Free Novel Read

Murder as a Fine Art Page 14


  “I remember hearing about an artist from Wales waiting for the right snow conditions,” said Laura. “Now I guess we know why.”

  “Keep on reading, “Richard told her. “Look at all the grants she received for this project. The lady is a grant junkie.”

  “She certainly knows how to work the system,” agreed Laura as she read the grateful acknowledgments of grants from the Canada Council, the Guggenheim, and two other foundations whose names she didn’t recognize. Under the heading Contributions, the artist thanked all those who had contributed to the project. Laura recognized a couple of names: Charlene Adams, the lesbian printmaker, and, among the men, Jeremy Switzer. Trust Jeremy to get involved in something like this. He would load up with a couple of beers and laugh with delight as he peed into the pristine snow.

  The attendant was still immersed in her book as they left. Richard, who was enjoying himself enormously, stopped at her desk to tell her how fortunate they were to have caught the exhibit before it was taken down.

  “Oh, but it’s been extended for another month,” she said.

  “That’s odd. I thought it had to come down to make room for John Smith’s performance.”

  “That’s been moved. Haven’t you heard? There’s been so much interest in his recital that they’ve decided to transfer it to the Eric Harvie Theatre. Look at the poster by the main door as you leave.”

  They stopped to examine the poster, which was just inside the front door. A wide band of paper announcing the change in venue—” by popular demand”— had been pasted diagonally across the poster.

  “What do you think of that?” John Smith suddenly appeared in the doorway. Uncharacteristically, he seemed almost excited.

  “Congratulations,” said Richard. “This should make you famous.”

  John Smith’s thin lips tightened. “Fame means nothing to me.”

  “Come off it,” Laura scoffed. “You’re a performance artist and, by definition, performance artists need audiences. The bigger the better.”

  John Smith gave her a measured look, then drew himself up. “As usual, you are right. When John Smith creates Art, he wants the world to know about it,” he chuckled as if suddenly struck by an amusing idea.

  “I’d like to show you something,” he said, falling into step beside them. “Why don’t you both come to my studio?”

  Richard cocked an inquiring eyebrow at Laura, and she nodded. Viewing John Smith’s art usually meant being the victim of it. Nevertheless, she was curious to see what went on in his studio. He had the Ron Thom Studio, designed by the late Toronto architect, located directly across from Richard’s studio and next to where the boat studio had once stood.

  John Smith unlocked his studio door and waved them in with a low bow. Inside, five female mannequins, all of them naked to the waist, were the first things that caught the eye. They were grouped by themselves in a dark corner. Thinking there would be a video camera somewhere, Laura kept her face expressionless as she gave them a cursory look. One mannequin clutched the bars of a small cage, another was lashed to a cross, the third was tied to a chair, and the remaining two were shackled together.

  But John Smith didn’t seem interested in the mannequins. Maybe they were props from a past installation, or part of a project he had abandoned. He didn’t so much as glance at them as he led his guests over to a paint-daubed bench beside an equally splattered sink — the Thom Studio was normally used by painters. He had assembled what looked like a junior crime lab on the bench. There was a small microscope, a magnifying glass, a fingerprint kit, a test tube rack, and various small jars and plastic bags. The display looked like the sort of thing that a pre-teen playing detective might have put together. Laura looked for her lock of hair among the objects littering the bench, but it didn’t seem to be there. But there were plenty of other items with a human connection: a cigarette butt smeared with lipstick, a sheet of music — Marek’s probably — the notorious slice of tape, a number of Polaroid prints, one of which, disturbingly, showed the interior of Laura’s studio. Richard swore under his breath and picked up a typed sheet of manuscript covered with penciled notations.

  “This is mine. What are you doing with it?”

