Read Dead Giveaway Online

Authors: Simon Brett

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

Dead Giveaway (17 page)

‘But they were all the same – surely?’

‘They were all nearly the same, yes. But they had been specially made to match the set. Hand-painted. I thought maybe they were slightly different, maybe there was more red on one, more blue on another. It was only likely to be a tiny difference – something definitely looked wrong. I couldn’t think of anything else.’

‘So what did you do?’ asked Charles, with a sick feeling he knew the answer.

His worst fears were confirmed. ‘I started changing them round.’

‘Oh, my God.’

‘Just to see if it made the colour balance better.’

‘So which one did you change with Barrett’s?’ asked Charles, resigned.

‘I can’t remember.’

‘Oh, come on. You must remember,’ Charles snapped. ‘You realise how important this is, don’t you?’

‘Yes. I do. Now. But, honestly, I can’t remember. I tried them every way. I moved first one and then the other. I really couldn’t say at the end which one was where. That’s why I felt so awful when I heard about the cyanide. Then, when Chippy was arrested, I thought, thank God, at least he got the right one back.’

‘Except that his right one contained gin at six-thirty.’

‘Yes.’ The tufted head drooped.

‘But surely,’ said Sydnee excitedly, ‘the police would have checked the glasses afterwards. If we go to them and say what happened, and find out who had the one containing gin –’

Charles shook his head. ‘The desk got knocked over. The glasses were scattered all over the place.’

Sylvian raised his head. ‘Yes, I don’t understand that. I designed it to be very stable. I mean, the centre of gravity was –’

But Sydnee didn’t think it was the moment for a discussion of the intricacies of furniture design. ‘Surely, Charles, the celeb who had gin in his or her glass would have noticed?’

‘Must’ve done, yes. But nobody’s said anything, have they? Otherwise Chippy wouldn’t have been arrested. Which must mean the intended victim knew the poison was meant for him –’

‘Or for her.’

‘Yes . . . and is deliberately keeping quiet about it.’

‘And all the while letting Chippy suffer,’ said Sydnee, boiling with resentment.

‘You realise something else . . .’

Sydnee looked at him curiously.

‘If the cyanide wasn’t put into Barrett’s glass but into someone else’s, it could have been done at any time during the meal-break.’

‘Oh no. And all our checking of people’s movements has been quite worthless.’

Charles nodded, then let out a long sigh. ‘I think we’re going to have to get our little research team together again, Sydnee.’

Chapter Twelve

NO ONE EVEN suggested that the second meeting of Charles’s research team should take place in his bedsitter. They met instead at Harry Cockers, where Sydnee, Chita and Quentin obviously felt much more at ease.

‘Isn’t it a bit of a risk,’ Charles had said when the idea was mentioned, ‘talking about this sort of thing in such a public place?’

‘Good God, no,’ Sydnee had replied airily. ‘It’s ideal. Perfect security. Nobody at Harry Cockers goes to listen to anyone else. They just go to listen to themselves.’

And, as he once again sat watching the screeching variegated flying-suits at the bar, Charles had to admit she was right.

He had asked Sydnee to view the tape of the ill-fated pilot, concentrating on two specific moments, and the first business of their meeting was her report on this.

‘I’m afraid it didn’t help, Charles. The trouble is, television’s such a selective medium. You only see the shots that the director chooses and that the vision-mixer punches up. What you were hoping to see probably happened off-camera.’

‘There must have been shots of the celebrities drinking.’

‘Oh yes. There are. But in none of them are they showing any unusual reaction.’

‘But come on, if you pick up a glass you think contains water and take a swig from it and find it contains gin, you
must
react. There’s no way you can help yourself.’

‘You’re probably right. And I expect someone did react like that, but the fact remains that the camera wasn’t on them while they did it.’

‘Damn.’ Another hope bubbled up in his mind. ‘Did any of them not drink at all? That might be as much of a pointer as a reaction to the first swig. Once they’d identified the gin –’

The copper-beech hair swished as Sydnee shook her head apologetically. ‘No. All four of them take a drink from their glass at least once while they’re in shot.’

‘One of them must have been covering up,’ Quentin drawled.

‘Covering up what?’ asked Charles.

