Jonathan Creek (1997) s02e03 Episode Script
The Scented Room
Morning, Benjamin.
How are you today? OK, my name is Martha Parrish, personal secretary to Lady Theresa Cutler, and on her behalf, may I welcome you all today to Cicada Park.
The house is over 400 years old and is still the principal residence of Lady Theresa and her family.
Her husband, Sylvester Le Fley, you may know, of course, as the famous theatre critic and cultural affairs columnist on the "Sunday Telegraph".
Friday 10th.
Arts Desk.
FAO Derek Chinnery.
"Edgar Bint's latest effort at the Cottesloe, "Upload, Download", "was billed as 'a hilarious new comedy'.
"Of these four words, only the first is accurate.
"While neither, hilarious, new or comic, it is most certainly an indefinite article.
"The fact that it drew maniacal laughter from the horrendous hyenas around me "merely confirms my long-held belief "that quality theatre is too precious to be wasted on audiences.
" Mummy, can I have a tree house? Of course, sweetheart.
Not just at this second, though.
Saumon fumé, darling? I thought you might be hungry.
You read my mind.
The doors in this part of the house are of particular interest.
They're of hand-carved Spanish Moorish design dating back to the 1900s, when the 15th marquis had them specially imported from his villa in Aragón.
You demented harpy! - I can't even have a simple massage now?! - She had her arm up your shorts! You are insane! I tie my shoelace now, it's an act of infidelity.
What have you done to my tongue? I can't sthpeak! So go suck a dock leaf! This we call the Flemish Gallery, housing works by many well-known Dutch genre painters.
Everything in this room has been in the house at least 100 years, apart from Eric, of course, who's been here 150.
So we come to the jewel of Cicada Park, El Greco's "Kiss of Judas", which we keep in a room on its own, where, as you'll see, the temperature, humidity and light levels are carefully maintained to prevent discolouration or cracking.
Because of this, and for reasons of space, we can allow only eight people inside at a time.
So, who's going to be my first group? That's it.
OK.
As I say, the ambient light is controlled by the special tinting in the glass above you.
And if you could close the door while we're in here, please.
These aren't my rules - they're all laid down by the insurance company, because the picture that you see before you is conservatively valued at £1.
5 million.
Hmm.
- OK, when the rest of you are ready.
- Who's this? Ah, yes.
That's by a painter called Mostaert Right.
Let's have the next group, please.
OK? As I was saying to your friends, the reason we have to take extra care This can't be happening.
Eric! Eric! Eric! - It's gone! - Gone? How? Cut from the frame.
How? This is absurd! The whole thing is just absurd! I think it's best if you just I'm sorry.
I'm in a state of shock.
I can't think how this has happened.
Eric? Martha? Martha? Eric said The El Greco.
Someone's just I don't know.
Perhaps we're all dreaming or It was there 30 seconds before.
And then it wasn't.
And the room was empty, I swear.
Call the police.
Hello? Yes.
This is Martha Parrish ringing from Cicada P Mr Le Fley, are you all right? Something heavy from behind.
- I think I heard someone running off! - Darling? Theresa.
If it's like this at Hyde Park, we'll have right fun and games.
Never mind crowd attendants, we'll need synchronised swimmers.
Shut up and keep the knots dry.
I'm attempting a state of osteo-muscular pre-contraction.
- Whoa! - Bloody gangsters! Murdering scum, the lot of you! Help! Police! Over here! You keep away from that hole! Are you all set in there? And we start the clock.
Wrap your optic nerve around those two, Jonathan.
Give me a waterbed and three snorkels and I could be in paradise.
Oh, how absolutely, immensely satisfying.
Did you see this? Our all-time favourite reviewer, Sylvester Le Fley remember? "With Adam Klaus performing miracles, Jesus has nothing to worry about.
" Him and his nobby wife just had a priceless painting nicked.
Yesterday lunchtime, broad daylight.
Well, ha-ha! Suck on that you, smarmy bas - Where are you going? - They're nervous.
- They need someone to hold their hand.
- You're inside the coffin, remember? I knew it was too easy.
So, I don't know Everything's such a mess at the moment, I don't know where to start.
Have you had any more erotic dreams about? You know who? Last night, actually.
We were making love together like - I don't know - Olympic gymnasts.
I think I got down to a size ten at one point.
Except for some reason, we were onstage at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and the audience were all booing and shouting, "Bring back the juggler," which put us off slightly, because All right.
That'll do.
Come with me, please.
- I beg your pardon? - Detective Inspector Roy Gregson.
- I'm afraid this consultation is over.
- For what reason? For the reason that you're no more a psychoanalyst than I am.
- You what?! - I'm sorry.
It's called "obsessive delusion".
The sufferer acts out a fantasy role to satisfy some unfulfilled desire in their life.
In this case, listening to people's intimate sexual neuroses, but I'm afraid party's over now, young lady.
All right, Mr Gregson.
Leave her be, please.
Mr Gregson.
I'm sorry about this.
It's a psychotic condition.
He believes himself to be a police inspector whereas you actually work for the North Thames Gas Board.
Do forgive the intrusion.
I'll try and keep my door locked in future.
Unsettling when that happens, isn't it? Now, you were talking about some general sense of confusion in your personal life.
Sorry? Yes, well, there's this ongoing business with Jonathan, obviously.
But the other day, something else cropped up as well, which You know that thing where a ghost from your past suddenly comes back to haunt you? Listen, Jonathan, great to put a face to the name at last.
Um I'm sorry.
Due to a cock-up, I have two lunches today, and I'm late for both.
Oh, incidentally, Mad, did you hear any more about that other? Um, yeah.
He rang me again last night.
- And? - Yes.
Thursday morning.
I'm going to see it through, Barry.
My therapist reckons it'll be good for me.
- OK, shall we wend? - Well, I better get back Oh, come on! What do you say I take you somewhere really smart for lunch? Not that it's OTT or anything.
Just stick with me on this one.
Miss Magellan, Mr Creek, how do you do? Martha Parrish.
