The WATERGATE
BLUES
by
Mordecai Goldberg
THE CHARACTERS
DICK...a young man of 20.
TRISH...his bride, naturally fair hair.
RICHARD...a congressman of 40.
PAT...his wife, blonde.
R.N...60-year old occupant of a very high elected office.
PATRICIA...his wife, peroxided.
THE FIRST LADY...his wife, white hair with blue tint.
THE OLD MAN...octogenarian and former occupant of a very high elected office.
THE SET
The stage is divided in half. LEFT is the livingroom of Richards and
Pats Georgetown house. It is decorated to Pats taste; French
Provincial with suggestions of both elegance and pretentiousness. The colors
are light with a predominance of yellows and gold. RIGHT is Richards
study with lots of books and dark woodtones. There is a sharp contrast in
moods between the two rooms. In rear wall of livingroom a set of French doors.
Unseen diningroom adjoins livingroom.
THE TIME
ACT ONE: Midmorning of a bright spring day.
ACT TWO: That afternoon.
ACT ONE
RICHARD at desk working on papers or reading. PAT dialing livingroom telephone.
PAT: Hello? Id like to know if Flight 868 from Los Angeles will be arriving at Dulles on schedule? Thank you. Thank you very much. [Hangs up.] Did you hear that Richard?
RICHARD: Theyre coming in on time?
PAT: 11:30.
RICHARD: [Checks watch.] 2 hours.
PAT: [Comes to doorway of study.] It seems so silly not to pick them up at the airport.
RICHARD: Thats the way they want it.
PAT: But you know how crowded and confusing it can be at Dulles. At their age Im not so sure they can cope.
RICHARD: The Old Man was very specific about it Pat.
PAT: You know how they are; he was only trying to be considerate.
RICHARD: The Old Man is right. If we showed up at the airport it would attract someones attention. You know how the press is. They have the airport staked out 24 hours a day. God only knows how hes going to get here without being spotted.
PAT: Youd think after 20 years they would leave him alone.
RICHARD: Are you kidding? Do they leave us alone?
PAT: Thats different, isnt it? Were still part of whats happening. Were fair game.
RICHARD: Everybodys fair game now with this mess R.N. is in. Every cub reporter in D.C. can smell a Pulitzer Prize in the air.
PAT: You think theyve gotten wind of The Old Mans memoirs?
RICHARD: Hell, yes. They know hes been working on them for an awfully long time now. They know hes 80 years old. You put 2 and 2 together and you know his autobiography has got to come out pretty soon.
PAT: Stillthere hasnt been much in the papers about The Old Man lately.
RICHARD: Thats the miracle. So far there hasnt been a single story about whatever the hell it is hes writing. Ill give him a lot of credit for that. Its taken him a lifetime to do it; but somehow hes found a way to work in a leakproof environment. Ill have to remember to ask the old fart what his secret is. I know for damned sure R.N. would like to know what it is!
PAT: You think theyll really come over todayR.N. and Patricia?
RICHARD: Last I heard they were. Although how they will get here without the entire press corps at their heels is a mystery to me.
PAT: That would be awful!
RICHARD: Oh, theyll manage to arrive undetected somehow. They wouldnt want to miss the anniversary. Besides, R.N. is very eager to brainstorm this impeachment thing.
PAT: Are you still involved with that!
RICHARD: How the hell can I avoid it? From a purely political point of view, weve got to know whats going on inside his head. This affair could turn into a death blow to the Party.
PAT: Yes, it couldto our party. Darn it, Richard, I dont want anything to spoil our plans. This is their day and it has to be perfect!
RICHARD: It will all be very discreet.
PAT: Can we count on that? On them being discreet?
RICHARD: Whats that supposed to mean?
PAT: Stories that are circulating
RICHARD: What stories?
PAT: Stories about drinking. Lots and lots of drinking going on at their place.
RICHARD: Thats just gossip.
PAT: I dont think so.
RICHARD: Even if he were hitting the bottle a little, can you blame him?
PAT: Not just him; them.
RICHARD: Im sure theyre under control. Hell, I know theyre under control. I saw them just 2 days ago and everything was under control.
PAT: Really?
RICHARD: Theres a lot of strain there, naturallybut they are holding up. I mean, when you consider the pressure the guy is facingthe fantastic pressurewell, its a miracle they havent cracked yet.
PAT: As long as they dont do it today of all days. There should not be any political talk today.
RICHARD: Lets be realistic, Pat. The Old Man knows whats going on. He knows R.N. will be here. There is simply no way the subject can be avoided. It wont spoil anything though. I promise you that. In fact I think it might be good for us to sit down and discuss everything with The Old Man. I think thats what R.N. wants. I think thats what The Old Man wants.
PAT: Well, its definitely not what I want.
RICHARD: Alright, alrightyouve made your point.
PAT: Just one day. One normal day every 20 years? That isnt too much for me to ask for is it?
RICHARD: [Sigh.] I dont know. Maybe it is[His telephone rings.] Hello? Oh, good morning sir!Yes, theyre due in at 11:30Yes, the flights on time. We just called the airlineNo, in his telegram he told us specifically not to pick him up at the airportdidnt want to draw a crowdIm sure he understands the dynamics of the situation, sir. As I was telling Pat just now, the sonofaguns political instincts are still in working order. Apparently he got out of California without being spottedNo, nothing on the news, sirYes, he sent me a copy too. Stayed up most of the night, reading the damned thingYes, yes, I agree totally. Im sure hell agree tooI think he just wants to get our impressions of what hes written, sirI dont think theres any question about that. You are coming over, arent you? In about an hour? Certainly. [Laughs.]Im sure youll be safe over here. Theres been no sign of any activity outside our place all morning. Is there anything special we can lay on for you, sir?Alright, well see you both then. Goodbye, sir. [Hangs up phone.]
PAT: So, theyre definitely coming.
RICHARD: Yeah, theyre driving over in the back of a laundry van!
PAT: A laundry van? Oh, my God!
RICHARD: I dont know whether to laugh or cry.
PAT: Its not funny.
RICHARD: No. It isnt funny.
PAT: And its not just them. Its all of us. Were all starting to behave like criminals.
RICHARD: Thats the price you pay.
PAT: The price for what?
RICHARD: Do I have to answer that?
PAT: I suppose not.
RICHARD: Have we ever gotten anything without fighting for it?
PAT: No.
RICHARD: Is there anything worth getting without a fight?
PAT: It doesnt seem there isI just didnt think this was our fight.
RICHARD: We have got to help the man, Pat. He needs us. He needs us desperately. Theyre closing in on him from all sides now and he has got to feel that somebody is on his side.
PAT: Are we?
RICHARD: Are we what?
PAT: On his side?
RICHARD: No question about it.
PAT: You think hes right then?
RICHARD: It doesnt matter what I think. And it doesnt matter whether or not hes right. Its a question of loyalty. Thats what loyalty is all aboutwhat I would expect from my people, he expects from mefrom us. In politics there is never any right or wrong, anyway. Its a question of whos got the numbers. And right now the numbers are all running against him. Weve got to help turn that around. And we can start right here.
PAT: Well, you know you can count on me.
RICHARD: Yes. I know I can. I always do. No matter how tough things get, I know youre with me; I can feel you standing there beside me. Im sure its the same with them too. Thats like a rock, that solidarity. A rock that nobody or no thing can break down. They never broke The Old Man, did they? He always had his First Lady with himand God knows the holy hell they went through together.
PAT: Yes; I dont know if I could take what she took.
RICHARD: If you had toyou would.
PAT: But Im not going to have to, am I?
RICHARD: Lets hope not.
PAT: I mean this thing R.N. and Patricia are going through
RICHARD: That isnt going to happen to us. Were not like them. Were not going to make the same mistakes.
PAT: Then R.N. has made mistakes.
RICHARD: Hell yes, hes made mistakesplenty of mistakes. But that doesnt mean he deserves what theyre doing to him now.
PAT: No?
RICHARD: No! They have got him between a rock and a hard place and they wonder why he behaves like a cornered rat! Christ, if only they would leave him just a little room to maneuver.
PAT: But we can escape; we can get out of politics right now if we wanted to, cant we?
RICHARD: Id be lying to you if I said we could. I mean, they might sure as hell throw us out of politics some day; but you cant just quit it
PAT: You need it that much?
RICHARD: Yes. I need it that much. Its in my blood. It always has been.
PAT: I wish you had told me that 20 years ago!
RICHARD: A politician never reveals more than is absolutely necessary, does he?
PAT: At the time I didnt realize you were
Sound of antique auto horn.
RICHARD: Who could that be?
PAT: [Comes to footlights, looks through window.] Its Dick!
RICHARD goes to front door as DICK climbs stairs from orchestra pit carrying TRISH. PAT joins them as DICK sings Wedding March with TRISH.
PAT: What a wonderful surprise this is! What are you two doing here?
DICK: Cant you tell? [Sprinkles PAT and RICHARD with rice.]
PAT: Youre notyou cant be
DICK: Yes, yes; we are! Were married! Spliced! Hitched! Til death us do part. [Hugs TRISH.] Isnt that right, Trish? [They touch lips.]
