GEORGE SPIRO

THE GARDEN

A Tragedy in 12 Scenes.


Translated from the Hungarian by Andrew Bock

Translation copyright 1994-1998


Scenes
1.  2.   3.   4.   5.   6.   7.   8.   9.   10.   11.   12.


Characters of the Play:

JANOS

[Yahn-osh] a writer and ranking communist official

ELVIRA

his wife, a painter

SWEETY

Janos' lover, a prostitute

SCHOLAR

Donci [Doon-tsy], a historian and thought criminal

ANNA

Donci's wife

DOC

a physician, close friend of Janos

PROFESSOR

Laci [Lat-see], an ethnographer

JUNIOR

a writer, Janos' younger brother

KATIE

a servant

LEPORICH

Janos' chauffeur

COMMANDATORE

a poet

Time and Place: Monday, May 24, 1954, a wealthy neighborhood in the hills of Budapest, Hungary. Stage left, the ivy-covered back wall of a house. A shuttered door is open. Down left an attached stone terrace. The rest of the stage is a garden; tall oak and pine trees, a trimmed lawn, and untrimmed bushes. The sky is visible through the foliage. No fence is seen.

 


 

Scene 1.

(Bright sunshine. Mozart's G-Major Trio is heard from a radio inside the house. For a long while no one appears. Enter right ANNA and SCHOLAR. They stop. SCHOLAR wears a worn gray suit, dress shirt, and new shoes. ANNA wears a pleated blue skirt and polka dot blouse.)

ANNA
Look at this garden! They live here? In this garden? (Beat.) What a place! (SCHOLAR walks toward the house.) So this is where they live... in this house. (SCHOLAR nods.) It's paradise! I can't even... Fantastic. (SCHOLAR stands motionless.) Some people actually live like this...

(Enter KATIE from house.)

KATIE
Who are you looking for, comrades?

SCHOLAR
The people who live here.

KATIE
Comrade Assistant Under Secretary?

SCHOLAR
Yes - him.

KATIE
Are you expected, comrades?

SCHOLAR
He invited us. He sent us a letter.

KATIE
May I see the letter, comrade?

SCHOLAR
I didn't bring it with me.

KATIE
Then I'm sorry. Comrade Assistant Under Secretary isn't home right now. Try again another time, please, and next time telephone to announce yourself.

SCHOLAR
That's just great. We're leaving.

ANNA
Why? We were invited here!

SCHOLAR
We were sent a letter.

ANNA
Still, we were invited!

SCHOLAR
There was nothing in the letter about the watchdog.

ANNA
She's not a watchdog. She's just a girl.

SCHOLAR
I don't care what she is. She's a watch-bitch. Let's go.

ELVIRA
(From inside the house:) Has someone come, Katie?

KATIE
Two comrades. A gentleman comrade and a lady comrade.

ELVIRA
I'll be there in a second!

(Silence but for the music. SCHOLAR, ANNA, KATIE wait. ELVIRA appears at the door. She stops, stunned.)

ELVIRA
Donci! Oh, my dear, dear Donci! Oh my God! (She rushes toward him.)

SCHOLAR
Hello.

ELVIRA
(Stops.) Hello. (Beat.) Oh, God... So then you've been!... (Laughs, jumps up and down.) Katie, do you see him? See him?

(KATIE doesn't react, surprised by the display. )

ELVIRA
Oh, marvelous! Oh, thank heavens! Let me see you... You haven't changed, right? You're perfectly fine! Donci! This is your wife?

SCHOLAR
Anna. Anna, this is Elvira.

(The two women shake hands.)

ELVIRA
Anna... Hello, Anna.

ANNA
Hello.

ELVIRA
Is this a new wife or the old one?

SCHOLAR
The old one.

ELVIRA
(Takes ANNA's hand.) Why, you're so young! You dear, dear girl... (She kisses ANNA on both cheeks. ANNA stands, embarrassed.) Katie, chairs! - You'll have coffee, right? - Katie, coffee, too!

KATIE
On the terrace?

ELVIRA
Yes. My God!

(Exit KATIE into house. The music plays. A beat.)

ELVIRA
When?...

SCHOLAR
Not very long ago.

ELVIRA
I didn't know... we didn't know... Not right away... Even Janos only found out much later, he was beside himself you know, he tried pulling every single string... My God, it must be three years at least! - Would you like something to eat? We'll have a marvelous dinner tonight, Janos said to cook for ten... He said something this morning, something about a surprise... But such a big surprise! He already knew! And he didn't tell me! - He doesn't tell me much... He went out, out into the country, they took the car, he must be giving a reading somewhere... He's hardly ever home... But he'll be back soon... Donci! Well here you are! - Katie!

(Enter KATIE with two wicker chairs. She sets them on the terrace.)

ELVIRA
This is Katie. She's our domestic-issue employee. I barely had any time left to work, so we were absolutely forced to...

SCHOLAR
Of course.

ELVIRA
She's a decent, hard-working girl... We've tried two others before her, but she's working out well - thank you, Katie.

(Exit KATIE.)

ELVIRA
Come over here, sit down! - Donci!

(They step up onto the terrace. SWEETY enters from the house. She is an attractive young woman, dark complexion, wearing a flowery dressing gown.)

SWEETY
Freedom.[1] (Beat.)

ELVIRA
This is Sweety. Well, that's what we call her. She's a very nice girl. She lives with us now. She studies German. (Beat.) Sweety, this is a great man, a truly great man, among the few. A scholar. My friend! - and his wife, Anna.

SWEETY
Hello.

ANNA
Hello.

(They shake hands. KATIE brings out two more wicker chairs, puts them down, exits into house. )

ELVIRA
Why don't we sit down?

(They sit down. The music plays. Beat.)

SWEETY
Do you know German?

SCHOLAR
Pardon me?

SWEETY
Do you know German?

ELVIRA
Of course he does. He's published in Italian, French...

(KATIE brings out a wicker table, sets it down, exits.)

SWEETY
I hate it. The teacher's been stuffing my head with genitives and datives but I don't get a word of it. I get such a headache! I don't believe it's really a language!

ELVIRA
Well, it's not easy. No, it is not easy.

SWEETY
Hey, I'm not stupid. I could use my head for great things, Janos says. But I was working instead of going to school just to feed myself, so I didn't even finish fifth grade... And now I got to do this.

ELVIRA
It's very important to know German. A world language.

SWEETY
It's hard to catch up... but Janos says it's never too late... Do you know him?

ELVIRA
They're old friends.

ANNA
I only know his poetry... some of it...

ELVIRA
He should be here any second now.

(KATIE enters with a tray of coffee, plates, cups, sugar, milk. She sets it down and serves them. The music continues, she exits.)

ELVIRA
It's real coffee, you know.

(They sugar the coffees, stir.)

ANNA
What a wonderful garden this is!

ELVIRA
I don't know - I think it's become a bit overgrown. You know how hard gardeners are to find. Still, it is quite nice.

(They drink the coffee.)

SCHOLAR
(To SWEETY:) Are you... a relative?

SWEETY
They're all real nice to me... Like I was a member of the family, really. Elvira, too...

ELVIRA
And we have to fix up the house, they promised us last year... The roof was leaking last winter, right down into my studio, we tracked down a roofer somehow, he was up there fooling around for weeks, I couldn't get any work done. (To SCHOLAR:) We converted the loft into my studio. I had made a complete mess of the downstairs, the guests gawking at half-finished paintings, you know I couldn't have that... The studio is absolutely lovely, a big window looks out over the garden in back. I'd like the two of you to see it.

SWEETY
Yeah, Janos' study looks out over the garden too, but on the bottom floor. He filled it all up with books, and it's just a little room! That's where he works. Outside are trees and bushes... a lot of birds, he writes about them in his poems. I'll show you, 'kay? (She stands up, to ANNA:) Come on.

ANNA
Should I go?

ELVIRA
Go on. Then I'll show you the studio.

(SWEETY and ANNA exit into the house. Beat. The music plays on. They drink the coffee.)

ELVIRA
Such a sweet thing... (Beat.) Did they rehabilitate you?

SCHOLAR
They won't rehabilitate me.

ELVIRA
Oh, of course they will! We've heard everyone will be. Just the fact that you've been released... thank God...

SCHOLAR
I was never convicted of anything. There's no reason I should be rehabilitated.

ELVIRA
I don't follow politics too much these days, but if you were in jail then they have to rehabilitate you now.

SCHOLAR
No they don't.

(Beat. The music plays.)

ELVIRA
Your wife is so sweet... (Beat.) Are you all right? You've aged and your face... I see wrinkles... but it doesn't matter... As for me, I'm going gray... Well, no matter. (Beat. She jumps up.) If you don't mind, this Mozart is making me nervous today.

(ELVIRA exits into house. SCHOLAR sits. The music plays a little while longer, then stops. ANNA and SWEETY call down from the upstairs window:)

ANNA
Honey! You can see the whole city from the study! Kossuth Bridge, Margaret Bridge, Margaret Island, the Cathedral, Gellert Hill, the Castle, the whole city!

SWEETY
Janos writes poems and newspaper things in that room. And in the winter, he puts bacon out on the window for the birds. (To SCHOLAR:) Don't you want to see?

ANNA
Whose house was this?

SWEETY
I don't know. Some banker's or factory guy's. But Janos and Elvira have been living here a long time. Since '48 I think...

ANNA
It's gorgeous! Come have a look.

SCHOLAR
I've seen it.

SWEETY
The view's better from the studio. The trees don't block a thing. (To SCHOLAR:) Don't you want to look?

ANNA
I'm going. You're not coming up?

SCHOLAR
No, you go ahead.

(Beat. SCHOLAR sits. Birds chirp. The sound of a car's engine, then it cuts. Beat.)


Scene 2.

(DOCTOR [DOC] enters wearing a short sleeve, striped shirt, and long pants. JUNIOR wears Tyrol lederhosen with leather suspenders, a checkered short sleeve shirt. LACI [PROF] wears a dark gray suit, shirt, black tie.)

JUNIOR
I was sitting right there beneath them, two sections away - there's no question. I'm telling you, the guy was sitting in the entourage!

DOC
It could have been coincidence.

JUNIOR
Coincidence? They arranged the seating weeks ago! There's no way an officer in the Secret Police could have been seated right next to the Prime Minister! There's no way!

DOC
Why not? It's still -

JUNIOR
Don't you two get it? They've come up with the best way to maneuver a takeover! It's elegant. No need for anyone to take sides - nothing. It could have been an accident. He just sits there and everybody sees. The entourage sees, too! Listen - they know what coincidences mean! It's godamn brilliant!

DOC
Interesting.

JUNIOR
(Dramatically:) But be still my heart. Someone's on the terrace.

(They walk closer to the terrace.)

JUNIOR
Well, I'll be a son-of-a-gun if it isn't Donci!

PROF
Donci?!

JUNIOR
Yes, it is Donci. (He walks up to the terrace, stops.) Donci, what's happening, they let you out too? - It's either Donci, or it's his ghost, guys! - Hey, Donci!

SCHOLAR
Hello, Junior.

JUNIOR
(Steps up onto the terrace.) Not a black or blue mark on you. Let's see, both ears, your nose - is everything still there? - Supposedly before they release the patients they fatten them up, give them some new nails, fake balls, one or two kidneys -

SCHOLAR
So as not to upset your delicate stomach.

JUNIOR
Hey guys, it really is Donci!

(DOC and PROF also step up onto the terrace. )

SCHOLAR
Hello.

DOC
Hello.

PROF
Hello. (Beat.) What are you doing here?

SCHOLAR
(Gesturing:) This was not my decision.

PROF
Janos? Where is he?

SCHOLAR
I don't know.

JUNIOR
Janos called me this morning and said something about a big surprise, and that I should bring Laci along.

PROF
So you're the big surprise.

JUNIOR
Where's Elvira?

SCHOLAR
Inside.

(Beat. The birds chirp.)

JUNIOR
Well, why stand around looking so bemused. (Sits down.) Have a seat, everybody.

(DOC and PROF sit down. Beat.)

SCHOLAR
How are you boys? (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
(To PROF:) Etelka?

PROF
The same. (Beat.) Working. Writes her books day and night.

JUNIOR
Etelka's fantastic, I'm telling you. She doesn't even budge, just writes and writes... (laughs.) And I'm always tinkering. That damn car is always breaking down. Everything in it rattles, and I'm always trying to fix it. I'm totally fixated! (Laughs.)

(Beat. Birds.)

DOC
Really, how are you?

SCHOLAR
Good. Just to experience weather again... The hours of the day, the seasons... The existence of time. We never knew what time it was. (Beat.)

JUNIOR
You got lucky being released in the Spring and all.

DOC
In the winter there'd have been snow-that's also nice.

PROF
That's true. (Beat.)

JUNIOR
Really, guys, I wouldn't mind sitting in jail for a while. I'd appreciate everything much more than I do now, that's for sure... (Makes a face, laughs.) Donci, could you arrange something for me? Talk to 'em for me, alright?! (Laughs.)

(Beat. Birds. Enter ELVIRA from house in a cocktail dress.)

ELVIRA
Hello.

DOC
Hello.

PROF
Hello.

ELVIRA
(To PROF:) Etelka didn't come?

JUNIOR
I could barely drag him out here... Both of them wanted to work! On a sunny day! (Laughs.)

ELVIRA
I'm sorry Etelka didn't come. It'd be good to sit down and talk with her sometime -Well, I don't know if we should wait for Janos, maybe we could have something cold to eat in the meantime...

JUNIOR
Maybe a little lubrication in the meantime.

ELVIRA
Where is Sweety?

SCHOLAR
Showing your studio.

ELVIRA
Everybody, Donci brought his wife!

DOC
You were married before... ?

SCHOLAR
That's right, before.

DOC
And she didn't get a divorce?

SCHOLAR
No.

JUNIOR
That's really something. It's beautiful. It's touching, really. Women just amaze me - from time to time. Let me tell you.

PROF
What are you doing these days?

SCHOLAR
Working.

ELVIRA
Oh, that's good. That's very good. What are you writing?

SCHOLAR
Nothing.

ELVIRA
You said you were working.

SCHOLAR
I shelve books in a library. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Isn't that something like being a stock clerk?

SCHOLAR
Something like that.

JUNIOR
What??? You shelve books for those idiots in the library?

SCHOLAR
I do.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) God! That's great! Donci shelves books! That's the best joke of this century!

ELVIRA
(To PROF:) Laci, why don't you hire him over where you work. As a researcher or something.

PROF
Me?

ELVIRA
Sure. It'd be no trouble for you.

PROF
Well, I'd be happy to, of course... but it's not that simple, unfortunately. But I'll give it a try, sure.

SCHOLAR
I wouldn't work in the place where you were the director.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Ahhh, Laci, touché!

