The Domino Effect and Other Plays for Teenagers

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The Domino Effect and Other Plays for Teenagers Page 10

by Fin Kennedy


  Driven by Patience Ademola

  A newly qualified family-law solicitor

  On her way to an early-morning meeting.

  The vehicles miss each other

  And neither driver is hurt

  But the resulting road-rage incident

  (For Patience is patient in name only)

  Catches the attention of halal butcher Joynul Uddin

  Who, momentarily distracted from his high-powered butcher’s bandsaw,

  Accidentally chops off two of his own fingers.

  Mr Uddin survives

  But the fingers cannot be replaced

  Resulting in him having to give up

  For ever

  His beloved piano

  His lifelong passion

  And the one source of peace and beauty

  In his otherwise monotonous and mundane life.

  The depression Mr Uddin subsequently suffers

  Ultimately leads to the break-up of his marriage to Mrs Uddin

  A nurse in the neonatal ward at Royal London Hospital

  Leading her

  At the age of forty-two

  To embark on a string of disastrous affairs

  With several wholly unsuitable men.

  Mrs Uddin’s ensuing suicide attempt

  Is the final straw in a hospital department beset by staff shortages

  And a major contributory factor to the preventable death

  Of Stanley Trout’s premature baby girl Clara

  A loss which plunges the domestic-heating engineer Mr Trout

  And his wife Tina

  Into an endless winter of alcoholism and debt

  From which they never truly recover.

  Pause.

  Grumpy Mrs Khan

  And the fox

  Suffered no consequences at all.

  Tick

  Tock

  Tick

  Tock.

  Pause.

  On the twenty-seventh of June 1997

  At 4.03 a.m.

  Ali Mustafa and Mahmud Nazim

  Two teenage vandals

  Break in to Spitalfields City Farm

  Where a sheep called Judith has just given birth

  To a trio of baby lambs.

  As Mustafa and Nazim proceed to daub the sheep enclosure

  With graffiti expressing their loyalty to local gang

  The Brick Lane Massive

  The resulting panic among the sleeping animals

  Causes all three baby lambs

  To suffer heart attacks and die.

  When the farm opens to the public at 8.30 the next morning

  The sight of the three dead baby lambs

  Upsets five-year-old Fahida Begum so much

  That she becomes inconsolable

  And has to be taken home.

  Her mother Laila

  An engineer at Bow Gasworks

  Is thinking about this the following Monday

  Causing her to neglect to double-check

  That an important safety valve is adequately sealed.

  The force of the subsequent gas explosion is substantial enough

  To flatten three rows of nearby terraced houses

  And knock Laila Begum to the ground

  Shattering her left arm

  Like a glass rod dropped onto concrete.

  The arm has to be amputated

  And the rows of terraces bulldozed

  But the sight of this rare patch of open space in the East

  London landscape

  Inspires a forward-thinking Tower Hamlets councillor

  To suggest the site as one possible area

  For a future London Olympic Games;

  An event at which Ali Mustafa and Mahmud Nazim

  (Our teenage vandals;

  By now grown men with families)

  Are able to make a considerable profit selling fake 2012 merchandise

  In and around the stadium.

  Judith the sheep, meanwhile

  Is assumed to be genetically substandard

  Sold to a local mutton factory

  And made into dog food.

  Tick

  Tock

  Tick

  Tock.

  Pause.

  On the nineteenth of September 1997

  At 11.59 p.m. and fifty-nine seconds

  Amina Rahman

  This story’s hero

  Is watching all this unfold

  From her vantage point high up inside a storm cloud

  At that moment drenching her soon-to-be home of Tower Hamlets.

  For at this precise moment in time

  Amina is not yet born

  But is instead a tiny spirit

  Observing the world she will soon inhabit

  Trying to decide which unborn fetus she will possess

  And which set of parents she will make her own.

  Two actors step forward and become AMINA’s parents.

