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Through the Back Door 1

      FOREWORD.

This is a love story --

A vision seen through

the tears of a mother -- and a forgotten child --

[dissolve to:]

2 It echoes the story God whispers

to each tiny soul before He

blesses it with the miracle of Life -- The story of mother-love.

3 In the summer of 1903,

Ostend, on the coast of

Belgium, the playground

     of the rich.

4 Mme. Louise Bodamere,

a widow with a child,

who is too modern to be a mother, too rich to be contented and too attractive to be single.

5 And so Elton Reeves

has decided she is 

going to marry again.

6 Jeanne Bodamere, one of those lucky children of the rich, who can have anything the heart desires -- except a mother.

7 Marie Gaston, a good

old soul, who is

old-fashioned enough to really enjoy children.

8 "No one must ever come

  between us, dear.
It'll be just we two --
and the rest of the world."

9 "Louise, I'm fond of the baby

 too -- but -- well -- frankly
-- I'm jealous of her."

10 "Don't be unreasonable, dear

 -- we probably won't see
her more than once a day."

11 "Why -- you don't intend

 to take her on the
boat, do you? Imagine
a honeymoon with the
bride and groom nursing
a five year old child!"

12 The sweet misery of good-bye

-- when Louise sacrifices

the joy of being a mother for the privilege of being a wife.

13 "Don't neglect Jeanne's English

 -- and if we shouldn't return
as soon as Mrs. Reeves expects
-- just try to make her happy."

14 "Mama's playing with me

  -- she's hidin'."

15 "Mama - - you're

forgetting me!"

16 "Poor little baby --

 don't cry -- some
day she may be sorry."

17 Five years later, on Marie's

little farm in Belgium,

Jeanne now calls her old

  nurse Mamma Marie.

18 Marie's husband, Jacques.

19 Jeanne Bodamere .....

Mary Pickford

[dissolve to:]

20 Born to the chase -- to the

shoot -- to the hounds,

even the limitations of the farm have not dulled the instincts that make little Jeanne a great sportswoman.

21 "Any luck?"

22 "I'll kill that cat! He ate

 our fish! Hurry and
catch him before he
chokes on a bone!"

23 "It's from Jeanne's mother

 and was sent from Paris."

24 "She's coming tomorrow to

  take my Jeanne away.
It's cruel! She didn't come
back as she promised --
   She didn't care!"

25 "Perhaps she's sorry now

-- and wants her child."

26 "She bore Jeanne, but I

 have reared and loved
her as my own and she
rightfully belongs to me."

27 "Jeanne!"

28 "Jeanne -- come here to me!"

29 What we produce belongs

 to the world -- --

What we possess, we work for.

      =============

This being Marie's contention

she found courage to form

a desperate plan to hold

  Jeanne for her own.

30 "Go to the Vanderbrockens'

 for the day -- but remember
Charlotte's temper and be careful
   not to make her angry."

31 "I don't have to make

 her angry -- her
 bunions do that."

32 "Are you sending Jeanne

 away today -- and her
mother coming from Paris?"

33 "Please, dear, leave

this matter to me."

34 The Vanderbrockens',

a typical Belgian home,

where cleanliness is seen

  and not heard.

35 "It sounds like it's going to

    be a hot day - -
    Let's go someplace."

36 "Don't worry, it'll brush off

-- it's just clean mud."

37 "Scrub that floor until it's

 as clean as you found it."

38 "I'd like to do it for you

 -- only Mama Marie
needs me right away."

39 "I've brought some new

 clothes for Jeanne to
wear back to America."

40 "Where is she?"

41 "Why don't you answer

    me, Marie?"

42 "Little Jeanne -- is dead."

43 "I did write you, madame,

   only last week."

44 "I'll never forgive myself

 for letting my husband
persuade me to wait --
and wait -- and wait ---"

45 "I never should have

 left my Jeanne at all.
I didn't know how much
  she meant to me."

46 "Where is the grave?"

47 "It was -- the river --

 We never found her."

48 The surest way to lose

your husband's devotion

for you is to lose your

   devotion for him.