PROF
Do you have a problem with me?

(SCHOLAR doesn't respond.)

PROF
Can I help it if I wasn't thrown in jail? (Beat.)

JUNIOR
Maybe he read some of your articles and didn't agree with them.

PROF
I might have made a few mistakes in my life, but no one can say that I don't believe in what I write.

ELVIRA
Laci has become a very respected man in society - all of his hard work has paid off... (Short bear, she stands up.) I'll go call the maid. (Beat.)

JUNIOR
(To DOC:) I don't think Donci would help hold your scalpel, either. (Laughs) The things you wrote! How female anatomy is perfectly suited for hard physical labor! How preferable it is that girls drive the tractors! They couldn't possibly harm their uteruses! Quite the opposite!

(He laughs. Beat. Enter KATIE, now wearing a white chambermaid's cap and white apron. She carries wine and wine glasses on a tray.)

KATIE
Good afternoon. Freedom.

JUNIOR
Hi Katie.

PROF
Good afternoon.

DOC
A pleasure.

(KATIE sets down the wine and glasses, exits with tray.)

JUNIOR
(Sniffing the bottle:) Smells like Blue Nun. The real thing. From Sopron burghers. (Pours the wine.)

ELVIRA
Where are Sweety and Anna?

JUNIOR
Schmoozing, dear.

(JUNIOR pours ELVIRA wine.)

ELVIRA
Well, uhhm... To a happy return, how should I say this? Cheers, Laci.

(They toast.)

JUNIOR
Delicious, isn't it? Over in Sopron there's this tour guide, what the hell's his name... He makes this wine.

SCHOLAR
(To PROF:) What is Etelka writing these days?

PROF
Books. (Beat.)

JUNIOR
(To SCHOLAR:) So, you go today?

SCHOLAR
What?

JUNIOR
The game!

SCHOLAR
Me?

PROF
Why should he have gone? Even I didn't go. I listened on the radio.

JUNIOR
What are you so defensive for? Except for the hundred thousand people behind bars, the whole country listened to the game.

PROF
I simply stated that I wasn't at the game, either.

JUNIOR
Well I was at the game. And our boys were incredible! They've got to win the World Cup! Even Brazil couldn't beat us. The goals were amazing! When Kocsics let his left leg rip! And when Toth fell into the net on top of the ball! It's too bad Tsibor didn't score, he moved like a sack of shit out there on the field, they took him out a few times, but by then the English had screwed themselves for good. It was intoxicating, I'm telling you, intoxicating! At the end the whole team played to let him score, too... his tough luck... No one could have guessed seven to one, not even me!

DOC
We'll all see it on the next newsreel.

(ANNA and SWEETY appear at the door. SWEETY is wearing a one-piece bathing suit.)

SCHOLAR
(To PROF:) And Agnes?

(Beat. SWEETY holds back ANNA, who has started heading toward the terrace. )

SCHOLAR
Where's Agnes? How old is she now? Fifteen? Sixteen? (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Agnes died. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
What?!

PROF
Let's be a little bit more precise. Agnes didn't die - she committed suicide. She jumped out of a seventh-floor window.

SCHOLAR
Why?!

JUNIOR
Janos translated a poem not too long ago. One of the lines went: "A man, so like a blade straw, may be broken by a gentle breeze" - but they censored it. Not optimistic enough.

SCHOLAR
But when?! Why?!

PROF
Love. (Beat.)

SWEETY
Look here everyone, this is Anna. (She leads ANNA to the terrace.) She's a teacher! She teaches kids! Isn't that great? A teacher.

JUNIOR
(Springing up:) That's a beautiful occupation. What am I saying occupation? A beautiful profession! (He kisses ANNA's hand.)

(DOC and PROF stand, shake hands with ANNA bowing gallantly.)

SWEETY
Isn't she pretty? And when I told her so - you know what, her face turned all red! She acts like she doesn't know it herself!

ANNA
Please, don't.

SWEETY
Alright, I won't embarrass you. What's going on here, you guys are drinking already? (She pours a glass and offers it to ANNA.) Janos gets it from Sopron.

ANNA
Thank you, not for me.

SWEETY
Just a little.

ANNA
I don't drink.

JUNIOR
Don't force her. Teachers must exercise self-restraint.

ELVIRA
Both of you sit down. - Katie! - Sit down.

(ANNA and SWEETY sit down.)

ELVIRA
How do you like my studio?

ANNA
It's beautiful. The view... it's breath-taking. I never knew how beautiful the city was. From up here.

(Enter KATIE.)

ELVIRA
Katie, bring more chairs, please.

(Exit KATIE.)

JUNIOR
And Elvira's paintings?

ANNA
Beautiful.

JUNIOR
How beautiful? (Beat.)

ANNA
I don't really know how to talk about paintings.

JUNIOR
Everyone knows how to talk about paintings. Besides, you are the public, you are the People! And not just anyone - a teacher! So how do you like them?

ANNA
It surprised me... that she paints the garden. (To ELVIRA:) That you paint the garden.

ELVIRA
Why, what should I paint?

ANNA
I don't know. Maybe the garden is the best thing to paint.

ELVIRA
Really, how did you like them? (To SCHOLAR:) Five months ago I had a large exhibition of my work, each review was better than the next. I don't believe the critics. They just wrote those things because of Janos. They think good reviews will win points with him. But Janos doesn't paint my pictures, I do. (To ANNA:) So you can tell me honestly.

ANNA
They're beautiful.

ELVIRA
They don't lack anything?

ANNA
No. Nothing. I'm not a critic, but they're really beautiful. Very beautiful. They're so... green.

ELVIRA
Green?

ANNA
The garden might be a little less green, maybe.

JUNIOR
Tada!

ANNA
I mean the garden isn't entirely so green.

(Beat. KATIE enters with two wicker chairs, puts them down, exits back into the house. JUNIOR, PROF and DOC sit down. Beat.)

JUNIOR
(To SCHOLAR:) Elvira is no longer a cubist, now she's a realist. Landscapes. You could say she's in her Repin period. (Laughs.) Trees, plants, flowers, prairies, branches, twigs...

ELVIRA
Van Gogh painted flowers, didn't he?

JUNIOR
Did I say he didn't? Sure, he painted some real nice sunflowers. You can paint flowers a lot of different ways.

ELVIRA
You think I should paint a man stoking some furnace instead?

(JUNIOR shrugs.)

ELVIRA
So I should paint the garden, right?

(KATIE brings two more chairs, then exits.)

SWEETY
Elvira paints such gorgeous flowers. Sometimes I watch her hand just glide!... It's really something. And I've seen a lot of painters. (To SCHOLAR:) Once a bunch of people drew me, with charcoal, I stood there naked for hours, they were working and working, then the teacher showed them how they should do it, and they erased everything and started again, but none of them was as good as Elvira.

JUNIOR
Of course, their hands were shaking. A flower... and a flower standing there in the buff! That's something different! (Laughs, looks at SWEETY:) Yes... She's a hot little number.

SWEETY
As you sow, so shall you ream.

JUNIOR
You snatched that one from me!

ELVIRA
I don't understand where Janos could be. He should have been here a long time ago.

SWEETY
He was all worked up this morning. Smiling, humming to himself...

DOC
I don't like it when he's so worked up.

SWEETY
I like it. (To ANNA:) He's something else! sometimes eight times a day!...

(Beat. Sound of a car's engine, brakes. ELVIRA stands. Enter KATIE from house.)

JUNIOR
Janos is here!


Scene 3.

(Enter JANOS in a dark suit, white short sleeve shirt, tie. LEPORICH follows behind him in a square-cut untucked shirt, gray pants. COMMANDATORE in a white shirt, white tennis pants, tennis shoes. COMMANDATORE steps forward, then stops, hesitating. LEPORICH remains behind. JANOS walks to center stage, turns around, triumphantly points to COMMANDATORE.)

JANOS
Well?! What do you say?! Who'd I bring?

JUNIOR
(Jumps up:) Commandatore!

(ELVIRA, DOC, PROF stare dumbfounded. DOC and PROF stand up. JANOS takes off his jacket, walks over to the terrace, hangs his jacket on one of the chairs. His tie stays on.)

JANOS
(Kisses SWEETY on the mouth, then ELVIRA.) Hello, Donci! (Shakes hands with SCHOLAR, who stands up.) Is this your wife? (Kisses ANNA, who has also stood up, on both cheeks.) Oh, how sweet! - Hello, Laci! Great to see you! (Hugs him.) Little brother! (Slaps Junior on the shoulder.) Well, what do you think all the lunatics in the asylum are talking about? Seven-to-one, of course! Even the most hopeless cases are thrilled! Soccer is a big deal after all. Isn't that right, Commandatore? Technology! Radios in the asylum. (He looks at his watch:) We missed the G Major Trio. I would have made it... If we didn't have a flat... Never mind, I'll put it on in a second... So, ladies and gentlemen, here's the surprise!

(He turns around. COMMANDATORE stands motionless behind him. LEPORICH fans himself with a newspaper - "Free People." Beat.)

DOC
You took him out of the asylum?

JANOS
I thought he'd live with us, for a while, a few days, test things out. And if he likes it, then for good.

ELVIRA
He's going to live with us?

JANOS
There's enough room. And I've missed him for so long, for years!

JUNIOR
They just let him out?

JANOS
Of course. Why not? He's never hurt anyone.

SWEETY
Who is he?

JANOS
Who is he? A poet. The most talented of us all. We started out together in '37...

SWEETY
A poet?

JANOS
That's right, and the most fun, always. God, what good times we had... Well. Then, during the war, he just withdrew into a shell. He was sent to a few different hospitals, was let go for a while, then they sent him out to the asylum. What a beautiful garden they've got out there! A real arboretum. And everyone just walks around - it's really something! Whoever wants to work can work. No coercion. The dominion of freedom! Julius is doing a superb job.

ELVIRA
And Julius just handed him over to you?

JANOS
Why not? There's nothing's wrong with him. He said we just have to watch out for him a bit, otherwise he's perfectly fine. In the car we talked about Mallarme and Parnassians. There's nothing wrong with his mind. He wrote a couple of beautiful poems inside... (Searches in his pockets:) There aren't that many, but they're very good... What'd I do with them...

LEPORICH
We left them at the institution, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary.

JANOS
Oh yeah?

LEPORICH
In the cafeteria.

JANOS
Well, never mind. Julius collects them and makes copies anyway, he's collecting them for a book... Well? Nice little surprise, right? (Stands, smiling triumphantly.)

ELVIRA
(Walks toward COMMANDATORE.) Hello.

COMMANDATORE
Hello. Hello. (Beat.) Beautiful garden. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Come, sit over here with us.

COMMANDATORE
Thank you. (He remains where he is. Beat.)

DOC
I'll bring a chair over there.

(Beat. DOC picks up a chair, brings it to COMMANDATORE, sets it down, slightly right of center stage. Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
(He stares at the chair for a long time.) Toilet paper... Do you have toilet paper?

ELVIRA
Toilet paper?

JANOS
We've got some. We've got toilet paper. Katie! Bring some toilet paper.

KATIE
How much?

JANOS
How much? How much indeed... A roll.

(Exit KATIE. Beat. They stand.)

ELVIRA
How are you?

COMMANDATORE
Well. (Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
Beautiful garden.

ELVIRA
I take care of it myself.

COMMANDATORE
Very nice.

(Beat. Enter KATIE with a roll of toilet paper.)

KATIE
Should I give it to him?

JANOS
Sure. Hand it right over.

(KATIE walks toward COMMANDATORE, and keeping her distance holds the toilet paper out to him. He takes it.)

COMMANDATORE
Thank you.

(KATIE runs back to the terrace.)

JANOS
(Laughing:) Don't be scared, he doesn't bite!

(COMMANDATORE jumps up onto the chair, examines it. He begins wiping the chair with the toilet paper. The others watch. Beat. COMMANDATORE wipes.)

SWEETY
Why's he doing that?

JANOS
It's nothing - he just is.

(JANOS is also taken aback, watches.)

JANOS
Julius said... Julius said he does everything slowly. He gets up in the morning... that takes him until evening. He eats breakfast at night. But otherwise he's normal.

(COMMANDATORE wipes).

JANOS
Donci, at last, I'm so happy to see you! It was terrible... As if I had thrown you in jail myself! I felt awful. Ridiculous, isn't it? But worst of all I couldn't drop in on you... with a line... with a rhyme... But thank God now... Let's sit down!

(They sit. KATIE and LEPORICH stand).

JANOS
Comrade Leporich, go and have a look in the kitchen, please.

LEPORICH
Thank you, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary.

(He walks to the terrace, places the newspaper on the parapet and exits. KATIE follows him.)

ELVIRA
(Jumps up:) Look!

(They look. COMMANDATORE is wiping his clothing with the toilet paper. Beat.)

JANOS
There's nothing wrong with him, he just has to be left alone. Have a seat.

(ELVIRA sits. JUNIOR pours. Beat. COMMANDATORE, absorbed in this activity, continues wiping himself.)

JANOS
Well, ladies and gentlemen... What can I say? I'm very happy. There. The old gang's together once again. The old troupe. Everyone. Donci's finally back again, Commandatore... Who would have thought we could do it?... (He smiles, moved by the moment.) End of toast. Cheers everyone.

(They toast. JANOS kisses the three woman; ELVIRA and SWEETY on the mouth, ANNA on the forehead).

SWEETY
He's not drinking?

(They look over at COMMANDATORE.)

JANOS
Maybe later. We'll leave him alone, and let him do it for as long as he needs to. (To SCHOLAR:) And you two? (Smiles, to ANNA:) At last I have the opportunity to meet you. You look just the way I imagined. Young, attractive, devoted. I'm so happy that the two of you came today. I wasn't so sure... Right, Donci? I just felt I had to bring the old gang together again. Just like old times, right? (Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
Water. Is there any water? (They look over).

ELVIRA
He wants water.

JANOS
I hear him.

ELVIRA
Katie.

(KATIE enters.)

ELVIRA
Bring him some water.

KATIE
Right away. (Exits.)

(Beat. All watch COMMANDATORE, who is perched precariously on the chair. Enter KATIE with a pitcher of water and water glass on a tray. She brings the tray to COMMANDATORE, stops, visibly frightened.)

COMMANDATORE
Thank you.

(He picks up the pitcher and slowly, meditatively, pours the water onto the chair. Beat. He begins wiping the wet chair with toilet paper. KATIE runs back to the terrace holding the tray).

KATIE
He poured it on the chair!

JANOS
That's alright. (Smiles at KATIE:) Thank you.

(They watch COMMANDATORE.)

ELVIRA
(Quietly, to DOC:) What kind of sickness is that?

DOC
How should I know?

