EDWARD
. (MIDGE
. No, I don’t want anything.EDWARD
. Yes, you do. (LADY
ANGKATELL. Some coffee, Henrietta?HENRIETTA
. Yes, thank you. Shouldn’t one of us go up to Gerda?(EDWARD
LADY
ANGKATELL. My dear child, one doesn’t know what to think.(EDWARD
One doesn’t even know what her reactions
HENRIETTA
. Aren’t we assuming rather too readily that Gerda(
EDWARD
. Well, we found her standing over his body with the revolver in her hand. I imagined there was no question about it.HENRIETTA
. We haven’t heard yet what she has to say.EDWARD
. It seems self-evident to me.(HENRIETTA
LADY
ANGKATELL. Mind you, she had every provocation. John behaved in a most barefaced manner. After all, there are ways of doing these things. Being unfaithful, I mean.(GERDA
GERDA
. (LADY
ANGKATELL. ((MIDGE
(
GERDA
. No, no, thank you. I—I am only just beginning to realize it. I haven’t been able to feel—I still can’t feel—that John is really(
SIR
HENRY. (LADY
ANGKATELL. This is Mrs. Cristow, Mr. Colquhoun.(
GERDA
. (INSPECTOR
. I don’t want to distress you, Mrs. Cristow, but I would like to ask you a few questions. You’re not bound to answer them unless you wish to do so, and you are entitled, if you like, to have your solicitor present before you say anything at all.SIR
HENRY. That is what I should advise, Gerda.GERDA
. (INSPECTOR
. Any statement you choose to make . . .GERDA
. I want to tell you. It’s all so bewildering—like a bad dream. I haven’t been able to cry, even. I just don’t feel anything at all.SIR
HENRY. It’s the shock.