Read Catastrophe Practice Online

Authors: Nicholas Mosley

Catastrophe Practice (14 page)

Geordie comes and stands behind him
.

Waldorf faces front. He acts as if he has had a cue, and is lecturing —

WALDORF

I want to say something about the decent things of life. There has to be some morality beyond that of power and money There was once the English gentleman. He had long hair and wore a beard. He had nothing to do with tradesmen. He marched through the streets on Sundays —

He breaks off as if he is uncertain that he has done the right thing
.

Harry picks up the piece of paper and sits at one of the tables, left, reading it
.

The Hostess, who has been watching him, goes out of the gothic door, left
.

Then Harry screws the piece of paper up and throws it on to the floor again
.

The Char comes and sits at the table, left, with Harry
.

CHAR

He's — the only word I can think of — arid. I want to have a relationship with him, but I can't. He wants me to dress up as Napoleon. I want to say — Kissey kissey make-up — but I can't.

HARRY

You want him back?

CHAR

Yes.

HARRY

Then lay a trap —

CHAR

How?

HARRY

Dig a pit. Cover it with old milk bottles. Then when he comes to fetch his clothes —

CHAR

He won't —

Harry shouts —

HARRY

Then sell them!

Geordie, standing behind Waldorf as if he were a hairdresser, has been watching Harry and the Char
.

After a time —

WALDORF

Is he one of ours?

GEORDIE

I think so.

WALDORF

And him?

GEORDIE

I don't know.

WALDORF

The woman?

GEORDIE

It was agreed —

WALDORF

What a place!

GEORDIE

That's why they chose it.

WALDORF

Why?

GEORDIE

I promised never to tell.

WALDORF

Then never, never do —

The machine makes a whirring sound, as if it were a fruit machine. Then it is silent
.

The Barman has remained standing, in front of it
.

Then he murmurs —

BARMAN

Ever try it?

HARRY

No.

The Barman yells like a fielder in a cricket match —

BARMAN

'Owzat!

Then he turns to the audience
.

Some team, I think. On Sundays.

He squats down, with his hands out towards the audience, like a wicket-keeper. Behind him the machine makes a loud tinkling noise, as if coins were pouring out
.

Geordie, behind Waldorf at the table, right, brushes at Waldorf's collar and straightens his hair
.

He looks at the audience as if it were a mirror. The Char speaks to Harry
.

CHAR

I remember you in your pram.

HARRY

No!

The Barman, crouching, makes a noise, as if he were imitating music, or a machine gun —

BARMAN

— Da da di dum dum. Da da di da —

The char seems to change her tune
.

CHAR

— Ah there was a spirit in those days!

The boys with their little tails going!

Their drums like bells! —

HARRY

And you were left with an only son to bring up?

CHAR

As a matter of fact he did very well in the war —

HARRY

That's why he had to go for a quiet pull in the pub —

CHAR

You're not just doing this to be nice to me, are you?

The Barman straightens and looks at the flies
.

BARMAN

It goes on all the time. Like seeds. Like parachutes.

He waits. He looks at the audience
.

Leaping up the waterfalls. Breaking down the walls.

Then he goes behind the bar. He acts —

— Good evening, sir, and what can I do for you? I hear you've got some Pakistanis on your billiard table. You won't be able to get into your own pockets next —

He laughs
.

Harry gets up from the table, left, and goes and sits at the bar
.

HARRY

If only she'd say something — !

BARMAN

Didn't she? What —

HARRY

What were you doing last night. The names of your dearest friends —

Geordie speaks over Waldorf's head, facing the audience
.

GEORDIE

Put your tongue out —

He mimes wiping the corner of Waldorf's mouth with a handkerchief. He puts his hands on Waldorf's shoulders
.

Got your umbrella?

Geordie takes a newspaper from one of the briefcases and rolls it up and puts it under Waldorf's arm. Waldorf'stands. Then Geordie leads Waldorf to the back of the stage on the right. He seems to be posing him there
.

BARMAN

You'd still have to go —

HARRY

Grow?

BARMAN

Go!

Harry looks round
.

HARRY

On this strange planet.

The Barman, behind the bar, takes a plug and wire and plugs the wire into a socket on the wall at the back
.

Then he comes from behind the bar and sits on a stool in front, by Harry, watching the machine as if it were television
.

The glass door opens, right, and a woman in the
dress of the Hostess comes in. She stands looking down at her papers
.

Harry turns to her: seems about to speak: then stops
.

