Scene - Same as Act I. No time elapses.
Doctor. (alone) Good old Merry
Andrew! What a sight he looked! Fancy expecting
me to take his lumbering carcase for my gentle Aunt.
Why, I could see his trousers, (laughs, picks up
bills, suddenly stops laughing) I must sober down
now and remember I’m a married man with a lot
of responsibilities and no money, not yet!
But Auntie’s coming to-morrow the
real Aunt coming like a good fairy
to make everything rosy! (looks at photo) Flo,
dear little Flo!
(Bell.)
(not hearing bell, engrossed in
photo) I’m longing to tell you the good
news! I’ll write to you. (sits and writes)
“Dear Madam.” (tears it up) I mean
“Darling Flo.” (writes)
(Enter Flora. shown in by Aurora.
She carries a bag in each hand, and parcels under
each arm.)
Aurora. This way, miss. The Doctor’s
very busy, but
Doctor. (not hearing, writes)
“What wouldn’t I give to have you here
now.” (takes out coppers) Sevenpence ha-penny!
Flora. (slyly behind him C.) Is Doctor Sheppard
in?
Doctor. (absently) Good afternoon.
Won’t you sit down? Now, what can I do
for you? What’s the trouble, eh?
Flora. The trouble?
Doctor. Oh, it’s my wife! (rushes into
her arms) Flo!
Flora. Jack! (kisses him)
Aurora. (gasps, aside) ’Appy patient!
(Exit Aurora.)
Doctor. Delighted to see you,
my dear Flo most unexpected pleasure only
sorry you can’t stop the night.
Flora. (surprised) Jack! I’ve come
to stop for ever.
Doctor. (releasing her suddenly) You can’t you
mustn’t!
Flora. But I can and I must! I can’t
live apart from you, Jack.
I’ve tried it all the morning, and I can’t.
(falls in his arms)
Doctor. But you must live apart
from me for for a day or two.
There’s a lady coming to-morrow who mustn’t
see you here for anything.
Flora. (by sofa C.) A lady!
The first day of our honeymoon! Who is she? (pauses)
A patient?
Doctor. (smiling and shaking his
head) Better than a hundred patients.
Flora. What’s she coming
for? Tell me tell me at once.
Doctor. (putting his arm round
her assuredly) My dear little wifie, she’s
only my maiden Aunt.
Flora. Oh, Jack, are you sure
she’s a maiden Aunt?
Doctor. Quite! Here’s
her letter, (crosses to sofa, takes it from his
pocket and gives it to her) Now are you satisfied,
jealous little woman?
Flora. Forgive me, Jack.
I can’t help being jealous of everybody and
everything I love you so much!
Doctor. (round on to sofa)
I know you do and see what luck you’ve
brought me. (pointing to letter which she is reading)
I told you we shouldn’t go wrong if we followed
Quayle’s advice. Auntie’s coming
to-morrow, and she’s going to do all that money
can
Flora. (reading letter) To-day,
Jack she’s coming to-day.
This letter was written yesterday.
Doctor. (suddenly) What a fool
I am! Where’s the Bradshaw? (crosses
to table, turns over leaves of Bradshaw, hurriedly)
Ambleside! A! Where’s A! Acton,
Aldersgate, Ambleside, here we are! Good gracious!
She’s nearly here! (crosses to Flo) Flo,
it will never do to greet her with a story of a secret
marriage she’d be simply horrified!
It’s very hard to part it’s
been a short and unsatisfactory honeymoon, (kisses
her) But Where’s that Bradshaw?
(crosses to table, fumbles to find the place)
Lowestoft? L! L! Where the devil is
L?
(Enter Aurora with letter.)
Aurora. ’Ere, sir a
letter for you, sir and the boy’s
waiting, (R. C.)
Doctor. (takes letter) Look
out the next train, you must catch it! (throws
Bradshaw to Flo)
(Doctor reading letter Flo
reluctantly looking out train, in Bradshaw, half crying.)
Aurora. (aside) You shall catch
it, impudent ’ussy! I see yer kiss ‘im!
They all kiss their dear Doctor. excep’ me. (turns
up her nose at Flo, crosses R. of table c.)
Flora. (glancing at Aurora)
I don’t like the look of that girl, (starts)
She’s reading his letter, and I haven’t
seen it!
Aurora. (to Doctor) Any answer, sir?
Doctor. Yes, I’ll write a note to this
lady.
Flora. (jealously) A lady!
Aurora. (aside, reading the letter)
I’ll learn ‘er bloomin’ symptoms I
must be ’is patient.
