He looked at his watch.
“Hey,” Phil said, stepping in front of Ott who smiled more broadly, a mistake when dealing with my brother.
I could see that Phil was giving serious consideration to committing mayhem.
“We can talk after the memorial service,” said Ott, taking a step to his right so that he could see past Phil.
I touched Phil’s arm, realizing too late that instead of restraining him, it might turn him on me.
“We’re about to begin,” Ott announced.
“Oh Christ,” sighed Phil. “This is bullshit, Tobias.”
I shrugged. One of the Dranabadurs standing near the wall on our right reached up and flicked a switch. The room went dark. Then a dim green glow came from the ceiling. Light danced green on the well-polished head of the dark skull of Bombay, still sitting in the same place he had last faced me.
“Magic,” said Ott, his face green, his smile more than a little nuts. “We live to perform, to dazzle, to mystify. We honor at the anniversary of their moment of departure those who have come before us, those who have achieved.…” He hesitated trying to find the right words.
“The highest plateau of deception,” one of the whiskered group supplied.
“Yes, thank you,” Ott said. “The highest plateau of deception. Dranabadur’s singing blade remains among the list of eighteen illusions of magic that have never been duplicated, the secrets of which have never been revealed and have gone to the grave with their creators.”
There was a pause during which Ott took a long drink, looked at Phil and me and then back at the group of costumed guests.
“Another year,” said Ott. “Has anyone solved the mystery? Can anyone claim the reward?”
“Yes,” came a voice from the corridor behind us.
A startled Ott swung around, the remains of his drink spraying me. In the green glow, a figure stepped out of the corridor and into the room.
“Stephen, the lights,” Ott called.
The green glow disappeared. There was an instant of darkness and then light.
The man who had stepped out of the corridor was Blackstone.
“I didn’t invite you,” said Ott, clearly shaken, his voice rising.
Blackstone was wearing his tux and tails from the show. His white hair billowed. His mustache caught the light.
“The singing blade,” Blackstone said.
“You don’t know how it was done,” Ott said.
“But I do,” said Blackstone. “And it is not for sale, nor do I ever intend to perform it. There are some secrets which are better not revealed. The legend of Dranabadur would be gone.”
“You lie,” Ott challenged, his voice quivering.
“No,” said Blackstone calmly, facing the frozen costumed group in front of him and looking at them as he named “Wayne, Paul, Walter, Milton, Steven, Bill, Richard, Leo.”
“What do you want?” Ott demanded.
“What do I want? A man of questionable motive and character was murdered at the theater tonight during my performance. A young woman in my troupe was shot tonight by a man dressed as …”
He pointed dramatically at each of the people in front of him.
“… Dranabadur. Knowing of this annual party, it seemed a reasonable place to come for answers.”
I watched Ott’s face. Tension. Then a series of quick contortions and decisions. Throw the magician out of his house? This was Blackstone. The eight men in costume behind him might not want to take part of the blame from throwing Blackstone out. They might even go with him. Ott’s face loosened a little. Phil and I had been hired to find out why Ott had set up the testimonial dinner for Blackstone. How would it look if he threw out of his home the man he was going to honor on Wednesday?
“Forgive me,” Ott said. “I was … of course you are welcome, anytime.”
“Mr. Pevsner, Mr. Peters,” said Blackstone. “I assume you are here seeking the same answers. Please.”
Ott moved to the side to sulk and pour himself another drink. The stage had been taken from him. I think he was shaking.
“How long have you been here?” I asked the group.
They looked at each other and one, the one named Stephen who had operated the lights, said,
“Since about eleven. I mean most of us started to arrive about eleven. I came about ten minutes earlier. Marcus wanted to go over my handling the lights.”
No help there. Anyone in the room could have shot Cunningham and Gwen and been here by eleven.
“I’d like to talk to everyone here alone, one at a time in some nice quiet room,” said Phil.
“No,” said Ott, regaining a touch of courage. “This is my house. You are not the police. These are my colleagues. The gathering is over. The mood is destroyed. I am feeling decidedly drained. Please leave, depart, go, and I shall see you all on Wednesday night.”
Slowly, led by the little chubby one called Leo, they moved past us giving good-byes, exchanging a word or two with Blackstone. Phil didn’t try to stop them though he gave each one his look that said, ‘I know you’re guilty.’
When they had all left, Ott faced us and said, “Anything else?”
He was very calm again. I didn’t like the latest smile. He had something up his sleeve, probably an ace of spades.
“Why did you come to the Pantages tonight?” I asked. “The show was almost over.”
“A whim, to see a little of the master at work,” he said with a thick layer of sarcasm.
“Just happened to be the night someone was murdered,” said Phil.
“Didn’t discover that till I entered the theater and was stopped by a police officer,” said Ott.
“Didn’t know the dead man, Cunningham?” I tried.
“That’s what the police asked me. I’ll give you the same answer I gave them, no. More questions?”
“Someone was supposed to be at the theater, someone who had threatened to ruin my show if I didn’t turn over my secrets,” said Blackstone.
“You think it was me?” asked Ott, pointing to himself.
“Yes,” Blackstone said.
“Why not the man who was shot? Or the one who shot him?” asked Ott smugly.
“Pieces of the puzzle,” said Blackstone.
“Well,” said Ott with an overdone sarcasm, “if anyone can put the pieces together, it’s the great Blackstone. I am, as I said, drained. I will see you all on Wednesday night,” Ott said, holding his glass up in a toast to Blackstone.
We went to the front door. I was about to say “Open Sesame” when Blackstone simply clapped his hands and the door opened. We stepped out into the night past the gargoyles. The doors closed.
“I hate to say it,” said Blackstone, “considering the murder and Gwen’s shooting, but I enjoyed that.”
We moved to the street. The cars that had filled the driveway when we arrived were gone. There was one, lone dark Buick parked in front of Phil’s Ford. Pete Bouton stood next to it.
“Alright?” he asked.
“Fine,” said Blackstone.
“A question,” I said. “Do you really know how to do the singing blade trick?”
“Ah,” said Blackstone looking at his brother. “Pete?”
“I’d say there are maybe eight or nine people here in the United States, four in Europe, one in Australia and who knows how many in China who could do it,” said Pete.
“Then why don’t they?” Phil asked.
“It’s not much of a trick,” said Blackstone, looking back at Ott’s house. “Any really competent illusionist could figure out how it was done. The technology has come a long way since Dranabadur. But, that said, there are still brilliant illusions, which have endured for centuries. The singing blade, however, is not one of them.”
“Ott’s an idiot?” Phil asked.
“Mr. Ott is a wealthy amateur in the worst sense of the word,” said Blackstone. “Given the opportunity, he