Loyalties by John Galsworthy (romantic love story reading .TXT) š
LADY A. I've told the Dancys--she was in bed. And I got through toNewmarket, Charles, and Inspector Dede is coming like the wind on a motorcycle.
MARGARET. Did he say "like the wind," Adela? He must have imagination.Isn't this gorgeous? Poor little Ferdy!
WINSOR. [Vexed] You might take it seriously, Margaret; it's prettybeastly for us all. What time did you come up?
MARGARET. I came up with Adela. Am I suspected, Charles? Howthrilling!
WINSOR. Did you hear anything?
MARGARET. Only little Ferdy splashing.
WINSOR. And saw nothing?
MARGARET. Not even that, alas!
LADY A. [With a finger held up] Leste! Un peu leste! Oh! Here are theDancys. Come in, you two!
MABEL and RONALD DANCY enter. She is a pretty young woman withbobbed hair, fortunately, for she has just got out of bed, and is inher nightgown and a wrapper. DANCY is in his smoking jacket. Hehas a pale, determined face with high cheekbones, small, deep
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CANYNGE. [After a vexed turn up and down the room] Itās mad, sir, to jump to conclusions like this.
DE LEVIS. Not so mad as the conclusion Dancy jumped to when he lighted on my balcony.
CANYNGE. Nobody could have taken this money who did not know you had it.
DE LEVIS. How do you know that he didnāt?
CANYNGE. Do you know that he did?
DE LEVIS. I havenāt the least doubt of it.
CANYNGE. Without any proof. This is very ugly, De Levis. I must tell WINSOR.
DE LEVIS. [Angrily] Tell the whole blooming lot. You think Iāve no feelers, but Iāve felt the atmosphere here, I can tell you, General. If I were in Dancyās shoes and he in mine, your tone to me would be very different.
CANYNGE. [Suavely frigid] Iām not aware of using any tone, as you call it. But this is a private house, Mr De Levis, and something is due to our host and to the esprit de corps that exists among gentlemen.
DE LEVIS. Since when is a thief a gentleman? Thick as thievesāa good motto, isnāt it?
CANYNGE. Thatās enough! [He goes to the door, but stops before opening it] Now, look here! I have some knowledge of the world. Once an accusation like this passes beyond these walls no one can foresee the consequences. Captain Dancy is a gallant fellow, with a fine record as a soldier; and only just married. If heās as innocent asāChristāmud will stick to him, unless the real thief is found. In the old days of swords, either you or he would not have gone out of this room alive. It you persist in this absurd accusation, you will both of you go out of this room dead in the eyes of Society: you for bringing it, he for being the object of it.
DE LEVIS. Society! Do you think I donāt know that Iām only tolerated for my money? Society canāt add injury to insult and have my money as well, thatās all. If the notes are restored Iāll keep my mouth shut; if theyāre not, I shanāt. Iām certain Iām right. I ask nothing better than to be confronted with Dancy; but, if you prefer it, deal with him in your own wayāfor the sake of your esprit de corps.
CANYNGE. āPon my soul, Mr De Levis, you go too far.
DE LEVIS. Not so far as I shall go, General Canynge, if those notes arenāt given back.
WINSOR comes in.
WINSOR. Well, De Levis, Iām afraid thatās all we can do for the present. So very sorry this should have happened in my house.
CANYNGE. [Alter a silence] Thereās a development, WINSOR. Mr De Levis accuses one of your guests.
WINSOR. What?
CANYNGE. Of jumping from his balcony to this, taking the notes, and jumping back. Iāve done my best to dissuade him from indulging the fancyāwithout success. Dancy must be told.
DE LEVIS. You can deal with Dancy in your own way. All I want is the money back.
CANYNGE. [Drily] Mr De Levis feels that he is only valued for his money, so that it is essential for him to have it back.
WINSOR. Damn it! This is monstrous, De Levis. Iāve known Ronald Dancy since he was a boy.
CANYNGE. You talk about adding injury to insult, De Levis. What do you call such treatment of a man who gave you the mare out of which you made this thousand pounds?
DE LEVIS. I didnāt want the mare; I took her as a favour.
