Authors: Maggie Pearson
âThis way!' Fadge said firmly, taking him by the arm, and heading for the bright lights and the people. The Masher wouldn't try anything while there were plenty of people around.
âCome on!' begged Fadge, pulling at the doctor's coat. âWe can lose 'em now!'
Jack, catching something of Fadge's panic, took a grip on the doctor's coat-tails and stuck close behind them.
Seconds later, they were standing on a busy street, with horse-drawn cabs trotting by and chestnut sellers and ham-sandwich sellers and hot-potato men. The air was full of the smells of cooking, soot, stale fish, dog dirt and horse dung. The buildings were caked with grime and soot, the paint and plaster peeling off almost as fast as it was slapped on. Mud and slush were swept into swirling patterns by the ladies' skirts.
A tiny girl sang the first verse of âThe Last Rose of Summer', over and over. Nobody listened. Nobody gave her a farthing. So she launched into a wobbly tap-dance, to the tune of âRule Britannia', whistled by a blind man with a wooden leg and a sign saying âOld Sojer. Pleas help' hung round his neck.
The blind man gave her a sour look when the first coin chinked into her begging bowl, not his; but he kept whistling. And she kept dancing.
A man in a top hat threw away the dog-end of a cigar, into the road. And a little kid was on it before it hit the ground, rescuing it from under the horses' flailing hooves.
Jack winced and watched till the kid made it safely back to the pavement.
No one else seemed especially bothered. Not even kind Dr Watson. He was gazing up at the building opposite with a rapt expression on his face.
Above the entrance âPrince George Theatre' was painted in gold letters. Beside it stood a sandwich board, with a poster stuck to it:
TONIGHT at 7.00 pm
The Tragedy of HAMLET,
Prince of Denmark.
Mr BAILEY
to appear as
The Ghost of Hamlet's Father.
âI wonder!' the doctor muttered to himself.
âHow does it go? Look thou upon this picture⦠Could that be the answer? No sense standing here wondering!' He launched himself across the road without looking to the left or right. And made it safely to the other side, where he vanished between the theatre's white-painted columns.
Fadge and Jack followed more cautiously, dodging between the traffic. Which was why they fetched up a little way down the street and Jack's eye was caught by the other poster, the one pasted onto the back of the sandwich board:
LOST!!!
One GOLDEN PENDANT (and chain),
set with red and green stones.
In order to receive his JUST REWARD
the FINDER must apply (With All Speed!)
to Wm Bailey Esq, Actor-Manager,
at the Prince George Theatre.
âReward!' breathed Fadge, after Jack had read it out loud for him â twice, in case he'd heard it wrong the first time. âWhere does it say Reward?'
Jack pointed.
âThat says re-ward? Come on, then!' Fadge grabbed Jack by the sleeve. âLet's go and collect it!'
Off he went, up the steps, dragging Jack after him willy-nilly, through a foyer awash with red plush and gold leaf. To the first person he bumped into, âMr Bailey!' cried Fadge. âWhere is he? Where can I find him?'
Maybe it was his air of life-or-death urgency. Maybe the broom had something to do with it. A very large broom, bristles uppermost, jabbing at their chins. People gibbered and pointed and stood back out of Fadge's way, while the tall boy following close behind muttered, â'Scuse us! Cheers! Sorry!'
âWhat about Dr Watson?' Jack managed to get through to Fadge at last.
âHe can catch up later.'
âBut he's got the â Oh! No, he hasn't.'
Fadge twirled the pendant merrily round his head, then slipped it back inside his shirt.
âBut I thought â When did you â?'
âHad to take it off him, didn't I? For his own safety. He don't know the Masher like I do.'
Jack hadn't got time to puzzle out how much safer Fadge thought the doctor would be without the pendant than with it, if the Masher thought he'd got it. Red plush and gold leaf had suddenly given way to bare boards and peeling plaster and a narrow winding staircase, leading upwards, with no hand-rail. Then a corridor, with plain wooden doors either side and names chalked on them.
âWhich one's Bailey, then?' demanded Fadge. âYou can read, can't you?'
âGive me a chance. Some of them are smudged. This one looks like Mrs Bailey. We must be getting close. This is it! Wm Bailey, Esq, Actor and Manager,' Jack read aloud.
Fadge barged straight in without knocking.
