Scene. The library, used as a sort
of semi-office by Starkweather at such times when
he is in Washington. Door to right; also, door
to right rear. At left rear is an alcove, without
hangings, which is dark. To left are windows.
To left, near windows, a fiat-top desk, with desk-chair
and desk-telephone. Also, on desk, conspicuously,
is a heavy dispatch box. At the center rear is
a large screen. Extending across center back
of room are heavy, old-fashioned bookcases, with swinging
glass doors. The bookcases narrow about four feet
from the floor, thus forming a ledge. Between
left end of bookcases and alcove at left rear, high
up on wall, hangs a large painting or steel engraving
of Abraham Lincoln. In design and furnishings,
it is a simple chaste room, coldly rigid and slightly
old-fashioned.
It is 9:30 in the morning of the day succeeding previous
act.
Curtain discloses Starkweather seated
at desk, and Dobleman, to right of desk, standing._
{Starkweather}
All right, though it is an unimportant
publication. I’ll subscribe.
{Dobleman}
(Making note on pad.) Very
well, sir. Two thousand.
(He consults his notes.) Then
there is Vanderwater’s Magazine.
Your subscription is due.
{Starkweather}
How much?
{Dobleman}
You have been paying fifteen thousand.
{Starkweather}
It is too much. What is the regular subscription?
{Dobleman}
A dollar a year.
{Starkweather}
(Shaking his head emphatically.) It is too
much.
{Dobleman}
Professor Vanderwater also does good
work with his lecturing. He is regularly on the
Chautauqua Courses, and at that big meeting of the
National Civic Federation, his speech was exceptionally
telling.
{Starkweather}
(Doubtfully, about to give in.) All right
(He pauses, as if recollecting
something.) (Dobleman has begun to write down
the note.) No. I remember there was something
in the papers about this Professor Vanderwater a
divorce, wasn’t it? He has impaired his
authority and his usefulness to me.
{Dobleman}
It was his wife’s fault.
{Starkweather}
It is immaterial. His usefulness
is impaired. Cut him down to ten thousand.
It will teach him a lesson.
{Dobleman}
Very good, sir.
{Starkweather}
And the customary twenty thousand to Cartwrights.
{Dobleman}
(Hesitatingly.) They have asked
for more. They have enlarged the magazine, reorganized
the stock, staff, everything.
{Starkweather}
Hubbard’s writing for it, isn’t he?
{Dobleman}
Yes, sir. And though I don’t
know, it is whispered that he is one of the heavy
stockholders.
{Starkweather}
A very capable man. He has served me well.
How much do they want?
{Dobleman}
They say that Nettman series of articles
cost them twelve thousand alone, and that they believe,
in view of the exceptional service they are prepared
to render, and are rendering, fifty thousand
{Starkweather}
(Shortly.) All right.
How much have I given to University of Hanover this
year?
{Dobleman}
Seven nine millions, including that new
library.
{Starkweather}
(Sighing.) Education does cost.
Anything more this morning?
{Dobleman}
(Consulting notes.) Just one
other Mr. Rutland. His church, you
know, sir, and that theological college. He told
me he had been talking it over with you. He is
anxious to know.
{Starkweather}
He’s very keen, I must say.
Fifty thousand for the church, and a hundred thousand
for the college I ask you, candidly, is
he worth it?
{Dobleman}
The church is a very powerful molder
of public opinion, and Mr. Rutland is very impressive.
(Running over the notes and producing a clipping.)
This is what he said in his sermon two weeks ago:
“God has given to Mr. Starkweather the talent
for making money as truly as God has given to other
men the genius which manifests itself in literature
and the arts and sciences.”
{Starkweather}
(Pleased.) He says it well.
{Dobleman}
(Producing another clipping.)
And this he said about you in last Sunday’s
sermon: “We are to-day rejoicing in the
great light of the consecration of a great wealth
to the advancement of the race. This vast wealth
has been so consecrated by a man who all through life
has walked in accord with the word, The love of Christ
constraineth me.’”
{Starkweather}
(Meditatively.) Dobleman, I
have meant well. I mean well. I shall always
mean well. I believe I am one of those few men,
to whom God, in his infinite wisdom, has given the
stewardship of the people’s wealth. It
is a high trust, and despite the abuse and vilification
heaped upon me, I shall remain faithful to it.
(Changing his tone abruptly to
businesslike briskness.) Very well. See that
Mr. Rutland gets what he has asked for.
{Dobleman}
Very good, sir. I shall telephone
him. I know he is anxious to hear.
(Starting to leave the room.)
Shall I make the checks out in the usual way?
{Starkweather}
Yes: except the Rutland one.
I’ll sign that myself. Let the others go
through the regular channels. We take the 2:10
train for New York. Are you ready?
{Dobleman}
(Indicating dispatch box.)
All, except the dispatch box.
{Starkweather}
I’ll take care of that myself.
(Dobleman starts to make exit to
left, and Starkweather, taking notebook from pocket,
glances into it, and looks up.)
Dobleman.
{Dobleman} (Pausing.) Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Mrs. Chalmers is here, isn’t she?
{Dobleman}
Yes, sir. She came a few minutes
ago, with her little boy. They are with Mrs.
Starkweather.
{Starkweather}
Please tell Mrs. Chalmers I wish to see her.
{Dobleman}
Yes, sir.
(Dobleman makes exit.) (Maidservant
enters from right rear, with card tray.)
{Starkweather}
(Examining card.) Show him in.
(Maidservant makes exit right rear).
(Pause, during which Starkweather consults notebook.)
(Maidservant re-enters, showing in Hubbard.)
(Hubbard advances to desk.)
(Starkweather is so glad to see him that he half
rises from his chair to shake hands.)
{Starkweather}
(Heartily.) I can only tell
you that what you did was wonderful. Your telephone
last night was a great relief. Where are they?
{Hubbard}
(Drawing package of documents from
inside breast pocket and handing them over.) There
they are the complete set. I was fortunate.
{Starkweather}
(Opening package and glancing at
a number of the documents while he talks.) You
are modest, Mr. Hubbard. It required more than
fortune. It required ability of
no mean order. The time was short. You
had to think and act with too
great immediacy to be merely fortunate.
(Hubbard bows, while Starkweather
rearranges package.)
There is no need for me to tell you
how I appreciate your service. I have increased
my subscription to Cartwright’s to fifty
thousand, and I shall speak to Dobleman, who will remit
to you a more substantial acknowledgment than my mere
thanks for the inestimable service you have rendered.
(Hubbard bows.)
You ah you have read the documents?
{Hubbard}
I glanced through them. They
were indeed serious. But we have spiked Knox’s
guns. Without them, that speech of his this afternoon
becomes a farce a howling farce. Be
sure you take good care of them.
(Indicating documents, which Starkweather
still holds.) Gherst has a long arm.
