Page 7 of Light Thickens


  ‘Because I do better without. Tomato juice. A double and nothing stronger with it.’

  Menteith said: ‘I’ll have that too.’

  ‘Two double tomatoes. Four beers,’ Ross repeated and went to the bar.

  ‘Rangi,’ Lennox said, ‘we’ve been arguing.’

  ‘Oh? What about?’

  Lennox looked at his mates. ‘I don’t know exactly. About the play.’

  ‘Yes?’

  Menteith said: ‘We were trying to get to the bottom of its power. On the face of it, it’s simply what a magical hand can do with a dose of blood-and-thunder. But that doesn’t explain the atmosphere it churns up. Or does it?’

  ‘Suppose – ‘ Caithness began. ‘You won’t mind, Rangi, will you?’

  ‘I’ve not the faintest idea what you’re going to ask, but I don’t suppose I will.’

  ‘Well, suppose we were to offer a performance of the play on your – what do you call it – ?’

  ‘The marai?’

  ‘Yes. How would you react?’

  ‘To the invitation or to the performance?’

  ‘Well – to the performance, I suppose. Both, really.’

  ‘It would depend upon the elders. If they were sticklers, really orthodox people, you would be given formal greetings, the challenge and the presentation of the weapon. It is possible…’ He stopped.

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘It would have been possible, I believe, that the tahunga – that’s what you’d call a wise man – would have been asked, because of the nature of the play, to lay a tapu on the performance. He would do this. And then you would go away and dress and the performance would take place.’

  ‘You don’t mind about using – well, you know – eyes, tongue and everything in the play?’

  ‘I am not entirely orthodox. And we take the play seriously. My great-grandfather was a cannibal,’ said Rangi in his exquisite voice. ‘He believed he absorbed the attributes of his victims.’

  A complete silence fell upon the table. Perhaps because they had been rather a noisy party before, their silence affected other patrons and Rangi’s declaration, quite loudly made, was generally heard. The silence lasted only for a second or two.

  ‘Four beers and two tomato juices,’ said Ross, returning with the drinks. He laid the tray on the table.

  CHAPTER 3

  Third Week

  In the third week the play began to consolidate. The parts that were clearly spurious had of course been taken out; the structure was fully revealed. It was written with economy: the remorseless destiny of the Macbeths, the certainty from the beginning that they were irrevocably cursed, their progress, at first clinging to each other, then separated and swept away downstream to their damnation: these elements declared themselves in every phase of this destructive play.

  Why, then, was it not dreary? Why did it excite rather than distress?

  ‘I don’t know,’ Peregrine said to his wife. ‘Well, I do, really. It’s because it’s wonderfully well written. Simple as that. It’s the atmosphere that it generates.’

  ‘When you directed it before, did you feel the same way about it?’

  ‘I think so. Not so marked though. It’s a much better company, of course. Really, it’s a perfect company. If you heard Simon Morten in the English scene, Emily. Saying: “My wife killed too?” Then when Malcolm offers his silly conventional bit of advice, Simon looks at Ross and says: “He has no children.”’

  ‘I know.’

  ‘Come down to rehearsal one of these days and see.’

  ‘Shall I?’

  ‘Yes. Do. At the end of next week.’

  ‘All right. How about the superstitions? Is Nina Gaythorne behaving herself?’

  ‘She’s trying to, at least. I don’t mind betting she’s taking all sorts of precautions on the side, but as long as she doesn’t talk about it…Barrabell – he’s the Banquo – feeds her stories, I’m quite sure. I caught him at it last week. The scrap shed down by the river was struck by lightning last week.’

  ‘No! You never told me.’

  ‘Didn’t I? I suppose I’ve clapped locks on anything that looks like superstition and don’t unfasten them even for you. I caught Barrabell nicely and gave poor old Nina the shock of her life.’

  ‘What were they saying?’

  ‘He was on about one of the witches – Blondie – making a scene and getting the willies during the storm. Some people do get upset, you know – it’s electrical. They always say they’re sorry and they can’t help it.’

  ‘Was Blondie all right?’

  ‘Right as rain when the lightning stopped.’

  ‘How unfortunate.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘That there should be a thunderstorm.’

  ‘You don’t mean – ‘

  ‘Oh, I don’t believe all the nonsense. Of course I don’t. I just thought how unfortunate from the point of view of the people who do.’

