Scene. Sitting room of Howard Knox dimly
lighted. Time, eight o’clock in the evening.
Entrance from hallway at side to right.
At right rear is locked door leading to a room which
dees not belong to Knox’s suite. At rear
center is fireplace. At left rear door leading
to Knox’s bedroom. At left are windows
facing on street. Near these windows is a large
library table littered with books, magazines, government
reports, etc. To the right of center, midway
forward, is a Hat-top desk. On it is a desk telephone.
Behind it, so that one sitting in it faces audience,
is revolving desk-chair. Also, on desk, are letters
in their envelopes, etc. Against clear wall-spaces
are bookcases and filing cabinets. Of special
note is bookcase, containing large books, and not
more than five feet high, which is against wall between
fireplace and door to bedroom.
Curtain discloses empty stage._
(After a slight interval, door
at right rear is shaken and agitated. After slight
further interval, door is opened inward upon stage.
A Man’s head appears, cautiously looking around).
(Man enters, turns up lights, is
followed by second Man. Both are clad decently,
in knock-about business suits and starched collars,
cuffs, etc. They are trim, deft, determined men).
(Following upon them, enters Hubbard.
He looks about room, crosses to desk, picks up a letter,
and reads address).
{Hubbard}
This is Knox’s room all right
{First Man}
Trust us for that.
{Second Man}
We were lucky the guy with the whiskers
moved out of that other room only this afternoon.
{First Man}
His key hadn’t come down yet when I engaged
it.
{Hubbard}
Well, get to work. That must be his bedroom.
(He goes to door of bedroom, opens,
and peers in, turns on electric lights of bedroom,
turns them out, then turns back to men.) You know
what it is a bunch of documents and letters.
If we find it there is a clean five hundred each for
you, in addition to your regular pay.
(While the conversation goes on,
all three engage in a careful search of desk, drawers,
filing cabinets, bookcases, etc.)
{Second Man}
Old Starkweather must want them bad.
{Hubbard}
Sh-h. Don’t even breathe his name.
{Second Man}
His nibs is damned exclusive, ain’t he?
{First Man}
I’ve never got a direct instruction
from him, and I’ve worked for him longer than
you.
{Second Man}
Yes, and you worked for him for over
two years before you knew who was hiring you.
{Hubbard}
(To First Man.) You’d
better go out in the hall and keep a watch for Knox.
He may come in any time.
(First Man produces skeleton keys
and goes to door at right. The first key opens
it. Leaving door slightly ajar, he makes exit.)
(Desk telephone rings and startles Hubbard.)
{Second Man}
(Grinning at Hubbard’s alarm.)
It’s only the phone.
{Hubbard}
(Proceeding with search.) I
suppose you’ve done lots of work for Stark
{Second Man}
(Mimicking him.) Sh-h. Don’t
breathe his name.
(Telephone rings again and again,
insistently, urgently.)
{Hubbard}
(Disguising his voice.) Hello Yes.
(Shows surprise, seems to recognize
the voice, and smiles knowingly.)
No, this is not Knox. Some mistake. Wrong
number
(Hanging up receiver and speaking
to Second Man in natural voice.) She did hang
up quick.
{Second Man}
You seemed to recognize her.
{Hubbard}
No, I only thought I did.
(A pause, while they search.)
{Second Man}
I’ve never spoken a word to
his nibs in my life. And I’ve drawn his
pay for years too.
{Hubbard}
What of it?
{Second Man}
(Complainingly.) He don’t know I exist.
{Hubbard}
(Pulling open a desk drawer and
examining contents.)
The pay’s all right, isn’t it?
{Second Man}
It sure is, but I guess I earn every
cent of it. (First Man enters through door at right
He moves hurriedly but cautiously. Shuts door
behind him, but neglects to re-lock it.)
{First Man}
Somebody just left the elevator and is coming down
the hall.
(Hubbard, First Man, and Second
Man, all start for door at right rear.)
(First Man pauses and looks around
to see if room is in order. Sees desk-drawer
which Hubbard has neglected to close, goes back and
closes it.)
(Hubbard and Second Man make exit.)