Flora. (watching her) The forward
minx! (shuts Bradshaw with a bang) I won’t
go back to Lowestoft. A wife’s place is
by her husband’s side, (takes her hat off
and sits twisting Bradshaw, viciously)
Doctor. Give the boy this.
Aurora. Yes, sir. (takes note,
crosses to Flo) Can I show you your place
(Flo indignant.)
in the Bradshaw, miss?
P’raps you ain’t beyond the A. B. C.
Flora. (haughtily, snatching it
back) No, thank you I can manage myself.
Aurora. (aside) Can yer?
I’ll struggle with yer I’ve
learnt ’er symptoms, (as she goes out)
Impudent ’ussy! kissing the dear
Doctor. I’ll struggle with yer, my gal!
(Exit Aurora.)
Flora. (looking at Doctor. who
is absorbed reading letter) He’s forgotten
me already, (pause)
Doctor. (rubbing his hands)
Good business! Call on you this evening, my dear
lady of course I will! I wish it was
time now. (looks at watch)
Flora. (jealously) Who’s
that letter from, Jack? (kneels on sofa)
Doctor. A lady in Grosvenor Road.
Flora. How long have you known her?
Doctor. I’ve never seen her yet.
Flora. Who is she? (stands)
Doctor. A patient, Flo my first at
last!
Flora. (with a sigh of relief) Oh, only that!
Doctor. “Only that!”
My dear Flo, a Doctor’s wife can’t afford
to be jealous. You’ll frighten away all
my most paying patients.
Flora. Oh, no, Jack, I won’t,
(runs and kneels by him) I’ll try and
look as if I liked them, but I can’t help being
jealous. My jealousy’s only love the wrong
side up that’s all.
Doctor. I know it is, and I’m
so glad that my first case has come when you were
here. You are a mascotte indeed! (stoops
and kisses her)
Flora. If I stop, I’m sure
lots and lots and lots will come.
Doctor. (not noticing, absorbed
in letter) This is the very case I’ve always
been hoping for, and I’ve got if at last!
Just look at the gold crest, and the thick paper.
No, don’t read it. Oh, it’s worth
three guineas a week, if it’s worth a penny,
and it’s a three years’ job bar
accidents.
Flora. What’s she got?
Doctor. Hysterical paraplegia she’s
afflicted with all sorts of abnormal fancies and longings.
(Front door bell rings.)
Flora. (jumping up suddenly from
her knees) Who’s that? Another lady
afflicted with all sorts of longings?
Doctor. (seriously, rubbing his
hands) I hope so devoutly, (rises
suddenly) By George! If it’s Auntie!1
She mustn’t find you here.
Flora. (running about aimlessly)
Where shall I go? (crosses L., runs towards bathroom
R. U. E)
Doctor. (stopping her) Not in my bedroom!
Flora. Why not? I’m your wife!
Doctor. Oh, yes, I forgot.
But Aunt may want to take her things off, and if she
found you there, the whole story’d have
to come out, and she might think it was a fairy tale,
and that would be awful! I know on
my operating couch.
Flora. (shrieks) Ach! Operating!
(Runs down O. P.., crosses R. corner
and then round table C., followed by Doctor.)
Doctor. It’s all right!
It won’t bite you! (takes up rug) I’ll
chuck this rug over you. She’ll think it’s
something anatomical. She’ll never suspect
it’s my blushing bride.
Flora. Oh, Jack, why should you
hide your blushing bride? She’s sure to
find me here.
Doctor. No, no, she won’t!
Flora. She will! I’m so conspicuous!
(sits on sofa)
Doctor. The more conspicuous
the better, when you want to hide anything. It
disarms suspicion, (down stage)
Flora. (jumps off couch, and stalks
down to him in a towering rage) Jack! You’ve
done this before!!
Doctor. Never! I swear!
Do help me now, and all will come right, (drags
her back and covers her up)
Flora. (popping her head out)
Oh, hubby, are you sure we’re properly
married?
Doctor. Quite. Lie still, (same Bus.)
Flora. (same Bus.) It doesn’t
feel like it a bit. Oh, it’s a horrid,
horrid wedding day! (kicks and disarranges rug)
Doctor. (putting it back) She’s
coming! Lie still, do lie still! Flo, please for
my sake! Do lie quite still
(Flo kicks.)
and don’t kick.
(Enter Plant.)
Plant. My dear cousin Jack! (putting
out his hand) I’m so glad to find you alone.
My mission is of rather a delicate nature.
Doctor. (aside) Oh, Lord! (looks
at couch nervously to Plant) I’m rather
busy to-day. You couldn’t call some other
time, could you? (feels his pulse)
Plant. My dear Jack, you misunderstand
me it’s not me it’s
my precious jewels. I’ve left them lying
in their room, their sobs were distressing to hear,
they are suffering terribly.