Would you like to follow me, please? It's not much further.
It's just through here.
Look, I just want a cheese omelette Oh! Are you OK? Jonathan, unfortunately, is borderline asthmatic.
- You couldn't give us a second? - Oh, yes.
Of course.
I'll just go find Mr Le Fley for you.
Mr Le? All right.
Where's the mirror? Just to remind myself what a gullible prat looks like.
All right.
All right! I'll level with you.
They don't do omelettes.
Come on! It's a real puzzle.
You've read the reports.
- A painting is there one minute, gone the next.
- "Take you somewhere smart for lunch.
" - Will I never learn? - Jonathan! - Just because he's given you iffy reviews - Death notices! .
.
is no reason to pass up a challenge.
But I hear what you're saying.
It is clearly so impossible, why even try? It's one of those weird mysteries that'll just never be explained.
That the room down there? The window's made of some kind of reinforced special glass.
It was never designed to be opened, except where else could they have got in? Are you two married? - Whatever gave you that idea? - I saw you arguing.
That's right, but we're just arguing in sin.
Mummy and Daddy are always arguing.
Sometimes they shout at me and Benjamin.
What have you been told about talking to strange men and women? That's another habit you've picked up from Melissa, isn't it? His last nanny was a terribly bad influence.
We return from two months abroad and find her fraternising with a mechanic.
The consequences are unthinkable.
- Never trust a man with oily fingers.
- Exactly.
As for this horror, the police are up a gum tree, so the £50,000 is there for the taking to anyone who can come up with a positive lead.
Oh, yes That was the other thing.
They are offering a small reward for the painting's return, which can't be bad? Now, you see, this is where I'm sitting, here - not over there, not over there, but here, where I've got a direct line through that door - eating my lunch, which on Friday comprised a bottle of Lucozade and a Spam sandwich.
When Mrs Parrish came out with those girls, it was there on the wall in its frame.
Half a minute later, when they opened the door, it was gone.
And if you're thinking that someone might have stepped in or out without my noticing, well When that painting was stolen, there was no one inside that room.
So, you'd come out of the Flemish Gallery and you're standing, what, looking out of the window, when someone attacked you from behind with a sharp instrument? As I seem to have told everyone 100 times.
- And then I fell to the ground.
- Where? - Pardon me? - You couldn't show us? On the floor? Where you fell? Exactly.
And that's when you heard whoever it was running away? Presumably into the library, because that's where they found footprints in the dust, which do not correspond to any shoes worn by members of this household.
Might be worth a shufti.
Interesting - Two riddles in one.
- How's that? Setting aside the problem of how our invisible thief got past everyone with a painting, it's a safe bet he'd be in a hurry to get out, so this doesn't tally.
- What do you mean? - Oh, come on.
A child of five could work it out.
I can work it out.
Why didn't he go across the carpet? Exactly.
He's heading for the window, so why go around the room? Riddle number one.
Riddle number two, why was he walking? These aren't the footprints of a running man, Mr Le Fley.
Whoever was in this room didn't attack you in the hall.
- Who did you say they were? I've lost track.
- Miss Magellan is - have I got this right? - an investigative crime writer.
- And Mr Creek is - Creative consultant to Adam Klaus.
You came to one of our shows, remember? It was "a ragbag of charmless chicanery ill-conceived by witless tricksters "who seemed to confuse mystery with misery.
" Turn of phrase he's got, hasn't he? So, anyway I make no secret of my aversion to your particular art form, Mr Creek.
However, I concede its relevance to the problems in hand.
If you have any insights, we'd be pleased to hear them.
It's a stumper.
No question.
I'm afraid I can't help.
So this been a complete waste of our time? It's defeated everyone else.
Lord knows why we expected these two to fare any better.
I didn't say it'd defeated me.
I know exactly how your painting disappeared, Mr Le Fley.
I'm just not going to tell you.
Time we were moving.
Fifty thousand green ones, Jonathan.
So, you've clocked it all, basically, worked it out, but you just want to make him suffer.
Correct.
Don't you think that's being amazingly petty? Still I suppose no one can blame you.
The man's a grade-A toss-bag, I can't deny.
Yes.
Why don't we make him stew? Why should we let him know what we know? What, um do we know exactly? Obviously, you can tell me.
Dream on.
"Witless trickster.
" That's not far off the mark, is it? Now, sweetheart, no one's denying your invaluable contribution to the show or the unique place you occupy in my affections.
I just have to be careful when meeting Her Majesty about who I bring along.
Which I don't want you to take as any kind of slight, because I know she would absolutely adore you.
- Lovely.
It's been a big help.
Thanks a lot.
- You're very welcome.
There's no sweat, you know.
I'll work it out myself.
I've seen everything you've seen.
I'm not a complete and utter moron.
Yes? - I never said anything.
- Look, just give me a leg up to get me started.
Please.
Just one tiny clue.
Look to Eric's Spam sandwich.
It contains the key to the whole affair.
Sorry about the time.
Guess where I've just come from.
Mr Poison Pen, Sylvester Le Fley's, one of the weirdest set-ups I ever Yes, yes.
You can tell me later.
Did you talk to Larry about the dowels in the coffin? He'll see.
We can't make them too loose or we'll blow the audience inspection.
Just enough so I don't break my spine.
Box office is through the roof.
Both performances.
Biggest open-air magic show for 70 years.
Now, Thursday week, Buckingham Palace.
- Have you come up with anything? - What's to come up with? You're being presented to the Queen.
You just shake your hand, cop your MBE, then off.
No, no, no.
It needs a little something to leaven it.
I was toying with an egg from the mouth.
Or what about this - a stamp on her tongue? - A stamp on her?! Are you insane?! - Come on.
It's perfect.
I get her to stick it out.
"Oh, what's this, Your Majesty?" "I know this face.
Could you sign this for me?" Big laugh.
What do you think? How could we do that? Are you winning? Oh, right.
Come to gloat now, I suppose, at my ineptitude? Oh, come on.