  ‘The silly fatheads have got over it. The theatre wasn’t struck by lightning. Being fixed up with a good conductor, it wouldn’t have felt it anyway.’

  ‘No.’ After a short silence Emily said: ‘How’s the little boy behaving?’

  ‘William Smith? Very well. He’s a good actor. It’ll be interesting to see what happens to him after adolescence. He may not go on with the theatre but I hope he does. He’s doubling.’

  ‘The Bloody Child?’

  ‘And the Crowned Child. They’re one and the same. You should hear him wail out his “Great Birnam Wood to high Dunsinane Hi-i-ill shall come against him.”’

  ‘Golly!’

  ‘Yes, my girl. That’s the word for it.’

  ‘How are you working the scene? The apparitions?’

  ‘The usual things. Dry ice. A trap door. A lift. Background of many whispering voices: “Double, double.” Strong rhythm. The show of Kings are all Banquo’s descendants. The scene ends with “And points at them for his.” The next bit in the script is somebody’s incredibly silly addition – I should think the stage manager’s for a fourth-rate company in the sticks. It’s a wonder he didn’t give the witches red noses and slapsticks.’

  ‘So you go on with – what?’

  ‘There’s a blackout and great confusion. Crescendo. Noises. Macbeth’s voice. Sounds, possibly drums. I’m not sure. Macbeth’s voice again, strongly, calling: ‘Lennox!’ Sound of footfalls. Lights dim up with Lennox knocking on the door. Macbeth comes out. Rest of scene as written.’

  ‘Smashing.’

  ‘Well, I hope so. It’s going to need handling.’

  ‘Yes. Of course.’

  ‘It’s the only tricky one left from the staging point of view.’

  ‘Could Gaston be a help? About witchcraft?’

  ‘I daren’t risk asking him. He could, of course, but he does so – go off the deep end. He is a teeny bit mad, you know. Only on his own lay, but he is. He’d God’s gift when it comes to claidheamh-mors. What will you think of the fight? It terrifies me.’

  ‘Is it really dangerous, Perry?’

  He waited for a minute.

  ‘Not according to Gaston, always making sure the stage is right. He’ll keep a nightly watch on it. The two men have reached an absolute perfection of movement. They’re getting on together a bit better, too, man to man. Maggie had a go at Simon, bless her, and he’s less crissy-crossy when they are not fighting, thank God.’

  ‘Well,’ said Emily, ‘nobody can accuse you of being superstitious, I’ll say that for you.’

  ‘Will you? And you’ll come next week when we’ll take it in continuity with props?’

  ‘You bet I will,’ said Emily.

  ‘I don’t know what you’ll think of Gaston. I mean, of what I’m doing with him. He’s the bearer of the great ceremonial sword – the claidheamh-mor – we’re making a harness for him to take the haft. It’s the real weapon and weighs a ton. He’s as strong as a bull. He follows Macbeth everywhere like a sort of judgement. And at the end he’ll carry the
head on it. He is watching Jeremy’s drawings for his costume with the eye of a hawk.’

  ‘What’s it like?’

  ‘Like all the other Macbeth ménage. Embryo tartan, black woollen tights, thonged sheepskin leggings. A heavy belt to take the sword-hilts. A mask for the fights. In his final appearance with the head on the sword – er – he suggested a scarlet tabard.’

  ‘Oh, for heaven’s sake, Perry!’

  ‘I know. Where would he change, and why? With fighting thanes milling all round. I pointed this out and for once he hadn’t an answer. He took refuge in huffy grandeur, said it was merely an idea and went into a long thing about colour and symbolism.’

  ‘I feel I must meet him.’

  ‘Shall I invite him for tea?’

  ‘Do you like him?’ she asked incredulously.

  ‘Oh, one couldn’t exactly do that. Or I don’t think one could. Collect him, perhaps. No, he might just turn into a bore and not go home.’

  ‘In that case we won’t ask him here.’

  ‘Or bring the Macbeth’s head with him to show you. He did that to me. When we’d finished afternoon rehearsal. It was in the shadows of the wardrobe room. I nearly fainted.’

  ‘Frightful?’

  ‘Terrifying. It’s sheet white and so like Dougal. With a bloody gash, you know. He wondered if I had any suggestions to make.’

  ‘Had you?’

