The same SCENE half an hour later.
ROSALIE is discovered by table R.
ROSALIE. Father in ’Eaven,
help me. My little girl is in terrible trouble
and there is not anyone to ’elp ’er but
me. She is a good girl you know all
things, you know she is a good girl. Show me the
way. I ’ave been a fakir all my life.
I ’ave tricked them and fooled them, but
I ’ave never meant to ’arm a soul,
I ’ave never done ’arm to any person.
And there is a power. It ’as come to me
before, a power that I could not understand.
I felt it, and I showed it. Oh God, give it to
me again. Do this for my little girl, for the
sake of your Son. Amen.
(Turns and goes up stage and then
to the window at R. She pulls up the blind
and raises the window. The light comes up from
the street lamp, throwing out her figure in strong
silhouette, and showing a square patch of light on
the ceiling. In the C. of this patch, sticking
point up in the heavy wooden panelling, can be seen
the knife. ROSALIE stands for a few moments
looking out at the night. DONOHUE enters
down L. He turns on the lights from the switch
below the door down L.)
DONOHUE (crosses to L.C.). Who turned
off the lights?
ROSALIE (at window R.). I did, sir.
DONOHUE. Why?
ROSALIE. I was praying. (Coming to above table
R.)
DONOHUE. Praying? What for?
ROSALIE. Guidance.
DONOHUE (with a laugh). I hope you get
it.
ROSALIE (with conviction).
I will, sir, I will. (She starts toward the door
L.) I will join the others now.
DONOHUE. I think’d you better wait. (Calls
off L.) Mike!
(ROSALIE is C. DUNN enters from L.)
DUNN. Yes, Inspector.
DONOHUE. Did Madame la Grange see you as she
came in here?
DUNN (down L.). No, sir.
I followed your instructions and kept out of sight.
DONOHUE (L.C.). How long has she been here?
DUNN. About ten minutes.
DONOHUE. Time enough for her to find what we
couldn’t.
DUNN. I’ll bet she’s got it.
DONOHUE. Take her to Mrs. MacPherson.
She’s not to go near anyone or speak to anyone.
Tell Mrs. Mac to search her. (He turns to ROSALIE,
who is C.) Unless, of course, you want to give
up that knife now.
ROSALIE. I ’ave not any knife, and
I ’ave been searched once.
DONOHUE (L.C.). Exactly, and
then you were allowed to come back into this room.
We’re rather anxious to see what you’ve
found while you were in here. Well?
ROSALIE. I ’ave found nothing that
would be any good to you.
DONOHUE. I’m the best judge of that.
What was it you found?
ROSALIE. I found comfort, sir.
A feeling that the innocent would come to no ’arm.
DONOHUE (dryly). Take
her to Mrs. MacPherson. Come back as soon as
you turn her over to the matron.
DUNN. Yes, Inspector. Come on come
on, you.
ROSALIE (crossing L.). I will come!
(They go out. He stands looking
after them for about five seconds, when DUNN re-enters
and says:)
DUNN (above door L.). Mrs. Mac’s
got her.
DONOHUE. She turned out that
light. I wonder why? What did she want in
the dark.
(He goes over toward the light
switch at L. and puts out his hand. He
stops suddenly as his attention is attracted by a
POLICEMAN coming feet foremost down the chimney.
DONOHUE gives a little start and then comes
L.C. The POLICEMAN jumps down all the way
in fireplace, and comes into the room to console table
L. end of chesterfield. His uniform is covered
with soot, and so are his face and hands. DUNN
goes down L. below door.)
DUNN. I sent him to see if they’d
hidden that knife up there?
DONOHUE. Good. (To POLICEMAN.) Find anything?
POLICEMAN. Nothing but dirt. Who pays for
this uniform?
DONOHUE. You don’t, anyway.
Could you hear anything while you were up there?
POLICEMAN. Not a thing.
DONOHUE. You are sure?
POLICEMAN. Certain.
DONOHUE. Go and get a bath.
POLICEMAN. ’Tain’t Saturday.
(He exits at L. DONOHUE crosses R. Pause.)
DUNN (down L. After a pause). Don’t
it beat Hell?
DONOHUE. Why?
DUNN. That knife couldn’t have flew away.
DONOHUE (coming C.). We’ll
find it eventually. It’s in this room somewhere.
DUNN. No, sir, it ain’t.
DONOHUE. Where have you looked?
DUNN. Everywhere.
DONOHUE. Not hidden in the furniture?
DUNN. I’ll gamble it ain’t.
Took up all the rugs, shook ’em. Dug through
the upholstery in the furniture, looked back of mat
on the wall. It’s not in the bric-a-brac,
or whatever these swells call their jugs.
(DONOHUE crosses towards table R.)
DONOHUE. Unless we find it on the old woman,
it’s still in this room.
DUNN. I suppose you noticed that she opened the
window.
DONOHUE (upper end of table
R.). Yes, I noticed that. Mike, you’ve
the makings of a great detective.
DUNN. I’m a darned good detective now.
(DONOHUE goes to window at R. and calls
out.)
DONOHUE. Say, Doolan! See anything?
DOOLAN (outside window R.).
A woman put up the window just now. She stood
there a while looking up in the air. (Pause.)
Watching the stars, I guess.
DONOHUE. Have anything in her hand?
DOOLAN. No, sir. The light
from this lamp was shinin’ right on her.
I could see everything.
DONOHUE. Throw anything out of the window?
DOOLAN. No, Inspector.
DONOHUE. All right. You’re to arrest
anyone leaving the house.
DOOLAN. I gotcha.
