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My Sister's Keeper

Page 3

by Ted Allan


  SARAH

  My daughter is burning and needs water! No one is giving her water!

  ROBERT

  (Shouting) Take it! It’s just a sleeping pill. Nothing else!

  (She looks frightened, takes the pill and swallows it with some water)

  Now lie down and rest.

  (She lies down and begins mumbling to herself)

  SARAH

  (O.S.) Keeps a telephone in his bedroom…and I have to listen…with a telephone talking to all his women.

  (As she mutters Robert hurries back to the living room and dials his phone there)

  ROBERT

  Dr Williams, please…Robert Waller…

  SARAH

  Lying here listening…telephone in his room… such laughing going on…

  ROBERT

  John?…I’m sorry to do this to you…My sister’s really flipped…Those pills you gave me for her aren’t strong enough…No…But its not just a manic state…She’s hallucinating now…Imagining her daughter is burning…Could you please come now, John and give her an injection?…Something strong that will knock her out…I’ve got to get some sleep…Yes, she’ll have to…But she’s petrified of hospitals ever since that experience she had when she was sixteen…Please, if you could…I’ve heard of that one…It’s a very good one. Please try to get her in there. How long do you think it will take? As long as that?…No, I don’t want her taken to any hospital. I want her in that one…Whatever it costs…I’ll just have to wait till you can get her in…All right, as quickly as you can…I held back calling you as long as I could…It’s rather difficult for me…Thank you, John…Bye…

  (He replaces the receiver,

  Sarah has risen from her bed and walked into the living room to hear the last part of the conversation. He senses she is there. He turns around slowly)

  SARAH

  Still taking me to hospitals?

  ROBERT

  This is a very good one.

  SARAH

  Then why don’t you go?

  ROBERT

  I’m not ill.

  SARAH

  Oh yes you are! I don’t like your friends. They speak English too Englishy. He made me spill my tea, that Donald chap. I spilled my tea in front of him.

  ROBERT

  So what?

  SARAH

  I always spill my tea. Funny. I spill everything.

  ROBERT

  No, you don’t. You don’t spill everything. Why don’t you try to sleep now? You must be very tired.

  SARAH

  It’s rather difficult for you, is it?

  ROBERT

  Yes. It is.

  SARAH

  Difficult, is it? Poor brother. Poor Robert. Poor man. Has a mentally ill sister around his neck. Shit, it is rather difficult for him.

  ROBERT

  You haven’t eaten. Would you like me to make something?

  SARAH

  I hate those who are successful. What is the matter with me?

  ROBERT

  On a bad day I also hate those who are successful.

  SARAH

  I need to figure out why I hate people. I hate people.

  ROBERT

  On a bad day I also hate people.

  SARAH

  I like flowers, fruits, birds, but not people. I hate you. I am being honest with my hostility.

  ROBERT

  (Impatiently dry) I appreciate that. What makes you think I have to sit here and tolerate it?

  SARAH

  Because I have been badly hurt.

  ROBERT

  Everybody has been badly hurt. Why do you always expect special treatment?

  SARAH

  I expect special treatment from you.

  ROBERT

  Why me?

  SARAH

  Because you are my brother.

  ROBERT

  That is not a good enough reason and you know it.

  SARAH

  I have a better reason and you know it.

  ROBERT

  I cannot stand your raving. Could you shut up for a little while?

  SARAH

  You’ll have to, won’t you?

  ROBERT

  Don’t push me. You’ll push me too far. Don’t. I’m warning you.

  SARAH

  What will you do? What can be done to me that hasn’t been done…unless you’re thinking of killing me! And you wouldn’t do that. The scandal of it would be too much for you.

  ROBERT

  You’re vicious when you get like this. You know what you’re doing. Every minute of the time.

  SARAH

  That’s show business.

  (She looks at her fingers)

  Study your fingers. Truth might emerge from it.

  (Mimics her mother’s Irish accent)

  I can go to a bridge game. She’s studyin’. She’s studyin’.

  (Her own voice)

  How would you like to come home every day from school and no mother there? I don’t understand some mothers.

  (He has begun to write in a large notebook)

  ROBERT

  Why are you making me suffer because your mother neglected you, that same mother neglected me as well. There’s not a mother alive who isn’t guilty of neglecting her child at one time or another.

  SARAH

  But I got special treatment because I was a girl! Not one picture of me in the whole house. One of mummy, one of daddy, and one of Robert, but not one of me. I never could stand mother. Writing it all down. Going to give a lecture?