Doctor. (aside) Another case!
Quayle’s right again! They’re flowing
in.
Plant. (aside) Locked up, and
serve ’em right. I’ll get on better
without ’em. (aloud) They are both (
sobs ) both
Doctor. Two of ’em!
The more the merrier! I’ll come at once,
(putting on his hat)
Plant. No, you misunderstand
me they are simply overcome with the way to
use their own phrase the “affectionate”
way in which you received them this afternoon.
Doctor. (aside) And Flo can
hear every word. It’s all up!
Plant. They can talk of nothing else.
(Doctor pulls Plant’s coat.)
It’s Jack, dear Jack, darling
Jack, (same Bus.) Ah, you have robbed me of
my precious jewels.
Doctor. (glancing nervously at couch, with assumed
levity)
Nonsense!
Plant. (indignant) It’s
not nonsense at all, it’s very serious.
Heaven forbid that I should speak, harshly to a young
man with a rich ahem! future but
as their father from whom they have never
had a secret all their blameless lives (crosses
R.) I tell you, sir, you have broken two
hearts in one afternoon.
Doctor. (gloomily) Oh, good afternoon! (sits
at table)
Flora. (aside) I shall go home by the next
train.
Plant. They’re wasting
the best years of their lives, and all for you, sir all
for you! (cross L., waves his stick excitedly)
Doctor. (half to himself) I can’t commit
bigamy.
Plant. I don’t ask you
to marry both (whacks) of
them, but one or the other you must (whacks) and
shall (whacks on table) after
all you have said and done, (up) Now, my dear
sir, (walking about waving his stick C.) I speak
to you as a bachelor (whacks rug with
walking stick) without encumbrances,
(whacks) What have you got there? (whacks)
Doctor. (gets up) My encumbr--er--my model! (R. of chair)
Plant. Your model?
Doctor. (intercepting him) Yes, my ana
Plant. Anna?
Doctor. Anatomical model.
Look out, you’ll break it and these
things cost money, you know.
Plant. I accept your explanation without
prejudice, Well, to return to our muttons I
mean my poor lambs
Doctor. (aside) Oh. damn your
lambs! (crosses L.)
Plant. I ask you, as a father,
what are your intentions?
Doctor. (aside) Can’t
tell him I’m married he’d tell
Auntie.
Plant. (severely) Answer me,
sir what are your intentions with regard
to my two daughters? (Bus. Flo.)
Doctor. (sofa, aside) If he
wasn’t my fairy prince, I’d brain him!
(spots Flo’s hat and collars it, confused)
Flo’s hat! Oh er honourable,
you know strictly honourable, (tries
to hide Flo’s hat)
Plant. (pointing to Flo’s
hat) What is that, sir? (works right
round sofa)
Doctor. (following) A lady’s hat,
sir.
Plant. Don’t be flippant,
sir. (seizes hat and waves it) You’re
deceiving my girls, two girls with but one Single thought,
two hats hearts that beat for Jack.
Doctor. (to Plant) I’m
deceiving no one that hat belongs to one
of my patients.
Plant. (aside) A patient, indeed!
He’s got none. (goes for hat)
Doctor. A lady in whose case
I take the deepest interest. Can’t tell
you it would be a breach of professional
etiquette.
Plant. (goes to Doctor over R.,
throws his hat and stick on sofa) Ah, now you’re
talking business. The legal and medical professions
are sisters, and should have no secrets.
Doctor. (shakes his head) No,
no, it’s a delicate case. (Bus.)
Plant. Delicate cases are my
speciality, and if I can be of any assistance to you (aside) or
you to me . (aloud) I’m at your
service. Proceed.
Doctor. (aside) I’ll
break it to him gently why I can’t marry his
daughters, (to Plant) Well, to begin with, she’s
a married woman
Plant. Is she? She’ll
cost her husband a pretty penny in hats.
Doctor. (airily) Oh, he can
afford it. (speaks low so that Flo can’t
hear) He’s a great friend of mine in
fact, the greatest friend I have in all the world.
Plant. (loudly) Then what’s
his wife’s hat doing here?
Doctor. (aside) That’s just like a d--d lawyer!
(softly) Don’t you see,
they married secretly, without her parents’
consent, and she went back to her people, and and
time went on and at last she could bear
it no longer, so this afternoon she came up to town
to find her husband
Plant. Your greatest friend?
Doctor. Er precisely!
Plant. (aside) It’s that
lieutenant in the navy. I must remember that.