  ‘Just to cover it up quick. Fortunately the audience only sees it momentarily. He turns it to face Malcolm who is up on the steps at the back. It’ll be back to audience.’

  ‘They’ll laugh,’ said Emily.

  ‘If they laugh at that they’ll laugh at anything.’

  ‘What do you bet?’

  ‘Well, of course they have in the past always laughed at a head and the management always says it’s a nervous reaction. So it may be but I don’t think so. I think they know it isn’t, and can’t be, Macbeth’s or anybody else’s head and they laugh. It’s as if they said: “This is a bit too thick. Come off it.” All the same I’m going to risk it.’

  ‘You jolly well do and more power to your elbow.’

  ‘The final words are cut. The play ends with the thanes all shouting: “Hail, King of Scotland,” and pointing their swords at Malcolm. He’s in a strong light. I hope the audience will go away feeling, well – relieved, uplifted, as if Scotland stands free of a nightmare.’

  ‘I hope so too. I think they will.’

  ‘May you think so when you’ve seen it.’

  ‘I bet I will,’ said Emily.

  ‘I’ll push off. So long, Em, wish me luck.’

  ‘With all my heart,’ she said, and gave him a kiss and a packet and a Thermos. ‘Your snack,’ she said.

  ‘Thanks, love. I don’t know when I’ll be home.’

  ‘OK. Always welcome.’

  She watched him get into his car. He gave her a toot and was off.

  II

  He was taking the witches’ scenes. Mattresses had been placed on the stage behind the gallows rostrum. The body on the scaffold moved slightly in its noose, turned by one of the mysterious draughts that steal about backstage regions. When Peregrine walked in Rangi stood beside it and peered into the void beneath.

  ‘See anything?’ he asked.

  A muffled voice from the void said something indistinguishable.

  ‘If you can’t see the back of the gallery they can’t see you.’

  ‘Too dark.’

  ‘He’ll put a light on for you. Anyone up there?’ Rangi called and was answered by an affirmative.

  ‘Light yourself up.’

  ‘Hang on.’ A pause. A lighter flickered over a hirsute face. ‘See that?’ asked Rangi.

  ‘I can’t see nothing.’

  ‘Fair enough. OK,’ Rangi yelled. ‘You can come down from up there.’

  ‘’Morning, Rangi,’ said Peregrine. ‘Joined the Scene-shifters’ Union?’

  Rangi grinned. ‘We wanted to make sure we were masked from up there.’

  ‘You want to watch it. The right way is to ask me and I’ll check with the SM.’ He put his arm across Rangi’s shoulders. ‘You’re not in the land of Do-It-Yourself now,’ he said.

  ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t do anything. Just yelled.’

  ‘All right. You need to watch it. We might have the whole stage staff going out on strike. Is Bruce Barrabell here?’

  ‘I don’t think so.’

  ‘Good. Your part’s shaping up nicely. Do you like it?’

  ‘Oh, sure. Sure.’

  ‘We’ll give you a skirt for rehearsals.’

  ‘A sort of lady-tohunga, uh? Except that tohungas are always men.’

  ‘You’ll look like three disreputable old women until Macbeth sees your faces, and they are terrible and know everything. In the opening scene we see them, birdlike, as they are; almost ravens. Busy on the gallows collecting from the corpse what’s left of the “grease that’s sweaten from the murderer’s gibbet”. In the second scene when Macbeth first meets them they’ve put on a sort of caricature of respectability: hats, filthy aprons, dirty mutches that hold up their chins like grave-cloths. Blondie is the sexy one. One breast hangs out. Brown and stringy. They are not like female tohungas, really.’

  ‘Not in the least,’ said Rangi cheerfully.

  Dougal Macdougal arrived. He never ‘came in’. There was always the element of an event. He could be heard loudly greeting the more important members of the company who had now assembled and not forgetting to say ‘’Morning. ‘Morning,’ to the bit parts. He arrived on stage, hailed Peregrine as if they hadn’t encountered each other for at least a month, saw the witch-girls – ‘Good morning, dear. Good morning, dear – ‘ and fetched up face to face with Rangi. ‘Oh. Good morning – er – Rainy,’ he said loftily.