{Starkweather}
He cannot reach me here. Besides,
I go to New York to-day, and I shall carry them with
me. Mr. Hubbard, you will forgive me
(Starting to pack dispatch box
with papers and letters lying on desk.) I am very
busy.
{Hubbard}
(Taking the hint.) Yes, I understand.
I shall be going now. I have to be at the Club
in five minutes.
{Starkweather}
(In course of packing dispatch
box, he sets certain packets of papers and several
medium-sized account books to one side in an orderly
pile. He talks while he packs, and Hubbard waits.)
I should like to talk with you some more in
New York. Next time you are in town be sure to
see me. I am thinking of buying the Parthenon
Magazine, and of changing its policy. I should
like to have you negotiate this, and there are other
important things as well. Good day, Mr. Hubbard.
I shall see you in New York soon.
(Hubbard and Starkweather shake hands.)
(Hubbard starts to make exit to right rear.)
(Margaret enters from right rear.)
(Starkweather goes on packing dispatch
box through following scene.)
{Hubbard}
Mrs. Chalmers.
(Holding out hand, which Margaret
takes very coldly, scarcely inclining her head, and
starting to pass on.) (Speaking suddenly and
savagely.) You needn’t be so high and lofty,
Mrs. Chalmers.
{Margaret}
(Pausing and looking at him curiously
as if to ascertain whether he has been drinking.)
I do not understand.
{Hubbard}
You always treated me this way, but
the time for it is past. I won’t stand
for your superior goodness any more. You really
impressed me with it for a long time, and you made
me walk small. But I know better now. A
pretty game you’ve been playing you,
who are like any other woman. Well, you know where
you were last night. So do I.
{Margaret}
You are impudent.
{Hubbard}
(Doggedly.) I said I knew where
you were last night. Mr. Knox also knows where
you were. But I’ll wager your husband doesn’t.
{Margaret}
You spy!
(Indicating her father.) I
suppose you have told him.
{Hubbard}
Why should I?
{Margaret}
You are his creature.
{Hubbard}
If it will ease your suspense, let
me tell you that I have not told him. But I do
protest to you that you must treat me with more more
kindness.
(Margaret makes no sign but passes
on utterly oblivious of him.) (Hubbard stares
angrily at her and makes exit) (Starkweather,
who is finishing packing, puts the documents last inside
box, and closes and locks it. To one side is
the orderly stack of the several account books and
packets of papers.)
{Starkweather}
Good morning, Margaret. I sent
for you because we did not finish that talk last night.
Sit down.
(She gets a chair for herself and sits down.)
You always were hard to manage, Margaret.
You have had too much will for a woman. Yet I
did my best for you. Your marriage with Tom was
especially auspicious a rising man, of good
family and a gentleman, eminently suitable
{Margaret}
(Interrupting bitterly.) I
don’t think you were considering your daughter
at all in the matter. I know your views on woman
and woman’s place. I have never counted
for anything with you. Neither has mother, nor
Connie, when business was uppermost, and business
always is uppermost with you. I sometimes wonder
if you think a woman has a soul. As for my marriage you
saw that Tom could be useful to you. He had the
various distinctive points you have mentioned.
Better than that he was pliable, capable of being
molded to perform your work, to manipulate machine
politics and procure for you the legislation you desired.
You did not consider what kind of a husband he would
make for your daughter whom you did not know.
But you gave your daughter to him sold her
to him because you needed him
(Laughs hysterically.) In your business.
{Starkweather}
(Angrily.) Margaret! You
must not speak that way. (Relaxing.)
Ah, you do not change. You were
always that way, always bent on having your will
{Margaret}
Would to God I had been more successful in having
it.
{Starkweather}
(Testily.) This is all beside
the question. I sent for you to tell you that
this must stop this association with a man
of the type and character of Knox a dreamer,
a charlatan, a scoundrel
{Margaret}
It is not necessary to abuse him.
{Starkweather}
It must stop that is all. Do you understand?
It must stop.
{Margaret}
(Quietly.) It has stopped.
I doubt that I shall ever see him again. He will
never come to my house again, at any rate. Are
you satisfied?
{Starkweather}
Perfectly. Of course, you know I have never doubted
you that that way.
{Margaret}
(Quietly.) How little you know
women. In your comprehension we are automatons,
puppets, with no hearts nor heats of desire of our
own, with no springs of conduct save those of the immaculate
and puritanical sort that New England crystallized
a century or so ago.
{Starkweather}
(Suspiciously.) You mean that you and this
man ?
{Margaret}
I mean nothing has passed between
us. I mean that I am Tom’s wife and Tommy’s
mother. What I did mean, you have no more understood
than you understand me or any woman.
{Starkweather}
(Relieved.) It is well.
{Margaret}
(Continuing.) And it is so
easy. The concept is simple. A woman is
human. That is all. Yet I do believe it is
news to you.
(Enters Dobleman from right carrying
a check in his hand. Starkweather, about to speak,
pauses.) (Dobleman hesitates, and Starkweather
nods for him to advance.)
{Dobleman}
(Greeting Margaret, and addressing
Starkweather.) This check. You said you would
sign it yourself.
{Starkweather}
Yes, that is Rutland’s. (Looks for pen.)
(Dobleman offers his fountain pen.)
No; my own pen.
(Unlocks dispatch box, gets pen,
and signs check. Leaves dispatch box open.)
(Dobleman takes check and makes exit to right.)
{Starkweather}
(Picking up documents from top
of pile in open box.)
This man Knox. I studied him
yesterday. A man of great energy and ideals.
Unfortunately, he is a sentimentalist. He means
right I grant him that. But he does
not understand practical conditions. He is more
dangerous to the welfare of the United States than
ten thousand anarchists. And he is not practical.
(Holding up documents.)
Behold, stolen from my private files
by a yellow journal sneak thief and turned over to
him. He thought to buttress his speech with them
this afternoon. And yet, so hopelessly unpractical
is he, that you see they are already back in the rightful
owner’s hands.
{Margaret}
Then his speech is ruined?
{Starkweather}
Absolutely. The wheels are all
ready to turn. The good people of the United
States will dismiss him with roars of laughter a
good phrase, that: Hubbard’s, I believe.
(Dropping documents on the open
cover of dispatch box, picking up the pile of several
account books and packets of papers, and rising.)
One moment. I must put these away.
(Starkweather goes to alcove at
left rear. He presses a button and alcove is
lighted by electricity, discovering the face of a
large safe. During the following scene he does
not look around, being occupied with working the combination,
opening the safe, putting away account books and packets
of papers, and with examining other packets which
are in safe.)
(Margaret looks at documents lying
on open cover of dispatch box and glancing quickly
about room, takes a sudden resolution. She seizes
documents, makes as if to run wildly from the room,
stops abruptly to reconsider, and changes her mind.
