ACT I
Jenny : I’m sorry, but . . . oh, Frank, really . . .
[She gurgles.
Frank : Jenny, please control yourself. This is sheer hysteria.
Jenny (weakly): I’m sorry . . . but, Frank . . . you . . . you . . .
[She is near tears.
Frank : Jenny, this is very painful for me.
Jenny (controlling herself) : I know, Frank. I’m sorry. I’ll be good. Go on.
[She turns away from them and sits with her back to them, staring out of the window.
Kitty (white and tense) : What did he say?
Frank (hesitant) : Kitty . . . I hardly . . . you see . . . he has no memory of you, of having married you . . . naturally, he seemed a little . . . well, a little hostile. Oh, not personally . . . I don’t mean that . . . but the idea of a wife he didn’t know . . . it’s very dreadful. He turned away from me then, told me to go . . . became almost abusive, and so insisted that I was finally forced to leave him. I spoke to the doctor later. He said he had satisfied himself that Chris was suffering from a loss of memory extending over fifteen years, and that he thought in the circumstances, I, as his cousin, should make arrangements for his removal home.
Kitty : And where is he now? Still . . . still in Boulogne?
29