PAT: Oh, Dick, come onyoure kidding us. This is just one of your jokes, isnt it?
TRISH: No, its true! [Shows wedding ring.]
RICHARD: [Suddenly aware of their public exposure.] We better get out of this doorway. [Looks left and right before closing door.]
Both couples cross to livingroom.
RICHARD: Now, whats this all about?
DICK: Its about two young people falling in love and getting married.
RICHARD: You mean youre going to get married.
DICK: No. I mean married. Past tense. [produces marriage certificate.] About six hours past tense. [Hands certificate to RICHARD, who reads it.] Hey! Why so glum?
PAT: Im not glum, Dick. Im in a state of shock! This is all so sudden, so totally unexpected
RICHARD: It looks kosher to me. They are legally married alright. [Returns document to DICK.]
PAT: We always thought you would let us know beforehandso we could arrange a proper wedding.
DICK: Thats exactly why we didnt let you know! We didnt want all that fuss and hullabaloo[To TRISH.]did we, monkey?
RICHARD: The point is, it isnt just what you two want; there are other considerations; the feelings of others are involved.
DICK: [To TRISH.] Listen to that, will you? [To RICHARD and PAT.] Under what circumstances did you two guys get married?
PAT: That was different
DICK: Oh?
RICHARD: There was a war going on.
DICK: Theres a war going on now.
PAT: Richard was going into the Navy.
TRISH: Dick is going into the Navy.
RICHARD and PAT exchange looks, smile and then laugh. Everyone laughs.
RICHARD: The young squirts have got us dead to rights, Im afraid.
DICK: Its a fait accompli.
PAT: Well, if thats the case, we might as well make the most of it!
She kisses TRISH on cheek, then gives DICK hug. RICHARD kisses TRISH on cheek.
PAT: Congratulations
RICHARD: [Shaking DICKs hand.] Congratulationsand the best of luck!
PAT: Yes! The best of everything to you my darlings[Starts to cry.]
DICK: Now thats just what we were trying to avoid!
RICHARD: You cant avoid a womans tears at a wedding, Dickor even the thought of a wedding.
DICK: [To TRISH.] Is that right? Is that the way its going to be with you 20 years from now?
TRISH: I dont know. Maybe that depends on you.
DICK: What have I got to do with it? [To RICHARD.] Is that why shes crying?
RICHARD: Over spilled milk you mean?
DICK: [To TRISH.] The man said, "For better or for worse." Remember that!
PAT: Thats enough teasing. Im all right now. Just a little cloudburst, thats all. And now the sun is out and its going to shine brightly all day long!
RICHARD: [Having wandered to footlights, looks through window.] What is that "thing" you drove up here in, Dick?
DICK: That is a genuine 4 wheel 6 cylinder Antediluvian Special!
TRISH: It was made before the Flood alright!
DICK: Its basically a Ford
RICHARD: Basically?
DICK: Well, there is a little Chrysler and some DeSoto thrown inand one of the fenders is from a Packard.
RICHARD: [To PAT.] It reminds me of that rattletrap we used to drive. You remember that first jalopy of ours?
PAT: It was such a long time ago
RICHARD: You think itll make it into the garage, Dick? Im afraid it might attract some attention parked out there on the street.
DICK: Well if youre ashamed to have a genuine relic like that on your front lawn, I guess well have to hide it. This is a very exclusive neighborhood, after all. And we certainly wouldnt want to depress the real estate market for this part of Georgetown, would we?
DICK and RICHARD EXIT into orchestra pit. We will hear clatter of cars engine when it is started.
PAT: Its really quite unbelievable; that this should happen today of all days.
TRISH: Is today a special day?
PAT: Didnt you know? Richard and I are celebrating our wedding anniversary.
TRISH: You were married on the same day?
PAT: 20 years ago today.
TRISH: That is quite a coincidence.
PAT: Its more than that. Ours isnt the only anniversary we are celebrating today. This is a day full of anniversaries. Youll see! You are staying, arent you?
TRISH: I certainly hope so! Weve been driving most of the night, and its a long way to Cape Cod.
PAT: Cape Cod? Is that where you and Dick are going for your honeymoon?
TRISH: Yes.
PAT: Thats where we went; Richard and I
DICK and RICHARD RE-ENTER from pit.
RICHARD: By God, that jalopy of Dicks is almost the spitting image of the car we had, Pat. Remember how I nearly broke my arm cranking it up that one time?
PAT: You never were mechanically inclined, darling.
RICHARD: [To DICK.] Those old starting cranks can be murderous.
TRISH: Thats why he always makes me use it!
PAT: [To RICHARD.] Can you guess where Dick and Trish are going for their honeymoon?
RICHARD: Where?
PAT: Cape Cod.
RICHARD: Cape Cod! No kidding? Ah, thats a great place for a honeymoon.
DICK: Weve rented the same bungalow you two had.
RICHARD: You mean to tell me that old shack is still standing?
PAT: It wasnt exactly "standing" when we stayed in it. The walls were all leaning at the craziest angles! [Demonstrates with hands.] I was scared to death the whole time the place would collapse on us like a house of cards!
RICHARD: All the houses take a beating up there in that weather. But I guess it was made to last, that bungalowit sort of bends with the wind, I suppose. Youre going to love it up there. My God, those were wonderful days for us. The whole world was going to hell but we were in paradise: at least for a few weeks. Yes, those were great times for us[Pause.] So, youre going into the Navy?
DICK: Yes, sir. I have to report to San Diego on the 28th.
RICHARD: Does that mean sea duty?
DICK: Tin cans.
RICHARD: Destroyers, huh? Well, thats the real Navy all right. Rough dutythe roughest really. But very gratifying.
DICK: Is that what you served onDestroyers?
RICHARD: Yes. For a whilebefore I got a staff assignment. Maybe that was a mistake.
DICK: What was?
RICHARD: Leaving that bucket of rust. They were a great bunch of guys. They went down off the Solomons later in the war.
TRISH: Then you were lucky to get off when you did!
RICHARD: Ohmaybe I was, after all. Its just thatI always had the crazy feelingthat if I had stayed aboard her she wouldnt have gone down. A silly idea reallythat one man could make a difference like thatbut still, it is a question that haunts me: what would have happened if I had stayed on that ship?
PAT: [To TRISH.] So youll follow Dick to San Diego?
TRISH: Naturally.
PAT: And wait for the war to end.
TRISH: And wait for the war to end.
PAT: Just as I did.
TRISH: What else can a woman do?
PAT: Yes. What else can a woman do but watch the sun go down on the ocean every night?
TRISH: It cant last forever; the war.
PAT: No. The war will end and he will come back safe and sound.
DICK: Do you guarantee that?
PAT: Yes! I guarantee it!
RICHARD: Youve got a much better chance of surviving in the Navy, Dickthat was a smart choice. And the Navy will provide you with a good backgroundexcellent leadership training in the Navy. Its really incredible how many of this nations leaders come out of the Navy.
PAT: And what about your future? After the war. Have you decided on anything?
DICK: Were not looking that far ahead yet, really.
TRISH: We dont want to think beyond the next two weeks. We want them to be like a whole lifetime.
RICHARD: Yes. Thats the way to be when youre young. Let the future take care of itself.
DICK: That doesnt sound very typical of you, sir. Ive always thought of you as someone who believed in taking the future by the scruff of its neck and making it do what you wanted it to do.
RICHARD: Yes, well, thats probably truethat has been my philosophy.
DICK: Been your philosophy?
RICHARD: Still is, still isits just that
DICK: This impeachment thing? Is it that bad? For you, personally?
RICHARD: Personally, its got nothing to do with me. Its just a difficult timefor all of us. There is a little poison in the air just now.
PAT: Were not going to talk about that, are we, on a day like this?
RICHARD: No. Of course not. Youre right. We shouldnt. We shouldnt let the poison seep in here. This day should be specialsacreda real holiday.
PAT: Promise me just one thing, Trish. If Dick ever asks your permission to go into politics, turn him down. No matter what the cost, turn him down.
DICK: Thats not very likely to happen.
RICHARD: Does that mean youre not going on to Law School?
DICK: We havent decided that yet.
PAT: Law School is the first step on the road to a political career, Trish. Remember that!
RICHARD: Let me just say, in all fairness to politics, that we, Pat and I, have done all right by it. Not that its been all wine and roses, but nothing that really matters ever is. Take this house for example
TRISH: It is a truly handsome place
RICHARD: That wasnt necessarily my meaning, but youre right. It is a beautiful house. What I meant was that this house, because of its history, embodies the finer aspects of politics. There have been a lot of great people who have lived in this house. A lot of history has been made here. This place goes back to the Monroe administration. Congressmen, Supreme Court Justices, Cabinet Officers. There are a lot of ghosts in this housea lot of tradition living here. And its a great feeling you get being a part of something like thatbeing part of that legacy.
TRISH: Yes, there are ghosts hereand yet it feels verycomfortable!
RICHARD: Its certainly not the biggest or grandest house in Washingtonbut we feel very lucky to have gotten it. Its been a good house for those who have lived in it.
TRISH: Yes. Somehow I feel quite at home here
PAT: Would you like to see the rest of it?
