FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3084   3085   3086   3087   3088   3089   3090   3091   3092   3093   3094   3095   3096   3097   3098   3099   3100   3101   3102   3103   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108  
3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125   3126   3127   3128   3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   >>   >|  
BARTHWICK. Went to bed? Who knows where you went--I 've lost all confidence. For all I know you slept on the floor. JACK. [Indignantly.] I did n't, I slept on the---- BARTHWICK. [Sitting on the sofa.] Who cares where you slept; what does it matter if he mentions the--the--a perfect disgrace? MRS. BARTHWICK. What? [A silence.] I insist on knowing. JACK. Oh! nothing. MRS. BARTHWICK. Nothing? What do you mean by nothing, Jack? There's your father in such a state about it! JACK. It's only my purse. MRS. BARTHWICK. Your purse! You know perfectly well you have n't got one. JACK. Well, it was somebody else's--it was all a joke--I did n't want the beastly thing. MRS. BARTHWICK. Do you mean that you had another person's purse, and that this man took it too? BARTHWICK. Tcha! Of course he took it too! A man like that Jones will make the most of it. It'll get into the papers. MRS. BARTHWICK. I don't understand. What on earth is all the fuss about? [Bending over JACK, and softly.] Jack now, tell me dear! Don't be afraid. What is it? Come! JACK. Oh, don't Mother! MRS. BARTHWICK. But don't what, dear? JACK. It was pure sport. I don't know how I got the thing. Of course I 'd had a bit of a row--I did n't know what I was doing--I was--I Was--well, you know--I suppose I must have pulled the bag out of her hand. MRS. BARTHWICK. Out of her hand? Whose hand? What bag--whose bag? JACK. Oh! I don't know--her bag--it belonged to--[in a desperate and rising voice] a woman. MRS. BARTHWICK. A woman? Oh! Jack! No! JACK. [Jumping up.] You would have it. I did n't want to tell you. It's not my fault. [The door opens and MARLOW ushers in a man of middle age, inclined to corpulence, in evening dress. He has a ruddy, thin moustache, and dark, quick-moving little eyes. His eyebrows aye Chinese.] MARLOW. Mr. Roper, Sir. [He leaves the room.] ROPER. [With a quick look round.] How do you do? [But neither JACK nor MRS. BARTHWICK make a sign.] BARTHWICK. [Hurrying.] Thank goodness you've come, Roper. You remember what I told you this afternoon; we've just had the detective here. ROPER. Got the box? BARTHWICK. Yes, yes, but look here--it was n't the charwoman at all; her drunken loafer of a husband took the things--he says that fellow there [he waves his hand at JACK, who with his shoulder raised, seems trying to ward o
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3084   3085   3086   3087   3088   3089   3090   3091   3092   3093   3094   3095   3096   3097   3098   3099   3100   3101   3102   3103   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108  
3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125   3126   3127   3128   3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

BARTHWICK

 

MARLOW

 

raised

 

moving

 

shoulder

 

evening

 
moustache
 
Jumping
 
middle
 

eyebrows


inclined

 

ushers

 
corpulence
 

Chinese

 

Hurrying

 

goodness

 

remember

 

detective

 

fellow

 
leaves

afternoon

 

drunken

 
charwoman
 

loafer

 
husband
 

things

 

father

 

knowing

 

Nothing

 
perfectly

beastly
 

insist

 

silence

 

confidence

 

Indignantly

 

Sitting

 

mentions

 

perfect

 

disgrace

 

matter


person

 

Mother

 

suppose

 
belonged
 
desperate
 

pulled

 

afraid

 

papers

 
understand
 
softly