She looks about room for a hiding place, and her eyes
rest on portrait of Lincoln. Moving swiftly,
picking up a light chair on the way, she goes to corner
of bookcase nearest to portrait, steps on chair, and
from chair to ledge of bookcase where, clinging, she
reaches out and up and drops documents behind portrait.
Stepping quickly down, with handkerchief she wipes
ledge on which she has stood, also the seat of the
chair. She carries chair back to where she found
it, and reseats herself in chair by desk.) (Starkweather
locks safe, emerges from alcove, turns off alcove lights,
advances to desk chair, and sits down. He is about
to close and lock dispatch box when he discovers documents
are missing. He is very quiet about it, and examines
contents of box care-fully.)
{Starkweather}
(Quietly.) Has anybody been in the room?
{Margaret}
No.
{Starkweather}
(Looking at her searchingly.)
A most unprecedented thing has occurred. When
I went to the safe a moment ago, I left these documents
on the cover of the dispatch box. Nobody has been
in the room but you. The documents are gone.
Give them to me.
{Margaret}
I have not been out of the room.
{Starkweather}
I know that. Give them to me.
(A pause.) You have them. Give them to
me
{Margaret}
I haven’t them.
{Starkweather}
That is a lie. Give them to me.
{Margaret}
(Rising.) I tell you I haven’t them
{Starkweather}
(Also rising.) That is a lie.
{Margaret}
(Turning and starting to cross
room.) Very well, if you do not believe me
{Starkweather}
(Interrupting.) Where are you going?
{Margaret}
Home.
{Starkweather}
(Imperatively.) No, you are not. Come
back here.
(Margaret comes back and stands
by chair.) You shall not leave this room.
Sit down.
{Margaret}
I prefer to stand.
{Starkweather}
Sit down.
(She still stands, and he grips
her by arm, forcing her down into chair.) Sit
down. Before you leave this room you shall return
those documents. This is more important than you
realize. It transcends all ordinary things of
life as you have known it, and you will compel me
to do things far harsher than you can possibly imagine.
I can forget that you are a daughter of mine.
I can forget that you are even a woman. If I
have to tear them from you, I shall get them.
Give them to me.
(A pause.) What are you going to do?
(Margaret shrugs her shoulders.)
What have you to say?
(Margaret again shrugs her shoulders.)
What have you to say?
{Margaret}
Nothing.
{Starkweather}
(Puzzled, changing tactics, sitting
down, and talking calmly.) Let us talk this over
quietly. You have no shred of right of any sort
to those documents. They are mine. They were
stolen by a sneak thief from my private files.
Only this morning a few minutes ago did
I get them back. They are mine, I tell you.
They belong to me. Give them back.
{Margaret}
I tell you I haven’t them.
{Starkweather}
You have got them about you, somewhere,
concealed in your breast there. It will not save
you. I tell you I shall have them. I warn
you. I don’t want to proceed to extreme
measures. Give them to me.
(He starts to press desk-button,
pauses, and looks at her.) Well?
(Margaret shrugs her shoulders.)
(He presses button twice.) I have sent for
Dobleman. You have one chance before he comes.
Give them to me.
{Margaret}
Father, will you believe me just this
once? Let me go. I tell you I haven’t
the documents. I tell you that if you let me leave
this room, I shall not carry them away with me.
I tell you this on my honor. Do you believe me?
Tell me that you do believe me.
{Starkweather}
I do believe you. You say they
are not on you. I believe you. Now tell
me where they are you have them hidden somewhere (Glancing
about room.) And you can go at once.
(Dobleman enters from right and
advances to desk. Starkweather and Margaret remains
silent.)
{Dobleman}
You rang for me.
{Starkweather}
(With one last questioning glance
at Margaret, who remains impassive.) Yes, I did.
Have you been in that other room all the time?
{Dobleman}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Did anybody pass through and enter this room?
{Dobleman}
No, sir.
{Starkweather}
Very well. We’ll see what the maid has
to say.
(He presses button once.) Margaret,
I give you one last chance.
{Margaret}
I have told you that if I leave this
room, I shall not take them with me.
(Maid enters from right rear and advances.)
{Starkweather}
Has anybody come into this room from
the hall in the last few minutes?
{Maid}
No, sir; not since Mrs. Chalmers came in.
{Starkweather}
How do you know?
{Maid}
I was in the hall, sir, dusting all the time.
{Starkweather}
That will do.
(Maid makes exit to right rear.)
Dobleman, a very unusual thing has occurred.
Mrs. Chalmers and I have been alone
in this room. Those letters stolen by Gherst
had been returned to me by Hubbard but the moment
before. They were on my desk. I turned my
back for a moment to go to the safe. When I came
back they were gone.
{Dobleman}
(Embarrassed.) Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Mrs. Chalmers took them. She has them now.
{Dobleman}
(Attempts to speak, stammers.) Er er yes,
sir
{Starkweather}
I want them back. What is to be done?
(Dobleman remains in hopeless confusion.) Well!
{Dobleman}
(Speaking hurriedly and hopefully.)
S-send for Mr. Hubbard. He got them for you before.
{Starkweather}
A good suggestion. Telephone for him. You
should find him at the
Press Club.
(Dobleman starts to make exit to
right.) Don’t leave the room. Use this
telephone. (Indicating desk telephone.) (Dobleman
moves around to left of desk and uses telephone standing
up.) From now on no one leaves the room.
If my daughter can be guilty of such a theft, it is
plain I can trust no one no one.
{Dobleman}
(Speaking in transmitter.) Red 6-2-4.
Yes, please.
(Waits.)
{Starkweather}
(Rising.) Call Senator Chalmers
as well. Tell him to come immediately.
{Dobleman}
Yes, sir immediately.
{Starkweather}
(Starting to cross stage to center
and speaking to Margaret.) Come over here.
(Margaret follows. She is
obedient, frightened, very subdued but
resolved.)
Why have you done this? Were
you truthful when you said there was nothing between
you and this man Knox?
{Margaret}
Father; don’t discuss this before the
(Indicating Dobleman.) the servants.
{Starkweather}
You should have considered that before you stole the
documents.
(Dobleman, in the meantime, is
telephoning in a low voice.)
{Margaret}
There are certain dignities
{Starkweather}
(Interrupting.) Not for a thief.
(Speaking intensely and in a low
voice.) Margaret, it is not too late. Give
them back, and no one shall know.
(A pause, in which Margaret is
silent, in the throes of indecision.)
{Dobleman}
Mr. Hubbard says he will be here in three minutes.
Fortunately,
Senator Chalmers is with him.
(Starkweather nods and looks at
Margaret.) (Door at left rear opens, and enter
Mrs. Starkweather and Connie. They are dressed
for the street and evidently just going out.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Speaking in a rush.) We are
just going out, Anthony. You were certainly wrong
in making us attempt to take that 2:10 train.
I simply can’t make it. I know I can’t.
It would have been much wiser
(Suddenly apprehending the strain
of the situation between Starkweather and Margaret.) Why,
what is the matter?
