'Quiet!'
'Terribly sorry,' I apologized. 'Purely reflex action.'
'Quiet!'
'Speck of dust, I'm afraid.'
'Quiet!'
'Rather dusty places, these Studios.'
'For God's sake!' shouted Stringfellow. 'Can't you control yourself at your age? We'll go again. Stand by, everyone. Take two, Action.'
Hosegood hiccupped.
'Would you have the kindness to hiccup just a little more softly, Mr Hosegood?' asked Stringfellow. 'I fear it may inconvenience us by getting on the sound-track. Once again. Take three. Action.'
But Quintin Finn had some dandruff on his collar, and a chap with a whisk came to brush it off.
'Take four,' continued Stringfellow, now looking like Thomas Carlyle in the middle of one of his famous attacks of the sulks. 'This is only costing us a hundred and fifty quid a minute. All right, Melody? Action.'
'One second,' said Petunia's mum.
'Oh, God,' said Stringfellow.
'My daughter's hair's not right at the back.'
I began to feel sorry for the Stringfellow chap, even though he didn't understand the elements of nasal physiology.
'Make-up! Please fix Miss Madder's hair. At the back.'
They got ready to start again, and I was feeling pretty excited at seeing a real film being shot, when there was a shout from the back of 'Tea break!' and everyone knocked off for a cup and a bun.
I didn't have the chance for a word with Melody, because she was kept talking in a corner by Adam Stringfellow. And anyway my attention was divided between Hosegood, who'd gone green, and Quintin Finn, who was asking my opinion of all his pictures.
'Do go and see my next one, dear,' said Quintin. 'I'm a commando major, and it's ever so exciting. There goes the shooting bell again. I
'With the permission of Mrs Madder and the man with the chronic hay-fever,' Stringfellow announced, as the bell stopped, 'we will now go again. Quiet everyone, for God's sake. At your marks, Melody? Right. Take five. Action.'
That time they started, but Melody got her lines mixed up.
'Again,' said Stringfellow, with the expression of Sir Lancelot Spratt when the gastroscope bulb went out. 'No wonder people watch television. Take six. Action.'
Poor Melody, possibly rattled by the sight of Hosegood undoing his waistcoat, made a mess of it again.
'In Heaven's name, Miss Madder! You've only to say, 'Thank you for a wonderful evening.' Do try and concentrate, darling,
'Don't you talk to my daughter in that tone,' said Mum.
'If you interrupt any more, Mrs Madder, I shall ask you to leave the set.'
She got up. 'You will, will you? And where would any of you be without my daughter, I'd like to know?'
'I'm sorry, Mrs Madder. Deeply sorry. But I am suffering from bad nerves and an inadequate budget and I cannot stand any more nonsense from you or anyone-'
There was a howl beside me, as Hosegood staggered to his feet gripping his epigastrium.
'Damn it!' he gasped. 'It's all the fault of that bloody ginger tart!'
'What did you call my daughter, you swine?' Mum shouted. 'Marry her? Over my dead body!'
And she hit him on the head with a convenient carpenter's hammer.
19
'What am I supposed to do at this performance, anyway?' asked Petunia.
'Nothing, except read Sir Lancelot's little speech. I've sub-edited it a bit, by the way. I didn't think there was much point in your quoting in Latin.'
'Won't I have to talk to a lot of doctors?'
'Only my cousin Miles, and he's been incapable of speech for days. The posh job he's after at St Swithin's is decided next Thursday week.'
Petunia lit a cigarette.
'One thing, I'm not half so scared of doctors and hospitals as I used to be. Not after visiting poor dear Jimmy after his accident.'
'How is the patient, by the way?'
'Oh, fine. The doctors have let him out for convalescence. He's gone to Morecambe.'
It was the middle of September and autumn had come to London, with the news-vendors' placards changing from CLOSE OF PLAY to CLASSIFIED RESULTS and the first fierce winds starting to tear the summer dresses off the trees. I'd just picked up Petunia at her Chelsea flat and was driving her across to Sir Lancelot's meeting in St Swithin's.
'I'll nip in and collect his Lordship and his lolly,' I said, drawing up in Belgrave Square. 'Once you've said your little piece he's only got to hand Sir Lancelot his ten thousand quid, then we can all go off and have a drink. It's as simple as that.'
I found Lord Nutbeam sitting by the fire, sealing the envelope.
'Hello,' I greeted him. 'And how are we feeling this morning?'
I'd become a little worried about my patient in the past few weeks. He'd been oddly subdued and gloomy, and inclined to sit staring out of the window, like in his worst Long Wotton days. But I supposed this was reasonable in a chap who'd just finished a couple of months trying out all the night-clubs in London.
'I am still a little low, thank you, Doctor. A little low. Indeed, I fear I'm hardly up to the strain of presenting my modest donation in person.'
I nodded. 'I certainly wouldn't recommend a stuffy meeting if you don't feel equal to it. Though everyone will be frightfully disappointed, of course.'
'Besides, I have a visitor calling at noon, and I shouldn't like to keep him waiting.'
'I'll give it to the Lord Mayor to hand over, then,' I suggested.
'The Lord Mayor? I'd prefer it if you'd just quickly present it yourself, Doctor.'
'Me? But dash it! I'm not nearly important enough.'
'Oh, come, my dear Doctor. I assure you that you are, in my eyes, at any rate. I shall stay here, I think, and read a book. Or perhaps I shall play a few pieces on the piano.'
'Right ho,' I agreed, anxious to be off. 'I'll tell you all the nice things they say in the vote of thanks.'
The meeting itself, like any other of Sir Lancelot's special performances inside or out of his operating theatre, was organized on a grand scale. The old Founders' Hall at St Swithin's could look pretty impressive, with all those portraits of dead surgeons glaring down at you from the walls, not to mention the scarlet robes and bunches of flowers and chaps popping about taking photographs and the television cameras. I'd been a bit worried how the consultants at St Swithin's would react to Petunia as she appeared in a dress cut down to her xiphisternum, but they seemed delighted to meet her and all bowed over her politely as they shook hands. Sir Lancelot himself greeted us very civilly, ushering us to a couple of gilt chairs in the middle of the dais, where he'd arranged the Lord Mayor and some of the most expensive blood-pressures in the City.
'I am indeed sorry to hear Lord Nutbeam is indisposed,' he remarked, 'but I need hardly say your appearance here today, Miss Madder, will attract considerable interest to our cause. May I introduce one of my junior colleagues, Mr Miles Grimsdyke? He is taking the chair.'
Sir Lancelot banged on the table.
'Your Grace, My lord Marquis, My lords, My lord Mayor, ladies and gentlemen,' he began, 'may I invite silence for our Chairman?'