(DONOHUE comes below table R. and turns
to DUNN. Crosses to L.C.)
DONOHUE. We’ll find the knife eventually.
We’ve got to. Get me Mr.
Crosby, the O’Neill girl that’s
the order I want to see them in here.
(DUNN exits L. DONOHUE crosses
up R. end of chesterfield to chest up R.,
starts to cross L. below chesterfield.
CROSBY enters down L. and closes the door.
DONOHUE comes down to C. by R. end
of chesterfield.)
CROSBY (L.C.). Your man told me to come here.
DONOHUE. Yes. Sorry to have
to give orders in your house. If you don’t
like it I can take everyone down to Police Headquarters.
You know what will happen what the newspapers
will do if I take all these ladies and gentlemen down
town. In the end this way will be the best for
you and your friends. Well, how about it?
CROSBY (L.C.). Thank you.
I think you’d better regard this house as your
own for the present.
DONOHUE (C.). All right.
If you don’t mind I’ll use this room as
a headquarters for the present.
CROSBY. I have already told you
to use this house as your own.
DONOHUE. Thank you. Good evening.
CROSBY (with a laugh). I’m dismissed?
DONOHUE. You’re dismissed.
(CROSBY walks toward door L.) Why did Wales
object to the engagement of your son and Helen O’Neill?
CROSBY (turns to DONOHUE). Who told you
that? (Moving a few steps.)
DONOHUE. It doesn’t matter. I know
that he did. Why?
CROSBY (turning front). I can’t
talk about it.
DONOHUE (C.). All right.
You’re the best judge of that. Only I’m
attaching a great deal of importance to this fact.
If I’m unduly emphasizing its value, don’t
you think you’d better set me straight about
it?
CROSBY. What possible bearing can it have on
DONOHUE. Motive, my dear sir, motive.
CROSBY. Come now. You can’t
think that this girl killed Wales because she heard
him ask us to wait before we sanctioned her engagement
to my son.
DONOHUE. She did hear Mr. Wales
make that objection. That’s just what I
wanted to know.
CROSBY (L.). I think I’d better send for
my lawyer.
DONOHUE (C.). Well, you can do
as you like about that. Frankly, I don’t
understand your attitude at all. I can appreciate
your desire to spare your son all the unhappiness
that you can. But if this young woman killed
Wales and Lee, the sooner we find it out the better
for you and your family.
CROSBY. Oddly enough I was thinking only of Miss
O’Neill at the moment.
DONOHUE. You’d better think
of yourself and your family first. (Moves R.
a few steps.)
CROSBY. That’s for me to
decide. I certainly am not going to allow that
child to be bullied and badgered in the usual police
fashion. (Moves R. a step.)
DONOHUE. You’re going to
do as you are told, sir. If you warn that girl,
if you caution her in any way, I’ll drag every
one of you down town. You and your wife and your
son and the girl and all your friends. Be reasonable,
Mr. Crosby. If the girl is innocent, telling me
the truth won’t hurt her. If she’s
guilty, and I think she is, by God, I’m going
to drag the truth out of her and her mother. (There
is a knock on the door down L.) Come in.
(HELEN enters L.)
HELEN (L.). You wanted me?
DONOHUE. Yes, come in. Sit down, please.
(Indicating chair below table
R. HELEN crosses and sits. CROSBY starts
to move R.)
CROSBY. Helen
DONOHUE. What you are planning
to do, Mr. Crosby, will only make matters worse, I
promised you that.
(After a moment’s pause
CROSBY exits L. and leaves door open.
DONOHUE turns, closes door and turns sharply to
HELEN. Crosses towards the table.)
Now then, young woman, let’s hear what you’ve
got to say.
HELEN. Nothing.
DONOHUE (C.). Nothing? I
don’t suppose it’s necessary for me to
tell you that you’re under grave suspicion.
HELEN. No, I realize that.
DONOHUE. Now, the best way to
help yourself if you’re innocent is to be quite
frank with me. (She simply looks at him, but does
not speak.) Well?
HELEN. I’ve already told you that there
is nothing that I can say.
DONOHUE. Someone has advised
you not to answer me. Who was it? (There is
a pause.) You’d better tell me. (Moves
R.C.)
HELEN. I am not going to answer any of your questions.
DONOHUE. I told you that if you
were innocent, nothing that you could say would hurt
you. If you’re guilty well that’s
a different matter.
HELEN. You know that I didn’t do it.
DONOHUE (in front of table
R.). Well, there you are. Why not answer
my question then? The sooner we find out who is
guilty the sooner you’ll be freed from suspicion.
You see that, don’t you?
HELEN. Yes.
DONOHUE (brings chair and sits
in front of table R.). Now we’re getting
along. How well did you know Spencer Lee? (HELEN
does not answer him looking front.)
You’d better make up your mind to talk.
Do you hear? (HELEN does not speak. Losing
his temper.) Why, you little fool, do you think
you can fight me? (He turns sharply to face her,
turning his back on the door at L.) You were the last person to see Spencer
Lee alive. Yes, and you saw him dead, too. You heard Wales threaten
to tell these fine people what he knew about you; you knew hed prevent your
marriage to this young millionaire, and then
(ROSALIE enters quietly from
L. and stands for a moment watching them.)
When your chance came in the dark
you killed him. Now then, you come across with
the truth.
ROSALIE. She’ll come across
with nothing. (Crosses R. to table.)
(DONOHUE rises and stands by table R.C.
HELEN rises.)
You said that she was the one that
did it and you would find the knife on ’er.
Well, you did not, did you? You think that she
is the person that killed Spencer Lee?
