Night Must Fall : a Play in Three Acts - LightNovelsOnl.com
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HUBERT (_outside_): Good afternoon, Mrs. Terence.
MRS. TERENCE: Oh ... come in, sir. (_Coming back into the room_) It's a civilian for a change.
_She is followed by_ HUBERT.
HUBERT (_to_ OLIVIA): I say, this is all getting pretty terrible, isn't it?
OLIVIA: Yes, terrible.
MRS. TERENCE: Oh, terrible, terrible. There's one word for it; it's terrible. Forty-eight hours since they found 'er. They'll never get 'im now.
HUBERT: Terrible....
MRS. TERENCE: There was another charabanc load just after two o'clock.
All standin' round the rubbish-'cap eatin' sandwiches. Sensation, that's what it is.
OLIVIA: Would you like some food, Hubert?
HUBERT: Well, I--
MRS. TERENCE: They're still looking for the 'ead.
HUBERT (_to_ OLIVIA, _with a slight grimace_): No, thanks. I had lunch.
MRS. TERENCE: Mangled, she was, mangled.... Did you see your name in the _Express_, sir?
HUBERT: I--er--did catch a glimpse of it, yes.
MRS. TERENCE: Little did you think, sir, when you was digging that pit for my rubbish, eh? 'E may 'ave been _watchin'_ you digging it ...
ooh! I have to sit in my kitchen and think about it.
HUBERT: Then why don't you leave?
MRS. TERENCE (_indignantly_): How can I leave, with the whole village waitin' on me to tell 'em the latest? (_Going towards the kitchen_) I 'eard 'er 'ead must have been off at one stroke. One stroke....
HUBERT: Really.
MRS. TERENCE (_turning at the door_): She wasn't interfered with, though.
_She goes into the kitchen._
HUBERT: How they all love it.... How's the old lady bearing up in the old invalid chair, eh?
OLIVIA: She's bursting out of it with health. And loving it more than anybody. This is my latest job--a press-cutting book. There was a picture of her in the _Chronicle_ yesterday; she bought twenty-six copies.
HUBERT (_taking his pipe out_): She'll get to believe she did it herself in the end.... Is she in?
OLIVIA: She's gone over to Breakerly to interview a local paper.
HUBERT: The lad pus.h.i.+ng the go-cart?... He's the devoted son all right, isn't he?
OLIVIA (_after a pause_): I don't talk to him much.
HUBERT: Nice fellow. I've thought a lot about that prying into his things--pretty bad show, really, you know. (_Going to the left window_) I wonder if they'll ever nab him?
OLIVIA (_with a start_): What do you mean?
HUBERT: The fellow who did it.... Wonder what he's doing now.
OLIVIA: I wonder.
HUBERT: d.a.m.n clever job, you know, quietly.... That was a rum touch, finding that broken lipstick in the rubbish-heap.... You know, the fact they still have no idea where this woman's head is----
OLIVIA (_convulsively_): Don't....
HUBERT: Sorry.
OLIVIA (_after a pause_): It's a bit of a strain.
HUBERT (_earnestly_): Then why don't you leave?
OLIVIA: I--I couldn't afford it.
HUBERT: But you _could_, if you married me! Now, look here---- (_Going to her_) You said you'd tell me to-day. So here I am--er-- popping the question again. There's nothing much to add, except to go over the old ground again, and say that I'm not what you'd call a terribly brainy chap, but I am straight.
OLIVIA: Yes, I know.
HUBERT: Though, again, I'm not the sort that gets into corners with a pipe and never opens his mouth from one blessed year's end to the other. I can talk.
OLIVIA: Yes, you can.
HUBERT: An all-round chap, really--that's me.
OLIVIA: Yes.
HUBERT: Well?
OLIVIA: I'm sorry, Hubert, but I can't.
HUBERT: You can't? But you told me that day we might make a go of it, or words to that effect----
OLIVIA: I've thought it over since then, and I'm afraid I can't.
_A pause._
HUBERT: What's changed you?
OLIVIA: Nothing's changed me, Hubert. I've just thought the matter over, that's all.