Read Brian Friel Plays 1 Online

Authors: Brian Friel

Brian Friel Plays 1 (49 page)

BOOK: Brian Friel Plays 1
4.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘But on any one

of these nights soon

for you, the dark will not crack with dawn

And then I will begin

with you that hesitant conversation

going on and on and on.’

Something disquieting about that line ‘going on and on and on’, isn’t there? Ha-ha.

(
JUDITH
and
ALICE
enter.
CASIMIR
resumes
pacing.
JUDITH
in
a
dark
dress
and
carrying
Alice

s
case.
ALICE
with
coat
and
handbag.
They
deposit
these
things
in
the
study
.)

ALICE:
Thanks. Just leave it there.

JUDITH:
When’s your bus?

ALICE:
We’ve another fifteen or twenty minutes yet.

JUDITH:
Willie’ll be here. He said he’ll run you down.

ALICE:
That’d be handy.

(
They
both
come
out
to
the
lawn.
)

ALICE:
There’s tea in there if you want it.

EAMON:
None for me.

ALICE:
Casimir?

CASIMIR:
Not at the moment, thank you.

JUDITH:
Did you get your flight fixed up?

CASIMIR:
Mrs Moore did all the phoning‚ made all the arrangements. She was wonderful.

JUDITH:
Does Helga know?

CASIMIR:
I sent her a telegram. I should be home at midnight.

(
EAMON
touches
ALICE
’s
cheek
with
his
index
finger
.)

EAMON:
It’s healed.

ALICE:
Is it?

EAMON:
Almost.

ALICE:
I heal quickly.

EAMON:
Sorry.

ALICE:
I’ve packed your things.

EAMON:
Thanks.

ALICE:
Have you the tickets?

(
He
taps
hi
s
jacket
packet
.)

ALICE:
I’ll be glad to be home, if it’s only to get a sleep. (
Aloud
) Tom hasn’t left yet, has he?

JUDITH:
He’s in the library; some dates he wants to check again.

EAMON:
‘Check’‚ ‘recheck’, double-check’, ‘cross-check’.

JUDITH:
He’s talking about waiting over until the morning.

EAMON:
Wasn’t he lucky to be here for Father’s death? I suppose he’ll interpret that as ‘the end of an epoch’.

JUDITH:
Isn’t it?

EAMON:
Is it?

CASIMIR:
He’s from Chicago, he tells me. And I suspect he may be a very wealthy man: his uncle owns the Bell Telephone Company.

EAMON:
He should never have been let set foot here.

JUDITH:
He asked my permission.

EAMON:
To pry?

JUDITH:
To chronicle.

EAMON:
Ah.

JUDITH:
To record the truth.

EAMON:
Better still. And you said, ‘Go ahead, stranger’.

JUDITH:
Is there something to hide?

(
EAMON
spreads
his
hands.
)

JUDITH:
Besides – it’s my home.

(
Brief
pause.
Then
quickly.
)

ALICE:
It wasn’t exactly the biggest funeral ever seen in Ballybeg, was it?

CASIMIR:
Did you notice – the whole village closed down.

ALICE:
For the minute it took the hearse to pass through. And as Sister Thérèse would say: ‘The multitude in the church was a little empty, too.’

CASIMIR:
I thought the requiem mass very moving.

ALICE:
Until Miss Quirk cut loose. For God’s sake did nobody tell her it wasn’t the wedding?

JUDITH:
She would have played anyway.

ALICE:
But maybe not
This
Is
My
Lovely
Day.
Or is that one of the two pieces?

JUDITH:
You might have got
Bless
This
House
.

ALICE:
Father would not have been amused. Casimir, will you please stop prowling around?

CASIMIR:
Oh. Sorry – sorry.

(
He
sits – as
if
he
were
about
to
take
off
again
.)

ALICE:
Who was the man standing just behind Willie at the graveside? – glasses, pasty-looking, plump, bald. I noticed him in the chapel, too; in the front pew on the men’s side.

EAMON:
Jerry.

ALICE:
Who?

EAMON:
Jerry McLaughlin.

ALICE:
Who’s Jerry Mc –? Not –!

(
EAMON
nods.
)

ALICE:
For God’s sake! But that man could be her father, Judith!

JUDITH:
Easy.

(
The
music
stops
suddenly.
Silence.
)

ALICE:
She couldn’t have heard me, could she?

CLAIRE:
Casimir!

CASIMIR:
Hello-hello.

CLAIRE:
What’s the name of this?

ALICE:
(
Relieved
)
God.

(
CASIMIR
leaps
up
.)

CASIMIR:
A test! She’s testing me again! (
Shouts.
)
Go ahead! I’m ready! I’m waiting!

(
He
moves
upstage
and
stands
poised
,
waiting.
His
eyes
are
shut
tight
,
etc.
etc.
as
before.
The
music
is
the
Ballade
in
A
flat
major
,
Op.
47.
)

ALICE:
You never told me he was like that.

JUDITH:
Like what?

