Read The Dark Palace--Murder and mystery in London, 1914 Online
Authors: R.N. Morris
âIf the authorities allow you to go ahead.' Waechter recognized the voice of Kirkwood, Porrick's accountant. Kirkwood had come along to handle the financial side of the negotiations for Porrick. For his own part, he had brought Hartmann. It had been Hartmann's idea to have Eloise and Berenger there too. He knew how to impress a potential investor. The one other member of the party was Diaz, Waechter's trusted cameraman. In many ways, Diaz was Waechter's eyes, as well as his technical brain. Wherever he went, Waechter was always mulling over potential scenes and locations for future motion pictures. He liked to have Diaz there to advise.
âThey'll allow it,' asserted Porrick. âAnd we'll fill the place. Several times over. And even Mr Kirkwood will be happy.'
âI like it.' Waechter opened his eye and nodded decisively to his producer. âWe can make picture here.'
He gestured for Porrick to lead them inside. The kinema owner produced a large bunch of keys to unlock the several locks and padlocks securing the high ornate double doors.
The doors opened with a creak of protest on to a chill interior darkness. The kinema was evidently not open yet. But surely, Waechter thought, the matinee should have been underway by now? Their footsteps echoed cavernously as they progressed inside. The pungent whiff of charred air assailed his nostrils, mingled with the fresher smells of construction: sawn timbers, cement and plaster. There was the smell of something else too. Something organic. Not quite the smell of rotting. But possibly the smell of death. Certainly the smell of wet fur and piss. As if an animal had crawled in there to die. He expected to hear its whimpering. No doubt the workmen had put down poison for vermin. He imagined a doomed rodent twitching out its last in some dark forgotten corner of the building.
A thin silvering of feeble light seeped in from somewhere high up to leaven the gloom. It tinged the black figures moving through the treacly darkness.
âCan we have the lights on, Kirkwood?' demanded Porrick.
âAh, well, no, Mr Porrick ⦠actually we cannot. Not until we settle the outstanding account with the electrical company.'
âBut that's absurd! Why hasn't it been paid? Pay it immediately!'
âWe don'tâ'
But Porrick cut his accountant off. âI don't want to hear any of your excuses. I know I authorized the payment. I consider it very remiss on your part not to have made it.'
Waechter heard his producer's voice in the darkness. âIs it that the kinema is not in use at the moment, Porrick?'
âWe have only just finished the refurbishments.'
âHaven't finished them, actually,' put in Kirkwood. âIn fact, we didn't get any further than restoring the entrance before we ran out of funds.'
Hartmann was not impressed. âThis does not bode well, Porrick. How can you expect to hold a festival here?'
âThere are only one or two small jobs outstanding. I feel that if we are to go into partnership, Porrick's Palaces and Visionary Productions, perhaps the funds could be found from your side of the business?'
âBut this is absurd! You have wasted our time. We came here to talk to you about your investing in Visionary Productions, in order to secure an exclusive distribution deal. You cannot expect us to put money into your failing business. Come, Waechter, we have seen enough here.'
â
Vait!
' Waechter knew how to command, even with a single word. âIt is better for my film that it is not ⦠perfect. We can dress it,
ja
? I have an idea. I vill turn your kinema into a vision of Hell.
Ja
? You like?'
âI ⦠I'm not ⦠That sounds rather â¦'
âA young Fräulein â¦'
âEloise?' wondered Porrick.
â
Off courssse!
' Waechter bowed steeply towards the silhouette of his leading lady. âYour character, she loves the kinema. It is a drug to her. She comes every night. Spends all of her money. She must prostitute herself to pay for her habit.'
Eloise pretended to be scandalized. âBut what will my grandmother say when she sees it!'
â
Der
golden entrance to your kinema, Herr Porrick, is a shining bright entrance to Hell. Inside, it is a dark palace. We have torches, burning torches, on the walls,
ja
? Mephistopheles is in the box office. Beautiful demon girls light the way for her to her seat. She sits and watches film.
Der
screen is filled with flames.
