FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   >>  
, he shall not excel!" KEITH. Exactly. But if I'm to help you, you must do as I say. I must have time to think this out. Have you got money? LARRY. Very little. KEITH. [Grimly] Half-quarter day--yes, your quarter's always spent by then. If you're to get away--never mind, I can manage the money. LARRY. [Humbly] You're very good, Keith; you've always been very good to me--I don't know why. KEITH. [Sardonically] Privilege of A brother. As it happens, I'm thinking of myself and our family. You can't indulge yourself in killing without bringing ruin. My God! I suppose you realise that you've made me an accessory after the fact--me, King's counsel--sworn to the service of the Law, who, in a year or two, will have the trying of cases like yours! By heaven, Larry, you've surpassed yourself! LARRY. [Bringing out a little box] I'd better have done with it. KErra. You fool! Give that to me. LARRY. [With a strange smite] No. [He holds up a tabloid between finger and thumb] White magic, Keith! Just one--and they may do what they like to you, and you won't know it. Snap your fingers at all the tortures. It's a great comfort! Have one to keep by you? KEITH. Come, Larry! Hand it over. LARRY. [Replacing the box] Not quite! You've never killed a man, you see. [He gives that crazy laugh.] D'you remember that hammer when we were boys and you riled me, up in the long room? I had luck then. I had luck in Naples once. I nearly killed a driver for beating his poor brute of a horse. But now--! My God! [He covers his face.] KEITH touched, goes up and lays a hand on his shoulder. KEITH. Come, Larry! Courage! LARRY looks up at him. LARRY. All right, Keith; I'll try. KEITH. Don't go out. Don't drink. Don't talk. Pull yourself together! LARRY. [Moving towards the door] Don't keep me longer than you can help, Keith. KEITH. No, no. Courage! LARRY reaches the door, turns as if to say something-finds no words, and goes. [To the fire] Courage! My God! I shall need it! CURTAIN SCENE II At out eleven o'clock the following night an WANDA'S room on the ground floor in Soho. In the light from one close-shaded electric bulb the room is but dimly visible. A dying fire burns on the left. A curtained window in the centre of the back wall. A door on the right. The furnitur
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   >>  



Top keywords:
Courage
 

killed

 

quarter

 
hammer
 

shoulder

 
remember
 

driver

 

Naples

 

beating

 

covers


touched

 
shaded
 

electric

 

ground

 

centre

 

furnitur

 

window

 

curtained

 

visible

 
reaches

longer

 

Moving

 
eleven
 

CURTAIN

 

bringing

 

suppose

 

killing

 
Exactly
 

family

 
indulge

realise

 

service

 

counsel

 

accessory

 
thinking
 

Grimly

 

Sardonically

 
Privilege
 

brother

 

manage


Humbly

 
fingers
 

finger

 

tortures

 

Replacing

 

comfort

 

tabloid

 

heaven

 

surpassed

 

Bringing