CLIVE BARKER’S BOOKS OF BLOOD. Volume I. Chapter 4

Then the bloody door opened, and a draught blew up between them, cooling the point at issue.

Galloway almost turned round, then realized he was unbuckled, and stared instead into the mirror behind Diane to see the intruder’s face. It was Lichfield. He was looking straight at Galloway, his face impassive.

‘I’m sorry, I should have knocked.’

His voice was as smooth as whipped cream, betraying nary a tremor of embarrassment. Galloway wedged himself away, buckled up his belt and turned to Lichfield, silently cursing his burning cheeks.

‘Yes.. . it would have been polite,’ he said.

‘Again, my apologies. I wanted a word with—‘ his eyes, so deep-set they were unfathomable, were on Diane ‘— your star,’ he said.

Galloway could practically feel Diane’s ego expand at the word. The approach confounded him: had Lichfield

undergone a volte-face? Was he coming here, the repentant admirer, to kneel at the feet of greatness?

‘I would appreciate a word with the lady in private, if that were possible,’ the mellow voice went on.

‘Well, we were just —‘

‘Of course,’ Diane interrupted. ‘Just allow me a mo­ment, would you?’

She was immediately on top of the situation, tears forgotten.

‘I’ll be just outside,’ said Lichfield, already taking his leave.

Before he had closed the door behind him Diane was in front of the mirror, tissue-wrapped finger skirting her eye to divert a rivulet of mascara.

‘Well,’ she was cooing, ‘how lovely to have a well-wisher. Do you know who he is?’

‘His name’s Lichfield,’ Galloway told her. ‘He used to be a trustee of the theatre.’

‘Maybe he wants to offer me something.’

‘I doubt it.’

‘Oh don’t be such a drag Terence,’ she snarled. ‘You just can’t bear to have anyone else get any attention, can you?’

‘My mistake.’

She peered at her eyes.

‘How do I look?’ she asked.

‘Fine.’

‘I’m sorry about before.’

‘Before?’

‘You know.’

‘Oh… yes.’

‘I’ll see you in the pub, eh?’

He was summarily dismissed apparently, his function as lover or confidante no longer required.

In the chilly corridor outside the dressing room Lichfield was waiting patiently. Though the lights were better here

than on the ill-lit stage, and he was closer now than he’d been the night before, Galloway could still not quite make out the face under the wide brim. There was something

— what was the idea buzzing in his head? — something artificial about Lichfield’s features. The flesh of his face didn’t move as interlocking system of muscle and tendon, it was too stiff, too pink, almost like scar-tissue.

‘She’s not quite ready,’ Galloway told him.

‘She’s a lovely woman,’ Lichfield purred.

‘Yes.’

‘I don’t blame you…‘

‘Um.’

‘She’s no actress though.’

‘You’re not going to interfere are you, Lichfield? I won’t let you.’

‘Perish the thought.’

The voyeuristic pleasure Lichfield had plainly taken in his embarrassment made Galloway less respectful than he’d been.

‘I won’t have you upsetting her —‘

‘My interests are your interests, Terence. All I want to do is see this production prosper, believe me. Am I likely, under those circumstances, to alarm your Leading Lady? I’ll be as meek as a lamb, Terence.’

‘Whatever you are,’ came the testy reply, ‘you’re no lamb.’

The smile appeared again on Lichfield’s face, the tissue round his mouth barely stretching to accommodate his expression.

Galloway retired to the pub with that predatory sickle of teeth fixed in his mind, anxious for no reason he could focus upon.

In the mirrored cell of her dressing-room Diane Duvall was just about ready to play her scene.

‘You may come in now, Mr Lichfield,’ she announced. He was in the doorway before the last syllable of his name had died on her lips.

‘Miss Duvall,’ he bowed slightly in deference to her. She smiled; so courteous. ‘Will you please forgive my blundering in earlier on?’

She looked coy; it always melted men.

‘Mr Galloway—‘ she began.

‘A very insistent young man, I think.’

‘Yes.’

‘Not above pressing his attentions on his Leading Lady, perhaps?’

She frowned a little, a dancing pucker where the plucked arches of her brows converged.

‘I’m afraid so.’

‘Most unprofessional of him,’ Lichfield said. ‘But for­give me — an understandable ardour.’

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