(They all watch COMMANDATORE.)

SWEETY
Did he do that in the nut house, too?

JANOS
No, he didn't. He didn't do anything. We talked. Completely normally. He didn't do anything. We just talked.

ELVIRA
(Quietly:) Did he recognize you right away?

JANOS
Yes, right away. And you don't have to whisper in front of him. He recognized me right away.

ELVIRA
Was he happy you came to see him?

JANOS
Yes, he was happy.

(Beat. COMMANDATORE wipes the chair.)

JUNIOR
(Looks at his watch:) Well, we still got time yet. The broadcast starts at six.

JANOS
Let's bring the radio outside. There's an extension cord - would you get it, Katie?

KATIE
Right away. (She exits into the house.)

(Beat. They watch COMMANDATORE.)

COMMANDATORE
Do you have more water?

JANOS
An unlimited quantity. Wait a minute, the hose is right here, I'll hook it up to the faucet.

(JANOS walks behind the house and brings out a coiled garden hose. He squats and connects the end to a faucet in the middle of the garden. He places the other end into COMMANDATORE's hand, walks back over the faucet and squats.)

JANOS
Should I turn it on?

COMMANDATORE
Please.

(JANOS carefully turns on the water. COMMANDATORE holds the hose steadily in front of him, then raises it above his head and turns it on himself. JANOS watches astounded for a few moments, then turns off the faucet. COMMANDATORE is nonetheless soaked. JANOS stands frozen, at a loss for words.)

JANOS
Was that enough?

COMMANDATORE
Yes, for the time being. Thank you. (He smiles at JANOS, then begins wiping himself and his clothing with the toilet paper.)

(Enter KATIE with a "People's Radio."[2])

KATIE
Where should I put it?

(Beat. They watch COMMANDATORE. KATIE places the radio on the edge of the terrace, and plugs in the extension cord which disappears into the house.)

KATIE
I put the radio here.

ELVIRA
Good.

(All watch COMMANDATORE wipe himself. JANOS walks back to the terrace and sits down. LEPORICH appears at the door, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. He stops, looks at COMMANDATORE.)

SCHOLAR
The people's radio. (All look over at him.) The people's radio.

JANOS
That's right. The people's radio.

SCHOLAR
That's interesting. (Beat.)

SWEETY
What's so interesting about it?

SCHOLAR
(To JANOS:) You had a short-wave radio. An Orion.

JANOS
Had one.

SCHOLAR
It worked perfectly. We used to listen to the BBC. Then the government requisitioned it. They returned it to you in '45.

ELVIRA
That's right. Not the same one but one like it.

SCHOLAR
And... when was that? Even in '49 I listened to it at your place. What a great radio that was.

ELVIRA
It's down in the basement. Something burned out in it.

SCHOLAR
Interesting.

JUNIOR
What's so interesting?

SCHOLAR
(Stands up, and walks to the radio.) Such an ingenious contraption! Budapest 1, Budapest 2, and this little white circle in the middle. The other days I was visiting some friends and I asked them what this little white circle was. Their eight-year-old little boy just brushed me off with a wave of his hand and said: "That's the foreign places." And a foreign-sounding noise did come out of it. Maybe a Slavic language, with a little Italian stuck in. It's a wonderful set-up. How comforting to know that the outside world is so tiny and full of static, while there are two Hungarian stations. Extra Hungariam non est radio.[3] Our Hungarian inferiority complexes are perfectly solved using this brilliant little contraption. There is no outside world. Only Hungary.

LEPORICH
It may be adjusted to receive foreign stations for those who require it.

SCHOLAR
Yes, precisely that was the technical challenge: how could the receiver be made to jump directly from Budapest One to Budapest Two. So that we couldn't receive any other stations. That was difficult to figure out. But they did. And thank God. (He goes back to his chair, sits down.)

JANOS
That radio is a very inexpensive radio. I've gone out to rural areas where electricity had just been installed, and those people were already listening to the people's radio. And they were dirt poor! They listened to that radio as though it were God himself talking to them. The language of the people is Hungarian, and so we must speak to them in their language. (Beat.)

LEPORICH
If Comrade Assistant Under Secretary would like, I could adjust the radio to receive other stations, as well... It would be easier that way to... The receiver is, as you know...

JANOS
That's not necessary. (Beat.) If I wanted to, I could bring up the short-wave from the basement. Only one tube burned out in it. But I'm very happy with the people's radio, Comrade Leporich.

(SCHOLAR picks up the newspaper from the parapet and begins paging through.)

KATIE
He's still doing it.

(They look. COMMANDATORE is still wiping himself.)

SCHOLAR
Here it is! (All look at SCHOLAR.) If you don't mind, I'll read from a poem which appeared in today's issue of "Free People." Not in its entirety, just a few passages. Title: With Sound Serenity.

(Beat. SCHOLAR looks at the others, then begins.)

I watch Julie, her soft hands,
The dimple on her chin, her ever so slight mound.
In her eyes, so blue, serene, and sound
A burning conviction is found.
This playful shimmer,
Like light, is extinguished then rekindled again -
In her serene, blue eyes,
This burning conviction remain.

(He looks up.) Is once enough or should I read it again?

JUNIOR
Once is enough.

SCHOLAR
I went through this four times this morning, and I still don't understand it. "Slight mound." "Burning conviction." "Shimmer, like light, is extinguished then ignited again." A shimmer is itself a form of light, isn't it? It can't be "like" light - a shimmer is light. (Beat.)

In her serene, blue eyes
This burning conviction remain.
Yes, this conviction is ours,
Ours, Comrades, Communists,
The future speaks there in her smile,
Whose secret we unfold
For both in joy and in sorrow
Spring fruit ripens in the garden;
And our grandchildren soon shall recount
How we never, no never, left them in want.

(He looks up.) What can that mean? "The future speaks there in her smile / Whose secret we unfold"?

PROF
What don't you understand? The future is there in her smile.

SCHOLAR
So then where's the secret?

PROF
The future is always enigmatic.

SCHOLAR
Ah-hah. And it speaks. Enigmatically. In her smile.

PROF
This is verse, not prose. You can't read into it so literally.

SCHOLAR
Ah-hah. "And our grandchildren soon shall recount, how we never, no never, left them in want." ... Nicely convoluted. (Reading:)

Julie struggles yet to sit
She will soon sit then walk... (Looks up.)
In the secretive future. (Reading:)
In her eyes will soon be told
Living wonders of the world...

This is good. What are living wonders? Animals? Plants? The prehistoric mammals, maybe? Poetry. And the wonders are told. In her eyes. The little girl doesn't see these wonders, no no, the wonders are told - where? In her eyes. From where? Her pupils? The retina? And they're alive! (Reading:)

Soon she will admire her own son spell-bound,
The dimple on his chin, his ever so slight mound.

(Stops, looks up.) He also has a mound. And he's a boy. Well, it is possible she'll have a boy. But he too will have that ever so slight mound. Can a penis be described as a mound?

JUNIOR
It's a lyric vision.

SCHOLAR
Of course. This is verse, not prose. But how could a little boy have the same ever so slight mound as a little girl...

ELVIRA
(Stands up, walks behind SCHOLAR, looks into the paper:) Perhaps it's her chin's mound.

SCHOLAR
What?

ELVIRA
Well, both times it says, The dimple on her chin, ever so slight mound. So then her chin is her mound. Her chin's dimple, and her chin's mound. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
Chinmound! What a fantastic new word! Superb neologism! Dimpled chinmound. It's possible. Of course, it's obvious! That's the explanation! Thank you Elvira!

She will soon admire her own son spell-bound,
The dimple on his chin, his ever so slight mound,
And ripening in our hearts, all aflame,
Robust Communist conviction is found.

(Beat.) Nice. (He puts down the paper.)

JUNIOR
And?

SCHOLAR
Nothing. This is how we must speak to the People. Not in some foreign language, no no: in their own language.

JUNIOR
What do you want? You're the only person in the city who's read it through to the end. It was ordered for the Congress, they scraped it up, and here it is.

PROF
It may not be perfect, but it is sincere. Right? At least it's sincere!

ELVIRA
Laci, don't... Donci's become somewhat prickly. It's understandable. You don't have to...

PROF
It isn't the poem's imagery that bothers Donci, but the spirit of the poem. He's never accepted it.

SCHOLAR
That's right. And this was written by a national bard. The minstrel of our united nation.

JANOS
I didn't write that poem!

SCHOLAR
You could have written it.

(Beat. ELVIRA dashes back to her chair and sits down.)

SWEETY
It's not a bad poem. It's a beautiful poem. Everyone who has a little girl loves her just like that!

ELVIRA
Sweety!

SWEETY
(To PROF:) I'm sorry. You always have to be so careful what you say, I hate it.

JANOS
You don't have to be careful, darling, we love you as you are - sincere.

JUNIOR
(Points to COMMANDATORE.) What is he looking at? - For minutes he's been staring at something. A complete zombie. What are you staring at, Commandatore?

COMMANDATORE
Molehill... here... too. (They look over. Beat. Birds.) Molehill.

ELVIRA
Molehill. There's a molehill here, too.

(Beat. COMMANDATORE begins wiping the chair again.)

SWEETY
Why's he doing that?

ELVIRA
(Stands up, walks to COMMANDATORE, stops, watching him:) Why are you doing that? Is the chair dirty?

COMMANDATORE
The bacilli.

(Beat. COMMANDATORE offers a self-effacing grin to ELVIRA, then the others, and continues wiping.)

ELVIRA
Can I help? So you won't have to...

COMMANDATORE
No! Just me! Just me!

ELVIRA
Alright, alright then...

DOC
You better leave him alone.

ELVIRA
I didn't do anything! I just wanted to help! What are you butting in for?

SCHOLAR
(To ANNA:) Don't drink so much.

ANNA
What do you mean so much? I've barely had a sip. (Beat.)

JANOS
(Lifts his glass.) Well then, to Anna. (He pours for everyone, they drink.) You know Anna, some twenty years ago - an entire generation ago - Commandatore, your husband and myself, the three of us made a terrific pact. We dedicated ourselves to one proposition: and that was that even were the whole world around us prove weak and irresolute, we would never be, regardless of circumstance, come what may... and so we looked for models among those great men of the past, the wise men, the poets, those who stood up against evil. You might have called it a crusade. And later, when an entire nation hunted the very people you see here today, those great thinkers pointed the way so we might also bear that which fate had thrust upon us. We were blameless and innocent, Anna, and though harassed and hunted, there were few of more noble mind and peaceful spirit. For the good, the old, and the wise from those by-gone eras came to our aid, those who had drunk from the poison cup smiling. We devoured those authors in small, dingy rooms... where true peace of mind and happiness found its way into our heart. And though the light of the soul was extinguished in many places during those dark days, the light was on in one little room at least, at Doc's parent's. (Beat).

DOC
That's when I started Latin. God that was a long time ago. And - what good does it do me now?!

JANOS
And then, Anna, following our Liberation by the Red Army, we who had survived were swept up by an unforeseen energy. True, a fantastic number of us had died, but it didn't matter then, for joy had erupted from within us, inspiration, conviction that we, who had warned the nation against the oblivion of forgetting, we, guardians of the most noble traditions, we would be those to erase the power of fate, superstitions, the soul's unconscious writhing, the relentless incubi, we will erase them all from the face of the Earth... And then - the emptiness crushed us. Like an unseen power sucking the very marrow from our bones. Only then did we realize that the War had not only hunted our lives, no: it had sought to poison our souls and those of our children. We were disappointed, Anna, but not in ideas, as such: foremost we were disappointed in ourselves. All whom a mother has born, all are blighted in the end, Some deceived by others, (Places his hand on SCHOLAR's shoulder.) Some deceiving themselves... (Beat.)

JANOS
I've cheated myself, I've made mistakes. Yes I have. It's not easy to look emptiness straight in the eye.

PROF
Making a mistake is not the same as cheating. There are several kinds of mistakes. Unintentional mistakes are not the same as the rest, because there was no bad intention. There's no reason to blame oneself today.

JANOS
And yet still we feel persecuted. Still we are unable to spring from this emptiness. Not only me, Donci. Not a single one of us. Today, when we are the beneficiaries of this system in which certain things... happen. Today, when we live as few live. Right, Sweety? Very few. I say we must go back to that smoky little room together, those of us left alive and breathing. Those who didn't make it will ever know what we suffered - this was the greatest gift we could have received. And now we know we've squandered it. Yes. But it's not too late!

JUNIOR
(To ANNA:) Did your husband tell you all the shit we pulled during the war?

ANNA
No, he didn't. We didn't have enough time to... let him tell me.

JUNIOR
(Bursts out laughing) Picture this, Annie, when was it? 1943 New Years' Eve, that's right, because in '44 I was already living in a closet and that's where I shat, too, right there in the closet... So anyway, in '43 Donci came up with the idea of knocking on someone's door...

DOC
It wasn't Donci's idea, it was Commandatore's.

JUNIOR
Okay, it was Commandatore's idea, but Donci was there.

DOC
That's right.

JUNIOR
So. We fix ourselves up in a complete stranger's apartment... we said we were their distant relatives...

DOC
Fleeing from Transylvania.

JUNIOR
Right, fleeing from Transylvania. We went in, over there by the Technical University... what's that street called... right on the river... (Laughs) They open the door, Donci went in first with some insane spiel... the guy thought we really were his wife's relatives... The woman thought we were her husband's relatives...

DOC
Complete with a half-decorated Christmas tree, candles, cranberries, the whole bit...

JUNIOR
The missus weighed about 240, the girl 200... God, what sows!

PROF
We got the man drunk...

DOC
Janos immediately balled the wife...

JUNIOR
Donci her daughter...

DOC
No, first you did...

JUNIOR
Like hell! I waited my turn for the wife!

DOC
Our professor emptied his liquor cabinet.

PROF
Sorry. Commandatore helped me in that affair. He just watched the women, but he drank alright.

JUNIOR
That's right, even then Commandatore wasn't quite... Etelka, on the other hand, ran out. Etelka is our professor's wife, Annie, she's not here now, but she's his wife even today. So Donci climbed on the daughter. Then sooner or later everyone was on the daughter... Except Commandatore. The husband saw what was going on, but didn't want to see, relatives, you know... Christmas... the war... what an idiot... Then we left... In the morning, on that glorious first day of 1944, they must have thought angels had visited them... The Visitation! (He laughs, DOC laughs with him, Beat.)

ANNA
Is that what happened?

SCHOLAR
Yes. (Beat).

JUNIOR
Why, what should we have done? We weren't even sure we'd live to see the next day. You know, sinners and saints both only live once - - and then there's us! We didn't know whether we'd live even once!

JANOS
Annie, you shouldn't take what Junior says at his word. He's a writer, and so he embellishes. He adds flourishes to the stories he tells.

