"What's in there? Is it an animal?"
Nialla laughed.
"Better than that. It's Rupert's pride and joy: a magnetic recorder. Had it sent him from America. Cost him a pretty penny, I can tell you. Still, it's cheaper than hiring the BBC orchestra to play the incidental music!"
Rupert had already begun to tug boxes out of the Austin, grunting as he worked. His arms were like dockyard cranes, lifting and turning ... lifting and turning, until at last, nearly everything was piled in the grass.
"Allow me to lend a hand," the vicar said, seizing a rope handle at the end of a black coffin-shaped trunk with the word "Galligantus" stenciled upon it in white letters, as Rupert took the other end.
Nialla and I went back and forth, back and forth, with the lighter bits and pieces, and within half an hour, everything was piled up inside the parish hall in front of the stage.
"Well done!" the vicar said, dusting off the sleeves of his jacket. "Well done, indeed. Now then, would Saturday be suitable? For the show, I mean? Let me see ... today is Thursday ... that would give you an extra day to make ready, as well as time to have your van repaired."
"Sounds all right to me," Rupert said. Nialla nodded, even though she hadn't been asked.
"Saturday it is, then. I'll have Cynthia run off handbills on the hectograph. She can take them round the shops tomorrow ... slap a few up in strategic places. Cynthia's such a good sport about these things."
Of the many phrases that came to mind to describe Cynthia Richardson, "good sport" was not among them; "ogress," however, was.
It was after all Cynthia, with her rodent features, who had once caught me teetering tiptoe on the altar of St. Tancred's, using one of Father's straight razors to scrape a sample of blue zafre from a medieval stained-glass window. Zafre was an impure basic arsenate of cobalt, prepared by roasting, which the craftsmen of the Middle Ages had used for painting on glass, and I was simply dying to analyze the stuff in my laboratory to determine how successful its makers had been in the essential step of freeing it of iron.
Cynthia had seized me, upended me, and spanked me on the spot, making what I thought to be unfair use of a nearby copy of
"What you have done, Flavia, is not worthy of congratulation," Father said when I reported this outrage to him. "You have ruined a perfectly good Thiers-Issard hollow-ground blade."
I have to admit, though, that Cynthia was a great organizer, but then, so were the men with whips who got the pyramids built. Certainly, if anyone could manage to paper Bishop's Lacey from end to end in three days with handbills, it was Cynthia Richardson.
"Hold on!" the vicar exclaimed. "I've just had the most splendid idea! Tell me what you think. Why not present
Rupert did not reply at once, but stood rubbing his chin. Even I could see instantly that two performances would double the take at the box office.
"Well ..." he said at last. "I suppose. It would have to be the same show both times, though ..."
"Splendid!" said the vicar. "What's it to be, then ... the program, that is?"
"Open with a short musical piece," Rupert said. "It's a new one I've been working up. No one's seen it yet, so this would be a good chance to try it out. Then
"Smashing!" the vicar said. He pulled a folded sheet of paper and the nub of a pencil from an inner pocket and scribbled a few notes.
"How's this?" he asked, with a final flourish, then, with a pleased look on his face, read aloud what he had written:
"I hope you'll forgive the small fib and the exclamation point," he whispered to Nialla.
"(Operated by the acclaimed Rupert Porson. As seen on the BBC Television)