to paint that woman,’ said Troy Alleyn, ‘for five years. And now look!’
She pushed the letter across the breakfast table. Her husband read it and raised an eyebrow. ‘Remarkable,’ he said.
‘I know. Especially the bit about you. What does it say, exactly? I was too excited to take it all in. Who’s the letter from, actually? Not from her, you’ll notice?’
‘It’s from Montague Reece, no less.’
‘Why, “no less". Who’s Montague Reece?’
‘I wish,’ said Alleyn, ‘he could hear you ask.’
‘Why?’ Troy repeated. ‘Oh, I know! Isn’t he very well off?’
‘You may say so. In the stinking-of-it department. Mr Onassis Colossus, in fact.’
‘I remember now. Isn’t he her lover?’
‘That’s it.’
‘All is made clear to me. I think. Do read it, darling. Aloud.’
‘All of it?’
‘Please.’
‘Here goes,’ said Alleyn and read:
‘Dear Mrs Alleyn,
‘I hope that is the correct way to address you. Should I perhaps have used your most celebrated soubriquet?
‘I write to ask if from November 1st you and your husband will be my guests at Waihoe Lodge, an island retreat I have built on a lake in New Zealand. It is recently completed and I dare to hope it will appeal to you. The situation is striking and I think I may say that my guests will be comfortable. You would have, as your studio, a commodious room, well-lit, overlooking the lake, with a view of distant mountains and, of course, complete freedom as to time and privacy.’
‘He sounds like a land-and-estate agent – all mod cons and the usual offices. Pray continue,’ said Troy.
‘I must confess that this invitation is the prelude to another and that is for you to paint a portrait of Madame Isabella Sommita who will be staying with us at the time proposed. I have long hoped for this. In my opinion, and I am permitted to say in hers also, none of her portraits hitherto has given us the true “Sommita".
‘We are sure that a “Troy” would do so quite marvellously!
‘Please say you approve the proposal. We will arrange transport, as my guest, of course, by air, and will settle details as soon as we hear, as I so greatly hope, that you will come. I shall be glad if you will be kind enough to inform me of your terms.
‘I shall write, under separate cover, to your husband whom we shall be delighted to welcome with you to the Lodge.
‘I am, believe me, dear Mrs Alleyn,
‘Yours most sincerely,
‘Montague Reece.’
After a longish pause Troy said: ‘Would it be going too far to paint her singing? You know, mouth wide open for a top note.’
‘Mightn’t she look as if she were yawning?’
‘I don’t think so,’ Troy brooded, and then with a sidelong grin at her husband, ‘I could always put a balloon coming out of her mouth with “A in alt” written in it.’
‘That would settle any doubts, of course. Except that I fancy it refers to male singers.’
‘You haven’t looked at your letter. Do look.’
Alleyn looked. ‘Here it is,’ he said. ‘Over-posh and posted in Sydney.’ He opened it.
‘What’s he say?’
‘The preamble’s much the same as yours and so’s the follow-up: the bit about him having to confess to an ulterior motive.’
‘Does he want you to paint his portrait, my poor Rory?’
‘He wants me to give them “my valued opinion” as to the possibility of obtaining police protection “in the matter of the persecution of Madame Sommita by a photographer of which I am no doubt aware.” Well, of all the damn cheek!’ said Alleyn. ‘Travel thirteen thousand miles to sit on an island in the middle of a lake and tell him whether or not to include a copper in his house party.’
‘Oh! Yes. The penny’s dropped. All that stuff in the papers. I didn’t really read it.’
‘You must be the only English-speaking human being who didn’t.’
‘Well, I did, really. Sort of. But the photographs were so hideous they put me off. Fill me, as I expect they say in Mr Reece’s circles, in.’
‘You remember how Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy, as she was then, was pestered by a photographer?’
‘Yes.’
‘It’s the same situation but much exaggerated. The Kennedy rumpus may have put the idea into this chap’s head. He signs himself “Strix". He’s actually followed the Sommita all over the world. Wherever she has appeared in opera or on the concert stage: Milan, Paris, Covent Garden, New York, Sydney. At first the photographs were the usual kind of thing with the diva flashing gracious smiles at the camera, but gradually differences crept in. They became more and more unflattering and he became more and more intrusive. He hid behind bushes. He trespassed on private ground and cropped up when and where he was least expected. On one occasion he joined the crowd round the stage door with the rest of the press, and contrived to get right up to the front.
‘As she came into the doorway and did her usual thing of being delighted and astonished at the size of the crowd he aimed his camera and at the same time blew a piercingly loud whistle. Her jaw dropped and her eyes popped and in the resulting photograph she looked as if someone had thumped her between the shoulder blades.
‘From then on the thing ripened into a sort of war of attrition. It caught the fancy of her enormous public, the photos became syndicated and the man is said to be making enormous sums of money. Floods of angry letters from her fans to the papers concerned. Threats. Unkind jokes in the worst possible taste. Bets laid. Preposterous stories suggesting he’s a cast-off lover taking his revenge or a tenor who fell out with her. Rumours of a nervous breakdown. Bodyguards. The lot.’
‘Isn’t it rather feeble of them not to spot him and manhandle him off?’
‘You’d have thought so, but he’s too smart for them. He disguises himself – sometimes bearded and sometimes not. Sometimes in the nylon stocking mask. At one time turned out like a City gent, at another like a Skid Row drop-out. He’s said to have a very, very sophisticated camera.’
‘Yes, but when he’s done it, why hasn’t somebody grabbed him and jumped on the camera? And what about her celebrated temperament? You’d think she’d set about him herself.’
‘You would, but so far she hasn’t done any better than yelling pen-and-ink.’
‘Well,’ Troy said, ‘I don’t see what you could be expected to do about it.’
‘Accept with pleasure and tell my AC that I’m off to the antipodes with my witch-wife? Because,’ Alleyn said, putting his hand on her head, ‘you are going, aren’t you?’
‘I do madly want to have a go at her: a great big flamboyant rather vulgar splotch of a thing. Her arms,’ Troy said reminiscently, ‘are indecent. White and flowing. You can see the brush strokes. She’s so shockingly sumptuous. Oh yes, Rory love, I’m afraid I must go.’
‘We could try suggesting that she waits till she’s having a bash at Covent Garden. No,’ said Alleyn, watching her, ‘I can see that’s no go, you don’t want to wait. You must fly to your commodious studio and in between sittings you must paint pretty peeps of snowy mountains