You were the one who duped me into going in the first place, because you knew I'd never help Sylvester Le Fley, reward or no reward.
- So what are you doing back here today? - Figured you still owed me lunch.
Go on, then.
We'll give that Italian round the corner a try.
Just give me a minute - make some calls, put my face on.
I'll be with you.
Of course, there's another school of thought - that you know jack-shit about it.
This is all a bluff to make me feel like a dunce, while you get to act all superior, which, according to my analyst, is further evidence of your insecurity complex.
MY insecurity complex? - Want to know how it was done? - Yes.
- How the painting magically disappeared? - Yes! - So you can tell him and collect the reward.
- Yes, No All right, then, yes.
Oh, can't we just forget this stupid vendetta and pocket the dosh? We can make some serious money here.
They're desperate.
I know the insurance company are being sticky about the claim.
If I picked up that phone now, I could get him to double that reward easily.
£100,000, Jonathan.
- You reckon? - I'm sure of it.
So, instead of saying, "Stuff your 50 grand," I could say, "Stuff your 100 grand.
" Even more satisfying.
I surrender.
All right.
As that was a particularly fine linguine, let's have a quick canter through it.
The first girls come out with his secretary.
The painting's in view of everyone present.
In 30 seconds, it's cut from its frame and removed from the room.
There's nowhere it could've been hidden.
The thief somehow managed to spirit himself through the gallery without being seen and knock Le Fley to the floor outside.
The overhead window doesn't open.
Police said there was no sign it had been tampered with.
I don't know I've been working on every conceivable possibility.
Did it occur to you that someone could cut it without being in the room using a high-powered laser through the glass in the ceiling? You are kidding me?! 'Course I am.
The idea's ridiculous.
In fact, this trick was so sublimely simple, you'll wonder why you didn't get it.
For goodness' sake, put me out of my misery.
What was the significance of the sodding Spam sandwich.
Ah! Absolutely.
And, for that matter, what's the significance of the scented room which puts another spin on it altogether? The scented room? You clocked it.
The second we stepped through that door, a heavy fragrance of something sweet and floral in that drawing room.
That's right, that was coming from the pot-pourri on the table.
You mean pot-pourri, one of the biggest cons of the 20th century? People pick it up in a shop, what do they do? "Mmm! Smell this one.
"That's sensational! Oh, I'll have some of that.
" Yes, if you shove your face in it.
Put some in bowl, you can't smell a thing.
Should be a label - "Only effective when inserted up nostril.
" Is there a point to this? The point is that the smell wasn't coming from the pot-pourri.
I'm not with you.
What are you saying? That it was someone's perfume that was involved in the robbery? Perfumes don't hang around like that for two whole days.
Well what, then? All right.
Mr Creek, is it? Detective Inspector Roy Gregson.
You've got some serious questions to answer.
Yes, actually, Inspector, your services aren't required after all Just let me handle this.
Are you aware it's an offence to withhold information about a crime? You can either save yourself grief by telling me everything you know about the theft of Lady Theresa Cutler's painting or we can play hardball.
Why does your ID say "North Thames Gas Board"? Don't get clever with me or you'll regret it.
Failure to disclose evidence is a serious matter.
So is impersonating a police officer.
Nice try.
I have to be going.
I'll see you in court.
Oh, Jonathan! I had to have a contingency plan.
You can't blame me for that.
OK, now you can open them.
What do you think? You did say you wanted a tree house.
- What's that on the side? - Ah.
A lift.
So you don't get all scratched and tear your clothes climbing up the branches.
Come on.
As if we haven't got enough problems Sylvester Le Fley.
Mmm What? They are joking, surely to God?! Well, you tell him I want to speak to him NOW.
Your blasted insurance company aren't buying the painting's disappearance.
They say there isn't enough evidence a crime was committed.
If that Creek does know something, he's bloody well telling us! What this time? A row of flags coming out of the Duke of Edinburgh's flies? Jonathan Creek? Jonathan, I have a multiple choice question.
If you could choose the manner of your own death, would it be A - peacefully in your sleep, B - breathlessly with Nicole Kidman, or C - being dismembered by a homicidal illusionist? If C, simply hang up now.
If not, get your backside down to Cicada Park tomorrow and explain to Sylvester and Tweety Pie what happened to their El Greco.
But I'm sorry.
I'm not with any of this.
Then, let me keep it simple.
Lady Theresa Cutler's chairperson of the local Conservative Association.
She wields immense influence upon Westminster Council, who have the power of life or death over our concert on Saturday.
Our concert in the park has been refused a permit on discretionary grounds that purport to concern public safety, but really concern a member of my staff who naïvely thinks he cannot be bought with money.
Wrong, Jonathan.
Money can buy anything and anyone.
This is a battle we cannot win, so surrender your pride and save the show.
By tomorrow lunchtime, Jonathan, I expect to hear good news.
Okey-dokey, my sweet.
E- mail? What's that? I can barely remember my postcode.
Will do, then.
Sure.
Cheerio.
Bye.
Jonathan! To what do we owe? You're looking lost.
This stolen painting.
Something's come up, and I've got to move on it.
I can't track her nibs down this morning for love nor money.
I didn't expect to.
I know it's today he's coming down, this Gordon Hill.
I just thought if you had a contact number If she can put her love life on hold for 24 hours.
- How much has she told you about all this? - About what? You've known Madeline how long? A matter of months? You'll not have scratched her surface yet so to speak.
You do, you'll find a lot of protective layers, like she makes it look very easy, but it hasnae been.
You never knew her father.
Neither did she.
Her mother was a wreck, who lived on her nerves.
One day, she was stopped in a store, accused of stealing a packet of bacon.
She said it was all a mistake.
Supermarket took her to court.
Next day, she pulled the wire from an electric iron and put it in her mouth.
Maddy came home from work.
She was 17.
Ran away after that to try and put the pain behind her, except it never goes.
It just sits there, waiting for the day when you'll come back and confront it.
For Maddy, today's that day.
So who's Gordon Hill? Lunch break.
