, Charles could see the sagging contours of age and sadness.

Walter was determined to be jovial, to put across the showbiz image of indestructibility, but brashness could not hide the fear, the fear of ageing and of dying, the fear that could drive a man into the apparently rejuvenating arms of a young girl and that could turn him to violence if she rejected him. Charles could identify uncomfortably closely with Walter. He had known the blindness of sexual anger, the jealousy of a younger man’s irretrievable advantage. If he had been in love with Janine and if he had been aced out by a cocky young comedian, he would not like to have predicted how he might have behaved.

Lennie Barber emerged from the cupboard that served as dressing room, drink store, laundry room, lavatory and manager’s office. He got a bottle of Scotch and a glass from the bar and joined the wide circle of drinkers. He poured a big tumblerful and downed it.

‘Going all right tonight, Lennie. Before the fight,’ Miffy Turtle observed.

Barber shrugged wryly. ‘Audience was rubbish.’

‘But you was getting them round, Lennie. Act coming together very nicely.’

‘Very nicely,’ Walter echoed, with the indulgence of the big impresario. ‘All very promising. Of course, the IBA wouldn’t wear any of that material on telly, but the life is there and that’s what matters. No, when this telly show gets away, it’s going to be very big, very big indeed.’

‘As the actress said to the bishop.’ Nobody reacted to Steve Clinton’s reflex line.

‘What telly show’s this?’ asked Miffy Turtle, unnaturally quiet.

‘Got a pilot away for Lennie. And Charles here. Following the success on the old Alexander Harvey Show. Very exciting prospect, going to be very big.’

‘How long’ve you known?’

‘Only got the definite go-ahead today. Something. . fell through, so the studio date was suddenly available. I rang Lennie and Charles. Of course, I should have rung you, Miffy, as Lennie’s agent, but — ’

‘Too bloody right you should have rung me. Yes, I’m his agent and don’t you forget it. I’m not going to fart around getting him bookings in smelly little holes like this and then miss out on the big ones.’

‘No one was suggesting that, Miffy. I was going to ring you tomorrow.’

‘Oh yes, it’s always bleeding tomorrow, isn’t it?’

‘Miffy, don’t be bloody daft.’ Lennie Barber spoke with dignity and authority. ‘No one was trying to keep you in the dark about anything.’

‘And no one had better bloody try it. I’m not going to lose all my bloody artists just when they start to take off.’

‘Course you’re not, Miffy. Calm down. All right, it looks like you’ve lost one of your acts tonight, so I can see you’re sore. But Mixed Bathing wouldn’t have stuck together more than a couple of months anyway. You could see the split coming, couldn’t you?’

‘Oh, sure, Lennie, sure.’ Miffy Turtle’s anger had subsided. ‘I was just thinking, you used to be with the big agents when it was all happening for you. If it’s all happening over again, maybe the big boys will start sniffing again.’

‘If they do, I’ll tell them what they can sniff,’ said Lennie Barber coarsely. ‘That load of shits didn’t come near me when I was down on my luck. I don’t give a damn about them. Anyway, Miffy, this is only one television programme, not a big deal. It’s — ’

‘It is a big deal,’ objected Walter, offended.

‘No, it’ll probably come to nothing. Nothing to get excited about. Like they used to say to the would-be comics at auditions: It’s OK, but don’t give up your day-job.’

‘Now don’t play it down, Lennie,’ Walter protested. ‘This show’s going to put you right back on the map.’

‘Yeah, but whereabouts?’

Walter ignored the cynicism and started being a producer. ‘Actually, I wanted to talk about a few details on the show. First thing we’ve got to do is to get a script together. Can’t really talk about that now, but maybe we could fix up a meeting tomorrow — no, that’s Saturday — Monday, to talk about what we’re going to do. OK for you, Lennie? Paul? Steve?’

‘In the words of the abacus, you can count on me.’ Steve Clinton guffawed alone at his wit.

‘But more than that, we’ve got to think positive on this show. Think big. We’ve got to say, this show is going to be the biggest comedy sensation of the year and Lennie Barber is going to be the biggest star.’ Walter Proud was beginning to enjoy the Hollywood backstage movie in which he had cast himself. ‘So what it means is, Lennie, you’ve got to be seen around a bit. Right sort of places. I mean, for instance, next Wednesday there’s this UEF Awards lunch. The television company’s got a table and you’ve got to be seen there, Lennie. With Charles here.’