Doctor. And she came straight
to me, and she had a fit of hysteria and she fell
Plant. Fell?
Doctor. Yes in my arms.
Plant. Sir!
Doctor. Fainted fainted!
And now she’s lying down, and the question is,
when she recovers, where is she to go?
Plant. Go? To her husband, of course!
Where is he?
Doctor. Ah, that’s the question!
Flora. (aside, popping her head
out) I’ve got the cramp! I shall shriek
in a minute.
Plant. (aside) I’ll put
him under an obligation, (to Doctor effusively,
loudly) My dear cousin, my door is ever open to
the weary wanderer, and if the fair owner of that
hat
Doctor. No, no! It’s
very kind of you, but I won’t hear of it.
The fair owner of that hat is perfectly comfortable
where she is.
(Doctor and Plant up.)
Flora. Ooh! (sits up)
TABLEAU.
She’s not a bit comfortable where she is, Doctor
Sheppard!
Plant. (aside) Ah, the old story! (crosses
R. of table)
Flora. I’ve got pins and needles.
Doctor. My poor child, let me (goes
to her O. P. side of table)
Flora. Go away don’t
touch me. (lies on couch, rubbing her leg, aside
to Doctor) I’m not your poor child any longer.
I shall get the registrar to cancel our certificate.
Plant. (to Doctor. who comes down
C., looking miserable) So that’s your anatomical
model, eh? Your friend’s wife? You
Don Juan! (digs him in ribs. In his ear)
“These things cost money, you know.” (laughs to
Doctor) If it comes to a divorce, look me up.
I’ll pull you through on reduced terms.
Doctor. No, no, you don’t understand.
(To Flo, who comes down between them)
Are you all right now?
Flora. (coldly, crossing from him
to Plant) Yes, thank you, Doctor Sheppard. (aside)
Now I’ll find out all about Jack and these precious
jewels! (crosses r. to Plant) I accept your
kind offer of hospitality, sir.
(Doctor pulls Flo to him, she gets
away, and sits down r.)
Plant. (aside) He’ll
have to marry my daughter after this, (goes to
Flo)
Doctor. (aside) I hate letting
her go with Plant. but P’raps it’s the
best way out. Anyway she’ll not see Auntie,
I must get ’em oft before she comes, (to
Plant) My fairy prince, how can I thank you for
this double act of kindness?
(Slaps him hard on the back Plant
doubles up with lumbago.)
Don’t double up like that you
might be struck so. I’m more grateful to
you (same Bus.) than I can express. (same
Bus again) I’ve moved him at last!
Good!
(Doctor goes to Flo, who crosses
L. to sofa at once.)
Plant. I must get out of this.
Ah, my dear young lady, allow me. Your hat. (hands
Flo hat from off sofa, watching Doctor to
Flo) Ah, he’s a sad dog, always full of fun!
That’s why all the girls are so madly in love
with him.
Flora. (severely) They must
be mad to be in love with him! (at sofa back, putting
her hat on, looking in mirror)
Plant. (aside) Tired of him
already. She’ll be wanting to go back to
her husband good business for the lawyer (rubs
his hands) and especially for yours
truly, (goes up in front of mirror crosses
round sofa) I must find out what her husband’s
name is. I’m quite ready when you are, my
dear Mrs. er Mrs.
Doctor. (crosses C. quickly, aside
to Plant) Garden . better call her Miss
Garden for the present.
Plant. (aside to Doctor) I
say, this mustn’t be used against me in evidence.
It’s only for your sake, you gay dog! (offers
his arm to Flo) Come, my dear Miss Garden you
must confide in me as in a second father.
(She takes his arm.)
Doctor. (aside) I hope she won’t!
Plant. (at door) I say, Jack “a
lady in whose case I take the deepest interest!”
(nods towards her)
Doctor. (to Flora. as they go out) Flo!
Speak to me.
Flora. (going angry) No, I won’t
speak to you.
Plant. (as they go out arm in arm,
winks at Doctor) No, sir, we won’t speak
to you.
(Exit with Flora.)
(Bell rings.)
Doctor. (alone) I should like
to have that gentleman for a surgical patient!
I half wish I hadn’t let her go. Those girls
are sure to talk about me, and Heaven only knows what
they’ll say! I wonder if they’re
really in love with me? No! not likely.
I’m not the sort of fellow girls fall in love
with. No girl ever fell in love with me except
Flo dear jealous little Flo! Ah, well,
I love her all the more for being so jealous, and I
know she loves me. Thank Heaven one woman loves
me, and only one.
(Exit R. I. E..)