DONOHUE. Yes.
ROSALIE. Well, she is not.
You say you ’ave the finger-prints of the
girl who was in his rooms. Well, take ’er
finger-prints and put them side by side with the others,
and then you will see. I dare you to do that.
HELEN (with a cry). Mother
(She stops suddenly.)
DONOHUE. What were you going to say?
HELEN. Nothing.
(DUNN enters with box and envelope.)
DONOHUE. That’s very wise of you.
DUNN. Got it, Inspector. (Crosses to C.)
DONOHUE (down R.). Do they compare?
DUNN. To a T.
(ROSALIE C., HELEN down R.
DONOHUE in front table between HELEN and
ROSALIE.)
DONOHUE. All right. Let
me have ’em. Now ask Mr. Crosby and his
son to come here at once.
(DUNN turns and exits L. DONOHUE up
C. crosses to back of table R.)
I already have your daughter’s finger-prints,
Madame la Grange.
ROSALIE. ’Ave you really? ... You
are very smart.
(HELEN crosses to ROSALIE R.C.
ROSALIE puts her arms about the girl and swings
her L. of her. When DONOHUE opens
box at the back of table CROSBY and WILLIAM
enter from L. accompanied by DUNN.)
DONOHUE. That’s all, Mike.
(DUNN exits L. and closes
door. CROSBY L. of HELEN. WILLIAM
L. of CROSBY.)
Mr. Crosby, I told you that I’d
settle this case in a few minutes. The end has
come sooner than I thought. I am now ready to
make an arrest. I have sent for you and your
son because (He suddenly turns toward
HELEN.) This is the woman we have been hunting.
ROSALIE. That is a lie! (R. end of chesterfield.)
(WILLIAM goes to HELEN.)
DONOHUE (picking up cup and holding
it out toward them). Here is the cup
(CROSBY crosses down R. to below table moves
chair over R.)
which we took from Spencer Lee’s
rooms. These are the finger-prints of the woman
who used it. (Ignoring CROSBY for the moment.)
Here is the saucer that she used. More finger-prints.
A few minutes ago I sent this young woman a note.
The man who gave it to her wore gloves, so did I when
I addressed the envelope. Hers are the only naked
hands that have touched it. (He picks up the envelope
gingerly by one corner, and holds it outward to them.)
They are unquestionably Helen O’Neill’s
finger-prints. (HELEN is in WILLIAM’S
arms. DONOHUE puts down the envelope.
Then he picks up the cup and points to the finger-marks
on it.) And so, Mr. Crosby, are these. There
can be no doubt about it. There is never any
doubt about this method of identification. In
twenty years there has never been one mistake.
We now have what we’ve been hunting for:
the woman who went to Spencer Lee’s rooms.
(DONOHUE steps back with a little
gesture of triumph. CROSBY stands staring
at the girl. ROSALIE comes to R. of
HELEN, turns to her.)
ROSALIE (C.). Look at me, my
darling. Look at your mother. (She takes
HELEN’S face in her hands and looks at her
closely. Then with a little cry of contentment
stands R. of HELEN. ROSALIE and
HELEN back up to chesterfield.) Now, darling,
you must not be frightened. Look up, child.
Why do not you say something?
HELEN. I can’t.
(Sits on chesterfield. DONOHUE gives a short
laugh.)
DONOHUE. What can she say?
WILLIAM (going to her). Dear, tell him
it’s a lie.
CROSBY. Wait. Let me talk
to her. (CROSBY comes over to HELEN and
sits beside her on the chesterfield, R. side.
WILLIAM is at L. end.) My dear, you
understand that none of us believe what
the Inspector wants us to believe. We know that
you have never done anything that you are
no more guilty of this atrocious crime than I am.
We all want to help you. We believe in you and
trust you and love you. You understand that,
don’t you?
HELEN. Yes.
WILLIAM. I won’t have this.
CROSBY. I’m afraid you
must, Will. (He turns again to HELEN.) We want
to help you, so, my dear, you must be perfectly frank
with us. Inspector Donohue says he can prove
that you went to that man’s rooms. Is that
true?
HELEN (slowly and reluctantly). Yes.
(DONOHUE gives a short laugh. Sits back of
table R.)
ROSALIE (R. of chesterfield).
And what if she did? She had a good errand.
What did you go for, darling?
HELEN. I can’t tell you.
WILLIAM. Dear, you must tell
us. (She looks at him suddenly. He comes over
and kneels beside her and talks to her as if to a little
child.) My dear, it isn’t that we don’t
trust you. Surely you know how we all love you?
But we must know the truth because we have
to show him how wrong he is.
DONOHUE (seated back of table R.). Yes,
and I’m waiting to be shown.
WILLIAM (kneeling L. of HELEN).
Why did you go to Spencer Lee?
HELEN (sitting on chesterfield).
You mustn’t ask me that. I can’t tell
you.
CROSBY (still on chesterfield).
But if you don’t tell us, how can we help you?
HELEN. I didn’t do anything, I didn’t
do anything.
CROSBY. We know that, my child.
But why did you go? (HELEN does not answer.)
Did you know Spencer Lee?
WILLIAM. Of course she didn’t.
DONOHUE (seated back of table R.). Why
don’t she speak for herself?
WILLIAM. Because I’ll speak for her.
CROSBY. Can’t you answer even that question?
(HELEN shakes her head and makes a despairing gesture.)
WILLIAM. But, dear, don’t
you see what they’ll think? Helen, you must
tell me.
HELEN. Could I speak to mother, alone? (She
rises.)
DONOHUE. You cannot.
