TREBELL. Well ... I’ll be in anyhow.
FRANCES. [Going to the window as she buttons her gloves.] Were you on deck early this morning? It must have been lovely.
TREBELL. No, I turned in before we got out of le Havre. I left Kent on deck and found him there at six.
FRANCES. I don’t think autumn means to come at all this year ... it’ll be winter one morning. September has been like a hive of bees, busy and drowsy. By the way, Cousin Mary has another baby ... a girl.
TREBELL. [Indifferent to the information.] That’s the fourth.
FRANCES. Fifth. They asked me down for the christening ... but I really couldn’t.
TREBELL. September’s the month for Tuscany. The car chose to break down one morning just as we were starting North again; so we climbed one of the little hills and sat for a couple of hours, while I composed a fifteenth century electioneering speech to the citizens of Siena.
FRANCES. [With a half smile.] Have you a vein of romance for holiday time?
TREBELL. [Dispersing the suggestion.] Not at all romantic ... nothing but figures and fiscal questions. That was the hardest commercial civilisation there has been, though you only think of its art and its murders now.
FRANCES. The papers on both sides have been very full of you ... saying you hold the moral balance ... or denying it.
TREBELL. An interviewer caught me at Basle. I offered to discuss the state of the Swiss navy.
FRANCES. Was that before Lord Horsham wrote to you?
TREBELL. Yes, his letter came to Innsbruck. He “expressed” it somehow. Why ... it isn’t known that he will definitely ask me to join?
FRANCES. The Whitehall had a leader before the Elections were well over to say that he must ... but, of course, that was Mr. Farrant.
TREBELL. [Knowingly.] Mrs. Farrant. I saw it in Paris ... it just caught me up.
FRANCES. The Times is very shy over the whole question ... has a letter from a fresh bishop every day ... doesn’t talk of you very kindly yet.
TREBELL. Tampering with the Establishment, even Cantelupe’s way, will be a pill to the real old Tory right to the bitter end.
WALTER KENT comes
in, very fresh and happy-looking. A young man
started in life.
TREBELL hails him.
TREBELL. Hullo ... you’ve not been long getting shaved.
KENT. How do you do, Miss Trebell? Lucy turned me out.
FRANCES. My congratulations. I’ve not seen you since I heard the news.
KENT. [Glad and unembarrassed.] Thank you.
I do deserve them, don’t I?
Mrs. Farrant didn’t come down ... she left us
to breakfast together. But
I’ve a message for you ... her love and she
is in town. I went and saw Lord
Charles, sir. He will come to you and be here
at half past seven.