(First Man turns lights low and makes exit.)
(Sound of locking door is heard.)
(A pause.)
(A knocking at door to right.
A pause. Then door opens and Gilford enters.
He turns up lights, strolls about room, looks at watch,
and sits down in chair near right of fireplace.)
(Sound of key in lock of door to right.) (Door
opens, and Knox enters, key in hand. Sees Gifford.)
{Knox}
(Advancing to meet him at fireplace
and shaking hands.) How did you get in?
{Gifford}
I let myself in. The door was unlocked.
{Knox}
I must have forgotten it.
{Gifford}
(Drawing bundle of documents from
inside breast pocket and handing them to Knox.)
Well, there they are.
{Knox}
(Fingering them curiously.)
You are sure they are originals? (Gifford nods.)
I can’t take any chances, you
know. If Gherst changed his mind after I gave
my speech and refused to show the originals such
things have happened.
{Gifford}
That’s what I told him.
He was firm on giving duplicates, and for awhile it
looked as if my trip to New York was wasted. But
I stuck to my guns. It was originals or nothing
with you, I said, and he finally gave in.
{Knox}
(Holding up documents.) I can’t
tell you what they mean to me, nor how grateful
{Gifford}
(Interrupting.) That’s
all right. Don’t mention it. Gherst
is wild for the chance. It will do organized
labor a heap of good. And you are able to say
your own say at the same time. How’s that
compensation act coming on?
{Knox}
(Wearily.) The same old story.
It will never come before the House. It is dying
in committee. What can you expect of the Committee
of Judiciary? composed as it is of ex-railroad
judges and ex-railroad lawyers.
{Gifford}
The railroad brotherhoods are keen on getting that
bill through.
{Knox}
Well, they won’t, and they never
will until they learn to vote right. When will
your labor leaders quit the strike and boycott and
lead your men to political action?
{Gifford}
(Holding out hand.) Well, so
long. I’ve got to trot, and I haven’t
time to tell you why I think political action would
destroy the trade union movement.
(Knox tosses documents on top of
low bookcase between fireplace and bedroom door, and
starts to shake hands.) You’re damn careless
with those papers. You wouldn’t be if you
knew how much Gherst paid for them.
{Gifford}
You don’t appreciate that other crowd.
It stops at nothing.
{Knox}
I won’t take my eyes off of
them. And I’ll take them to bed with me
to-night for safety. Besides, there is no danger.
Nobody but you knows I have them.
{Gifford}
(Proceeding toward door to right.)
I’d hate to be in Starkweather’s office
when he discovers what’s happened. There’ll
be some bad half hours for somebody. (Pausing at
door.) Give them hell to-morrow, good and plenty.
I’m going to be in a gallery. So long.
(Makes exit.)
(Knox crosses to windows, which
he opens, returns to desk, seats himself in revolving
chair, and begins opening his correspondence. )
(A knock at door to right.)
{Knox}
Come in.
(Hubbard enters, advances to desk,
but does not shake hands. They greet each other,
and Hubbard sits down in chair to left of desk.)
(Knox, still holding an open letter, re-volves chair
so as to face his visitor. He waits for Hubbabd
to speak.)
{Hubbard}
There is no use beating about the
bush with a man like you. I know that. You
are direct, and so am I. You know my position well
enough to be assured that I am empowered to treat with
you.
{Knox}
Oh, yes; I know.
{Hubbard}
What we want is to have you friendly.
{Knox}
That is easy enough. When the
Interests become upright and honest
{Hubbard}
Save that for your speech. We
are talking privately. We can make it well worth
your while
{Knox} (Angrily.) If you think you can bribe
me
{Hubbard} (Suavely.) Not at
all. Not the slightest suspicion of it.
The point is this. You are a congressman.
A congressman’s career depends on his membership
in good committees. At the present you are buried
in the dead Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
If you say the word you can be appointed to the livest
committee
{Knox}
(Interrupting.) You have these
appointments to give?
{Hubbard}
Surely. Else why should I be here? It can
be managed.