JUNIOR
I'm adding flourishes? Let me tell you some real stories!

JANOS
You're not telling stories now. (Beat.) Perhaps, Anna, this little anecdote embodies that emptiness we felt. And to fill it we tried to believe, and we tried to love. And we sincerely simulated this belief and this love - we hardly knew what we were doing. Before the events, which... which we, too, to some degree took part in. We couldn't know beforehand. Now we know. And we are struggling to regain our purity of being, lightness of spirit, that warmth we started out with... true sincerity, the ability to forgive... they couldn't have disappeared completely...

KATIE
(Enters.) Food is served. (Exits.)

ELVIRA
(Stands up.) It can't be eaten cold. I made the salad. I suggest we go in.

JUNIOR
Everything else can wait, but not the food. (Laughs, stands up.)

DOC
(To SCHOLAR:) A cornucopia. Go have a look.

(PROF stands up, goes in the house.)

JANOS
Comrade Leporich, if you think...

LEPORICH
No thank you, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary.

JANOS
Then just a small glass.

LEPORICH
We still have one appointment today.

JANOS
Don't tell me.

LEPORICH
(Takes out a notebook.) The Academy. Petõfi's revolutionary poetry.

JANOS
I'd completely forgot. How about a little fruit?

LEPORICH
I ate. But I might have a taste.

JANOS
Please, be my guest.

DOC
Is this going to be dinner or lunch?

JANOS
Dunch.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) If we were in Pest, it would be punch... (Laughs) I know, we're in Buda, better quit being such a Boeotian. Diner, souper, soiree! in which an ex-con and a lunatic are served! Let's go! Food's on!

(ELVIRA, DOC, JUNIOR, LEPORICH walk toward the door.)

SWEETY
(To JANOS:) I love it when you talk like that. You talk so good! I love it.

JANOS
Oh, darling! (Kisses her, pushes her toward the house, and walks over to COMMANDATORE.) Come in, the food's ready.

(SWEETY, ELVIRA, DOC, JUNIOR and LEPORICH watch COMMANDATORE.)

COMMANDATORE
(Stops rubbing, looks at the chair, then sits down, looks up, meditatively:) Thank you. (Beat.)

JANOS
But we'll bring it out if you want to eat here.

COMMANDATORE
No, thank you... I've eaten today.

JANOS
Yes... that's true... but it was a while ago... (Beat.) Just tell us if you get hungry.

COMMANDATORE
Of course.

JANOS
(Walks to the terrace, to SCHOLAR:) Let's go in.

(ANNA stands up. ELVIRA, JANOS, DOC, JUNIOR, SWEETY, LEPORICH watch.)

ANNA
Aren't you coming in?

SCHOLAR
(Remains sitting.) I don't know. (Beat.) You go ahead.

ANNA
You could be a little nicer to them. Now that we've been invited. And you don't have to constantly badger them. (Beat.)

ANNA
(To the others:) We're coming in a second.

ELVIRA
It'll get cold.

(ELVIRA, JANOS, DOC, JUNIOR, SWEETY, LEPORICH exit into the house.)


Scene 4.

(Beat.)

ANNA
What's wrong now?

SCHOLAR
Nothing.

ANNA
You know it would be nice if you could be happy just for once. It's just terrible the way you're sitting here, just like at home, with such a tragic expression on your face.

SCHOLAR
Well, I guess we've survived this, too. Almost. We lost Agnes.

ANNA
Who?

SCHOLAR
Laci's daughter. She committed suicide.

ANNA
Who's Laci?

SCHOLAR
Oh, the professor... he was sitting there. (Beat.) She was a smart girl, very pretty and sweet. There was none of Etelka's bitterness, just her intelligence. She was the only child in our circle of friends... We just adored her. It was as though she was everyone's child. She was somehow proof... that when children like her are born into the world... then there's still hope... That biologically at least the world's not completely lost. (Beat.)

ANNA
Sweety, she said a lot of things in the studio... She's Janos' lover, that's why she's living here. Janos "keeps" her... Janos is her best "master," that's how she put it.

SCHOLAR
Janos is her what?

ANNA
Master. She said before Janos she had a lot of masters, but Janos is the best one so far.

SCHOLAR
Let's leave. Alright? Let's go. This is too painful for me. I really did love these people at some point. It's terrible to see... that this is what's become of them. (Beat.)

ANNA
They're interesting! They're okay.

SCHOLAR
These people?

ANNA
They enjoy life! They enjoy having a garden, drinking wine, things like that.

SCHOLAR
This garden is too good for them. You know whose it is? The state's. It was issued by the government. Janos got it before he even lifted a finger. And he's serving them well for it.

ANNA
They're your friends.

SCHOLAR
They were my friends.

ANNA
We were invited to come here. You can't go on acting like this. You can't go on like this all the time. What have they done to us? You're going to end up like him. (Points to COMMANDATORE.) Just like him. I can't say it's a pleasure living with you.

SCHOLAR
I know.


Scene 5.

(Enter JANOS from house.)

JANOS
What's the matter, aren't you two coming in? (Beat. He walks over to them.)

ANNA
We're not hungry. We ate before we came.

JANOS
(Sits down.) Hey, what's the problem? Can I help?

ANNA
No, you can't. Not even you. No one.

JANOS
Oh, but I might.

ANNA
Not with this. You know what's so awful? Not that for three years, innocently he... because he was innocent, you can believe me. Not that I was fired, had to become a sales girl, that they harassed me to divorce him, a class traitor... because it was so obvious that I wouldn't get a divorce, even if I starved to death first... It's what keep me alive. Not for his sake but for myself. I had somebody. Something that I could count on. Who was behind bars. Someone they couldn't take away from me. Who I could send packages to - for three years. Do you understand? Packages to somebody, who's mine, who exists, and who is mine only.

SCHOLAR
Anna...

JANOS
Let her! What she's saying is magnificent!

ANNA
We had such a short time together, a few months... He was my everything! I didn't know him, it's easy that way, huh? I swear, not many people had the peace of mind I had for those three years. Because he was so far from me. I couldn't visit him, and so he became more and more important, and more and more perfect... They were crucifying him, and compared to that my problems... I could go out to the park... I don't think you understand what I'm trying to say.

JANOS
Of course I understand.

ANNA
And I hoped he would come back looking just as young as when they took him, in pajamas, half-asleep.

SCHOLAR
Please...

ANNA
I stood there in my nightgown, five of them came and surrounded him... like an armed robber!

JANOS
Terrible!

ANNA
And that's how I survived. I could have gone mad. What I went through, what should I send him? What does he need?! They told me that he wouldn't get it anyway, it'd be stolen, and yet night after night... from the few lousy Forints I had. But that's how I managed. I should be thankful that they took him away. Just not that they let him out.

JANOS
Anna! (Beat.)

ANNA
Then a man rang the bell... just rang the bell, some person... he looked like him, didn't even look so bad, but not like... It wasn't him I sent the packages to... and he just rang the bell and walked in... into my room, which I had cleaned for him, like a crazy person, sometimes twice a day, because he might come back at any moment, he might come in the morning, or at night, tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, but he's coming, and then a man just walks in... as if he were coming home from a day at the office. And looks up at me like I was his savior.

JANOS
He couldn't help that. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
Don't say these things, Anna. Not even if this is how you feel right now. This is too serious. (Beat.)

ANNA
I'm sorry. - I'm sorry. Let's go, I wanted to come here, we didn't really need to. Let's leave.

JANOS
You don't really think I'd let you go now, do you? Such a marvelous person? Do you know what value and rarity a such woman as yourself represents? There are no real women today. Men spend their lives without a real companion, hunting for meager substitutes. There are no women who might be a man's companion, physically, spiritually, a soul mate! And yet we pretend that there were... we pretend. But there are none. We have no real partners.

ANNA
I'm not his partner. He drags all kinds of books home, in every language, and I don't even understand the titles.

JANOS
That doesn't matter, Anna. A woman doesn't need to know those things, but something else. What you do know.

ANNA
He doesn't need me. I'm just in his way.

JANOS
But you can't know that. You're too young, and still have no confidence. But the man does not exist to whom you would not be equal partner. I understand you. The moment I saw you I felt that you were a woman...

SCHOLAR
(Stands up.) I'm going to go eat something. Just go ahead and seduce my wife.

ANNA
Why are you being like that?!

SCHOLAR
Alright, I won't be like that. I'm hungry. You both go ahead and debate what exactly it is that I need. (Exits into the house.)


Scene 6.

(Beat.)

JANOS
I've hurt his feelings. (Beat.) I honestly didn't mean to! Quite the opposite. Life is so hard... for a person like him... he... He was the happiest fellow among us.

ANNA
Let's go inside.

JANOS
The most important person in my life. Even if I haven't seen him for years. It was enough for me to know that he existed. And yet... I'm unable to find the right words, both of us are...

(ANNA pours herself a glass, downs it.)

JANOS
It only natural he's become so ill-natured. With all of his problems. And toward those who would help him. It's also understandable that he's jealous.

ANNA
He's what?

JANOS
Jealous.

ANNA
Him? He cares more about his crummy books than he does about people.

JANOS
It's written on his face. The way he looks at you. And how he only said a few words to you. - I'd be jealous too.

ANNA
He has no reason to be! None!

JANOS
I don't mean to hurt your feelings, either... (Beat.)

ANNA
Let's go in.

JANOS
I want to help you.

ANNA
I don't need your help. I'm not so bad off.

JANOS
I want to help you in my friend's interest. You're not the one I'm concerned with. If any other woman had come with him, blind in one eye, with a wooden-leg, a hunch-back, I would have wanted to help her as well. (Beat.)

ANNA
Don't you think you should have started helping sooner if he's such a great a friend of yours?

JANOS
Oh, yes I do.

ANNA
Before they took him away.

JANOS
Donci was detached... but you're right, I shouldn't have let him go.

ANNA
Why do you think he's so desperate for your help?

JANOS
Because there's no one else who will stand by him. (Beat.)

ANNA
Maybe I'm too insensitive.

JANOS
That's possible, too.

ANNA
What? What about all your compliments?

JANOS
At times a man will exaggerate in his own interest.

ANNA
You lied to me.

JANOS
In all likelihood, yes.

ANNA
I'm not really such a great catch, but you just can't let me go, right?. Maybe Sweety falls for all this...

JANOS
Who?

ANNA
Sweety, if I understood her name right. Upstairs, in the studio, she described your manly attractions to me in detail. Well, when I saw you I have to admit I was surprised. Looking at you I wouldn't think you were capable of living with two women. Or are there others, too?

JANOS
There are.

ANNA
Don't you think that's immoral?

JANOS
No, I don't. I don't hurt them, I help them - I liberate in them that which is natural and gives rise to pleasure. I would be acting immorally if I were to withhold myself from them.

ANNA
Such self-sacrifice.

JANOS
Oh, no, not at all. I also enjoy it. I take pleasure in this natural endowment. I would never think of hindering others with theirs, I simply live with my own.

ANNA
Let's go inside.

JANOS
I'm surrounded by beasts! I'll be just like them soon! I'm unfaithful to Elvira and she tolerates it! While she plays the role of the dignified wife and celebrated painter. Sweety reads pulp fiction, adores operettas, and is desperately in love with movie actors! (JANOS laughs, ANNA looks at him sadly.)

JANOS
These men... who in better days were good, decent men... I think of my younger brother - it was as if I saw myself in a twisted mirror, my mannerisms... Doc is emptied of any human emotion, a meat grinder, nothing interests him but his career... And Laci... our famous professor.

ANNA
I'm not interested!

JANOS
Killers wallow in my soul! I killed Donci, too, I know... not directly, I could even redeem myself now, but I don't.

ANNA
Don't talk about that! (Beat.)

JANOS
What?

ANNA
Not that! Talk about something else!

JANOS
What should I talk about?

ANNA
Do I know? You should know! (Beat.)

JANOS
I don't know a thing. All I know is that I need you. The moment I saw you I was struck. You could help take me to this new golden age. Don't think I'm exaggerating! Sometimes a glance is all it takes to grasp everything. The entire person, undivided, the body and the soul. This is what's happened to me, not half an hour ago. (Beat.) You're my soul mate. My equal. A man can struggle with you, fight for what is right. Independence. Personality. You're precious as any king's ransom, the dearest, through which a man may find himself - through which I will find myself! (Beat.) It's simply tragic that we didn't meet under different, more equal circumstances. Too much clings to me: power, spotlight, poetry, but it all means nothing to me. I would have liked to meet you at a bus-stop somewhere, in a threadbare suit, worn briefcase, a nobody... and approach you like so!

ANNA
Like in a movie.

JANOS
I'm jealous of everyone who leads a humble life. Of course it's not seemly for me to say so, but even Donci... This guilt, insomnia, this drunken feeling of sin - which I can rationally reject, but is impossible to come to terms with emotionally - I wouldn't wish on an enemy. But in this country today, everyone above a certain standard of living with even the most minimal morals finds it inescapable.

ANNA
Move into an apartment.

JANOS
You'll laugh: I've played with the idea very seriously! But I won't give up this garden, for I have a philosophy of life which I don't want to give up, and I won't - and that philosophy is one of happiness. Life should be filled with joy, glory, full of wonders. My job is to proclaim joy, especially now when it's so difficult to find... This is my modernity! Why will Hamlet not commit suicide? Have you ever thought about it? He would happily commit suicide, but he is afraid: "... for in that sleep of death what dreams may come?" Fearing the horrors of the world to come he chooses the lesser evil: life. In Shakespeare's day they knew that life was not good. They would have run to their deaths if the vision of hell hadn't restrained them. The idea that life is good is only a few hundred years old. We have nothing over on the other side - and that is worst of all. Life is good by comparison... And you agree with me. We both grew up in this belief, to some degree. And I am grateful, for this is progress! This is Europe, this is the Renaissance, this is the Enlightenment, this is revolution! I will not regress back to any religion, any kind of mysticism, any form of oriental fatalism or submission... this is the struggle! You believe and you are suffering, Anna, because those who have been wronged, who are weak, try to convince you that there is greatness and nobility in suffering, but you are a healthy, whole person, born for pleasure and happiness... (ANNA stands up and throws her arms around his neck.) Our senses and our feelings are smarter than we are, Anna, thank God. Courage does not lie, Anna, in our ability to help a wretched...

ANNA
You don't have to talk anymore.

JANOS
Courage lies in our ability to discard that part of our personality, which seems real, but which in fact is an alien morality forced upon us. Naturally, through the giving and taking of pleasure...

(ANNA lowers JANOS' head, kisses him, and pulls him down to the ground. JANOS takes off ANNA's underwear. Sounds of copulation. COMMANDATORE watches, dazed. Birds chirp. After a lengthy time LEPORICH appears at the door, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. He notices the couple, watches them with interest, then looks at his watch.)