We've timed it well.
This shouldn't take too long.
Just one last piece of the jigsaw and we're all set.
I was told to expect you.
You have some news for us, I believe.
Benjamin, you all right? How would you like to learn another trick? So on a scale of one to ten, Mr Le Fley, just how baffling would you say this robbery was? If this is another feeble attempt to antagonise me Haven't we all driven ourselves utterly demented trying to figure it out? All right.
Just so we're clear.
No one in any doubt the painting did actually vanish from this room? I think that's the one factor in this whole blasted business we can be certain of.
Why? Because it's going to make what happens next totally impossible.
If everyone could just leave now except for Benjamin.
- Benjamin? - What? Indulge him.
It usually pays off.
About 30 seconds, I think you said, the door was closed.
- Yes.
- If you want to put your watch on OK? It can't be! Now, remember, Benj.
First law of magic - never tell them how it was done.
The, um sordid matter of the reward, Lady Theresa.
What? Oh, yes It's obviously something I'll have to take up with your son.
Well, then, perhaps you can use it to buy him something he really needs, like a life.
So I don't know.
All that stuff about "it'll be really cathartic" was absolute bollocks in the end.
The only way I could ever get through all the horror in life was to try and forget about it.
I think I might just have stepped in front of that digger if he hadn't showed up at that point to finish that business of the stolen picture.
Do you remember me telling you about it? Talk about the last person I'd ever suspect.
How did you find out? Through a boring process of watertight logic.
The same logic that told me how you did it.
There was no question it was one of you.
What we're still hazy on is why.
You'll have to speak to Melissa, my sister.
She'll be round at Geoff's.
So suddenly, I'm thinking, "Melissa, Melissa " That name that cropped up earlier, but it took me a minute to remember where.
That's another habit we picked up from Melissa, isn't it? His last nanny was a terribly bad influence.
Well was that a tale and a half, when it actually came out in the wash.
For God's sake, Judith.
Do you want to get us put away? We won't rat on you.
That's not the object of the exercise.
We know you set all this up to get your own back, for which I'm sure Jonathan would love to give you a big wet kiss.
I've got no problem giving Sylvester Le Fley a hard time.
I'm curious which of his many charming qualities drove you to it.
They had no idea about that child.
No idea or they didn't care.
They were too into themselves and their ritzy lifestyle gadding round the globe.
Aspen one day, St Moritz the next.
They'd never given Benjy any time, any quality time.
It was like anything he wanted, he could have, except the one thing he really needed - a mother and father who were prepared to make the effort.
When they were around, she'd often be on this knife-edge, giving her husband hell over absolutely nothing.
Sometimes she'd get quite violent.
Talk about volatile.
Of course, I didn't find favour at all.
I indulged him.
Of course I did.
I worshipped him.
When they gave me a fortnight's notice, well there weren't enough tears to cry.
I just thought if there was any way I could put them through it, deprive them of something they really loved.
Something like a million-pound painting? To take it without actually stealing it I've got to say, it was a nice one.
Everyone could see it had vanished, but where to? The floor and walls didn't offer any clue.
It had to be the window, but how do you get up there and open a window that doesn't open? Answer - you didn't.
The window had nothing to do with it.
Once you cross that one off, you're down to only one possibility, which was so gloriously unlikely, it never occurred to anyone.
The contrasting grain on each side told the whole story.
The way the original Spanish builders secured the panels to the frame, you'd ended up with a door that was technically hollow.
Geoff first saw the possibilities.
One day, when he was there helping me pack my stuff Melissa.
Finding an hour when Eric and Martha were out of the way was easy.
Then it was just a question of opening a slit, a couple of nails that could be swivelled across.
We rehung it.
Everything was set.
Judith thought of the idea of the school outing.
Who'd suspect a bunch of 12-year-old girls? So what happened? Six of you went in but only five came out.
Who's counting schoolgirls? Half a minute's just about enough.
Your pals are outside keeping Martha busy with a few questions.
So when the next group goes in and everyone's glued to the empty frame, you merge in with them.
For my money, a world-class trick, with a delicious irony that all the time he's freaking out, it's just a few yards away, between two panels of wood.
Like a slice of Spam in a sandwich.
The rest of it we have to guess, but it's not wide of the mark to imagine Theresa getting ballistic with her husband.
.
.
you patronising louse! Oh, my God! I'm sorry! He dashes inside.
Major panic.
Not only is one of their most valuable art treasures gone, there's not a shred of evidence anyone was in there.
That won't look good on an insurance claim.
The loss adjuster will need more evidence.
So what does he come up with? An imaginary whack from behind by the unseen intruder.
Mr Le Fley! Are you all right? He's already got the head wound, courtesy of his wife.
It's a gift.
- Eric! - Yes, someone hit me.
An intruder They come up with another idea before the police arrive.
A set of footprints in the dust on the floor to show where the thief had left the building.
Slight drawback - there wasn't any dust.
It'd just been cleaned.
No problem.
They just create their own.
Hence the overpowering smell that hit us inside the room.
See what I'm saying? It'd be a brilliant read, if I could actually use it, but that'd drop the ex-nanny and her sister in it, and we gave our word to keep schtum.
Well, you've got to respect a confidence like that, so Sorry.
Where was I? You will stop me if I start rambling? You can't believe a couple like that would ever stay together, considering there's no communication between them of any kind.
What I can't understand is his complete lack of embarrassment about it.
To turn up at Buckingham Palace with 12 birds concealed about your person is a major error.
That's the death of any relationship, when people stop listening to each other.
Since when has the Royal Family been noted for its puckish sense of humour? Especially when there's a child involved, there's no excuse.
You just know one will escape and where it will go.
That's why if we ever had a son, it'd work out.
We'd make sure it did.
It's the first time in memory the Queen's presented an MBE with a canary up her skirt.
Somehow, I don't think he'll top the bill at the Royal Command.
Ever thought about that, Jonathan, at all? - Sorry? - Having a family.
Settling down and all that.
Right Very probably.