(CROSBY and WILLIAM rise.
CROSBY moves to L. end of chesterfield.)
ROSALIE (R. end of chesterfield).
Where is the ’arm in that? A child ’as
the right to talk to ’er own mother any time
she does want.
DONOHUE. Anything you wish to say you can say
in front of me.
ROSALIE (coming to HELEN C.).
Darling, you need not mind the nice Inspector.
I well know that there was never anything in your mind
that you could not say before all the world. (There
is a pause.) Tell your mother, my darling.
(CROSBY is now C. WILLIAM stands below him
C.)
HELEN (beginning to cry). I can’t.
I can’t.
ROSALIE (C.). Stop, there ’as
been crying enough. I did lose my ’ead
through that. Stop crying or I will beat you.
(She too begins to cry and takes her daughter in
her arms again.) There, there, my dear. Your
mother is not going to let anyone ’urt you not
anyone at all. (They cry together for a moment,
and then ROSALIE gets her self-control back.
She blows her nose vigorously.) We will both be
the better for that. Now then, tell me.
HELEN. Mother, I can’t.
ROSALIE (R.C.). Who did you promise you would
not?
HELEN (surprised). Why, how did you
ROSALIE. She is shielding someone.
HELEN. No. No.
ROSALIE. That is the first lie
you ’ave ever told me. I want to know
who it is you are shielding? (HELEN does not answer.
ROSALIE suddenly turns to WILLIAM.) She is
your girl?
WILLIAM (L.C.). Yes.
ROSALIE. Then make her tell.
WILLIAM (to HELEN C.). Nell dear, you must
HELEN. Billy, I can’t.
CROSBY (drops down L. of
group). My dear, even if you’re protecting
someone else, I think you ought to tell us.
HELEN (with a sudden outburst). Why are you all
against me? Why are you all trying to make me break my
(Moves to R. end of chesterfield.
WILLIAM comes to her. CROSBY is
L.C.)
ROSALIE (interrupting HELEN,
coming to R.C.). Break your word?
You shall not. You need not tell. I know
it myself now I ’ave been blind.
(She turns suddenly on the INSPECTOR moves
to down table R., above him.) You are the
one that found out there was two Helens. The extra
Helen, you said. Well, please to send for the
other Helen and ask her.
HELEN. Mother, stop!
ROSALIE. Stop? I will not.
CROSBY (C.). Wait, please.
Is it my daughter you’re protecting? (HELEN
does not answer.) Because if it is –much
as we love her my dear, we can’t
accept that sacrifice from you. I’m her
father, and you must tell me the truth. Did my
daughter send you? (There is a long pause.)
Did you go for my daughter?
HELEN (slowly). Yes.
ROSALIE. I did know it. (Above table R.)
CROSBY. My daughter sent you. What for?
HELEN (R.C.). Some letters.
WILLIAM (in front of chesterfield C.).
Why didn’t she go herself?
HELEN. She was afraid.
DONOHUE (still seated back of table R.).
Well, go on.
(HELEN does not speak.)
WILLIAM (R.C.). Tell him, dear, it’s all
right.
HELEN. I don’t know what to say.
DONOHUE. Why not tell the truth?
(Rises and comes to chair below table R.)
ROSALIE. Tell the Inspector what
happened, dearie. (Putting HELEN in chair
front of table R.)
HELEN. Nothing happened.
That’s the funny part of it. The minute
Mr. Lee understood that I knew about the letters,
everything was changed. I said that unless he
gave them to me I’d tell Mr. Crosby about them.
He seemed terribly upset. He said he hadn’t
meant to frighten Helen. That he loved her, and
was desperate. I thought it was a funny kind of
love, but I didn’t tell him that. Then
he gave me the letters.
DONOHUE. Was this before or after you had tea
with him?
HELEN. Before.
DONOHUE. Go on. He gave you the letters?
HELEN (seated in front of table
R.). Yes. And he seemed terribly unhappy.
He begged me to stay and talk to him for a few minutes,
and I did. He asked me to have some tea with
him, and I did that too.
DONOHUE. How charming! What did you do after
tea?
(ROSALIE is at the back of the chair in the front
of the table.)
HELEN. I came home and gave Helen her letters.
DONOHUE. And that’s all?
HELEN. That’s all.
DONOHUE. Why did you do this?
HELEN. She’s Billy’s sister.
DONOHUE. My compliments, young
woman. That was beautifully done. And she
looks so innocent too.
WILLIAM (C). You dont believe
DONOHUE. Not a word of it. Not one word.
ROSALIE. And why not?
DONOHUE. That I don’t
is sufficient. Her story is preposterous. Your daughters
WILLIAM. It is the truth.
DONOHUE. Do you expect me to
believe for a minute that a man like Lee would threaten
your daughter, and then when a total stranger comes
to him and asks for the letters, give them up without
a word? Why, no jury in the world would believe
your story.
WILLIAM. Jury? You’re not going to
arrest her?
DONOHUE. She is arrested.
ROSALIE. You ’ave not proof.
DONOHUE (below table R.).
All the proof that I need. If she was innocent,
why didn’t she tell me all this when I first
questioned her? Why did she wait until she knew
that I had proof that she had been in Spencer
Lee’s rooms?
WILLIAM. She was protecting my sister.
DONOHUE. Women don’t hang together like
that.
ROSALIE (upper end of table
R.). Oh, they do, they do! The poor creatures!
DONOHUE (down R.). They
do not. I know them. (He turns to WILLIAM.)
She wasn’t protecting your sister. She was
protecting herself. She went for the letters,
of course; and they had tea before she asked for them,
not afterwards.