There come in through the glass door, right, Smudger and Norbert, an older and a younger man. They are dressed in holiday clothes. They carry travelling bags and a radio. It is possible that one of them might be a woman. They walk one behind the other. They act —

SMUDGER

Mule train halt!

NORBERT

We're outside our own hotel, Daddy —

SMUDGER

What do you think the poet was trying to say?

NORBERT

The nature of time, and of human responsibility.

They put down their bags and radio on the table, right They look round the room Waldorf is posed with the newspaper under his arm. Geordie is standing looking at him as if he were a statue. The woman like the Hostess looks up at Harry. She is older than the original Hostess
.

HOSTESS

Hullo —

HARRY

Hullo —

HOSTESS

I was afraid you might not remember me —

HARRY

Oh yes, I loved only you, you see. I never loved anyone else in my life —

The Hostess puts her head in her hands
.

HOSTESS

I feel so guilty!

Smudger goes and looks at Waldorf's feet, as if he were a statue and there were an inscription there. He seems to read —

SMUDGER

— The column, drawn by six white horses, rose to a height of several thousand feet —

He looks up at Waldorf
.

— Slowly our forefathers moved down the Mall —

Norbert watches Smudger
.

NORBERT

— There were not many left to tell —

He breaks off. It is as if he and Smudger had been trying out some code
.

HARRY

That's not right, is it?

The Hostess looks up at Harry
.

HOSTESS

No.

The Barman leans forward and gives the machine a bang
.

Geordie has been watching Smudger and Norbert
.

GEORDIE

What's he carrying?

Smudger and Norbert look at Waldorf
.

SMUDGER

A wireless?

Harry speaks to the Hostess
.

HARRY

A child?

NORBERT

A rolled-up newspaper?

The Hostess turns towards the gothic doorway, left. Then she looks back at Harry
.

Smudger holds his hand out to Waldorf
.

SMUDGER

Smudger —

Waldorf relaxes: takes his hand
.

WALDORF

Waldorf —

Smudger turns to introduce Norbert
.

SMUDGER

Nobby —

Norbert holds out his hand to Waldorf who comes forward and takes it
.

WALDORF

Wally —

He turns to Geordie —

Geordie —

Geordie comes up and holds out his hand
.

SMUDGER

Smudger

NORBERT

Norbert —

Geordie takes Smudger's hand: then Norbert's —

GEORDIE

That's not right is it?

They wait
.

The Barman leans forward and gives the machine a bang
.

The Hostess moves towards the gothic door; then stops and looks back at Harry
.

Waldorf, Geordie, Smudger and Norbert have settled down round the table, right. They repeat, as if jokingly —

SMUDGER

Smudger —

WALDORF

Waldorf —

SMUDGER

Nobby —

WALDORF

Wally —

GEORDIE

Geordie —

SMUDGER

Smudger —

NORBERT

Nobby —

GEORDIE

George —

They stop
.

There is suddenly deafening music (a military march) from the machine as if it were a juke box. Harry puts his hands over his ears
.

The Hostess goes out through the gothic door, left
.

The Four sit round their table, right, and seem to confer, quickly, amongst themselves, under cover of the music
.

The Barman has gone behind the bar. He pulls the electric plug out
.

The music stops
.

The Four at the table stop talking
.

Harry remains with his hands over his ears. After a time the Four at the table, right, speak as if in a comic routine they have learned
.

WALDORF

— Where's the child —

SMUDGER

— Where's the car —

NORBERT

— Where's the money —

GEORDIE

— At the airport.

Norbert lifts the radio from the floor on to the table. He pulls up the aerial, carefully. The Four continue to talk as if in obviously assumed voices
.

SMUDGER

— I'll be at the second milestone —

WALDORF

— I'll be at the fourth —

GEORDIE

— Then run —

WALDORF

— I can't —

NORBERT

— Why not —

WALDORF

— Arthritis.

Norbert has put an ear to the radio. He seems to be tuning it
.

The Barman has been watching the Four at the table. He glances at the Char, who has turned to look at him
.

Harry takes his hands away from his ears. He looks at the Barman
.

After a time the Barman begins to shake up and down as if he were on a train. He comes from behind the bar as if moving down a corridor. He takes a pad and pencil from his pocket and stands by the table, right
.

He watches Norbert who seems to be tuning the radio. He seems to be trying to see what Norbert is doing
.

BARMAN

You know, in the old days, they took on water south of Carlisle. There was a trough. A little nozzle —

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