CANYNGE. With an eye to possibilities, I venture to thinkāthe principle guides a good many transactions.
DE LEVIS. [As if flicked on a raw spot] In my race, do you mean?
CANYNGE. [Coldly] I said nothing of the sort.
DE LEVIS. No; you donāt say these things, any of you.
CANYNGE. Nor did I think it.
DE LEVIS. Dancy does.
WINSOR. Really, De Levis, if this is the way you repay hospitalityā
DE LEVIS. Hospitality that skins my feelings and costs me a thousand pounds!
CANYNGE. Go and get Dancy, WINSOR; but donāt say anything to him.
WINSOR goes out.
CANYNGE. Perhaps you will kindly control yourself, and leave this to me.
DE LEVIS turns to the window and lights a cigarette. WINSOR comes back, followed by DANCY.
CANYNGE. For WINSORās sake, Dancy, we donāt want any scandal or fuss about this affair. Weāve tried to make the police understand that. To my mind the whole thing turns on our finding who knew that De Levis had this money. Itās about that we want to consult you.
WINSOR. Kentman paid De Levis round the corner in the further paddock, he says.
DE LEVIS turns round from the window, so that he and DANCY are staring at each other.
CANYNGE. Did you hear anything that throws light, Dancy? As it was your filly originally, we thought perhaps you might.
DANCY. I? No.
CANYNGE. Didnāt hear of the sale on the course at all?
DANCY. No.
CANYNGE. Then you canāt suggest any one who could have known? Nothing else was taken, you see.
DANCY. De Levis is known to be rolling, as I am known to be stony.
CANYNGE. There are a good many people still rolling, besides Mr De Levis, but not many people with so large a sum in their pocket-books.
DANCY. He won two races.
DE LEVIS. Do you suggest that I bet in ready money?
DANCY. I donāt know how you bet, and I donāt care.
CANYNGE. You canāt help us, then?
DANCY. No. I canāt. Anything else? [He looks fixedly at DE LEVIS].
CANYNGE. [Putting his hand on DANCYās arm] Nothing else, thank you, Dancy.
DANCY goes. CANYNGE puts his hand up to his face. A momentās silence.
WINSOR. You see, De Levis? He didnāt even know youād got the money.
DE LEVIS. Very conclusive.
WINSOR. Well! You areā!
There is a knock on the door, and the INSPECTOR enters.
INSPECTOR. Iām just going, gentlemen. The grounds, Iām sorry to say, have yielded nothing. Itās a bit of a puzzle.
CANYNGE. Youāve searched thoroughly?
INSPECTOR. We have, General. I can pick up nothing near the terrace.
WINSOR. [After a look at DE LEVIS, whose face expresses too much] Hām! Youāll take it up from the other end, then, Inspector?
INSPECTOR. Well, weāll see what we can do with the bookmakers about the numbers, sir. Before I go, gentlemenāyouāve had time to think it overā thereās no one you suspect in the house, I suppose?
DE LEVISās face is alive and uncertain. CANYNGE is staring at him very fixedly.
WINSOR. [Emphatically] No.
DE LEVIS turns and goes out on to the balcony.
INSPECTOR. If youāre coming in to the racing to-morrow, sir, you might give us a call. Iāll have seen Kentman by then.
WINSOR. Right you are, Inspector. Good night, and many thanks.
INSPECTOR. Youāre welcome, sir. [He goes out.]
WINSOR. Gosh! I thought that chap [With a nod towards the balcony] was going toā! Look here, General, we must stop his tongue. Imagine it going the rounds. They may never find the real thief, you know. Itās the very devil for Dancy.
CANYNGE. WINSOR! Dancyās sleeve was damp.
WINSOR. How dāyou mean?
CANYNGE. Quite damp. Itās been raining.
The two look at each other.
WINSOR. IāI donāt followā [His voice is hesitative and lower, showing that he does].
CANYNGE. It was coming down hard; a minute out in it would have been enoughā[He motions with his chin towards the balcony].
WINSOR. [Hastily] He must have been out on his balcony since.
CANYNGE. It stopped before I came up, half an hour ago.
WINSOR. Heās been leaning on the wet stone, then.
CANYNGE. With the outside of the upper part of the arm?