49 "Come, dear -- you've cried

  now for three days --
don't you think I deserve
 a little consideration?"

50 "What consideration did you

      show my baby?"

51 Never be deceived by

the looks of a mule --

always expect the worst.

52 "Take me home and

 I'll let you sleep
 in the carrot-bin."

53 Five years later.

54 AUGUST

1914

55 Braving the anguish of

separation, Marie sends

Jeanne to America --

   and safety.

56 "I -- I don't think I can go

 -- unless you promise ---
   to come to me later."

57 "When Belgium no longer

     needs me --"

58 "This is my complete confession

  -- witnessed by the good
Father Laison. It will tell your
mother who you are, with the
word of the Church behind you."

59 "Good-bye."

60 "Good-bye."

61 The leaden light of a weary

 dawn, with the roads

of Belgium echoing to the tread of homeless feet.

62 "Mama went to sleep last night

 at the side of the road --
and we couldn't wake her up."

63 "I'll take you with me to

  my mama in America."

64 Nearing America, the shelter

 which strangers think of

as the place where dreams

       come true.

65 As Jeanne pictures her mother

 -- genial, open-armed,

warm-hearted, broad-bosomed and --- well, just a mother.

66

     ELLIS ISLAND.

The back door to America.

67 Imported Americans.

68 The desire to smuggle is felt

 by all and indulged by

the few - - - who travel.

69 The Reeves Estate

on Long Island.

70 "Crawford, in the future

 confine this sort of
thing to the servants'
      quarters."

71 "Where can I find

 Madame Reeves?"

72 "Mo--M--Madame Reeves."

73 "Crawford, I can't be annoyed

 with these children now --
Please see that they are fed."

74 "Not that way - -

  through the back door."

75 "I -- I knew Madame

  Reeves in Belgium --
I am -- a friend of hers."

76 "You'd better not remind

 her of it -- you're not
the sort of person she's
supposed to have known
     over there."

77 Visions evaporated, hopes

collapsed, plans twisted,

Jeanne realizes that by living in a world apart from her mother she has grown to be the daughter of the peasant woman Marie.

78 "I am Belge too."

79 "I wanted to speak to

  Madame Reeves."

80 "Impossible -- but I can

   give you a job."

81 "How about my children?"

82 "You can hide them

 over the garage --
but don't tell the
  housekeeper."

83 Installed as a maid, Jeanne

 takes advantage of her
   first opportunity.

84 "Madame Reeves -- I -- I have ---

 something important --- to ----"

85 Billy Stokes, the boy

 next door, who has

radical ideas about life, neckties and women -- You had them too at 17.

86 "I saw you fall --

  are you hurt?"

87 "No thanks -- just muddy."

88 Wondering where in the world

 he ever got the idea 

that women were an awkward

 inconvenience in life.

89 By an uncanny coincidence,

 Billy Stokes stumbled

upon Jeanne again that after- noon. This time it was Billy

        who fell.

90 "You really weren't hurt

this morning, were you?"

91 "Hasn't it been a

 wonderful day?"

92 "Yes -- all day."

93 "Whose children are those?"

94 "They're mine."

95 "YOURS!"

96 The idle rich, who have

 time to waste, generally

waste it --- An edifying "Saturday to Monday" at

   the Reeves home. 

97 Laugh and your husband laughs with you, weep, and he laughs

   with somebody else.

98 Out of the West had come

 Margaret Brewster --

99 -- and her brother, Jim.

100 "You know, I'm glad

  I met you - -
you're changing my 
ideas about women."

101 "I don't think your mother

 would approve of this, 
    Master Stokes."

102 "If you talk much longer

 you'll be late for dinner."

103

Tonight Mrs. Reeves does not
 dress for dinner - - she
dresses for her husband.

(The women will understand this.)

104 "What's that Brewster girl

  after you for - -
a Wall Street tip for
   her brother?"

105 "Possibly she enjoys

    my company."

106 "Surely you don't think

 the young simpleton
is really infatuated
by a middle-aged, and
rather fat man, like you!"

107 By another uncanny

 coincidence, they

deliberately met again

 in the evening.