TRISH: Yes! Yes, I would. Very much so[She and PAT rise.]
PAT: And how about you, Dick? Would you like the 25-cent tour?
RICHARD: Hows about I show Dick the masculine part of our digs?
PAT: Alright. I think it might be good to separate the sexes for a little while.
TRISH: Im not so sure about that! Weve only been married for 6 hours!
PAT: Maybe we should start with the bedrooms?
TRISH: Now thats a marvelous idea!
RICHARD: Thats why I want to have my little talk with Dick first!
PAT: Come on[Takes TRISH by the arm.] Well start in here. This is where were going to have our party
PAT and TRISH EXIT left. RICHARD and DICK cross to study.
RICHARD: Well, what do you think of it?
DICK: Its fantastic! Beautiful! The woodtones, the books, the whole atmosphere of the placeits perfect!
RICHARD: Go ahead; sit behind the desk. [DICK sits and swivels in chair.] You like the feel of the place?
DICK: Yes! Yes! I like it!
RICHARD: I used to dream about having a room like thiswell, never really like this! I mean, would you believe Henry Clay sat right where youre sitting? This room hasnt changed a helluva lot since his time. Lincoln paid a visit here a couple of times. And Teddy Roosevelt and Wilson andI think there were 8 or 9 presidents in all who have visited here[Gets book.] They kept a journal of all the distinguished visitors[Turns pages, reads.]"On March the 22nd, 1832, President Jackson came for supper with Senator Calhoun and Senator Daniel Webster"
DICK: That must have been some supper!
RICHARD: "December 20th, 1856, Chief Justice Roger Taney paid a visit to the Attorney General"
DICK: That was around the time of the Dred Scott decision, wasnt it?
RICHARD: Yes, I think it was
DICK: They probably discussed it right here in this room.
RICHARD: Lots of historic discussions in this room. [Handing journal to DICK.] Go ahead. Feel free to browse through it
DICK: [Turning pages.] Youre still making entries.
RICHARD: Oh, yesits part of the tradition of this place. History didnt stop with the 19th century. Someday, a long time from now, someone will look at those entries we make and remark about the history we played a part in making.
DICK: [Closes journal.] Yes. [Rises.]
RICHARD: No, noyou go ahead and sit there.
DICK: Its your chair, sirsomehow it feels just a little bit large for me.
RICHARD: [Comes behind desk to sit in chair.] Someday
DICK: [Looking at books on wall.] Sir?
RICHARD: Someday you will be sitting in a chair like this; in a room like this.
DICK: I doubt it. Trish isnt very keen on politics.
RICHARD: None of them are. Women, I mean. Pat iswell, I guess you can tellshes not exactly what youd call 100%butwe each have our own worlds; our own imperativesmen and women, that is.
DICK: Are you saying I should "Damn the torpedoes and full speed ahead?"
RICHARD: Yes. Trish will respect you for it, too. Even though she might never admit it. People always respect a man who does what he knows he has to do. It might not be the popular thing to do; in fact, its never the popular thing to do. But in the end they respect you for it.
DICK: Thats respect. What about love? Do they love you for it?
RICHARD: Those two things are actually very similar, Dick, arent they? Isnt "respect" just our word for what a woman calls "love?"
DICK: God knows!
RICHARD: Im not an expert, thats for sure; but if there is anything I know about the relationship between men and women, Dick, its that without mutual respect, there is very little of anything else. Nothing of value anyway. No. When the honeymoon is over you have got to have that rock hard foundation of respect if youre going to build anything solid and lasting.
DICK: It wouldnt be easy to persuade Trish.
RICHARD: Hell, no. Of course it wouldnt be. It wasnt easy for me. But if you take the easy way outif you compromise yourself when youre just starting out, you will end up with nothing left to give away. Thats why this first decision is so critical. I cant tell you exactly what to do; but I cant urge you strongly enough to do what you really want to do.
DICK: Maybe thats what I really dont knowwhat it is I really want.
RICHARD: I think you do. I saw it in your face when you were sitting in this chair. I see it now as you look at those books. You are projecting yourself into this houseyoure looking ahead 20 years and saying to yourself: "This is what I want!."
DICK: Maybe I do want the room. And the housebut Im not sure about everything else that goes along with it. [Pause.]
RICHARD: Did The Old Man send you a copy of his Memoirs?
DICK: Yes.
RICHARD: I see
DICK: I havent read all of it yet.
RICHARD: No. Neither have I.
DICK: But Ive read enough
RICHARD: Yes? Read enough for what?
DICK: To know you have to be a very special person to go through what he went through.
RICHARD: You think thats the message?
DICK: There are a lot of messages in what he wrote, but that is certainly one of them. At least for me it is. I had to ask myself whether I could have handled it. And I had to ask myself whether it would be right to ask Trish to go through it all with me.
RICHARD: But she went through it with him; with The Old Man. The two of them went through it together, didnt they? And, in the end it was a good thing"It was a fine thing," he says. "A terrible adventure," he says, "but an adventure they shared"
DICK: And the sharing of it made them special to each other.
RICHARD: Yes. That is what he says.
DICK: But that was himthat was them. I dont think Trish and I are made out of the same stuff.
RICHARD: The hell youre not! Youre doing fineyoure right on the track. Just because you doubt yourself doesnt mean you arent capable of doing what weve all done. That quality of self doubt is itself a good, strong quality. Besides, what happened to The Old Man doesnt necessarily have to happen to all of us. Thats what I think the message is. The Old Man made some mistakes; tragic mistakes. But they were his mistakes. We can avoid them.
DICK: Maybe the first mistake he made was going into politics.
RICHARD: He doesnt say that, does he?
DICK: Not in so many words, maybe
RICHARD: No. I dont think there is any of that in his book. Thats whats so remarkable about the thing, Dick. There arent any regrets in it! Here is the story of a man going through the holiest kind of hell imaginablesinking to the absolute lowest depths of disgrace and dishonor. Nobody had ever fallen that far before; and yet hes telling us that if he had to do it over again, he would do it! Not because what he did was right; but because it was he, himself doing it. And, by God, thats the only justification he needs. He is stripping himself naked and saying: this is what I am. Hell, thats a fantastic thing for a man to do, Dick. I dont mind telling you I did a lot of crying as I read the thing.
DICK: Maybe thats because youre a lot closer to him than I am. Anyway, I didnt cry.
RICHARD: Yes. Maybe I am a lot closer to him. Sure I am! But that is only years. That is only time. In every other respect were all very close to each other. When I was your agewhen The Old Man was your agewe felt the same way about the same things. I can only say I hope when Im 80 I can write that kind of book about myself; that I can have those kinds of attitudes about myself.
DICK: Surely it isnt necessary to go through what he went through just to achieve that kind of perspective about ones self?
RICHARD: Well, now, there I agree with you. Im sure it isnt necessary. Each of us has to do it in his own way.
DICK: Thats what bothers me about his bookhe seems to be saying we dont have any choice; that there is a certain "inevitability" about it all.
RICHARD: I think hes saying just the opposite, Dick. I think he is saying his life was just that; his life. He was the one who shaped the events. They didnt shape him.
DICK: [Pause.] Is this the house he was talking about? Did he live here too?
RICHARD: Yes.
DICK: And R.N. too?
RICHARD: Yes. They were both congressmen, like me. This house sort of goes with the territory.
DICK: It seems like more than just that. It seems a little frightening.
RICHARD: Hell, If youre superstitious, you can find some other house.
DICK: No. Thats just it. Im sure it would have to be this one. Im sure if I looked all over Washington, I couldnt find a house that felt like this one. Thats what disturbs me about it. When I came inside for the first time, just now, I felt I had been here before. When Pat asked me if I wanted to see the other rooms, I almost answered that I knew what the other rooms were like.
RICHARD: Things like that happen. You dream about a place and then, someday, you find youre actually there.
DICK: Do you put that much faith in dreams?
RICHARD: It happens. It happened to me. I believe in anything that happens. Dont you?
DICK: Yes. I guess I do. But maybe we shouldnt.
RICHARD: Why do you say that?
DICK: It seemed to be a theme I detected running through The Old Mans bookthat the great weakness, the central flaw in his character and his life was that he never realized the importance of moral principles. He only saw what there was on the surface; never what lay underneath.
RICHARD: Thats easy for him so say now that hes been out of the kitchen for 20 years. The only morality there is, is the morality of staying alive. And thats not just politics, Dick, thats life.
DICK: I cant believe that. I cant believe there is no morality anywhere, in anything.
RICHARD: The kind of morality youre talking about exists only in books.
DICK: If thats true, its a pretty lousy thing.
RICHARD: Yes, its pretty lousy. But thats the way it is.
DICK: Well, I dont want it to be that way.
RICHARD: Neither did I. Neither did The Old Man. But we dont make the rules.
DICK: I thought you did! I thought thats what politics was all about. Making better rules. Otherwise, whats the point of it all?
RICHARD: Of course thats true; in the long run. In the big picture, thats true. Im talking about what it takes to get that donethe process itselfwhat happens on the line of scrimmage to make those end around plays work so beautifully. Thats what politics is all about. Its hand-to-hand combat. But, all along, you know, in spite of the cut and thrust of it all, in the end you are helping to achieve something basically goodeven noble. Something that is better than when you started out. Thats what The Old Man says, doesnt he? That on balance he left the field of combat with a few more marks of glory than of infamy. That he left us all a little better off than when he found us.
