
Delicate Flowers is the name of a Memory in Act Il of We Happy Few.
Location[]
In the train station, by the bar area.
Overview[]
Sally attempts to console her mother about giving up Elizabeth and Anne to Germany, only to end up being told she will never become a mother and truly understand what it's like to lose a child.
Transcript[]
Mrs. Boyle: "I can't let them go off on their own."
Sally: "I'd go in their place if I could."
Mrs. Boyle: "They're not hard like you. They're delicate. They're flowers. They still climb into bed with me when they have nightmares."
Sally: "They'll be fine. They'll adapt. Kids adapt."
Mrs. Boyle: "You can't understand what it's like, can you? For someone to take your children away, to send them where you can't protect them, where you can't even hold them when they cry, when they're scared. You're not a mother. And you probably never will be, will you?"