‘As soon as the person in question smelt the gin, he or she must have realised what had happened, realised that the cyanide glass had been switched and that someone else was going to cop it. So they’d want to hide the fact that they knew anything about it.’

Charles grimaced. ‘Sorry, Quentin, that doesn’t work. The only person who knew there was a glass with cyanide in it was the person who put it there. Unless we’re talking about an elaborate suicide plot, the discovery by that person that he or she had gin would not automatically mean that the proposed murder victim’s glass had been switched. They’d just think, funny, why have I got gin in here?’

‘But why wouldn’t they have mentioned it when questioned by the police? Surely then the police would have realised there was something odd and –’

‘No. You see, by then the proposed murder victim would know what had happened. As soon as Barrett Doran reacted to the poison, they must have understood, and realised why they had gin in their glass. But, for some reason of their own, they didn’t want the police to know that someone was out to kill them. Which was why they upset the table – to send all the glasses over the floor and confuse the evidence.’

He looked across at Sydnee, who shook her head lugubriously. ‘Camera wasn’t on it. There’s a shot of the celebs before Barrett takes his fatal swig, then the camera stays with him as he starts choking. Next time we see the celebs, they’re running forward and the desk’s already tipped over.’

‘So we’ve no idea who pushed it?’

‘No.’

‘Because that person, I’ll lay any money, was the intended victim.’ Charles looked at Chita and Quentin. ‘You two were on the set. You didn’t by any chance see . . .?’

His words trickled to a stop as they shook their heads. ‘Sorry. There was so much confusion and chaos that we didn’t really see anything.’

Sydnee spoke. ‘Joanie Bruton said it was Nick Jeffries who pushed the desk over.’

‘Yes.’

‘Any reason to disbelieve her?’

Charles shrugged. ‘Not really, but I’m now getting so paranoid about this case that I’m suspicious of everyone.’

‘On the new time-scale, of course,’ Quentin announced slowly, ‘Nick Jeffries would have had time to put the cyanide in a glass himself.’

‘Yes, but I think the person who pushed the desk over was the intended victim rather than the murderer.’

Sydnee corrected him. ‘Not necessarily, Charles. As soon as Barrett Doran had started choking, the murderer would have realised that something had gone wrong and have exactly the same reason to confuse the evidence as the intended victim.’

Charles was forced to admit the truth of this.

‘In fact, a much more straightforward reason than the intended victim.’

He was forced to admit the truth of that too. He looked round at his researchers. ‘Right, so Nick Jeffries is now in the running. Who else? Back we go to the tedious business of retracing everyone’s footsteps.’

‘We’ve done it,’ said Chita, and handed him a blue folder.

Charles looked at her in surprise.

‘Well, we knew you’d want to know, so we got together and went through everyone. We are professional researchers, you know.’

‘Yes. Of course.’ He opened the folder and looked at the list inside. It read as follows:

SUSPECTS WITH OPPORTUNITY

1.   BOB GARSTON

Left Conference Room at 6.05. Not seen again until 6.20 when he was observed by Tim Dyer walking along the corridor with Roger Bruton.

2.   JOANIE BRUTON

Left Conference Room at 6.10 with Roger to go to Make-up, where he left her. According to Make-up, left them at 6.20. Roger Bruton claims she met him by the lifts a little before 6.30. By that time both of them were back up in the celebrity Conference Room.

3.   ROGER BRUTON

See above. On his own after depositing his wife in Make-up. Seen with Bob Garston by Tim Dyer at 6.20. Again presumably on his own until meeting his wife again just before 6.30.

4.   NICK JEFFRIES

Left celebrity Conference Room, following Fiona Wakeford, just after 6.15. Seen entering her dressing room at about 6.20, and seen leaving it again about a minute later. Not back in the Conference Room until just after 6.30.

NOTE:   These are the facts as accurately as they can be ascertained. They do not, however, take into account the possibility of any of the witnesses lying, nor of a conspiracy amongst any of the above to poison the water glass.

‘But just a minute,’ said Charles, as he finished reading the document. ‘Surely there are a couple more we should be considering. The two contestants, Tim Dyer and Trish Osborne. They both left their Conference Room at six-fifteen. She went to Barrett Doran’s dressing room, but was out of there by twenty-five past and . . .’

