(M. F. A. L. alone.)
Feda.—Oh, it's Miss Olive!
M. F. A. L.—So glad to meet you, Feda!
Feda love you and Soliver best of all. SLionel and SAlec too she love very much.
Yaymond is here. He has been all over the place with Paulie, to all sorts of places to the mediums, to try and get poor boys into touch with their mothers. Some are very jealous of those who succeed. They try to get to their mothers, and they can't—they are shut out. They make me feel as though I could cry to see them. We explain that their mothers and fathers don't know about communicating. They say, why don't they all go to mediums?
Yaymond say, it makes me wonder too.
He say, he was telling Feda, it was awful funny the things some of them did—it has a funny side, going to see the mediums. You see, Paul and he couldn't help having a joke; they are boys themselves, laughing over funny things.
He says he was listening to Paul, and he was describing the drawing-room at home. (A good description was now given of the drawing-room at Mariemont, which the medium had never seen.)
Feda sees flowers; they're Feda's, not Gladys's.
[M. F. A. L. had brought flowers for Mrs. Leonard.]