“Never.”
“Custom-built to wreck the morale of any given company?”
“That’s Marco.”
“Remember the occasion when he broke off and told latecomers after the interval to sit down or get the hell out of it?”
“Vividly.”
“And when the rest of the cast threw in their parts as one man?”
“I directed the fiasco.”
“He’s said to be more than usually explosive just now on account of no knighthood last batch.”
“He is, I understand, apoplectic, under that heading.”
“Well,” said Jeremy, “it’s your play. I see you’ve settled for rolling the lovely boy and the seduced fair friend and ‘Mr. W.H.’ all up in one character.”
“So I have.”
“How you dared!” Jeremy muttered.
“There have been madder notions over the centuries.”
“True enough. It adds up to a damn good part. How do you see him?”
“Very blond. Very male. Very impertinent.”
“W. Hartly Grove?”
“Might be. Type casting.”
“Isn’t he held to be a bad citizen?”
“Bit of a nuisance.”
“What about your Dark Lady? The Rosaline? Destiny Meade, I see you’ve got here.”
“I rather thought Destiny. She’s cement from the eyes up but she gives a great impression of smoldering depths and really inexhaustible sex. She can produce what’s called for in any department as long as it’s put to her in basic English and very, very slowly. And she lives, by the way, with Marco.”
“That might or might not be handy. And Ann H?”
“Oh, any sound, unsympathetic actress with good attack,” Peregrine said.
“Like Gertie Bracey?”
“Yes.”
“Joan Hart’s a nice bit. I tell you who’d be good as Joan. Emily Dunne. You know? She’s been helping in our shop. You liked her in that T.V. show. She did some very nice Celias and Nerissas and Hermias at Stratford. Prick her down on your list.”
“I shall. See, with a blot I damn her.”
“The others seem to present no difficulty, but the spirit sinks at an infant phenomenon.”
“He dies before the end of Act I.”
“Not a moment too soon. I am greatly perturbed by the vision of some stunted teen-ager acting its pants off!”
“It’ll be called Gary, of course.”
“Or Trevor.”
“Never mind.”
“Would you give me the designing of the show?”
“Don’t be a bloody ass.”
“It’d be fun,” Jeremy said, grinning at him. “Face it: it would be fun.”
“Don’t worry, it won’t happen. I have an instinct and I know it won’t. None of it: the glove, the theatre, the play. It’s all a sort of miasma. It won’t happen.”
Their post box slapped.
“There you are. Fate knocking at the door,” said Jeremy.
“I don’t even wonder if it might be, now,” Peregrine said. “However, out of sheer kindness I’ll get the letters.”
He went downstairs, collected the mail and found nothing for himself. He climbed up again slowly. As he opened the door, he said: “As I foretold you. No joy. All over. Like an insubstantial pageant faded. The mail is as dull as ditchwater and all for you. Oh, sorry!”
Jeremy was talking on the telephone.
He said, “Here he is, now. Would you wait a second?”
He held out the receiver with one hand over the mouthpiece.
“Mr. Greenslade,” he said, “wishes to speak to you. Ducky—this is it.”
THREE
Party
“A year ago,” Peregrine thought, “I stood in this very spot on a February morning. The sun came out and gilded the stage tower of the injured Dolphin and I lusted after it. I thought of Adolphus Ruby and wished I was like him possessed. And here I am again, as the Lord’s my judge, a little jumped-up Cinderella-man in Mr. Ruby’s varnished boots.”
He looked at the restored caryatids, the bouncing cetaceans and their golden legend, and the immaculate white frontage and elegance of ironwork and he adored them all.
He thought: “Whatever happens, this is, so far, the best time of my life. Whatever happens I’ll look back at today, for instance, and say: ‘Oh that was the morning when I knew what’s meant by bliss.’ ”
While he stood there the man from Phipps Bros, came out of Phipps Passage.
“Morning, guvnor,” he said.
“Good morning, Jobbins.”
“Looks a treat, dunnit?”
“Lovely.”
“Ah. Different. From what it was when you took the plunge.”
“Yes: indeed.”
“Yus. You wouldn’t be looking for a watchman, I suppose? Now she’s near finished-like? Night or day. Any time?”
“I expect we shall want someone. Why? Do you know of a good man?”
“Self-praise, no recommendation’s what they say, ainnit?”
“Do you mean you’d take it on?”
“Not to deceive yer, guvnor, that was the idea. Dahn the Passage in our place, it’s too damp for me chubes, see? Somethink chronic. I got good references, guvnor. Plenty’d speak up for me. ’Ow’s it strike yer? Wiv a sickening thud or favourable?”
“Why,” said Peregrine. “Favourably, I believe.”
“Will you bear me in mind, then?”
“I’ll do that thing,” said Peregrine.
“Gor’ bless yer, guv,” said Jobbins and retired down Phipps Passage.
Peregrine crossed the lane and entered the portico of his theatre. He looked at the framed notice:
DOLPHIN THEATRE
REOPENING SHORTLY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
It hung immediately under the tattered Victorian playbill that he had seen on his first remarkable visit.
THE BEGGAR GIRL’S WEDDING
IN RESPONSE TO
OVERWHELMING SOLICITATION!!——
MR. ADOLPHUS RUBY…
When the painters cleaned and resurfaced the façade Peregrine had made them work all round that precarious fragment without touching it. “It shall stay here,” he had said to Jeremy Jones, “as long as I do.”
He opened the front doors. They had new locks and the doors themselves had been stripped and scraped and restored to their original dignity.
The foyer was alive. It was being painted, gilded, polished and furbished. There were men on scaffolds, on long ladders, on pendant platforms. A great chandelier lay in a sparkling heap on the floor. The two fat cherubim, washed and garnished, beamed upside-down into the resuscitated box-office.
Peregrine said good morning to the workmen and mounted the gently curving stairs.
There was still a flower-engraved looking-glass behind the bar, but now he advanced towards himself across shining mahogany, framed by brass. The bar was all golden syrup and molasses in colour. “Plain, serviceable, no tatt,” Peregrine muttered.
The renovations had been completed up here and soon a carpet would be laid. He and Jeremy and the young decorator had settled in the end for the classic crimson, white and gilt, and the panelling blossomed, Peregrine thought, with the glorious vulgarity of a damask rose. He crossed the foyer to a door inscribed management and went in.
The Dolphin was under the control of “Dolphin Theatres Incorporated.” This was a subsidiary of Consolidated Oils. It had been created, broadly speaking, by Mr. Greenslade, to encompass the development of The Dolphin project. Behind his new desk in the office sat Mr. Winter Meyer, an extremely able theatrical business manager. He had been wooed into the service by Mr. Greenslade upon Peregrine’s suggestion, after a number of interviews and, Peregrine felt sure, exhaustive inquiries. Throughout these preliminaries, Mr. Conducis had remained, as it were, the mere effluvium: far from anxious and so potent that a kind of plushy assurance seemed to permeate the last detail of renaissance in The Dolphin.