“Congratulations. It sounds like a good place to be. How did you find me?”
“Well, I stopped in the dean’s office for a minute last week and I caught a bit of your performance.”
“Performance? What do you mean?”
“Your screen acting performance.”
“You baffle me.”
“Didn’t you act in a student film down there?”
“Oh, Christ, yes. I’m sorry, I didn’t make the connection. We don’t really have a film department as such, and I acted as faculty adviser on a student project last year. I got roped into playing a part. That must have been what you saw.”
“That’s exactly what I saw, and just enough to get the gist of the plot. I must say, I was impressed. Perhaps you missed your calling.”
“Well, if the recession ever catches up with music teachers, maybe I’ll try Broadway or Hollywood.”
“Did you know I went to Herald?”
“No, I didn’t. I don’t expect it’s changed much since you were here.”
“Probably not. I have to tell you that I’m surprised the powers that be down there allowed the film to be made.”
“You baffle me, James. Why shouldn’t they allow it?”
“Did anybody from above read the script?”
“No, I guess not. I haven’t even read it myself.”
“You were the faculty adviser, and you didn’t read the script?”
“No, the boy who directed it came over all Woody Allen and insisted that the actors saw only the pages of the scenes they were appearing in. He was very secretive about the project. I wondered why, at first, but he assured me that there was no nudity, no sex, and only minimal, prep-school-boy bad language.”
“Ah, now I begin to get it.”
“Get what?”
“Well, after I saw the scene in our dean’s office, I filched the script from his secretary’s desk and read it.”
Now Ripley was getting worried. “Was there anything alarming in it?”
“Nothing that would alarm the general public, since it’s only a student film, but you should hope the headmaster never sees the film.”
“Why on earth should I be concerned about that?”
“You obviously don’t get it, Alan. The script fairly closely follows some real events at the school. It would have been before your time, of course-five or six years ago. I could see why you wouldn’t have known. I can also see why the student wanted to keep his film under wraps. I take it you haven’t seen the finished product.”
“No, the boy left school early, and he was still editing, I think. He promised to send me a DVD, but he hasn’t as yet done so.”
“Mmmm, yes.”
“James, exactly what real events does the film follow?”
“Well, as I said, it was before your time there, and after mine. I didn’t hear about this until I attended my tenth reunion. There was some talk about it at that time.”
“Go on.”
“Well, the rough outline is something like this: a master diddles a student, student drops out of school, hangs himself while allegedly doing that sex thing that’s supposed to generate an orgasm with partial asphyxiation-but suicide is a possibility.”
“Good God!”
“Hang on to your hat, my friend, there’s more.”
“The investigation is cursory-small-town Virginia police, you know, but back at Herald, the boy’s death brings attention to bear on a chemistry master. A few weeks later, the master is found dead in his study.”
“Dead how?”
“The supposition is suicide, but the autopsy report does not give a cause of death. But the fellow is a chemistry master, after all, and the feeling is that he mixed up some sort of untraceable potion and offed himself.”
“This is awful,” Ripley said, downing the remainder of his scotch.
“Just one more thing: there was a suspicion in the air that one or more of his students, out to avenge their classmate, may have concocted the potion and somehow introduced it into his system. The police questioned everybody, but they could find no evidence pointing to anyone in particular. By that time, the master’s remains had been cremated, and his ashes scattered on the James River, so the whole business eventually petered out.”
“James,” Ripley said, “is there any way you can get your hands on that script, or the DVD?”
“Nope. The boy asked for both to be returned to him, and they were. He didn’t want anyone to see it. Actually, that may not be a bad thing for you. And, if the headmaster gets wind of the flick, you might want to stick with only the facts you knew before this conversation, which I will keep to myself. After all, being dumb is better than being complicit.”
“You have a point,” Ripley said. “Tell me how this film came to be in your dean’s office.”
“The boy, this Peter Barrington, has applied for admission to the school, and the word is, he had a favorable interview. The dean did tell his secretary that the committee all thought his film was brilliant, the sort of thing that might do well at the indie festivals.”
“You said Barrington?”
“Peter Barrington.”
What the hell? Ripley thought. “His name wasn’t Barrington when he was here. It was Calder.”
“Like the sculptor?”
“Like the actor. So, if he’s accepted, he would matriculate in the fall?”
“It seems so.”
“Well, thanks for the heads-up, James.”
“Not at all, Alan.”
“At least I’ll know what I’m up against if I have to face the headmaster monster.”
“If you get up this way, let me know, and I’ll buy you a bad lunch in our cafeteria.”
“Certainly will, James. Take care.” Ripley hung up and stared into the fire. So now Peter Calder is Peter Barrington? Let’s see, it’s January, he thought. If I start looking now, I might just be able to find a new job before the fall.
He poured himself a second scotch, a larger one.
38
Arrington drove from her rental house to her new property and turned down the long, oak-lined drive. Even from that distance she could see Tim Rutledge waiting for her on the front porch, a roll of blueprints under his arm. He stood stone-still, staring at her as she approached.
Arrington began to take deep breaths, trying to keep her blood pressure from rising. She parked her car out front, then gathered her purse and her briefcase and got out. She walked up the front steps purposefully, tucked her purse under one arm, and held out her hand. “Good morning, Tim,” she said.
He looked at her hand contemptuously, then deigned to shake it briefly. “Good morning,” he said. “Is that all you have to say to me?”
“I’m sure I will have a great deal to say to you, once we get to work, and it will be all business. I believe that has been made clear to you.”
“Well, Barrington called and said he was your lawyer. That was news to me.”
“He has been my attorney for just over a year, and I’m very pleased with him. I trust him to convey to others my exact intentions.”
“Does that include your intentions toward me?”
“It does. Now, shall we get to work?” Without waiting for a reply, she inserted her key in the front door and opened it. She walked into the broad hallway that ran the length of the house, stopped and looked around. “Take notes,” she said.
Rutledge produced a yellow legal pad and pen.
“The color of the wood stain on the floor of the library is not the one I selected; it’s not dark enough.”
“I thought it should be the same as that in the hall,” Rutledge replied.
Arrington walked into the library, set her briefcase on the top of a stepladder, opened it, and took out a stain chart. She dropped it on the floor. “See the X?” she asked. “That’s the color I want on this floor. Please see that it’s sanded and restained immediately. I can see that there’s only one coat of varnish applied, and when the stain is right, I want ten coats, as I specified earlier. Same for the hall.”
“All right,” Rutledge said, making a note.
“I do not want the move-in date changed by so much as an hour, because the ten coats have taken so long to dry. With the varnish I selected you can apply two coats a day, one at eight a.m., another at six p.m.”