“That seems a little far-fetched.”
Martyn said rapidly: “I suppose it’s idiotic of me to say this, but I’d rather say it. Mr. Bennington very naturally resented my luck in this theatre. He tackled me about it and he was pretty truculent. I expect the stage-hands have gossiped to Badger and he thinks you might — might—”
“Smell a motive?”
“Yes,” said Martyn.
“Did Bennington threaten you?”
“I don’t remember exactly what he said. His manner was threatening. He frightened me.”
“Where did this happen?”
“Off-stage, during the first dress rehearsal.”
“Was anyone present when he tackled you?”
The image of Poole rose in Martyn’s memory. She saw him take Bennington by the arm and twist him away from her.
“There were people about,” she said. “They were changing the set. I should think it very likely — I mean it was a very public sort of encounter.”
He looked thoughtfully at her and she wondered if she had changed colour. “This,” he said, “was before it was decided you were to play the part?”
“Oh, yes. That was only decided half an hour before the show went on.”
“So it was. Did he do anything about this decision? Go for you again?”
“He didn’t come near me until I’d finished. And knowing how much he must mind, I was grateful for that.”
Alleyn said: “You’ve been very sensible to tell me this, Miss Tarne.”
Martyn swallowed hard. “I don’t know,” she said, “that I would have told you if it hadn’t been for Fred Badger.”
“Ah, well,” Alleyn said, “one mustn’t expect too much. How about that statement, Mike?”
“Here we are, sir. I hope you can read my writing, Miss Tarne.”
When she took the paper, Martyn found her hands were not steady. Alleyn moved away to the table with his subordinate. She sat down again and read the large schoolboyish writing. It was a short and accurate résumé of the incident of the letter from Prague.
“It’s quite right,” she said. “Am I to sign it?”
“If you please. There will be statements for most of the others to sign later on, but yours is so short I thought we might as well get it over now.”
He gave her his pen and she went to the table and signed. P. C. Lamprey smiled reassuringly at her and escorted her to the door.
Alleyn said: “Thank you so much, Miss Tarne. Do you live far from here?”
“Not very far. A quarter of an hour’s walk.”
“I wish I could let you go home now but I don’t quite like to do that. Something might crop up that we’d want to refer to you.”
“Might it?”
“You never know,” he said. “Anyway, you can change now.” Lamprey opened the door and she went to the dressing-room.
When she had gone, Alleyn said: “What did you make of her, Mike?”
“I thought she was rather a sweetie-pie, sir,” said P. C. Lamprey. Fox, in his disregarded corner, snorted loudly.
“That was all too obvious,” said Alleyn. “Sweetness apart, did you find her truthful?”
“I’d have said so, sir, yes.”
“What about you, Br’er Fox? Come out of cover and declare yourself.”
Fox rose, removed his spectacles and advanced upon them. “There was something,” he observed, “about that business of when deceased went for her.”
“There was indeed. Not exactly lying, wouldn’t you think, so much as leaving something out?”
“Particularly in respect of whether there was a witness.”
“She had her back to you but she looked at this portrait of Adam Poole. I’d make a long bet Poole found Bennington slanging that child and ordered him off.”
“Very possibly, Mr. Alleyn. He’s sweet on the young lady. That’s plain to see. And she on him.”
“Good Lord!” Mike Lamprey ejaculated. “He must be forty! I’m sorry, sir.”
Mr. Fox began a stately reproof but Alleyn said: “Go away, Mike. Go back to the stage. Wake Dr. Rutherford and ask him to come here. I want a change from actors.”
Dr. Rutherford, on his entry into the Greenroom, was a figure of high fantasy. For his greater ease in sleeping he had pulled his boiled shirt from its confinement and it dangled fore and aft like a crumpled tabard. Restrained only by his slackened braces, it formed a mask, Alleyn conjectured, for a free adjustment of the Doctor’s trouser buttoning. He had removed his jacket and assumed an overcoat. His collar was released and his tie dangled on his bosom. His head was tousled and his face blotched.
He paused in the doorway while Lamprey announced him and then, with a dismissive gesture, addressed himself to Alleyn and Fox.
“Calling my officers about me in my branched velvet gown,” he shouted, “having come from a day-bed where I left Miss Gainsford sleeping, I present myself as a brand for the constabular burning. What’s cooking, my hearties?”
He stood there, puffing and blowings and eyed them with an expression of extreme impertinence. If he had been an actor, Alleyn thought, he would have been cast, and cast ideally, for Falstaff. He fished under his shirt-tail, produced his snuff-box, and helped himself, with a parody of Regency deportment, to a generous pinch. “Speak!” he said “Pronounce! Propound! I am all ears.”
“I have nothing, I’m afraid, to propound,” Alleyn said cheerfully, “and am therefore unable to pronounce. As for speaking, I hope you’ll do most of that yourself, Dr. Rutherford. Will you sit down?”
Dr. Rutherford, with his usual precipitancy, hurled himself into the nearest armchair. As an afterthought he spread his shirt-tail with ridiculous finicking movements across his lap. “I am a thought down-gyved,” he observed. “My points are untrussed. Forgive me.”
“Tell me,” Alleyn said. “Do you think Bennington was murdered?”
The Doctor opened his eyes very wide, folded his hands on his stomach, revolved his thumbs and said “No.”
“No?”
“No.”
“We do.”
“Why?”
“I’ll come to that when I’m quite sure you may be put into the impossible class.”
“Am I a suspect, by all that’s pettifogging?”
“Not if you can prove yourself otherwise.”
“By God,” said Dr. Rutherford deeply, “if I’d thought I could get away with it, be damned if I wouldn’t have had a shot. He was an unconscionable rogue, was Ben.”
“In what way?”
“In every way, by Janus. A drunkard. A wife-terrorist. An exhibitionist. And what’s more,” he went on with rising intensity, “a damned wrecker of plays. A yea-forsooth knavish pander, by Heaven! I tell you this, and I tell you plainly, if I, sitting in my O.P. box, could have persuaded the Lord to stoop out of the firmament and drop a tidy thunderbolt on Ben, I would have done it with bells on. Joyously!”
“A thunderbolt,” Alleyn said, “is one of the few means of dispatch that we have not seriously considered. Would you mind telling me where you were between the time when he made his last exit and the time when you appeared before the audience?”
“Brief let me be. In my box. On the stairs. Off-stage. On the stage.”
“Can you tell me exactly when you left your box?”
“While they were making their initial mops and mows at the audience.”
“Did you meet anyone or notice anything at all remarkable during this period?”
“Nothing, and nobody whatever.”
“From which side did you enter for your own call?”
“The O.P., which is actors’ right.”
“So you merely emerged from the stairs that lead from the box to the stage and found yourself hard by the entrance?”
“Precisely.”
“Have you any witness to all this, sir?”
“To my knowledge,” said the Doctor, “none whatever. There may have been a rude mechanical or so.”
“As far as your presence in the box is concerned, there was the audience. Nine hundred of them.”
“In spite of its mangling at the hands of two of the actors, I believe the attention of the audience to have been upon My Play. In any case,” the Doctor added, helping himself to a particularly large pinch of snuff and holding it poised before his face, “I had shrunk in modest confusion behind the curtain.”