MRS
. BOYNTON. A girl? What girl? (RAYMOND
. (MRS
. BOYNTON. (RAYMOND
. ((
COPE
. Well, I hope to have done Jerusalem pretty thoroughly in another couple of days and then I’m going to have a look at Petra, the rose-red city of Petra—a most remarkable natural phenomenon, right off the beaten track.MRS
. BOYNTON. “A rose-red city—half as old as time.”RAYMOND
. It sounds marvellous.COPE
. It’s certainly worth seeing. (MRS
. BOYNTON. (MRS
. BOYNTON. You see. They won’t leave me. What about you, Nadine? You didn’t say anything.NADINE
. No, thank you, not unless Lennox cares about it.MRS
. BOYNTON. Well, Lennox, what about it? Why don’t you and Nadine go? She seems to want to.LENNOX
. (COPE
. Well—you are a devoted family.(COPE
SARAH
MRS
. BOYNTON. (RAYMOND
. Yes—er—yes.MRS
. BOYNTON. Who is she?RAYMOND
. Her name is King. She’s—she’s a doctor.MRS
. BOYNTON. I see. One of those women doctors. ((NADINE
(
(COPE
She takes such good care of me. (
(COPE
, NADINE, LENNOXBut it’s dull for her sometimes. You ought to go sightseeing with Mr. Cope, Nadine.
COPE
. (NADINE
. We’ll see—tomorrow.(
COPE
. Excuse me—but surely you’re Doctor Theodore Gerard?GERARD
. Yes. (COPE
. Naturally you wouldn’t remember me. But I had the pleasure of hearing you lecture at Harvard last year, and of being introduced to you afterwards. (GERARD
. You are too kind.