  “I like to have little mementos of my friends,” replied John Smith looking amused when Richard folded the page and put it in his pocket. Laura was sure he would have a copy somewhere. He made no attempt to explain what he was doing with the equipment and the bizarre collection of personal items. He seemed content to have them know they were there. As so often was the case with him, the symbolism seemed more important than the reality. While he hovered over the bench, Laura glanced around the cluttered studio, looking for the video camera. Intentionally or otherwise, John Smith had transformed the studio into a surrealistic happening. Masks and costumes were strewn about everywhere; some were hanging on the walls, others were lying on the floor and along the back of the sofa. A muffled whirring sound gave away the camera’s location. It was hidden inside a grotesque mask that John Smith had once worn to a “Bad Dreams” party at the Centre. The mask had a gaping mouth that accommodated the camera’s wide-angle lens. It was probably capable of filming almost everything that took place in the studio.

  Laura decided to ignore it, and turned back to John Smith with a look that seemed to ask, “Is that all there is?” He smiled thinly, pulled a lever, and a figure, arms flapping wildly, sprang up from behind the sofa. Its blue mouth leering horribly, it swayed from side to side before finally coming to rest.

  “This is quite a collection of toys you have here.” Richard gave the dummy a push, making it sway on its springs again.

  “It’s better at night with the lights off,” John Smith said, with a look of childish disappointment. “His face glows in the dark.”

  Laura, who was beginning to relax and enjoy herself, sat down on the sofa, ready for whatever other treats John Smith might have in store for them. A Bible lay open on the coffee table. Wondering whether it would explode in her face, she picked it up. It was opened at the Book of Revelation. Watching her, John Smith nodded approvingly. “That’s what I’m going to call my performance. Revelation.”

  “Revelation about what? Or need I ask?”

  “You’ll find out at the proper time.” John Smith tried to look omniscient, but only succeeded in looking smug.

  “Is it all right if I move this?” Laura pointed to a gorilla mask glaring over her shoulder.

  “If it bothers you, yes.” John Smith seemed to feel he had scored a minor victory.

  “It doesn’t bother me. It’s just in my way.” Turning to pick up the mask, Laura saw a large paper dragon lying on the floor behind the sofa. It looked oddly pathetic, as if it were dying. Then Laura saw that what she at first had taken to be wounds were just the spaces where John Smith had yet to finish covering the bamboo frame with crepe paper. The dragon was red, or would be when it was finished. Looking more closely, Laura saw that it was designed to be worn as a costume. There was an opening in its belly where an actor, presumably John Smith, could put it on.

  Revelation. Laura’s parents had dutifully sent her to Sunday School until she convinced them that her time would be better spent painting. By then, however, she had been exposed to the apocalyptic visions in the Book of Revelation. It was a nightmarish watercolour she did of the fifth angel, his trumpet blaring while a blazing star fell from heaven, and fire and smoke rose from the bottomless pit that finally persuaded her parents to let her stay home.

  “The great red dragon. Wasn’t he ...?” Laura picked up the Bible, turned some pages and began to read aloud. “‘And another portent appeared in heaven; behold a great red dragon, with seven heads and seven diadems upon his heads. His tail swept down a third of the stars of heaven, and cast them to the earth.’” She closed the Bible and placed it back on the table. “Is the great red dragon going to be your messenger?”

  “Very good, Laura. You’re very quick. But you’ll have to wait for the night of the performa
nce.”

  But Laura wasn’t listening. One of the mannequins had moved! The telltale movement was almost imperceptible, just a slight rise of a breast as she eased the pressure of the thongs that bound her to the cross. Laura was mildly surprised that she hadn’t spotted her before, but John Smith had cleverly managed to divert their attention. Now that she knew what she was looking for, it was easy to detect the slight movement of the model’s chest as she took a shallow breath. A quick glance at the other figures confirmed that they were “real” mannequins. Once again, John Smith had stood reality on its head.

  “She must be terribly uncomfortable holding her breath like that,” Laura remarked casually.