DICK: Yes. Thats what he says.
RICHARD: You dont believe him?
DICK: I dont know. I mean, I believe he believes it. Im just not sure whether it really happened that way. Whether we are better off because of him or in spite of him. That is what Id like to talk to him about.
RICHARD: Is that why you really came hereto see The Old Man?
DICK: Partly. Maybe mostly. I dont know. [Pause.] Why did you ask?
RICHARD: R.N. is coming over too. Im sure he wants to talk to The Old Man
DICK: You dont want me around for that, do you?
RICHARD: I dont know. Its not what I want. Its how R.N. feels about it.
DICK: How does he feel?
RICHARD: About a thing like that? I really cant say.
DICK: I meant about things in general.
RICHARD: Hes holding up.
DICK: Is he?
RICHARD: Dont believe everything you read in the Post, Dick.
DICK: Its not just the papers, sir. Weve seen him on television and he looks pretty bad. Grotesque, really.
RICHARD: Hes under one hell of a strain, physically
DICK: Its not just physical. There seems to be a spiritual sickness about him. It pokes right up through all that TV makeup
RICHARD: There is no "spiritual" sicknessthe man is being crucified on the instalment plan; and it hurts. It hurts like hell. Its no wonder that sometimes the pain shows through[PAT and TRISH RE-ENTER livingroom.]The miracle is he has come as far as he has without totally caving in. Its his spirit that keeps him going. No one else could have taken what hes taken so far; in the physical sense, that is. In the physical sense he was mortally wounded a long time ago. Its his spiritual reserve that keeps him functioning now
PAT and TRISH cross to study doorway.'
TRISH: Heywhat dark, cabalistic plots are you guys hatching in here?
RICHARD: Come on in, Trish. I was just showing off the study to Dick.
TRISH: [Enters study, looks about, touches some of the woodwork.] Mmmm. Its nice. This entire house is a dream. But not for the likes of us poor folk!
RICHARD: Dont worry. Someday you will have a house just as nice as this. Nicer maybe. You married the right guy, Trish.
TRISH: [Sits on arm of Dicks chair, musses his hair.] Oh, I dont have any doubts about that. Dick is special alrightvery special. Hell make a wonderful dentistwont you darling?
PAT: How about some coffee? We will probably be having a late lunch so a bite now would be wise.
PAT goes to diningroom. Others cross to livingroom and sit. PAT returns with coffee service and cookies.
RICHARD: Ive been thinking about this tin can theyve assigned you to, Dick. If youd rather have staff duty I could pull some strings with BuPers and get you billeted with CincPac.
DICK: No! No, Im kind of looking forward to sea duty.
RICHARD: I was thinking of Trish too, actually. It can be pretty tough for her being all alone in a strange town.
DICK: She can take it, sir. Cant you?
TRISH: Im certainly going to find out, arent I!
DICK: After all, the two of you managed it, didnt you?
PAT: Apparently we did!
DICK: Besides, it just wouldnt be right.
RICHARD: What wouldnt?
DICK: Using political influence to get a soft billet.
RICHARD: Now hold on just a minuteI wasnt talking about just getting you a soft billet. Oh noI was talking about getting you a staff job that could help you develop the skills needed for a successful career. Thats just helping somebody along and its done all the time.
DICK: That doesnt make it right.
RICHARD: The war isnt right, is it?
DICK: I thought it was!
RICHARD: I mean war itself is unfair. And if thats the case, whatever a fellow does to escape the harsher consequences of something thats not his fault; well, there cant be anything wrong with that, certainly. Just for arguments sake, lets suppose you were put in jail for a crime you didnt commit. Wouldnt you have the moral right to get out of there any way you could?
DICK: The system itself takes care of such cases. Thats why the doctrine of Habeas Corpus was developed
RICHARD: Before Habeas Corpus then!
DICK: Before Habeas Corpus I would fight for the principle of Habeas Corpus.
PAT: I think hes got you there Richard!
RICHARD: Of course hes got meand that just proves my point. He should definitely go to Law School!
PAT: [To TRISH.] You see what its like living with a politician? You can never win an argument. Even when they lose, they prove theyve really won.
RICHARD: Trish wants Dick to become a dentist!
PAT: I think its a fine idea. Weve got too many politicians and not enough good dentists in this world.
RICHARD: You cant take someone like Dick and dress him up in a white dental smock
PAT: Why not?
RICHARD: Because hes not a dentist. He never will be a dentist. No dental college in the world could make a dentist out of him. I mean, could you see me as a dentist?
PAT: But Dick is not you.
RICHARD: He may not be me but hes no dentist either.
TRISH: I was just kidding about the dentist thing!
DICK: You were? I dont knowI kind of like the idea. It sounds soplacid.
PAT: The fact of the matter is simply that you are an exceptionally talented young man and there is a whole world of career opportunities for you to choose from
RICHARD: Yes, and in the end you will go to law school; and after law school youll go into politics.
PAT: Why on earth is it so important that Dick follow in your footsteps?
RICHARD: I didnt say he had to follow in my footsteps
PAT: But thats what you meant Richard. Youre all the sameyou, R.N., The Old Manalways wanting someone else to justify the choices you made when you were young by making the same choice. Surely you will admit to Dick there are other professions, other careers that are rewarding, stimulating and challenging?
RICHARD: No. I cant admit that. It isnt true. It just isnt true.
PAT: [Pause.] There must be some way to change this depressing subject!
TRISH: Tell us about Cape Cod. Tell us what it was like when you were there.
PAT: WellI dont know if the world was a simpler place in those days, or whether it was just being young, or if it really is just Cape Cod itselfbut it was a time of sheer magic. An enchanted time when all of my fondest dreams seemed to be coming true
RICHARD: We wanted those two weeks to go on forever. Its almost painful to remember how sweet those days were.
PAT: Oh, the innocence of it all. The innocence and purity. Seeing the sun rise over the sea and watching the sunset colors dancing on the water: one had a powerful sense of being in touch with eternity
RICHARD: And the serenity of it allthats the word that comes to me: serenity.
TRISH: That sounds almostsad; that something so wonderful had to end.
PAT: How else can happiness end; and it must end, mustnt it? We cant expect unending happiness, can we? But we cant let the sadness stop us from enjoying what we can when we can.
RICHARD: You wont be worrying about the future while youre there. Itll be just the two of you. Nothing else will matter. There wont be anything else. And that two weeks will seem like an entire lifetime. Youll see.
TRISH: Have you ever been back there?
PAT: No. We havent.
RICHARD: There were many times we wanted towe tried to get back; but somehow we just never made it.
TRISH: Well, we are going back every summer; every anniversaryisnt that right, Dick?
DICK: First we have to win the war.
TRISH: Thats what I meantafter the war.
PAT: Thats what we kept saying, didnt we, Richard? After the war? After law school? After the election?
TRISH: Were going to be different! Were going to take a solemn oath right here and now: that when the war is over, no matter what, we are going back to Cape Cod every single summer for the rest of our lives to celebrate our wedding anniversary. And, if that breaks some kind of tradition or law or whatever, well, so be it! Is that alright? Does that sound like a proper solemn oath?
RICHARD: That sounds very legal and proper, young lady!
TRISH: Welldo you so solemnly swear, Dick?
DICK: I do so solemnly swear.
TRISH: Do we seal it with a kiss? Is a kiss alright?
RICHARD: I think, in the case of a solemn oath, that a kiss is deemed very proper indeed!
TRISH and DICK kissa long, increasingly passionate kiss that becomes the cause of some embarrassment to RICHARD and PAT.
TRISH: There! Weve settled that, havent we!
Telephone rings.
RICHARD: No! Dont answer it. [Phone rings.] We dont want to be bothered today. [Phone rings.] Today we are not home. [Phone rings.] As far as the rest of the world is concerned we have all gone to Cape Cod. [Phone rings.]
PAT: It might be The Old Man, Richard[Phone rings.]
RICHARD: Cant be. Theyre not due in for another 45 minutes.
Phone rings. A pause. Phone rings.
PAT: Whoever it is, they seem to know were here.
Phone rings. RICHARD rises and answers it.
RICHARD: Hello?Oh, hello StanWhat? The Old Man coming to Washington? That is news to me StanNo, I dont know if they have left Elba or notIf they have I really wouldnt know where theyd be goingI understand youve got a job to do, Stan. I just hope you wont help stir up anything until all the facts are in, thats allYes, I know you are a responsible journalist; one of the very few. That Is why I assure you if I knew anything Id be the first to pass it along to youWhat do you want me to do, Stan; swear on a Bible? All rightPat is getting me the family Bible right now[Indicates she is not to do that.]No, Im not kidding you, Stan. I am putting my hand on the Bible. It is on the Bible Stan, and I am swearing to you right now as a Christian, as a United States Congressman, as a member of the Baron the grave of my father, Stan! Is that good enough for you? On all those things I swear to you The Old Man is not coming hereI know youve been mistreated in the past, Stan, but never by me, right? Never by yours truly. So I would appreciate it if you do whatever you can to nip this phony story in the bud. God knows Ive got enough on my plate right now without these groundless speculationsWhats that?Oh, well, on that matter I might have something for you later. The man is coming over here today via the back doorIm telling you this in all candor so you can help keep the pack away from his heels. It is certainly to your advantage as much as to his to keep the lid on itAlright. Ill get back to you later tonight or in the morning at the latest and let you know what I can on the impeachmentO.K. Stan. Yes. I understand. So long. [Puts phone down.] Goddammit. I knew I shouldnt have picked that phone up!
