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I said to Jackson, 'My bodyguard's like a growling dog. Pay no attention. The film company insists on him because others beside you want this movie stopped.'

'That bitch Audrey, Sonia's sneering sister, I bet she she does, for one.' does, for one.'

'She above all,' I agreed.

Lucy reappeared at the front door and called to her father, 'Dad, Uncle Ridley's on the phone.'

'Tell him I'll come in a minute.'

I said, as she dematerialised, 'Your brother rode on the Heath this morning, for the film. He won't be pleased with me.'

'Why not?'

'He'll tell you.'

'I wish you'd never come,' he said bitterly, and strode off towards his house, his safe haven, his two normal nice women.

I spent the journey back to Newmarket knowing I'd been rash, but not really regretting it. I might think I knew who'd killed Paul, but proving it was different. The police would have to prove it, but I could at least direct their gaze.

I thought of one particular newspaper clipping that I'd found in the file now resting in O'Hara's safe.

Valentine had written it for his occasional gossip column. The paper was dated six weeks after Sonia's death, and didn't mention her.

It said: Newmarket sources tell me that the jockey P.G. Falmouth (19), familiarly known as 'Pig', has gone to Australia, and is seeking a work-permit to ride there, hoping to settle. Born and raised near the town of his name in Cornwall, Pig Falmouth moved to Newmarket two years ago, where his attractive personality and dedication to winning soon earned him many friends. Undoubtedly he would have prospered in England as his experience increased, but we wish him great success in his new venture overseas.

This item was accompanied by a smiling picture of a fresh-faced, good-looking young man in jockey's helmet and colours; but it was the headline of the section that had been for me the drench of ice-cold understanding.

'Exit,' it said, 'of the Cornish boy.'

CHAPTER 16.

We filmed the hanging scene the following morning, Monday, in the cut-and-separated loose box upstairs in the house.

Moncrieff flung a rope over the rafters and swung on it himself to test the set's robustness, but owing to the solid breeze blocks and huge metal angle-iron braces anchoring the new walls to the old floor, there wasn't the slightest quiver in the scenery, to the audible relief of the production department. The straw-covered concrete in the set sections deadened all hollow give-away underfoot echoing noises, those reality-destroying clatterings across the floors of many a supposedly well-built Hollywood 'mansion'.

'Where did you get to after our very brief meeting last night?' Moncrieff enquired. 'Howard was looking all over the hotel for you.'

'Was he?'

'Your car brought you back, you ate a room-service sandwich while we discussed today's work, and then you vanished.'

'Did I? Well, I'm here now.'

'I told Howard you would be sure to be here this morning.'

'Thanks so much.'

Moncrieff grinned. 'Howard was anxious.' anxious.'

'Mm. Did the Yvonne girl get here?'

'Down in make-up,' Moncrieff nodded lasciviously. 'And is she a dish.'

'Long blonde hair?'

He nodded. 'The wig you ordered. Where did you get to, in fact?'

'Around,' I said vaguely. I'd slipped my minder and walked a roundabout way, via the Heath, to the stables, booking in with the guard on the house door and telling him I wanted to work undisturbed and, if anyone asked, to say I wasn't there.

'Sure thing, Mr Lyon,' he promised, used to my vagaries, so I'd gone privately into the downstairs office and phoned Robbie Gill.

'Sorry to bother you on Sunday evening,' I apologised.

'I was only watching the telly. How can I help?'

I said, 'Is Dorothea well enough to be moved tomorrow instead of Tuesday?'

'Did you see her today? What did you think?'

'She's longing to go to the nursing home, she said, and a lot of her toughness of spirit is back. But medically... could she go?'

'Hm...'

'She's remembered a good deal more about being stabbed,' I said. 'She saw the attacker's face, but she doesn't know him. She also saw the knife that cut her.'

'God,' Robbie exclaimed, 'that knuckleduster thing?'

'No. It was the one that ended in me.'

'Christ.'

'So, move her tomorrow if you can. Give her a false name in the nursing home. She's at risk.'

'Bloody hell.'

'She remembers that Paul interrupted the attack on her and effectively saved her life. It's comforting her. She's amazing. She's had three terrible things happen, but she'll be all right, I think.'

'Spunky old woman. Don't worry, I'll shift her.'

'Great.' I paused. 'You remember the police took our fingerprints to match them with the prints in Dorothea's house?'

'Of course I do. They took Dorothea's and her friend Betty's and her husband's and worked out Valentine's from his razor.'

'And,' I said, 'there were others they couldn't match.'

'Sure. Several, I believe. I asked my police friend how their enquiries were progressing. Dead stop, I would guess.'

'Mm.' I said, 'Some of the prints they couldn't match would have been O'Hara's, and some would have been Bill Robinson's.' I explained Bill Robinson. 'And there has to be another Dorothea's attacker didn't wear gloves.'

Robbie said breathlessly, 'Are you sure?'

'Yes. She said she saw his hand through the knife and he had dirty fingernails.'

'Jeeze.'

'When he went to her house he didn't expect her to be there. He didn't plan in advance to attack her. He went to search with Paul for something Valentine might have had and I guess they ripped the place to bits from fury and frustration that they couldn't find anything. Anyway, his prints must be all over the place.'

Robbie, perplexed, asked, 'Whose?'

