Read Classic Calls the Shots Online
Authors: Amy Myers
âI do. Nicked from outside a posh house near Tunbridge Wells. No sign of it. Insurance paid up like gents after the thirty-day limit for finding it expired. But that Aston you mentionedâ'
âToo late. It's gone.'
âDon't tell me. One came on the books today, and the number you gave me for the one you saw was false. But we've double-checked Gladden and you're right, not a sign of it. Nicked from Brentwood in Essex. Owner away, only just discovered it missing.'
âHave you tried the Helsted car park? The Aston might have taken it into its head to chug after Nathan Wynn.'
âNot there either. But, guess what, all by ourselves we thought of trying the other car parks guarded â if that's the right word â by Shotsworth Security. I'll keep you posted.'
âThanks. Any instructions?' I called after him as he left.
âYes. Keep on taking the pills.'
I would, if I knew which pill to take. I went to the catering area in the hope of finding Joan, but there was no sign of her. I caught a passing runner, who said Joan was on call for Scene Seven, whatever that might be. The good news was that I could legitimately sit down and eat lunch. From here I had a longshot view of what was going on. There were crew, cast, noise, lights, cameras mounted on cars, cranes, various sound effects, but nothing actually
happening
in terms of filming, even though I could see two or three of Nigel's classics moving slowly towards the gates. I thought about their insurance again, although just as with the filming nothing seemed amiss. Roger would hardly be part of any conspiracy to diddle his own company, but there must surely be two insurances involved, not just Oxley Productions'. They would insure the Auburn and other cars for the filming, but there was the private insurance too. Suppose there was an angle to that which had stirred up Angie's rage.
I could not collar Bill yet awhile. He was currently cheering on his troops like Montgomery at El Alamein. Like him, Bill was quiet, determined, indefatigable. Did Pen's wild ravings fit in with that? I couldn't see it. Nor could I see her around anywhere, although that might be a bad sign. It would be unlike her to abandon enticing fruit here for the picking.
Baulked of speaking to Joan for the moment, and with Louise, wherever she was, beyond my reach, I looked around for Tom as soon as I'd finished lunch. As well as being in the firing line for Angie's murder, he was a firm part of the âold gang' and I needed to warn him about Pen's probable presence, the worm in today's apple. It wasn't hard to find him â he was in the ops caravan, admiring his precious storyboards.
âGood, eh?' he said, justifiably admiring his comically inaccurate sketches of the Auburn and its three companions. He was right to do so because despite their flaws they worked. There was a feeling of threat both in his sketches of the massed cars and in those still making their relentless way up the drive. There was even one of the last scene â
my
scene as I thought of it, although I hadn't yet been called. There was a sense of finality in the sketch with a car making its way along the drive alone and somehow isolated in the vast expanse of the âTranton Towers' estate, representing, I guessed, the false âpeace' of Munich and the isolationism of the USA. That car, I thought hopefully, might be my Lagonda.
âI came to warn you there's a journalist at large,' I told Tom. âShe's digging up old leather and trying to make new shoes out of it. Old leather being
Running Tides
.'
âOh?' He was looking away from me rather too obviously.
âShe's working on a theory that Angie's murder was connected to it.'
Very wary now. âHow's that then?'
âThe crazy idea that Angie killed Margot Croft. That it wasn't suicide at all.' I decided not to mention Bill's inclusion in Pen's theory.
Tom merely looked astonished. âShe shot herself in a car on the cliffs near Folkestone. Everyone knows that.'
I tested him. âBill's car?'
âNo,' he said, again surprised. âHer own. An Italian job, I think. So how does this Pen woman figure Angie killed her?'
âNo idea.' I didn't add the word âyet' but I was getting an uneasy feeling that this theory wasn't going to go away.
Tom frowned. âAngie was a pain in the neck, but it's rubbish that she could have killed Margot. For a start Margot did not die until after the shooting was finished. Angie wouldn't have been around.'
âDid you see Angie with Bill while the film was on?'
âWouldn't have mattered if I did.' Tom seemed to find his drawings even more fascinating. âShe fancied Bill, no doubt about that, and she might have stalked him a bit, but Margot was the one.'