PAT: You think he believed you?
RICHARD: Yeah. He bought it. Ive never screwed him beforenot so he found out about it anyway. But he might not be the only one. Seems he got word from a "very reliable source" on the coast that The Old Man had left Elba and boarded a plane at LAX. Apparently they dont know about the memoirs. He didnt mention them. So thats something. He thinks The Old Mans trip must be related to R.N.getting him ready for a resignation scenario possibly[Comes to footlights for look out of window.'] It seems nice and peaceful out therebut I can just see The Old Man pulling up and 45 reporters jumping out of the trees and popping up from the sewers. I swear if that happens Ive got a good mind to go out there on that lawn with the magnum and order them the hell off our land like some outraged rancher in one of those old John Wayne movies
TRISH: Yes! That would be such fun! Why dont you do it!
RICHARD: Because that is what theyd love for me to do. What a great frontpage spread that would make. Congressman goes berserkthreatens press corps with gun! You cant beat the bastards, Trishyou just cannot beat them.
DICK: Theyve got a job to do, sir, havent they?
RICHARD: A job to do? Theyre scum! Theyre vultures! They feed on carrion. Thats their job, Dick, to keep on sticking their noses into the worst kind of human garbage
DICK: Is that why you lied to him?
RICHARD: I couldnt very well tell him the truth, could I? That whole street out there would look like Times Square on New Years Eve. The helicopters would blot out the sky. Instant pandemonium would erupt. You have no idea what a hellish fury they can whip up. I just dont think The Old Man is strong enough could take thatand, oh, how they would love to get him down on the ground for a dying interview! Theyve been after him for 50 years50 goddammed years! And Im not going to help them corner him now. Theyve gotten more than their pound of flesh from himand God knows how much of his blood they have sucked outthats why I lied to him.
DICK: The end justifies the means
RICHARD: Quoting The Old Man again, eh? Well, if The Old Man really believes the end doesnt justify the means anymore, then let him tell them hes on his way here. But he doesnt seem to have told them, does he!
DICK: No. I guess he hasnt.
RICHARD: Maybe you can be the first one not to ever tell a lie, Dick. And, believe me, you will be the first!
ENTER R.N. and PATRICIA from diningroom. He wears baseball cap, dark glasses and windbreaker. She wears a rather ordinary dress, black wig and sunglasses. Everyone rises on their entrance.
RICHARD: Well! You made it!
R.N.: Took the old "Ho Chi Minh trail" along the river and then through a few backyards.
RICHARD: Anyway, youre safe and sound
R.N.: Its a hell of a thing to have to do; a hell of a thing, Richard
RICHARD: Yes, yesa hell of a thing. Would you like to change into something more comfortable?
R.N.: No, this stuffs o.k. You never know when well have to hightail it out of here
PAT: Well, right now you can both sit down and have some coffee.
R.N.: Id like to pow-wow with Richard before The Old Man shows up.
RICHARD: Sure, surewe can go into my study.
PAT: Havent you got the time to say hello to Dick and Trish?
R.N.: Dick? Is this Dick? Im sorryI didnt recognize you! And this is?
DICK: This is Trish, sirmy wife.
R.N.: Your wife? [To RICHARD.] Why didnt you tell me Dick was getting married?
PAT: We didnt know they had eloped ourselves until an hour ago.
R.N.: Now that was a damned silly thing to do, Dick. We could have arranged a swell ceremony for you two at the White House.
PATRICIA: [Obviously inebriated, to TRISH.] Hi. Im Patricia. [Offers hand for a shake.]
TRISH: Its a pleasure to meet you.
PATRICIA: Is it? Really? Are you sure about that?
R.N.: Therell be plenty of time for small talk when The Old Man and The First Lady get here[Moves toward study with RICHARD, then turns.] What about Dick? We cant leave him alone with all these women, can we Richard? Come on, son
DICK approaches. R.N. puts arm around his shoulders.
R.N.: Who knows, maybe youre the one with all the answers, huh? [They cross into study.]
PATRICIA: [As lights fade in livingroom.] Would it be too much trouble to find me a large scotch on the rocks?
Livingroom goes dark as lights come up in study.
R.N.: First things first, Richard. I need a drink.
RICHARD pulls bar out from library wall revealing some of its books to have been fakes.
RICHARD: How about you, Dick?
DICK: No, sir. Im fine.
R.N.: Yeah. I can see you are. You dont need this poison yet, do you? Youve still got life by the balls, huh?
DICK: Yes, sir; I guess I have.
RICHARD hands R.N. drink, takes his own behind desk.
RICHARD: Dicks going into the Navy, R.N. Two weeks in Cape Cod and then its a tin can in WestPac.
R.N.: That sounds familiar[Drinks.] Cant we do something for Dick? Get him into the J.A.G. or something comfortable like that?
RICHARD: He wants to suffer.
R.N.: Is that true?
DICK: I want to go to sea; yes, sir, thats true.
R.N.: What in the hell for? [Drinks.] Richard and I both suffered for Old Glory and look where its gotten us, for Christs sake! You dont think theyre going to give you a fucking medal for being a nice guy, do you?
DICK: Im not interested in medals, sir.
R.N.: No? What are you interested in?
DICK: I dont knowexactly.
R.N.: You must want to go somewhere, be something
DICK: Maybe I just want to be myself.
R.N.: [Having drained drink, rattles ice in glass.] Whats that supposed to mean?
DICK: Im not sure it means anything to anyone else but myself. I know what feels right for me.
R.N.: Puking your guts out on a tin can in the Pacific? That sounds "right" to you?
DICK: Yes sir, if thats the way it has to be.
R.N.: But thats what were saying. It doesnt have to be that way. You dont have to spin your wheels for 4 or 5 years. You could be doing something useful and profitable; something that would give you a leg up. Theres no virtue in suffering, is there? Jesus, you dont like to suffer, do you?
DICK: No, sir.
R.N. raises empty glass. RICHARD notices, takes it away for a refill.
R.N.: I wish to Christ somebody would offer me a way out! Id even swap for your billet on that tin can!
DICK: If it were in my power, sir, Id help you do that.
R.N.: [Receives drink, pause.] Do I really look that pathetic to you?
DICK: You look pretty bad, sir.
R.N.: [Looks to RICHARD.] The sonofabitch is pretty fucking candid, isnt he!
RICHARD: Perhaps it would be better, Dick, if you
R.N.: No! Let him stay! Maybe a dose of candor is what I need. Im drowning in asskissers, kid. Even Richard has been known to pucker his lips when I walk into a room. But youre not eager to kiss my presidential ass, are you? Youre not awed by the majesty of my office; and youre certainly not awed by me, are you!
DICK: No, sir.
R.N.: [Drinks.] No. No reason why you should be. Youve got the world by the balls all rightI know the feeling. Not that Ive had it lately. Lately its been the other way around. Somebodys got their fingers wrapped around my scrotumand theyre beginning to squeeze real hard. How the hell do I get them to let go! [Pause.] No answer to that? [Drinks.] Isnt there some kind of animal that bites off its own gonads and leaves them behind when somethings chasing it?
RICHARD: Yeah, I think there is
R.N.: A groundhog, or something like that?
RICHARD: A gopher. I think its a gopher.
R.N.: Thats a hell of a thingbiting off your own balls. I dont know if I could do that. They must grow back, huh? On the gopherthey grow back?
RICHARD: Damned if I know.
R.N.: They must. They must grow back. But mine wouldnt, would they?
RICHARD: Metaphorically? Is that what were talking about?
R.N.: Thats right. Political ballssome kind of castrational red herring to throw my pursuers off the impeachment track.
RICHARD: Maybe we ought to think along those lines
R.N.: We have got to start thinking along some kind of lines, goddammit! There has got to be a way out of this! There is always a way out, isnt there? Havent I always found a way out? Havent I always come up with the answer? Well? Where is the fucking answer this time!
Lights fade in study and start coming up in livingroom.
DICK: I think it might be in The Old Mans book
Darkness envelops the study as R.N. and RICHARD look at DICK.
PATRICIA: Time for a little girl talk, huh? [Drinks, to TRISH.] Hey, youre real cute. You know that? I like your looks. You know why I like your looks? Laughs.] I have a picture of myselfa picture that looks very much like youvery very much like youthe picture does, that is. Not me. [Drinks.] What do you guys think of my disguise? According to the secret service you can fool your own grandmother in this getup[Removes wig and examines it.] You think we can trust those bastards? What the hell do they know about my grandmother! But if we cant trust the secret service, who can we trust? [Pause.]