{Starkweather}
(Patently disturbed by their entrance,
speaking to Dobleman, who has finished with the telephone.)
Lock the doors.
(Dobleman proceeds to obey.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Mercy me! Anthony! What has happened?
(A pause.) Madge! What has happened?
{Starkweather}
You will have to wait here a few minutes, that is
all.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
But I must keep my engagements. And I haven’t
a minute to spare.
(Looking at Dobleman locking doors.)
I do not understand.
{Starkweather}
(Grimly,) You will, shortly.
I can trust no one any more. When my daughter
sees fit to steal
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Steal! Margaret! What have you been
doing now?
{Margaret}
Where is Tommy?
(Mrs. Starkwater is too confounded
to answer, and can only stare from face to face.)
(Margaret looks her anxiety to Connie.)
{Connie}
He is already down in the machine
waiting for us. You are coming, aren’t
you?
{Starkweather}
Let him wait in the machine.
Margaret will come when I get done with her.
(A knock is heard at right rear.)
(Starkweather looks at Dobleman and signifies that
he is to open door.)
(Dobleman unlocks door, and Hubbabd
and Chalmers enter. Beyond the shortest of nods
and recognitions with eyes, greetings are cut short
by the strain that is on all. Dobleman relocks
door.)
{Starkweather}
(Plunging into it.) Look here,
Tom. You know those letters Gherst stole.
Mr. Hubbard recovered them from Knox and returned them
to me this morning. Within five minutes Margaret
stole them from me here, right in this
room. She has not left the room. They are
on her now. I want them.
{Chalmers}
(Who is obviously incapable of
coping with his wife, and who is panting for breath,
his hand pressed to his side.) Madge, is this
true?
{Margaret}
I haven’t them. I tell you I haven’t
them.
{Starkweather}
Where are they, then?
(She does not answer.)
If they are in the room we can find them. Search
the room. Tom,
Mr. Hubbard, Dobleman. They must be recovered
at any cost.
(While a thorough search of the
room is being made, Mrs. Starkweather, overcome, has
Connie assist her to seat at left. Margaret also
seats herself, in same chair at desk.)
{Chalmers}
(Pausing from search, while others
continue.) There is no place to look for them.
They are not in the room. Are you sure you didn’t
mislay them?
{Starkweather}
Nonsense. Margaret took them.
They are a bulky package and not easily hidden.
If they aren’t in the room, then she has them
on her.
{Chalmers}
Madge, give them up.
{Margaret}
I haven’t them.
(Chalmers, stepping suddenly up
to her, starts feeling for the papers, running his
hands over her dress.)
{Margaret}
(Springing to her feet and striking
him in the face with her open palm.) How dare
you!
(Chalmers recoils, Mrs. Starkweather
is threatened with hysteria and is calmed by the frightened
Connie, while Starkweather looks on grimly.)
{Hubbard}
(Giving up search of room.)
Possibly it would be better to let me retire, Mr.
Starkweather.
{Starkweather}
No; those papers are here in this
room. If nobody leaves there will be no possible
chance for the papers to get out of the room.
What would you recommend doing, Hubbard?
{Hubbard}
(Hesitatingly.) Under the circumstances
I don’t like to suggest
{Starkweather}
Go on.
{Hubbard}
First, I would make sure that she er Mrs.
Chalmers has taken them.
{Starkweather}
I have made that certain.
{Chalmers}
But what motive could she have for such an act?
(Hubbard looks wise.)
{Starkweather}
(To Hubbard.) You know more
about this than would appear. What is it?
{Hubbard}
I’d rather not. It is too
(Looks significantly at Mrs. Starkweather
and Connie.) er delicate.
{Starkweather}
This affair has gone beyond all delicacy. What
is it?
{Margaret}
No! No!
(Chalmers and Starkweather look
at her with sudden suspicion.)
{Starkweather}
Go on, Mr. Hubbard.
{Hubbard}
I’d I’d rather not.
{Starkweather}
(Savagely.) I say go on.
{Hubbard}
(With simulated reluctance.)
Last night I saw I was in Knox’s
rooms
{Margaret}
(Interrupting.) One moment;
please. Let him speak, but first send Connie
away.
{Starkweather}
No one shall leave this room till
the documents are produced. Margaret, give me
the letters, and Connie can leave quietly, and even
will Hubbard’s lips remain sealed. They
will never breathe a word of whatever shameful thing
his eyes saw. This I promise you.
(A pause, wherein he waits vainly
for Margaret to make a decision.) Go on, Hubbard.
{Margaret}
(Who is terror-stricken, and has
been wavering.) No! Don’t! I’ll
tell. I’ll give you back the documents.
(All are expectant She wavers again,
and steels herself to resolution.) No; I haven’t
them. Say all you have to say.
{Starkweather}
You see. She has them. She said she would
give them back.
(To Hubbard.) Go on.
{Hubbard}
Last night
{Connie}
(Springing up.) I won’t stay!
(She rushes to left rear and finds
door locked.) Let me out! Let me out!
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Moaning and lying back in chair,
legs stretched out and giving preliminary twitches
and jerks of hysteria.) I shall die! I shall
die! I know I shall die!
{Starkweather}
(Sternly, to Connie.) Go back to your mother.
{Connie}
(Returning reluctantly to side
of Mrs. Starkweather, sitting down beside her, and
putting fingers in her own ears.) I won’t
listen! I won’t listen!
{Starkweather}
(Sternly.) Take your fingers down.
{Hubbard}
Hang it all, Chalmers, I wish I were
out of this. I don’t want to testify.
{Starkweather}
Take your fingers down.
(Connie reluctantly removes her
fingers.) Now, Hubbard.
{Hubbard}
I protest. I am being dragged into this.
{Chalmers}
You can’t help yourself now.
You have cast black suspicions on my wife.
{Hubbard}
All right. She Mrs.
Chalmers visited Knox in his rooms last night.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Bursting out.) Oh! Oh!
My Madge! It is a lie! A lie! (Kicks
violently with her legs.) (Connie soothes her.)
{Chalmers}
You’ve got to prove that, Hubbard.
If you have made any mistake it will go hard with
you.
{Hubbard}
(Indicating Margaret.) Look at her. Ask
her.
(Chalmers looks at Margaret with
growing suspicion.)
{Margaret}
Linda was with me. And Tommy.
I had to see Mr. Knox on a very important matter.
I went there in the machine. I took Linda and
Tommy right into Mr. Knox’s room.
{Chalmers}
(Relieved.) Ah, that puts a
different complexion on it.
{Hubbard}
That is not all. Mrs. Chalmers
sent the maid and the boy down to the machine and
remained.
{Margaret}
(Quickly.) But only for a moment
{Hubbard}
Much longer much, much
longer. I know how long I was kicking my heels
and waiting.
{Margaret}
(Desperately.) I say it was
but for a moment a short moment.