What can I smell in here? Is it talcum powd?
How are you today? OK, my name is Martha Parrish, personal secretary to Lady Theresa Cutler, and on her behalf, may I welcome you all today to Cicada Park.
The house is over 400 years old and is still the principal residence of Lady Theresa and her family.
Her husband, Sylvester Le Fley, you may know, of course, as the famous theatre critic and cultural affairs columnist on the "Sunday Telegraph".
Friday 10th.
Arts Desk.
FAO Derek Chinnery.
"Edgar Bint's latest effort at the Cottesloe, "Upload, Download", "was billed as 'a hilarious new comedy'.
"Of these four words, only the first is accurate.
"While neither, hilarious, new or comic, it is most certainly an indefinite article.
"The fact that it drew maniacal laughter from the horrendous hyenas around me "merely confirms my long-held belief "that quality theatre is too precious to be wasted on audiences.
" Mummy, can I have a tree house? Of course, sweetheart.
Not just at this second, though.
Saumon fumé, darling? I thought you might be hungry.
You read my mind.
The doors in this part of the house are of particular interest.
They're of hand-carved Spanish Moorish design dating back to the 1900s, when the 15th marquis had them specially imported from his villa in Aragón.
You demented harpy! - I can't even have a simple massage now?! - She had her arm up your shorts! You are insane! I tie my shoelace now, it's an act of infidelity.
What have you done to my tongue? I can't sthpeak! So go suck a dock leaf! This we call the Flemish Gallery, housing works by many well-known Dutch genre painters.
Everything in this room has been in the house at least 100 years, apart from Eric, of course, who's been here 150.
So we come to the jewel of Cicada Park, El Greco's "Kiss of Judas", which we keep in a room on its own, where, as you'll see, the temperature, humidity and light levels are carefully maintained to prevent discolouration or cracking.
Because of this, and for reasons of space, we can allow only eight people inside at a time.
So, who's going to be my first group? That's it.
OK.
As I say, the ambient light is controlled by the special tinting in the glass above you.
And if you could close the door while we're in here, please.
These aren't my rules - they're all laid down by the insurance company, because the picture that you see before you is conservatively valued at £1.
5 million.
Hmm.
- OK, when the rest of you are ready.
- Who's this? Ah, yes.
That's by a painter called Mostaert Right.
Let's have the next group, please.
OK? As I was saying to your friends, the reason we have to take extra care This can't be happening.
Eric! Eric! Eric! - It's gone! - Gone? How? Cut from the frame.
How? This is absurd! The whole thing is just absurd! I think it's best if you just I'm sorry.
I'm in a state of shock.
I can't think how this has happened.
Eric? Martha? Martha? Eric said The El Greco.
Someone's just I don't know.
Perhaps we're all dreaming or It was there 30 seconds before.
And then it wasn't.
And the room was empty, I swear.
Call the police.
Hello? Yes.
This is Martha Parrish ringing from Cicada P Mr Le Fley, are you all right? Something heavy from behind.
- I think I heard someone running off! - Darling? Theresa.
If it's like this at Hyde Park, we'll have right fun and games.
Never mind crowd attendants, we'll need synchronised swimmers.
Shut up and keep the knots dry.
I'm attempting a state of osteo-muscular pre-contraction.
- Whoa! - Bloody gangsters! Murdering scum, the lot of you! Help! Police! Over here! You keep away from that hole! Are you all set in there? And we start the clock.
Wrap your optic nerve around those two, Jonathan.
Give me a waterbed and three snorkels and I could be in paradise.
Oh, how absolutely, immensely satisfying.
Did you see this? Our all-time favourite reviewer, Sylvester Le Fley remember? "With Adam Klaus performing miracles, Jesus has nothing to worry about.
" Him and his nobby wife just had a priceless painting nicked.
Yesterday lunchtime, broad daylight.
Well, ha-ha! Suck on that you, smarmy bas - Where are you going? - They're nervous.
- They need someone to hold their hand.
- You're inside the coffin, remember? I knew it was too easy.
So, I don't know Everything's such a mess at the moment, I don't know where to start.
Have you had any more erotic dreams about? You know who? Last night, actually.
We were making love together like - I don't know - Olympic gymnasts.
I think I got down to a size ten at one point.
Except for some reason, we were onstage at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and the audience were all booing and shouting, "Bring back the juggler," which put us off slightly, because All right.
That'll do.
Come with me, please.
- I beg your pardon? - Detective Inspector Roy Gregson.
- I'm afraid this consultation is over.
- For what reason? For the reason that you're no more a psychoanalyst than I am.
- You what?! - I'm sorry.
It's called "obsessive delusion".
The sufferer acts out a fantasy role to satisfy some unfulfilled desire in their life.
In this case, listening to people's intimate sexual neuroses, but I'm afraid party's over now, young lady.
All right, Mr Gregson.
Leave her be, please.
Mr Gregson.
I'm sorry about this.
It's a psychotic condition.
He believes himself to be a police inspector whereas you actually work for the North Thames Gas Board.
Do forgive the intrusion.
I'll try and keep my door locked in future.
Unsettling when that happens, isn't it? Now, you were talking about some general sense of confusion in your personal life.
Sorry? Yes, well, there's this ongoing business with Jonathan, obviously.
But the other day, something else cropped up as well, which You know that thing where a ghost from your past suddenly comes back to haunt you? Listen, Jonathan, great to put a face to the name at last.
Um I'm sorry.
Due to a cock-up, I have two lunches today, and I'm late for both.
Oh, incidentally, Mad, did you hear any more about that other? Um, yeah.
He rang me again last night.
- And? - Yes.
Thursday morning.
I'm going to see it through, Barry.
My therapist reckons it'll be good for me.
- OK, shall we wend? - Well, I better get back Oh, come on! What do you say I take you somewhere really smart for lunch? Not that it's OTT or anything.
Just stick with me on this one.
Miss Magellan, Mr Creek, how do you do? Martha Parrish.
Would you like to follow me, please? It's not much further.
