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ELIZABETH. I seem to know her already. I think her face is a little sad, for a love like that doesn't leave you gay, it leaves you grave, but I think her pale face is unlined. It's like a child's.
C.-C. My dear, how you let your imagination run away with you!
ELIZABETH. I imagine her slight and frail.
C.-C. Frail, certainly.
ELIZABETH. With beautiful thin hands and white hair. I've pictured her so often in that Renaissance Palace that they live in, with old Masters on the walls and lovely carved things all round, sitting in a black silk dress with old lace round her neck and old-fas.h.i.+oned diamonds. You see, I never knew my mother; she died when I was a baby.
You can't confide in aunts with huge families of their own. I want Arnold's mother to be a mother to me. I've got so much to say to her.
C.-C. Are you happy with Arnold?
ELIZABETH. Why shouldn't I be?
C.-C. Why haven't you got any babies?
ELIZABETH. Give us a little time. We've only been married three years.
C.-C. I wonder what Hughie is like now!
ELIZABETH. Lord Porteous?
C.-C. He wore his clothes better than any man in London. You know he'd have been Prime Minister if he'd remained in politics.
ELIZABETH. What was he like then?
C.-C. He was a nice-looking fellow. Fine horseman. I suppose there was something very fascinating about him. Yellow hair and blue eyes, you know. He had a very good figure. I liked him. I was his parliamentary secretary. He was Arnold's G.o.dfather.
ELIZABETH. I know.
C.-C. I wonder if he ever regrets!
ELIZABETH. I wouldn't.
C.-C. Well, I must be strolling back to my cottage.
ELIZABETH. You're not angry with me?
C.-C. Not a bit.
[_She puts up her face for him to kiss. He kisses her on both cheeks and then goes out. In a moment TEDDIE is seen at the window._
TEDDIE. I saw the old blighter go.
ELIZABETH. Come in.
TEDDIE. Everything all right?
ELIZABETH. Oh, quite, as far as he's concerned. He's going to keep out of the way.
TEDDIE. Was it beastly?
ELIZABETH. No, he made it very easy for me. He's a nice old thing.
TEDDIE. You were rather scared.
ELIZABETH. A little. I am still. I don't know why.
TEDDIE. I guessed you were. I thought I'd come and give you a little moral support. It's ripping here, isn't it?
ELIZABETH. It is rather nice.
TEDDIE. It'll be jolly to think of it when I'm back in the F.M.S.
ELIZABETH. Aren't you homesick sometimes?
TEDDIE. Oh, everyone is now and then, you know.
ELIZABETH. You could have got a job in England if you'd wanted to, couldn't you?
TEDDIE. Oh, but I love it out there. England's ripping to come back to, but I couldn't live here now. It's like a woman you're desperately in love with as long as you don't see her, but when you're with her she maddens you so that you can't bear her.
ELIZABETH. [_Smiling._] What's wrong with England?
TEDDIE. I don't think anything's wrong with England. I expect something's wrong with me. I've been away too long. England seems to me full of people doing things they don't want to because other people expect it of them.
ELIZABETH. Isn't that what you call a high degree of civilisation?
TEDDIE. People seem to me so insincere. When you go to parties in London they're all babbling about art, and you feel that in their hearts they don't care twopence about it. They read the books that everybody is talking about because they don't want to be out of it. In the F.M.S. we don't get very many books, and we read those we have over and over again. They mean so much to us. I don't think the people over there are half so clever as the people at home, but one gets to know them better. You see, there are so few of us that we have to make the best of one another.
ELIZABETH. I imagine that frills are not much worn in the F.M.S. It must be a comfort.
TEDDIE. It's not much good being pretentious where everyone knows exactly who you are and what your income is.
ELIZABETH. I don't think you want too much sincerity in society. It would be like an iron girder in a house of cards.
TEDDIE. And then, you know, the place is ripping. You get used to a blue sky and you miss it in England.
ELIZABETH. What do you do with yourself all the time?
TEDDIE. Oh, one works like blazes. You have to be a pretty hefty fellow to be a planter. And then there's ripping bathing. You know, it's lovely, with palm trees all along the beach. And there's shooting. And now and then we have a little dance to a gramophone.
ELIZABETH. [_Pretending to tease him._] I think you've got a young woman out there, Teddie.
TEDDIE. [_Vehemently._] Oh, no!
[_She is a little taken aback by the earnestness of his disclaimer.
There is a moment's silence, then she recovers herself._