LEPORICH
Excuse me, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary. (The sounds cease, JANOS rises to his knees.) We must leave for the Academy.

JANOS
Yes. (He stands up, zips his fly, straightens his tie, runs his fingers through his hair, then looks down at ANNA, lying on her back.) My love, my dearest, I must go, Petõfi's revolutionary poetry, half an hour, stay here! I'll come back for you!

(JANOS runs out stage right. LEPORICH picks up JANOS' jacket on the chair, exits after him. ANNA sits up, then stands up, staggering a little, drinks from the bottle. She notices COMMANDATORE, who turns his head away.)

ANNA
(Walks over to COMMANDATORE.) Were you here?

COMMANDATORE
I'm far away, young lady. Out there it snows, quietly. Always.

(ANNA shuffles back to the terrace, stands. Beat. The birds sing. The rumble of a car, it fades away. ANNA picks up her underwear, quickly disappears behind the house left into the garden.)

Intermission.


Scene 7.

(Birds are heard singing. COMMANDATORE roosts in his chair. ELVIRA, SWEETY, JUNIOR, DOC, PROF, SCHOLAR, behind them KATIE, enter from the house.)

JUNIOR
Why did the Party Congress begin today? It's obvious: they knew we'd demolish the English! God, what national unity, what unity!

DOC
But what if the English had beaten us?

JUNIOR
Then we'd have capitalism here tomorrow. Two weeks ago when the Yugoslavs beat the English two-one the Central Committee dropped its jaw. Tito is screwing us over again! Think about it! our win isn't worth so much now!

SCHOLAR
Where's Anna?

ELVIRA
You left her with Janos, didn't you?

SWEETY
Janos went to the Academy. To give a talk.

(Beat. SCHOLAR looks at COMMANDATORE.)

SCHOLAR
Have you seen Anna? Anna... my wife. (Beat.) Do you know who I am?

COMMANDATORE
Of course, Donci. Hello.

SCHOLAR
Hello. (Beat.) My wife was here... I left her with Janos.

COMMANDATORE
She was here. She went for a walk. In the garden.

SCHOLAR
With Janos?

COMMANDATORE
Janos has left. In an automobile.

ELVIRA
Your lunch is getting completely cold! Don't you want to eat?

COMMANDATORE
Thank you. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Katie, bring out that folding table and set it... while everything's hot.

KATIE
Right away, ma'am. (Exits.)

ELVIRA
I thought we'd have the bloody marys and fruit outside.

DOC
(Looks up) It's going to rain.

ELVIRA
Yes... The air is so heavy!... But we won't get caught in it. - I mixed the bloody marys myself.

SWEETY
What a great name, bloody mary! It's so... exciting! I'd never even heard of it before I came here, I pictured something really strange, like some kind of magic potion... But it's good.

DOC
He's still not on? (Walks to the radio, turns it on. A folk song is heard.)

JUNIOR
(Laughs) The Congress is dancing.

PROF
This is still "Good Music for Good Work."

DOC
(Turns off the radio.) This godamn daylight-saving's time has got me completely turned around.

(KATIE enters with the folding table, pushes it close to COMMANDATORE's chair, runs back into the house.)

PROF
If we weren't on daylight-saving's time, the speech would be starting later, right? Mozart would be starting now.

DOC
Right. It's an hour later now.

JUNIOR
What do you mean later? Earlier!

PROF
Earlier? What are you talking about? Six o'clock has now become seven o'clock.

JUNIOR
That's why it's earlier! 'Cause it's six o'clock!

PROF
I'm saying, at seven o'clock it's really six o'clock!

JUNIOR
You boob! Yesterday at midnight we had to set the clocks forward an hour.

DOC
That is why it's later, Junior. Figure it out. One hour more is one hour later.

(JUNIOR shakes his head, but remains quiet.)

ELVIRA
Well, the dogs don't know about the time change. (To SCHOLAR:) There are so many dogs out here again. Everyone owns a dog... They invite us to dinner, but they're scared... they think the dogs will protect them... (Beat.) Now the dogs bark an hour later. Or rather, at the same time.

JUNIOR
That's right, only us humans are dumb enough to fall for it! (Laughs.)

(KATIE enters with a table cloth, tray, sets the plates and cutlery.)

ELVIRA
Katie, the bloody marys and fruit.

KATIE
In a moment. (Exits into house.)

(ELVIRA, then JUNIOR, DOC, PROF, SWEETY sit down.)

ELVIRA
Donci, aren't you sitting down?

SCHOLAR
I'll look for Anna.

ELVIRA
Oh, let her walk through the garden. She hasn't seen it yet.

JUNIOR
Sometimes you just got to let the misses roam free. Let her think she's not really a slave after all. (Laughs.)

(SCHOLAR sits down. KATIE brings the food, places it on the table before COMMANDATORE. Beat.)

KATIE
Bon appetit. (Beat.) Please begin.

(Beat. KATIE goes back to the terrace. She watches COMMANDATORE.)

ELVIRA
Thank you, Katie.

KATIE
I'll bring the rest right away. (Exits into house.)

SWEETY
Does he eat?

DOC
Most likely.

(All watch COMMANDATORE.)

SWEETY
Maybe he's one of those kinds who don't eat meat. There's a word for 'em.

PROF
Vegetarian.

SWEETY
That's it!

JUNIOR
If he gets hungry he'll eat. We've just got to leave him alone.

SWEETY
(To SCHOLAR:) You didn't eat very much.

SCHOLAR
I had enough.

PROF
Might we take that as an insult?

SCHOLAR
If you like. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Others were locked up, too, you know, in the old regime they locked people up too, and they didn't become so... so...

SCHOLAR
So what?

ELVIRA
So sensitive...

(SCHOLAR bursts out laughing.)

SWEETY
It's got to have been hard on him.

ELVIRA
It's hard for us as well! Just that things like what happened to him can happen... It takes a real toll on us! On everyone! But he doesn't have to... without reason!

JUNIOR
(To DOC:) You know what's next? The political prisoners are going to stream out of prison en masse, parading their principles, and then showing off their bruises they'll nicely give all of us the boot. That's next. (To SCHOLAR:) I'm not talking about you, Donci, naturally. (To DOC:) How much do you want to bet?

DOC
Come on.

JUNIOR
Just wait. We'll be the traitors of the working class, and they'll be the saints. If they'd stayed out of jail, then maybe they wouldn't have stayed so immaculate. But they locked 'em up, and now they're coming back. Pretty soon they'll be the ones lecturing us.

DOC
There aren't very many of them. And the ones who survived are happy they've still got a hole to shit from.

(Enter KATIE with fruit and bowls, places them on the table, exits.)

ELVIRA
(To SCHOLAR:) Don't let this talk bother you, we're all just a little nervous right now. The heat will do it to you. Help yourself everyone.

SCHOLAR
(To SWEETY:) This is quite peculiar for me, Sweety. There was a time when these people here were my best friends. When they didn't have power. Really. They meant an incredible amount to me. They were like my family. An ideal, a real home existing around ideas. Because of these people I didn't leave the country when I should have. Isn't that strange?

(Enter KATIE with a tray of bloody marys. She places it down, stands.)

ELVIRA
You may go now.

(KATIE, slightly taken aback, exits.)

DOC
Well. Let's get on with it. (Walks to the radio, turns it on. A march - "Sports March" - is heard.) There are a lot of people who manage to work quite happily in this country. (Turns off the radio, walks over to COMMANDATORE:) Why don't you eat something. Do you know what that is? Tenderloin! The real thing!

COMMANDATORE
Thank you. Just a little longer... I'll eat in a moment. It's good, to eat. Just a little while longer.

DOC
What's the cooking like down there?

COMMANDATORE
The cooking is good.

DOC
I can imagine. (Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
Good. Plentiful. (Beat.) Just a moment. Please be patient.

DOC
Oh, I'm not rushing you. Take your time. (Goes back to the terrace. To ELVIRA:) This wasn't one of Janos' brighter ideas.

JUNIOR
No, not really.

(DOC sits down again, takes a strawberry, eats.)

ELVIRA
Whipped cream?

DOC
(Indicating no:) Hmmm.

JUNIOR
Your figure! (Laughs. Beat.)

(SCHOLAR stands up, disappears left behind the house into the garden.)


Scene 8.

JUNIOR
Well, those two aren't destined for a long life together.

SWEETY
And she's so sweet.

JUNIOR
That's why.

SWEETY
Donci, he's not even so old. If he wasn't so nervous, he'd be a good-looking guy.

JUNIOR
You'd sleep with him, huh?

SWEETY
I would.

ELVIRA
It won't happen, Sweety-pie. Donci has principles.

SWEETY
So what if he does, did the both of you have principles?

ELVIRA
We were friends. Friends. Do you know what that is?

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Donci didn't need Elvira. He took his hormones to a whorehouse. So his soul might muse unadulterated.

SWEETY
He's an alright guy.

DOC
He's in love with his wife, Sweety. So in this case you should forget about your true calling in life.

JUNIOR
Probably impotent. For years after they get out his kind droop hopelessly.

(Enter ANNA right. They look at her. She stops right of COMMANDATORE.)

ANNA
Didn't he come back yet?

ELVIRA
He's looking for you in the garden, dear.

ANNA
I didn't hear the car. (Beat.)

JUNIOR
(Bursts out laughing:) We're talking about Donci. He seeks your Highness' presence in the garden. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
I'll warm up the lunch.

ANNA
No. Thank you.

ELVIRA
Then at least have some fruit.

ANNA
No. Thank you. (Beat. To COMMANDATORE:) The garden is so lovely. (COMMANDATORE looks at her, silent.) Why don't we go for a walk?

COMMANDATORE
I'll stay...

ANNA
I'll show you around, okay? I've just seen it. It slopes in back, completely untouched.

ELVIRA
We've planned on putting a trellis there for years now... .

ANNA
It'd be a shame to ruin it.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) It seems the ladies differ in taste.

ANNA
The garden is perfect as it is.

ELVIRA
Oh! (Beat.) I'm so happy you're enjoying our garden.

ANNA
It's not good for you to sit here in one place, you should go for a walk... I'd be happy to have a talk with you.

COMMANDATORE
No, I'd rather stay... (Raises his hands in defense, brings his two fists in front of his eyes, like binoculars.) All that is happening... is, behind a veil of rain... You are there, too. (Laughs.) This is good, you are there... There's no problem... I'm still here.

(Beat. KATIE appears in the door, stops.)

ANNA
Okay, don't misunderstand me, I didn't...

(COMMANDATORE lowers his hands, looks apologetically at ANNA. ANNA smiles back, nods, walks to the terrace, sits down, sighs, smiles. Beat.)

JUNIOR
It's not so easy with him. No woman yet has been able to catch his eye... You see, not even you! (He shakes his head.) Try one of us. Me, for example, I'd gladly be a sweet two-some with you. (Laughs) Hasn't yet been a teacher. A post office girl, pharmacist, wife of a ship captain, librarian at a "meet the author" evening yes, but a teacher... I wrote about a few of them in my last book, did you read it?

ANNA
No.

JUNIOR
It was just published. My best book.

ANNA
I haven't read any of your books. (Smiles at JUNIOR.)

DOC
(Laughing:) Well now! A teacher, and she doesn't read...

ANNA
There's so much to... I just don't find the time, for the classics, for anything.

ELVIRA
I'm sure you must be very overworked.

ANNA
It's not the teaching which takes up my time, but what comes afterwards.

SWEETY
Oh, I'd love to teach little kids! It'd be so fun!

ANNA
If there weren't 45 of them in one class, all crowded together... and they weren't kept inside all day... when the sun is out... hunched over, forced to keep their hands behind their backs... What they need is exercise, to run around. But during the ten-minute recess they walk in a circle, single-file. And I have to keep them in line, with a whistle in my mouth... They walk in a circle like little prisoners, seven, eight-year-old kids... This would be a wonderful place for a school.

ELVIRA
Here?

ANNA
Such a big garden. They'd love it. Seventy, eighty children would fit in the house. Two teachers would be just enough. And I'd cook for them. The school food is disgusting. There could be a slide in back of the garden. The children could play in the smaller rooms. The dining room would be the classroom, the studio the day room... We wouldn't need a thing... just a few benches and tables... Whoever is bored in class would go out and play... (Beat.) But this must be boring for all of you.

JUNIOR
Not at all! Just the opposite! It's very interesting. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Bloody mary?

ANNA
Thank you. (Helps herself, has a sip.) It's delicious.

SWEETY
Elvira made it.

ANNA
It's very good.


Scene 9.

(Beat. SCHOLAR enters stage right, from the garden, stops right of COMMANDATORE's chair. COMMANDATORE watches SCHOLAR. SCHOLAR looks back at him.)

SCHOLAR
How long are you going to sit here for? All day?

COMMANDATORE
Why not?... This is good.

SCHOLAR
Good?

COMMANDATORE
Good.

SCHOLAR
Other places are just as good, right? Anywhere. Wherever.

COMMANDATORE
Just as good.

SCHOLAR
Sure, you know best... (He's shaken up. Pause.)

JUNIOR
Let him sit there. Who's he bothering?

SCHOLAR
For how many years have you been sitting around - wherever? Seven? Eight? (Beat.) You didn't count. Why should you count... Oh God. (He moves to the terrace, stops. To ANNA:) I've been looking for you everywhere.

PROF
Your wife has become possessed by this garden. She seems to think it's hers. (ANNA drinks.)

SCHOLAR
Don't drink on an empty stomach. You haven't eaten today.

ANNA
Not true. I ate.

SCHOLAR
Like hell you ate!

ANNA
Like hell I did eat! I had two rolls at school.

SCHOLAR
When was that? And you never even eat breakfast.

ANNA
Because I'm always rushing out in the morning. (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Sit down, Donci... Some strawberries?

SCHOLAR
No, thank you. We'd better be leaving.

ELVIRA
Already? You just came!

SCHOLAR
Yes, but I have a lot to do. We have a lot to do.

ANNA
I'd like to stay.

ELVIRA
You see! After so many years you really could spend one afternoon with us.

JUNIOR
What's the matter, you've got to go shelve books for those schmucks this instant?

ANNA
He worked this morning, like I did. He wants to go home to read.

JUNIOR
So you'll read tonight.

SCHOLAR
I have a lot of reading to do.

DOC
I wouldn't have thought many books have been published in the last three years that you would want to read.

SCHOLAR
Books existed before then.

DOC
You've read all those books.

SCHOLAR
Then I'll read them all again. I have a new perspective now. (To ANNA:) Let's go.

ANNA
Let's stay.