  ROBERT

  I’m writing everything you’re saying. It’s the only way I’ll preserve my sanity.

  SARAH

  Nothing anybody does is any good. What humans? Everybody. They don’t like insane people. They can hate, compete, and kill. They call that sane.

  (He stops writing)

  ROBERT

  Now you’re making a speech.

  SARAH

  Yah! You elect me, my fellow maniacs, and I’ll pass a law outlawing insanity! I’ll take it, kids, but some day I’ll be back and you won’t like it. I don’t mind travelling. Come on. Send me around the world.

  ROBERT

  If I could, believe me, I would.

  SARAH

  I will come back and regain the custody of my child. My child has a right to live with whom she wants. I’m the lumpen proletariat. There’s got to be a place for me somewhere. I’ll find a planet. Who’s going to have a lobotomy? I just asked you a question.

  ROBERT

  What was the question?

  SARAH

  (Mimicking) What was the question?

  ROBERT

  I called John Williams to come and give you a sedative.

  SARAH

  You gave me a sedative, didn’t you? Didn’t you give me a sleeping pill?

  ROBERT

  Yes. But you need something stronger. He’ll give you an injection.

  SARAH

  Going to put me out and then take me to a hospital, is that it?

  (Waits a moment)

  ROBERT

  No. That’s not it. He’s just going to give you something to calm you down.

  SARAH

  I don’t want to be calmed down. Am I hurting anybody? Calmed down. Idiots. I asked you who’s going to have a lobotomy.

  ROBERT

  I don’t know. How did that come up?

  SARAH

  My family! It’s incredible. You have no family. If you don’t call on them you have a chance to walk out a free person. What a life.

  ROBERT

  How come you get so lucid suddenly?

  SARAH

  (Mimics) How come you get so lucid suddenly? Because I’m a mental case and they get lucid sometimes. Okay? (Contemptuous) Big brain. Big brother brain. The genius. Lectures at Universities. About love! Hah! About love and feelings! Hah!

  ROBERT

  Hah!

  SARAH

  All of a sudden brother Bobby comes to say goodby
e. If he knew what I went through. I feel I should call my mother. She tells everybody she worries about me. I can’t understand her, so get rid of her. (Mimics her mother) So what am I supposed to do now? Take care of her. Try to take care of her. She’s lazy. She never helps me with the dishes. (Her own voice) I heard that song, fucking lousy dishes. I hate this society, so I have to conform. Lock them up in the mental hospitals and give them shock! The only time my family will move is when I’m in a crisis. The atom is the smallest thing and now it’s getting to be the biggest. So I’ll laugh!

  (She starts to laugh – a nervous release of terror. He gets up and goes to stare out of the window. She approaches him – her laughing fit over)

  ROBERT

  I won’t be able to make it. You’re too goddamned nutty. I’m getting too exhausted and too depressed. I have my problems too damn it. I thought I would never get into a funk again. I’ve been working well. I could let myself go as you do…rave and cry and laugh and wallow in self-pity…I could go nuts too!

  (He screams, dances, rolls his eyes, sticks out his tongue)

  How’s that?

  SARAH

  I give you four out of ten – for trying.

  ROBERT

  How’s this then?

  (He crawls on all fours, howls like a dog)

  SARAH

  You’re improving. Five out of ten.

  (He jumps up, and starts to dance…)

  ROBERT

  I’m a nut! I’m a nut! I’m a goddamned nut!

  (They sing and dance)

  SARAH

  Now! You’re getting some place!

  (They dance separately but she comes to him and they do a crazy abandoned dance together…For a moment he has forgotten himself and has really flipped out. She watches him fascinated and excited…They are in tune now.

  It frightens him. He breaks away. He stops exhausted)

  ROBERT

  So what did I prove?

  SARAH

  If that’s all there was to being nuts, it would be a ball.

  ROBERT

  What the hell do you want from me!

  SARAH

  The truth. It was just here wasn’t it? Pshhh. Truth just dropped in and stayed a moment.

  ROBERT

  There’s your truth and my truth, your life and my life. I am not responsible for your life!

  SARAH

  No?

  ROBERT

  No!

  SARAH

  Then why do you stay here with me? Why are you tolerating it? Why don’t you call the police and get me out of here? Why don’t you leave?

  ROBERT

  Because you can’t be left alone!

