(CARTER
CARTER
. The young lady. (CARTERWOMAN
. (SIR
WILFRID. This is Mr. Mayhew. He is Leonard Vole’s solicitor. I am Sir Wilfrid Robarts, Counsel for the Defence.WOMAN
. ((MAYHEW
Havin’ a bit of a confab, are you? Well, maybe I can help you if you make it worth my while.
SIR
WILFRID. You know, Miss—er . . .WOMAN
. (SIR
WILFRID. (WOMAN
. Aw, come off it! I didn’t say I knew anything, did I? I’veMAYHEW
. What is it you have got, madam?WOMAN
. Aye-aye! I was in court today. I watched the—that trollop give her evidence. So high and mighty about it too. She’s a wicked one. A Jezebel, that’s what she is.SIR
WILFRID. Quite so. But as to this special information you have . . .WOMAN
. (MAYHEW
. I’m afraid we could not countenance anything of that character, but perhaps if you tell us a little more about what you have to offer . . .WOMAN
. You don’t buy unless you get a butcher’s, is that it?SIR
WILFRID. A butcher’s?WOMAN
. A butcher’s ’ook—look.SIR
WILFRID. Oh, yes—yes.WOMAN
. I’ve got the goods on her all right. (SIR
WILFRID. Letters written by Romaine Vole to the prisoner?WOMAN
. (MAYHEW
. (WOMAN
. Putting it in your own language, aren’t you? Well, as I say, I don’t expect you to buy without seeing. But fair’s fair. If those letters will do the trick, if they’ll get the boy off, and put that foreign bitch where she belongs, well, it’s a hundred quid for me. Right?MAYHEW
. (WOMAN
. (SIR
WILFRID. (WOMAN
. Fifty quid and it’s a bargain. That’s if you’re satisfied with the letters.SIR
WILFRID. Twenty pounds. ((
WOMAN
. All right, blast you. ’Ere, take ’em. Quite a packet of ’em. (