Stagestruck

Stagestruck Read Free

Book: Stagestruck Read Free
Author: Peter Lovesey
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place, then.’
    It sounded like sarcasm. Already under strain, Shearman said with more force than the first time, ‘But you’re not needed.’
    ‘Like London’s Noble Fire Brigade?’
    ‘What?’
    ‘Belloc.’
    ‘I beg your pardon.’
    The sergeant chanted, ‘“Until Matilda’s Aunt succeeded in showing them they were not needed.”’
    ‘I’m a busy man.’
    ‘Then permit me to introduce Constable Reed. Reed can write at speed, so Reed is needed. Oh, yes, there is a need for Reed.’
    The young policewoman looked at Shearman and winked, as if asking him to make allowance. To confirm that this was for real, she had opened a notebook and was writing in it.
    ‘And I’m Sergeant Dawkins,’ the ponderous introduction continued, ‘in pursuit of the truth, and as the poet said, “Beauty is truth, truth beauty, that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.” So I’m needed also. Dawkins and Reed, addressing the need. We’re here about the occurrence last night.’
    Out of all the verbiage one word struck home, and to Shearman’s ear it carried dangerous overtones. ‘Occurrence?’
    Sergeant Dawkins said, ‘In your theatre, on your stage.’ Then he had the cheek to reach into one of the model stage sets on Shearman’s bookcase and touch the figure of an actor, tipping it over, face down.
    Shearman was incensed. He wanted to tell this smart-arse to go to hell, but you don’t say that to a policeman. ‘You didn’t have to do that. I know what you’re talking about and I wouldn’t call it an occurrence.’
    ‘What would you call it, then?’
    ‘I don’t know. It didn’t amount to anything.’
    ‘An incident?’
    ‘Nothing like that. One of the cast was taken ill, that’s all.’
    ‘Occurrence.’ Dawkins made a horizontal gesture with his right hand like a cricket umpire signalling. Then he repeated the movement six inches higher. ‘Incident.’ Then higher again. ‘Offence. Occurrence, incident, offence.’
    ‘It’s not an offence , for God’s sake. Anyway, we’re dealing with it ourselves.’
    ‘I bet you are.’
    Blatant insolence. If this man had been on the theatre staff he wouldn’t have lasted a moment longer. ‘It’s the responsible thing to do,’ Shearman said.
    ‘Dealing with it?’
    ‘Of course. That’s my job.’
    ‘And we investigate. That’s our job.’
    ‘But I didn’t send for you.’
    Sergeant Dawkins parted his lips in a grin that revealed sharp canines. ‘If we waited to be invited, we wouldn’t get out at all.’
    Shearman felt as if he’d strayed into a play by Samuel Beckett. ‘So on whose authority are you here?’
    ‘Take your pick.’
    He hesitated, wary of a trap. ‘My pick of what?’
    ‘Avon and Somerset Police. The Home Office. Her gracious Majesty.’
    Either the man was a crank, or he was trying to wind Shearman up for a purpose. ‘Who, precisely, sent you?’
    ‘Are you thinking we came of our own volition? Are you thinking of us as ambulance chasers?’
    Shearman gave up. The whole conversation was surreal.
    ‘Rest assured,’ Dawkins said. ‘We’re not ambulance chasers. We’re at the receiving end.’
    ‘There’s no point in this. I don’t follow what you’re saying.’
    ‘We don’t follow either.’
    ‘Follow what?’
    ‘Ambulances.’
    ‘It wasn’t me who mentioned ambulances.’
    ‘We follow up. Follow up occurrences. Or incidents. Or offences. When an occurrence is deemed to be an offence you really do have something to be concerned about. Any unexplained injury of a serious nature that shows up in A & E gets referred to us and we follow up. Were you present at the occurrence yourself?’
    That word again. Shearman’s mind was made up. He refused to submit to interrogation by these two. They had to be challenged here and now. ‘This has gone far enough. I intend to speak to your senior officer.’
    Dawkins was unmoved. ‘You’ll be wasting your time and ours, sir. There’s a chain of command and it’s

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