OLIVIA. It is an ugly word, isn"t it?
GEORGE. Yes, but don"t you understand--(He jumps up and comes over to her) Look here, Olivia, old girl, the whole thing is nonsense, eh? It isn"t your husband, it"s some other Telworthy that this fellow met.
That"s right, isn"t it? Some other shady swindler who turned up on the boat, eh? This sort of thing doesn"t happen to people like _us_--committing bigamy and all that. Some other fellow.
OLIVIA (shaking her head). I knew all the shady swindlers in Sydney, George. . . . They came to dinner. . . . There were no others called Telworthy.
(GEORGE goes back despondently to his seat.)
GEORGE. Well, what are we going to do?
OLIVIA. You sent Mr. Pim away so quickly. He might have told us things. Telworthy"s plans. Where he is now. You hurried him away so quickly.
GEORGE. I"ve sent a note round to ask him to come back. My one idea at the moment was to get him out of the house--to hush things up.
OLIVIA. You can"t hush up two husbands.
GEORGE (in despair). You can"t. Everybody will know. Everybody!
OLIVIA. The children, Aunt Julia, they may as well know now as later.
Mr. Pim must, of course.
GEORGE. I do not propose to discuss my private affairs with Mr.
Pim----
OLIVIA. But he"s mixed himself up in them rather, hasn"t he, and if you"re going to ask him questions----
GEORGE. I only propose to ask him one question. I shall ask him if he is absolutely certain of the man"s name. I can do that quite easily without letting him know the reason for my inquiry.
OLIVIA. You couldn"t make a mistake about a name like Telworthy. But he might tell us something about Telworthy"s plans. Perhaps he"s going back to Australia at once. Perhaps he thinks I"m dead, too. Perhaps-- oh, there are so many things I want to know.
GEORGE. Yes, yes, dear. It would be interesting to--that is, one naturally wants to know these things, but of course it doesn"t make any real difference.
OLIVIA (surprised). No difference?
GEORGE. Well, that is to say, you"re as much his wife if he"s in Australia as you are if he"s in England.
OLIVIA. I am not his wife at all.
GEORGE. But, Olivia, surely you understand the position----
OLIVIA (shaking her head). Jacob Telworthy may be alive, but I am not his wife. I ceased to be his wife when I became yours.
GEORGE. You never _were_ my wife. That is the terrible part of it. Our union--you make me say it, Olivia--has been unhallowed by the Church.
Unhallowed even by the Law. Legally, we have been living in--living in--well, the point is, how does the Law stand? I imagine that Telworthy could get a--a divorce. . . . Oh, it seems impossible that things like this can be happening to _us_.
OLIVIA (Joyfully). A divorce?
GEORGE. I--I imagine so.
OLIVIA. But then we could _really_ get married, and we shouldn"t be living in--living in--whatever we were living in before.
GEORGE. I can"t understand you, Olivia. You talk about it so calmly, as if there was nothing blameworthy in being divorced, as if there was nothing unusual in my marrying a divorced woman, as if there was nothing wrong in our having lived together for years without having been married.
OLIVIA. What seems wrong to me is that I lived for five years with a bad man whom I hated. What seems right to me is that I lived for five years with a good man whom I love.
GEORGE. Yes, yes, my dear, I know. But right and wrong don"t settle themselves as easily as that. We"ve been living together when you were Telworthy"s wife. That"s _wrong_.
OLIVIA. Do you mean wicked?
GEORGE. Well, no doubt the Court would consider that we acted in perfect innocence--
OLIVIA. What Court?
GEORGE. These things have to be done legally, of course. I believe the proper method is a nullity suit, declaring our marriage null and--er--void. It would, so to speak, wipe out these years of--er--
OLIVIA. Wickedness?
GEORGE. Of irregular union, and--er--then--
OLIVIA. Then I could go back to Jacob. . . . Do you really mean that, George?
GEORGE (uneasily). Well, dear, you see--that"s how things are--one can"t get away from--er----
OLIVIA. What you feel is that Telworthy has the greater claim? You are prepared to--make way for him?
GEORGE. Both the Church and the Law would say that I had no claim at all, I"m afraid. I--I suppose I haven"t.
OLIVIA. I see. (She looks at him curiously) Thank you for making it so clear, George.
GEORGE. Of course, whether or not you go back to--er--Telworthy is another matter altogether. That would naturally be for you to decide.
OLIVIA (cheerfully). For me and Jacko to decide.
GEORGE. Er--Jacko?
OLIVIA. I used to call my first husband--I mean my only husband--Jacko. I didn"t like the name of Jacob, and Jacko seemed to suit him somehow. . . . He had very long arms. Dear Jacko.
GEORGE (annoyed). You don"t seem to realise that this is not a joke, Olivia.
OLIVIA (a trifle hysterically). It may not be a joke, but it _is_ funny, isn"t it?
GEORGE. I must say I don"t see anything funny in a tragedy that has wrecked two lives.
OLIVIA. Two? Oh, but Jacko"s life isn"t wrecked. It has just been miraculously restored to him. And a wife, too. There"s nothing tragic for Jacko in it.
GEORGE (stiffly). I was referring to _our_ two lives--yours and mine.
OLIVIA. Yours, George? Your life isn"t wrecked. The Court will absolve you of all blame; your friends will sympathise with you, and tell you that I was a designing woman who deliberately took you in; your Aunt Julia----