Following close behind, Jack saw walls flyposted with theatre bills from floor to ceiling, a smouldering fire in an open grate, and a screen in one corner gaudily hung with clothes. A thin-lipped young man in a tight suit glanced up as they erupted into the room. He was clutching a sheaf of papers, standing beside a desk, where an older man sat, totting up figures.
The older man did not look up. Jack felt he was making a point of not looking up.
âYou Mr Bailey?' demanded Fadge.
âSixty-two, sixty-four, sixty-five. That's three pounds, five shillings and fourpence for the gallery, Mr Musgrove,' the man at the table said to the thin young man, as if there was no one else in the room. âNot bad, for a
Saturday night. Don't you agree?'
âIt's good, Mr Bailey. Very good indeed.' The young man gave an uneasy glance towards Fadge. âEr.'
The man at the table looked up.
Fadge gasped and drew back. The man's face was a mask of white, tinged with a graveyard green, the frown-lines etched dark and deep in his forehead and round his eyes. âYes?' His mouth leered blood-red.
Fadge got ready to run.
âIt's just make-up,' hissed Jack, grabbing him. âFor the play. Remember the notice outside? Mr Bailey as the Ghost of Hamlet's father, right?' Then, still keeping tight hold of Fadge, âAre you Wm Bailey Esq?'
âWilliam Bailey Esquire?' boomed the actor-manager. âI am! And who,' he paused, âare you?'
âI'm Jack Farthing. And this is Fadge,' said Jack, dragging him forward.
âWe found this,' said Fadge, pulling out the pendant. âAnd we've come for the reward, like it said.'
âHave you, indeed!' Mr Bailey held out his hand.
Fadge drew back out of reach. âWhat about the reward?'
âYou shall have it!' The actor-manager picked up a little bell and rang it. âYour just reward!'
Before Jack had quite made up his mind that he didn't much like the way Mr Bailey said that, the costume-draped screen gave a wobble. And a large man â a very large man! â in navy blue sidled out from behind it.
âWhat's this?' said Fadge.
âConstable!' commanded Mr Bailey. âDo your duty!'
The policeman advanced.
Fadge stood firm. He dropped the pendant back inside his shirt, gripped his broom in both hands, and prepared to sell his freedom dearly.
âI never stole it!' yelled Fadge. âAnd you're no policeman!'
âI arrest you â,' began the man in navy blue.
âOh, no, you don't!' declared Fadge. âYour buttons are wrong, for a start.'
The policeman â if policeman he was â still walking forward, looked down at his buttons to check, and met the end of the broom handle
coming the other way.
Young Mr Musgrove, caught up in the excitement, started towards Fadge, who dodged and fetched him a crack of the bristle end across the back of his knees that brought him down with a painful bump.
âRun for it, Jack!' cried Fadge. âI'll hold 'em off! I never stole it!' he screeched at Mr Bailey. âI found it! Like I said! I was bringing it back, like a good citizen! And this is all the thanks I get!' The broom was twirling like a windmill.
âFadge!' yelled Jack.
âHaven't you gone yet?'
âI'm not going anywhere. Dr Watson! He's downstairs. He'll tell them. He'll tell them we found it. Found it inside the chicken. And we worked out how it got there. Listen to me, Fadge! Just listen!'
All four of them were suddenly listening, caught in a game of âStatues'.
Jack said, âJust put the broom down, Fadge, nice and slowly. Before you break it. You don't want to break it, do you, Fadge?'
Fadge bit his lip. âI did find it. I did! And I want my reward.' It wasn't going to happen, was it? He knew it in his bones. Just like
he'd told the doctor: Life, eh! Life had a way of catching you a side-swipe, just when you thought you'd got it licked. But he put down the broom.
âNow!' Mr Bailey, safe behind his desk during all the excitement, took charge: âSam!' he said to the âpoliceman', who was still nursing his bruised stomach, âgo downstairs, will you, and see if you can find this Dr Watson. Ask him to join us?' The navy-blue man grimaced, and left.
Mr Bailey pulled out a watch from under his ghostly robes. âAct three, scene one. Queen Gertrude should have ten minutes to spare. Then there's the interval.' He gestured towards the door. âMr Musgrove!'
The thin young man went scurrying from the room.