Der
flames come out of the screen and burn down the kinema. Everyone dies â¦
Und
goes to Hell. The manager of the kinema is
der Teufel
.
Ja
? The deffil. Berenger will play him.'
The darkness swirled exuberantly as Berenger doffed his bowler hat and executed a swooping bow in a gesture of gratitude.
Porrick was less appreciative. âI ⦠hmmm ⦠I think we need to work on the scenario somewhat. Can it not be a little more cheerful? I'm not sure I like the idea of a fire in one of my Palaces.'
âIt vill not be real fire. We create illusion,
ja
? Diaz, it can be done?'
The Chilean's response was obscure. Perhaps he nodded. Perhaps he shrugged. It seemed he sighed.
âThere is problem?'
âNo, Señor Waechter. Whatever you ask, I do. You know that.'
Waechter nodded tersely. That was all he needed to know. All he cared about. Any hint of pain or grief that he might have detected in the little man's hesitancy was no concern of his.
âBut ⦠uhm â¦' Porrick spoke in a whisper out of the corner of his mouth. âYou do know that there was a fire here, in which a man died? That's why we have been refurbishing the place.'
âI cannot help that.'
âI do not believe that the English motion picture viewing public will pay good money to see such a depressing subject enacted. Hartmann, what do you think?'
âWaechter is Waechter. His vision is his genius. If you want to make films with Waechter, you must surrender to his vision.'
âLook here, what if she is inspired by the films she sees to become a motion picture actress? She falls in love with her leading man ⦠uhm ⦠and is a great success. And they ⦠they â¦'
âThey all live happily ever after?' said Kirkwood sarcastically.
âYes!'
âThis is not a Waechter film,' pronounced Waechter. âIn a Waechter film she becomes prostitute and goes to Hell.'
âI don't see why it has to be like that.'
âIf you do not wish to make Waechter film, you do not go into
eine Partnerschaft mit
Waechter!'
âAmen to that!' said Kirkwood.
âYou vont Waechter films to save you from ruin?'
Porrick's voice receded as he turned away from Waechter and led the way further inside. âYou haven't seen the auditorium.'
There was a metallic clatter. In his haste, and anger, Porrick had walked into something: a metal pail or a tin box, by the sound of it. He gave a pained yelp of surprise as he sprawled headlong to the ground. âWhat the devil!'
Waechter closed his eye and sniffed. He prided himself on his keen senses of taste and smell. The organic odour he had identified earlier had suddenly intensified, as if it had been released by Porrick's accident.
âAre you all right, Porrick, old chap?' It was Hartmann, fussing over the fallen businessman.
âI tripped over something. Kirkwood, are you sure we can't muster a light in here? I wouldn't want anyone else to come a cropper. Mademoiselle Eloise, for example.'
âThere may be some candles in the box office. I shall investigate.' The scrape of phosphor against sandpaper gave a brief moment of match light as Kirkwood located the box office and headed off towards it. The match went out before he reached his destination. But before too long a second was struck, and in its brief flare, the candles were found.
Kirkwood came back holding two lighted candles, one of which he gave to Diaz, the other he waved vaguely towards Porrick, who was sitting on the floor groping blindly around him. âI've lost the keys. They were in my hand and I dropped them.'
He gave a sudden cry of disgust. His hand had found something unpleasant, it seemed. âBring that candle down here, will you, Kirkwood.'
The accountant moved swiftly to obey. The candle flame flickered and left a swathe of light in its trail, demonstrating the principle of the persistence of vision upon which they all depended for their livelihoods.
And now they could all see what Porrick's hand had found. A tin box lay on its side, its lid splayed open, the contents tipped out. Waechter felt his mouth twitch up in a tight curl of satisfaction. The animal hadn't been dead long. Its little legs stuck out stiffly as if it had been frozen in mid bound. Its loathsome snout was stuck open as if it had choked on one last detestable yelp.
âScudder!' cried Porrick.