Chita shook her head. ‘She’s in the clear. She went straight to the Ladies. One of the Assistant Stage Managers was in there and saw her, trying to repair her make-up. She’d been crying, apparently. She was there till after half-past.’

Charles felt obscurely relieved that Trish had been telling the truth. ‘But what about Tim Dyer?’

Quentin shook his head. ‘No. We’ve found another witness there too. One of the dressers saw him hanging around the corridor, looking suspicious. There’ve been quite a lot of costumes going missing recently, so the dresser watched what he was up to. Tim Dyer went into Studio A just before half-past, but he quite definitely did not go into Studio B.’

‘So he couldn’t have got the cyanide. Oh well, at least thank God that’s two of them eliminated.’ Charles looked down at their list. ‘Thanks for this. Good bit of work.’ He sighed ruefully. ‘I don’t know. Bloody marvellous, isn’t it? Four murder suspects and I don’t even know who they were trying to kill.’

‘I’m sorry,’ he said to Sydnee later that evening. ‘I’m not proving to be much use to you. I’m afraid my reputation as a detective has been a little over-inflated.’

She did not deny this, but told him that at least she had been glad of someone to talk to about the case. They were sitting over coffee after dinner in a Covent Garden Italian restaurant. Charles felt very low. The first snagging self-doubts of depression threatened. When the depression came, it could be a long one.

He sighed. ‘So I suppose now we do what we should have done in the first place – go to the police about it. I tell them that Barrett Doran’s glass contained gin at six-thirty. At least that’ll let Chippy off the hook.’

‘And then the police will get on to Sylvian,’ Sydnee said listlessly. ‘And he won’t be able to tell them which glass he changed for which, because he fiddled about with all of them . . .’

‘But at least sorting out all these bloody suspects then becomes the police’s problem. It is their job, after all. That’s what they’re trained for.’

Sydnee nodded and was silent for a moment. ‘Of course, the police aren’t going to be terribly pleased with you.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Withholding evidence. Why didn’t you go and tell them what you knew earlier?’

Charles shrugged. ‘That’s a risk I’ll have to take.’ But he didn’t warm to the idea.

‘I just feel we’ve got so close to it,’ said Sydnee doggedly.

‘Oh yes. I thought we were getting close with Bob, but after finding out about the glasses being switched, I don’t know, the whole case is so wide open that everything we’ve done seems to have been wasted.’

‘Not everything.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘We now know our suspects pretty well. We know what makes them tick, what their priorities are.’

‘Yes.’ In spite of himself, Charles felt a flicker of interest. ‘So where does that lead us?’

‘Well, it enables us to think of reasons why they might want to murder each other.’

‘Go on.’

‘All right, let’s start with Bob Garston. We worked out a lot of reasons why he might want to murder Barrett. In doing that, we should have found out enough about his character to see reasons why he might want to murder someone else.’

‘His character seems very simple to me. Totally selfish. He’s motivated solely by considerations of his career. Anyone who threatened that might be expendable. But Barrett was the only one on the show who represented any kind of threat.’

‘Maybe. Bob was also desperately worried about adverse publicity.’

‘That’s just another facet of the same thing. It threatened his career.’ Charles mused in silence for a moment. ‘The thing that really seemed to get him uptight was that we knew about Barrett and his wife . . .’

‘Yes, he didn’t want the gossip columns to get hold of that, did he?’

‘No.’ Charles found his mind wasn’t as exhausted as he’d thought. It was waking up again, starting to make connections. ‘And before the show, the only person he thought knew about the affair was Joanie Bruton . . .’

‘And Roger. Remember, Tim overheard Roger talking about it.’

‘Yes. My God, do you suppose that what Roger was actually saying was a blackmail demand? You do something for us or we’ll tell the press about Barrett and your wife.’

‘It’s possible.’

‘Far-fetched, though. Why should someone as successful as Joanie Bruton want to resort to blackmail?’

‘People are greedy. Even the rich – particularly those who’ve just become rich – always want that little bit more. And Joanie’s success may not be that secure. Okay, she’s Flavour of the Month at the moment, but we both know how quickly television faces go out of fashion. Then she’d be just back to the journalism. It’s not as if she writes books or has got any other nice little earner going for her.’

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