{Starkweather}
(Abruptly, to Hubbard.) Where were you?
{Hubbard}
In Knox’s bedroom. The
fool had forgotten all about me. He was too delighted
with his er new visitor.
{Starkweather}
You said you saw.
{Hubbard}
The bedroom door was ajar. I opened it.
{Starkweather}
What did you see?
{Margaret}
(Appealing to Hubbard.) Have
you no mercy? I say it was only a moment.
(Hubbard shrugs his shoulders.)
{Starkweather}
We’ll settle the length of that
moment Tommy is here, and so is the maid. Connie,
Margaret’s maid is here, isn’t she? (Connie
does not answer.) Answer me!
{Connie}
Yes.
{Starkweather}
{Dobleman}.
Ring for a maid and tell her to fetch
Tommy and Mrs. Chalmer’s maid.
(Dobleman goes to desk and pushes button once.)
{Margaret}
No! Not Tommy!
{Starkweather}
(Looking shrewdly at Margaret,
to Dobleman.) Mrs. Chalmer’s maid will do.
(A knock is heard at left rear.
Dobleman opens door and talks to maid. Closes
door.)
{Starkweather}
Lock it.
(Dobleman locks door.)
{Chalmers}
(Coming over to Margaret.)
So you, the immaculate one, have been playing fast
and loose.
{Margaret}
You have no right to talk to me that way, Tom
{Chalmers}
I am your husband.
{Margaret}
You have long since ceased being that.
{Chalmers}
What do you mean?
{Margaret}
I mean just what you have in mind about yourself right
now.
{Chalmers}
Madge, you are merely conjecturing. You know
nothing against me.
{Margaret}
I know everything and without
evidence, if you please. I am a woman. It
is your atmosphere. Faugh! You have exhaled
it for years. I doubt not that proofs, as you
would call them, could have been easily obtained.
But I was not interested. I had my boy.
When he came, I gave you up, Tom. You did not
seem to need me any more.
{Chalmers}
And so, in retaliation, you took up with this fellow
Knox.
{Margaret}
No, no. It is not true, Tom. I tell you
it is not true.
{Chalmers}
You were there, last night, in his
rooms, alone how long we shall soon find
out
(Knock is heard at left rear.
Dobleman proceeds to unlock door.) And now you
have stolen your father’s private papers for
your lover.
{Margaret}
He is not my lover.
{Chalmers}
But you have acknowledged that you
have the papers. For whom, save Knox, could you
have stolen them?
(Linda enters. She is white
and strained, and looks at Margaret for some cue as
to what she is to do.)
{Starkweather}
That is the woman.
(To Linda.) Come here.
(Linda advances reluctantly.)
Where were you last night? You know what I mean.
(She does not speak.) Answer me.
{Linda}
I don’t know what you mean, sir unless
{Starkweather}
Yes, that’s it. Go on.
{Linda}
But I don’t think you have any right to ask
me such questions.
What if I if I did go out with my young
man
{Starkweather}
(To Margaret.) A very faithful
young woman you’ve got.
(Briskly, to the others.) There’s
nothing to be got out of her. Send for Tommy.
Dobleman, ring the bell.
(Dobleman starts to obey.)
{Margaret}
(Stopping Dobleman.) No, no;
not Tommy. Tell them, Linda.
(Linda looks appealingly at her.)
(Kindly.) Don’t mind me. Tell them
the truth.
{Chalmers}
(Breaking in.) The whole truth.
{Margaret}
Yes, Linda, the whole truth.
(Linda, looking very woeful, nerves
herself for the ordeal.)
{Starkweather}
Never mind, Dobleman.
(To Linda.) Very well.
You were at Mr. Knox’s rooms last night, with
your mistress and Tommy.
{Linda}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Your mistress sent you and Tommy out of the room.
{Linda}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
You waited in the machine.
{Linda}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
(Abruptly springing the point he
has been working up to.) How long?
(Linda perceives the gist of the
questioning just as she is opening her mouth to reply,
and she does not speak.)
{Margaret}
(With deliberate calmness of despair.)
Half an hour an hour any length
of time your shameful minds dictate. That will
do, Linda. You can go.
{Starkweather}
No you don’t. Stand over there to one side.
(To the others.) The papers
are in this room, and I shall keep my mind certain
on that point.
{Hubbard}
I think I have shown the motive.
{Connie}
You are a beast!
{Chalmers}
You haven’t told what you saw.
{Hubbard}
I saw them in each other’s arms several
times. Then I found the stolen documents where
Knox had thrown them down. So I pocketed them
and closed the door.
{Chalmers}
How long after that did they remain together?
{Hubbard}
Quite a time, quite a long time.
{Chalmers}
And when you last saw them?
{Hubbard}
They were in each other’s arms quite
enthusiastically, I may say, in each other’s
arms. (Chalmers is crushed.)
{Margaret}
(To Hubbard.) You coward.
(Hubbard smiles.)
(To Starkweather.) When are
you going to call off this hound of yours?
{Starkweather}
When I get the papers. You see
what you’ve been made to pay for them already.
Now listen to me closely. Tom, you listen, too.
You know the value of these letters. If they
are not recovered they will precipitate a turn-over
that means not merely money but control and power.
I doubt that even you would be re-elected. So
what we have heard in this room must be forgotten absolutely
forgotten. Do you understand?
{Chalmers}
But it is adultery.
{Starkweather}
It is not necessary for that word
to be mentioned. The point is that everything
must be as it was formerly.
{Chalmers}
Yes, I understand.
{Starkweather}
(To Margaret.) You hear.
Tom will make no trouble. Now give me the papers.
They are mine, you know.
{Margaret}
It seems to me the people, who have
been lied to, and cajoled, and stolen from, are the
rightful owners, not you.
{Starkweather}
Are you doing this out of love for
this this man, this demagogue?
{Margaret}
For the people, the children, the future.
{Starkweather}
Faugh! Answer me.
{Margaret}
(Slowly.) Almost I do not know.
Almost I do not know.
(A knock is heard at left rear. Dobleman answers.)
{Dobleman}
(Looking at card Maid has given
him, to Starkweather.) Mr. Rutland.
{Starkweather}
(Making an impatient gesture, then
abruptly changing his mind, speaking grimly.)
Very well. Bring him in. I’ve paid
a lot for the Church, now we’ll see what the
Church can do for me.
{Connie}
(Impulsively crossing stage to
Margaret, putting arms around her, and weeping.)
Please, please, Madge, give up the
papers, and everything will be hushed up. You
heard what father said. Think what it means to
me if this scandal comes out. Father will hush
it up. Not a soul will dare to breathe a word
of it. Give him the papers.
{Margaret}
(Kissing her, shaking head, and
setting her aside.) No; I can’t. But
Connie, dearest
(Connie pauses.) It is not
true, Connie. He he is not my lover.
Tell me that you believe me.
{Connie}
(Caressing her.) I do believe
you. But won’t you return the papers for
my sake?
