Read Such Men Are Dangerous Online
Authors: Stephen Benatar
LINDA re-enters with a tray. As she does so TREVOR moves—almost guiltily—from his position on the arm of WILLIAM’S chair; and forgets to take the tray from her.
LINDA | Trevor, would you please move those magazines? Also the ashtray. |
TREVOR | Oh, yes, of course. Sorry. |
LINDA | Have you two been getting to know each other? |
TREVOR | Yes, we’ve been…talking of this and that. |
LINDA | Me, I hope, principally. |
TREVOR | Of course. |
LINDA | What else? |
TREVOR | Oh, I don’t know. A bit about God. A bit about the Bomb. A bit about Eton. |
LINDA | Has Dad been going all pretentious on you? What’s he been saying about Eton? He can be such a snob. |
WILLIAM | It may be true I’m a snob but is it |
LINDA | (Pouring coffee) Dad, please don’t feel you have to entertain us. |
WILLIAM | (Sings—from |
LINDA | Then concentrate on drinking this, instead. |
WILLIAM | It’s a little sad if you don’t appreciate my conversation. There was another point I was hoping to make, sort of arising out of the last, if I wasn’t boring you too terrifically. I was going to say it’s exactly the same with sex. I always think that sex will be magical for other people—I mean, of course, so long as they’re young, or youngish, and physically attractive. No lack of responsiveness, passion or invention. And no problems whatever about staying the course. Lasting a good fifty minutes. |
LINDA | Oh my God! Have you ever heard anything like it? |
TREVOR | Well…In places, some of our vicar’s sermons get a trifle spicy. |
LINDA | But why does he pick on fifty? I’d have thought sixty would have been a much rounder figure. And forty would have been more biblical. In the Bible they were always doing things for forty days and forty nights. |
WILLIAM | They had staying power in those days. Trevor, can you last a good fifty minutes? |
LINDA | Dad… |
WILLIAM | But at least you can do fifty press-ups. You can do fifty press-ups? |
TREVOR | I’ll tell you one thing: I certainly couldn’t do two-hundred-and-fifty. |
WILLIAM | You know, Tom didn’t believe that. The young whatsit called me a liar. |
LINDA | No, he didn’t. |
WILLIAM | As good as. |
TREVOR | Well…between father and son…It’s natural he should feel this need to belittle you. |
WILLIAM | And vice versa? |
TREVOR | Perhaps. But I suppose that depends on the father. |
WILLIAM | You’re absolutely right—yes, I’m a rotten father. But why am I drinking this? I want another whisky. Trevor, old fellow, will you join me in another whisky? Keep me company? Please? |
TREVOR | All right, I will. Thank you. |
WILLIAM | Lindy? |
LINDA | A very small one—in my coffee. |
TREVOR | By the way, you know, I didn’t say you were a rotten father. |
WILLIAM | Shall I tell you something pathetic? Twenty years ago I wanted to be the very best father and the very best husband. Believe it or not, there was even a time when I wanted to be the very best human being. But that came earlier: I must have been somewhere near your own age. I went through a phase when I used to distribute largesse to old people on street benches if they looked as though they needed it: two or three pounds: I must have been insufferable. |
TREVOR | Loving. |
WILLIAM | Smug. Then something put an end to it. An old man stopped me in Baker Street and started some hard-luck story; he wanted the price of a cup of tea. I was delighted; this was almost what I lived for. I gave him everything I had. It was only about thirty shillings but he thought he’d won the jackpot. He could hardly speak. I remember his eyes, his old rheumy eyes. “God bless you,” he said, “I swear you’ll go to ’eaven.” It was a lovely moment for the pair of us. And then he stepped off the pavement—and was knocked down by a bus. |
LINDA | Killed? |
WILLIAM | Smashed and squashed and bloody. There was a ten-bob note that looked like crêpe paper at Christmas. I had nightmares about it for weeks. Occasionally still do. |
TREVOR | At least he died a happy man. Perhaps there couldn’t have been a better moment for him to go. |