  “She likes it,” John Smith snapped. He looked thoroughly put out. Laura was puzzled as to what the “fake” mannequin was doing there. John Smith could-n’t have known she and Richard would be coming back to the studio with him. Maybe it was a rehearsal, or more likely, John Smith had deliberately gone looking for some unsuspecting victims he could lure into the studio and startle out of their wits when the mannequin suddenly came to life. He must have been hugging himself with glee when she and Richard agreed to visit him.

  “Are you all right?” Richard asked the woman with genuine concern. While this had all the earmarks of one of John Smith’s performances, it was possible that she had been tied up against her will.

  “I’m okay,” she said, shrugging her shoulders.

  “It’s Charlene, isn’t it?” Although her shorn blond hair was covered with a black wig, Laura recognized the printmaker who worked part-time in housekeeping. Laura had seen a revealing collection of Polaroid’s in Charlene’s studio in the art building. The walls were lined with pictures of Charlene and her girlfriends laughing, drinking wine, hugging and kissing one another.

  “Yeah,” she replied with another shrug. Suddenly the thongs fell away from her wrists, dropping to the floor with a soft thud. Rubbing her wrists, she stepped away from the cross and unhurriedly took her shirt down from a hook and slipped into it.

  Richard signalled that it was time to leave. As they walked toward the door, John Smith placed his hand on Laura’s arm. “You’re very good, you know. Very observant. I like that. How would you like to assist me with my project?”

  Remembering how the performance artist had fixated on Erika in the days before her death, Laura wondered if she was to become his next subject. She had no intention of letting that happen.

  “I’m sure that would be very interesting,” she said. “But I’m totally wrapped up in my own work at the moment. As a fellow artist, I know you will understand.”

  Put that way, John Smith had no choice but to accept her refusal. But there was something threatening in the scowl that darkened his face as Richard held the door open for her and followed her out.

  “Listen,” said Laura as she and Richard crossed the footbridge. “It’s Schubert,” she said as the gentle notes wafted through the air. “That must be Isabelle practicing the sonatas.”

  The window was partially open and a gentle breeze tugged at the lightly woven drapes, spreading them slightly apart. Isabelle was seated at the Baldwin, her back to them as her fingers moved over the keys. They lingered for a few moments while Laura fed the scene into her visual memory book. She would paint it, sooner than later.

  “Are we going to see each other tonight?” Richard asked as they resumed their leisurely stroll.

  “Not tonight. I’ve got some serious reading to do.” Laura paused and laid a hand on Richard’s arm. “I took one of Henry’s books out of the library. I need a block of time to really delve into it.”

  Richard stared at her for a moment, then shrugged, and said, “Everyone to their own taste,” as they walked on.

  Propped up in bed, Laura opened Demystifying Deconstructionism. Its weight made her grateful that she had brought her portable reading stand from Denver with her. She had expected Henry’s book to be heavy going, but soon found that it was highly readable. The sarcasm and condescension that marred his every day conversation were totally absent in his writing. It helped that she agreed with his central thesis — that deconstructionism was a self-destructing philosophy that failed to recognize that the whole could be more that the sum of its parts. Looking up from the page, Laura nodded to herself. Henry’s book itself was an example of what he was saying. In addition to the words and the ideas, there was also his prose style, sure-footed and lucid. If, as the deconstructionists would have it, you took that away and broke the text down into the individual words, attaching equal weight to each one, the whole exercise would become meaningless. Unavoidably perhaps, Norrington occasionally lapsed into professional jargon, twice forcing Laura out of bed to consult her dictionary. But she always enjoyed learning new words, no matter how arcane.

  “Right on,” she found herself murmured as she read a paragraph that stoutly declared there was nothing wrong with fiction “constructing rather than reflecting realty.”

  Her eyes were beginning to burn. Marking her place with the flap of the dust jacket, she was surprised to see that she had read almost half the thick tome. Holding it with both hands, she placed in on the bookshelf next to the row of Richard’s novels. There’s plenty of room for both of you in the world of literature, she thought to herself. Richard knew that, but Norrington refused to accept it.