WINSOR. Against the wall, perhaps. There may be a dozen explanations. [Very low and with great concentration] I entirely and absolutely refuse to believe anything of the sort against Ronald Dancy in my house. Dash it, General, we must do as weād be done by. It hits us allāit hits us all. The thingās intolerable.
CANYNGE. I agree. Intolerable. [Raising his voice] Mr De Levis!
DE LEVIS returns into view, in the centre of the open window.
CANYNGE. [With cold decision] Young Dancy was an officer and is a gentleman; this insinuation is pure supposition, and you must not make it. Do you understand me?
DE LEVIS. My tongue is still mine, General, if my money isnāt!
CANYNGE. [Unmoved] Must not. Youāre a member of three Clubs, you want to be member of a fourth. No one who makes such an insinuation against a fellow-guest in a country house, except on absolute proof, can do so without complete ostracism. Have we your word to say nothing?
DE LEVIS. Social blackmail? Hām!
CANYNGE. Not at allāsimple warning. If you consider it necessary in your interests to start this scandal-no matter how, we shall consider it necessary in ours to dissociate ourselves completely from one who so recklessly disregards the unwritten code.
DE LEVIS. Do you think your code applies to me? Do you, General?
CANYNGE. To anyone who aspires to be a gentleman, Sir.
DE LEVIS. Ah! But you havenāt known me since I was a boy.
CANYNGE. Make up your mind.
A pause.
DE LEVIS. Iām not a fool, General. I know perfectly well that you can get me outed.
CANYNGE. [Icily] Well?
DE LEVIS. [Sullenly] Iāll say nothing about it, unless I get more proof.
CANYNGE. Good! We have implicit faith in Dancy.
There is a momentās encounter of eyes; the GENERALāS steady, shrewd, impassive; WINSORāS angry and defiant; DE LEVISās mocking, a little triumphant, malicious. Then CANYNGE and WINSOR go to the door, and pass out.
DE LEVIS. [To himself] Rats!
CURTAIN ACT II SCENE IAfternoon, three weeks later, in the card room of a London Club. A fire is burning, Left. A door, Right, leads to the billiard-room. Rather Left of Centre, at a card table, LORD ST ERTH, an old John Bull, sits facing the audience; to his right is GENERAL CANYNGE, to his left AUGUSTUS BORRING, an essential Clubman, about thirty-five years old, with a very slight and rather becoming stammer or click in his speech. The fourth Bridge player, CHARLES WINSOR, stands with his back to the fire.
BORRING. And the r-rub.
WINSOR. By George! You do hold cards, Borring.
ST ERTH. [Who has lost] Not a patch on the old whistāthis game. Donāt know why I play itānever did.
CANYNGE. St Erth, shall we raise the flag for whist again?
WINSOR. No go, General. You canāt go back on pace. No getting a man to walk when he knows he can fly. The young men wonāt look at it.
BORRING. Better develop it so that t-two can sit out, General.
ST ERTH. We ought to have stuck to the old game. Wish Iād gone to Newmarket, Canynge, in spite of the weather.
CANYNGE. [Looking at his watch] Letās hear whatās won the Cambridgeshire. Ring, wonāt you, WINSOR? [WINSOR rings.]
ST ERTH. By the way, Canynge, young De Levis was blackballed.
CANYNGE. What!
ST ERTH. I looked in on my way down.
CANYNGE sits very still, and WINSOR utters a disturbed sound.
BORRING. But of c-course he was, General. What did you expect?
A FOOTMAN enters.
FOOTMAN. Yes, my lord?
ST ERTH. What won the Cambridgeshire?
FOOTMAN. Rosemary, my lord. Sherbet second; Barbizon third. Nine to one the winner.
WINSOR. Thank you. Thatās all.
FOOTMAN goes.
BORRING. Rosemary! And De Levis sold her! But he got a good p-price, I suppose.
The other three look at him.
ST ERTH. Many a slip between price and pocket, young man.
CANYNGE. Cut! [They cut].
BORRING. I say, is that the yarn thatās going round about his having had a lot of m-money stolen in a country house? By Jove! Heāll be pretty s-sick.
WINSOR. You and
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