  She settles on Samit Rahman

  And his wife Nabijah

  A couple of modest means

  But with honest hearts

  He, a watchmaker by trade

  Quiet

  Studious

  Precise

  (And never late)

  She, the opposite

  Gregarious

  Ambitious

  And hungry for life’s riches.

  They are an unlikely match,

  But then

  The odds of any of us having been born

  Are astronomically terrifying;

  Like thinking about infinity.

  The NARRATORS think about infinity for a moment.

  They shudder and move on.

  A clock chimes twelve times for midnight.

  Then

  At the very stroke of midnight

  On the fourteenth of December, 1997

  Amina is reluctantly forced from her mother’s womb

  Induced by a doctor

  Two weeks overdue;

  Hers is a reluctant birth.

  For Amina decided long ago that this world she will inherit

  Is unconscionably vile

  Full of dog fights

  Drunkenness

  Muggings

  And misery.

  Take 1997 – the year of Amina’s birth:

  Tony Blair is elected

  Lady Diana is killed

  Great Britain wins the Eurovision Song Contest

  Oasis release their third album

  Channel 5 is launched

  And a new-style 50p coin is pointlessly introduced.

  This is clearly a world without hope.

  So before she is even born

  Our hero

  Amina

  Decides to withdraw

  Away from the external world

  And instead to live a life looking inwards

  To a world of softness

  Imagination

  And possibility.

  SAMIT and NABIJAH stand with a newborn baby AMINA in their arms.

  NABIJAH. No crying.

  SAMIT. No.

  NABIJAH. She’s quiet.

  SAMIT. Yes.

  NABIJAH. A thinker. Like her father.

  Clocks tick.

  NARRATORS. After her birth

  Amina returns from hospital

  To her new home

  A modest rented apartment

  In a dilapidated Victorian block

  A former East India Company warehouse

  Echoey

  Damp

  A crumbling temple to the former glories

  Of an Empire long since lost

  Now council-owned

  And filled with her father’s clocks

  Tick

  Tock

  Tick

  Tock

  A daily

  Hourly

  Minutely

  Secondly reminder

  Of the pointlessness and fragility of life.

  The ticking clocks become louder and louder.

/>   Eventually, they all chime at once.

  AMINA wakes in her mother’s arms and starts to cry.

  NABIJAH. I think perhaps the clocks are disturbing her, Sami.

  SAMIT. She’ll get used to them.

  NARRATORS. Amina’s father Samit likes:

  Polishing his pocket watch;

  An Egyptian antique

  Sterling silver

  Engraved with its year: 1898.

  He loves reading about his hero, Al-Jazari

  A twelfth-century inventor from Baghdad

  Author of

  The Book of Ingenious Mechanical Devices

  Instructions on how to build:

  Water clocks

  Candle clocks

  Castle clocks

  Elephant clocks

  And even

  The world’s very first robot.

  But most of all

  Samit Rahman loves

  Reading the notes on the back of his bottle of cologne.

  SAMIT takes out a bottle of Ajmal Vision and reads the back of the bottle.

  ‘Ajmal Vision

  A sparkling fragrance

  For men who exude passionate dynamism

  Vision is the spirit of the young, energetic male

  Dominated by musk

  Cedarwood

  And a floral fresh heart.

  Macho music swells.

  Ajmal Vision ignites the spirit of the wearer

  With a burning desire for triumph.

  A perfect companion for men who want to conquer their tomorrow

  For the future belongs only to a few men:

  The men with Vision.’

  A triumphant crescendo.

  SAMIT sprays some into the air and breathes in the scent.

  NABIJAH enters.

  NABIJAH. What are you doing?

  SAMIT. Nothing.

  NABIJAH. Is dinner ready?

  SAMIT. Two minutes.

  NABIJAH. I’ve had a long day.

  NABIJAH sniffs.

  What is that smell?

  SAMIT. What smell?

  NABIJAH. Like a dirty florist’s.

  SAMIT. Nothing.

  SAMIT hides the bottle.

  NARRATORS (whisper). He is never brave enough to actually wear any;

  (Whisper.) The future, perhaps, belongs to other men.