âWas the split his doing?'
âIt was. Absolutely.'
Not quite the story as I'd heard it from Roger, from whom there'd been no mention of Angie being in the picture at all, let alone stalking Bill. âDid Margot still want Bill?'
â'Course she did, but she came first in her own mind. Margot was always totally wrapped up in what she was doing and with herself. She loved Bill, no doubt about that, but Margot was her main love. She was another Garbo in a way. She was the flame, Bill was the wick she needed, and, believe me, Bill had to melt wax all round her.'
âIf she believed in herself so much, why kill herself?' I asked.
âShe needed Bill. It's not so simple. Margot needed her husband too.'
âDoes that fit with her being wrapped up in herself?' I wondered for one mad moment if Pen could be right, and that Angie saw the threat as ongoing because Margot would never let go her hold over Bill.
âNo, it doesn't,' Tom said savagely. But with someone like Margot anything goes. You don't have a plan. You have a mood. And in the mood she killed herself, shot herself with the gun like Bill had.'
âAny doubt it was her gun?'
âNone. The coroner went into it thoroughly.'
âHow long after filming finished did it happen?'
âA month or so. The cast had scattered and we were in post production stage. Heads down editing. I was involved in that.'
âBut not Angie of course.'
âNo way. She was background and had gone back to London. On set Bill would have brushed her off like an annoying fly if he'd even noticed her. It was only after Margot's suicide that she must have come back into the picture and helped him pick up the pieces. I think she got a job in his next film â another extra, and I doubt if Bill had anything to do with that. It took a mighty long time for him to get over Margot's death. He and Angie didn't get hitched for another three years.'
âDid you dislike Margot?'
Tom looked taken aback. âDislike? You've got me all wrong. We all loved Margot. You'd have to have met her to understand. She had her head in the clouds one minute, the untouchable Garbo the next, and suddenly she'd be with you, and you were the most important being on earth for her. All genuine. She was charming to everyone, Angie included. She knew Angie's sort was no threat to her.'
âWas she easy to deal with on set?'
âAlways and for all of us. Margot wasn't an interferer. She wasn't an angel either. She was wrapped up with her own role and the film, but she left everyone else to get on with their own jobs. She took Bill's direction like a lamb, she didn't quarrel with Roger's handling of the production, she never demanded star's rights. She loved my storyboards. She was a . . .' Tom struggled for words.
âA hard act to follow,' I finished for him. âI can see that.' Now for the âinnocent' question. âSo why did Bill walk out on her?'
Tom sighed. âNone of us knew. Probably because she wouldn't leave her husband.'
âWhat happened to him?'
âManning? I don't know. He wasn't in the film business. Geoff was his name. Geoffrey Manning.'
As I left, history repeated itself. I ran into Bill again. He seemed to have aged twenty years since I first met him. The strain of the day's filming on top of everything else was showing.
âNice car that Lagonda, Jack,' he said. âYou're called for six o'clock. The shadows are right then.'
âThanks,' I said. âI'm looking forward to it.'
He grunted. âNot so fast. Lord Charing takes over for the close-ups. OK?'
I gulped. âSure.' As far as I would trust anyone but myself to drive it, Brian would do. âI need a word with you, Bill.' I saw him flinch and quickly added, âSome other time?'
â
Now
,' he said. âMy van.'
This looked as Spartan as a bachelor's flat. Functional rather than a retreat. Bill sat there with folded arms and waited.
âI need to know the exact words Angie used about the cars that morning,' I explained. Bill was a pro. If he couldn't remember, he would tell me. If he spoke, the words would be accurate. There was a silence as he reconstructed them in his mind. âI was pulling into the lot,' he said at last, âthinking about the scene I was about to shoot. I heard her say, “You go on set. I'll see Roger first and tell you later.” Yes, I'm sure that's right. Then I said, “What about?” She said, “It's the cars. There's something oddâ” no, “
fishy
about the cars. That's why I need to see Roger right away. See you, darling.” That help?'