WILLIAM | There was a child that I remember screaming. A woman threw up just behind me. I don’t know whether the vomit I found on my trousers was hers or mine. I was responsible for all of that. |
LINDA | Nobody could possibly—ever—have said it was your fault. |
WILLIAM | I saw it as a message straight from God; a punishment for my complacency. And then I was so disgusted—disgusted that I could seriously view the death of a human being, not to mention what it could have done to everyone who saw it, as just another step in my own education. |
LINDA | Daddy, why have you never told us this? |
WILLIAM | What does anyone ever tell anyone about the things which have helped shape him? |
LINDA | The big things? Normally a lot. |
WILLIAM | I suppose I didn’t want to pretend to a goodness I no longer possessed—even if I’d ever got close to it in the first place. And I didn’t want to lay myself open to the kind of sympathetic banalities for which I might have seemed to be asking. In fact, I just can’t think why I’m telling you tonight. Oh, yes, I can. (Holds up his whisky glass) But I don’t mean you to pass it on to your mother—or to Tom—or indeed to anyone. |
LINDA | Obviously your…your parents knew? |
WILLIAM | My mother had been dead for almost precisely a year. And I hadn’t seen my father for about ten. |
TREVOR | Of course! There was that episode in |
WILLIAM | (Almost accusingly) You’re very perceptive, aren’t you? |
TREVOR | I loved that book. If I had written it, I think that whatever else I had done or had not done with my life… |
WILLIAM | No. That’s the sort of thing I used to think: one book I could feel really proud of…! But of course it never stops there. How could it? You always want more. |
TREVOR | Like what? |
WILLIAM | Like recognition. Fame. Money. Friendship. The next book to be something more than ‘just a played-out repetition’. |
TREVOR | Nonsense. I know that both the others also had very favourable reviews. Mainly. |
WILLIAM | Mainly. But it’s always the one cruelly negative review you pay attention to. And—besides. There weren’t any film offers. |
TREVOR | (Laughs) Oh, I’m sure those will turn up—in time! But to get back to |
WILLIAM | Possibly Lindy could find you boring. I assure you I never could. |
TREVOR | Well, I so identified with Mark. There was that theme of friendship in the book. I remember the two quotes—both from Byron, weren’t they?—‘Friendship is Love without his wings!’ and that other one—wait a moment, on the surface not at all connected—yes!—‘A solitary shriek, the bubbling cry of some strong swimmer in his agony.’ I know that I’m repeating myself but I found it almost unbearably moving. That’s why I didn’t want to talk about it too soon after I got here. I wanted the moment to be absolutely right. It was a marvellous piece of writing. Horribly disturbing. The whole book was disturbing…but as for the electrocution of poor Mrs Wolfit…! I didn’t realize, though, that it was quite so central. |
WILLIAM | Central? I don’t know that it was. I almost didn’t put it in. But I wasn’t strong enough to leave it out—not when it came to it. |
TREVOR | Leave it out? But why should you have wanted to? |
WILLIAM | I felt badly about it. I felt shifty. |
TREVOR | I don’t understand. |
WILLIAM | Because you write about things—transmute them—and almost they become all right, as though they’ve now fulfilled some higher purpose, justified their awfulness, through being developed into ‘art’. No tragedy that can’t be utilized! I can respect a lemming. But no one can respect a leech. |
LINDA | Oh! You! You could manage to feel guilty over anything. |
TREVOR | Couldn’t you say it was a form of exorcism? |
WILLIAM | Is purging yourself more important than profiteering? |
TREVOR | You were alive; the old man was dead. He wasn’t going to care. (WILLIAM gives a shrug) Did you yourself ever have ambitions of entering the Olympics as a swimmer? |
WILLIAM | You mean, as opposed to the old man? |
