TROTTER
. Miss Waring. You taught school—in the school where those children went.MOLLIE
. Yes.TROTTER
. It’s true, isn’t it, that Jimmy, the child who died, managed to get a letter posted to you? (MOLLIE
. I couldn’t. I never got it.TROTTER
. You just—didn’t bother.MOLLIE
. That’s not true. I was ill. I went down with pneumonia that very day. The letter was put aside with others. It was weeks afterwards that I found it with a lot of other letters. And by then that poor child was dead . . . (TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. I thought the police didn’t carry revolvers . . . (TROTTER
. The police don’t . . . I’m not a policeman, Mrs. Ralston. You thought I was a policeman because I rang up from a call box and said I was speaking from police headquarters and that Sergeant Trotter was on his way. I cut the telephone wires before I came to the front door. You know who I am, Mrs. Ralston? I’m Georgie—I’m Jimmy’s brother, Georgie.MOLLIE
. Oh. (TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. You’d better not. (TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. That revolver will make a lot of noise.TROTTER
. It will rather. Much better to do it the usual way, and take you by the neck. ((MISS
CASEWELLMISS
CASEWELL. Georgie, Georgie, you know me, don’t you? Don’t you remember the farm, Georgie? The animals, that fat old pig, and the day the bull chased us across the field. And the dogs. (TROTTER
. Dogs?MISS
CASEWELL. Yes, Spot and Plain.TROTTER
. Kathy?MISS
CASEWELL. Yes, Kathy—you remember me now, don’t you?TROTTER
. Kathy, it is you. What are you doing here? (MISS
CASEWELL. I came to England to find you. I didn’t recognize you until you twirled your hair the way you always used to do.(TROTTER
Yes, you always did it. Georgie, come with me. (
TROTTER
. Where are we going?MISS
CASEWELL. ((MISS
CASEWELLMAJOR
METCALF. (