Enter Cecilia, Helen’s younger sister. Cecilia is sixteen, but socially precocious and outrageously wise on all matters pertaining to her sister. She has blonde hair, in contrast to her sister’s dark brown; and, besides, remarkable green eyes with a wistful trusting expression in them. However, there are very few people whom she trusts.
Cecilia: (Calmly surveying the disorder around her) Nice-looking room.
Helen: Well, what do you expect? Nothing but milliners, dressmakers and clumsy maids all day. (Narry rises and leaves the room.) What’s the matter with her?
Mrs. Halycon: You’ve hurt her feelings.
Helen: Have I? What time is it?
Mrs. Halycon: Quarter after eight. Are you ready? You’ve got too much powder on.
Helen: I know it.
Mr. Halycon: Well, look me up when you come down; I want to see you before the rush. I’ll be in the library with your uncle.
Mrs. Halycon: And don’t forget the powder.
Mr. and Mrs. Halycon go out.
Helen: Hook up my belt, will you, Cecilia?
Cecilia: Yes. (She sets at it, Helen in the meanwhile regarding herself in the mirror.) What are you looking at yourself all the time for?
Helen: (Calmly) Oh, just because I like myself.
Cecilia: I am all twittered! I feel as if I were coming out myself. It is rotten of them not to let me come to the dance.
Helen: Why, you’ve just only put your hair up. You’d look ridiculous.
Cecilia: (Quietly) I know where you keep your cigarettes and your little silver bottle.
Helen: (Starting so as to unloosen several hooks, which Cecilia patiently does over again) Why, you horrible child! Do you go prying around among all my things?
Cecilia: All right, tell Mother.
Helen: What do you do, just go through my drawers like a common little sneak-thief?
Cecilia: No, I don’t. I wanted a handkerchief, and I went to looking and I couldn’t help seeing them.
Helen: That’s what comes of letting you children fool around with no chaperons, read anything you want to, and dance until two every Saturday night all summer. If it comes to that, I’ll tell something I saw that I didn’t say anything about. Just before we came into town, that night you asked me if you could take Blaine MacDonough home in the electric, I happened to be passing at the end of the drive by the club, and I saw him kiss you.
Cecilia: (Unmoved) We were engaged.
Helen: (Frantically) Engaged! You silly little fool! If any older people heard that you two were talking like that, you wouldn’t be allowed to go with the rest of your crowd.
Cecilia: That’s all right, but you know why you didn’t tell, because what were you doing there by the drive with John Cannel?
Helen: Hush! You little devil.
Cecilia: All right. We’ll call it square. I just started by wanting to tell you that Narry knows where those cigarettes are too.
Helen: (Losing her head) You and Narry have probably been smoking them.
Cecilia: (Amused) Imagine Narry smoking.
Helen: Well, you have been anyway.
Cecilia: You had better put them somewhere else.
Helen: I’ll put them where you can’t find them, and if you weren’t going back to school this week, I would go to Mother and tell her the whole thing.
Cecilia: Oh, no you wouldn’t. You wouldn’t even do it for my good. You’re too selfish.
Helen, still very superior, marches into the next room. Cecilia goes softly to the door, slams it without going out, and disappears behind the bureau. She emerges tip-toe, takes a cushion from an arm chair, and retires again to her refuge. Helen again reappears. Almost immediately a whistle sounds outside, twice repeated. She looks annoyed and goes to the window.
Helen: John!
John: (From below) Helen, can I see you a moment?
Helen: No, indeed. There are people all over the house. Mother would think I had gone mad if she saw us talking out of the window.
John: (Hopefully) I’ll climb up.
Helen: John, don’t. You’ll tear your dress clothes. (He is evidently making good, as deduced from a few muttered fragments, barely audible.) Look out for the spike by the ledge. (A moment later he appears in the window, a young man of twenty-two, good-looking, but at present not particularly cheerful.)
Helen: (Sitting down) You simple boy! Do you want the family to kill me? Do you realize how conspicuous you are?
John: (Hopefully) I’d better come in.
Helen: No, you had better not. Mother may be up at any moment.
John: Better turn out the lights. I make a good movie standing like this on this ledge.
Helen hesitates and then turns out all the lights except an electric lamp on the dresser.
Helen: (Assuming an effective pose in the arm chair) What on earth do you want?
John: I want you. I want to know that you are mine when I see you dancing around with this crowd tonight.
Helen: Well, I am not. I belong to myself tonight, or rather to the crowd.
John: You’ve been rotten to me this week.
Helen: Have I?
John: You’re tired of me.
Helen: No, not that. The family. (They have evidently been over this ground before.)
John: It isn’t the family, and you know it.
Helen: Well, to tell the truth, it isn’t exactly the family.
John: I know it isn’t. It’s me—and you, and I’m getting desperate. You’ve got to do something one way or the other. We are engaged, or—
Helen: Well, we are not engaged.
John: Then what СКАЧАТЬ