(A knock at door.)
{Margaret}
I can’t.
(Enter Rutland.)
(Connie returns to take care of
Mrs. Starkweather.)
{Rutland}
(Advances beamingly upon Starkweather.)
My, what a family gathering. I hastened on at
once, my dear Mr. Starkweather, to thank you in person,
ere you fled away to New York, for your generously
splendid yes, generously splendid contribution
(Here the strained situation dawns
upon him, and he remains helplessly with mouth open,
looking from one to another.)
{Starkweather}
A theft has been committed, Mr. Rutland.
My daughter has stolen something very valuable from
me a package of private papers, so important well,
if she succeeds in making them public I shall be injured
to such an extent financially that there won’t
be any more generously splendid donations for you
or anybody else. I have done my best to persuade
her to return what she has stolen. Now you try.
Bring her to a realization of the madness of what
she is doing.
{Rutland}
(Quite at sea, hemming and hawing.)
As your spiritual adviser, Mrs. Chalmers if
this be true I recommend I suggest I ahem I
entreat
{Margaret}
Please, Mr. Rutland, don’t be
ridiculous. Father is only making a stalking
horse out of you. Whatever I may have done, or
not done, I believe I am doing right. The whole
thing is infamous. The people have been lied
to and robbed, and you are merely lending yourself
to the infamy of perpetuating the lying and the robbing.
If you persist in obeying my father’s orders yes,
orders you will lead me to believe that
you are actuated by desire for more of those generously
splendid donations. (Starkweather sneers.)
{Rutland}
(Embarrassed, hopelessly at sea.)
This is, I fear ahem too delicate
a matter, Mr. Starkweather, for me to interfere.
I would suggest that it be advisable for me to withdraw ahem
{Starkweather}
(Musingly.) So the Church fails me, too.
(To Rutland.) No, you shall stay right here.
{Margaret}
Father, Tommy is down in the machine alone. Won’t
you let me go?
{Starkweather}
Give me the papers.
(Mrs. Starkweather rises and totters
across to Margaret, moaning and whimpering.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Madge, Madge, it can’t be true.
I don’t believe it. I know you have not
done this awful thing. No daughter of mine could
be guilty of such wickedness. I refuse to believe
my ears
(Mrs. Starkweather sinks suddenly
on her knees before Margaret, with clasped hands,
weeping hysterically.)
{Starkweather}
(Stepping to her side.) Get up.
(Hesitates and thinks.) No;
go on. She might listen to you.
{Margaret}
(Attempting to raise her mother.)
Don’t, mother, don’t. Please get
up.
(Mrs. Starkweather resists her
hysterically.) You don’t understand, mother.
Please, please, get up.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Madge, I, your mother, implore you,
on my bended knees. Give up the papers to your
father, and I shall forget all I have heard.
Think of the family name. I don’t believe
it, not a word of it; but think of the shame and disgrace.
Think of me. Think of Connie, your sister.
Think of Tommy. You’ll have your father
in a terrible state. And you’ll kill me.
(Moaning and rolling her head.)
I’m going to be sick. I know I am going
to be sick.
{Margaret}
(Bending over mother and raising
her, while Connie comes across stage to help support
mother.) Mother, you do not understand. More
is at stake than the good name of the family or (Looking
at Rutland.) God. You speak of
Connie and Tommy. There are two millions of Connies
and Tommys working as child laborers in the United
States to-day. Think of them. And besides,
mother, these are all lies you have heard. There
is nothing between Mr. Knox and me. He is not
my lover. I am not the the shameful
thing these men have said I am.
{Connie}
(Appealingly.) Madge.
{Margaret}
(Appealingly.) Connie.
Trust me. I am right. I know I am right.
(Mrs. Starkweather, supported by
Connie, moaning incoherently, is led back across stage
to chair.)
{Starkweather}
{Margaret}, a few minutes ago, when
you told me there was nothing between you and this
man, you lied to me lied to me as only a
wicked woman can lie.
{Margaret}
It is clear that you believe the worst.
{Starkweather}
There is nothing less than the worst
to be believed. Besides, more heinous than your
relations with this man is what you have done here
in this room, stolen from me, and practically before
my very eyes. Well, you have crossed your will
with mine, and in affairs beyond your province.
This is a man’s game in which you are attempting
to play, and you shall take the consequences.
Tom will apply for a divorce.
{Margaret}
That threat, at least, is without power.
{Starkweather}
And by that means we can break Knox
as effectually as by any other. That is one thing
the good stupid people will not tolerate in a chosen
representative. We will make such a scandal of
it
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Shocked.) Anthony!
{Starkweather}
(Glancing irritably at his wife
and continuing.) Another thing. Being proven
an adulterous woman, morally unfit for companionship
with your child, your child will be taken away from
you.
{Margaret}
No, no. That cannot be.
I have done nothing wrong. No court, no fair-minded
judge, would so decree on the evidence of a creature
like that.
(Indicating Hubbard.)
{Hubbard}
My evidence is supported. In
an adjoining room were two men. I happen to know,
because I placed them there. They were your father’s
men at that. There is such a thing as seeing through
a locked door. They saw.
{Margaret}
And they would swear to to anything.
{Hubbard}
I doubt not they will know to what to swear.
{Starkweather}
Margaret, I have told you some, merely
some, of the things I shall do. It is not too
late. Return the papers, and everything will
be forgotten.
{Margaret}
You would condone this this
adultery. You, who have just said that I was
morally unfit to have my own boy, will permit me to
retain him. I had never dreamed, father, that
your own immorality would descend to such vile depths.
Believing this shameful thing of me, you will forgive
and forget it all for the sake of a few scraps of
paper that stand for money, that stand for a license
to rob and steal from the people. Is this your
morality money?
{Starkweather}
I have my morality. It is not
money. I am only a steward; but so highly do
I conceive the duties of my stewardship
{Margaret}
(Interrupting, bitterly.) The
thefts and lies and all common little sins like adulteries
are not to stand in the way of your high duties that
the end hallows the means.
{Starkweather}
(Shortly.) Precisely.
{Margaret}
(To Rutland.) There is Jesuitism,
Mr. Rutland. I would suggest that you, as my
father’s spiritual adviser
{Starkweather}
Enough of this foolery. Give me the papers.
{Margaret}
I haven’t them.
{Starkweather}
What’s to be done, Hubbard?
{Hubbard}
She has them. She has as much
as acknowledged that they are not elsewhere in the
room. She has not been out of the room. There
is nothing to do but search her.
{Starkweather}
Nothing else remains to be done.
Dobleman, and you, Hubbard, take her behind the screen.
Strip her. Recover the papers.
(Dobleman is in a proper funk,
but Hubbard betrays no unwillingness.)
{Chalmers}
No; that I shall not permit.
Hubbard shall have nothing to do with this.
