HENRIETTA
. You don’t understand. John. You don’t know what it is to want something—to look at it day after day—that line of neck—the muscle—the angle of the head—that heaviness under the jaw. I’ve been looking at them, wanting them, every time I saw Gerda. In the end—I just had to have them.JOHN
. Utterly unscrupulous.HENRIETTA
. Yes—I suppose you could call it that.JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. I don’t know, John. I think—it might be(EDWARD
You remember Edward—John.
JOHN
. (EDWARD
. (JOHN
. (EDWARD
. What do you think of it?JOHN
. (EDWARD
. Powerful!JOHN
. ’M?EDWARD
. I said it’s powerful.JOHN
. Yes.HENRIETTA
. (EDWARD
. Still lots of time. (JOHN
. No, thank you. (EDWARD
. ((
HENRIETTA
. (JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. Edward’s a dear.JOHN
. Possibly. (HENRIETTA
. You know, sometimes, John, I’m afraid for you.JOHN
. Afraid for me? What do you mean?HENRIETTA
. It’s dangerous to be as oblivious as you are.JOHN
. Oblivious?HENRIETTA
. You never see or know anything that people are feeling about you.JOHN
. I should have said the opposite.HENRIETTA
. You see what you’re looking at—yes. You’re like a searchlight. A powerful beam turned on to the one spot where your interest is, but behind it, and each side of it, darkness.JOHN
. Henrietta, darling, what is all this?HENRIETTA
. I tell you, it’s(JOHN
Do you know at all what they feel about you?
JOHN
. (HENRIETTA
. You can be sure of no one in this world, John.(JOHN
(
EDWARD
. (HENRIETTA
. Please.EDWARD
. (HENRIETTA
. I know. One gets tangled up in things.EDWARD
. Is that the real reason?HENRIETTA
. Not quite.EDWARD
. You can tell me, Henrietta.HENRIETTA
. (EDWARD
. (HENRIETTA
. Because—one can’t go back.EDWARD
. You used to be happy there, in the old days.HENRIETTA
. Yes, happy in the loveliest way of all—when one doesn’t know one is happy.EDWARD
. (