{Knox}
(Meditatively.) I thought our
government was rotten enough, but I never dreamed
that House appointments were hawked around by the
Interests in this fashion.
{Hubbard}
You have not given your answer.
{Knox}
You should have known my answer in advance.
{Hubbard}
There is an alternative. You
are interested in social problems. You are a
student of sociology. Those whom I represent are
genuinely interested in you. We are prepared,
so that you may pursue your researches more deeply we
are prepared to send you to Europe. There, in
that vast sociological laboratory, far from the jangling
strife of politics, you will have every opportunity
to study. We are prepared to send you for a period
of ten years. You will receive ten thousand dollars
a year, and, in addition, the day your steamer leaves
New York, you will receive a lump sum of one hundred
thousand dollars.
{Knox}
And this is the way men are bought
{Hubbard}
It is purely an educational matter.
{Knox}
Now it is you who are beating about the bush.
{Hubbard}
(Decisively.) Very well then.
What price do you set on yourself?
{Knox}
You want me to quit to
leave politics, everything? You want to buy my
soul?
{Hubbard}
More than that. We want to buy those documents
and letters.
{Knox}
(Showing a slight start.) What
documents and letters?
{Hubbard}
You are beating around the bush in
turn. There is no need for an honest man to lie
even
{Knox}
(Interrupting.) To you.
{Hubbard}
(Smiling.) Even to me.
I watched you closely when I mentioned the letters.
You gave yourself away. You knew I meant the letters
stolen by Gherst from Starkweather’s private
files the letters you intended using to-morrow.
{Knox}
Intend using to-morrow.
{Hubbard}
Precisely. It is the same thing. What is
the price? Set it.
{Knox}
I have nothing to sell. I am not on the market.
{Hubbard}
One moment. Don’t make
up your mind hastily. You don’t know with
whom you have to deal. Those letters will not
appear in your speech to-morrow. Take that from
me. It would be far wiser to sell for a fortune
than to get nothing for them and at the same time
not use them.
(A knock at door to right startles Hubbard.)
{Knox}
(Intending to say, “Come in") Come
{Hubbard}
(Interrupting.) Hush.
Don’t. I cannot be seen here.
{Knox}
(Laughing.) You fear the contamination
of my company. (The knock is repeated.)
{Hubbard}
(In alarm, rising, as Knox purses
his lips to bid them enter.) Don’t let anybody
in. I don’t want to be seen here with
you. Besides, my presence will not put you in
a good light.
{Knox}
(Also rising, starting toward door.)
What I do is always open to the world. I see
no one whom I should not permit the world to know
I saw.
(Knox starts toward door to open
it.) (Hubbabd, looking about him in alarm,
flees across stage and into bedroom, closing the door.
During all the following scene, Hubbard, from time
to time, opens door, and peers out at what is going
on.)
{Knox}
(Opening door, and recoiling.)
Margaret! Mrs. Chalmers!
(Margaret enters, followed by Tommy
and Linda. Margaret is in evening dress covered
by evening cloak.)
{Margaret}
(Shaking hands with Knox.)
Forgive me, but I had to see you. I could not
get you on the telephone. I called and called,
and the best I could do was to get the wrong number.
{Knox}
(Recovering from his astonishment.)
Yes. I am glad.
(Seeing Tommy.) Hello, Tommy.
(Knox holds out his hand, and Tommy
shakes it gravely. Linda stays in back-ground.
Her face is troubled.)
{Tommy}
How do you do?
{Margaret}
There was no other way, and it was
so necessary for me to warn you. I brought Tommy
and Linda along to chaperon me.
(She looks curiously around room,
specially indicating filing cabinets and the stacks
of government reports on table.) Your laboratory.
{Knox}
Ah, if I were only as great a sociological
wizard as Edison is a wizard in physical sciences.
{Margaret}
But you are. You labor more mightily
than you admit or dare to think. Oh,
I know you better than you do yourself.
{Tommy}
Do you read all those books?
{Knox}
Yes, I am still going to school and
studying hard. What are you going to study to
be when you grow up?
(Tommy meditates but does not answer.)
President of these great United States?