They came back out blinking into the sorry light. All except for Waechter who kept his eye closed, savouring the darkness in which his imagination flourished. He had enough of a sense of direction to carry him on to the pavement without having to look where he was going. He knew that Porrick was clutching the black tin box. He knew that the dog was inside it. In his mind's eye, he could see both the outside of the box and its grim contents.
He was aware of a car pulling up at speed in front of them. He opened his eye to see the rear door fly open and the troublesome detective bound out.
âKonrad Waechter. You will come with us, please. We have some questions we wish to put to you.'
The car they had brought for him was as black as a hearse. He felt that if he accepted the detective's invitation he would be taken to some dark place from which he would never return. He imagined an oubliette in the basement of Scotland Yard.
Before he got into the car, he tried to catch Berenger's eye. But his leading man avoided meeting his own singular gaze, so studiously that he must have believed it cursed.
Q
uinn had Inchball and Macadam escort Waechter to the Special Crimes Department, rather than an interview room. The projector and rheostat were still set up there. It was the most convenient place to show him
Totentanz.
âVy are you showing me this? I make this film. You think I haff not seen it before?'
âI would like you to watch the final scene carefully. You are familiar with the final scene?'
â
Off coursse
! I tell you, I make this film.'
Quinn walked over to the patch of glowing movement on the wall. At a prearranged moment, Macadam stopped the mechanism, so that a single frozen image was projected on the wall. Quinn pointed to the woman whom he had last seen being led away from Cecil Court as he held her eye in a handkerchief. âYou see this woman?'
â
Ja
.'
âShe is the woman who was attacked last Friday.'
Waechter waited a beat before replying: âShe vos not attacked.'
âHer eye was not gouged out of its socket?'
â
Nein
.'
âI held it in my hand.'
âZat is vot you
beleeff
. But it is not vot happened.'
âWho is she?'
âShe is
eine
⦠actress. Her name is Lyudmila Lyudmova.'
âA Russian?'
â
Off coursse
.'
âI don't understand. I looked into the empty socket where her eye had been. I saw ⦠I saw the black emptiness there.'
Waechter shrugged. âShe lost her eye when she vos a child. In
Totentanz
she has glass eye. You can see. Her eyes do not alvays look ⦠um â¦
too-gehtter
.'
âWell, blow me, she's boss-eyed!' exclaimed Inchball.
â
Ja
. Is so. There vos no attack. It vos â¦
ein Streich
,
ein
trick,
ein
gag,
ja
?'
Suddenly a detail from the night, which had troubled Quinn in his dreams, made sense. âHer eye was the wrong colour.'
Waechter let out a rueful laugh. âIs true?'
âYes. The eye I retrieved was brown. But her eye, the eye on her face, was blue, I believe.'
âHe would not think about that! We are too used to working in black and vite!'
âHe? Are you saying that you are not responsible for this grotesque prank?'
âNo. I knew nothing of it until the night. And then I keep silent because I knew that it had been done for the best of motives. A harmless prank. Maybe it would help to promote our film. But most, I
be-leeff
, it vos intended to make me
lahh-ff
.'
âMake you laugh?' Inchball's eyes bulged in disgust.
âI
be-leeff
so.'
Quinn turned away from the projected image and faced Waechter. He found his attention focused on the inky pool of blackness that was the Austrian's eye patch. âWhy would it make you laugh? Wouldn't it be more likely to cause you pain?'
Waechter's hand flew up to his eye patch. âBecause of this?' Waechter lifted the patch. Quinn felt his heart hammer. Once again he was going to stare into the potent darkness of an empty eye socket. But even in the chiaroscuro of the semi-darkened room, he could make out that what he expected to see was not there. There was not an absence of an eye, but an eye. The softly spreading beam of the projector revealed Waechter to be the possessor of a full complement of gleaming eyes. âI do not lose my eye in a duel. I do not even lose my vision.'
âBut when I asked you about your eye before, you told me that a splinter from a gunshot robbed you of it?'
Waechter shrugged. âTo me, it vos not any of your business.'
âSo why do you wear the patch?'
â
Symbolisch
. I vear this to show how I am damaged.'