He was obviously relieved to be finished and when I nodded, he couldn't wait to leave and we went our separate ways. This time I noted the words down before I went to find Joan to follow up what she had been intending to say about Nigel and Angie. Or should I track down Pen first, to see what harm she was wreaking? I was fairly sure she hadn't gone away, and shuddered to think that Bill might get to hear her theory about Angie and, worse, the one that he might have murdered his own wife. Was Pen even now ferreting out the little cogs and screws which she would chuck willy-nilly into an engine of her own making? Knowing Pen, she would have no hesitation in throwing away any that did not suit her purpose â such as that Angie was innocent, for instance.
I chose Joan in case she was on call again later and found her still costumed and talking to Brian Tegg on seating that had been provided on the lawns at the rear of the manor. Brian was looking very lordly in plus fours, smart Norfolk jacket and cap. When I told him about our rendezvous with the Lagonda, he groaned.
âHave you got something against Lagondas?' I asked mildly.
âMeans another costume change â back into city gear if I'm coming down to Tranton Towers for the weekend. Can't appear in plus fours and brown shoes. Not done.'
âWhat part did you play in
Running Tides
?' I asked. âOfficer?'
âNothing so grand.' He grinned. âI was a waiter in a Lille
estaminet.
'
Joan eyed me suspiciously. âYou look very purposeful, Jack. I'm sorry I had to leave that delightful journalist so abruptly, but I really couldn't take any more. You want to ask me about that “more”, I suppose.'
I glanced at Brian, thinking she might not want to speak in front of him, but she said calmly, âWe all know now what that journalist is proposing to write.'
âDon't worry,' I assured them. âI'll see Pen Roxton off.'
âDo so,' Brian said with feeling. âI have an idea I shall be in her sights soon. I too was in Margot's toils. We all were. I wasn't a fan of Angie's though, as you've probably heard, but I don't see her as a killer.'
âIt's just too bad,' Joan said vehemently, âthat woman trying to make a story out of Margot's death.'
âThere must have been something special about that production to keep you all in touch for so long afterwards,' I said.
Joan and Brian exchanged glances. âIt hasn't been because of Margot's death,' Joan answered. âThat was a private tragedy for me because I was a friend of hers since schooldays, and it was a sadness for us all. In fact the cast dispersed after the wrap party in Chilston Park.'
âBut you kept together off and on after that?' I asked.
Brian hesitated, then explained, âUsually the glue that holds a cast together during the shooting melts pretty quickly afterwards, but when one meets again there's a shared mutual experience that brings you back together. That's what happened after
Running Tides.
'
âAnd that explains your closeness on set here?'
Joan answered this time. âWe're close, but not because of mutual nostalgia.'
âShared tragedy?'
âNo,' Brian said vehemently. âCall me crackers, but it's more like Bill's mood for the film. Menace.'
Joan went very white. âWhat
do
you mean?'
Brian gave a nervous laugh. âAlmost as though we're herding together for protection. Don't you feel that, Joan?'
âI suppose I do. It must be the practical jokes that kept happening. And now this terrible murder. Do you think we're harbouring some deep dark secret, Jack?'
âNot consciously,' I said. âBut I still believe there was something out of the ordinary about
Running Tides
.'
âMargot,' Joan said flatly.
I could see tears in her eyes, and hastily changed the subject. âJoan, you implied you'd overheard a row between Angie and Nigel.'
Joan looked uncomfortable. âAngie had rows with everyone.'
âI know, but do you remember what you heard and when over this one? It's important.'
I thought she wasn't going to answer, but eventually she did. âIt was the Tuesday evening before she died,' she said after a while. âI was in the canteen, in the part that extends into the foot of the L shape. I wouldn't have been visible to them, and I didn't like to announce my presence. I'm not sure if I can remember what was said.'
It was bad practice but I had to prompt her. âWas it about the Auburn?'
Joan looked more hopeful. âIt was mentioned. She said something like, “It's more than the Auburn involved, isn't it? You didn't bank on it going missing, did you?” Nigel sounded alarmed, and said, “You're barking up the wrong tree”, to which she replied, “Maybe, but I'm going to chop yours down”.'