CROSBY (R.C. to L. of WILLIAM).
How do you know that?
DONOHUE. She couldn’t take tea with a man
she’s just killed.
WILLIAM. Why, damn you (Starts
R.)
CROSBY (grabbing WILLIAM by shoulders).
Billy!
WILLIAM (breaks up stage a few
steps, then down stage again). I’m
sorry. I didn’t mean to lose my temper.
I suppose we’ve got to take this thing calmly.
Inspector, you honestly believe that Nelly killed this
man?
DONOHUE. Yes.
WILLIAM. Why should she?
DONOHUE. She was engaged to you he
had compromising letters she had written to him he
was threatening her with exposure she went
to get her letters. They had tea together she’s
admitted that, after we proved it, and then when he
wouldn’t give up her letters she killed him.
So much for the first murder. (Turns away.)
Now for the second: she was sitting next to Wales;
he had already threatened her with exposure; in another
minute the medium would have told her name as that
of the person who had been at Spencer Lee’s
rooms. She pulled her hand away from his, struck
and took his hand again. (There is a pause.)
Young man, you’ll have a hard time tearing apart
that chain of evidence.
ROSALIE. Except for the fact
that she did never write the man a letter in ’er
life, it is a grand case you ’ave, Inspector.
WILLIAM (down C. a step.
CROSBY goes above WILLIAM C.). Of course.
Dad, we’ve lost our brains. She didn’t
go for her own letters. (WILLIAM turns to the
INSPECTOR.) You were talking of juries. Do you
think any jury will believe that a young girl would
kill a man to get back another woman’s letters
for her? (He starts toward door L.)
CROSBY. Where are you going?
WILLIAM. To get my sister.
DONOHUE. Wait. (WILLIAM stops.) I’ll
send for Mrs. Trent.
WILLIAM (crosses L.C.). But I want to ask her
DONOHUE (interrupting him).
I’ll ask my own questions. If you want to
help this investigation, you might call Sergeant Dunn
for me.
(WILLIAM opens door at L.)
WILLIAM. Sergeant Dunn, the Inspector
wants you. (He turns back to the girl, and
DUNN enters L.)
DONOHUE. Ask Mrs. Trent to come here.
(DUNN exits at L. ROSALIE is
at the R. end of chesterfield. HELEN
is in the chair in front of the table R. WILLIAM
C. CROSBY walks up L., then back to
L.C. DONOHUE below the table looking at them
with a grim smile. After a pause of about ten
seconds MRS. TRENT and TRENT enter from
L., followed by DUNN, who stands below the door.)
I sent for Mrs. Trent.
TRENT (L.C.). I know that. What do you want
to see her about?
DONOHUE. Mrs. Trent, did you
ask this girl to go to Spencer Lee’s rooms to
get letters you had written to him?
TRENT (L. of MRS. TRENT). Did she what?
DONOHUE. Did you, Mrs. Trent?
MRS. TRENT (L.C.). Certainly not.
HELEN. Why (Rises from chair in
front of table R.)
DONOHUE (sternly). Keep still, you. (To
MRS. TRENT.) Are you sure?
TRENT (L. of MRS. TRENT). Of course she’s
sure.
DONOHUE. Mr. Trent, you must stop these interruptions.
(To MRS.
TRENT.) Will you please answer my question?
MRS. TRENT. I never wrote a letter
to Spencer Lee in my life. (She suddenly turns
to HELEN.) How dare you say I sent you there?
HELEN. You did! You did! (In front of
table.)
MRS. TRENT (down L.C.). I dont know what shes
told you, Inspector, but
DONOHUE. Never mind what she told me. I
want to be very sure of this.
You did not ask this girl to go to Spencer Lee’s
rooms?
MRS. TRENT. No.
DONOHUE (down R.). He had no letters of
yours?
MRS. TRENT (L.C.). No.
DONOHUE. Do you know whether this girl had written
to him?
MRS. TRENT. I don’t know anything about
it.
WILLIAM (coming L. of
MRS. TRENT. CROSBY comes C.). But
Nell didn’t know Lee, and you did, Helen.
DONOHUE (still down R.). How about that,
Mrs. Trent?
MRS. TRENT. I hadn’t seen
Mr. Lee for two or three years. He used to come
here a good deal. He wanted to marry me, but I
didn’t like him. And I certainly never
wrote him letters of any sort. That is all I can
tell you.
DONOHUE. Thank you very much. That is all
that I want to know.
WILLIAM (turning on his sister).
You’re lying to save yourself. You’ve
got to tell the truth.
TRENT. She is telling you the truth.
WILLIAM. She’s not.
CROSBY (after a pause, putting his hand on his
son’s shoulder).
I’m sorry, Billy.
(WILLIAM goes up to chesterfield
C. and sits. CROSBY looks coldly at
HELEN and turns to his daughter.)
MRS. TRENT. Father, you know that
CROSBY. Yes, dear, I know. Inspector, do
you want us any more?
DONOHUE. Not any more, thank you.
CROSBY. Come then, children.
(He exits with MR. and MRS. TRENT down
L.)
(HELEN is still in front of the
table R. As the door closes, DONOHUE crosses
to L.C.)
DONOHUE. Mike, take her down town.
ROSALIE (C.). I would not if
I was you. Inspector, I do know who ’as
done it.
(WILLIAM rises.)
DONOHUE (turning to ROSALIE C.). You know!
Who was it?
ROSALIE. I cannot tell you yet. (DONOHUE laughs.
WILLIAM goes to
HELEN.) But I will! I will!
