Read Such Men Are Dangerous Online
Authors: Stephen Benatar
NORAH | Speak for yourself. |
TREVOR | Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith the Lord. Sir, isn’t |
LINDA | Give up. I think you might have met your match, Dad. |
WILLIAM | Rubbish. The devil, too, can quote scripture. |
TOM | Did he really say ‘too’? |
TREVOR | In any case, I’m aware I was being priggish. I apologize. |
WILLIAM | And please don’t call me ‘sir’. It makes me feel ancient. |
TOM | You are ancient. And a line like that’s not going to put him in his place. |
TREVOR | (Starts very purposefully, then breaks off) Well, as a matter of fact…Oh, may I give you a hand with that? |
WILLIAM | No, you sit down. Tom can profit from your example. Tom, come and take these round. Norah, you’re going to have one, aren’t you? |
NORAH | Certainly! |
TOM | Do I get one? My nerves are shattered too. |
WILLIAM | If you come clean: admit how much you really love me. |
TOM | Does the size of my drink increase with the depth of my devotion? |
WILLIAM | Remember, I can sniff out the least taint of insincerity. |
TOM | Dad, I love you enormously. |
WILLIAM | And didn’t we always know it? (Gives TOM a drink) |
TOM | Ta, Pa. |
WILLIAM | You’re welcome. |
NORAH | (Looks at Tom’s glass) I think I would prefer he had loved you a little less. (Looks at her own) I think I’d prefer |
WILLIAM | That figures. I sometimes feel everything I touch has a tendency to crumble into ashes. You always hurt the one you love, the one you never meant to hurt at all. Trevor, you’ll no doubt tell me if I got that right? |
NORAH | How can Trevor possibly tell you? That song came out of the ark. |
WILLIAM | Oh, I hoped it might have come out of St Paul’s Epistle to the Romans. Well, never mind. At least the ark is still scripture. |
NORAH | And yours came to rest in the nineteen-forties or thereabout. Got stuck there. Grounded not so much on Ararat as Annabella. You forget that some of us weren’t even around until the middle sixties…And, by the way, I have absolutely no intention, thank you very much, of sitting here disintegrating into ashes just to fulfil some heart-rending little theory which happens to appeal to your feelings of self-pity. Not this evening, anyway. |
TOM | (Pause) Hey, Wobbles, what is all this? |
NORAH | You know, truthfully, I’m none too sure. |
TOM | Then please don’t quash his generous instincts. They already find it hard enough getting by. Who was Annabella? |
NORAH | What? Oh…she was the film-star wife of Tyrone Power. |
TOM | And did Tyrone Power mind Dad’s ark being grounded on his wife? |
WILLIAM | I tell you, I never even saw her. She was well before my time; though plainly not before your mother’s. |
TOM | Oh God! Imagine! Painful enough having somebody’s ark grounded on you to some real purpose. But… |
NORAH | My son’s a lunatic. But since it may appear I’m going that way myself, I hope he’ll think he’s in good company. |
TREVOR | Well, anyway, I know that I am. And may I drink a toast to that? To good company! |
NORAH | Oh, it’s not fair! I’ve been wanting to propose a toast for the past five minutes. I wanted to be the first to do so. (Nevertheless, they drink) |
WILLIAM | We can see that as a dummy run. Now this will be the proper thing. |
TOM | I trust it’s going to be to Annabella. That’s the very least we can do. You know, it’s going to be a long time before I shall forget the fate of that innocent, once-lovely creature. I shall dream of it for ages. |
NORAH | No, it’s |
WILLIAM | To Linda and Trevor. |
TOM | To Freaky and Trev. |
LINDA | Thank you, Mum. That was sweet of you. |
TREVOR | And here’s to all of you. I feel very blessed to be here. Thank you for taking me in. |
TOM | ‘Taking me in’ is not a happy phrase. |
TREVOR and LINDA drink a silent toast to one another. Everybody sips. A short silence.
WILLIAM | Trevor, you started to say something earlier and then appeared to think better of it. “Well, as a matter of fact…,” you said; and I felt sure something of significance was about to emerge. |
NORAH | Darling, if he thought better of it, then obviously he’d rather not tell us what it was. |
WILLIAM | It’s just that he started out so decisively. “Well, as a matter of fact…” And people’s first thoughts are always the ones I find most interesting. |
NORAH | That’s only because you yourself launch into things without a moment’s hesitation, not caring what you say or even whom you say it to. Until afterwards, I mean, when inevitably you wriggle around in paroxysms of remorse, wondering whether so-and-so will have been hurt or so-and- so will consider you a fool or so-and-so will repeat what you’ve just said—or in extreme cases, of course, all three possibilities at once. I don’t think it’s the novelist in him, I think it’s more the Aries. Trevor, when’s your birthday; what’s your star sign? |
TREVOR | I’m Sagittarius. |
NORAH | Oh dear. Linda is Scorpio…Anyway, who believes in all that nonsense? |
WILLIAM | My wife is supremely skilled in the art of drawing red herrings. |
NORAH | She has to be. |
TREVOR | I stopped saying what I was going to, because I was scared it might sound counterfeit—which, honestly, cross my heart, it wasn’t. You asked me not to call you sir since it made you feel so ancient. Well, my first thought on seeing you— |
TOM | Forget about Scorpio and Sagittarius! Trev and Freaky—clearly, the two of you are soulmates! |
LINDA | (Ignoring this) There, what did I tell you about Dad? Peter Pan himself. |
WILLIAM | Trevor, that’s very kind of you. |
NORAH | You’ve made yourself a friend for life. |