{Tommy}
(Shaking his head.) Father
says the President doesn’t amount to much.
{Knox}
Not a Lincoln?
(Tommy is in doubt.)
{Margaret}
But don’t you remember what
a great good man Lincoln was? You remember I
told you?
{Tommy}
(Shaking his head slowly.)
But I don’t want to be killed. I’ll
tell you what!
{Knox}
What?
{Tommy}
I want to be a senator like father. He makes
them dance.
(Margaret is shocked, and Knox’s eyes twinkle.)
{Knox}
Makes whom dance?
{Tommy} (Puzzled.) I don’t know.
(With added confidence.) But
he makes them dance just the same.
(Margaret makes a signal to Linda
to take Tommy across the room.)
{Linda}
(Starting to cross stage to left.)
Come, Tommy. Let us look out of the window.
{Tommy}
I’d rather talk with Mr. Knox.
{Margaret}
Please do, Tommy. Mamma wants to talk to Mr.
Knox.
(Tommy yields, and crosses to right,
where he joins Linda in looking out of the window.)
{Margaret}
You might ask me to take a seat
{Knox}
Oh! I beg pardon.
(He draws up a comfortable chair
for her, and seats himself in desk-chair, facing her.)
{Margaret}
I have only a few minutes. Tom
is at father’s, and I am to pick him up there
and go on to that dinner, after I’ve taken Tommy
home.
{Knox}
But your maid?
{Margaret}
Linda? Wild horses could not
drag from her anything that she thought would harm
me. So intense is her fidelity that it almost
shames me. I do not deserve it. But this
is not what I came to you about.
(She speaks the following hurriedly.)
After you left this afternoon, something happened.
Father received a telegram. It seemed most important.
His secretary followed upon the heels of the telegram.
Father called Tom and Mr. Hubbard to him and they
held a conference. I think they have discovered
the loss of the documents, and that they believe you
have them. I did not hear them mention your name,
yet I am absolutely certain that they were talking
about you. Also, I could tell from father’s
face that something was terribly wrong. Oh, be
careful! Do be careful!
{Knox}
There is no danger, I assure you.
{Margaret}
But you do not know them. I tell
you you do not know them. They will stop at nothing at
nothing. Father believes he is right in all that
he does.
{Knox}
I know. That is what makes him
so formidable. He has an ethical sanction.
{Margaret}
(Nodding.) It is his religion.
{Knox}
And, like any religion with a narrow-minded
man, it runs to mania.
{Margaret}
He believes that civilization rests
on him, and that it is his sacred duty to preserve
civilization.
{Knox}
I know. I know.
{Margaret}
But you? But you? You are in danger.
{Knox}
No; I shall remain in to-night.
To-morrow, in the broad light of midday, I shall proceed
to the House and give my speech.
{Margaret}
(Wildly.) Oh, if anything should happen to
you!
{Knox}
(Looking at her searchingly.) You do care?
(Margaret nods, with eyes suddenly
downcast.) For Howard Knox, the reformer?
Or for me, the man?
{Margaret}
(Impulsively.) Oh, why must
a woman forever remain quiet? Why should I not
tell you what you already know? what you
must already know? I do care for you for
man and reformer, both for
(She is aflame, but abruptly ceases
and glances across at Tommy by the window, warned
instinctively that she must not give way to love in
her child’s presence.)
Linda! Will you take Tommy down to the machine
{Knox}
(Alarmed, interrupting, in low
voice.) What are you doing?
{Margaret}
(Hushing Knox with a gesture.)
I’ll follow you right down.
(Linda and Tommy proceed across
stage toward right exit.)
{Tommy}
(Pausing before Knox and gravely
extending his hand.) Good evening, Mr. Knox.
{Knox}
(Awkwardly.) Good evening,
Tommy. You take my word for it, and look up this
Lincoln question.
{Tommy}
I shall. I’ll ask father about it.
{Margaret}
(Significantly.) You attend
to that, Linda. Nobody must know this.
(Linda nods.)
(Linda and Tommy make exit to right.)
(Margaret, seated, slips back her
cloak, revealing herself in evening gown, and looks
at Knox sumptuously, lovingly, and willingly.)