(Enter Aurora. followed by Aunt.)
Aurora. This way, mum. The Doctor’s
very busy.
Aunt. (aside) I’m calmer
now! (her lips are set, and she looks anything
but calm) And I’ll make him explain his outrageous
conduct, (crosses right round writing table)
Aurora. Will you take a chair, mum and
I’ll tell the Doctor
Aunt. (with suppressed indignation)
Engaged with some poor suffering patient, I presume?
(sits)
Aurora. (aside) I don’t
like her tone of voice, (comes down and looks in
her face aside) It’s ’im!
(aloud) Is the Doctor expectin’ of you
back, or was you took wuss? What’s your
complaint, eh? (taps her on the shoulder)
Aunt. (indignantly) My complaint?
You! (shoves her away) Go and tell the
Doctor that I am here, at once.
Aurora. (not moving) Oh, yuss,
if not sooner. What name, eh? (same Bus.)
Aunt. (loudly) No name.
Aurora. (not moving) Oh, the
Doctor won’t see no lady without no name.
’E’s very particular.
Aunt. (with suppressed rage)
Then tell him Susie-Toosie wants to see him. (crosses
sofa and sits)
Aurora. Oh! what ho! (laughing)
Susie-Toosie oh, if it’s that you
needn’t wait. Come along, outside. (tries
to pull her out of her chair) ’Op it!
(Enter Doctor. Aurora stops suddenly.)
Doctor. (surprised) Aurora!
Aurora. (to him) It’s
Susie-Toosie, sir. (laughs) Come back again.
Doctor. (laughing) So it is.
Go on, Aurora. turn it out, that thing’s my
Aunt, (sings) “For she’s a jolly
good fellow.”
(Bell rings.)
Aurora. (leaving go of Aunt)
Drat that bell, it’s spoilt my day.
(Exit Aurora.)
Doctor. (quietly) Look here,
you merry Andrews take your hair off. (pulls it)
Oh, by George!, he has stuck it on tight! (pulls
it harder)
Aunt, (indignantly) Sir!
Doctor. Don’t put on that
silly voice, I know all about you. I’ll
make him jealous, (sings) “There were
two jolly sailor girls from Portsmouth town” the
little one makes eyes at me. But it’s the
tall one I like, she calls me “dear Jack.”
Oh, she’s dead gone on me. Her father
wants me to marry her. (aside) That’s
shut him up! (aloud) And look here, you’ve
got to take your hook. I’m fagged out after
my railway journey I’m going to have
a bath before she comes you know
I’m a great believer in the water cure.
(Takes off his frock coat and throws
it down, goes to bath room, turns on hot and cold
taps in sight of audience, noise of water flowing
into bath.)
Now, don’t sit there looking
a silly ass. (shies something at her at the last
word)
(Aunt sits facing audience, speechless
with indignation.)
You know you’re not a bit like
a lady, and nobody but a lunatic would take you for
one. Hurry up and get some decent togs on, and
come back for me at 7:30. Do you hear, you old
joker, it’s no use keeping it up
(Aunt sits motionless.)
Oh, well, I can’t wait, (undoes
his braces) But look here, if you don’t
clear out before she comes I’ll break
every bone in your body. Au reservoir!
(Doctor exits into bath-room.)
Aunt. (crosses to table) And
that is my brother’s only child!
A shameless monster, lost to all sense of decency,
and carrying on with two sailor girls!
Horrible! But after all, he’s my nephew
and I must do my duty by him. What is my duty,
I wonder? (comes back and sits on sofa) His
father was such a gentle soul, and to think that this
brutal ruffian is his son.
(Enter Tupper.)
Tupper. (looks round, sees no one,
hears splashing in next room) ’E’s
‘avin’ a bath, now’s my time for
a quiet smoke, (picks cigarette end oft ash tray)
Aunt. (to herself) Oh, my poor head!
Tupper. (starts and comes to her,
cigarette in mouth) Summat wrong with yer ’ead?
Aunt. Go away, you horrid boy!
Tupper. The Doctor’ll cure
it in a jiffy, take my tip, but ’e’s ‘avin’
a bath just now. You know he’s a great believer
in the water cure. He says if we ’ad cleaner
bodies we’d ’ave cleaner minds do
you ’old with that? I spec he’ll
give you the water cure. I say you
must pay for it afore you go, ’cos ’e’s
stoney. Goes on tick for every think. ’Ave
you got a light?
Aunt. Go away!
Tupper. All right, no offence,
(gets match from mantelpiece) The Doctor could
make lots of money if he’d only try, but ’e
don’t. ’E just lies on that couch
all day reading books with ’orrible pictures
of people ’aving their arms and legs chopped
orf, and such like. (coming round) This is the
wüst ain’t it blood-curdling?