JUNIOR
Let her stay! You've become so forceful! I wouldn't have recognized you. Let her stay if she's enjoying herself!

ANNA
I feel so good. I'm so happy. Just like... Like when I was in high school. There was this time, I was going to school one morning, waiting for the street car, I had finally solved my math homework from the night before, the street car came, and the sun shone on the window, pure red, I looked across to Buda, even the windows across the river were shining, the windows, everything was so sharp, pure, everything was... Maybe this was what they mean by a state of grace. It was the most beautiful morning of my life.

(Beat. SCHOLAR sits. Beat.)

SWEETY
(To SCHOLAR:) You should eat something. You didn't eat. You just had one piece of bread.

DOC
You don't have an ulcer by any chance?

SCHOLAR
I do. Everyone gets one.

DOC
You should eat more. Try to neutralize the stomach acids.

ANNA
He doesn't eat. I don't have the time to worry about it, and I don't. My stomach is fine, he doesn't eat because he doesn't want to. He just eats the same things he did in prison. Bread, and he cooks some horrible gruel, with disgusting gristle floating on top... He buys the gristle at the butcher's. He won't let me cook for him. He's getting ready to go back.

SWEETY
Go back where?

ANNA
Prison. (Beat.)

DOC
Come on, Donci! They just let you out!

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Well! That's swell! Donci's getting ready to go back!

ELVIRA
Donci, are you really?...

SWEETY
That's why he's not eating? He won't eat 'cause he's scared that... ? He should eat more! We didn't have food back home, but when we did you couldn't stop us! When you got food you got to eat it! It's so stupid he doesn't eat! - Katie! You got to eat everything when it's there, right?!

KATIE
Um, that's right. Or pack in ice what's left, or dig a ditch deep enough to...

SWEETY
You got to eat everything! And eat more if you're not sure there'll be any left the next day!

DOC
But tell us... you think they'll bring you back?

SCHOLAR
(Laughs) Is it out of the question, theoretically?

ANNA
He says... each state is only transitory. Especially when something is good. Only you don't have to fall into that trap, that's what he says. That's the trap. - Did I say it right?

DOC
Pardon me - what's the trap exactly? That they finally let you out and you have food to eat? Could you explain that one to me?

SCHOLAR
The problem might be that they forget about me and they don't take me back. Who knows? That in itself might destroy me. (Laughs) But I don't want to bore the company.

JUNIOR
Oh, please, just go on and bore us... This must be some kind of psychosis.

SCHOLAR
Obviously.

DOC
Are you afraid that... you'll forget? Or what the hell are you talking about? Are you afraid you're getting soft? (To ANNA:) Does our dear friend sleep on the bed?

ANNA
Me? Where else would I sleep?

DOC
No, him. Does he sleep on the floor?

ANNA
No.

SCHOLAR
I didn't bring the planks home with me, if that's what you're thinking.

DOC
That's what I'm thinking. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
A few years ago I still had some bonds... From the Monarchy. War bonds from 1916, 1917. My grandfather bought them... and went bankrupt because of them. Then they disappeared. Printed nicely on each one was the maturity date. Like the peace bonds today. I remember, the last maturation date would have been in 1990. (Laughs) They thought it was possible to look ahead, to plan. If the monarchy issued a bond in 1916, then in 1990 the monarchy would exist if only because of the date on the certificate. That's how they planned. Generations ahead. Everything was permanent and reliable. It's funny, really, looking back today... That was really a unique way of thinking.

ELVIRA
Don't take this the wrong way, Donci, but to think they're going to send you back to... When they've admitted that mistakes were made!...

SCHOLAR
It wasn't necessarily a mistake.

ELVIRA
What do you mean not necessarily a mistake? What are you talking about?

SCHOLAR
Maybe I made the mistake, thinking I couldn't be... and didn't have to be taken to prison. But why not? There's no need for a specific motive. Of course, they provide the motive. But even that was unnecessary. There's a shortage of everything... and they have to take from those who have... It really doesn't matter what, it could be an apartment or a book... But even that's unnecessary. Our very existence is built upon forced labor. By comparison everything else is transitory, random... and futile. It's easy to forget. Some never even realize... One or two weeks of eating well and you're as stupid as before. (Beat.)

PROF
You believe that? You think that our society... is built upon forced labor?

SCHOLAR
Every society, Laci... Not only ours. Every single one, if that makes you feel better. You know, Laci... it's a big mistake to think that slavery, feudalism... and all the rest... tribal society, for example... that they've disappeared. They haven't. They're right here. Deep within Europe, deep down, they've all remained. In the reflexes of a common criminal, in a prison guard's family life... they've all remained. The propaganda continues. And the people responsible are people like us. And some not only propagate it, they honestly believe it, too. But come on now, in the second half of our century, Laci, it's time to wake up... It's time. This is the century of triumphant cannibalism, Laci. It doesn't matter what you call it, fascism, whatever... I'm not saying this to convince you... I don't want to convince you... and I don't expect you to try to convince me of anything, either. You're fine as long as you have your illusions, your vision of changing the world... As long as you're proclaiming something, anything, it could be anything, but not the truth... I'm not trying to change your ideology, Laci, you can live with it, and if you report me to the police because this is what I believe, then you did the right thing, your ideology is a good one, I admit that... I only said all this because you happened to ask. (Smiles at PROF.)

ELVIRA
Do you cook?

ANNA
I'm sorry?

ELVIRA
I mean you do cook, don't you, dear?

ANNA
Cook? Sometimes... But he never eats what I cook. But I always buy ice for the ice-box. (To SCHOLAR:) If you want to go, there's milk and eggs in the ice-box... Buy some bread. (Beat.) When would I cook? I never cook just for myself. And I have such a stupid teaching schedule... This week I work mornings until Wednesday, and afternoons from Thursday, and next week the reverse. (Beat.)

PROF
What do you think, what do you think it is that I'm doing?

DOC
He doesn't think anything, he has a philosophical temperament, it's just coming out now.

PROF
One passage coming from that philosophical temperament referred to me...

JUNIOR
Oh let it go. He's a hurt man, he's just looking to hurt someone back. Forget about it.

PROF
How, without saying one word, do you tolerate your husband... asserting such views... publicly. I honestly have to say that the mistake they made was not that they locked him up... but that they let him out.

SCHOLAR
There's truth in that. Prison is like childhood - very instrumental in shaping a man, though perhaps not effective enough. (Stands up.) Let's go. I have no time for this.

PROF
You have not time for what?

JUNIOR
Forget it!...

PROF
What don't you have any time for?

SCHOLAR
For this. Wasting my time here.

ELVIRA
And what do you mean by wasting your time?

SCHOLAR
Maybe you all have time. But I don't.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Don't tell me they're coming for you tomorrow morning?

SCHOLAR
Early in the morning. Two, three in the morning... Maybe they won't bring me back, and I'll simply keel over one day. That's bad enough, isn't it? - Anna, please...

ANNA
One afternoon won't change a thing! - Since he's come home... he's a lunatic. He just reads and runs back and forth in his room, mumbling to himself, swearing... At night I wake up and he's stomping around, turning on the light, flipping through pages, clearing his throat, walking around like this, just like a crazy person. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
That's my business, don't you think?

ELVIRA
Janos is the same way! He'll get an idea, some line for a poem, or an image will come to mind, and he won't be able to go to sleep until he finishes! - It's a good thing.

SCHOLAR
Janos knows precisely what he has to write. He's a happy man. Myself, on the other hand... The authors I read, they've lied so much, too much, I go through mountains of books before stumbling across one random honest line... those places where their towers of ethos have collapsed... which they built so strenuously... They steal my time, too, everybody... The living, the dead, everybody steals my time. I've got to hurry! I've got to defend what is so pitifully small now, it isn't even worth defending... Precisely because it's worth nothing, it's become so dwarfed and diseased... And everyone can throw my time away, but I can't... I'm not allowed to wake up at night... Reflecting is forbidden... Of course, this too is an illusion, it's my business... I know... I have a goal, towards which I must strive - the perfection of my so-called unacceptable personality. And this is Europe, mere pretense, the belief in progress, which never was... Yes, there is no trace of humility in me, of wisdom, no trace! Maybe three years was too little... It wasn't even three... Inside I was told that after three years comes the big transformation... something irreversible, that's when the individual breaks, precisely after three years... They could have kept me in for another few weeks! I came out the same as when I went in... I didn't learn a thing... I've only lost my patience. (Silence, SCHOLAR looks them all over, then looks at ANNA. To ANNA:) There is a poem... inside it came to mind... I'd repeat it to myself... because it's beautiful...

SCHOLAR
God doth not need
Either man's work or his own gifts; who best
Bear his mild yoke, they serve Him best. His state
Is kingly. Thousands at his bidding speed
And post o'er land and ocean without rest;
For they too serve who stand and wait."

You know the man who wrote that had gone blind... I'd read it first before the war, then forgot it... I didn't think I knew it by heart.

SWEETY
Who wrote that?

PROF
Milton. (Beat.)

SWEETY
Sounds like German to me.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Almost.

SWEETY
I didn't have French nannies when I was growing up, okay? I can't help it!

COMMANDATORE
The last line is wrong.

SCHOLAR
For they serve too who only stand and wait.

COMMANDATORE
That's not it. "For they also serve who only stand and wait. For they only serve who stand and wait... For they too slave who stand and wait..."

SCHOLAR
Slave?

COMMANDATORE
Slave.

SCHOLAR
Serve.

COMMANDATORE
Slave.

SCHOLAR
Serve.

COMMANDATORE
Slave.

SCHOLAR
"They serve Him best who only stand and wait."

COMMANDATORE
"They also slave who stand and wait."

SCHOLAR
Milton knew servitude, Commandatore. You know slavery.

(COMMANDATORE concentrates, mumbles to himself.)

SWEETY
He not so nuts after all... Oh, sorry. (Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
"His state / Is kingly. Thousands at his bidding speed / And post o'er land and ocean without rest; / They also serve who only stand and wait." (Pause.)

ANNA
That's beautiful. (Pause.)

SCHOLAR
That's it. He's got it. (It grows darker.)

COMMANDATORE
Thousands at his bidding speed... No! He does not bid! (All look over, COMMANDATORE has stood up, and is shaking.) At his bidding... that's not good... It's not right! It's not true! The Lord does not bid! He does not bid! It is not so! Milton is wrong! Milton is a fake! He's lying! Bad! Bad! Bad! (COMMANDATORE, weeping, collapses into the chair, shaking violently.)

ELVIRA
Commandatore! (To DOC:) Do something! He's crying!

DOC
I see that.

ELVIRA
My God.

DOC
(Stands up.) Do you have any tranquilizers?

SWEETY
We got some sleeping pills!

PROF
He's a maniac.

JUNIOR
Forget him. Let Janos deal with him.

KATIE
I'm not going over there again! I'm not going over there!

ELVIRA
(Stands up.) A tranquilizer.

DOC
Do you have a tranquilizer?

ELVIRA
Just make him pass out... do whatever it is you do.

JUNIOR
It's just like Janos to leave us with this pain in the ass.

SWEETY
I'll bring a sleeping pill. (Runs into the house.)

(COMMANDATORE weeps, shakes in the chair.)

ELVIRA
Go over there, for Christ's sake! He's dying on us!

DOC
What should I do with him? Bite off his ear? What should I do?

ELVIRA
You're a Doctor! That's why you're here, because you're a Doctor!

DOC
I don't have a damn clue what to do. I can slice 'em open, cut out what's inside, then sew up 'em back up, but what do I do with someone's soul? How do you cut it out? Where is it in the body?

PROF
He's a maniac. It's that simple. If he attacks, there are more of us.

KATIE
Get him away! Please!

(Enter SWEETY with a prescription bottle.)

SWEETY
Where did you get that?

SWEETY
From your paint box.

ELVIRA
That's mine!

JUNIOR
(Laughs) Tuck it away for a little trip to the next world, maybe?

ELVIRA
That's mine!

KATIE
Get him away! Please! Get him away!

ELVIRA
Shut up!

SWEETY
Should I take it back?

KATIE
Get him away!

PROF
Don't scream! Don't scream! (Beat.)

DOC
There. Everything's alright now.

(COMMANDATORE shakes, but isn't weeping.)

DOC
(To SWEETY:) Put it back.

SWEETY
It's Elvira's. (Puts it down on the table.) Elvira can go hide it in the paint box.

DOC
(Sits down, to SCHOLAR:) Next time you'll recite a better poem, better.

JUNIOR
(Laughs) What an outburst, huh? "Milton bad!" Jeez.

ELVIRA
(To KATIE:) You will not shriek, understood? Do not shriek or I will dismiss you.

KATIE
He's going to kill... I can feel it... Forgive me, ma'am. (Runs into the house.)

ELVIRA
It's just terrible how you can't find decent help. All the girls are going to the factories.

(COMMANDATORE sits motionless. Beat. PROF looks at his watch, stands up, goes over to the radio.)

PROF
It's past six. We missed the beginning. He's already on.

(He turns on the radio. Frenetic applause.)

PROF
I told you! It's Rakosi!

(The applause continues.)

SWEETY
It's raining.

ELVIRA
The table-cloth... Katie!

JUNIOR
A shower. Shit.

ELVIRA
Katie! (The applause dies out.)

VOICE OF RAKOSI
Looking back over the time since the time of our Liberation, we may state that over the course of our thousand-year history...

ELVIRA
Katie!! (They stand up. It's raining very hard.)

V.R.
... our people have never lived through such profound economic, social, political and cultural transformations, as during the last ten years. (KATIE enters, ELVIRA motions, and runs into the house. PROF, JUNIOR, DOC hurry into the house. SWEETY stands, ANNA and SCHOLAR stand up.) In scarcely ten years our country's economic system has radically changed, our economic structure has radically changed, our country's mode of production has changed, and production relations have changed. (KATIE exits with a portion of the dishes. SWEETY brings in the bloody marys.) The socialist system is now the sole master of industry, transportation, commerce, and banking. (ANNA goes in the house.) Factories, means of transportation, and banks have been nationalized, and are now property of the workers' state. (KATIE enters, clears the remaining dishes.) Commerce today is under state management or has become a cooperative. The appropriation of private capital has been executed according to the needs of the workers' state. (Exit KATIE with dishes and table-cloth.) A powerful socialist sector has arisen in agriculture, encompassing one-third of entire agricultural production. Our social infrastructure has fundamentally changed. The classes themselves have changed, and class relations have changed. (KATIE runs out, stacks the chairs.) Land-owners and the gentry have ceased to exist. The commercial bourgeoisie have been terminated. In Hungary today only empty relics can be found of these exploitive classes. (KATIE runs in.) The final exploitive class, the rural bourgeoisie, has been reduced to a few members of the Kulak class. In number, knowledge, culture, and organization, the working-class, our society's governing class, possessors of power, have grown in great numbers, accumulating essential experience in government. (COMMANDATORE lifts his face to the sky, bathes it in the rain, laughs.) Within the working-class, those governing our nation, the people's economy, and society have been elevated to a new level. The sheer number of the working-class has increased by half a million, that is, by fifty percent. Within the working-class, wage differences of the last ten years have been eliminated. Our workers are united, organized, and have become, by means of single-minded political struggle, the national ruling class...

