LADY KITTY. It hasn"t made my eyelashes run, has it?
PORTEOUS. Not a bit.
LADY KITTY. It"s very good stuff I use now. They don"t stick together either.
PORTEOUS. Look here, Kitty, how much longer do you want to stay here?
LADY KITTY. Oh, I"m quite ready to go whenever you like.
PORTEOUS. Clive gets on my nerves. I don"t like the way he keeps hanging about you.
LADY KITTY. [_Surprised, rather amused, and delighted._] Hughie, you don"t mean to say you"re jealous of poor Clive?
PORTEOUS. Of course I"m not jealous of him, but he does look at you in a way that I can"t help thinking rather objectionable.
LADY KITTY. Hughie, you may throw me downstairs like Amy Robsart; you may drag me about the floor by the hair of my head; I don"t care, you"re jealous. I shall never grow old.
PORTEOUS. d.a.m.n it all, the man was your husband.
LADY KITTY. My dear Hughie, he never had your style. Why, the moment you come into a room everyone looks and says: "Who the devil is that?"
PORTEOUS. What? You think that, do you? Well, I daresay there"s something in what you say. These d.a.m.ned Radicals can say what they like, but, by G.o.d, Kitty! when a man"s a gentleman--well, d.a.m.n it all, you know what I mean.
LADY KITTY. I think Clive has degenerated dreadfully since we left him.
PORTEOUS. What do you say to making a bee-line for Italy and going to San Michele?
LADY KITTY. Oh, Hughie! It"s years since we were there.
PORTEOUS. Wouldn"t you like to see it again--just once more?
LADY KITTY. Do you remember the first time we went? It was the most heavenly place I"d ever seen. We"d only left England a month, and I said I"d like to spend all my life there.
PORTEOUS. Of course I remember. And in a fortnight it was yours, lock, stock and barrel.
LADY KITTY. We were very happy there, Hughie.
PORTEOUS. Let"s go back once more.
LADY KITTY. I daren"t. It must be all peopled with the ghosts of our past. One should never go again to a place where one has been happy.
It would break my heart.
PORTEOUS. Do you remember how we used to sit on the terrace of the old castle and look at the Adriatic? We might have been the only people in the world, you and I, Kitty.
LADY KITTY. [_Tragically._] And we thought our love would last for ever.
[_Enter CHAMPION-CHENEY._
PORTEOUS. Is there any chance of bridge this evening?
C.-C. I don"t think we can make up a four.
PORTEOUS. What a nuisance that boy went away like that! He wasn"t a bad player.
C.-C. Teddie Luton?
LADY KITTY. I think it was very funny his going without saying good-bye to anyone.
C.-C. The young men of the present day are very casual.
PORTEOUS. I thought there was no train in the evening.
C.-C. There isn"t. The last train leaves at 5.45.
PORTEOUS. How did he go then?
C.-C. He went.
PORTEOUS. d.a.m.ned selfish I call it.
LADY KITTY. [_Intrigued._] Why did he go, Clive?
[_CHAMPION-CHENEY looks at her for a moment reflectively._
C.-C. I have something very grave to say to you. Elizabeth wants to leave Arnold.
LADY KITTY. Clive! What on earth for?
C.-C. She"s in love with Teddie Luton. That"s why he went. The men of my family are really very unfortunate.
PORTEOUS. Does she want to run away with him?
LADY KITTY. [_With consternation._] My dear, what"s to be done?
C.-C. I think you can do a great deal.
LADY KITTY. I? What?
C.-C. Tell her, tell her what it means.
[_He looks at her fixedly. She stares at him._
LADY KITTY. Oh, no, no!
C.-C. She"s a child. Not for Arnold"s sake. For her sake. You must.
LADY KITTY. You don"t know what you"re asking.