  Amina’s mother Nabijah likes:

  Home-made mint and saffron tea.

  NABIJAH. Gram for gram, saffron is worth more than gold.

  NARRATORS. Afterwards, she likes to read the future In the leaves at the bottom of the cup.

  NABIJAH looks into the bottom of a teacup. She gasps.

  At the weekends, she loves visiting the British Museum;

  The solid-gold exhibits are her favourites –

  She likes to try to guess how much they cost.

  NABIJAH examines an exhibit, reading from the label.

  NABIJAH. ‘Solid-gold crown, first-century BC.’ Beautiful. How much do you think, Amina? At least a million.

  NABIJAH catches the attention of a MUSEUM GUARD.

  Excuse me? How much is this one?

  MUSEUM GUARD. The exhibits are not for sale, madam.

  NARRATORS. But most of all

  Nabijah Rahman likes it

  When her boss gives her compliments.

  BOSS. An excellent cup of tea, Nabjiah.

  NABIJAH. Thank you, sir.

  BOSS. Just how I like it.

  NABIJAH. Will there be anything else?

  BOSS. Yes, why not. I’ll have a coffee.

  NABIJAH. Coming right up!

  NARRATORS. Her ambition shines out of her;

  If the flashing light of Canary Wharf tower is the mountain’s peak

  Beaming out its prize:

  C

  E

  O

  Then Receptionist is base camp

  And each cup of tea or coffee

  A milestone in the steep road ahead.

  Clocks tick as NABIJAH comes home.

  SAMIT is fixing one of them with a screwdriver.

  Coming home reminds her

  Of how far she has to climb;

  Draughty windows

  A birdcage lift

  The smell of damp

  Floorboards soft with woodworm

  And a husband as quiet as a stopped clock.

  NABIJAH. Any sales today?

  SAMIT shakes his head, not looking up from the clock he is repairing.

  Any customers?

  SAMIT nods.

  Did they buy anything?

  SAMIT shakes his head.

  Then that’s a visitor.

  Pause.

  Sami, I cannot support us forever. Our debts are piling up, like sand. We have a child now.

  A young AMINA is playing in the corner.

  NARRATORS. Amina stays quiet.

  NABIJAH. How was she today?

  NARRATORS. Though she is more than capable of speech

  NABIJAH. Did she speak?

  NARRATORS. She has discovered her power…

  NABIJAH. Sami?

  NARRATORS.…Silence.

  NABIJAH. Are you even listening to me?

  AMINA casts her hands like she is casting a spell.

  There is a thunderclap.

  Silence on stage.

  AMINA looks blissful.

  NARRATORS (whisper). But like all powers

  (Whisper.) It has a dark side.

  DOCTOR enters and puts a stethoscope to AMINA’s chest and stares into her eyes with a torch.

  DOCTOR. There is nothing physically wrong with your daughter, Mrs Rahman.

  NABIJAH. Alhamdullilah.1

  DOCTOR. Mentally, on the other hand –

  NABIJAH. Oh no.

  DOCTOR. Everything is fine too.

  NABIJAH. Oh good.

  DOCTOR. She passes all our cognitive tests.

  NABIJAH. That’s a relief.

  DOCTOR. With flying colours, in fact.

  NABIJAH. Really?

  DOCTOR. Amina is a clever girl.

  NABIJAH. Thank you.

  DOCTOR. Which only leads me to conclude that it is her own choice not to speak.

  NABIJAH. Is that a problem?

  DOCTOR. This level of non-verbalism is quite unusual.

  NABIJAH. You should meet her father.

  DOCTOR. In fact, it is usually the sign of some terrible trauma.

  NABIJAH. What?

  DOCTOR. How are things at home?

  NABIJAH. No. I mean fine.

  DOCTOR. Happy?

  NABIJAH. Very.

  DOCTOR. And how are things at school?

  TEACHER enters.

