“Oh, rather! Priceless!”
“Wasn’t that part an Englishman before?” asked Mrs Peagrim. “I thought so. Well, it was a stroke of genius changing it. This Scotchman is too funny for words. And such an artist!”
Freddie rose shakily. One can stand just so much.
“Think,” he mumbled, “I’ll be pushing along and smoking a cigarette.”
He groped his way to the door.
“I’ll come with you, Freddie my boy,” said Uncle Chris, who felt an imperative need of five minutes’ respite from Mrs Peagrim. “Let’s get out into the air for a moment. Uncommonly warm it is here.”
Freddie assented. Air was what he felt he wanted most.
Left alone in the box with her nephew, Mrs Peagrim continued for some moments in the same vein, innocently twisting the knife in the open wound. It struck her from time to time that darling Otie was perhaps a shade unresponsive, but she put this down to the nervous strain inseparable from a first night of a young author’s first play.
“Why,” she concluded, “you will make thousands and thousands of dollars out of this piece. I am sure it is going to be another ‘Merry Widow.’”
“You can’t tell from a first night audience,” said Mr Pilkington sombrely, giving out a piece of theatrical wisdom he had picked up at rehearsals.