ALICE:
That’s an elderly man. (
To
EAMON
) Did you know he was like that?

CASIMIR:
Good Lord – good Lord – good Lord – good Lord –

ALICE:
She’s only – what? – twenty-seven? – twenty-eight?

CASIMIR:
I know it – I know it so well – but what is it? – what
is
it? –

ALICE:
Thank God the wedding’s postponed for three months. Maybe she’ll come to her senses in the meantime. How could the poor child marry a man like that, for God’s sake?

JUDITH:
I’ve no idea. (
Rises.
)
There are some things we’ve got to get settled before you all leave. (
Shouts
.)
Claire, could you come out for a few minutes?

ALICE:
So that’s Jerry McLaughlin.

EAMON:
He looks older than he is.

JUDITH:
Claire!

ALICE:
O dear, dear, dear, dear, dear.

(
The
music
stops.
CASIMIR
comes
downstage.
)

CASIMIR:
(
To
EAMON
) It’s a sonata – a sonata – I know that – either 58 or 59 – but which? – which?

EAMON:
Don’t ask me.

ALICE:
(
To
EAMON
) What age is he?

CASIMIR:
Oh, Lord, I should know. Alice?

ALICE:
What?

CASIMIR:
58 or 59?

ALICE:
Is he serious?

CASIMIR:
59 – that’s my guess.

ALICE:
He’s right.

CASIMIR:
Am I?

ALICE:
He must be that. Oh, the poor baby!

(
CLAIRE
enters – she
is
not
wearing
mourning
clothes.
ALICE
studies
her
face
with
anxious
compassion
.)

CLAIRE:
(
To
CASIMIR
) Well?

CASIMIR:
It’s a sonata.

CLAIRE:
Is it?

CASIMIR:
Isn’t it?

ALICE:
Claire darling, that was just beautiful playing.

CLAIRE:
Thanks.

CASIMIR:
Yes; it’s a sonata.

CLAIRE:
So you’ve said.

CASIMIR:
Is it not?

ALICE:
Would you like to sit here, facing the sun?

CLAIRE:
I’m fine. (
To
CASIMIR)
You don’t know!

JUDITH:
Please, everybody –

CASIMIR:
And it’s either – and I’m not absolutely certain –

CLAIRE:
You don’t know!

JUDITH:
Claire –

CASIMIR:
It’s either the –

JUDITH:
May I –?

CASIMIR:
58 – right?

JUDITH:
Please may I speak?

CLAIRE:
(
Whispers
)
Wrong.

CASIMIR:
(
Whispers
)
59?

JUDITH:
Could I have a moment now that we’re all here?

CASIMIR:
Sorry – sorry. I beg your pardon, Judith.

CLAIRE:
(
Whispers
)
Completely wrong.

JUDITH:
We haven’t got all that much time. (
To
CASIMIR
) Here’s a seat.

(
He
sits.
CLAIRE
grins
at
him
behind
Judith

s
back.
He
signals
another
answer
.
She
rejects
this
,
too.
He
is
deflated.
ALICE
has
not
taken
her
eyes
off
CLAIRE
.
Now
she
goes
to
her.
)

ALICE:
I got a glimpse of you coming down the aisle this morning and I had a sudden memory of you coming down on the morning of your first communion; and you looked exactly the same as you did then – not one day older – a beautiful little innocent child. Hasn’t changed a bit, has
she? (
She
looks
round
for
confirmation;
but
everyone
is
silent
and
waiting
.)
What’s wrong?

JUDITH:
I would like to talk about what’s to happen now that Father’s gone – before you all leave.

ALICE:
Sorry. Sorry. Of course. Go ahead.

JUDITH:
I know he has left everything to the four of us – the house, the furnishings, the land. And the question is: what are we going to do?

ALICE:
Well, as far as I’m concerned, my home’s in London, Casimir’s is in Hamburg, and this house is yours and Claire’s. (
To
CASIMIR
) Isn’t that right?

CASIMIR:
Oh, yes; oh‚ yes, indeed.

ALICE:
Naturally we’ll come back now and again. But the Hall must be your home. So the next time we’re here we’ll sign over to you whatever our share is – or better still have the papers drawn up and sent to us. The important thing is to have it all formal. (
TO
CASIMIR
) Don’t you agree?

CASIMIR:
I –

ALICE:
(
To
JUDITH
) I see no problem.

EAMON:
What has Casimir to say?

CASIMIR:
Me? Oh, yes, Alice is right, absolutely right. I mean I would hope to bring the boys over some time for a holiday – a short holiday – if I may. But I would be really happy for you to have it all, Judith – and Claire – oh, yes, very happy. You deserve it. It should be yours. It must be yours. Oh, yes.

BOOK: Brian Friel Plays 1
4.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Boy Out Falling by E. C. Johnson
Sheikh's Possession by Sophia Lynn
Apartment in Athens by Glenway Wescott
Betting on Fate by Katee Robert
How to Save a Life by Sara Zarr
Rose's Vintage by Kayte Nunn
The September Sisters by Jillian Cantor