“Suppose it should be Rod after all?”
The tears that had gathered in her eyes slid down her cheeks unnoticed. Rod laughed awkwardly. “That’s frank anyway!” There was a brick-red flush on his face.
Pauline looked at Basil as directly as he had looked at her. “I know Rod has nothing to fear from truth. Go as far as you like!”
Something stirred in Rod’s eyes as he looked at her.
Basil hesitated. How young Pauline was! Only the very young had such faith that truth could not harm them or those they loved. He spoke briskly to scatter his own thoughts.
“All right. I’ll do what I can.” His eyes went to Rod’s hands. “Are you in the habit of that?”
“Of what?” Rod looked down at his hands. “Oh.” His flush deepened. He swept the sugar lumps together and dropped them into the bowl. “I’m sorry. I’m afraid I do fiddle with things.”
“Especially sugar lumps at table.” Pauline eyed him with almost motherly indulgence. “It’s a filthy habit. And he’ll have to get over it, now that sugar is being rationed.”
Basil pushed back his chair from the table. “Suppose we adjourn to the next room. There’s something there I want to show you.”
They crossed the hall to another long, narrow room with cream paneled walls washed primrose by the eastern sun. Basil went to a desk and took out Wanda’s script of
“Recognize this?”
Rod turned the pages. “It’s Wanda’s.”
“You’re sure it didn’t belong to the actor who played
“Of course not. I’ve seen this script in Wanda’s hands at every rehearsal. Seymour Hutchins, who played
“Have you any idea why a line spoken by Siriex should be marked in Wanda’s script?”
“No, unless it was the cue for some bit of business she had worked out.”
“It couldn’t have been that,” cried Pauline. “She had no bit of business at that point in the first act.”
“Last night Milhau told the police that the running time of the first act was supposed to be forty-eight minutes,” went on Basil. “Did it run exactly that time last night?”
“Well, it may have been off schedule a minute or so either way,” admitted Rod. “But no more than that. Milhau’s very strict about timing.”
“Do you think you could make out a rough timetable of the principal incidents in the first act?”
“Such as?”
“Entrances and exits of
“I can try.” Rod sat down at the desk and studied the script, jotting figures on the margin. After a few moments he drew a sheet of notepaper toward him and scribbled. “Is this what you want?”
Basil and Pauline read the time table over his shoulder.
8:35
Curtain rises:
8:40
Wanda enters left:
8:46
Leonard enters left and opens alcove doors:
8:51
Leonard near
8:51–8:52
Wanda near
8:53–9:00
Rodney enters left:
9:01
Rodney near
9:02–9:03
Leonard near
9:04–9:05
Leonard exits left:
9:06
Rodney near
9:07–9:24
Leonard re-enters:
9:24
Wanda near
9:25–9:28
Curtain:
9:28
9:30
“Of course you understand that’s only a rough estimate,” said Rod. “Based on my memory of about how long each scene ran at rehearsal.”
“Even if the timing isn’t accurate to the split second, it gives me an idea of the continuity of events on the stage,” replied Basil. “And that’s what I want.”
“That’s simple,” said Pauline. “Characters in order of their approaches to
“And that’s when I was holding the knife over
“I don’t believe you’ve allotted enough time to Wanda,” cried Pauline. “All during your scene with
“But she wasn’t actually in the alcove!” insisted Rod. “She couldn’t have stabbed
“N-no.” Pauline’s tone was grudging. “But she might have seen something . . .”
Basil was seeing the stage again in his mind’s eye—the actors coming and going as they had last night. “What about gloves?” he asked suddenly. “I seem to recall that Wanda came in carrying a muff without gloves, while you and Leonard both entered with gloves and pulled them off before approaching