(KATIE runs out, grabs the radio, runs inside the house with it. COMMANDATORE is alone on the stage, showering his face in the rain, smiles. Beat. It pours, and then slowly subsides. The sun comes out. COMMANDATORE sits, smiles.)

COMMANDATORE
Even now... Still in our time! It rained! (He laughs happily.)


Scene 10.

(COMMANDATORE sits on the chair. His clothes are wet. Next to him, on the folding table, the food is soaked. From within the house, Rakosi's speech is on, unintelligibly. After a time, ELVIRA appears in the door. She stops, calls back.)

ELVIRA
Katie! The folding table, the table-setting! They're drenched! Bring them in!

(Beat. SWEETY appears next to ELVIRA. She looks at COMMANDATORE. )

SWEETY
Soaked! (Goes back in.)

(DOC, JUNIOR, PROF, ANNA enter from the house.)

DOC
It stopped.

(Enter SCHOLAR. KATIE enters with a tray, walks into the garden. She stops short, hesitating.)

JUNIOR
(Laughs) She doesn't dare go over.

(Beat. Enter SWEETY with a towel, she walks over to COMMANDATORE.)

SWEETY
Take off your shirt.

(COMMANDATORE stares back at her.)

SWEETY
Let's go, one-two-three. I won't let you catch pneumonia.

(COMMANDATORE takes of his shirt, SWEETY takes it, throws it down on the folding table. She begins drying off COMMANDATORE's head, upper body.)

JUNIOR
She still doesn't dare go over! (Laughs.)

(ANNA walks over to her chair, tilts the water off, dries the chair with a napkin.)

ELVIRA
Go and get those settings!

(KATIE creeps over, quickly puts the food on the tray, runs into the house.)

SWEETY
Take off your pants too, they're wet.

COMMANDATORE
No...

SWEETY
No back talk. One two three. (COMMANDATORE stands up, quickly takes off his pants, sits back down in his underwear, ashamed, tries to cover himself up.) Don't be scared, I won't bite it off.

(She throws the pants onto the table, kneels down in front of COMMANDATORE, starts drying off his legs and feet with the towel. ANNA sits down in her chair.)

ELVIRA
Katie! Dry off the chairs!

(They watch SWEETY at work. KATIE enters with rags. She wipes the chairs. ANNA sits. Beat.)

SWEETY
(Finishes drying him off, stands up, looks at COMMANDATORE:) You got a nice, athletic body. (COMMANDATORE curls up into a ball.) Too bad you're completely screwed up. (COMMANDATORE flashes his apologetic smile.) Really, you've never been with a girl? (Beat.) Too bad, nice body. (Picks up the pants and shirt from the table, exists.)

(Beat. JUNIOR sits down next to ANNA.)

JUNIOR
Would your highness allow me to be seated here?

(Laughs. Beat. DOC, PROF, ELVIRA sit down in their former seats. KATIE wipes the table, squeezes the water behind the stone parapet in the garden, wipes the table again.)

ELVIRA
That's enough, Katie. You may put on the tea.

KATIE
Right away.

(Exit KATIE. Beat. Enter SWEETY.)

SWEETY
I hung the clothes up to dry.

(SWEETY sits down in her chair. Beat.)

ELVIRA
(Screaming:) Katie! The radio, please!

SCHOLAR
Elvira, thank you for having us. Most pleasant. Good bye, everyone - Anna...

ELVIRA
Don't leave yet. At least wait until Janos returns, he'll be so hurt...

SCHOLAR
This is a small country, we're bound to run into each other.

ANNA
Even the storm was beautiful here... It's nothing like that in the city, it just pours and it's dark. But even the storm here is more real, untamed. (Stands up, looks out behind the house from the stone rail at the end of the terrace.) The city is so beautiful now, you can see it all from here... How strange that I live down below there... in an apartment building, me... Look at the lights... it's beautiful.

SCHOLAR
We'll watch it from the bus.

ELVIRA
You both hardly ate a thing, let me pack a few things into a picnic basket. Some home-cooking. (Laughs) So you'll have something in the ice-box.

ANNA
No, thank you.

SCHOLAR
Come on.

(ANNA stands at the end of the terrace.)

ANNA
It's so strange that I live down in the city.

SCHOLAR
Strange. Let's go.

ANNA
My life is passing me away. I've been sentenced to live down there... For my whole life.

SCHOLAR
I'll buy a house up here in the hills with the money from my first two Nobel Prizes. Come on, let's go.

ANNA
I'm not going. I'm staying.

PROF
Where's the radio?

JUNIOR
It must be heating the water.

ELVIRA
Katie! The radio!

SCHOLAR
Alright, I'm leaving. The bus goes to Moscow Square... What time does the bus stop running?

ELVIRA
I don't know, we usually take the car...

SWEETY
At ten.

ANNA
I'm really staying here.

SCHOLAR
Okay, I heard. You're staying here. (Starts right.)

ELVIRA
Donci, please... I'm asking you!

SCHOLAR
(Stops, to ELVIRA:) You have no right to ask!... Anna wanted to come here, she insisted... And then your face came to me, the way it was... That's why I agreed to come, really... That was the hubris.

ANNA
I don't think I'm coming home tonight.

SCHOLAR
Oh no?

ANNA
I don't feel like coming home. Any more.

(Beat. Enter KATIE with the tea, she places it on the table.)

ELVIRA
I've asked for the radio twice now!

KATIE
I'm sorry, I couldn't hear, the radio was too loud. (Exits.)

SCHOLAR
Let's talk about this at home.

ANNA
Don't be mad with me. I don't want to hurt you... It just happened this way. (Beat.) I'm in love with Janos. I slept with him. Earlier. (Beat. Enter KATIE with the radio.) V.R. The result has been the creation of a new nation in place of the old bourgeois nation; year by year, month by month, day by day, our socialist Hungarian Nation is moving forward. The People are becoming one with the Nation. For the first time in our thousand-year history the Hungarian People themselves are masters of the Nation.

(Fantastic applause. SWEETY jumps over to the radio, turns it off.)

SWEETY
When earlier?

ANNA
While you were eating.

ELVIRA
When?!

ANNA
So I'm not going home with you. I'm not coming home to you. (She sighs, sits down again in her chair. Beat.)

JUNIOR
If I only knew why the ladies are so crazy about him! He doesn't even exercise... He can have any woman! (To ANNA:) Tell me, how'd he sweep you off your feet? Maybe I could...

ANNA
He had a nice smile. So you don't have a chance.

(DOC stands up, takes the radio in the house.)

PROF
Well, now that we're all so nicely settled in together, maybe I'll have some tea. (Pours himself tea. Beat.) Have some tea, Donci. Or are you in such a hurry? You can't have that much to do... Numen lumen can wait. (Laughs.)

JUNIOR
(Excited:) Annie, you know what Janos' motto always was? "A hole is a hole is a hole!" That was Donci's maxim for a while too, at some point... And we kept to it even during the worst of times. In her own common way, Sweety says, It ain't soap, it won't get no smaller. Right, Sweety? Now that's valid here in this situation, too. So don't think that this is serious on Janos' part! Nothing doing! He has no emotions, wise up! I have emotions! I would respect you, I swear! - What'd ya mean he has a nice smile? I have a nice one, too! (Grimaces at ANNA.) Isn't this nice? My facial structure is very similar! But I have emotions, too!

PROF
Isn't this sweet? (Laughs, drinks his tea.)

SWEETY
It didn't take the two of you a lot of time... It was pretty quick.

PROF
(Bursts out laughing:) It took you a little longer, didn't it? And this is your profession.

SWEETY
I can still be a teacher... I'll finish high school through the mail!

ANNA
Please, don't stand there looking so miserable... And don't look at me like that! For three years the drain was backed up and I didn't clear it because your hair was in it... I dusted your books every week, took them off the shelves, and placed them back where they were, so you'd find... I didn't move back in with my mother, even though she wanted me... Two police officers were moved into the other room in our apartment, they yelled at night, fought, and I stayed there... Every year I made the pickled cucumbers, the way you like them - with lots of garlic. They rotted in the jars. (Beat.)

PROF
That must be good. I love garlic. (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
What do you think you're doing?!...

ANNA
Nothing. I don't know. Who cares.

PROF
Junior will bring the wedding dress and dowry in his car, just wait a few more minutes, Anna dear. Or wait, he doesn't even have to. Elvira will give you everything: bed linen, blankets, everything...

ELVIRA
Have a little taste, please!

PROF
Me? I just want to help the young couple. (Laughs) Just don't tell me, Elvira, that this is the first time...

JUNIOR
Move in with me! Hey, over here, move in with me! I live in a nice place, too... You'll have your own room, it looks out over a nice, big park... There's privacy. I make so much money, you wouldn't believe it... I have two books published a year... And I have my own car... Janos just has the government -

ANNA
Go away!

JUNIOR
Janos is going to leave you anyway... He doesn't need you.

ANNA
Go away!

PROF
Interesting... Perhaps I'm not the best judge of these things, Donci... But I wouldn't have thought that your wife was such a whore.

SWEETY
Oh, she's not! And I know plenty. She's just dumb still. Young. (To SCHOLAR:) She wants to live a little. It's no big deal. She'll go back to you anyway. Until then I'll sleep with you if you want.

JUNIOR
Why not with me? Why with everyone else? always!

PROF
(To JUNIOR:) Somewhere I read, Junior, that if a pregnant rat fornicates with a male rat stronger than the one which got her pregnant, she miscarries and becomes immediately pregnant again by that stronger rat. That's the way it is. (To SCHOLAR:) That's the way it is.

SCHOLAR
I can't believe this! You're sitting there as though you were one of them!

ANNA
I'm not sitting here like that.

SCHOLAR
As if we hadn't come out here together... from home... two hours ago... Aren't you ashamed to sit there?

ANNA
Please, don't... This doesn't suit you...

SCHOLAR
What? What doesn't suit me? (Beat.)

ELVIRA
Would you like a little tea, Annie?

ANNA
What?

ELVIRA
Tea. Don't you want a cup of tea?

ANNA
I don't drink tea. And I don't have a dowry. No one I know gives a dowry.

PROF
I thought it was still a custom. Forgive me, Anna dear, you know, I haven't been among the people for such a long time... If I remember correctly, though, dowries are given still. But if you say that these days they aren't... Have some tea, Donci! You really could wait for Janos, it would make him so happy!

JUNIOR
Annie, come home with me, this here isn't for you. Janos doesn't need you... he needs every woman... I would respect you, believe me... I'm a bachelor... Why stand along side the rest of them - number three? A part of the harem? Think about it!

PROF
Number three?! And all the others! Who throw themselves out of windows?

ELVIRA
Some day I'm going to draw all of you... hideously ugly, loathsome, pig-headed amphibians with claws, scaly tails, gills, drooling, pustulant amoebas...

PROF
Don't forget to put yourself in the picture, too, like all the great masters... innocent, oblivious, a flighty dragonfly... Not a hunter... no, one who is hunted, the poor thing. But still you had Sweety get Agnes over here... If you couldn't be the only one... then at least Sweety shouldn't either... You were the one!

ELVIRA
You are a lunatic!

PROF
You were the one.

ELVIRA
Somebody tell him he's crazy! (Beat.)

ANNA
(To SCHOLAR:) You'd better go. Your books are there for you. You don't need to live. Your books are your substitute for living... so at night you can stay awake and meditate on everything.

(DOC enters from house, stops.)

PROF
He say anything?

DOC
Nothing yet. He just started on foreign policy.

ELVIRA
Some people were moved into Donci's apartment... Police officers...

DOC
Kick them out. There are a couple of guys in the hospital right now who could take care... I can take care of it. Just say the word.

ELVIRA
Donci, did you hear that?

SCHOLAR
(To ANNA:) You don't know... you have no idea... Do you know whose garden this is?... Who you?... One of the worst miscreants... who was ever born.

JUNIOR
Really, now...

SCHOLAR
A heel-licker... an inquisitor... an elegant Auschwitz doctor selecting for the gas...

JUNIOR
Come on now!

SCHOLAR
Didn't you read his poetry? No? I'm sure it's here... They'll show you. An entire shelf. Half of it is full, the other half is commissioned already. That trash... Traitor... A savage... A hired pen... I know it all by heart... Everything that he's written... Not a line will remain, not one... but I'll know them all by heart... even after I'm dead I'll know them all...

Through curses of the enemy
Stalin's greatness is clear to me
Great Stalin, may you live long enough
To see my sons grow big and tough.

That's what he wrote! And he wrote this, too:

A poor Korean orphan dreams
Through the silence of the night,
And standing there beside her bed,
Is Rakosi, tucking her in tight...

This is the kind of trash that bastard wrote...

Trust in him who trusts in you
Whose every thought belongs to you,
Lift your eyes that you may see
Our shining star: Rakosi

The rhymes! The rhymes!

Into our country vipers were cast,
With hands of steel he gathered them fast,
Our country is now forever clean
Never again will vipers be seen.

(Beat. The sky begins turning red.)

ANNA
That was a vile thing to do.

SCHOLAR
That's what he wrote! And he'll write the opposite, too! He's like a bee who's buzzing around for today's fresh flowers and all the younger bees... Industrious young bees! Can't you hear me? Why are you sitting there?!

DOC
Don't scream! There's no need to scream! It's not such a big deal. Have some tea. You don't have to make a scene. (Walks over to him.) You're lucky no one heard that. We didn't hear a thing. But now shut your mouth. Wasn't three years enough? Don't shout anymore. There are neighbors.

SCHOLAR
And if I'm reported, it's not so good that you just sat there and listened to me.

DOC
Not good at all.

(SCHOLAR walks to the terrace, sits down. Beat.)

PROF
What should I do? He seduced my daughter! Of course if I'd had five daughters and not one... One of 'em dies, who cares, I still have four! And I could love them. But I only had one! Only one!

ELVIRA
It's not too late to...

PROF
We're not too old, I know! But to do it all over again! finding the milk, vitamins, during a carpet-raid... And meat! Setting up the bunker, worrying about pneumonia... And when she's almost grown... (Beat.) Should I have another one? I won't. I wouldn't be able to love that child. Not anymore. - So what are you talking about? About how they locked you up and you suffered a bit? Still you have no right to pass judgment on us! Know this: Janos can write umpteen shit poems, but still he's not one of the nobodies writing the news today... We've suffered through this ideology and now we stand by it! Consciously! It's time you learned to get over it!