PAT: Dick and Trish are going to Cape Cod for their honeymoon.
PATRICIA: Of course they are! Is there any other place for a goddamm honeymoon? [Drinks.] Youll like Cape Cod. Youll be all alone this early in the seasonall by your lonely little selvesyoull love it. Youll have a hell of a time up there. All that ocean air! All that screwing! Every time I smell the sea air I thinkI rememberyou know what I remember? I remember that I havent had a good fuck since then! [Laughs into glass, then sips from it.] Whattsa matter? Does that shock you?
TRISH: Yes. Yes!
PATRICIA: Well, ask her. Ask her if shes had a good fuck since Cape Cod!
PAT: Really Patricia, this is hardly the
PATRICIA: She has a right to know hasnt she? [Pause.] What the hell else are we going to talk about? What else is there to talk about? Were not going to talk about R.N.s pending impeachment, are we? [Drinks.] You have a right to know, little girl.
TRISH: A right to know what?
PATRICIA: Just what the hell youre getting yourself into, thats what. You dont want to end up like me, do you?
TRISH: I dontI cant
PATRICIA: Sure you can. You can say it. You dont have to be afraid of me, little girl. Youre not afraid of me, are you?
TRISH: Yes! I think I am! I think you are terrifying me!
PATRICIA: Why? Because Im married to R.N.? Or because Im smashed? Which is it? Or is it both? Or is it because deep down you know. You know there is a damned good chance you will end up like me!
TRISH: No. Im not going to end up like you. That will never happen. Not to me. Not to Dick and me
PATRICIA laughs, drinks and begins coughing, having gotten fluid down windpipe. PAT slaps her on back. The coughing subsides.
PATRICIA: Thanks. I needed that.
PAT: Try a little coffee.
PATRICIA: Yes, coffee[Sips from cup held by PAT.] That was ugly, wasnt it? That was an ugly little scene I played just now[To TRISH.] Cant you look at me when Im talking to you? You cant do it, can you? You cant face it! You want my advice?
PAT: Whats the sense of this?
PATRICIA: I told you: she has a right to know!
TRISH: Yes. I do have a right to know.
PATRICIA: There! You see!
PAT: This isnt the time or the place or the way to do it. They will be here any minute now and they shouldnt come in on the middle of a scene
PATRICIA: Youre absolutely right. No more scenes! There doesnt have to be a scene. We can be very adult and very calmvery calm. [Demonstrates her own calmness.] There nowwere all quite calm, arent we?
PAT: I know what youre going to say, Patricia
PATRICIA: Do you? Do you really?
PAT: Yes.
PATRICIA: How do you know? How can you be so sure of yourself?
PAT: Because weve been through all of this before.
PATRICIA: But this timethis time it might be different.
PAT: Its never different. Theyre youngtheyre in love. How can it be different?
PATRICIA: Is that the way it is, little girl? Are you really in love with him?
TRISH: Yes.
PATRICIA: I mean reallyreally, really in love with him?
TRISH: Yes!
PATRICIA: To honor and obey? For better or for worse? You know what that means; for better or for worse? Do you have the remotest idea of what worse really is? This is what it is! This! Me! Him! The two of us! Thats worse! We went to Cape Cod in an old jalopy too! We made love all night long too! We discussed the poetry of the sun rising over the Atlantic! We were young, young, youngand it didnt make any difference! Why is it going to be different for you?
TRISH: Because we are different. Because weve seenwe know what can happen
PATRICIA: We saw! We knew! [To PAT.] Didnt we?
PAT: It can be different. It is different. With Richard and me it is different. Theres still time for us.
PATRICIA: Youre a bloody fool if you really think that! Theres only one way out for her. For us its too late, but she still has a chance. [To TRISH.] You havent slept with him yet, have you? Youre not pregnant?
TRISH: Dick isnt that sort of man
PATRICIA: We know what kind of man Dick is! Now, listen to me. Im stone cold sober right now. Do you believe that Im sober?
TRISH: Yes.
PATRICIA: You want me to prove it by walking a straight line? [Rises,
walks, closes eyes, brings fingertips
together at nose.] See that? [Sits close to Trish,
takes her hand.] Now. Were touching each other. Were looking
each other straight in the eye. I want you to listen to what Im going
to say because what Im going to tell you will be the most important
thing anybody will ever tell you. [Pause.] Dont go through with
this marriage. [Raises other hand to silence
TRISHs protest.] I know how terrible
that sounds. But I dont want you to say anything right now. I just
want you to think about what Ive
said: and why I said it. Will you do that? Good.
[Pats TRISHs hand, retakes seat across from
coffee tablethen to PAT:] See? No scene.
Lights have been fading in livingroom and now there is darkness. Lights rise in study.
R.N.: So, you know about The Old Mans book?
RICHARD: He sent a copy to Dick, too.
R.N.: Christ Almighty, how many people has he sent the damned thing to!
RICHARD: Im sure were the only ones
R.N.: [Leaning, pointing finger at DICK.] You keep your mouth shut! Right?
RICHARD: We can trust Dick.
R.N.: Yeah? Can we? Can we trust anybody?
RICHARD: Dick appreciates the situation. Hes young but hes got a lot of savvy.
R.N.: Is that right? You appreciate the situation?
DICK: Objectively? I dont know. I guess I have my own perspective; my own opinions
R.N.: [Drinks, pause.] When it comes to these memoirs there is only one perspective; only one opinion. Mine. And I say theyre not going to see the light of day until this impeachment thing is behind us.
RICHARD: I dont think there can be any question about that.
R.N.: No?
RICHARD: The Old Man knows the score. Hes
R.N.: The Old Man is losing his fucking marbles, thats what The Old Man is! That goddamm book of his is completely bananas! Weve got to force him to withhold publication until after his deathFifty years after his deatha thousand years after his death! If I could only get my hands on the manuscript I would burn the fucking thing. Burn it!
RICHARD: Im sure we can get him to see things your way.
R.N.: Im telling you the sonofabitch is crazy, Richard! Its the book of a crazy man, isnt it? Isnt that the way you read it?
RICHARD: Theres a lot of material in there I dont understand, thats true enough. Theres a lot of stuff I disagree with, thats for sure. But thats why he sent it to us, I think: to get our reaction.
R.N.: Ill give him my reaction, alright! Maybe he will bring the original with him and we can set fire to it right here. Have you all got your copies? Still, theres the goddamm secretary who typed itand maybe more than one secretary. How many secretaries has he got out there? And the sonofabitch probably dictated the thing so there are tapes too; and his notes! Jesus! And, knowing him, hell have some secret copies put away somewhereshit. Maybe I could get the Bureau to work on itit wont be easy but maybe, just maybe we can make the whole thing disappear.
DICK: You cant make the truth disappear.
R.N.: Who the hell is talking about the truth! That shit he wrote; thats not the truth for Christs sake! Hes foaming off at the mouth. The guy is nuts, Im telling you. He wants to let 60 years worth of dirty laundry to hang out for the whole world to see.
DICK: Its not laundry. Hes baring his soul.
R.N.: His soul? Screw his soul! Its my ass hes exposing! Its me hes stabbing in the back!
DICK: No, sir. I dont think thats the way it is. I think hes doing it for you.
R.N.: What?!
DICK: I think he has written his memoirs specifically for youfor all of us, really.
R.N.: You think hes doing me a favor? Well, that kind of "favor" I dont need. Not now. If he wants to do me a favor he can keep his mouth shut; and so can you. The last thing in the world I need right now is bullshit advice about the meaning of life. My life isnt going to have any meaning if I dont get out of this impeachment bind. After thatlater, when Im an old man I can sit down someplace and ponder the meaning of life. Right now the problem iswhat am I going to do about the impeachment? Now thats a nice practical problem for you two guys to tackle, isnt ittwo smart guys like you? Have you come up with any bright ideas, Richard?
RICHARD: Ive made a list of options[Takes yellow legal pad from desk.]
R.N.: O.K. Shoot. [Sipping drink, measuring RICHARD over rim of glass.]
RICHARD: These are not in any priority order
R.N.: Yeah.
RICHARD: First on the list isresignation. Second: let the impeachment process unfold and cooperate with congress. Third: let the impeachment process unfold but dont cooperate with congress. Fourth: step aside until the verdict is in. [Pause.]
R.N.: Thats it? Thats all youve come up with!
RICHARD: Theres one more possible option
R.N.: Whats that?
RICHARD: Itsa hell of a risky proposition; a very high risk thing.
R.N.: But it might work?
RICHARD: It might. It could. If its handled right.
R.N.: What the hell are you beating around the bush for?
RICHARD: Its a scary ideaso scary I didnt even write it down.
R.N.: What could be more scary than those options you just read to me? They all say the same thingI havent got a snowballs chance in hell of getting out of this bind with my presidency not being destroyed!
RICHARD: Well, let me just say that this ideaits not a personal recommendation or anything like that. Its just anabstract possibility
R.N.: For Christs sake Richardeither shit or get off the pot!
DICK: I think I know what hes thinking
R.N.: Are you guys playing "keepaway" with me?
RICHARD: Dicks only guessing. I havent discussed this idea with anyonenot even Pat.
R.N.: Alright, alright! What the hell are you trying to tell me?!
