Authors: Mark Ravenhill
Robbie
Yeah.
Lulu
Gone limp on me.
Robbie
Yeah.
Lulu
Why’s that then?
Pause
.
Robbie
I was there. I was all ready. I was ready to deal.
Lulu
Right.
Robbie
There’s a few other dealers. Stood around the dance floor. I take up my position. I’m ready.
And this bloke comes up to me. Really, really nice-looking.
And he says: ‘You selling?’ Yeah, I say. Fifteen quid a go.
And the way he looks at me I know he fancies me, you know?
And he reaches in his pocket and – oh shit. So stupid.
Lulu
It was the knife yes?
Robbie
There wasn’t a knife.
Lulu
Gun?
Robbie
He. Look. He reaches in his pocket and says:
‘Shit I left my money in my other jeans. Oh shit, now how am I gonna have a good time, now how am I gonna enjoy myself?’
Lulu
Right. Yes.
Go on.
Robbie
And he looked so . . . I felt sorry for him, alright? But then he says: ‘How about this? How about you give me the E? Give me the E now then later, at the end, you can come back to mine and we can get the money from my jeans.’
Lulu
Right so he was luring you. Luring you back to his / place.
Robbie
No.
Lulu
Get you back to his so that he could pull the gun / or whatever.
Robbie
No.
Lulu
And get the Es off you.
Robbie
No, it didn’t happen. That’s not it.
Lulu
No?
Robbie
No.
So I said yes. It’s a deal. And I gave him the E and he takes it and I watch him and he’s dancing and he’s sweating and smiling and he looks – well – beautiful and just really really happy.
Lulu
How many?
Robbie
What?
Lulu
You broke the first rule – yes? Yes?
Robbie
Yes.
Lulu
How many?
Robbie
I was out there on my own.
Lulu
How many?
Robbie
Three. Maybe four.
Lulu
Shit. I told you. Rule number one.
Robbie
I know.
But then, a few minutes later. A bloke. Even better, yes, even better looking than the last bloke. And he says: ‘Look, you gave my mate some E and I was wondering, I get paid at the end of the week and if I give you my phone number will you give me a couple of E?’
Lulu
You didn’t?
Robbie
Yes.
Lulu
Fuck.
Robbie
And I felt good, I felt amazing, from just giving, you see?
Lulu
No, no I don’t.
Robbie
But imagine. Imagine you’re there, imagine how it feels.
Lulu
No.
Robbie
And then – it sort of rolled. It flew.
Lulu
You prick. Three hundred.
Robbie
Until there’s these guys, they’re asking and I’m giving and everyone’s dancing and smiling.
Lulu
Three hundred E. / Silly prick.
Robbie
Listen, listen to me. This is what I felt.
Lulu
I don’t want to know. / You gave away three hundred.
Robbie
It’s important.
Lulu
No. Stupid. Fucking. / Cunt.
Robbie
Just listen for a moment, OK?
Listen, this is the important bit. If you’d felt . . . I felt. I was looking down on this planet. Spaceman over this earth. And I see this kid in Rwanda, crying, but he doesn’t know why. And this granny in Kiev, selling everything she’s ever owned. And this president in Bogota or . . . South America. And I see the suffering. And the wars. And the grab, grab, grab.
And I think: Fuck Money. Fuck it. This selling. This buying. This system. Fuck the bitching world and let’s be . . . beautiful. Beautiful. And happy. You see?
You see?
But now you see, but then I’ve only got two left and this bloke comes up and says: ‘You the bloke giving out the E?’ I give him the two but he says ‘What two? Two. Two’s not going to do shit for me. You gotta have more.’ And he starts to hit, he starts to punch me.
Lulu
Fucking fucker arsehole. Fuck.
Pillowbiter. (
Hit .
) Shitstabber. (
Hit .
)
Boys grow up you know and stop playing with each other’s willies. Men and women make the future. There are people out there who need me. Normal people who have kind tidy sex and when they want it. And boys? Boys just fuck each other.
The suffering is going to be handed out. And I shouldn’t be part of that. But it’ll be both of us. And that’s not justice. Is it?
You look like shit now. Look like you might get (
Throws the bottle of TCP into
Robbie
’s eyes
.) gangrene.
Exit
Lulu
.
Robbie
Nurse. Nurse.
Bedsit
.
Mark
and
Gary
.
Gary
I knew it wasn’t right. I went to the council.
And I said to her, look, it’s simple: he’s fucking me.
Once, twice, three times a week he comes into my room.
He’s a big man. He holds me down and he fucks me. How long? she says. About two years, I say. I say he moved in then six months later it starts. I told her and she says ‘Does he use a condom?’
Mark
Yeah?
Gary
Yeah. I mean ‘Does he use a condom?’
When it’s like that he’s not gonna use a condom, is he? Just spit. All he used is a bit of spit.
Mark
On his – ?