DONOHUE. Telling’s not
enough. There’s just one thing that will
convince me that she didn’t kill Spencer Lee.
WILLIAM (down E.). What, Inspector, what?
DONOHUE. The confession of the one who did. (He
turns to ROSALIE.)
Bring me that and I’ll set your daughter free.
ROSALIE (C.). Inspector, give
me a chance. Do not arrest my little girl.
Give me time. I do know who ’as done it
and I will get for you what you want.
DONOHUE (L.C.). Nonsense!
ROSALIE (moves up to INSPECTOR).
Give me one hour, sir. Keep them all here one
hour more.
DONOHUE. No.
WILLIAM (in front of table
R.). Give her a chance. We are all here no
one will get away. What difference will a few
minutes make?
(There is a pause. DONOHUE
takes out his watch and looks at it.)
DONOHUE. I’ll give her
ten minutes. Mike, tell Doolan again to arrest
anyone trying to leave the house, and get on the front
door yourself and stay there until I tell you. (DUNN
turns and exits at L.) You’ve got just
ten minutes.
(He follows DUNN off L.)
ROSALIE. Ten minutes! Ten minutes!
(WILLIAM crosses to door L. and closes it.)
WILLIAM (L.C.). Why didn’t you tell
who did it?
ROSALIE (C.). How could I?
I ’ave no idea in the world. But I
am going to find out. I am going to find out.
HELEN (B.C.). But how, mother, how?
ROSALIE. Call them back. Make them all come,
too. I want them all.
(HELEN runs off L.) Sir, run down into the
’all. Do you know which is
Mr. Wales’ overcoat?
WILLIAM. Yes, I think so.
ROSALIE. See if you can find
for me a glove or something of ’is and
’urry, mon Dieu, ’urry!
(WILLIAM runs off L. ROSALIE
stands in thought for a moment, then she places
a chair C. facing up stage. WILLIAM
runs on again and hands her a glove.)
Did you get it?
WILLIAM (L.C.). What are you going to do?
ROSALIE (L.C.). Trick them. Lie to them.
It is for Nelly. Do you blame me?
WILLIAM. What can I do to help?
ROSALIE. You are a man after
my own ’eart. I am going to do something
to put the fear of God into the ’eart of that
murderer. Do not pay any attention to me.
Watch them. Do not look at me, do not take
your eyes off them. I am looking for one of them
to do something that will show us the way. It
is our only chance.
(HELEN runs in L.)
HELEN. They’re coming.
ROSALIE. Leave the door open
so we can ’ear them. (HELEN does so and returns
to her mother, standing L. of ROSALIE.)
Child, kiss me for luck. (They kiss.) It will
do no ’arm to kiss him, too. (They kiss.)
Now, my boy, can you lie?
WILLIAM. Can I!
ROSALIE (C.). I am going into
a trance. When they do come into the room you
will tell them that I asked for Mr. Wales’ glove
and the minute I ’ave it in my hand I went
off like they see me. Tell them you thought there
might be some reason for it. And then leave the
rest to me. (She sits in the chair C., facing
the back of the stage.)
WILLIAM. I understand.
ROSALIE. You stand here at the
back of me. I wish for them all to be in front
of me. (WILLIAM crosses back of ROSALIE to
R. side of ROSALIE’S chair.
HELEN crosses R. of ROSALIE above
her.) Nelly, stand close by me. (To WILLIAM.)
Go farther back. (HELEN moves to R. of
ROSALIE.) That’s right. Now don’t
you move from there. This will be the realest
trance and the grandest fake. When I come out,
make them go away, tell them you are afraid and that
it will kill me to see anyone.
(She suddenly stiffens in her chair.
Lying rigid with her head thrown back on the head-rest,
and the hand in which she is holding WALES’
glove stretched out straight in front of her.
Enter down L., CROSBY, MISS EASTWOOD, STANDISH,
TRENT, MRS. CROSBY, MRS. TRENT, MISS ERSKINE and
MISS STANDISH.)
CROSBY (crossing to up L.C.). What is
it, Billy?
(MISS EASTWOOD goes to the
L. side of ROSALIE’S chair, MRS.
TRENT and MRS. CROSBY L. of chesterfield
C.; TRENT, MISS ERSKINE and STANDISH lower
L. end of chesterfield.)
STANDISH. What’s happened?
WILLIAM (R. side of ROSALIE’S
chair). I don’t know, exactly.
We were talking about this awful thing. She knew,
of course, that her daughter couldn’t have done
it, and she asked me to get her something that had
belonged to poor Wales. I got a glove out of Wales’
overcoat pocket and handed it to her, and then all
of a sudden she went stiff like that. I don’t
know what it means.
(The others draw closer to
ROSALIE. MISS EASTWOOD comes to ROSALIE
and lays her hand on her forehead.)
MISS EASTWOOD. She’s like
ice, she’s not (Backing up
C. a few steps.)
HELEN. Oh, no, it’s a trance.
(MASON enters L.)
MASON. I wouldn’t touch her if I were you.
ROSALIE. (Speaking as LAUGHING
EYES.) Hello, everybody! What are you all so
solemn about? I’ve got a message from a
new friend. He do not want me to send it he
wants to talk; ha, ha, ha, he thinks he can talk,
and he ’as only been here a little while. (Still
speaking as LAUGHING EYES.) He says you are all
fools. It is so plain, so plain. He is looking
right at the one who did it, right straight at the
one who did it.
WALES’ VOICE. I’m
coming to you until you tell. I can’t speak
names. You’ve got to tell, I’m coming,
again and again and again, until you tell. Find
the knife. You must find the knife. The marks
will show. The marks will show.