It's just through here.
Look, I just want a cheese omelette Oh! Are you OK? Jonathan, unfortunately, is borderline asthmatic.
- You couldn't give us a second? - Oh, yes.
Of course.
I'll just go find Mr Le Fley for you.
Mr Le? All right.
Where's the mirror? Just to remind myself what a gullible prat looks like.
All right.
All right! I'll level with you.
They don't do omelettes.
Come on! It's a real puzzle.
You've read the reports.
- A painting is there one minute, gone the next.
- "Take you somewhere smart for lunch.
" - Will I never learn? - Jonathan! - Just because he's given you iffy reviews - Death notices! .
.
is no reason to pass up a challenge.
But I hear what you're saying.
It is clearly so impossible, why even try? It's one of those weird mysteries that'll just never be explained.
That the room down there? The window's made of some kind of reinforced special glass.
It was never designed to be opened, except where else could they have got in? Are you two married? - Whatever gave you that idea? - I saw you arguing.
That's right, but we're just arguing in sin.
Mummy and Daddy are always arguing.
Sometimes they shout at me and Benjamin.
What have you been told about talking to strange men and women? That's another habit you've picked up from Melissa, isn't it? His last nanny was a terribly bad influence.
We return from two months abroad and find her fraternising with a mechanic.
The consequences are unthinkable.
- Never trust a man with oily fingers.
- Exactly.
As for this horror, the police are up a gum tree, so the £50,000 is there for the taking to anyone who can come up with a positive lead.
Oh, yes That was the other thing.
They are offering a small reward for the painting's return, which can't be bad? Now, you see, this is where I'm sitting, here - not over there, not over there, but here, where I've got a direct line through that door - eating my lunch, which on Friday comprised a bottle of Lucozade and a Spam sandwich.
When Mrs Parrish came out with those girls, it was there on the wall in its frame.
Half a minute later, when they opened the door, it was gone.
And if you're thinking that someone might have stepped in or out without my noticing, well When that painting was stolen, there was no one inside that room.
So, you'd come out of the Flemish Gallery and you're standing, what, looking out of the window, when someone attacked you from behind with a sharp instrument? As I seem to have told everyone 100 times.
- And then I fell to the ground.
- Where? - Pardon me? - You couldn't show us? On the floor? Where you fell? Exactly.
And that's when you heard whoever it was running away? Presumably into the library, because that's where they found footprints in the dust, which do not correspond to any shoes worn by members of this household.
Might be worth a shufti.
Interesting - Two riddles in one.
- How's that? Setting aside the problem of how our invisible thief got past everyone with a painting, it's a safe bet he'd be in a hurry to get out, so this doesn't tally.
- What do you mean? - Oh, come on.
A child of five could work it out.
I can work it out.
Why didn't he go across the carpet? Exactly.
He's heading for the window, so why go around the room? Riddle number one.
Riddle number two, why was he walking? These aren't the footprints of a running man, Mr Le Fley.
Whoever was in this room didn't attack you in the hall.
- Who did you say they were? I've lost track.
- Miss Magellan is - have I got this right? - an investigative crime writer.
- And Mr Creek is - Creative consultant to Adam Klaus.
You came to one of our shows, remember? It was "a ragbag of charmless chicanery ill-conceived by witless tricksters "who seemed to confuse mystery with misery.
" Turn of phrase he's got, hasn't he? So, anyway I make no secret of my aversion to your particular art form, Mr Creek.
However, I concede its relevance to the problems in hand.
If you have any insights, we'd be pleased to hear them.
It's a stumper.
No question.
I'm afraid I can't help.
So this been a complete waste of our time? It's defeated everyone else.
Lord knows why we expected these two to fare any better.
I didn't say it'd defeated me.
I know exactly how your painting disappeared, Mr Le Fley.
I'm just not going to tell you.
Time we were moving.
Fifty thousand green ones, Jonathan.
So, you've clocked it all, basically, worked it out, but you just want to make him suffer.
Correct.
Don't you think that's being amazingly petty? Still I suppose no one can blame you.
The man's a grade-A toss-bag, I can't deny.
Yes.
Why don't we make him stew? Why should we let him know what we know? What, um do we know exactly? Obviously, you can tell me.
Dream on.
"Witless trickster.
" That's not far off the mark, is it? Now, sweetheart, no one's denying your invaluable contribution to the show or the unique place you occupy in my affections.
I just have to be careful when meeting Her Majesty about who I bring along.
Which I don't want you to take as any kind of slight, because I know she would absolutely adore you.
- Lovely.
It's been a big help.
Thanks a lot.
- You're very welcome.
There's no sweat, you know.
I'll work it out myself.
I've seen everything you've seen.
I'm not a complete and utter moron.
Yes? - I never said anything.
- Look, just give me a leg up to get me started.
Please.
Just one tiny clue.
Look to Eric's Spam sandwich.
It contains the key to the whole affair.
Sorry about the time.
Guess where I've just come from.
Mr Poison Pen, Sylvester Le Fley's, one of the weirdest set-ups I ever Yes, yes.
You can tell me later.
Did you talk to Larry about the dowels in the coffin? He'll see.
We can't make them too loose or we'll blow the audience inspection.
Just enough so I don't break my spine.
Box office is through the roof.
Both performances.
Biggest open-air magic show for 70 years.
Now, Thursday week, Buckingham Palace.
- Have you come up with anything? - What's to come up with? You're being presented to the Queen.
You just shake your hand, cop your MBE, then off.
No, no, no.
It needs a little something to leaven it.
I was toying with an egg from the mouth.
Or what about this - a stamp on her tongue? - A stamp on her?! Are you insane?! - Come on.
It's perfect.
I get her to stick it out.
"Oh, what's this, Your Majesty?" "I know this face.
Could you sign this for me?" Big laugh.
What do you think? How could we do that? Are you winning? Oh, right.
Come to gloat now, I suppose, at my ineptitude? Oh, come on.
You were the one who duped me into going in the first place, because you knew I'd never help Sylvester Le Fley, reward or no reward.