  SARAH

  What do you think I’ll do left alone? Rip your furniture to pieces, set fire to the house?

  ROBERT

  Who the hell knows what you’ll do? You’ll think up something that’s never been thought of before.

  SARAH

  If you’re staying, shut up. If you feel you have to stay, stay, and take it like a man! Were you ever man enough to take anything?

  ROBERT

  Shut up! Shut up! Shut up, you raving maniac!

  SARAH

  Guilty! I find this man guilty. How do you plead?

  ROBERT

  Guilty. Guilty!

  SARAH

  I sentence you to remain alive!

  (He sits and holds his head in his hands. She touches his head)

  You haven’t done only destruction. You’ve helped me too. You’re the only I know who helped me.

  ROBERT

  Then why are you going on like this…getting at me like this.

  SARAH

  I find you disgusting! Look at you…the way your face looks…poor itsy misused Bobby! His mentally ill sister’s making him feel bad.

  ROBERT

  Rave on, I won’t let it touch me.

  SARAH

  Guilty! Guilty, condemned to life!

  (He takes the notebook and holds the pencil ready)

  ROBERT

  Shoot. I’ll make it. Where were you?

  SARAH

  Then I come out of the asylum. Robert Waller’s got a Rhodes Scholarship and has gone to Oxford. All the excitement and success. Maybe he’ll fail his exams and I’ll laugh.

  (She gets quieter, remembering)

  When you were sick with that mastoid. I was twelve. Then I got to be sixteen. Who ye seein’? Where ye goin’? Before she couldn’t care less. I’m goin’ to have a lady for a daughter. Can’t go to the park. Okay, you got your lady. To me my life is a drama. To you it’s a comedy. Brian would have married me but you spoiled it.

  ROBERT

  Brian never earned a penny in his life. His only reason for suggesting marriage to you was to be kept – by me.

  SARAH

  I’m such an ungrateful stinker: the more you help me the more I hate. It’s hard to be grateful. That’s what happens when people commit suicide. What’s so horrible about death? Life is a bright light. Death is black. The more you live the brighter life is. The less the blacker. And that was why he wanted to marry me – so you could keep him?

  ROBERT

  You heard, eh?

  SARAH

  I hear everything.

  ROBERT

  Yes. I know.

  SARAH

  I hear flowers and grass and chairs and walls.

  ROBERT

  I believe you.

  SARAH

  It’s not because I’m mentally ill that I can hear. I can hear when I’m well. I don’t mean hallucinations.

  ROBERT

  I know what you mean…You realize you were hallucinating before.

  SARAH

  Yes. It’s frightening. Why did you have to hit me?

  ROBERT

  I got frantic.

  SARAH

  I thought I was getting messages from Debbie. Are you sure she’s all right?

  ROBERT

  I am positive! I telephoned and spoke to her! She’s all right!

  SARAH

  And you didn’t let me speak to her?

  ROBERT

  You were not in a very pleasant state.

  SARAH

  When did you call her?

  ROBERT

  At three this morning. You started imagining you were getting messages from her at three this morning.

  SARAH

  And she’s all right?

  ROBERT

  She is fine. You were getting somebody else’s messages.

  SARAH

  (Tries to smile) Is that what it was?

  ROBERT

  Why don’t you hire a tent and tell fortunes or something?

  SARAH

  I can’t tell fortunes. I just get messages. I really thought she was burning, the poor darling. On fire. Wow.

  ROBERT

  You seem better.

  SARAH

  Will you stop issuing regular bulletins on my condition.

  ROBERT

  Are you sure you’re not putting on an act?

  SARAH

  Yes. It’s an act. I feign madness. Like Hamlet. But my father hasn’t asked me to avenge him. So what am I so disturbed about? As if I don’t know.

  ROBERT

  You do know?

  SARAH

  I know everything. I told you. I know what you’re thinking this second.

  ROBERT

  What am I thinking?

  SARAH

  Why doesn’t she die? Why doesn’t she kill herself? Why doesn’t she get out of my life?

  ROBERT

  You’re incredible.

  SARAH

  But you really loved me. You know that.

  ROBERT

  Yes, I do love you.

  SARAH

  I don’t mean like a brother. You love me and you can’t face it.

  ROBERT

  You’ve always tried to make me believe that.

  SARAH

  There must be a reason I feel that.
>
  ROBERT

  It’s your fantasy, not mine.

  SARAH

  Debbie was ill, wasn’t she? Wasn’t she?

  ROBERT

 

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