But the lady don’t seem to mind she
looks quite calm and peaceful-like, don’t she?
(shows Aunt the book)
Aunt. Take it away, you dreadful boy!
Tupper. All right keep
your ’air on. (goes up stage) ’E’s
wonderful clever; you should see ’im with these
’ere knives, golly! ain’t they sharp!
(trying one) ’E’d slice yer up as
soon as look at yer, and yet no patients don’t
come. Why’s that? Do you think ’e’s
too expensive it’s a pound a time.
(Bell rings.)
I say, the proper way is to leave
it in a h’envelope on this ’ere table.
Don’t forget, ’cos there ’ere clothes
ain’t paid for yet, and if they ain’t
to-day, they’re a-comin’ orf.
Aunt. You rude boy! Go!
(sits in grandfather’s chair)
Tupper. (aside) Well, it ain’t
my fault if ’e don’t get on!
I says all I can!
(Exit Tupper R. I. E. above table.)
(Enter Ruby and Pearl. shown in
by Aurora they don’t see Aunt.)
Aurora. I’ll tell the Doctor.
(goes towards bath-room door)
(Splashing heard.)
He’s very busy but
(Louder splashing.)
Ruby. Pray don’t disturb him.
(Bell rings.)
Pearl. We don’t want to see him just
yet. We’ll wait
(Exit Aurora.)
That stupid cabman never suspected anything.
He called him “Mum.”
(Both laugh.)
Ruby. Let’s bring her in now, before Jack
comes in.
(Enter Aurora. followed by Flo.)
Aurora. I’ll tell the Doctor.
(goes to bath room) E’s very busy
now but
(Splashing heard.)
Flora. (to Aurora) Not yet I
want to speak to these ladies first.
Ruby. (backing down stage astonished, to Pearl)
Miss Garden!
What does she want to come for and spoil
our fun?
Pearl. (to Flo) You said you
had a headache, and were going to lie down.
Ruby. (to Flo) Yes, that was only an excuse
for coming to see
Jack.
Aunt. (aside) She calls him Jack!
Aurora. (aside) I must ’ear
this it’s all for ’im. (stays
at back, pretending to tidy)
Flora. It was no excuse at all.
I was pulling the blind down to darken the room, when
I saw you two horrid things crossing the road to this
house when you said you were going
shopping. That was only an excuse to come and
flirt with my Jack!
Aunt. (aside) Oh, he’s her Jack,
is he?
Flora. And I followed you, though
my head’s splitting, for I love him with all
my heart, and I won’t let anyone come
between us.
(Aurora gasps.)
Ruby. You brazen girl, and you’re married
to his greatest friend!
Flora. I’m not! (descends on Ruby)
Ruby. You know you are! Pa said so!
Flora. Did he? Then he basely
betrayed my husband’s sacred confidence, (crosses
back again)
Pearl. (with sarcasm) Your
husband’s sacred confidence! If you’re
really a respectable married woman, my dear Miss Garden,
instead of coming here to slander my father, you’d
better go back and lie down.
Flora. And leave you alone with
my Jack? No, thank you! What are you,
I’d like to know? Two horrid fast girls
who ran away with two young men only this morning,
and had to be locked up.
Aunt. (aside) And these
are my nephew’s friends!
Flora. And you picked the lock
with a hairpin, and came here all alone to flirt with
my Jack!
Ruby. Your Jack? How dare
you! (crosses to Flo and comes back) He’s
my Jack!
(Aurora gasps again.)
Aunt. (aside) Oh, he’s her Jack now!
It gets worse and worse!
Pearl. To be strictly accurate, Doctor Sheppard
is our Jack!
Aunt. (aside) Our Jack! This is too much!
(Aurora gasps louder.)
Flora. What do you mean?
Pearl. It is my father’s wish that one
of us should marry him.
Aurora. (screams) Oh, ’Evvings!
They’re going to marry my Jack! (coming down falls
on her knees facing audience C.)
Aunt. (aside) Her Jack! That’s four
of them! They all love
Jack!
Flora. (to Aurora) Your Jack!
Aurora. (kneeling) Yuss!
I love Mm with a secret passion and I don’t
care who knows it! (rises)
Aunt. It’s a perfect harem! (makes her
escape towards door and
Exits still unobserved.)
Aurora. (C.) Don’t you
think because I’m only a servant, a common slavey
with L5 a year and a ‘alf a pound o’ sugar
a week, that I’m a-goin’ to ’ave
the dear Doctor took from me!