  ‘Settle down, everyone,’ said Peregrine. ‘We are taking the witches’ scenes. I’ve got the lights manager to come down and the effects man: I’d like them to sit beside me, take notes and go away after this rehearsal to map out their plots. The message I plan to convey depends very much upon dead cues for effects and I hope that between us we’ll cook up something that’ll raise the pimples on the backs of the audiences’ necks. Right.’

  He waited while the witches took up their positions and the others sat in the front-of-house.

  ‘No overture,’ he said, ‘in the usual sense. The house darkens and there’s a muffled drumbeat. Thud, thud, thud. Like a heart. Curtain up, flash of lightning. We get a fleeting look at the witches. Dry ice.’

  Rangi on the arm of the gibbet reaching down at the head. Wendy doubled up, and Blondie on Wendy’s back clawing the feet. Busy. Hold for five seconds. Blackout. Thunder. Fade up to half-light concentrated on witches who are now all on the ground. Dialogue.

  ‘When shall we three meet again?’

  Blondie’s voice was a high treble, Wendy’s gritty and broken, Rangi’s full and quivering.

  ‘There to meet with – ’ A pause. Silence. Then they all whisper: ‘Macbeth.’

  ‘Flash of lightning,’ said Peregrine. ‘And two caterwauls. Dry ice – lots of it.’

  ‘ – hover through the fog and filthy air.’

  ‘Blackout! Catch them in mid-air still going up. Split-second cue. Hold blackout for scenic change. Witches! Ask them to come on, will you, someone.’

  ‘We heard you,’ said a voice, Rangi’s. ‘We’re coming.’ He and the two girls came on from behind the rostrum.

  ‘There’ll have to be means for a quick exit from behind in the blackout. OK? Charlie there?’

  ‘OK,’ said the ASM coming on stage.

  ‘Got it?’

  ‘Got it.’

  ‘Good. Any questions? Rangi, are the mattresses all right?’

  ‘I was all right. What about you two?’

  ‘All right that time,’ said Wendy. ‘We might sprain an ankle.’

  ‘Fall soft, lie flat and crawl off,’ said Peregrine.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘W
ait a bit.’ He used his makeshift steps to the stage and ran up on to the rostrum. ‘Like this,’ he said, and jumped high. He fell out of sight with a soft thud.

  ‘We’ll have to deal with that,’ said the effects man. ‘How about the muffled drum again?’

  There followed a complete silence. Wendy on the edge of the rostrum looked over. Perry lying on his back looked up at her.

  ‘All right?’ she asked.

  ‘Perfectly,’ he said in a strange voice. ‘I won’t be a moment. Next scene. Clear stage.’

  They moved away. Peregrine gingerly explored his right side. Below the ribs. Above the hip. Nothing broken but a hellishly sore bruise. He crept up into a kneeling position on the tarpaulin-covered mattress and from there saw what had happened. Under the tarpaulin was an unmistakable shape, cruciform, bumpy, with the hilt tailing out into the long blade. He felt it: undoubtedly the claymore. The wooden claymore, discarded since they had begun using the steel replicas of the original.

  He got to his feet and, painfully holding his bruise, stumped on to the clear stage. ‘Charlie?’

  ‘Here, sir.’

  ‘Charlie, come here. There’s a dummy claymore under the cover. Don’t say anything about it. I don’t want anyone to know it’s there. Mark the position with chalk and then move it out and tuck the cover back in position. Understand?’

  ‘I get you.’

  ‘If they know it’s there, they’ll start talking a lot of nonsense.’

  ‘Are you all right, sir?’

  ‘Perfectly,’ said Peregrine. ‘Just a jolt.’

  He straightened up and drew in his breath. ‘Right,’ he said, and walked on stage and down into the auditorium to his desk.

  ‘Call Scene Three,’ he said and sank into his seat.

  ‘Scene Three,’ called the Assistant Stage Manager. ‘Witches. Macbeth. Banquo.’

  III

  Scene Three was pretty thoroughly rehearsed. The witches came in from separate spots and met on stage. Rangi had his speech about the sailor to Aleppo gone, and contrived an excretion of venom in voice and face, egged on by moans of pleasure from his sisters. Enter Macbeth and Banquo. Trouble. Banquo’s position. He felt he should be on a higher level. He could not see Macbeth’s face. On and on in his beautiful voice. Peregrine, exquisitely uncomfortable and feeling rather sick, dealt with him, only just keeping his temper.