{Margaret}
It is too late, Tom. You have
stood by and allowed me to be stripped of everything
else. A few clothes do not matter now. If
I am to be stripped and searched by men, Mr. Hubbard
will serve as well as any other man. Perhaps
Mr. Rutland would like to lend his assistance.
{Connie}
Oh, Madge! Give them up.
(Margaret shakes her head.)
(To Starkweather.) Then let me search her,
father.
{Starkweather}
You are too willing. I don’t
want volunteers. I doubt that I can trust you
any more than your sister.
{Connie}
Let mother, then.
{Starkweather}
(Sneering.) Margaret could
smuggle a steamer-trunk of documents past her.
{Connie}
But not the men, father! Not the men!
{Starkweather}
Why not? She has shown herself dead to all shame.
(Imperatively.) Dobleman!
{Dobleman}
(Thinking his time has come, and
almost dying.) Y-y-yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Call in the servants.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Crying out in protest.) Anthony!
{Starkweather}
Would you prefer her to be searched by the men?
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Subsiding.) I shall die, I
shall die. I know I shall die.
{Starkweather}
Dobleman. Ring for the servants.
(Dobleman, who has been hesitant,
crosses to desk and pushes button, then returns toward
door.) Send in the maids and the housekeeper.
(Linda, blindly desiring to be
of some assistance, starts impulsively toward Margaret.)
Stand over there in the corner.
(Indicating right front.)
(Linda pauses irresolutely and
Margaret nods to her to obey and smiles encouragement.
Linda, protesting in every fiber of her, goes to right
front.)
(A knock at right rear and Dobleman
unlocks door, confers with maid, and closes and locks
door.)
{Starkweather}
(To Margaret.) This is no time
for trifling, nor for mawkish sentimentality.
Return the papers or take the consequences.
(Margaret makes no answer.)
{Chalmers}
You have taken a hand in a man’s
game, and you’ve got to play it out or quit.
Give up the papers.
(Margaret remains resolved and impassive.)
{Hubbard}
(Suavely.) Allow me to point
out, my dear Mrs. Chalmers, that you are not merely
stealing from your father. You are playing the
traitor to your class.
{Starkweather}
And causing irreparable damage.
{Margaret}
(Firing up suddenly and pointing
to Lincoln’s portrait) I doubt not he caused
irreparable damage when he freed the slaves and preserved
the Union. Yet he recognized no classes.
I’d rather be a traitor to my class than to
him.
{Starkweather}
Demagoguery. Demagoguery.
(A knock at right rear. Dobleman
opens door. Enter Mrs. Middleton who is the housekeeper,
followed by two Housemaids. They pause at rear.
Housekeeper to the fore and looking expectantly at
Starkweather. The Maids appear timid and frightened.)
{Housekeeper}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Mrs. Middleton, you have the two maids
to assist you. Take Mrs. Chalmers behind that
screen there and search her. Strip all her clothes
from her and make a careful search. (Maids show
perturbation.)
{Housekeeper}
(Self-possessed. ) Yes, sir.
What am I to search for?
{Starkweather}
Papers, documents, anything unusual.
Turn them over to me when you find them.
{Margaret}
(In a sudden panic.) This is
monstrous! This is monstrous!
{Starkweather}
So is your theft of the documents monstrous.
{Margaret}
(Appealing to the other men, ignoring
Rutland and not considering Dobleman at all.)
You cowards! Will you stand by and permit this
thing to be done?
Tom, have you one atom of manhood in you?
{Chalmers} (Doggedly.) Return the papers, then.
{Margaret}
Mr. Rutland
{Rutland}
(Very awkwardly and oilily.)
My dear Mrs. Chalmers. I assure you the whole
circumstance is unfortunate. But you are so palpably
in the wrong that I cannot interfere (Margaret
turns from him in withering scorn.) That
I cannot interfere.
{Dobleman}
(Breaking down unexpectedly.)
I cannot stand it. I leave your employ, sir.
It is outrageous. I resign now, at once.
I cannot be a party to this.
(Striving to unlock door.)
I am going at once. You brutes! You brutes!
(Breaks into convulsive sobbings.)
{Chalmers}
Ah, another lover, I see.
(Dobleman manages to unlock door
and starts to open it.)
{Starkweather}
You fool! Shut that door!
(Dobleman hesitates.) Shut it!
(Dobleman obeys.) Lock it!
(Dobleman obeys.)
{Margaret}
(Smiling wistfully, benignantly.)
Thank you, Mr. Dobleman.
(To Starkweather.) Father,
you surely will not perpetrate this outrage, when
I tell you, I swear to you
{Starkweather}
(Interrupting.) Return the documents then.
{Margaret}
I swear to you that I haven’t them. You
will not find them on me.
{Starkweather}
You have lied to me about Knox, and
I have no reason to believe you will not lie to me
about this matter.
{Margaret}
(Steadily.) If you do this
thing you shall cease to be my father forever.
You shall cease to exist so far as I am concerned.
{Starkweather}
You have too much of my own will in
you for you ever to forget whence it came. Mrs.
Middleton, go ahead.
(Housekeeper, summoning Maids with
her eyes, begins to advance on Margaret.)
{Connie}
(In a passion.) Father, if
you do this I shall never speak to you again.
(Breaks down weeping.) (Mrs.
Starkweather, during following scene, has mild but
continuous shuddering and weeping hysteria.)
{Starkweather}
(Briskly, looking at watch.)
I’ve wasted enough time on this. Mrs. Middleton,
proceed.
{Margaret}
(Wildly, backing away from Housekeeper.)
I will not tamely submit. I will resist, I promise
you.
{Starkweather}
Use force, if necessary.
(The Maids are reluctant, but Housekeeper
commands them with her eyes to close in on Margaret,
and they obey.)
(Margaret backs away until she
brings up against desk.)
{Housekeeper}
Come, Mrs. Chalmers.
(Margaret stands trembling, but
refuses to notice Housekeeper.) (Housekeeper
places hand on Margaret’s arm.)
{Margaret}
(Violently flinging the hand off,
crying imperiously.) Stand back!
(Housekeeper instinctively shrinks
back, as do Maids. But it is only for the moment.
They close in upon Margaret to seise her.)
(Crying frantically for help.) Linda!
Linda!
(Linda springs forward to help
her mistress, but is caught and held struggling by
Chalmers, who twists her arm and finally compels her
to become quiet.)
(Margaret, struggling and resisting,
is hustled across stage and behind screen, the Maids
warming up to their work. One of them emerges
from behind screen for the purpose of getting a chair,
upon which Margaret is evidently forced to sit.
The screen is of such height, that occasionally, when
standing up and struggling, Margaret’s bare
arms are visible above the top of it. Muttered
exclamations are heard, and the voice of Housekeeper
trying to persuade Margaret to sub-mit.)
{Margaret}
(Abruptly, piteously.) No! No!
