The Real Inspector Hound and Other Plays (5 page)

BOOK: The Real Inspector Hound and Other Plays
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FELICITY
: We shall see—the night is not over yet, Simon
Gascoyne! (
She exits
.)
MAGNUS
pays
SIMON
again
.

SIMON
(
to
MAGNUS
): So you’re the crippled half-brother of Lord Muldoon who turned up out of the blue from Canada just the other day, are you? It’s taken you a long time to get here. What did you do—walk? Oh, I say, I’m most frightfully sorry!

MAGNUS
: Care for a spin round the rose garden, Cynthia?

CYNTHIA
: No, Magnus, I must talk to Simon.

SIMON
: My round, I think, Major.

MAGNUS
: You think so?

SIMON
: Yes, Major—I do.

MAGNUS
. There’s an old Canadian proverb handed down from the Bladfoot Indians, which says: He who laughs last laughs longest.

SIMON
: Yes, I’ve heard it said.
(
SIMON
turns away to
CYNTHIA
)

MAGNUS
: Well, I think I’ll go and oil my gun. (
He exits
.)

CYNTHIA
: I think Magnus suspects something. And Felicity … Simon, was there anything between you and Felicity?

SIMON
: No, no—it’s over between her and me, Cynthia—it was a mere passing fleeting thing we had—but now that I have found you——

CYNTHIA
: If I find that you have been untrue to me—if I find that you have falsely seduced me from my dear husband Albert—I will kill you, Simon Gascoyne!
(
MRS. DRUDGE
has entered silently to witness this. On this tableau, pregnant with significance, the act ends, the body still undiscovered. Perfunctory applause
.)
(
MOON
and
BIRDFOOT
seem to be completely preoccupied, becoming audible, as it were
.)

MOON
: Camps it around the Old Vic in his opera cloak and passes me the tat.

BIRDBOOT: DO
you believe in love at first sight?

MOON
: It’s not that I think I’m a better critic——

BIRDBOOT
: I feel my whole life changing——

MOON
: I am but it’s not that.

BIRDBOOT
: Oh, the world will laugh at me, I know....

MOON
: It is not that they are much in the way of shoes to step into....

BIRDBOOT
: … call me an infatuated old fool....

MOON
:... They are not

BIRDBOOT
: … condemn me….

MOON
: He is standing in my light, that is all.

BIRDBOOT
: … betrayer of my class …

MOON
: … an almost continuous eclipse, interrupted by the phenomenon of moonlight.

BIRDBOOT
: I don’t care, I’m a gonner.

MOON
: And I dream....

BIRDBOOT
: The Blue Angel all over again.

MOON
: … of the day his temperature climbs through the top of his head....

BIRDBOOT
: Ah, the sweet madness of love...

MOON
: … of the spasm on the stairs....

BIRDBOOT
: Myrtle, farewell...

MOON
: … dreaming of the stair he’ll never reach——

BIRDBOOT
: … for I only live but once....

MOON
: Sometimes I dream that I’ve killed him.

BIRDBOOT
: What?

MOON
: What?
(
They pull themselves together
.)

BIRDBOOT
: Yes... yes … A beautiful performance, a collector’s piece. I shall say so.

MOON
: A very promising debut. I’ll put in a good word.

BIRDBOOT
: It would be as hypocritical of me to withhold praise on grounds of personal feelings, as to withhold censure.

MOON
: You’re right. Courageous.

BIRDBOOT
: Oh, I know what people will say——There goes Birdboot buttering up his latest——

MOON
: Ignore them——

BIRDBOOT
: But I rise above that——The fact is I genuinely believe her performance to be one of the summits in the range of contemporary theatre.

MOON
: Trim-buttocked, that’s the word for her.

BIRDBOOT
:—the radiance, the inner sadness——

MOON
: Does she actually come across with it?

BIRDBOOT
: The part as written is a mere cypher but she manages to make Cynthia a real person——

MOON
:
Cynthia?

BIRDBOOT
: And should she, as a result, care to meet me over a drink, simply by way of er—thanking me, as it were——

MOON
: Well, you fickle old bastard!

BIRDBOOT
(
aggressively
): Are you suggesting …?
(
BIRDBOOT
shudders to a halt and clears his throat
.)

BIRDBOOT
: Well now—shaping up quite nicely, wouldn’t you say?

MOON
: Oh yes, yes. A nice trichotomy of forces. One must reserve judgement of course, until the confrontation, but I think it’s pretty clear where we’re heading.

