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    At Home at the Zoo

    Page 3
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      ANN

      When?!

      PETER

      When you came in with the dish towel. “We should talk,” you said.

      ANN (Puzzled.)

      Did I?

      PETER

      Yes!

      ANN

      Well, I must have wanted to talk about something.

      PETER

      Yes; I assumed.

      ANN

      And we didn’t talk about it.

      PETER

      No; I don’t think so.

      ANN

      I wonder what it was. Was this before the spinach?

      PETER

      During.

      ANN

      I wonder what it was!

      PETER

      Maybe if you go out and come back …

      ANN

      That’s silly.

      PETER

      It might jog your memory.

      ANN (Pause.)

      All right. I’ll go back out and come back in.

      PETER

      And I’ll go back to my book.

      ANN

      OK.

      (She exits. PETER reads. She reenters.)

      We should talk.

      (PETER reads. She exits, reenters.)

      That didn’t do a thing.

      PETER

      Nothing?

      ANN

      Well, it had a kind of fascination—pretending to be doing something for the first time. That was interesting, but I don’t think it helped much, helped our problem … our dilemma.

      PETER

      … the dilemma of what you meant when …

      ANN

      … when I came in back there and said “We should talk.” The first time. Not the second. Before the spinach.

      PETER

      I wouldn’t keep doing it.

      ANN

      No; certainly not. Besides, it’ll probably come to me, when I least expect it, like so much does.

      PETER

      … down on the elevator, out the door, down Seventy-fourth Street to the corner …

      ANN

      … stand there? Scream? In the night? Then it might come back to me?

      PETER

      Might.

      (Imitation.)

      “I know what I wanted to talk to him about!”

      ANN

      More likely something less … dramatic. But if it did—if it was—I’d have to wake you up and tell you.

      PETER

      And if you did—if you woke me—I’d know it was something important—something … threatening.

      ANN (Smiles.)

      Really; and we don’t have that, do we.

      PETER (Uncertain.)

      No. I don’t think so—not yet anyway.

      ANN

      No, but if I did wake you, said we had to talk, you’d sit up quickly, and your eyes’d be open very wide.

      PETER

      Yes. Well, I think so. And I’d know something terrible had happened.

      ANN

      You’d know?

      PETER

      Well, no; I don’t know if I’d know, but I think I would.

      ANN

      You’d assume.

      PETER

      Yes. That’s it: I’d assume.

      ANN

      What would you assume?

      PETER

      That something terrible had …

      ANN

      You said that. Specifically. What specifically?

      PETER (A little annoyed.)

      Well, I don’t know. I mean … for God’s sake, Ann …

      ANN

      I’m not a generality; I’m a person.

      PETER

      I know.

      ANN

      … and if I woke you and you bolted up, whatever awful thing you thought had happened would relate to me, most likely, or the kids, or you, or …

      PETER

      Yes!

      ANN

      So?!

      PETER

      I’d … what’s the term? … I’d “gather my wits about me.”

      ANN

      So that’s what you’d do, is it?

      PETER

      What?

      ANN

      Gather your wits about you—if I sat on the bed and woke you in the … what do they call it? … the small hours? That’s what you’d do?

      PETER

      Most likely. Or scream. Or refuse to wake up.

      ANN

      If you thought it was going to be terrible enough.

      PETER

      Yes. But I’d probably bolt up, gather my wits about me … and ask what it was.

      ANN

      But what would you imagine? What would you imagine was terrible enough …

      PETER

      That’s not what I said. “Important” is what I said, or “threatening.”

      ANN

      Then you said “terrible.”

      PETER

      All right!!

      ANN

      And we don’t have that, do we?

      PETER (Sighs.)

      No. But—as I said—we’re probably going to, one day.

      ANN (Sincere.)

      Oh, you poor dear. And we may even talk about it.

      PETER

      Don’t patronize.

      ANN

      I’m not.

      PETER (Calm.)

      I’m not a bad person, you know; my life may not be very exciting … no jagged edges …

      ANN (Agreeing.)

      No.

      PETER

      … but it’s not a bad life we’ve made together, and …

      ANN

      I know! I’m happy!

      PETER (Tiny pause.)

      Are you?

      ANN

      Well … yes; I … yes, of course. I have my bad times. You do, too.

      PETER

      You do?

      ANN

      Of course. You never tell me about yours, so …

      PETER

      I do! I just told you about …

      ANN

      Not the real ones; not the ones that there’s nothing to be done about … in any real sense.

      PETER (Pause.)

      Ah. Those. Well, you don’t tell me, either.

      ANN

      About the real ones? The ones there’s nothing to be done about?

      PETER

      Yes; those.

      ANN

      Why bother? If there’s nothing to be done … why bother? If there’s no help … why bother?

      PETER (Shy.)

      To … share?

      ANN

      Be helpless together? Cling like marmosets?

      PETER

      People need that sometimes.

      ANN

      Do they? Do you?

      PETER

      Not yet … I guess.

      ANN

      I wonder if I do.

      PETER (Pressing.)

      What was it you’d tell me?