Flora. How dare you love him!
Aurora. And why not? ’Cos
I wears a cap? Look ’ere! you three girls
is all settin’ your caps at ’im. I’m
in it too. (throws down cap) and
I chucks darn the gimlet.
Pearl. You little stupid!
Aurora. (crying) Yuss!
I know I’m a little stupid, but which o’
you would put yer ‘olé soul into cleanin’
’is boots, as I does? Which o’ you
would buy ‘im wittles out o’ yer perks
as I does? I may be a little stoopid,
but I loves ’im more than all of yer put together,
and I’ll struggle with yer, see if I don’t!
(Exit Aurora.)
Ruby. (to Flo) Are you going, Miss Garden,
or are you not?
Pearl. It’ll make your headache much worse
if you stay here.
Flora. I shall ask the Doctor
to give me something to send it away, (makes herself
comfortable on sofa, back to Pearl)
Pearl. (to Ruby) Isn’t she a spiteful
little cat!
Ruby. (to Pearl) Never mind,
she shan’t interfere with our fun; we can’t
leave those two sitting in that four-wheeler all day.
(rises, comes to Pearl)
Pearl. No, come along, We’ll go and tell
“Auntie” to come in.
(Exeunt Ruby and Pearl.)
Flora. (aside) I’ll make
Jack explain about those girls, or I’ll break
off our our honeymoon; they talk as if he
was engaged to both of them. Now I know why he
was so desperately anxious to hide me when their father
called.
(Enter Doctor. in pyjamas and eccentric
Turkish dressing gown, rubbing his head with a towel Flo
doesn’t see him.)
Oh, Jack, jack, I never thought you’d
turn out such a monster as this!
Doctor. (surprised to see her)
Good afternoon, (fumbles for his eye-glass which
is hanging down his back)
What can I do for--(recognizes her) My darling wife! This
is a pleasant surprise.
Flora. (starting up) Go away,
you object! (crosses R. ) It’s not a
pleasant surprise, and I’m not
your wife any longer! I know all oh,
Jack!
Doctor. (aside) Those precious
jewels have said something. Confound them! (advancing
to her, timidly) My dear Flo, if you will only
give me time, I can explain everything!
Flora. (eagerly) Oh, do, Jack,
do! (rushes into his arms)
(Enter Ruby and Pearl.)
Ruby. (seeing Doctor and Flo together)
Oh, we didn’t know you were engaged.
Pearl. There’s another lady wants to see
you.
Flora. (jealously) Another lady? (turns
away)
Doctor. (eagerly) In hysterics?
Pearl. No in a four-wheeler.
Ruby. She said she’d rung twice, but couldn’t
make anyone hear.
Doctor. Tupper’s never
awake when the bell rings. I’ll discharge
that boy at least my half of him!
Ruby. I told her I’d see
if you were disengaged, and she scribbled her name
on her card; here it is. (reads) Miss Susannah
Sheppard!
Doctor and Flora. Auntie!
Doctor. (to Flo) She mustn’t
see me like this (looks at the dressing
gown) and she mustn’t see you
at all, you must fly!
Flora. (clinging to Jack, who is
pale and agitated) Oh, Jack! I can’t
go and leave you with them, (looking at Ruby and
Pearl) Can’t you say that I’m one
of your patients?
Doctor. Good idea, how clever
of you. Get back there, (on operating couch)
Ruby. Oh, what fun! Let’s
all be patients! (nudges Pearl)
(Ruby and Pearl sit down and pretend
to be suffering.)
Doctor. (to girls) All right!
All be patients. It’ll impress Auntie,
(takes off dressing-gown and flings it into bathroom,
is just going in stops) No! No
time to change, (snatches his frock coat off chair,
and buttons it over his pyjamas) Remember!
This is the supreme moment of my life. Whatever
I say to you whatever I do to you you
mustn’t mind.
Ruby and Pearl. We won’t, (stifling
a laugh)
Doctor. Hush!
(Enter Andrew dressed as Aunt,
followed by Waverly.)
(to Andrew) My dear Aunt, I’m
so glad to see you. Won’t you sit down?
(leads him down to sofa)
(Pearl runs to Waverly, and drags
him down O. P. corner.)
Pearl. Come and sit here!
Pretend to be a patient! Waver. Why?
(Pearl explains in dumb show.)
Doctor. (at settee to Andrew)
I must apologize for this worn-out attire I’m
always worn out on Friday, my worst day. I wish
you’d come any other day. No!
I don’t mean that! I mean I’m awfully
glad you’ve come to-day, but I’m awfully
sorry I’m so busy I can’t talk to you.
