you see, darling?”
What she saw was a skin-tight gown of dull metallic material, slit up one side to allow her to walk. A crimson, heavily furred garment was worn over it, open down the front. She had only one jewel, a great clasp.
“I hope I’ll fit it,” said Maggie.
“You’ll do that,” he said. “And now” — he was conscious of a tightness in his chest — “we’ll clear stage and get down to business. Oh! There’s one point I’ve missed. You will see that for our first week some of the rehearsals are at night. This is to accommodate Sir Dougal, who is shooting the finals of his new film. The theatre is dark, the current production being on tour. It’s a bit out of the ordinary, I know, and I hope nobody finds it too awkward?”
There was a silence during which Sir Dougal with spread arms mimed a helpless apology.
“I can’t forbear saying it’s very inconvenient,” said Banquo.
“Are you filming?”
“Not precisely. But it might arise.”
“We’ll hope it doesn’t,” Peregrine said. “Right? Good. Clear stage, please, everyone. Scene One. The Witches.”
It’s going very smoothly,” said Peregrine, three days later. “Almost
too
smoothly.”
“Keep your fingers crossed,” said his wife, Emily. “It’s early days yet.”
“True.” He looked curiously at her. “I’ve never asked you,” he said. “Do you believe in it? The superstitious legend?”
“No,” she said quickly.
“Not the least tiny bit? Really?”
Emily looked steadily at him. “Truly?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“My mother was a one-hundred-percent Highlander.”
“So?”
“So it’s not easy to give you a direct answer. Some superstitions — most, I think — are silly little matters of habit. A pinch of spilt salt over the left shoulder. One may do it without thinking but if one doesn’t it’s no great matter. That sort of thing. But… there are other ones. Not silly. I don’t
believe
in them. No. But I think I avoid them.”
“Like the
Macbeth
ones?”
“Like them. Yes. But I didn’t mind you doing it. Or not enough to try to stop you. Because I don’t
really
believe,” said Emily very firmly.
“I don’t believe at all. Not at any level. I’ve done two productions of the play and they both were accident-free and very successful. As for the instances they drag up — Macbeth’s sword breaking and a bit of it hitting someone in the audience or a dropped weight narrowly missing an actor’s head — if they’d happened in any other play nobody would have said it was an unlucky one. How about Rex Harrison’s hairpiece being caught in a chandelier and whisked up into the flies? Nobody said
My Fair Lady
was unlucky.”
“Nobody dared to mention it, I should think.”
“There is that, of course,” Peregrine agreed.
“All the same, it’s not a fair example.”
“Why isn’t it?”
“Well, it’s not serious. I mean… well…”
“You wouldn’t say that if you’d been there, I daresay,” said Peregrine.
He walked over to the window and looked at the Thames: at the punctual late-afternoon traffic. It congealed on the south bank, piled up, broke out into a viscous stream, and crossed by bridge to the north bank. Above it, caught by the sun, shone the theatre: not very big but conspicuous in its whiteness and, because of the squat mass of little riverside buildings that surrounded it, appearing tall, even majestic.
“You can tell which of them’s bothered about the bad-luck stories,” he said. “They won’t say his name. They talk about the ‘Thane’ and the ‘Scots play’ and ‘The Lady.’ It’s catching. Lady Macduff — Nina Gaythorne — silly little ass, is steeped up to the eyebrows in it. And talks about it. Stops if she sees I’m about but she does, all right, and they listen to her.”
“Don’t let it worry you, darling. It’s not affecting their work, is it?” Emily asked.
“No.”
“Well, then.”
“I know, I know.”
Emily joined