- So what are you doing back here today? - Figured you still owed me lunch.
Go on, then.
We'll give that Italian round the corner a try.
Just give me a minute - make some calls, put my face on.
I'll be with you.
Of course, there's another school of thought - that you know jack-shit about it.
This is all a bluff to make me feel like a dunce, while you get to act all superior, which, according to my analyst, is further evidence of your insecurity complex.
MY insecurity complex? - Want to know how it was done? - Yes.
- How the painting magically disappeared? - Yes! - So you can tell him and collect the reward.
- Yes, No All right, then, yes.
Oh, can't we just forget this stupid vendetta and pocket the dosh? We can make some serious money here.
They're desperate.
I know the insurance company are being sticky about the claim.
If I picked up that phone now, I could get him to double that reward easily.
£100,000, Jonathan.
- You reckon? - I'm sure of it.
So, instead of saying, "Stuff your 50 grand," I could say, "Stuff your 100 grand.
" Even more satisfying.
I surrender.
All right.
As that was a particularly fine linguine, let's have a quick canter through it.
The first girls come out with his secretary.
The painting's in view of everyone present.
In 30 seconds, it's cut from its frame and removed from the room.
There's nowhere it could've been hidden.
The thief somehow managed to spirit himself through the gallery without being seen and knock Le Fley to the floor outside.
The overhead window doesn't open.
Police said there was no sign it had been tampered with.
I don't know I've been working on every conceivable possibility.
Did it occur to you that someone could cut it without being in the room using a high-powered laser through the glass in the ceiling? You are kidding me?! 'Course I am.
The idea's ridiculous.
In fact, this trick was so sublimely simple, you'll wonder why you didn't get it.
For goodness' sake, put me out of my misery.
What was the significance of the sodding Spam sandwich.
Ah! Absolutely.
And, for that matter, what's the significance of the scented room which puts another spin on it altogether? The scented room? You clocked it.
The second we stepped through that door, a heavy fragrance of something sweet and floral in that drawing room.
That's right, that was coming from the pot-pourri on the table.
You mean pot-pourri, one of the biggest cons of the 20th century? People pick it up in a shop, what do they do? "Mmm! Smell this one.
"That's sensational! Oh, I'll have some of that.
" Yes, if you shove your face in it.
Put some in bowl, you can't smell a thing.
Should be a label - "Only effective when inserted up nostril.
" Is there a point to this? The point is that the smell wasn't coming from the pot-pourri.
I'm not with you.
What are you saying? That it was someone's perfume that was involved in the robbery? Perfumes don't hang around like that for two whole days.
Well what, then? All right.
Mr Creek, is it? Detective Inspector Roy Gregson.
You've got some serious questions to answer.
Yes, actually, Inspector, your services aren't required after all Just let me handle this.
Are you aware it's an offence to withhold information about a crime? You can either save yourself grief by telling me everything you know about the theft of Lady Theresa Cutler's painting or we can play hardball.
Why does your ID say "North Thames Gas Board"? Don't get clever with me or you'll regret it.
Failure to disclose evidence is a serious matter.
So is impersonating a police officer.
Nice try.
I have to be going.
I'll see you in court.
Oh, Jonathan! I had to have a contingency plan.
You can't blame me for that.
OK, now you can open them.
What do you think? You did say you wanted a tree house.
- What's that on the side? - Ah.
A lift.
So you don't get all scratched and tear your clothes climbing up the branches.
Come on.
As if we haven't got enough problems Sylvester Le Fley.
Mmm What? They are joking, surely to God?! Well, you tell him I want to speak to him NOW.
Your blasted insurance company aren't buying the painting's disappearance.
They say there isn't enough evidence a crime was committed.
If that Creek does know something, he's bloody well telling us! What this time? A row of flags coming out of the Duke of Edinburgh's flies? Jonathan Creek? Jonathan, I have a multiple choice question.
If you could choose the manner of your own death, would it be A - peacefully in your sleep, B - breathlessly with Nicole Kidman, or C - being dismembered by a homicidal illusionist? If C, simply hang up now.
If not, get your backside down to Cicada Park tomorrow and explain to Sylvester and Tweety Pie what happened to their El Greco.
But I'm sorry.
I'm not with any of this.
Then, let me keep it simple.
Lady Theresa Cutler's chairperson of the local Conservative Association.
She wields immense influence upon Westminster Council, who have the power of life or death over our concert on Saturday.
Our concert in the park has been refused a permit on discretionary grounds that purport to concern public safety, but really concern a member of my staff who naïvely thinks he cannot be bought with money.
Wrong, Jonathan.
Money can buy anything and anyone.
This is a battle we cannot win, so surrender your pride and save the show.
By tomorrow lunchtime, Jonathan, I expect to hear good news.
Okey-dokey, my sweet.
E- mail? What's that? I can barely remember my postcode.
Will do, then.
Sure.
Cheerio.
Bye.
Jonathan! To what do we owe? You're looking lost.
This stolen painting.
Something's come up, and I've got to move on it.
I can't track her nibs down this morning for love nor money.
I didn't expect to.
I know it's today he's coming down, this Gordon Hill.
I just thought if you had a contact number If she can put her love life on hold for 24 hours.
- How much has she told you about all this? - About what? You've known Madeline how long? A matter of months? You'll not have scratched her surface yet so to speak.
You do, you'll find a lot of protective layers, like she makes it look very easy, but it hasnae been.
You never knew her father.
Neither did she.
Her mother was a wreck, who lived on her nerves.
One day, she was stopped in a store, accused of stealing a packet of bacon.
She said it was all a mistake.
Supermarket took her to court.
Next day, she pulled the wire from an electric iron and put it in her mouth.
Maddy came home from work.
She was 17.
Ran away after that to try and put the pain behind her, except it never goes.
It just sits there, waiting for the day when you'll come back and confront it.
For Maddy, today's that day.
So who's Gordon Hill? Lunch break.
We've timed it well.
This shouldn't take too long.
