Plays: Lady Frederick, The Explorer, A Man of Honor - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
[_Shaking hands with him._] Good-bye. A clergyman always helps one so much to bear other people's misfortunes.
[CARBERY _goes out, and in a moment_ ROBERT BOULGER _comes back into the room_.
LADY KELSEY.
Is he better?
BOULGER.
Oh, much. He'll be all right in a minute. [LADY KELSEY _goes to the window, and he turns to_ MRS. CROWLEY.] You are a brick to come here to-day, when they're all in such awful trouble.
MRS. CROWLEY.
[_With a little hesitation._] Did you really come away before the trial was ended?
BOULGER.
Why, of course. What did you think? You don't imagine they'll convict him?
MRS. CROWLEY.
It's too dreadful.
BOULGER.
Where is Lucy? I was hoping to get a glimpse of her.
MRS. CROWLEY.
I wouldn't trouble her to-day if I were you. I think she most wants to be left alone.
BOULGER.
I wanted to tell her that if I could do anything at all, she had only to command.
MRS. CROWLEY.
I think she knows that. But I'll give her the message if you like....
You're very devoted.
BOULGER.
I've been madly in love with her ever since I was ten.
MRS. CROWLEY.
Take care then. There's nothing so tedious as the constant lover.
[d.i.c.k _comes into the room and speaks to_ ROBERT BOULGER.
d.i.c.k.
George is quite well now. He wants you to smoke a cigarette with him.
BOULGER.
Certainly.
[_He goes on to the balcony._
d.i.c.k.
[_When_ BOULGER _is gone_.] At least, he will the moment he sees you.
MRS. CROWLEY.
What do you mean by that?
d.i.c.k.
Merely that I wanted to talk to you. And Robert Boulger, being a youth of somewhat limited intelligence, seemed in the way.
MRS. CROWLEY.
Why did you leave the Old Bailey?
d.i.c.k.
My dear lady, I couldn't stand it. You don't know what it is to sit there and watch a man tortured, a man you've known all your life, whom you've dined with times out of number, in whose house you've stayed. He had just the look of a hunted beast, and his face was grey with terror.
MRS. CROWLEY.
How was the case going?
d.i.c.k.
I couldn't judge. I could only see those haggard, despairing eyes.
MRS. CROWLEY.
But you're a barrister. You must have heard his answers. What did he reply to all the questions?
d.i.c.k.
He seemed quite dazed. I don't think he took in the gist of his cross-examination.
MRS. CROWLEY.
But the man's innocent.