'I'll tell you when I'm sure.'

'Don't get yourself killed.'

'Of course not,' I said.

Yvonne came upstairs at the required time, and proved to be the regulation issue semi-anorexic Californian waif beloved of moguls, a culture concept a cosmos away from the real laughing reckless Sonia.

Sonia, at her death, had worn, according to the more conservative newspapers, 'a rose-red satin slip', and, according to the titillators, in blackest type, 'A shiny scarlet mini with shoe-string shoulder straps, and black finely-strapped sandals with high rhinestone heels'.

No wonder, I'd thought, that suicide had been in doubt.

Yvonne of the dream lovers was wearing a loose white day-dress described in American fashion circles as a 'float': that is to say, it softly outlined only what it touched. She also wore, at my request, chandelier pearl and gold earrings and a long pearl necklace nearly to her waist.

She looked beautifully ethereal and spoke like Texas.

'This morning.' I said, 'we're shooting the scenes in the right sequence. That's to say, first you enter through that split door.' I pointed. 'There will be back-lighting. When Moncrieff is ready, I'd like you to stand in the doorway and turn your head slowly until we say stop, then if you'll remember that position and stop your head right there for the take, we will get a dramatic effect. You will be entering but looking back. OK? I expect you know your lines.'

She gave me a limpid unintelligent wide-eyed look: great for the film, not so good for technical speed while we made it.

'They say,' she said, 'you get mad if you have to shoot a scene more then three times. That so?'

'Absolutely so.'

'Guess I'd better concentrate then.'

'Honey child,' I said in her accent, 'you do just that and I'll earn you talk-show spots.'

'The Today Show?'

'Nothing's impossible.'

Calculation clouded the peerless violet eyes and she went quietly off to one side and studied her script.

Battle lines drawn, we proceeded. When Moncrieff was satisfied with his light placement we stood Yvonne in the doorway and moved her inch by inch until the light outside the door shone through her flimsy float to reveal her body to the camera inside: too flat-chested for my interest, but of the dreamy other-world unreality I'd hoped for.

'Jeeze,' Moncrieff murmured, looking through his lens.

I said, 'Can you put a glint on those earrings?'

'You don't ask much!'

He positioned an inkie an inkie-dinkie, meaning a very small spotlight to give a glitter below her ears.

'Great,' I said. 'Everyone ready? We'll do a rehearsal. Yvonne, don't forget you're being followed by an earthy man who is parsecs away from a dream lover. You are already laughing at him in your mind, though not openly, as he has power to make Nash's life that's to say, your film husband's life very difficult. Just imagine you're being followed by a man you sexually despise but can't be rude to...'

Yvonne giggled. 'Who needs to act? I meet them every day.'

'I'll bet you do,' Moncrieff said under his breath.

'Right then,' I said, trying not to laugh, 'we'll do a walkthrough. Ready? And...' a pause, 'go.'

Yvonne got it dead right at the second rehearsal and then we shot the scene for real twice, both times fit to print.

'You're a doll,' I told her. She liked it, where Silva might have said 'sexism' or 'harassment'. I liked women, all sorts; I'd simply discovered, as I had with male actors, that it saved time to accept, not fight, their views of themselves in the world.

In the scene Yvonne, talking to a man out of shot, had been saying she'd promised to prepare the loose box for a soon-to-arrive horse, a job she'd forgotten earlier but was now doing before joining her husband at a drinks party, to be held somewhere on his way home from the races.

So silly about her white sandals, she said, on the rough flooring. Would he please help her move the stack of hay bales, since eyelashes fluttering he was so much bigger bigger and and stronger stronger than little Yvonne? than little Yvonne?

'I'd lie down and die for her,' Moncrieff observed.

'He more or less did.'

'Such a cynic,' Moncrieff told me, moving lights to a point high among the rafters.

I rehearsed Yvonne through the scene where she realised the man meant business against her wishes. We trekked through surprise, discomfort, revulsion and, dangerously, mockery. I made sure she understood and could personally relate to every step.

'Most directors just yell at me,' she said at one point, when she'd fluffed her lines in rehearsal for the fifth or sixth time.

'You look stunning,' I said. 'All you need to do is act stunned act stunned. Then laugh laugh at him. Some men can't bear women laughing at them. He's full of lust for you, and you think he's at him. Some men can't bear women laughing at them. He's full of lust for you, and you think he's funny funny. What you're doing is mocking him to madness. He's going to kill you.'

Total comprehension lit her sweet features. 'Get out the strait-jacket,' she said.

'Yvonne, I love you.'

We took a long series of shots of her face, one emotion at a time, and many of negative messages of body language and of the growth of fright, of panic, of desperate disbelief: enough to cut together the ultimate terror of approaching unexpected death.

We gave Yvonne a rest for lunch, while Moncrieff and I filmed the crews slapping heavy ropes sharply over the rafters, and tying frightful knots, to show the violence, the speed, the tack of mercy that I wanted. Naturally each segment took many minutes to stage and get right, but later, in cinemas, with every successful impression strung together slap, slap, slap the horror of the hanging would strike the popcorn crunchers silent.

I sat beside Yvonne on a hay bale. I said, 'This afternoon we are going to tie your wrists together with that thick rope now hanging free from that rafter.'

She took it easily.

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