(
HENRIETTA
. Is there anything the matter, darling?JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. Have you? (HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. When?JOHN
. Ten years ago.HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. I don’t know—I’m so tired.(HENRIETTA
,(
HENRIETTA
. Get along quite well, I expect.JOHN
. Why should things come back into your mind—things that are over and done with?HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. Not after ten years? Heaven knows how long since I thought about it. But lately—even when I’m walking round the wards, it comes into my mind and it’s as vivid as a picture. (HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. Yes. I was engaged to her once—ten years ago.HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. Crazy young fool! I was mad about her. She was just starting in pictures then. I’d qualified about a year before. I’d had a wonderful chance—to work under Radley. D.H. Radley, you know,HENRIETTA
. What happened?JOHN
. What I might have guessed would happen. Veronica got her chance to go to Hollywood. Well, naturally, she took it. But she assumed, without making any bones about it, that I’d give up everything and go with her. (HENRIETTA
. Very few people have. I hadn’t till you told me about it and I read it up.(JOHN
JOHN
. She said who cared about a lot of obscure diseases anyway. California was a wonderful climate—it would be fun for me to see the world. She’d hate to go there without me. Miss Craye was the complete egoist—never thought of anyone but herself.HENRIETTA
. You’re rather by way of being an egoist too, John.JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. What did you suggest?JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. And what did she say to that?JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. And so?