TREVOR | Good. If that’s true nothing could please me more. |
TOM | Are you really only twenty-one? |
TREVOR | Why? Do I seem ancient? |
TOM | Where do you get all the right words? |
NORAH | Oh, |
TREVOR | Well, I think I’m just in luck tonight. You should hear me sometimes. It depends on whom I’m with—and here I feel very much at home. |
TOM | Oh God. He’s done it again. |
NORAH | And you notice he doesn’t blaspheme. That’s certainly a large part of it. |
TREVOR | But any moment now I’m bound to take a fall. It’s dangerous to tempt providence. |
TOM | By saying which, folks, he’s shown that—against all expectation—he’s fallible. He appears to have taken that fall. |
TREVOR | How come? |
TOM | Because if taking a fall is a direct reflection on the company you’re in…why at any moment were you expecting to take one? |
WILLIAM | Convoluted, but I see your point. |
TOM | Do I get another drink? |
WILLIAM | No. Trevor, are you ready for some more? |
TREVOR | No thanks. Not yet. |
TOM | I’m obviously employing the wrong tactics. Wait…let me rack my brains. Dad, you must be the youngest-looking man ever to have a daughter about to be spliced. Honey chile, I jus’ carn believe it, it plum defies belief! |
WILLIAM | Thank you. No go. |
TOM | Yes, sir, the very youngest. Not to mention the most suntanned. |
TREVOR | Yes…I was going to ask. Have you just come back from abroad? |
TOM | Was it winter sports, Dad, or the Caribbean or was it something a little more exotic? Like the Leisure Centre? You know, Trev, they have almost real palms down at the Leisure Centre in this town. Dad rents a sunbed beneath them. |
WILLIAM | And I go twice weekly. Weekly total: half an hour. It makes me feel good. I know it must sound very sinful. |
TOM | Does your father look as madly sexy as ours? |
TREVOR | My father’s getting on for sixty. Silver-haired, handsome and distinguished…although he could do with losing a bit of weight. |
NORAH | My heart warms to him already. Can’t you tell that Trevor would never talk about his father the way you talk about yours? |
TOM | Wobbles, surely you know my one concern is that it might dry out his skin? |
LINDA | Anyway, if Dad’s still taking his cod liver oil, you can relax; that should help to keep it from getting all shrivelled and loose. |
TOM | Phew! I was afraid it might simply fall off at an inconvenient moment—undoubtedly when one of my friends was present. |
WILLIAM | (Pinching the skin on his wrist) Perhaps if I took lessons from a yogi I could learn to slough it off at will. (To NORAH) Now that would be something to control him with. |
TOM | God, yes! Imagine having Dad’s baggy old skin held over you. Worse than the Bomb. I’d reform upon the instant. But may I have another drink before I do? |
WILLIAM | Only if you go round beforehand refilling glasses. And don’t forget the soda water. Here, I think I’ll see to me first. |
TREVOR | (To NORAH) Actually, in spite of what you said about my father and me, I can’t let you think we have an easy relationship. I do respect him, yes…but, though we both try, we can’t really talk to one another. There’s a distance between us which seems impossible to bridge. What goes on here—with these two—has infinitely more vitality. (To WILLIAM) Is it true you can actually bring yourself to take cod liver oil?…Now that’s what I call courage. |
WILLIAM | Even if you begin by hating it, you very quickly reach the point where you wouldn’t be without it. |
NORAH | I take it as well, if you’re handing out the plaudits. (To TOM) I take that, too, if you’re handing out the whisky. |
TREVOR | No wonder you both look so fit. |
TOM | You should see the vitamins they have beside their breakfast plates! |
NORAH | Minerals |
TOM | Or hypochondriacs. (Looking at WILLIAM) |
WILLIAM | I am not a hypochondriac. |
TOM | Oh no? Who keeps thinking there might be something wrong with his heart, then? Who keeps testing his pulse rate when he believes there’s nobody looking? Who can’t bear to hear of anyone in their forties who suddenly drops dead? |
WILLIAM | Whereas we all know it’s |
TOM | Yeah, I’d have it on my own personal Pick of the Week. Probably take it to my desert island. |
LINDA | Honestly, listening to you, Tom, anyone who didn’t know Dad would think he was the most terrible wimp. Well, let’s finally see which of you is the real wimp. How many press-ups can |
TOM | You freak! Probably a great many more than you. |
LINDA | (To TREVOR) Do you know how many Dad does? Two hundred and fifty! At one go! |
TREVOR | You’re joking. (To WILLIAM) Tell me she’s joking…At one go? Crumbs. If I could get up to fifty I should be amazed. |
TOM | It doesn’t have much to do with strength. It’s far more a matter of practice. Like swimming. |
WILLIAM | Swimming? Is that a matter of practice over strength? Why at eighty, then, can’t you swim so far as you did at forty? |
TOM | Well, that’s stupid; it isn’t the same thing. |
LINDA | There speaks the fellow who probably can’t manage even ten press-ups. |
TOM | Anyway, have you ever seen Dad do two hundred and fifty? Go on, Dad, get down on the floor and do two hundred and fifty. |
NORAH | This is an exceedingly boring subject. Can we drop it, please? |
TOM | And if it truly is a matter of strength…well, if Trevor and Dad were to have an arm wrestle, I know which |
NORAH | Did you hear what I said? |
WILLIAM | Yes, stop it, Tom! I’ll come and hold my skin over you. |
LINDA | Oh, Dad, you went and spoilt it. If there |
TOM | You cow! There are times when you make me positively sick! |
NORAH | Oh ye gods, ye gods, ye gods! Why, |