  TEACHER. You see, Mrs Rahman, in some subjects, like art – which Amina’s very good at, I should add – silence is of course not a problem. But in others, like English, or languages, some interaction with others is required.

  DOCTOR/TEACHER. I may have to make a referral.

  NABIJAH. What? No –

  DOCTOR. Yes, to a specialist.

  TEACHER. To the school psychiatrist.

  NABIJAH. You don’t understand –

  DOCTOR. To a counsellor.

  TEACHER. To Children’s Services.

  DOCTOR. To the police.

  TEACHER. To MI5.

  DOCTOR. To Interpol.

  TEACHER. To the FBI.

  DOCTOR. The CIA.

  TEACHER. To NASA.

  DOCTOR. To the International Criminal Court of Hideous Weirdos.

  TEACHER. Don’t you understand what this means?

  DOCTOR/TEACHER. DISASTER!!

  There is a disaster dance; everyone swirling around NABIJAH and AMINA.2

  Eventually, NABIJAH interrupts it by shouting.

  NABIJAH. STOP! I will sort this out. I will. I’ll withdraw her from school. I’ll give up work. Teach her myself. At home. I will make – her – speak!

  The dancers go.

  NABIJAH and AMINA are left alone.

  Clocks tick in the apart
ment at home.

  NABIJAH takes out some school books.

  NARRATORS. And so it was that Mrs Nabijah Rahman

  Gave up a promising career

  To try to save her daughter from silence.

  NABIJAH takes out a child’s alphabet – magnetic numbers on a blackboard. She tries to make AMINA repeat the letters after her.

  NABIJAH. A. A. A. A.

  NARRATORS. The tragedy was always

  That there was nothing she could do.

  For her daughter’s protest was not with her

  Or her family

  Or their house

  Or her school

  It was with the world.

  Amina just didn’t think it was worth her while.

  NABIJAH. Please, Amina. Please. Just speak. One word. Not even a word.

  One letter. A.

  NABIJAH takes the magnetic letter ‘A’ and holds it out.

  A. A!

  SAMIT. Nabijah –

  NABIJAH. Go and sell some clocks!

  NARRATORS. This turn of events meant

  That Amina retreated

  Even further into fantasy.

  It was a world in which nothing was what it seemed

  Where her father was not just a salesman of clocks

  But of time itself

  Where flustered customers

  Flustomers

  Burst in to buy themselves an extra fifteen minutes.

  A FLUSTOMER bursts into SAMIT’s clock workshop.

  FLUSTOMER. Quick! I’m late for work. What have you got?

  SAMIT. Quarter of an hour?

  FLUSTOMER. Perfect.

  The FLUSTOMER pays.

  You’re a lifesaver.

  SAMIT. We have a special offer on weekends. Buy one hour, get one free.

  FLUSTOMER. No time!

  The FLUSTOMER rushes out.

  SAMIT (sighs). But there is all the time in the world.

  NARRATORS. It is a world where Joynul Uddin

  The halal butcher with the missing fingers

  Looks mournfully at his dust-covered piano

  Which is actually an evil, ivory-toothed monster

  Filled with the bitten-off fingers

  Of everyone who has ever been foolish enough to try to play it.

  JOYNUL UDDIN. Don’t even think about it. Vicious contraption.

  NARRATORS. It is a world in which the drunk homeless tramp

  Stanley Trout

  Is actually a traveller through time

  From somewhere long ago

  Somewhere dirty

  Smelly

  And medieval

  His endless Lottery scratchcard purchases

  Are actually attempts to find the right coordinates

  Which will transport him back home.

  STANLEY TROUT scratches a scratchcard he has bought from MRS KHAN.

  MRS KHAN watches him grumpily.

  STANLEY TROUT. Fifty… twenty-five… ten… Dammit!

  I wanna go back to the past!

  MRS KHAN. Get out!

  NARRATORS. It is a world where grumpy Mrs Khan

  Isn’t just a shopkeeper

  But a secret government spy

  In touch with HQ

  James Bond-style

 

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