On the face of it, nobody. In the last scene of the play, Macbeth compares himself to a bear at a bearbaiting, who muct fight off all of the dogs all by himself without any help. The only people we see fighting are Macbeth, young Siward and Macduff; the only casualty that is reported is young Siward, killed by Macbeth.
But this is a very unlikely scenario. There were probably troops that stayed loyal to Macbeth. Seyton seems to be faithful to him the last time we see him, in Act V Scene 5.
A monogamist stays married and faithful to one person only.
Her main concern is to keep the death of the king a secret, and she does not want Macbeth to spoil that up. She wants him to stay the king, so that she stays the queen.
If by "the Macbeth book" you mean Shakespeare's play, Macbeth stays at various castles. The castle where he murders Duncan is at Inverness (It's on Loch Ness in the northeastern part of the country) The castle where he is attacked by the English army supported by the Scottish exiles is at Dunsinane Hill, about halfway between Perth and Dundee and straight north of Edinburgh on the east coast of Scotland
And then Macbeth asked Macbeth if he confronted Macbeth on killing Macbeth with Macbeth.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
How does lady macbeth cover for macbeth at the banquet?
The first apparition warned Macbeth, 'Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: beware Macduff, Beware the Thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough'
The witches never said "Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth". In Act 4, Scene 1, both the First Apparition and the Second Apparition begin their prophecies by calling out, "Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!" Macbeth responds to the First Apparition by thanking it for warning him against the Thane of Fife (Macduff). Macbeth responds to the Second Apparition with: "Had I three ears, I'd hear thee."
Lady Macbeth is the wife of the title character, Macbeth, a Scottish nobleman.
she is the assistant of lady macbeth(macbeth's wife)
Is it true? Is it true that over there in the leafy walkway, you always wait for me by the vine-draped wall? And that with the moonlight and the little stars you consult about me also? Is it true? Speak! What I feel, only she grasps -- she who feels with me and stays ever faithful to me, eternally faithful.
One answer: Duncan is insightful, respectful and shows moral order for the little time he has in the play. Another: Duncan is far from insightful: he is astonished by the treason of Cawdor ("He was a gentleman in whom I placed an absolute trust."), chooses the feckless Malcolm as his heir instead of the better-qualified Macbeth, and is oblivious to the resentment Macbeth feels over being passed over. He is a good man but not a very good king.