Read Etiquette and Vitriol Online

Authors: Nicky Silver

Etiquette and Vitriol (20 page)

BOOK: Etiquette and Vitriol
2.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

ARTHUR:
Grace! Where's Mrs. Duncan? Grace!

TODD:
I've asked you not to do that!!!

TOMMY
(Removing jacket)
: I'll take it sir.

ARTHUR:
How are you feeling Buzz-Todd?

TODD:
Fine!

ARTHUR:
No symptoms?

TODD:
No!

(Phone rings. Tommy rushes to it, dropping Arthur's jacket on the floor. Todd goes to work on the dinosaur.)

TOMMY:
Hello?

ARTHUR:
Where's your mother?

TODD:
Upstairs.

ARTHUR:
Grace!

TOMMY
(Into the phone, irritated)
: Oh, just a minute.

(Grace enters.)

GRACE:
Is that you Arthur? What are you doing home? Isn't it the afternoon? I've lost the thread of the day—

TOMMY
(Handing Grace the phone)
: It's for you.

GRACE:
Thank you, Tommy. Hello?

TOMMY:
Can I get you something, sir?

ARTHUR:
Privacy.

GRACE
(Into the phone)
: You must be kidding me.

TOMMY
(Hostile)
: I'm just doing my job.

GRACE
(Hanging up)
: This is terrible!

TOMMY:
What is it?

GRACE:
Arthur, can you play the violin?

ARTHUR:
Of course not.

GRACE:
Viola?

ARTHUR:
Grace!

GRACE:
It seems our violinist was killed this morning by a stray bullet during a bank holdup.

TOMMY:
Did he work at a bank?

GRACE:
He was holding one up.

ARTHUR:
Who cares? No one'll miss one violin from an orchestra.

GRACE:
It's a string quartet.

TODD:
Not anymore.

ARTHUR:
I have to talk to you Grace.

GRACE
(Starting to rush off)
: Can't it wait? I have to locate a violin and practice like mad!

ARTHUR:
No! Something terrible has happened.

GRACE:
Oh I know it. The tent is wrong, the flowers are off, the rabbits malignant, and I've got a table full of nuns at twenty-seven.

ARTHUR
(Sitting)
: Get me a drink.

TOMMY
(Bitterly)
: Yessum Massa Duncan.
(He exits)

GRACE:
I wish, Arthur, you'd say please to the servants. Your curtness is read as ingratitude. You're the reason we can't keep good help.

ARTHUR:
Don't criticize me. I've had a terrible day.

GRACE:
So have I. See your setbacks as challenges. That's what I do.

TODD:
I had a nice day.

GRACE:
Did you?

TODD:
But I see my setbacks as setbacks.

ARTHUR:
Please. I don't know how to say this—

(Tommy enters with a drink.)

TOMMY:
Here.

ARTHUR:
Why are you still wearing that?

TOMMY:
It's my uniform.

ARTHUR:
I asked you to wear pants.

TOMMY:
Mrs. Duncan said—

ARTHUR:
It's awful.

GRACE:
It's snappy.

ARTHUR:
It's faggy.

GRACE:
Arthur, please.

ARTHUR:
Well, it is. It's the fruitiest thing I've ever seen.

GRACE
(Under her breath)
: You'll offend Todd.

ARTHUR:
Oh, he doesn't care. Do you Buzz-Todd?

GRACE:
Arthur, he's homosexual.

ARTHUR:
That doesn't mean he's effeminate.

GRACE:
He'll have another “fit.”

ARTHUR:
That's all behind ya, isn't it Buzz-Todd?

TODD:
No.

TOMMY:
I think I look like Tony Curtis in
Some Like It Hot
!

ARTHUR:
I hated that movie.

TOMMY
(Hostile)
: It's a classic.

GRACE
(To Arthur)
: You never had a sense of humor.

TODD:
I found it politically incorrect in it's portrayal of transvestites as buffoons.

GRACE:
Didn't you have something to tell me? I left Emma on a stool upstairs with pins in her hem.

ARTHUR:
Don't look at me. I don't think I can say this if anyone is looking at me.

(The others turn away from Arthur.)

GRACE:
Oh my. Maybe I should have a drink too.

ARTHUR:
What?

GRACE:
It sounds as if I'm going to need one.

ARTHUR:
Do you have to?

GRACE:
Just one.

ARTHUR:
It always starts with “just one” doesn't it?

GRACE
(Turning back to Arthur)
: What does?

ARTHUR:
You know very well.

GRACE:
I don't know what you're talking about—Tommy, a Scotch.

(Tommy rises.)

ARTHUR:
Sit down, Tommy.

(Tommy sits.)

I'm asking you not to.

GRACE:
If I understood your implication, I'd be insulted. A drink, please.

(Tommy rises.)

ARTHUR:
Sit Tommy.

(Tommy sits.)

GRACE:
Stand Tommy.

(Tommy rises.)