(MISS EASTWOOD shrieks and faints
on L. end of chesterfield. MASON is
below end of chesterfield looking at her.
WILLIAM is standing R. side and back of
ROSALIE looking eagerly about him. HELEN
turns and looks at MISS EASTWOOD. MRS.
CROSBY goes to MISS EASTWOOD on chesterfield.)
MASON. This has got to stop.
(Starts to move to ROSALIE’S chair L.
side of it.)
HELEN (R. side of ROSALIE’S
chair). You mustn’t touch her.
MASON. It’s all right as
far as the men are concerned, but look at that girl.
(He points to MISS EASTWOOD on the chesterfield.)
They’ll all be fainting if this isn’t
stopped.
(TRENT goes to ROSALIE.)
WALES’ VOICE. Trent, let
the medium alone. Do you understand? Let
the medium alone.
TRENT. That’s Wales’ voice and
Wales is dead.
(MASON goes slowly to ROSALIE’S
chair. TRENT moves L. above
MASON to STANDISH. ROSALIE begins to
mutter and moan. Suddenly she brings her hands
together, and then throws her arms wide apart.
WALES’ glove sails out of her hand and strikes
MASON on the face. It falls to the floor.)
(STANDISH exits very quietly door
down L. MASON picks glove up, holding it in
his hand looks at it suddenly
drops it to the floor turns to MRS.
CROSBY.)
MASON. Mrs. Crosby, shall I take
Miss Eastwood to your room for you?
MRS. CROSBY. Yes, please, Philip.
(MISS ERSKINE moves to door
L. MASON assists MISS EASTWOOD and helps
her from the room, exiting door down L. MRS. CROSBY
goes out L. TRENT wipes his hands with handkerchief.
ROSALIE stirs uneasily and moans.)
HELEN (standing R. side
of ROSALIE’S chair). Please leave
her to me. I’m afraid seeing you all here
will trouble her. I’m afraid she’ll
Oh, won’t you please go.
(The others turn, move towards
the door down L. and go out.)
CROSBY (below L. end of
chesterfield). Let me know if there’s
anything I can do.
(ROSALIE moans again.)
HELEN. Yes, yes. Only please go now.
(CROSBY goes out L. WILLIAM
runs quickly to the door at L., closes it
and then turns to ROSALIE, who is sitting up
in her chair.)
ROSALIE (rises and crosses a step R.).
Well?
HELEN (R.C.). It was the Eastwood
girl. Her face was terrible. I was glad
when she fainted.
WILLIAM (L.C.). I think you’re
wrong. Standish ran away. He couldn’t
bear it.
ROSALIE. And that is all
you saw? I told you to use your eyes and the
brains that are at the back of them.
WILLIAM. Well, of course, there
was Trent. You can’t mean Trent? Why,
he’s the kindest man in the world. (There
is a pause.) The letters. If he’s known
the truth about the letters. (Breaks L. a
step.)
HELEN (coming down to L. of
ROSALIE’S chair and picking up glove).
Mother, why did you throw that glove at Mason?
ROSALIE. Did it hit him?
Well, well! Well, any’ow it was a good séance.
(ROSALIE crosses down R.C.)
HELEN (moving to L. side
of ROSALIE). Mother, you know? You’ve
found out?
(WILLIAM takes ROSALIE’S
chair up L. and then comes down L.)
ROSALIE. It is one thing to know and another
to prove.
HELEN (L. of ROSALIE). Mother, who was
it?
ROSALIE. Child, child, do you
think it is a game we do play? I ’ave
two or three minutes. What I ’ave
to do I ’ave to do quickly.
HELEN. But what, mother, what?
ROSALIE. I do not know!
I do not know! Child, if you do not get away
from me you will drive me mad.
WILLIAM. But cant we
ROSALIE. This is no work for children. Leave
me alone and let me think.
(WILLIAM and HELEN run off L., closing
door.)
ROSALIE. He will never tell in
the world. Never in all this world. (L.C. Half
in thought.) Laughing Eyes, you are no good to
me in the world. We ’ave faked all
our lives, and now when I want the real thing I get
nothing at all. If I could find the knife, there
would be marks of a ’and on that. But it
is gone. It is gone. I cannot let ’im
get away. I want a sign. I want a sign.
Laughing Eyes, are we going to be beaten by a scheming,
cold-hearted murderer?
(Two knocks are heard outside the
door down L. After five seconds two further
knocks. ROSALIE starts and looks hastily
around the room.)
I did not do that. I did not
do that. (She lifts her skirt and sees that her
feet are still in her shoes.) It is come!
After all the years, a real message. A real message.
I will ’ave it in the dark, believing and
trusting that I am to be shown.
(She crosses down to door L.
and switches off the light. All the lights
in the room are out. The spot from the window
shines on the ceiling, brilliantly illuminating the
knife. ROSALIE moves C.)
Laughing Eyes, have you a message
for me? (She looks up at knife in ceiling.)
Look at it! The knife!
(The door at L. opens,
POLLOCK stands in the doorway. He sees that
the lights are out and turns them on. Then he
sees ROSALIE, who is standing C., facing
front as in a trance.)
POLLOCK. Excuse me, madam.
I knocked twice, but you didn’t hear me.
ROSALIE. I ’eard you. Just the same,
it was a message.
POLLOCK. The Inspector says, have you got anything
you want to tell him?
(ROSALIE stands lost in thought.
POLLOCK looks at her for a moment and then nervously
begins to place the chair below table to up R.
corner of scene. He notices that the window
blind is up, goes over and pulls it down and draws
the curtains. He then comes back to ROSALIE,
above table R.)