Gary
Spit on his dick.
Mark
Of course.
Gary
And then she / says –
Mark
/ And you –
Gary
The next thing / she says –
Mark
Does he / spit –
Gary
I told her that and / she says –
Mark
Does he spit up you?
Gary
Listen. I tell her he’s fucking me – without a condom – and she says to me – you know what she says?
Mark
No. No, I don’t.
Gary
I think I’ve got a leaflet. Would you like to give him a leaflet?
Mark
Fuck.
Gary
Yeah. Give him a leaflet.
Mark
Well –
Gary
No, I don’t want a leaflet. I mean, what good is a fucking leaflet? He can’t even read a fucking leaflet, you know.
Mark
Yes.
Gary
And there’s this look – like . . . panic in her eyes and she says: What do you want me to do?
Mark
Right.
Gary
Tell me what you want me to do.
Mark
And you said.
Gary
Well, I don’t know. Inject him with something, put him away, cut something off. Do something. And I’m – I’ve got this anger, right? This great big fucking anger – here in front of my eyes. I mean, I fucking hate her now, right?
Mark
So did you / attack?
Gary
I go: Fuck. Fuck.
Mark
Maybe a knife or something?
Gary
So. In this little box, little white box room . . .
Mark
You attacked / her?
Gary
I stand on the table and I shout:
It’s not difficult this is it? It’s easy this. He’s my stepdad. Listen, he’s my stepdad and he’s fucking me.
And I walk away and I get on the coach and I come down here and I’m never going back. Gonna find something else. Because there’s this bloke. Looking out for me. He’ll come and collect me. Take me to this big house/
Mark
Look, this person that you’re looking for . . .
Gary
Yeah?
Mark
Well it’s not me.
Gary
Of course not.
Mark
No.
Gary
Fuck, you didn’t think . . . ? No. It’s not meant to be you. You and me we’re looking for different things, right?
Mark
Right.
Gary
Mates?
Mark
Mates.
Gary
So – mate – do you wanna stay?
Mark
I don’t know.
Gary
Stay if you like. Room on the floor. Someone waiting up for you?
Mark
Not exactly.
Gary
You stay long as you want.
Mark
Thank you.
Gary
Stay around and you can keep yourself busy. Give us a hand. Getting the messages, cleaning up. Chucking out the mental ones.
Tell you what, you hang around long enough we can . . .
He pulls out a holdall from behind the chair.
He unzips the bag. It is full of fifty-pence pieces. He catches up handfuls and lets them cascade through his fingers
.
See? I’m a winner me. Every time. And I don’t let them give me tokens.
I can pay for what I want.
Stick around, you and me could go shopping yeah?
Mark
I don’t know.
Gary
It’s only shopping.
Mark
Alright then. Yeah. Let’s go shopping.
They both listen to the coins as they run through
Gary
’s fingers.
Flat.
Brian
,
Lulu
and
Robbie
.
Brian
inserts a video.
Brian
Watch. I want you to see this.
They watch a video of a schoolboy playing a cello. They sit for some time in silence
.
Brian
starts to weep
.
Sorry. Sorry.
Lulu
Would you like a – something to wipe?
Brian
Silly. Me a grown man.
Lulu
Maybe a handkerchief?
Brian
No. No.
He pulls himself together. They sit and watch again for some time, but eventually he starts to weep again
.
Oh God. I’m so – I’m really sorry.
Lulu
No, no.
Brian
It’s just the beauty, you see? The beauty of it.
Lulu
Of course.
Brian
Like a memory, you know, memory of what we’ve lost.
Pause
.
Lulu
Are you sure you don’t want – ?
Brian
Well –
Lulu
It’s no problem.
Brian
Well then.
Lulu
(
to
Robbie
) Could you – ?
Robbie
No problem.
Robbie
exists. They continue to watch the video.
Robbie
enters again with a toilet roll, takes it over to
Brian
.
Brian
What’s this?
Robbie
It’s for your – you know to wipe your -
Brian
I asked you what it is.
Robbie
Well.
Brian
So tell me what it is. What is in your hand?
Robbie
Well –
Lulu
Darling.
Brian
Yes?
Robbie
Toilet paper.
Brian
Toilet paper exactly. Toilet paper. Which belongs in the –
Robbie
Toilet.
Brian
Exactly.
Lulu
Darling, I didn’t mean . . . that.
Brian
And we use it to – ?
Robbie
Well, wipe your arse.
Brian
Exactly. Wipe your arse. While I – what is this? (
Wipes eye.
)
Lulu
I didn’t mean toilet paper.
Robbie
It’s a – like a tear.
Brian
It is a tear. Little drop of pure emotion. Which requires a – ?
Robbie
Well, a hanky.
Brian
Handkerchief.
Robbie
Handkerchief.
Lulu
Of course, I meant a handkerchief.
Brian
This is disrupting you know that?