ARTHUR:
Grace, it's not even four.

GRACE:
So what?

ARTHUR:
If you start now, you'll be gone by dinner.

GRACE:
Gone? Gone where? Try to avoid the vague euphemism.

TOMMY:
Would you like me to leave?

ARTHUR:
That would be best.

(Tommy starts to exit.)

GRACE:
Stay put Tommy.

(Tommy sits.)

If Mr. Duncan wishes to hurl ugly accusations, let him do so in public. What are you trying to say, Arthur?

ARTHUR:
You're an alcoholic, Grace.

GRACE
(Very still)
: What did you say to me?

TODD:
He called you an alcoholic.

ARTHUR:
I wish you wouldn't drink so much!

GRACE:
What's “so much”?

ARTHUR:
You drink yourself blind every night.

GRACE:
You call that “so much”? Please.

ARTHUR:
Your drinking is out of control!

GRACE:
I don't have a problem! Todd! Am I an alcoholic?

TODD:
Of course.

GRACE:
Speak up.

TODD:
Yes. You're an alcoholic.

GRACE:
Oh piffle! I don't have a problem! You're the one with the problem, Arthur!

ARTHUR:
I know this is a difficult time. We're all under a lot of strain. Buzz-Todd's sick. There's a big dead thing in the living room—

GRACE
(Snapping)
: You wouldn't know if I were drinking or dying—
(To Todd)
Sorry.

ARTHUR:
Fine! I don't want to discuss it!

GRACE:
I could have left you years ago and you'd never know it! You're never here!

ARTHUR:
I'm always here—

GRACE:
Were you home for dinner last night? Or the night before?

TOMMY:
I slave and slave over a hot stove.

ARTHUR:
Well, why bother! You'd be passed out in the tub!

GRACE:
Were you!

ARTHUR:
I was working!!

TOMMY:
Likely excuse.

ARTHUR:
Night and day! To satisfy your insatiable need for “things!”

GRACE:
You delude yourself, Arthur! You always have. Justify your philandering! I'm a drunk so you can assuage your guilt over being less than a father and less than a husband. But I've told you, Arthur, your indiscretion is immaterial to me. I learned a long time ago to replace you in my affections, as you had me in yours. Now. What did you want to tell me?

ARTHUR
(Sweetly, cruel)
: It pains me to say this, Grace. But the fact is, I no longer have a job.

(Pause.)

GRACE:
Pardon me?

ARTHUR:
That's it. That's what I wanted to tell you. It's over. It's all over. Finished. Done.

GRACE
(Still stunned)
: What are you talking about?

ARTHUR:
I have been asked to step down.

GRACE:
Well, decline politely!

ARTHUR:
It's not that simple.

GRACE:
You're the president, Arthur!

ARTHUR:
Was dear. Was the president. Past tense.

GRACE:
You're lying.

ARTHUR:
Why would I lie about a thing like this?

GRACE:
This is a dream. I'm living a dream—

ARTHUR:
It's no dream. It's over. And I must say, I feel so free. I feel comfortable for the first time.

GRACE
(Simply)
: What happened?

ARTHUR:
It's complicated.

GRACE:
Explain it to me!

ARTHUR:
In time.

GRACE:
Now!

ARTHUR:
I feel as if a terrible burden has been lifted. I feel lighter.

GRACE:
How dare you?

ARTHUR:
It wasn't my choice Grace.

GRACE:
Women I could tolerate. Not poverty!

ARTHUR:
We can spend more time together.

GRACE
(After a moment, a threat)
: What did you do?

ARTHUR
(Not recognizing the word)
: Do? I'm sorry.

GRACE:
You were at that bank for thirty years!

ARTHUR:
Good years.

GRACE:
You were president for ten!

ARTHUR:
Wonderful years.

GRACE:
Things don't just happen—you did something!

ARTHUR:
I did my best.

GRACE:
Did you steal? Did you embezzle?

ARTHUR:
I feel positively liberated.

GRACE:
STOP SAYING THAT.

ARTHUR:
So sorry. Buzz-Todd, a catch?

TODD:
No, thank you.

ARTHUR:
Aw.

GRACE:
You did something! I know it! You did this on purpose! This has been a terrible goddamn—did you see that tent!!?—EXCUSE ME!!
(She runs off)

ARTHUR
(After a moment)
: I think that went very well.

TODD:
What did you do?

ARTHUR:
I didn't do anything.

TODD:
Don't lie to me. I can tell.

ARTHUR:
I need some air.

BOOK: Etiquette and Vitriol
2.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Barricade in Hell by Jaime Lee Moyer
Walk in Hell by Harry Turtledove
MASH 14 MASH goes to Moscow by Richard Hooker+William Butterworth
A Baron in Her Bed by Maggi Andersen
The Deception by Lynne Constantine
Evil Relations by David Smith with Carol Ann Lee
Into the Storm by Anderson, Taylor
Amethyst by Heather Bowhay