

Emmy is not there, but the father, young Charlie, and her siblings nerdy Ann (Edna May Wonacott) and Roger (Charles Bates) are there waiting for uncle Charlie. However, as he sees the family coming, his walk becomes completely normal and he is effusively greeted. The train clerk (Clarence Muse) offers to help him, as do a doctor (Edward Fielding) and his wife (Sarah Edwards) but Oakley pretends to be a grumpy person and rejects everybody's help. As he gets off the train he walks looking downward and uses a cane as an old frail person might. Oakley, on the train towards Santa Rosa, has kept out of sight behind Pullman curtains. Neither she nor Charlotte are able to identify it. Her mother Emma "Emmy" Oakley-Norton (Patricia Collinge) is radiant with pleasure at the prospect of seeing her youngest brother. At the telegraph office she learns that he has just announced by telegram that he is on his way. At times she feels the charming man is the only one who understands her need to be extraordinary, that there is more to her than her small town allows. She not only shares a nickname with her mother's youngest brother, but a special bond.

Charlotte decides to improve things by inviting her favorite Uncle Charlie to come for a visit. Charlotte "Charlie" Newton (Teresa Wright), is frustrated by boredom, complaining to her father, Joseph "Joe" Newton (Henry Travers) because nothing interesting ever happens in her life or that of her family. In Santa Rosa, a teen living in a two story house is lying in bed. Oakley is at a pay phone booth, sending a telegram to Santa Rosa, California, telling his sister that he is coming for a visit and will arrive in a couple of days. He walks quickly, turns corners, loses them as he goes up a building and watches them from the rooftop, making sure he has lost them. Spencer, whose real name is Oakley, gets off the bed, picks up the money, goes out past the men, who do not react, but begin to follow him at a distance. Spencer" (Joseph Cotten) that two men were asking for him but she had followed his instructions, told them he was out. The landlady, Mrs Martin (Constance Purdy) knocks, opens the door and tells "Mr. Money bills are on his dresser and tumbled on the floor.

A man dressed in a suit is lying on a bed, deep in thought. Couples in costumes in a room with 1900 décor are dancing to the music of The Merry Widow waltz by Franz Lehar.
