twenty-five.â
âAnd tell me again about Box Eight. You let this Ghost have it?â
âThe Ghost considers it is his for every first night, yes.â
âHow does he get in?â
âNo one knows. Weâve searched and searched for secret entrances â¦â
âHe really doesnât pay?â
âNo.â
âItâs worth fifty dollars a night!â
âThere will be trouble if you sell it,â said Salzella.
âGood grief, Salzella, youâre an educated man! How can you sit there so calmly and accept this sort of madness? Some creature in a mask has the run of the place, gets a prime Box all to himself, kills people, and you sit there saying there will be trouble?â
âI told you: the show must go on.â
â Why? We never said âthe cheese must go onâ! Whatâs so special about the show going on?â
Salzella smiled. âAs far as I understand it,â he said, âthe ⦠power behind the show, the soul of the show, all the effort thatâs gone into it, call it what you will ⦠it leaks out and spills everywhere. Thatâs why they burble about âthe show must go onâ. It must go on. But most of the company wouldnât even understand why anyone should ask the question.â
Bucket glared at the pile of what passed for the Opera Houseâs financial records.
âThey certainly donât understand book-keeping! Who does the accounts?â
âAll of us, really,â said Salzella.
â All of you?â
âMoney gets put in, money gets taken out â¦â said Salzella vaguely. âIs it important?â
Bucketâs jaw dropped. âIs it important ?â
âBecause,â Salzella went on, smoothly, âopera doesnât make money. Opera never makes money.â
âGood grief, man! Important? Whatâd I ever have achieved in the cheese business, Iâd like to know, if Iâd said that money wasnât important?â
Salzella smiled humourlessly. âThere are people out on the stage right now, sir,â he said, âwhoâd say that you would probably have made better cheeses.â He sighed, and leaned over the desk. âYou see,â he said, âcheese does make money. And opera doesnât . Operaâs what you spend money on .â
âBut ⦠what do you get out of it?â
âYou get opera. You put money in, you see, and opera comes out,â said Salzella wearily.
âThereâs no profit ?â
âProfit ⦠profit,â murmured the director of music, scratching his forehead. âNo, I donât believe Iâve come across the word.â
âThen how do we manage?â
âWe seem to rub along.â
Bucket put his head in his hands. âI mean,â he muttered, half to himself, âI knew the place wasnât making much, but I thought that was just because it was run badly. We have big audiences! We charge a mint for tickets! Now Iâm told that a Ghost runs around killing people and we donât even make any money!â
Salzella beamed. âAh, opera ,â he said.
*Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â *
Greebo stalked over the innâs rooftops.
Most cats are nervous and ill at ease when taken out of their territory, which is why cat books go on about putting butter on their paws and so on, presumably because constantly skidding into the walls will take the animalâs mind off where the walls actually are .
But Greebo travelled well, purely because he took it for granted that the whole world was his dirtbox.
He dropped heavily on to an outhouse roof and padded towards a small open window.
Greebo also had a catâs approach to possessions, which was simply that nothing edible had a right to belong to other people.
From the window came a variety of smells which included pork pies and cream. He squeezed through and dropped on to the pantry shelf.
Of course,