  She turned out the light and stepped out onto the balcony. The dark mass of Mount Rundle was limned with moonlight. With a slight shudder Laura realized it was eerily like the way it had been lit by the fire that took Erika’s life.

  chapter fourteen

  John Smith must have worked all night, thought Laura as she read one of his new posters on her way to breakfast. He would be determined to fill the theatre. Having it only half-full would be an intolerable blow to his pride. The poster confirmed the change of venue and promised startling revelations when John Smith, “who knows all, would reveal all.” There was no mention of what the “all” might be, although, under the circumstances, there was a clear inference that it had something to do with the mysterious deaths on campus.

  Those deaths continued to remain mysterious, Laura mused as she stood before the poster, lost in thought. With the subcutaneous bruising, Montrose’s death might well have been murder although Jeremy, the only one known to have a motive, apparently had an unshakable alibi. Erika’s death was almost certainly murder, but what was the motive? It was Geoff Hamilton who had made the one telephone call she received, and she might well have told him that they were through. Karen obviously thought of him as a possible suspect.

  Laura snapped out of her reverie when Richard walked up to stand beside her. Scanning the poster, he muttered, “So we are going to have ‘revelations’ are we? And John Smith is going to reveal all.”

  “Knowing him,” Laura said as they turned away and headed for the Banquet Hall, “it could simply mean that he will take off his clothes.”

  “How did you get along with Henry’s book?”

  “Amazingly well. I was thinking of it as kind of a ‘duty’ read. I see him every day and I thought I should know something about his work, but it was fascinating. He writes beautifully. He comes across completely differently than in person. Have you read any of his books?”

  Richard blinked in surprise. “Good Lord, no.”

  Constable Peplinski brought a copy of the poster into Karen’s office where she was working at her desk. She frowned as she read it and told the constable to find John Smith and bring him in for an interview.

  This time there was no difficulty in locating the performance artist. Within minutes Peplinski was back. Closing the office door, he told Karen that John Smith was waiting in the hall. His eyes widened as he told her that he had found him in his studio painting an image of Satan on the body of a girl who was stark naked. So complete was the paint job that at first Peplinski had thought she was wearing a costume. “Her face was all made up with slanted eyebrows and her pubic hair had been shaved off,” he told the bemused corp
oral. “To make it easier to paint her,” he added helpfully. “He even introduced me,” he said in a tone of wonder. “Her name is Charlene.”

  Karen gave a tight-lipped smile and asked him to show the performance artist in. She waited a few moments before acknowledging John Smith’s presence. Glancing up from the poster spread out on her desk, she said, “I’ll get right to the point. If you know anything about the murders, it’s your duty to tell me.”

  “So it’s ‘murders’ now, is it? You’re finally admitting that old Montrose was murdered.”

  “I’m treating his death as murder, until proven otherwise. Exactly what is it you know about these deaths?”

  “What makes you think I know anything about them?”

  “You’re telling the whole world that there’s going to be a revelation, that you’re going to reveal all.”

  “The poster doesn’t even mention murder.”

  “It won’t be long before everyone will think you intend to reveal the identity of the murderer or murderers. Are you saying that’s not true?”

  “I guess everyone will have to wait to find out.”

  Although she knew it wouldn’t do any good, the policewoman tried to pressure John Smith into telling what he knew. Knowing that appeals to his duty as a law abiding citizen would only amuse him, she warned him that he had foolishly placed his life at risk and that the only way to protect himself was to tell the police what, if anything, he had found out.

  “That makes it all the more interesting, don’t you see?” John Smith seemed exasperated by her obtuseness.

  “What I see is that this whole thing is one of your performances. Was setting fire to Erika’s studio one of your performances, too?”

  “I liked Erika. She was my friend.”

  “You told me that before. But I hear that she was frightened of you.”