DICK: To start a war.
R.N.: Start a war? Is that this bright new idea of yours Richard? [RICHARD nods.] Jesus Christ! Weve already got a fucking war!
DICK: A small one
RICHARD: A localized one
R.N.: What are you sayingthat I should take on the Russians?
RICHARD: Its the only way to turn the domestic heat off.
R.N.: Go nuclear?
RICHARD: If you have to.
R.N.: What do you mean"If I have to?" How the hell else can it be done? Theyd cream our ass in a conventional war. Wed have to hit the bastards first and hit em hard.
RICHARD: Well, you know more about the implications than either of us.
R.N.: This isnt the first time the idea has come up, you know.
RICHARD: Oh?
R.N.: The Old Man thought of the same thing. Its right there in his book!
RICHARD: I didnt see that
DICK: He talks about it alright.
RICHARD: Oh. Well? Why didnt he try it?
DICK: Simple. He didnt think he could do it.
RICHARD: Morally, you mean?
R.N.: Morally! What the hell do morals have to do with it?!
RICHARD: Well, we are talking about megadeaths, arent we?
R.N.: The megadeaths of Russians! Whats immoral about that? If the thing could be done, impeachment aside, it would be the most moral goddamm thing this country has ever done. Just think! Wed be wiping communism off the face of the earth! That would be the single most significant act in the history of mankind!
RICHARD: Then what did stop The Old Man from doing it?
R.N.: He just didnt thinkhe wasnt sure he could bring it offmaybe that if he pressed the little red button, the people on the other end, in the War Room, would know it wasnt a signal to launch an attack; it would be a signal that he, The Old Man, had lost his cookies. Five minutes after he pressed that button the men in white suits would have come for him with a straightjacket. And then he would have been branded not just with impeachment or resignation but with the attempted mass murder of the entire world just to save his dirty little political asshole.
RICHARD: Was he right? I mean about those people in the War Roomin The Old Mans War Room?
R.N.: I dont know. He never found out.
RICHARD: What about your situationthe people in your War Room?
R.N.: Thats just it. I dont know either. You cant ever know until you push that button. The button doesnt start anything. It only sends a signal to the guy at the other end. All day long Im pushing presidential buttons and nothing gets done the way I want it. Why should The button be any different?
RICHARD: And a scheme like this has to work perfectly
R.N.: Its 4th down and 99 yards to go for the winning touchdown.
RICHARD: Whatever you do in a situation like this, its going to be pretty risky.
R.N.: Theres no easy way out, thats for sure.
DICK: If you knew for certain that the red button would do it, would you go ahead with the holocaust? Is that the only thing that held The Old Man backthinking he wouldnt be able to get it started?
R.N.: I dont buy that horseshit about the "awesomeness" of the decision, if thats what youre driving at. Ive already said that, impeachment notwithstanding, its a hell of a good idea. You think Napoleon or Caesar or Alexander would have hesitated if they had had our first strike capability? No. Theres all kinds of moral and historical justification for doing it. In fact, as The Old Man himself pointed out, it might well be the force of destiny working through the impeachment process to create the frame of mind in which such a radical proposal might be considered. Suppose my Soviet opposite number found himself in the kind of political hot water Im in. You think he wouldnt consider the same option? So maybe the impeachment message of is a message from God. Thats certainly one way of looking at the thing; of justifying the thing.
RICHARD: There would always be speculation in the history books about your motives
R.N.: Who gives a shit about that if they are our history books, American history books! Thats my answer to any speculation about my motives, Richard! Theyre not Russian history books, are they? There wont be any more Russian history books! And if the only history books in the future are Russian, then who gives a shit what they say?
RICHARD: So it really comes down to a question of who is at the other end of that red button.
DICK: That isnt the way it was with The Old Man. That was only one of the questions
R.N.: The Old Man is lying. It was the only consideration at the timewho is at the other end of that red button? The rest of what he says are the lies any old man tells himself to make himself believe that his life made some kind of sensethat he was some kind of fucking hero because he sacrificed himself for the cause of humanity or some other goddamm thing; that his resignation was a "supreme act of statesmanship."
DICK: What about the Cook County recount?
R.N.: Are you saying the Cook County recount was an act of statesmanship?
DICK: Wasnt it?
R.N.: Suppose he had demanded the recount and the recount showed he was still the loser?
DICK: You think it was just an act of political calculus?
R.N.: What else is there?
DICK: I cant believe he would have pressed the button even if he could have. In spite of what he says or you say: he pulled back because ofbecause of just simple human decency. He had the power to destroy the world and maybe save himself by doing itbut he pulled back because deep down he wasnt cut out for that kind of butchery. Deep down he wasnt Caesar or Attila the Hunor even what he was at the moment, a very exalted personage. That was the moment he realized his entire political career had been a sham, a contrivancea mistake. A mistake he had made a long time before and had tried to live with. But that simple little mistake he made years and years and years before would not fade away. It wouldnt die of old age. The ramifications of it kept multiplying and breeding until they overwhelmed him. That simple mistakea lie he told himself or told somebody else loomed now as a choice between personal disgrace or the obliteration of all humanity. He chose to be disgraced. And in that choice, though he didnt see it at the time, he had atoned for that old, old lie. Everything had come full circle.
R.N.: [Pause.] Maybe. Maybe that is easy to say when youre 80. When youre all washed up. When the game is over. But I cant say it.
DICK: It doesnt matter whether you can say it. It only matters whether or not its true.
R.N.: If were talking about whats true, what about you? What are you going to do about your first mistakeyour first lie? What are you going to do if you dont do what weve done?
RICHARD: In the final analysis, Dick, isnt The Old Man saying he did what he did because he was what he was at the time?
R.N.: [To DICK.] Are you sayingis The Old Man sayingthat we could have become something elseor someone else?
DICK: Yes!
RICHARD: Whenwhen could we have done that?
DICK: Now. Now! Right now!
RICHARD: Do you expect me to give up all this?
DICK: If you dont want to go through what The Old Man went through. If you dont want to go through what R.N. is going through. Yes. Youll have to give it all up.
RICHARD: And what about you? What will you give up?
DICK: When the time comes
RICHARD: When the time comes? The time is already here! The time is already past for you. You married that girl. Youre going to Cape Cod. Youre dying to get aboard that tin can and go sailing off to a war!
DICK: Thats got nothing to do with what were talking about!
R.N.: [Drinking.] You are bullshitting yourself, kid. You are bullshitting yourself and you know it, dont you
Lights start to fade in study and rise in livingroom.
R.N.: If you dont, youre in a lot of trouble. Thats a weakness we all seem to havebullshitting ourselves without knowing we are bullshitting ourselves
Study is dark. In livingroom PAT has delivered fresh drink to PATRICIA.
PATRICIA: Do you blame me for drinking? Do you blame me for becoming what Ive become? Can you possibly imagine what it was like coming over here in the ass end of a laundry van? Sneaking through backyards like a couple of criminals to get here? Im 60 years old, honey! How can you handle something like that without some booze? If Id known 40 years ago that I would have to go through this nightmare, I would havewell, I would have done what I just told you to do.
TRISH: Thats not going to happen to me.
PATRICIA: Why not you?
TRISH: It wont, thats all. I wont let it happen to me.
PATRICIA: What the hell makes you so special?
TRISH: Because Im me and Dick is Dick.
PATRICIA: You think that makes you better than us?
TRISH: Im not making value judgmentswere different, thats all.
PATRICIA: The hell youre not making value judgments!
TRISH: Alright; maybe we are a little smarter, a little wiser
PATRICIA: Why? Because youve seen what has happened to us?
TRISH: Yes.
PATRICIA: But we saw too. We saw what had happened to those who went before us. It happened to The Old Man and The First Lady. Its been happening since the dawn of time. Since the human race climbed out of the trees and emerged from the caves, we have all known. But what you know and what you do are different things, little girl. Deep down you know that Dick is not the man for you
TRISH: No! I dont know that!
PATRICIA: There is a feeling in you right now that something is fatally defective about him.
TRISH: Dick is not perfect. I know hes not perfect. But that doesnt mean hes going to turn out like
PATRICIA: The men we married?
PAT: Now wait a minute! Were not going to bring my Richard into this discussion, are we?
PATRICIA: Of course we are, darling. How can we discuss a topic like this without bringing your dear Richard into it?
PAT: Well Im not going to discuss himnot like this: not in this context.
PATRICIA: And what context is thatyou mean in the context of the truth?
PAT: The truth isits R.N. who is dragging us all through the mud! Youre not the only one suffering, Patricia. Believe me you are not!
PATRICIA: Oh, I do believe you! I am only saying we are all getting exactly what we deserve to get.
PAT: I think you can only really speak for yourself on that.
PATRICIA: Thats what Im doing you goddamm fool! I am telling you there is no way out for us as long as we stay with them! Cant you see what they are doing to us? What they have always done to us?
PAT: No! I dont see it that way at all!
TRISH: Why in Gods name dont you leave him then?
PATRICIA: Why dont you!
TRISH: Im not the one with a problem!
PAT: Oh, this is really dreadfuldreadful. On a day such as this for us to be doing what we are doing! [Loses control for a few moments, buries face in hands.]
