SOPHY.
[_In a murmur, her eyes closed._] Eh-h-h?
POLLITT.
I have had my early struggles too.
SOPHY.
You, love?
POLLITT.
Yes. If you should ever hear--
SOPHY.
Hear--?
POLLITT.
That until recently I was a solicitor"s clerk--
SOPHY.
[_Slightly surprised._] A solicitor"s clerk?
POLLITT.
You would not turn against me?
SOPHY.
Ah, as if--!
POLLITT.
You know my real name is Pollitt--Frank Toleman Pollitt?
SOPHY.
I"ve heard it isn"t really Valma. [_With a little shiver._] Never mind that.
POLLITT.
But I shall be Frank to you henceforth, shan"t I?
SOPHY.
Oh, no, no! always Valma to me--[_dreamily_] my Valma. [_Their lips meet in a prolonged kiss. Then the door-gong sounds._] Get up! [_They rise in a hurry. She holds his hand tightly._] Wait and see who it is. Oh, don"t go for a minute! stay a minute!
[_They separate; he stands looking out upon the leads._ MISS CLARIDGE _enters, preceding the_ MARQUESS OF QUEX _and_ SIR CHICHESTER FRAYNE.
LORD QUEX _is forty-eight, keen-faced and bright-eyed, faultless in dress, in manner debonair and charming._ FRAYNE _is a genial wreck of about five-and-forty--the lean and shrivelled remnant of a once good-looking man. His face is yellow and puckered, his hair prematurely silvered, his moustache palpably touched-up._
QUEX.
[_Perceiving_ SOPHY _and approaching her._] How are you, Miss Fullgarney?
SOPHY.
[_Respectfully, but icily._] Oh, how do you do, my lord?
[MISS CLARIDGE _withdraws._ FRAYNE _comes forward, eyeing_ SOPHY _with interest._
QUEX.
My aunt--Lady Owbridge--has asked me to meet her here at two o"clock.
Her ladyship is lunching at a tea-shop close by--bunning is a more fitting expression--with Mrs. Eden and Miss Eden.
SOPHY.
[_Gladly._] Miss Muriel!
QUEX.
Yes, I believe Miss Muriel will place her pretty finger-tips in your charge, [_partly to_ FRAYNE] while I escort Lady Owbridge and Mrs. Jack to view this new biblical picture--[_with a gesture_] a few doors up.
What is the subject?--Moses in the Bulrushes. [_To_ FRAYNE.] Come with us, Chick.
SOPHY.
It"s not quite two, my lord; if you like, you"ve just time to run in next door and have your palm read.
QUEX.
My palm--?
SOPHY.
By this extraordinary palmist everybody is talking about--Valma.
QUEX.
[_Pleasantly._] One of these fortune-telling fellows, eh? [_Shaking his head._] I prefer the gipsy on Epsom race-course.
SOPHY.
[_Under her breath._] Oh, indeed! [_Curtly._] Please take a seat.
[_She flounces up to the desk and busies herself there vindictively._