SCHOLAR
You didn't have the nerve to take revenge against Janos, and yet now you dare flaunt your weakness to me! Jesus Christ!

DOC
Shut up already!

ELVIRA
I'm scared... Do something! I'm scared!

DOC
Calm down! And you don't have to faint, either. (Sits down, pours himself tea.) Such a scene for one lousy screw! You're all mad! (Beat.) Last week he ran up to see me at the clinic. His heart was beating irregularly, he said. So I made him a strong cup of coffee. What do you think had upset him? That Russian magazine. An article in The Russian Literary Gazette.

JUNIOR
About the morality of writers?

DOC
That's the one.

JUNIOR
Do you read that magazine?

DOC
He placed it in front of me, saying here, this is my death sentence. He was as white as a ghost. They kicked out a few dipshits from the Soviet Writers' Union. One of them because he was married four times.

JUNIOR
Voloshin.

DOC
What?

JUNIOR
Voloshin. That's his name.

SWEETY
Janos only got married once.

DOC
But he has lovers. He's having conniption fits about a new Mafia being put on top, the morality Mafia, and he'll become public enemy number one - idiot - and he won't be able to crawl his way out of it... He sat there whining to me... He doesn't know if he should be writing denunciations. If he should give a speech at the Writers' Union conference... He should lay low until it blows over. Let's wait and see what happens! Let the others shoot off their mouths, they'll overplay their hands soon enough.

SWEETY
He's a poet! He doesn't need to explain a thing, he's got inspiration!

JUNIOR
Tushy, just shut your second set of lips for one minute, okay?

SWEETY
Just because you need dirty magazines to...

DOC
(To ELVIRA:) Tell him not to write anything about anybody. The Comédie Française went to Moscow... Churchill is making guarded statements... The Romanian General Secretary has been given the boot... He just has to wait! - There. (Drinks his tea.)

(Beat.)

COMMANDATORE
They come quietly.

(All look at him.)

COMMANDATORE
They come, gently rustling, gently moving. (Beat.)


Scene 11.

(Sound of a car's engine. Brakes. Beat. JANOS rushes in right, behind him LEPORICH.)

JANOS
What'd he say? Did he say something? Who's talking now? Did the Prime Minister speak before the Secretary General? Who spoke first? Where's the radio? (Beat.) What's wrong? (Beat.)

PROF
You've been expected.

JANOS
I came as soon as I could. They asked questions. How could one emulate Petõfi today... What would Petõfi write about today... Would Petõfi have laid down his life in Korea... (Laughs) I couldn't get away! And two theater students recited poetry... I had to sit through the whole thing... They let me go after the speech started... We raced over... Is something wrong?

PROF
Our little teacher has anxiously been waiting for you.

JANOS
How nice. (Smiles at ANNA.) Where's the radio? You took it in? It rained here, too? (Looks at his watch.) It can't be over yet.

JUNIOR
The little school teacher has fallen in love with you.

JANOS
(Laughs) How flattering. (ANNA stands up. Beat.) Annie... How charming! (To SCHOLAR:) You are one lucky man! - But sit down, Annie, you're not ready to leave already? Stay a while! I am sorry I had to rush out... Today... I'd forgotten about the... I shouldn't take on as much as I do. I hardly have any time left to work! (Turns toward COMMANDATORE.) And him? No problems, right? (Beat.) He took off his clothes? Well, fine, it's warm. I'd gladly do the same right now... Comrade Leporich, now you really can have a drink.

LEPORICH
Thank you, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary. I might listen to the speech.

JANOS
Why aren't you all listening? The whole country is listening! Our fate rests on this speech! The radio didn't break, did it? We'll go to the neighbors!...

JUNIOR
He's still talking foreign policy.

JANOS
Yeah? And?...

SWEETY
Did you sleep with her?

JANOS
What?

SWEETY
Did you sleep with her? Anna.

JANOS
How should I know? What difference does it make now?!

SWEETY
Anna said you did. While we were eating.

JANOS
While you were eating? (He smiles at ANNA.) What can I say, she's such a lovely, attractive, charming girl, I would have gladly.

ANNA
The driver was here.

JANOS
Excuse me? (Beat.) Comrade Leporich, do you understand what she's talking about?

LEPORICH
No, I do not understand, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary.

JANOS
(Smiles at ANNA:) I don't either.

ANNA
He saw, too... Commandatore.

JANOS
Commandatore? (JANOS walks over to COMMANDATORE.) How are you? (COMMANDATORE looks straight at him.) You're not cold?

COMMANDATORE
No.

JANOS
How's everything for you here?

COMMANDATORE
Good.

JANOS
Was there any trouble?

COMMANDATORE
No.

ANNA
He watched the whole thing! He saw it!

JANOS
Commandatore, I don't completely understand what this sweet little girl is talking about. Do you understand? (Beat. JANOS walks back to the terrace.) The truth is I could have come back sooner... But there was this student, one of the theater students... and she recited so beautifully with such enthusiasm, such emotion... Right, Comrade Leporich?

LEPORICH
She recited beautifully.

JANOS
She did Petõfi's "September"... Now that's not exactly a revolutionary poem... (Laughs) But she recited it very well. So I just had to talk with her... I thought she was wonderful. (Smiles.) It's so stirring to see how sensitive and talented the young people are... so full of faith. We might learn something from them! (He sits down.) Donci, I've been reflecting on the way home... How would you like to write for us? Anything you want. I think the situation now is such that you could publish with confidence. An essay, a review, anything. I don't want to push you, but if something comes to mind, think of me... would you?

SCHOLAR
If something comes to mind. (Laughs scornfully at ANNA:) Of course.

(Beat. ANNA runs in the house. Beat.)


Scene 12.

JANOS
Is there anymore tea?

ELVIRA
Katie, put some water on for tea, please...

JANOS
If not then forget it. (Smiles at KATIE.) They gave us coffee. - Did you hear that Lajos Nagy is in the hospital? They say he's ready to kick...

JUNIOR
That's what he's telling everyone so they'll give him the Distinguished Worker of the Republic award.

JANOS
Of course. Last week we called all the editors together. We want to put out a memorial issue. I suggested that we include Milan Füst as well... It might work. - Donci. It would be so good. If you have the strength... So not only idiots will be writing about him.

SCHOLAR
I... will not write... for you.

JANOS
For me?! Not for me! Lajos Nagy was so tragic, how he's been censored over the years! Because he remained honest as so few authors did. Now we have the chance to write about him... There's no telling if two months from now we will... We must seize the opportunity... Now that it's possible for us to even ask Milan Füst, that petty bourgeois writer... And they're not screaming "reactionary," but they've thought about it... Donci, you simply have to take part in this. We can't be dragged back into the cult of personality. Think about it, please. We need every upright, honest man we can get. It would be a luxury to draw up into a shell... for a man with such a brain! "When you see a thief you join with him; you throw your lot in with him."

SCHOLAR
Then I'd have to write about you - if it were important enough. But it's not. And if I were to write about you there wouldn't be a scandal. Without morality there is no scandal.

(Beat. COMMANDATORE looks up toward the roof of the house, is paralyzed with fear, his face becomes contorted.)

JANOS
Oh, don't worry about me... I'm just doing my job as best I can... But the youth, who are still enthusiastic, sincere, devoted... We need to write about them, Donci. You know... against all the odds... I'd really like to appear on a book jacket again with you.

(KATIE notices the paralyzed COMMANDATORE, her eyes follow his stare, and she screams. SWEETY looks up.)

SWEETY
God! (Puts her hands in front of her mouth.)

DOC
(Looks up, stands up, stares up, motionless.)

JUNIOR
(Looks up, laughs nervously.)

SCHOLAR
(Looks up, shudders.) Anna! What are you doing? No!...

ELVIRA
(Doesn't look up, but starts shaking uncontrollably.)

PROF
(Stares straight ahead, clasps his ears.)

(Beat. ANNA's body comes falling down from above, with a huge clap on the ground behind the stone barrier.)

ELVIRA
Oh God!... Oh God! I can't look... (Shakes, cries hysterically.)

(SWEETY runs behind the terrace. DOC starts after her. SCHOLAR runs after them. )

SCHOLAR
Anna! Don't die! Don't leave me!... Stay with me. (Whimpers.)

DOC
Don't touch her!

(Beat. SCHOLAR whimpers. KATIE enters.)

SWEETY
She's alive!

DOC
Of course she's alive. Get away from her, I have to get closer! (DOC crouches down, can't be seen by the audience.)

SCHOLAR
Anna! It's me! Look at me!

DOC
Get back!

(SCHOLAR backs up, stands shaking, looks at the ground.)

JUNIOR
Why now? Why?!

PROF
That was just one and a half flights, at most. One and a half. What's one and a half flights?! (Whimpers, laughs.)

(ELVIRA trembles. Beat.)

DOC
(Standing up:) I don't know, there might be broken bones... maybe her spine... She might make it. If there's no serious internal damage. Maybe she'll just be crippled. Nobody touch her. (Jumps up from behind the terrace.) We have to get her out of here...

LEPORICH
I'll call an ambulance.

DOC
Takes too long. Maybe the car...

LEPORICH
Isn't that dangerous? (Beat.)

DOC
She's in a bad spot here. (Looks around.) We'll take her out onto to the street. She fell out of a tree, something like that.

ELVIRA
Oh my God, so!... (Weeps.)

DOC
Calm down. We need a board...

JANOS
The big pastry-board. Little woman. She'll fit. Katie! Get the pastry-board! Immediately!!

(KATIE runs into the house.)

SWEETY
You can't move her! Her spine's broken! My sister is a nurse!

DOC
Shut up! I'm the doctor!

SWEETY
You can't!

DOC
Shut up! (Beat.)

SCHOLAR
Anna, don't die... I'll take care of you... You'll get better! I'll be with you no matter what... Don't be scared...

(Whimpering, KATIE enters with a large pastry-board. DOC takes it and crouches down by ANNA's body.)

DOC
Somebody get over here!

(JUNIOR runs over. They put ANNA on the board. Faint whimpering.)

ELVIRA
I can't stand that sound, I can't stand it...

JANOS
It'll be over in a second, dear... you don't have to...

ELVIRA
I'll hear it forever... Forever!

DOC
Her leg... it's hanging down... someone grab it!

(SCHOLAR joins DOC and JUNIOR. They lift up the board, SCHOLAR holds ANNA's leg.)

DOC
Slowly, carefully.

(DOC, JUNIOR, SCHOLAR slowly march ANNA through the garden right, KATIE crosses herself, follows them. PROF turns in his chair, watches the procession. JANOS stands next to ELVIRA. ELVIRA turns away. COMMANDATORE stares straight ahead, listening to something only he hears. Beat. DOC, JUNIOR, SCHOLAR disappear right, SWEETY runs after them. Beat. The sky darkens.)

PROF
One and a half flights, maybe not even.

LEPORICH
Fairly high flights. Old building. It's at least five meters.

PROF
Eighteen meters, now that's something. Eighteen! (Whimpers, then laughs.) Touché, Donci! Touché! You won't have such a big mouth anymore. Touché.

(Beat. JUNIOR and DOC enter.)

DOC
She fell out of an apple tree, out by the street.

JANOS
It's horrible how you just can't help the people. They won't let you! This is what happens to them! Commandatore, too... Such opaque people!

DOC
That's not what this is about! It's not about Commandatore! You were too scared to look Donci straight in the eye, and that's why you dragged Commandatore out here... (Yells:) I told you who Donci was sitting in prison with! Didn't I?! We need his help to help ourselves, don't we?! He was our only way to those people!... The only way! And you go climb on top of his wife! What's horrible is that you can't put a harness on your cock!!! (Beat.)

ELVIRA
You know what you are! A butcher!

DOC
(Nods mockingly:) I'll call the ambulance.

(DOC exits into the house. It grows darker.)

JANOS
Katie, a drink!

KATIE
(To COMMANDATORE:) That's what they get! They all end up this way! Every one of them! (Runs in the house.)

ELVIRA
It has to be scrubbed! Until then I can't look over there... It has to be scrubbed.

JANOS
Alright, Katie will scrub it down in a little while. - How is she?

JUNIOR
Pretty ugly. (Shaken up, he exits into house.)

(Enter KATIE with a bottle of brandy.)

JANOS
Glasses, too.

ELVIRA
Don't... need them.

JANOS
Darling... Why wouldn't we need them - Katie, glasses, please.

(KATIE places the bottle on the table, goes back in the house. It's dusk.)

JANOS
It's cooled down quite a bit. And the sun's barely gone down... Hmmm, and it's Spring.

ELVIRA
She's going to scrub it, right?

JANOS
That's right, darling. I told you. Didn't you hear me? (KATIE enters with a tray and glasses, places them on the table, exits back in the house. JANOS to PROF:) Come on, let's have a drink. (PROF stands up.) Oh, come on. (PROF goes in the house. ELVIRA pours, drinks. SWEETY enters right.) How is she?

SWEETY
She's talking. (Beat.) I left them alone. They're all lovey-dovey.

(ELVIRA exits into house. Beat.)

LEPORICH
What should I do with him?

(JANOS stops, turns around, stares at COMMANDATORE.)

JANOS
Oh, yeah. Bring him back to the asylum early tomorrow morning. The rest of your day is free.

LEPORICH
Thank you, Comrade Assistant Under Secretary.

JANOS
(Looks at his watch:) I wanted to do something... What was it... I was late for everything today... I missed the G-Major Trio, too! (Shakes his head, starts toward the house.) Well, come on in, now you really can have a drink!

LEPORICH
He's not going to get cold out here?

(JANOS shrugs his shoulders, goes in the house. LEPORICH after him. Beat. Nightfall. The lights go on in the house. KATIE closes the door, light escapes from the shutters. Beat. Quiet hissing sounds... COMMANDATORE looks up, then looks down to the ground. The hose suddenly begins slithering. COMMANDATORE smiles. Hissing. Rustling. Shadows. From the house the G-Major Trio is heard. He takes deep breaths, excited. Dinosaurs slowly, quietly appear, rustling in the garden; a few tyrannosauruses in addition to the herbivores. G-Major Trio is heard. A gentle breeze blows. The tree branches rustle. COMMANDATORE laughs happily. The prehistoric creatures slowly, peacefully envelop the garden.)


Curtain.

 


Notes

1. "Freedom". During the Stalinist 1950s this was a common form of comradely greeting. [BACK]

2. "People's Radio": The only radio available in Hungary in the 1950s, a small, plain box with no tuner and three buttons. It received only the two Hungarian stations. [BACK]

3. "There is no radio outside Hungary." [BACK]