(The struggle becomes more violent,
and the screen is overturned, disclosing Margaret
seated on chair, partly undressed, and clutching an
envelope in her hand which they are trying to force
her to relinquish.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Crying wildly.) Anthony!
They are taking her clothes off!
(Renewed struggle of Linda with
Chalmers at the sight.)
(Starkweather, calling Rutland
to his assistance, stands screen up again, then, as
an afterthought, pulls screen a little further away
from Margaret.)
{Margaret}
No! No!
(Housekeeper appears triumphantly
with envelope in her hand and hands it to Hubbard.)
{Hubbard}
(Immediately.) That’s not it.
(Glances at address and starts.)
It’s addressed to Knox.
{Starkweather}
Tear it open. Read it.
(Hubbard tears envelope open.)
(While this is going on, struggle behind screen
is suspended.)
{Hubbard}
(Withdrawing contents of envelope.)
It is only a photograph of Mrs. Chalmers.
(Reading.) “For the future Margaret.”
{Chalmers}
(Thrusting Linda back to right
front and striding up to Hubbard.) Give it to
me. (Hubbard passes it to him, and he looks at it,
crumples it in his hand, and grinds it under foot.)
{Starkweather}
That is not what we wanted, Mrs. Middleton.
Go on with the search.
(The search goes on behind the
screen without any further struggling.) (A
pause, during which screen is occasionally agitated
by the searchers removing Margaret’s garments.)
{Housekeeper}
(Appearing around corner of screen.)
I find nothing else, sir.
{Starkweather}
Is she stripped?
{Housekeeper}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Every stitch?
{Housekeeper}
(Disappearing behind screen instead
of answering for a pause, during which it is patent
that the ultimate stitch is being removed, then reappearing.)
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Nothing?
{Housekeeper}
Nothing.
{Starkweather}
Throw out her clothes everything.
(A confused mass of feminine apparel
is tossed out, falling near Dobleman’s feet,
who, in consequence, is hugely mortified and embarrassed.)
(Chalmers examines garments, then
steps behind screen a moment, and reappears.)
{Chalmers}
Nothing.
(Chalmers, Starkweather, and Hubbard
gaze at each other dumbfoundedly.)
(The two Maids come out from behind
screen and stand near door to right rear.)
(Starkweather is loath to believe,
and steps to Margaret’s garments and overhauls
them.)
{Starkweather}
(To Chalmers, looking inquiringly
toward screen.) Are you sure?
{Chalmers}
Yes; I made certain. She hasn’t them.
{Starkweather}
(To Housekeeper.) Mrs. Middleton,
examine those girls.
{Housekeeper}
(Passing hands over dresses of Maids.) No,
sir.
{Margaret}
(From behind screen, in a subdued,
spiritless voice.) May I dress now?
(Nobody answers.) It it is quite
chilly.
(Nobody answers.) Will you
let Linda come to me, please?
(Starkweather nods savagely to
Linda, to obey.) (Linda crosses to garments,
gathers them up, and disappears behind screen.)
{Starkweather}
(To Housekeeper.)
You may go.
(Exit Housekeeper and the two Maids.)
{Dobleman}
(Hesitating, after closing door.) Shall I lock
it?
(Starkweather does not answer,
and Dobleman leaves door unlocked.)
{Connie}
(Rising.) May I take mother away?
(Starkweather, who is in a brown
study, nods.) (Connie assists Mrs. Starkweather
to her feet.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Staggering weakly, and sinking
back into chair.) Let me rest a moment, Connie.
I’ll be better. (To Starkweather, who takes
no notice.) Anthony, I am going to bed. This
has been too much for me. I shall be sick.
I shall never catch that train to-day.
(Shudders and sighs, leans head
back, closes eyes, and Connie fans her or administers
smelling salts.)
{Chalmers}
(To Hubbard.) What’s to be done?
{Hubbard}
(Shrugging shoulders.) I’m
all at sea. I had just left the letters with
him, when Mrs. Chalmers entered the room. What’s
become of them? She hasn’t them, that’s
certain.
{Chalmers}
But why? Why should she have taken them?
{Hubbard}
(Dryly, pointing to crumpled photograph
on floor.) It seems very clear to me.
{Chalmers}
You think so? You think so?
{Hubbard}
I told you what I saw last night at
his rooms. There is no other explanation.
{Chalmers}
(Angrily.) And that’s
the sort he is vaunting his moral superiority mouthing
phrases about theft our theft and
himself the greatest thief of all, stealing the dearest
and sacredest things
(Margaret appears from behind screen,
pinning on her hat. She is dressed, but somewhat
in disarray, and Linda follows, pulling and touching
and arranging. Margaret pauses near to Rutland,
but does not seem to see him.)
{Rutland}
(Lamely.) It is a sad happening ahem a
sad happening. I am grieved, deeply grieved.
I cannot tell you, Mrs. Chalmers, how grieved I am
to have been compelled to be present at this ahem this
unfortunate
(Margaret withers him with a look
and he awkwardly ceases.)
{Margaret}
After this, father, there is one thing I shall do
{Chalmers}
(Interrupting.) Go to your lover, I suppose.
{Margaret} (Coldly.) Have it that way if you
choose.
{Chalmers}
And take him what you have stolen
{Starkweather}
(Arousing suddenly from brown study.)
But she hasn’t them on her. She hasn’t
been out of the room. They are not in the room.
Then where are they?
(During the following, Margaret
goes to the door, which Dobleman opens. She forces
Linda to go out and herself pauses in open door to
listen.)
{Hubbard}
(Uttering an exclamation of enlightenment,
going rapidly across to window at left and raising
it.) It is not locked. It moves noiselessly.
There’s the explanation.
(To Starkweather.) While you
were at the safe, with your back turned, she lifted
the window, tossed the papers out to somebody waiting
(He sticks head and shoulders out
of window, peers down, then brings head and shoulders
back.) No; they are not there.
Somebody was waiting for them.
{Starkweather}
But how should she know I had them?
You had only just recovered them?
{Hubbard}
Didn’t Knox know right away
last night that I had taken them? I took the
up-elevator instead of the down when I heard him running
along the hall. Trust him to let her know what
had happened. She was the only one who could
recover them for him. Else why did she come here
so immediately this morning? To steal the package,
of course. And she had some one waiting outside.
She tossed them out and closed the window
(He closes window.) You
notice it makes no sound. and sat down
again all while your back was turned.
{Starkweather}
Margaret, is this true?
{Margaret}
(Excitedly.) Yes, the window.
Why didn’t you think of it before? Of course,
the window. He somebody was waiting.
They are gone now miles and miles away.
You will never get them. They are in his hands
now. He will use them in his speech this afternoon.
(Laughs wildly.)
(Suddenly changing her tone to
mock meekness, subtle with defiance.) May I go now?
(Nobody answers, and she makes
exit.) (A moments pause, during which Starkweather,
Chalmers, and Hubbard look at each other in stupefaction.)