Just one last piece of the jigsaw and we're all set.
I was told to expect you.
You have some news for us, I believe.
Benjamin, you all right? How would you like to learn another trick? So on a scale of one to ten, Mr Le Fley, just how baffling would you say this robbery was? If this is another feeble attempt to antagonise me Haven't we all driven ourselves utterly demented trying to figure it out? All right.
Just so we're clear.
No one in any doubt the painting did actually vanish from this room? I think that's the one factor in this whole blasted business we can be certain of.
Why? Because it's going to make what happens next totally impossible.
If everyone could just leave now except for Benjamin.
- Benjamin? - What? Indulge him.
It usually pays off.
About 30 seconds, I think you said, the door was closed.
- Yes.
- If you want to put your watch on OK? It can't be! Now, remember, Benj.
First law of magic - never tell them how it was done.
The, um sordid matter of the reward, Lady Theresa.
What? Oh, yes It's obviously something I'll have to take up with your son.
Well, then, perhaps you can use it to buy him something he really needs, like a life.
So I don't know.
All that stuff about "it'll be really cathartic" was absolute bollocks in the end.
The only way I could ever get through all the horror in life was to try and forget about it.
I think I might just have stepped in front of that digger if he hadn't showed up at that point to finish that business of the stolen picture.
Do you remember me telling you about it? Talk about the last person I'd ever suspect.
How did you find out? Through a boring process of watertight logic.
The same logic that told me how you did it.
There was no question it was one of you.
What we're still hazy on is why.
You'll have to speak to Melissa, my sister.
She'll be round at Geoff's.
So suddenly, I'm thinking, "Melissa, Melissa " That name that cropped up earlier, but it took me a minute to remember where.
That's another habit we picked up from Melissa, isn't it? His last nanny was a terribly bad influence.
Well was that a tale and a half, when it actually came out in the wash.
For God's sake, Judith.
Do you want to get us put away? We won't rat on you.
That's not the object of the exercise.
We know you set all this up to get your own back, for which I'm sure Jonathan would love to give you a big wet kiss.
I've got no problem giving Sylvester Le Fley a hard time.
I'm curious which of his many charming qualities drove you to it.
They had no idea about that child.
No idea or they didn't care.
They were too into themselves and their ritzy lifestyle gadding round the globe.
Aspen one day, St Moritz the next.
They'd never given Benjy any time, any quality time.
It was like anything he wanted, he could have, except the one thing he really needed - a mother and father who were prepared to make the effort.
When they were around, she'd often be on this knife-edge, giving her husband hell over absolutely nothing.
Sometimes she'd get quite violent.
Talk about volatile.
Of course, I didn't find favour at all.
I indulged him.
Of course I did.
I worshipped him.
When they gave me a fortnight's notice, well there weren't enough tears to cry.
I just thought if there was any way I could put them through it, deprive them of something they really loved.
Something like a million-pound painting? To take it without actually stealing it I've got to say, it was a nice one.
Everyone could see it had vanished, but where to? The floor and walls didn't offer any clue.
It had to be the window, but how do you get up there and open a window that doesn't open? Answer - you didn't.
The window had nothing to do with it.
Once you cross that one off, you're down to only one possibility, which was so gloriously unlikely, it never occurred to anyone.
The contrasting grain on each side told the whole story.
The way the original Spanish builders secured the panels to the frame, you'd ended up with a door that was technically hollow.
Geoff first saw the possibilities.
One day, when he was there helping me pack my stuff Melissa.
Finding an hour when Eric and Martha were out of the way was easy.
Then it was just a question of opening a slit, a couple of nails that could be swivelled across.
We rehung it.
Everything was set.
Judith thought of the idea of the school outing.
Who'd suspect a bunch of 12-year-old girls? So what happened? Six of you went in but only five came out.
Who's counting schoolgirls? Half a minute's just about enough.
Your pals are outside keeping Martha busy with a few questions.
So when the next group goes in and everyone's glued to the empty frame, you merge in with them.
For my money, a world-class trick, with a delicious irony that all the time he's freaking out, it's just a few yards away, between two panels of wood.
Like a slice of Spam in a sandwich.
The rest of it we have to guess, but it's not wide of the mark to imagine Theresa getting ballistic with her husband.
.
.
you patronising louse! Oh, my God! I'm sorry! He dashes inside.
Major panic.
Not only is one of their most valuable art treasures gone, there's not a shred of evidence anyone was in there.
That won't look good on an insurance claim.
The loss adjuster will need more evidence.
So what does he come up with? An imaginary whack from behind by the unseen intruder.
Mr Le Fley! Are you all right? He's already got the head wound, courtesy of his wife.
It's a gift.
- Eric! - Yes, someone hit me.
An intruder They come up with another idea before the police arrive.
A set of footprints in the dust on the floor to show where the thief had left the building.
Slight drawback - there wasn't any dust.
It'd just been cleaned.
No problem.
They just create their own.
Hence the overpowering smell that hit us inside the room.
See what I'm saying? It'd be a brilliant read, if I could actually use it, but that'd drop the ex-nanny and her sister in it, and we gave our word to keep schtum.
Well, you've got to respect a confidence like that, so Sorry.
Where was I? You will stop me if I start rambling? You can't believe a couple like that would ever stay together, considering there's no communication between them of any kind.
What I can't understand is his complete lack of embarrassment about it.
To turn up at Buckingham Palace with 12 birds concealed about your person is a major error.
That's the death of any relationship, when people stop listening to each other.
Since when has the Royal Family been noted for its puckish sense of humour? Especially when there's a child involved, there's no excuse.
You just know one will escape and where it will go.
That's why if we ever had a son, it'd work out.
We'd make sure it did.
It's the first time in memory the Queen's presented an MBE with a canary up her skirt.
Somehow, I don't think he'll top the bill at the Royal Command.
Ever thought about that, Jonathan, at all? - Sorry? - Having a family.
Settling down and all that.
Right Very probably.
What can I smell in here? Is it talcum powd?