“Hear anything?”
“ ‘Bungled,’ sir. As near as I could get.”
“Right. Take the stage door, would you? Colin—over there in the check shirt—will show you where it is. No one in or out.”
The sergeant disappeared. Barnaby looked round. In the wings, next to a clutch of fifth-formers huddled together for comfort in a suddenly alien landscape, Rosa’s husband held her hand. The chief inspector crossed to them.
“Earnest, I need some temporary help. Would you go to the foyer, please? Notify the station what’s happened on the pay phone. Don’t let anyone leave. Won’t be for long.”
“I would, Tom, but I feel I should stay with Rosa.”
“No, no. Do as Tom says.” Rosa wore a clown face, makeup crudely drawn on a chalky background. “I’ll be all right, really.”
“Shall I ask them to send help?”
“They’ll know what to do.”
Earnest, still looking rather uncertain, left them both. By now the wings were full of actors, and the stage deserted. Barnaby noticed with some relief that his wife had lost her terrible frozen stillness and was weeping in their daughter’s arms. Colin returned, and Barnaby asked him for a box or carrier bag and something to cover the body. Colin tipped some flexible cord and electrical connections out of a shoe box and gave it to Barnaby, who placed it over the razor, which was lying near Esslyn’s right hand. A curtain was found, and Barnaby covered the corpse, stepping carefully around the blood, which was still seeping outward. It had made a large stain, pear-shaped with an extra bulge on one side, like an inverted map of Africa.
The curtain was hideously inappropriate, being covered with rainbows and balloons and teddy bears having a grand time. Barnaby took the key to the men’s dressing room from the board, ran downstairs (closely shadowed by Harold), locked it, and returned the key to Colin.
“You seem to be taking a lot upon yourself,” said Harold. Alone among the shocked and haggard faces, his shone with lively indignation.
“What’s it all for, Tom … all this … ?” said Colin, gesturing with the key. “I mean, a terrible thing has happened, but it was an accident. …”
“You’re probably right,” answered Barnaby. “But until I get a clearer picture, there are certain precautions it’s only sensible to take.”
“I must say, I don’t see why,” retorted Harold. “All this showing off. Ordering people about, barging here and there, locking the place up. Who the hell do you think you are?”
“I’m just going to have a word with the audience,” continued Barnaby. “Explain what is going on. We shouldn’t have to keep them too long.”
“You most certainly will not have a word with the audience!” cried Harold. “Any words to be had will be had by me. This is my theater. I’m in charge here.”
“On the contrary, Harold,” replied Barnaby, and his voice made him a stranger to them all. “Until further notice, I shall be in charge here.”
Half an hour had passed. Reinforcements had arrived. The audience had their names and telephone numbers taken and, with a single exception, had gone off to spread the news to family and friends considerably more excited than when they arrived, which, as one elderly gentleman said while buttoning up his overcoat, made the evening a first in more ways than one.
One of the half-dozen worried parents waiting outside to take the fifth-formers home had been allowed to enter and was now acting as chaperon in the women’s dressing room while they were being gently questioned. Registration numbers in the parking garage and adjacent streets had been noted, and a constable was positioned in the pouring rain outside the main door. Another sat onstage on the Emperor Joseph’s throne with the humped gay curtain.
In the clubroom Deidre was trying to persuade her father to drink some coffee. When she had first fled up the aisle to him just after the curtain fell, she had been horrified to see his staring eyes and wildly gesturing hands. His legs, too, had been shaking and twisting, and he drummed his feet like a runaway horse. People sitting nearby were either ignoring him, looking sympathetic, or, in the case of the teenagers in the same row, laughing hysterically. Deidre, tears of pity pouring down cheeks still pale with shock, gradually managed to soothe him into some sort of quiescence. Now, he jiggled and joggled his mug and splashed coffee all over the settee. Deidre spoke softly, reassuringly, to him while he stared over her shoulder. He had just started to make a toneless droning sound when the door opened and a young man with bristly red hair and a sharp, narrow face entered. He wore a sports jacket, and his trousers were marked with dreadful stains. “You Miss Tibbs? The DCI would like a word.”
“I’m sorry,” said Deidre. “I don’t think I can leave my father.”
“I’m not offering you a choice, miss.”
“Oh.” Deidre got hesitantly to her feet. She wondered if she could be talked to in the clubroom, then quickly realized what a stupid idea that was. The last thing she wanted now that her father was calming down a little were questions that might recall the climax of the play.
“Could you … perhaps stay with him?”
“Sorry.” Troy held the door open, adding glibly, “He’ll be okay. Right as rain.” He closed the door and led her firmly downstairs.
Deidre felt a little better when she entered the ladies’ dressing room and realized the detective chief inspector was going to be Tom. She asked if he’d be very long, as she was anxious to get her father safely home.
“No longer than I can help, Deidre. But the quicker we can sort this business out, the better. I’m sure you’ll want to help us all you can.”
“Of course I do, Tom. But I just don’t understand how anything like this could have happened. It worked perfectly well at rehearsals.”
“When did you actually check the props this evening?”
“Just before the half. About twenty past seven, I suppose.”
“And the tape was in place then?”
“Of course. Otherwise I would have—” She broke off then, her eyes widening. “Oh my God, you don’t mean …” Her stare was a mixture of horror and disbelief. “You can’t!”
“What did you think had happened?”
“I assumed it had rubbed thin. Or got torn.”
“I’m afraid not. Completely removed.”
Deidre said “My God!” again, and buried her head in her hands. After a few moments she looked up and said, “Who on earth could have done such a terrible thing?” Barnaby gave her a moment more, then said, “Where was the tray with the razor kept?”
“On the props table. At the back, out of the way. It only goes on once, you see. Right at the end.”
“And it’s fairly dark in the wings?”
“Yes. A certain amount of light spills out from the stage, of course, although the flats cut off a lot. And I’ve got an anglepoise in my corner. For tape and lighting cues. Not that I needed to give any of those. Tim was doing his own thing. He’s been threatening to for years, but no one thought he ever would.”
“Did you see anyone touch the tray or anything on it during the evening?” Deidre shook her head. “Or anyone hovering about in that area who shouldn’t have been?”
“No. But then I wouldn’t, Tom. Amadeus has got nearly thirty scenes. We don’t have a second to think. Oh, there was Kitty, of course. And Nicholas. He sat down there for a minute after his last exit.”