TREVOR | Stop it! You’re needling me! |
WILLIAM | (Laughs) Lindy, I like this golden boy you’ve brought home. I really do like him. |
LINDA | Needling? Is there something here I’m missing? |
TREVOR | (To WILLIAM) |
WILLIAM | Of course. I do a pretty mean dog paddle. |
TREVOR | No, be serious. |
WILLIAM | Yes, I had ambitions. I used to love swimming. But it was only a dream. In reality, I was far too lazy. All that training…Also, I used to love writing. And for |
TREVOR | ‘Between friends’. And returning to that theme of friendship, I always hate it, too, that these days one man can’t show any deep affection for another without everybody instantly supposing…Even my mother, who’s normally one of the least cynical of people. I think that was the thing that really drew me to Mark in the first place: his constant hope that somehow, someday, there would materialize from somewhere this fellow who would turn out to be the sort of friend he’d always been longing for; the only proper friend he’d ever need. Somebody with whom he could make natural physical contact which wasn’t all tied up with…oh, I don’t know… |
LINDA | All tied up with what? |
TREVOR | Does one really have to spell it out?,,, Anyway, enough of being so earnest! Shall I go and fetch my bag out of the car? |
WILLIAM | I’ll come with you. Give you a hand. |
TREVOR | Thanks. Although it’s not that large a bag. |
WILLIAM and TREVOR go. LINDA gathers up the coffee things and takes them out. NORAH enters, surprised to find the room empty. Sees the whisky and the soda water and goes to put them away. While doing so, suddenly breaks down. LINDA returns.
LINDA | Mum! What’s the matter? |
NORAH | Oh, nothing. Nothing, darling. I’m just so very happy. Where is everybody? |
LINDA | Getting Trevor’s not-very-large bag out of the car. How’s Tom? |
NORAH | A bit better. A good night’s sleep should do the trick. |
LINDA | Anyway, at the moment it’s not Tom I’m worried about…Is that really on the level: tears of joy? |
NORAH | Yes—of course. What else? Don’t you know I always cry at weddings? And because this will be the biggest wedding of my life I’m getting into practice. |
LINDA | The second biggest—one should hope? |
NORAH | What? Oh, yes—naturally. But I didn’t cry at my own wedding. In fact, I blush to say it, I got the giggles. We all did. Standing right there at the altar. Daddy—his best man—finally myself. It was dreadful. But then, you see, I had nothing to cry about at my own wedding. I wasn’t losing a beloved daughter. |
LINDA | Who was the best man? |
NORAH | Oh, heavens, do you know I can’t even remember his name? Isn’t that awful? Some teaching colleague of Daddy’s: a nice enough man; he made me laugh a lot…Brian something or other…Why? |
LINDA | Just wondered. Did you laugh a lot afterwards? After the wedding? |
NORAH | What do you mean? |
LINDA | I don’t know, really. I don’t know what I mean…Well, you weren’t losing a daughter but you were certainly losing other things. Like freedom; like…Mummy, do you ever regret having got married? |
NORAH | Oh, darling, what a question!…I know there’ve been times—many, many times—when I’ve said I wanted to run away…and if I’d had anywhere to run to… |
LINDA | Well, yes, but there was always Granny’s, wasn’t there? |
NORAH | There would have been, obviously, but half the time I didn’t have the train fare. Nor the heart, I suppose, when it really came down to it. For how could I ever honestly have regretted it, you great foolish lump—with you and Tom, and everything like that? |
LINDA | What was ‘everything like that’? |
NORAH | Why, Dad, of course. |
LINDA | At the start were you very much in love with him? |
NORAH | At the start? Oh dear. That does sound ominous. But…no; no, I wasn’t. In fact I married on the rebound. It was the same for him. The more |
LINDA | And what about him? Who was his great love? |
NORAH | Rory’s? |
LINDA | No, not Rory’s. Dad’s. |
NORAH | Oh, you remember. She was a woman some ten years older than him; already married, divorced, three young children. |