The Inspector says, have you got anything you want
to tell him.
(ROSALIE drops down R. in front of table.
DONOHUE enters from L.)
DONOHUE (moving C). Time’s about
up. (He laughs.) Well?
ROSALIE (below table R.). I want them
all here. All of them. Everyone.
DONOHUE. What for?
ROSALIE. You are going to ’ear the murderer
confess.
DONOHUE. Pollock, ask Mr. Crosby
to bring everyone here, (Crosses R. to above
table.)
POLLOCK. Very good, sir.
(He exits L. DONOHUE takes
out his watch and stands with it in his hand watching
ROSALIE. She stands lost in her dreams.
DUNN enters with HELEN O’NEILL down
L.)
DUNN. Here she is, Inspector.
DONOHUE. Come here, miss. (HELEN
crosses to DONOHUE. To DUNN.) Go and
get a taxi.
(DUNN turns and exits L. The
others enter and stand crowding in the doorway.
WILLIAM pushes through and crosses and stands by
HELEN up R.C. right end of chesterfield.)
CROSBY (up L.C.). What is it? You
sent for us.
DONOHUE (between table and chesterfield).
She says her daughter’s not guilty. I gave
her ten minutes to find out who is. The time’s
up. (He puts his watch back in his pocket.
He turns to ROSALIE.) Well?
(ROSALIE stands rigid. There is a long pause.)
ROSALIE (below table R.). You that is
’iding, come out!
DONOHUE. Come on. (He takes
HELEN by the hand. They go up R. above
table.)
ROSALIE (lower end of table
R.). You that is skulking, come out! I call
on the spirit of Edward Wales. I call on the spirit
of Edward Wales. Now, you that’s killed
two men, look!
(The door at L. of fireplace
slowly swings open. MASON with a cry of
horror pushes through the crowd at the doorway, which
parts to let him through. He follows the spirit
he sees moving across the stage until he is C.
and a little above the table. MRS. TRENT,
MISS ERSKINE and STANDISH below door down
L. TRENT, MRS. CROSBY, MISS EASTWOOD C. above door
L. WILLIAM up R.C. All watch MASON. Suddenly
the window curtains are thrown back, the blind runs
up noisily and the lights go down. The street
light strikes the knife in the ceiling, as it begins
to fall. MASON’S eye follows the
light. He sees the knife and gives a cry of horror
as it strikes the table and sticks in front of him.
MASON rushes up stage end of table R.)
MASON (with a cry). I
can’t fight the dead. I can’t fight
the dead!
(Slowly ROSALIE points at
him. The others stand and stare.)
ROSALIE. Go on, tell it. (Lower R. side
of table R.)
MASON. I had to do it. I was afraid Mr.
Wales would know.
ROSALIE. You did kill them both?
MASON. Yes.
ROSALIE. Mr. Wales to prevent ’im finding
out about Spencer Lee?
MASON. Yes.
ROSALIE. And Spencer Lee?
MASON. He ought to have been
killed. I’d been waiting for years to kill
him.
ROSALIE. Why?
MASON. That’s between him
and me. He smashed my life, and by God, I got
him. He knows why I killed him, I told him I would.
I’m glad I did. I only wish I could have
done it over and over again. That’s all.
ROSALIE. Why did you kill Spencer Lee?
MASON. He took her away from
me. She was the one thing in the world and he
took her away from me. I went to Paris to forget
and all I could do was to remember. Then she
died, and I made up my mind that he must die too.
DONOHUE. How did you get the knife in the ceiling?
MASON. I threw it. Just
as I threw a knife into Spencer Lee’s back.
I stood in the doorway of his room and told him I’d
come to kill him, and he ran for his revolver and
as he ran I threw the knife into his back. Then
I picked up my knife and walked away. No one saw
me. I was quite safe. Quite safe until she
came. And unseen hands pushed me forward.
Unseen hands have pointed the way. She’s
not human. Lee’s message came through her you
all heard Wales speak; out of her lips we heard Wales’
voice. He said he’d come back, again and
again and again. And then he came! I saw
him as he came through the door! God Almighty,
you can’t fight the dead!
(He turns suddenly and walks to
door L. As he opens it SERGEANT DUNN steps
into the room.)
DONOHUE. That’s your man, Sergeant.
DUNN (putting his hand on MASON’S arm).
You got him?
DONOHUE. Yes, I got him.
DUNN. Great work, chief, great work. (He takes
MASON off down L.)
(HELEN crosses down to lower end of table R.)
ROSALIE (as they disappear from
view). The poor young man! the poor young
man!
DONOHUE. Ladies and gentlemen, you are all quite
at liberty.
(He goes toward door L.)
CROSBY. Thank you, Inspector, for your consideration.
DONOHUE. Not at all, it was the best way out
of it.
ROSALIE. Inspector! (Coming below table
R. to R.C.)
DONOHUE (half turning). Yes.
ROSALIE. My congratulations.
(He looks at her for a moment,
then turns back and shakes hands with her.)
DONOHUE. You were quite right about me.
I was a damn fool.
(He exits at L. HELEN comes below table
R.)
MRS. TRENT (turning to her father
up L.C. with a cry). Oh, daddy, daddy!
I lied about her! I lied about her!
(CROSBY takes her in his arms,
up L. HELEN crosses to ROSALIE from
below table R.)
ROSALIE (C.). There is nothing
but ’appiness coming to you. The spirits
tell me you are the favourite child of fortune.
You will ’ave wealth and prosperity and
’appiness. You will marry the man you love,
and you will be ’appy.