108 "I brought a cake for

  - - your children."

109 "Why do you insist upon

  using perfume --
and especially that
 sickening Jasmine?"

110 "I've been wanting to

  ask you something
terribly embarrassing ---"

111 "---- are those children

     really yours?"

112 "Yes -- I found them."

113 "Oh -- that's good."

114 "What delightful perfume!"

115 "Yes -- it's Jasmine."

116 "Dinner is served."

117 At that feeble hour of the

  evening when guests

begin to wonder what time

  it's getting to be.

118 "When are you thinking of

   getting married?"

119 "Constantly."

120 Finding courage in the

absence of the awesome

Mrs. Reeves to deliver the confession of Mother Marie.

121 "I -- I just left something ---"

122 "Have you been using

   my perfume?"

123 "It was spilled -- I just

    sponged it up."

124 "Your brother tells me you

  cannot stay as long as
you had planned -- and are
leaving in the morning --"

125 "--- so I'll say

good-bye now."

126 "Sh-h -- Don't shout

 -- Be sensible."

127 "You're the one who's

   not sensible - -
objecting to my kissing
that flabby-lipped Reeves."

128 "I'm objecting not only

 because you're my
wife -- but you're
spoiling our game."

129 "For Heaven's sake, Louise,

    be sensible."

130 "Either that woman leaves

  this house in the 
morning - - or I do!"

131 "Very well -- if that's

    your choice."

132 "--- But it's a safe bet

Reeves won't pay it
to keep us from telling
his wife something she
    already knows."

133 "I'm not worrying about

 the money -- When
I'm Mrs. Elton Reeves
  I'll have plenty."

134 "Won't it be a little

inconvenient -- to
have two husbands?"

135 "Why -- I expect to

 divorce you, Jim."

136 "I don't care what you do

  after we put this over --
but you're going through with
my game first -- understand?"

137 "And just to make sure

 that you'll be true
to me, my dear, I'll
lock you in for the night."

138 The Reeves' "Saturday

 to Monday" having 

developed a satisfactory amount of scandal to last from Monday to Saturday,

 the guests depart.

139 Uneasy lies the head

- - that rests on

a pair of shoe trees

    all night.

140 "Your infernal whimpering

 has driven me to look
elsewhere for congeniality
-- you can blame yourself
if I have compromised that
girl -- and if I have to
      make amends."

141 "Amends! -- to her --

 but what of me?"

142 "Your vanity has been hurt --

 but her honor is at stake."

143 "The Brewsters aren't

  honorable - -
  they're married."

144 "What are you talking about?"

145 "He called her his wife!

 -- I heard him! --
And they're trying to
  get your money."

146 "You're lying! Someone put

 you up to this -- you --"

147 "Elton, please reserve

 your temper for me."

148 "Please -- lady -- don't cry.

   You still have me."

149 "Did you get my letter?"

150 "No -- please go away."

151 "Oh, lady --- I'm ---

 we're -- related."

152 "Please -- go -- and

 let me be -- alone."

153 "Aren't you going home

     in my car?"

154 "No."

155 "I told you once

 I'd divorce you
-- and I meant it."

156 "You might save time by

using one of our cars,
   Mrs. Brewster."

157 "It's been very nice

   to know you."

158 Her passport to America

-- the only remaining
proof of who she is.

159 "Jeanne -- my Jeanne."

160 "My own, dear, little girl

  -- why didn't you
   tell me before?"

161 "I -- I was afraid you'd

   be ashamed of me."

162 Marie Gaston, in Belgium,

 receives news that
 cheers her heart.

163 If it were not for New York

hotels, where would

elopers, divorcees and red plush furniture go?

[dissolve to:]

164 At the Hotel Knickerbocker.

165 "Mother! Mother!"

166 "Now what do I do?"

167 Mrs. Stokes took heart-sick

 Billy to New York to

convalesce -- and walked him right up the corridor

     to a relapse.

168 "This is my daughter Jeanne.

 She has been at school in
Belgium for several years."

169 "Has Billy ever been

    in Belgium?"

170 "You know -- I lo-- I mean

-- you're -- you're the --"

THE END