SIR GEORGE. Do you mind seeing that I"m not robbed by my gondolier? [He goes out.]
AGNES. [Giving the medicine to LUCAS, undisturbed.] Here, dear.
KIRKE. [To AGNES.] May I pop in tonight for my game of chess?
AGNES. Do, doctor; I shall be very pleased.
KIRKE. [Shaking her hand in a marked way.] Thank you. [He follows SIR GEORGE.]
AGNES. [Looking after him.] Liberal little man.
[She has LUCAS" overcoat in her hand: a small pen-and-ink drawing of a woman"s hand drops from one of the pockets. They pick it up together.]
AGNES. Isn"t that the sketch you made of me in Florence?
LUCAS. [Replacing it in the coat-pocket.] Yes.
AGNES. You are carrying it about with you?
LUCAS. I slipped it into my pocket, thinking it might interest the Duke.
AGNES. [a.s.sisting him with his overcoat.] Surely I am too obnoxious in the abstract for your uncle to entertain such a detail as a portrait.
LUCAS. It struck me that it might serve to correct certain preconceived notions of my people"s.
AGNES. Images of a beautiful temptress with peach-blossomed cheeks and stained hair?
LUCAS. That"s what I mean; they suspect a decline of taste on my part, of that sort. Good-bye, dear.
AGNES. Is this mission of the Duke of St Olpherts the final attempt to part us, I wonder? [Angrily, her voice hardening.] Why should they hara.s.s and disturb you as they do?
LUCAS. [Kissing her.] Nothing disturbs me now that I know I and strong and well. Besides, everybody will soon tire of being shocked. Even conventional morality must grow breathless in the chase. [He leaves her. She opens the other door and calls.]
AGNES. Mrs. Thorpe! I"m alone now. [She goes on to the balcony, through the centre window, and looks down below. GERTRUDE enters, and joins her on the balcony.]
GERTRUDE. How well your husband is looking!
AGNES. Sir George Brodrick p.r.o.nounces him quite recovered.
GERTRUDE. Isn"t that splendid! [Waving her hand and calling.] Buon giorno, Signor Cleeve! Come molto meglio voi state! [Leaving the balcony, laughing.] Ha, ha! My Italian! [AGNES waves finally to the gondola below, returns to the room, and slips her arm through GERTRUDE"S.]
AGNES. Two whole days since I"ve seen you.
GERTRUDE. They"ve been two of my bad days, dear.
AGNES. [Looking into her face.] All right now?
GERTRUDE. Oh, "G.o.d"s in his heaven" this morning! When the sun"s out I feel that my little boy"s bed in Ketherick Cemetery is warm and cosy.
AGNES. [Patting GERTRUDE"S hand] Ah!--
GERTRUDE. The weather"s the same all over Europe, according to the papers. Do you think it"s really going to last? To me these chilly, showery nights are terrible. You know, I still tuck my child up at night-time; still have my last peep at him before going to my own bed; and it is awful to listen to these cold rains--drip, drip, upon that little green coverlet of his! [She goes and stands by the window silently.]
AGNES. This isn"t strong of you, dear Mrs. Thorpe. You mustn"t--you mustn"t. [AGNES brings the tray with the cut flowers to the nearer table; calmly and methodically she resumes tr.i.m.m.i.n.g the stalks.]
GETRUDE. You"re quite right. That"s over. Now, then, I"m going to gabble for five minutes gaily. [Settling herself comfortably in an armchair.] What jolly flowers you"ve got there! What have you been doing with yourself? Amos took me to the Caffe Quadri yesterday to late breakfast, to cheer me up. Oh, I"ve something to say to you! At the Caffe, at the next table to ours, there were three English people--two men and a girl--home from India, I gathered. One of the men was looking out of the window, quizzing the folks walking in the Piazza, and suddenly he caught sight of your husband. [AGNES" hands pause in their work.] "I do believe that"s Lucas Cleeve," he said. And then the girl had a peep, and said "Certainly it is." And the man said: "I must find out where he"s stopping; If Minerva is with him, you must call."
"Who"s Minerva?" said the second man. "Minerva is Mrs. Lucas Cleeve,"
the girl said, "it"s a pet name--he married a chum of mine, a daughter of Sir John Steyning"s a year or so after I went out." Excuse me, dear.
Do these people really know you and your husband, or were they talking nonsense?
[AGNES takes the vase of faded flowers, goes onto the balcony, and empties the contents of the vase into the ca.n.a.l. Then she stands by the window, her back towards GERTRUDE.]
AGNES. No, they evidently know Mr. Cleeve.
GERTRUDE. Your husband never calls you by that pet-name of yours. Why is it you haven"t told me you"re a daughter of Admiral Steyning"s?
AGNES. Mrs Thorpe--
GERTRUDE. [Warmly.] Oh, I must say what I mean! I have often pulled myself up short in my gossips with you, conscious of a sort of wall between us. [AGNES comes slowly from the window.] Somehow, I feel now that you haven"t in the least made a friend of me. I"m hurt. St"s stupid of me; I can"t help it.
AGNES. [After a moment"s pause.] I am not the lady these people were speaking of yesterday.
GERTRUDE. Not--?
AGNES. Mr. Cleeve is no longer with his wife; he has left her.
GERTRUDE. Left--his wife!
AGNES. Like yourself, I am a widow. I don"t know whether you"ve ever heard my name--Ebbsmith. [GERTRUDE stares at her blankly.] I beg your pardon sincerely. I never meant to conceal my true position; such a course is opposed to every true principle of mind. But I grew so attached to you in Florence and--well, it was contemptibly weak; I"ll never do such a thing again. [She goes back to the table and commences to refill the vase with the fresh flowers.]
GERTRUDE. When you say that Mr. Cleeve has left his wife, I suppose you mean to tell me that you have taken her place?
AGNES. Yes, I mean that.
[GERTRUDE rises and walks to the door.]
GERTRUDE [At the door.] You knew that I could not speak to you after hearing this?
AGNES. I thought it almost certain that you would not.
[After a moment"s irresolution, GERTRUDE returns, and stands by the settee.]
GERTRUDE. I can hardly believe you.
AGNES. I should like you to hear more than just the bare fact.
GETRUDE. [Drumming on the back of the settee.] Why don"t you tell me more?