MAN, 25-40
GIRL, 21
A room with two chairs and a table.
The MAN is standing. The GIRL is seated
MAN
So, let’s start with
something simple. Name? (Pause.) Come on, this isn’t difficult. I mean, it shouldn’t
be, should it? Not as if I asked you for the secrets of the universe. Or why the grass is green and not orange. Or where the carp
go in winter when the pond freezes over at the Japanese Tea Garden.
GIRL
Susan.
MAN
And?
GIRL
And nothing. Just Susan.
MAN
Uh huh. Any other names?
GIRL
I don’t think so.
MAN
(Writing . . .) Doesn’t think . . . No Miranda? Sassafras? Weltanschauung? Dormendorosa?
GIRL
No.
MAN
Adrienne? Samantha?
GIRL
Just Susan
MAN
So, Just Susan, is there
a last name to go along with Just Susan?
GIRL
Yes. (Pause.) Smith.
MAN
(Pause. Looks at papers.)
So strange. Strange, but true. Who
would believe Susan Smith, sitting right here, in my very own . . . room. Finally.
GIRL
What do you mean, “finally?”
MAN
Well, you’ve been out
there a long time. Three years, give or take.
GIRL
I’ll take, I think.
MAN
Don’t get cute. You have no business being cute. Cute’s
going to get you even deeper. Do you want to go deeper, Susan? Is the deep end where you lust to be? Flailing about in murky
depths, wondering where your next breath is coming from? (Pause.) I didn’t think so. (Pause.) Three years. Just had a birthday, I see.
GIRL
Yes.
MAN
Was it swell? Were there presents? Was there cake? Butter cream frosting? A candle or two? How many candles were there, Susan? Looks to me, from everything
here, from everything in this file, as if there should have been twenty-one. Take
quite a big breath to blow out all those candles, all twenty-one. Did you take
a big breath, Susan? Susan Smith?
GIRL
Yes, actually.
MAN
Good. Important to know you’ve got a lot of breath, you’ll be needing it.
GIRL
Needing it?
MAN
Didn’t your grandmother
ever tell you? Save your breath to cool your porridge? You’ll be eating a lot of porridge, Susan. Some’ll
be too hot. Some’ll be too cold.
I wonder whether any of it will be just right.
GIRL
Why am I here?
MAN
Ah, the eternal question. Why are we here? Why is anyone of us
here? To fear God, to do good, to be a good citizen. Anything else? (Pause.)
I said, anything else?
GIRL
No.
MAN
Ah. Well then. Which raises the question, what are you doing here? Why would a girl like you, a nice girl like you, a Susan Smith sort of girl find herself
alone in a room with someone like me? Only one possible answer, really, isn’t
there? (Pause.) Likes, Susan smith. Prevarication. So sad, a nice young girl
like you. Why you don’t look a day over eighteen.
GIRL
Lies?
MAN
So strange, isn’t it,
the web of circumstance, that extraordinary, convoluted conjunction that threads its way, setting unintentional traps for
the unwary. Are you wary, Susan Smith, or un?
GIRL
I . . .
MAN
Before you answer, what’s
your relationship to Sarah Brown?
GIRL
Sarah’s my friend. My best friend.
MAN
And is your best friend,
Sarah Brown, truthful?
GIRL
I guess so.
MAN
Well, she isn’t here,
is she/ so she must be, mustn’t she?
If she was a liar, where do you suppose she’d be?
(Pause)
GIRL
Here.
MAN
Where you are. Right. At least we both understand why you’re here. So, if Sarah told us something about you, that something would be true then.
GIRL
Yes.
MAN
So, the books are true and
the cell phone is true and the business about your identity card is true. (Pause.) It’s all true, isn’t
it?
GIRL
I don’t know.
MAN
No, you don’t, do you,
know anything, do you, because, if you did, you would have known, would have understood the consequences of your perfidy and
would not, I assume, have undertaken it. Now, let’s start with something
simple. How old are you?
GIRL
Twenty-one.
MAN
How old are you?
GIRL
Twenty-one.
MAN
How old are you?
(Pause.)
GIRL
Eighteen. How did you . . .?
MAN
This is today. You can’t fool any of the people any of the time.
GIRL
Did Sarah . . .?
MAN
No. Not at first. No harm in your knowing, now that you’re
here. Useful, actually. It was the
books. So much easier these days, libraries, bookstores, so compliant. Little Women. Sylvia Plath.
The Vagina Monologues. Oh, Susan.
GIRL
Is Sarah . . .?
MAN
Sarah’s fine. Sarah’s a champ. Sarah has a future. You could have a future, Susan.
GIRL
It’s not a crime. Lying about your age. People do it all
the time. Kids do it, to get into bars.
People do it. Old people say they’re younger to get dates. People say all kinds of things. Make
up where they went to school to get a job. It’s not a crime.
MAN
Did you make up a school? Did you go into a bar? You have the books. You called Sarah on your cell phone from a bar.
Did you lie to your other friends, too? Those people who make up schools
they went to, what books do they read?
GIRL
I don’t know. I mean, I don’t know any people who, like, lie on their resumes or anything.
MAN
I see. Well, then, since you don’t know any people like that, I think we should get to know you a little
better. Let’s start over. You
said your name was Susan. Are you sure?
What’s your name?
BLACKOUT