{Knox}
(Inflamed by the sight of her.)
Don’t! Don’t! I can’t stand
it. Such sight of you fills me with madness.
(Margaret laughs low and triumphantly.)
I don’t want to think of you as a woman.
I must not. Allow me.
(He rises and attempts to draw
cloak about her shoulders, but she resists him.
Yet does he succeed in partly cloaking her.)
{Margaret}
I want you to see me as a woman.
I want you to think of me as a woman. I want
you mad for me.
(She holds out her arms, the cloak
slipping from them.)
I want don’t you see what I want?
(Knox sinks back in chair, attempting
to shield his eyes with his hand.)
(Slipping cloak fully back from her again.)
Look at me.
{Knox}
(Looking, coming to his feet, and
approaching her, with extended arms, murmuring softly.)
Margaret. Margaret.
(Margaret rises to meet him, and
they are clasped in each other’s arms.)
(Hubbard, peering forth through
door, looks at them with an expression of cynical
amusement. His gaze wan-ders, and he sees the
documents, within arm’s reach, on top of bookcase.
He picks up documents, holds them to the light of
stage to glance at them, and, with triumphant expression
on face, disappears and closes door.)
{Knox}
(Holding Margaret from him and
looking at her.) I love you. I do love you.
But I had resolved never to speak it, never to let
you know.
{Margaret}
Silly man. I have known long
that you loved me. You have told me so often
and in so many ways. You could not look at me
without telling me.
{Knox}
You saw?
{Margaret}
How could I help seeing? I was
a woman. Only, with your voice you never spoke
a word. Sit down, there, where I may look at you,
and let me tell you. I shall do the speaking
now.
(She urges him back into the desk-chair,
and reseats herself.) (She makes as if to pull
the cloak around ’her.) Shall I?
{Knox}
(Vehemently.) No, no!
As you are. Let me feast my eyes upon you who
are mine. I must be dreaming.
{Margaret}
(With a low, satisfied laugh of
triumph.) Oh, you men! As of old, and as
forever, you must be wooed through your senses.
Did I display the wisdom of an Hypatia, the science
of a Madam Curie, yet would you keep your iron control,
throttling the voice of your heart with silence.
But let me for a moment be Lilith, for a moment lay
aside this garment constructed for the purpose of
keeping out the chill of night, and on the instant
you are fire and aflame, all voluble with love’s
desire.
{Knox}
(Protestingly.) Margaret! It is not fair!
{Margaret}
I love you and you?
{Knox}
(Fervently and reverently.) I love you.
{Margaret}
Then listen. I have told you
of my girlhood and my dreams. I wanted to do
what you are so nobly doing. And I did nothing.
I could do nothing. I was not permitted.
Always was I compelled to hold myself in check.
It was to do what you are doing, that I married.
And that, too, failed me. My husband became a
henchman of the Interests, my own father’s tool
for the perpetuation of the evils against which I
desired to fight.
(She pauses.) It has been a
long fight, and I have been very tired, for always
did I confront failure. My husband I
did not love him. I never loved him. I sold
myself for the Cause, and the cause profited nothing.
(Pause.) Often, I have lost faith faith
in everything, in God and man, in the hope of any righteousness
ever prevailing. But again and again, by what
you are doing, have you awakened me. I came to-night
with no thought of self. I came to warn you,
to help the good work on. I remained thank
God! I remained to love you and
to be loved by you. I suddenly found myself,
looking at you, very weary. I wanted you you,
more than anything in the world.
(She holds out her arms.) Come
to me. I want you now.
(Knox, in an ecstacy, comes to
her. He seats himself on the broad arm of the
chair and is drawn into her arms.)
{Knox}
But I have been tired at times.
I was very tired to-night and you came.
And now I am glad, only glad.
{Margaret}
I have been wanton to-night.
I confess it. I am proud of it. But it was
not professional. It was the first
time in my life. Almost do I regret almost
do I regret that I did not do it sooner it
has been crowned with such success. You have held
me in your arms your arms. Oh, you
will never know what that first embrace meant to me.