      ANN (Self-absorbed.)

      Hm?

      PETER

      What was it you’d tell me if you sat on the bed and woke me in the small hours? What might it be?

      ANN

      Oh …

      (Gathers ideas.)

      that my mother had died—or yours? That someone had kidnapped the girls? That I was three months pregnant and not by you? That our broker had made off with everything? That …

      PETER (Hands over ears.)

      Please!!

      ANN

      What do you want—minor stuff? The parakeets got out? The icebox broke? Someone threw up in the hall?

      PETER

      Yes!

      ANN

      I wouldn’t wake you up for any of that. And I don’t wake you for the worse stuff—the real killers that nothing can be done about. That … that I know you love me—as you understand it, and I’m grateful for that—but not enough, that you don’t love me the way I need it, or I think I do; that that’s not your makeup—not in you, perhaps, or that maybe there’s no one could do it, could love me as much as I need to be loved; or worse … that I think I deserve more than I do, and that deep down I’m … less than I think I am.


      PETER (A hand out.)

      Oh, Ann.

      ANN

      Shall I go on?

      PETER (Sighs.)

      Might as well.

      ANN

      That nothing is … ultimately … sufficient—not you, not us, not … me? And I know you’re probably going through this, too. Or—worse—that maybe you’re not, that maybe none of it’s ever occurred to you—that you … don’t have it in you?

      PETER (Long silence.)

      Well.

      ANN

      You did ask.

      PETER

      Yes, I did.

      ANN

      Which is it?

      PETER

      Pardon?

      ANN (Harder.)

      … that you don’t have it in you!

      PETER (Quiet supplication.)

      Be kind.

      ANN

      No! No! Do you? Do you have it in you?

      PETER (Engaged, but rational.)

      I thought we both made a decision—when we decided to be together, or even before we knew each other—I thought we made a decision, must have made one, that what we wanted was a smooth voyage on a safe ship, a view of porpoises now and then, a gentle swell, bright clouds way off, a sense that it was a … familiar voyage, though we’d never taken it before—a pleasant journey, all the way through. And that’s what we’re having …

      (Slight doubt.)

      isn’t it?

      ANN (A tinge of disappointment.)

      Yeah; sure.

      PETER (Hearing it.)

      No?

      ANN

      No; yes. That’s what we’ve both wanted: stay away from icebergs; avoid the Bermuda Triangle; remember where the lifeboats are, knowing, of course, that most of them don’t work—no need. Yes; that’s what we’ve wanted … and that’s what we’ve had—for the most part. And isn’t it frightening.

      PETER

      That wasn’t a question.

      ANN

      No; it wasn’t. And isn’t it frightening.

      PETER (A little boy.)

      It is?

      ANN

      Sure. And we’ll never die.

      PETER

      No?

      ANN

      No; we’ll just vanish.

      (A silence.)

      PETER

      I made the assumption, I guess, that it’s what you wanted, too.

      ANN

      Oh? Well … sure—for the most part … most of the time. We have a better life than most people; we haven’t hit any of the brick walls yet; the playing field is all green and mowed within an inch of its life, except now and then there are … gopher holes.

      PETER (Bewildered.)

      Gopher holes?!

      ANN

      Sure; take our fucking, now …

      PETER (A protest.)

      Ann!

      ANN

      There’s no one here: The cats are asleep someplace, the girls are upstairs going deaf from all the music, and the birds couldn’t care less. Who’s to hear?

      PETER (Quietly.)

      Me?

      ANN

      Oh, yeah? Then listen. You’re good at making love.

      PETER

      Thank you.

      ANN

      You’re welcome, but you’re lousy at fucking.

      (PETER gets up.)

      Sit down!

      (He does.)

      All the things that fucking entails, or can entail—aggressive, brutal maybe, two people who’ve known each other for years—slept together for years—suddenly behaving like strangers, like people who’ve just met in a bar and gone to the motel next door to hammer it all out, to fuck for the sake of fucking. There are people who’ve lived together for years, who love one another deeply. Who sometimes go at each other like strangers—a regular one-shot deal, like you’ll never see each other again … or want to. The moment! Two strangers! The moment! There are people rise to that—sink to it, if you like—rise to that, become animals, strangers, with nothing less than impure simple lust for one another. There are people do that.

      PETER (Long, sad pause.)

      I’m not like that.

      ANN

      I know. And I love you dearly. When we come together in bed and I know we’re going to—what is the term young people use?—going to do it? When we come together in bed and I know we’re going to “make love.” I know it’s going to be two people who love each other giving quiet, orderly, predictable, deeply pleasurable joy. And believe me, my darling, it’s enough; it’s more than enough … most of the time. But where’s the … the rage, the … animal? We’re animals! Why don’t we behave like that … like beasts?! Is it that we love each other too safely, maybe? That we’re secure? That we’re too … civilized? Don’t we ever hate one another?

      PETER (Small pause.)

      Cover it up any way you want—be nice about it—but you mean I’m not very good in bed.

      ANN

      No! You’re very good—very good. I just wish you could be a little … bad sometime.