Mr Bailey, Jack and Fadge stood, or sat, eyeing each other. No one could think of anything to say. So they said nothing. Until the door was flung open. Queen Gertrude didn't walk into the room; she entered.
Every inch a queen, she looked, to Fadge's eyes anyway. Lips red as cherries, skin white as snow. Hair like a solid-gold crown, threaded with pearls. Dressed all in velvet and gold trimmings and lace coming out of her ears, almost.
âMy dear!' Mr Bailey bowed low. âMy Queen!' (Mrs Bailey always liked to keep in character during a performance, or there was hell to pay after.) âGood news!'
âGood news?' The Queen echoed, striking a pose, one hand behind her ear, the other on
her heart.
âThis child! This child of the gutterâ¦' Mr Bailey, overcome with emotion, flapped a hand towards Fadge.
Fadge couldn't stand the suspense any longer. He dragged out the locket again and dangled it in front of her.
Queen Gertrude threw up her hands in a pantomime of surprise and delight. âIt is found!'
âFound!' Mr Bailey echoed. âAnd is this the boy?'
Queen Gertrude peered short-sightedly. âWhich boy? I can see two of them.'
âEither of them! Is either of these two boys⦠the thief?' demanded Mr Bailey.
Faced with Mr Bailey's accusing finger, the Masher would have fallen on his knees, confessed and begged for mercy on the spot.
Queen Gertrude peered from Jack to Fadge. âNo! A great lummox, I said, in a red velvet coat.'
âHe might have changed his coat.'
The Queen pressed one hand to her heart. âI still say no! I'll take my oath on it!'
âThen how â?' Mr Bailey looked from
Fadge to Jack, who both stood lost for words.
Luckily at that moment, Dr Watson arrived, escorted by Sam in his navy blue, who took one look at Fadge still within arm's reach of his broom and beat a hasty retreat.
And Dr Watson told the story, from the beginning. âEarlier this evening,' he began, âthis boy' â pointing at Jack â âcame knocking at my doorâ¦' The Baileys didn't just listen. They reacted. They had a pose for everything: mild interest, alarm, astonishment. An errand of mercy! A life-or-death race through dark, fog-bound streets! âMeanwhile, back at the houseâ¦' said the doctor. And the Baileys turned to one another and nodded as if to say they'd suspected it all along.
Did they ever stop acting? Jack wondered. Did they wake up in the morning with loud yawns and stretchings and looking wideeyed at one another, as if they'd never seen daylight before?
When they came to the crime and the hue and cry that followed, Queen Gertrude relived the moment. âGone! Gone for ever!' She whipped out a lace-trimmed handkerchief, and started
dabbing at her blue-painted eyelids. âMy fault! I never should have worn it in the street!' she sobbed. âVanity! All isâ¦'
âVanity, thy name is woman!' Mr Bailey interrupted.
âFrailty, thy name is woman,' the Queen corrected, looking daggers.
âThere, there!' cooed Mr Bailey. âThere's no harm done. It is found again!'
âFound.' She gave a brave, watery smile.
There was a knock at the door. Mr Musgrove stuck his head round, âTwo minutes to the second half?'
âGive us five,' said Mr Bailey. âSend on the clowns to fill in.' The door closed again. âDry your pretty eyes, my love. The locket is found, just in time for your big scene.' He whisked the necklace out of Fadge's fingers and slipped it over her head. âLook thou upon this picture⦠and on this?'
Fadge tugged at Dr Watson's sleeve. âWhat's he talking about?'
âIt's a line from the play,' whispered Dr Watson.
âHamlet, Prince of Denmark?' said Jack.
âThe greatest play ever written!' beamed Mr Bailey. âThis â that's the second “this”, of
course â being the locket that Hamlet wears, with the picture of his dead father, the Queen's first husband â'
âSo noble, so brave, and so handsome!' The Queen was dabbing at her eyes again.
âThat's me,' beamed Mr Bailey.
âDead!' sighed the Queen. âAnd my second husband, whose portrait I now wear ⦠that's this one hereâ¦'
âA villain!' growled Mr Bailey.
âHis murderer!' The queen mimed shockhorror.
Fadge's head was starting to spin. He didn't want explanations. He wanted his reward.
âBut if there ain't two lockets identical, where's the dramatic effect?' Mr Bailey spread his hands wide. âI ask you!'