I am not a clod. I am not iron nor stone.
I am a woman a warm, breathing woman .
(She rises, and draws him to his feet.)
Kiss me, my dear lord and lover. Kiss me. (They
embrace.)
{Knox}
(Passionately, looking about him
wildly as if in search of something.) What shall
we do?
(Suddenly releasing her and sinking
back in his own chair almost in collapse.) No.
It cannot be. It is impossible. Oh, why could
we not have met long ago? We would have worked
together. What a comradeship it would have been.
{Margaret}
But it is not too late.
{Knox}
I have no right to you.
{Margaret}
(Misunderstanding. ) My husband?
He has not been my husband for years. He has
no rights. Who, but you whom I love, has any
rights?
{Knox}
No; it is not that.
(Snapping his fingers.) That for him.
(Breaking down.) Oh, if I were
only the man, and not the reformer! If I had
no work to do!
{Margaret}
(Coming to the back of his chair
and caressing his hair.) We can work together.
{Knox}
(Shaking his head under her fingers.)
Don’t! Don’t!
(She persists, and lays her cheek
against his.) You make it so hard. You tempt
me so.
(He rises suddenly, takes her two
hands in his, leads her gently to her chair, seats
her, and reseats himself in desk-chair.) Listen.
It is not your husband. But I have no right to
you. Nor have you a right to me.
{Margaret}
(Interrupting, jealously.)
And who but I has any right to you?
{Knox}
(Smiling sadly.) No; it is
not that. There is no other woman. You are
the one woman for me. But there are many others
who have greater rights in me than you. I have
been chosen by two hundred thousand citizens to represent
them in the Congress of the United States. And
there are many more
(He breaks off suddenly and looks
at her, at her arms and shoulders.) Yes, please.
Cover them up. Help me not to forget.
(Margaret does not obey.) There
are many more who have rights in me the
people, all the people, whose cause I have made mine.
The children there are two million child
laborers in these United States. I cannot betray
them. I cannot steal my happiness from them.
This afternoon I talked of theft. But would not
this, too, be theft?
{Margaret}
(Sharply.) Howard! Wake
up! Has our happiness turned your head?
{Knox}
(Sadly.) Almost and
for a few wild moments, quite. There are all
the children. Did I ever tell you of the tenement
child, who when asked how he knew when spring came,
answered: When he saw the saloons put up their
swing doors.
{Margaret}
(Irritated.) But what has all
that to do with one man and one woman loving?
{Knox}
Suppose we loved you and
I; suppose we loosed all the reins of our love.
What would happen? You remember Gorki, the Russian
patriot, when he came to New York, aflame with passion
for the Russian revolution. His purpose in visiting
the land of liberty was to raise funds for that revolution.
And because his marriage to the woman he loved was
not of the essentially legal sort worshiped by the
shopkeepers, and because the newspapers made a sensation
of it, his whole mission was brought to failure.
He was laughed and derided out of the esteem of the
American people. That is what would happen to
me. I should be slandered and laughed at.
My power would be gone.
{Margaret}
And even if so what of
it? Be slandered and laughed at. We will
have each other. Other men will rise up to lead
the people, and leading the people is a thankless
task. Life is so short. We must clutch for
the morsel of happiness that may be ours.
{Knox}
Ah, if you knew, as I look into your
eyes, how easy it would be to throw everything to
the winds. But it would be theft.
{Margaret}
(Rebelliously.) Let it be theft.
Life is so short, dear. We are the biggest facts
in the world to each other.
{Knox}
It is not myself alone, nor all my
people. A moment ago you said no one but I had
any right to you. You were wrong. Your child
{Margaret}
(In sudden pain, pleadingly.) Don’t!
{Knox}
I must. I must save myself and
you. Tommy has rights in you. Theft again.
What other name for it if you steal your happiness
from him?