BIRDBOOT
: I agree. It’s Magnus a mile off.
(
Small pause
.)

MOON
: What’s Magnus a mile off?

BIRDBOOT
: If we knew that we wouldn’t be here.

MOON
(
clears throat
): Let me at once say that it has
élan
while at the same time avoiding
éclat
. Having said that, and I think it must be said, I am bound to ask—does this play know where it is going?

BIRDBOOT
: Well, it seems open and shut to me, Moon—Magnus is not what he pretends to be and he’s got his next victim marked down——

MOON
: Does it, I repeat, declare its affiliations? There are moments, and I would not begrudge it this, when the play, if we can call it that, and I think on balance we can, aligns itself uncompromisingly on the side of life.
Je suis
, it seems to be saying,
ergo sum
. But is that enough? I think we are entitled to ask. For what in fact is this play concerned with? It is my belief that here we are concerned with what I have referred to elsewhere as the nature of identity. I think we are entitled to ask—and here one is irresistibly reminded of Voltaire’s cry,
“Voila!”
—I think we are entitled to ask—
Where is God?

BIRDBOOT
(
stunned
): Who?

MOON
: Go-od.

BIRDBOOT
(
peeping furtively into his programme
): God?

MOON
: I think we are entitled to ask.
(
The phone rings
.)
(
The set re-illumines to reveal
CYNTHIA, FELICITY
and
MAGNUS
about to take coffee, which is being taken round by
MRS. DRUDGE, SIMON
is missing. The body lies in position
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
into phone
): The same, half an hour later?... No, I’m sorry—there’s no one of that name here. (
She replaces phone and goes round with coffee. To
CYNTHIA
): Black or white, my lady?

CYNTHIA
: White please.
(
MRS. DRUDGE
pours
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
FELICITY
): Black or white, miss?

FELICITY
: White please.
(
MRS. DRUDGE
pours
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
MAGNUS
): Black or white, Major?

MAGNUS
: White please.
(
Ditto
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
CYNTHIA
): Sugar, my lady?

CYNTHIA
: Yes please.
(
Puts sugar in
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
FELICITY
): Sugar, miss?

FELICITY
: Yes please.
(
Ditto
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
MAGNUS
): Sugar, Major?

MAGNUS
: Yes please.
(
Ditto
.)

MRS. DRUDGE
(
to
CYNTHIA
): Biscuit, my lady?

CYNTHIA
: No thank you.

BIRDBOOT
(
writing elaborately in his notebook
): The second act, however, fails to fulfil the promise....

FELICITY
: If you ask me, there’s something funny going on.
(
MRS. DRUDGE’S
approach to
FELICITY
makes
FELICITY
jump to her feet in impatience. She goes to the radio while
MAGNUS
declines his biscuit, and
MRS. DRUDGE
leaves
.)

RADIO
: We interrupt our programme for a special police message. The search for the dangerous madman who is on the loose in Essex has now narrowed to the immediate vicinity of Muldoon Manor. Police are hampered by the deadly swamps and the fog, but believe that the madman spent last night in a deserted cottage on the cliffs. The public is advised to stick together and make sure none of their number is missing. That is the end of the police message. (
FELICITY
turns off the radio nervously. Pause
.)

CYNTHIA
: Where’s Simon?

FELICITY
: Who?

CYNTHIA
: Simon. Have you seen him?

FELICITY
: No.

CYNTHIA
: Have you, Magnus?

MAGNUS
: No.

CYNTHIA
: Oh.

FELICITY
: Yes, there’s something foreboding in the air, it is as if
one of
us
——

CYNTHIA
: Oh, Felicity, the house is locked up tight—no one can get in—and the police are practically on the doorstep.

FELICITY
: I don’t know—it’s just a feeling.

CYNTHIA
: It’s only the fog.

MAONUS
: Hound will never get through on a day like this.

CYNTHIA
(
shouting at him): Fog!

FELICITY
: He means the Inspector.

CYNTHIA
: Is he bringing a dog?

FELICITY
: Not that I know of.

MAGNUS
:—never get through the swamps. Yes, I’m afraid the madman can show his hand in safety now.
(
A mournful baying hooting is heard in the distance, scary
.)

CYNTHIA
: What’s that?!

FELICITY
(
tensely
): It sounded like the cry of a gigantic hound!

MAGNUS
: Poor devil!

CYNTHIA
: Ssssh!
(
They listen. The sound is repeated, nearer
.)

FELICITY
: There it is again!

BOOK: The Real Inspector Hound and Other Plays
10.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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