No, no! I don’t mean that! I mean I’m
awfully glad, of course, that I’m so busy I can’t
talk to you! No, no, of course I don’t
mean that I mean I don’t
quite know what I do mean. You see it’s
Friday oh! what a fool she must think me!
Will you excuse me just two minutes while I settle
off a few patients?
(Trio 1st laugh Doctor crosses quickly
to them.)
(aside to them, softly) Don’t
laugh at her! and don’t look so beastly healthy!
Look pale! Faint! Do something!
(Bus. Ruby makes a sling
for her arm out of her handkerchief.)
(crosses quickly back to Aunt)
I’m so sorry to keep you waiting, my dear Aunt;
won’t you amuse yourself with a book or something?
(goes to couch at back, fetches “Quayle on
Muscles,” comes back quickly to Aunt, opens
it) Here you are. (shuts it quickly and shies
it down, aside) What do ladies read?
(Crosses quickly to Pearl. who
is reading “Pink ’Un,” snatches
it from her.)
Thank you very much, (crosses quickly
to Aunt) Here you are, Aunt, this is a lady’s
paper! (gives it to her and runs to Flo at back aside
anxiously) I’ll explain everything when they’ve
gone! (loudly, holding her hand) Ah! your nerves
are run down a little, (goes to medicine chest)
(Trio 2nd laugh.)
Confound those Plant girls I’ll
pay them out! (flings roll of lint at Pearl. then
pours sal volatile from bottle into measuring glass,
then into tumbler, adds a little water to
Flo) There! drink that! You’ll soon
be better.
(During this Bus. Pearl picks
up roll of lint, puts a bandage round Waverly’s
face Ruby steals across stage and kisses
Andrew Doctor turns round just after.)
Ruby. (C., confused, comes to table)
Could you take my case next, Doctor? I’m
so bad!
Doctor. You are. (Bus. with
stethoscope) I mean with pleasure!
I’ll write you a prescription, (writes)
I should advise a long voyage with a merry companion.
(Andrew shakes his fist at Doctor
unobserved by him.)
Better start at once, (hands her
prescription, saying aside) Go! (rings bell
on table)
(Enter Tupper.)
Show this lady to her carriage, Tupper.
(Ruby doesn’t move from table.)
(aside) Go! Go! What are you waiting
for?
Ruby. (aside to him, stifling a laugh) My sister,
of course.
I’m not going to leave her here, (crosses
C., then on to
Andrew)
Doctor. Pray don’t.
(Doctor rushes at Pearl. who is
hobbling across stage on Waverly’s walking stick
and takes stick from her.)
(aside) Do you want to give me away to my Aunt?
(then loudly) I’ll write
to your school mistress about you. I think a
little physical treatment locally applied (brandishing
stick) will put you right very soon. Good
afternoon, (aside) Go! Go! both
of you! (rings bell)
(Re-enter Tupper.)
More carriages for this lady, Tupper.
(to Pearl) You needn’t wait, little girl.
Pearl. I shall wait for Mr. Vane;
and I won’t be called a little girl! (goes
to Ruby)
(Bell rings.)
Doctor. (getting desperate)
Shall I never get rid of ’em! (rushes at
Vane and grips him by the arm) I’ll take
you next, sir. (loudly)
(Waverly laughs.)
Stop that infernal laughing.
I know my Aunt will see through it soon, (punches
him on back)
(Waverly cries out.)
Ah, it’s still there! (loudly)
That’ll have to come out! (punches him harder)
(Waverly cries louder.)
Yes! (severely) We must remove
that at once. Step into my operating room.
(Drags him oft to bath-room opens
door, turns on taps and leaves them running.
Waverly runs back to his chair, Doctor runs back after
him.)
Come along, now be a man!
Waver. Not to-day, thank you all the same.
(Enter Aunt, shown in by Tupper.)
Aunt. (C.) I’ll give him one last
chance.
Doctor. (seeing her rushes
at her aside to her) Take ’em
off, you fool! She’s come! Take ’em
off, I say, or I’ll take ’em off for you!
(Andrew starts up and takes his
bonnet and wig off.)
Andrew. (calls loudly) Jack! Jack!
(Doctor far too preoccupied to
hear him, pushes Aunt into bath-room she
falls head foremost into bath, her heels go up loud
splash. Doctor bangs door, turns round, sees Andrew.)
Doctor. (aghast) Merry Andrew!!!
Andrew. Yes, Dull Boy!
Doctor. Then who’s in here? (opens door)
TABLEAU.
(Flo rushes into bath-room and
shuts door quickly.)
CURTAIN.