{Margaret}
(Bending her head forward on her
hand and weeping.) I have been so lonely and
then you you came, and the world grew bright
and warm a few short minutes ago you held
me in your arms a few short
minutes ago and it seemed my dream of happiness had
come true and now you dash it from me
{Knox}
(Struggling to control himself
now that she is no longer looking at him.) No;
I ask you to dash it from yourself. I am not too
strong. You must help me. You must call your
child to your aid in helping me. I could go mad
for you now
(Rising impulsively and coming
to her with arms outstretched to clasp her.) Right
now
{Margaret}
(Abruptly raising her head, and
with one outstretched arm preventing the embrace.)
Wait.
(She bows her head on her hand
for a moment, to think and to win control of herself.)
(Lifting her head and looking at
him.) Sit down please.
(Knox reseats himself.)
(A pause, during which she looks
at him and loves him.) Dear, I do so love you
(Knox loses control and starts
to rise.) No! Sit there. I was weak.
Yet I am not sorry. You are right. We must
forego each other. We cannot be thieves, even
for love’s sake. Yet I am glad that this
has happened that I have lain in your arms
and had your lips on mine. The memory of it will
be sweet always.
(She draws her cloak around her, and rises.)
(Knox rises.) You are right.
The future belongs to the children. There lies
duty yours, and mine in my small way.
I am going now. We must not see each other ever
again. We must work and forget.
But remember, my heart goes with you into the fight.
My prayers will accompany every stroke.
(She hesitates, pauses, draws her
cloak thoroughly around her in evidence of departure.)
Dear will you kiss me once one
last time? (There is no passion in this kiss, which
is the kiss of renunciation. Margaret herself
terminates the embrace.)
(Knox accompanies her silently
to the door and places hand on knob.) I wish I
had something of you to have with me always a
photograph, that little one, you remember, which I
liked so. (She nods.) Don’t run the risk
of sending it by messenger. Just mail it ordinarily.
{Margaret}
I shall mail it to-morrow. I’ll drop it
in the box myself.
{Knox}
(Kissing her hand.) Good-bye.
{Margaret}
(lingeringly.) But oh, my dear,
I am glad and proud for what has happened. I
would not erase a single line of it.
(She indicates for Knox to open
door, which he does, but which he immediately closes
as she continues speaking.) There must be immortality.
There must be a future life where you and I shall
meet again. Good-bye.
(They press each other’s hands.)
(Exit Margaret.)
(Knox stands a moment, staring
at closed door, turns and looks about him indecisively,
sees chair in which Margaret sat, goes over to it,
kneels down, and buries his face.)
(Door to bedroom opens slowly and
Hubbard peers out cautiously. He cannot see Knox.)
{Hubbard}
(Advancing, surprised.) What
the deuce? Everybody gone?
{Knox}
(Startled to his feet.) Where
the devil did you come from?
{Hubbard}
(Indicating bedroom.) In there.
I was in there all the time.
{Knox}
(Endeavoring to pass it off.)
Oh, I had forgotten about you. Well, my callers
are gone.
{Hubbard}
(Walking over close to him and
laughing at him with affected amusement.) Honest
men are such dubs when they do go wrong.
{Knox}
The door was closed all the time.
You would not have dared to spy upon me.
{Hubbard}
There was something familiar about the lady’s
voice.
{Knox}
You heard! what did you hear?
{Hubbard}
Oh, nothing, nothing a
murmur of voices and the woman’s I
could swear I have heard her voice before.
(Knox shows his relief.) Well, so long.
(Starts to move toward exit to
right.) You won’t reconsider your decision?
{Knox}
(Shaking his head.)
{Hubbard}
(Pausing, open door in hand, and
laughing cynically.) And yet it was but a moment
ago that it seemed I heard you say there was no one
whom you would not permit the world to know you saw.
(Starting.) What do you mean?
{Hubbard}
Good-bye.
(Hubbard makes exit and closes
door.) (Knox wanders aimlessly to his desk,
glances at the letter he was reading of which had been
interrupted by Hubbard’s entry of first act,
suddenly recollects the package of documents, and
walks to low bookcase and looks on top.)
{Knox}
(Stunned.) The thief!
(He looks about him wildly, then
rushes like a madman in pursuit of Hubbard, making
exit to right and leaving the door Hying open.)
(Empty stage for a moment.)
Curtain