      (Sees him react.)

      I’ve hurt you!

      PETER

      No; that’s not it. I was bad, once. I was very bad.

      ANN (Ears sharp.)

      Oh? Recently?

      PETER (Smiles slightly.)

      No; before I knew you.

      ANN (Kind of sad.)

      Oh.

      PETER

      I’ve never told you. I never thought I’d have to. I was at college. And I’d pledged to a fraternity.

      ANN (Generous.)

      Well … back then bright people did that sometimes.

      PETER

      Yes. And there was a lot of hazing—forcing beer down us ’til we threw up, making us take terrible enemas until we couldn’t hold it, and throwing us out of doors naked, so passersby would …

      ANN

      Jesus!

      PETER

      Yes; well. And one night there was the sex party.

      ANN (Ears again.)

      Oh?

      PETER

      It was ugly; it was planned with one of the sororities. The pledges were all put together—the girls with the boys, and …

      ANN

      And?

      PETER

      And we were supposed to fuck. Cherry-popping they called it.

      ANN

      I don’t believe it.

      PETER

      What happened?

      ANN

      No; the term.

      PETER

      Well, there it was—a lot of liquor, grass, other stuff. Mattresses spread around; lights way down; rooms, too. And most people … wanted it, or seemed to.

      ANN

      What fraternity was this?

      PETER

      And there was this girl came on to me; I didn’t know her …

      ANN

      … from Eve.

      PETER

      … from what? Oh; yes; very good. I didn’t know her and she’d brought me into this room, and we were alone in there and … well, I’d been with a couple of girls—you know: in my life—so I wasn’t a total amateur, or anything. And we were both … out of it—mostly grass, I think—and we’d gotten naked, and she was playing with my … with my …

      ANN

      Your ear? Your toe?

      PETER

      No; my … my …

      (Points.)

      ANN (Fairly loud.)

      Your penis!

      PETER (Sotto voce.)

      Yes! Shhhhh!

      (She laughs.)

      Don’t!

      ANN

      Sorry.

      PETER

      And I guess we were both pretty hot, and I moved down on her and …

      ANN

      Did she like that? I do.

      PETER

      I know.

      ANN

      Go on.

      PETER

      Well, I thought she would, and I was spreading her a little, and she said, “No. Don’t do that. Go in me.” And so I spread her further, and, well, my … penis was very hard, and I was going to enter her and she said, “No; not there
    . The other.”

      ANN (Enlightened.)

      Ohhhhhh.

      PETER

      “You want me to …,” “Yes! Yes! There!” Well, I’d never done that, and …

      ANN

      What a surprise.

      PETER

      Let me finish?

      ANN

      Sorry.

      PETER

      But it was what she wanted she said, and it was real exciting, and so I did. And it was; it was real exciting, and disgusting, and it turned me on in an awful way, and I wanted to hurt her, and she started sort of hissing at me, “Hurt me! Hurt me!” And … I guess I was too big …

      ANN (Entranced.)

      Big enough.

      PETER

      And—here it is—I was stroking harder and harder, jamming it into her, really, and she was sobbing and yelling and “Yes! Hurt me!” And I kept on jamming and jamming into her until she screamed, and it wasn’t a right scream, and she screamed again and tried to push me out with her hands and she did, and there was blood; my … penis was bloody and …

      ANN (Oddly angry.)

      No! Not your penis! Your dick! Your cock! That’s what was bloody!

      PETER (Tiny pause.)

      Yes;

      (Comes down from it as he talks.)

      and I was all bloody, and she was crying—whimpering really, and I said, “Oh, God, I’m sorry; I’m so sorry!” And she said, “You hurt me!” And I said “That’s what you said; you said you wanted me to hurt you! I’m sorry! I’m so sorry!”

      (Pause.)

      ANN (Cold.)

      What happened?

      PETER (Sighs.)

      She went to the infirmary, they told me, and they fixed her up and …

      ANN

      And?

      PETER

      And she never told anyone who I was. I guess she was too embarrassed.

      ANN

      Or too nice?

      PETER

      What? Oh, yes: or too nice. So … so I’ve been careful never to hurt anyone—to hurt you; you being everyone for so long now.

      ANN

      Thank you.

      PETER

      It’s not all right to want to love somebody and not hurt them?

      ANN (Oddly self-absorbed.)

      Yes; of course it is.

      PETER

      So, if I’ve been too careful, if I’m too gentle …

      ANN

      You learned your lesson.

      PETER

      Yes.

      ANN

      I don’t think I was talking about pain, anyway—not like that; that’s something I don’t need. I think I was talking about being an animal—nothing more.

      PETER (A litle uncertain.)

      We all are, no?

      ANN

      Yes, but we can have it bred out of us—learned away. Thank you for being a fine husband—no sarcasm; don’t even think it—for being gentle, and thoughtful, and honest, and … “good”—oh, that awful word! And for putting up with your wife, who seems to want … something a little less—less deserving, maybe, though she doesn’t know; has glimmers now and then, but doesn’t truly know.

      PETER (Pause.)

     


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