PATRICIA: Youre right. Im sorry. I apologize
PAT: [Brightening.] There must be something else we can talk about.
PATRICIA: Yes. There must be. Lets try.
PAT: They will be here very soon now. For their sake we should try tobrighten things up.
PATRICIA: For everybodys sake
PAT: Its ridiculous, isnt it? Suddenly everything seems so controversial!
TRISH: What about music?
PAT: Music?
TRISH: Dick tells me you play the violin.
PAT: Yes. I do.
TRISH: So do I. I find it a marvelous way to relaxto forget. Not that Im awfully good at it. But music seems totake me into a different world. Is that how it is with you?
PAT: Yes. I like to play.
: TRISH: [To PATRICIA.] Do you like music?
PATRICIA: Do I like music? Its been such along time since I even thought about an abstract question like that!
TRISH: Right now Im working on the Tchaikovsky Concerto in D Major. I dont suppose I will live long enough to master it, but to me it is the most heavenly piece ever written. Im totally lost in it whenever I play it or hear it. Its as if Tchaikovsky had written it just for me. Isnt that silly?
PAT: I have a recording of the D Major by Heifitz. Would you like to hear it?
TRISH: [Clapping hands once.] Oh yes! What a wonderful way to brighten things up! Listening to Heifitz play Tchaikovsky! [To PATRICIA as PAT puts record into player.] Dont you think so?
PATRICIA: I seem to remember Tchaikovsky making me cryonce upon a time. Is that possible?
TRISH: Of course its possible!
PATRICIA: But if the music is beautiful, why should one cry?
TRISH: Just because it is so beautiful!
Music begins. We listen until cadenza is finished. As theme begins, lights fade on women and come up in study. Music will fade but linger after livingroom is dark.
DICK: No. Im not there yet.
R.N.: Youre not where yet?
DICK: At the point where our paths diverge.
RICHARD: He thinks that point is law school.
R.N.: Law School! What the hell has law school got to do with it? Lots of people go to law school and they dont end up where I am at. Youre not saying law school is responsible, are you?
DICK: It could be that law school leads inevitably to politics and politics leads inevitably to your present difficulties.
RICHARD: My God, Dickyou cant seriously believe that, can you? I mean, we cant live our lives like thatalways running away from things.
DICK: Its not a question of running away from things
R.N.: What is it then?
DICK: Its a question of trying to discover what my true nature is and harmonizing my desires with whatever that is.
RICHARD: But thats it, Dickthats exactly what you are trying to run away from now: your true nature. You know damned will you want to go to law school! There is a burning desire in you to do what we have done, isnt there? Despite what has happened and what will happen to us, that desire is burning inside of you. Admit it!
DICK: Thats only one facet, one desire, one possibility
RICHARD: But its there, isnt it! It is a part of you, just as it was a part of us. And it is the best part, the hottest part. How in the world are you going to turn that off without freezing to death?
DICK: Youre turning it off for me!
RICHARD: You really think youd rather be a retired dentist, living with the memories of all the teeth you fixedthan be The Old Man looking back on a life filled with excitement and turbulence and challenge?
DICK: Yes!
R.N.: There you go again kidbullshitting yourself. Youre beginning to develop your own credibility gap already! Thats been one of our problems all along. Maybe Richard isnt ready to admit it, but he knows it is truewe are all lousy liars.
DICK: Im not kidding myself, What you say about what is going on inside of me is true. Partly true, anyway. Ive got certain desires, certain ambitions. But I am going to suppress them. I know what they are and I know where they will lead; and I just dont want to go down that road. And I am not going to go down that road. I dont want to be like you, or you, or The Old Man and that is all there is to it. If I have to be a dentist or a schoolteacher or a bus driver, it doesnt matter
RICHARD: Is that you talkingor is it Trish?
DICK: It is both of us talking.
R.N.: I think weve wasted enough time on this kind of speculation. Weve got some practical problems to solve. The first one is The Old Man and his memoirs. Hes got to understand it would be catastrophic for that stuff to surface right now. Were agreed on that, right?
RICHARD: No question about it.
DICK: I think you are dead wrong on that.
R.N.: Oh for Christs sake
DICK: I think that is the whole point of the memoirs and why The Old Man is suggesting we consider publishing them now.
R.N.: There is nothing new about that approach. Its the old "Let it all hang out" theory. Only never in our wildest fantasies did we ever consider letting that much hang out. Good God, hes included everything in this horror story of his. Even the marital details
RICHARD: Especially the marital details.
DICK: That is what makes it such a brilliant strategy
R.N.: The Old Man and his "brilliant strategies." He had a strategy for every crisis!
DICK: This time I think he is right.
R.N.: Hey! I thought you were going into dentistry! All of a sudden youre an expert on Machiavelli! Why the hell should we trust the judgment of a future dentist?
DICK: Im not asking you to trust anything. I am asking you to look at the merits of the idea unemotionally, dispassionately, pragmatically, and soberly.
RICHARD: That is awfully damned rude of you. Dick. I think you are forgetting just who it is you are talking to.
R.N.: O.k., Richard. Youve made your obligatory asskissing protestation. Now lets see if maybe the kid is right.
RICHARD: Well, lets not forget that I have something at stake here too!
R.N.: You?
RICHARD: Me! Those memoirs could destroy my re-election chances.
R.N.: You mean I have to worry about your career?
RICHARD: What am Ijust another flunky you can throw to the wolves?
R.N.: No! Ill tell you what you are!
DICK: The two of you are behaving like hysterical hasbeens!
R.N.: Listen, you selfrighteous little sonofabitch. I have had it up to here with your adolescent provocations! When you have actually done some of those things you talk about so heroically you can come rejoin the debate and maybe we will listen to what you have to say. Until then either sit there and keep your yap shut or go out and join that other debating society!
DICK rises and crosses to darkened livingroom. As he does so music and lights come up there and fade in the study. DICK sits and listens. The music ends.
TRISH: Wasnt that lovely? How could such beauty come from a mans mind? Oh Peter Illyich, how I do love that mind of yours!
PATRICIA: [To DICK.] Whats the matter? You look like youve been exiled!
DICK: As a matter of fact I have been!
PATRICIA: Welcome to the club!
PAT: You know what Im thinking? Its such a lovely day, why dont we have the lunch out on the patio?
TRISH: That sounds wonderful!
DICK: Dining al fresco could present problems.
PAT: Problems? You mean the temperature?
DICK: I was thinking more about telephoto lenses and line-of-sight microphones.
PAT: They wouldnt
PATRICIA: Hes right. Young Dick is absolutely right! R.N. would say exactly what Dick just said if you asked him about eating outside. Anyone want to bet on that?
PAT: It really was a silly ideawhat with the insects and the possibility of a chill setting in. After all, they are 80 years old. Its hard to believe but they are very old and very fragile people now.
TRISH: Still, they say if you make it that far there must be a reason for going even farther. No reason they cant live to be 100 is there?
PAT: [At French doors.] Would you believe its getting cloudy? The weather is changing completely.
PATRICIA: It wouldnt surprise me if it actually rains. My joints have been sending storm warnings all morning[Looks at her hands, mimes playing violin.]
TRISH: Did you play too?
PATRICIA: Of course I played!
As lights fade in livingroom PATRICIA mimes playing while singing theme of D Major Concerto. Darkness. Lights up in study.
R.N.: One thing we have got to get straight on this business of your survival. You cant survive unless I survive. [Pause.] Isnt that right? Isnt that the way you see it? How in hell can you stay afloat if I go down the tubes? The whole party will go up in flames if Im forced out of office!
RICHARD: It has happened before
R.N.: You mean when The Old Man went down for the count? That is not the same thing
RICHARD: Now who is bullshitting who?
R.N.: What are you talking about? I never bailed out on him. I was with him right until the bitter fucking end.
RICHARD: Thats the way it looked, alright.
R.N.: Thats the way it was. What the hell do you know about it? You werent there.
RICHARD: But Im here now and I can see that what you did to him makes sense to me.
R.N.: I didnt do a damned thing to him!
RICHARD: Or for him!
R.N.: What could I have done for him? What could anybody have done for him!
RICHARD: What youre asking me to do for yougive you moral supportlead the floor fight show some backbone come up with brilliant scenarios. Battle on back to back until there is nothing left but to fall on our own swords. Isnt that what you expect me to do for you? But you didnt do that for him. In the end, you survived. You survived and you flourished! Nobody fell on their own swords, did they?
R.N.: Is that what you want me to do? Suicide?
RICHARD: Its one of the options. I didnt write that one down either, but it should be included, I think.
R.N.: Its an option, alright. But the way you say it, it sounds more like a fucking recommendation!
RICHARD: I havent really made up my mind on that yet
R.N.: You havent made up your mind about my suicide? Do you know how that sounds?
RICHARD: Insolent? Arrogant?
R.N.: I dont believe this! Even youve turned against me! The treachery is so totalso complete! Every one of you motherfuckers has turned against me
RICHARD: You shouldnt take it personally, R. N. Its strictly politics.
R.N.: Its strictly the rats deserting a sinking ship.
RICHARD: Thats the same thing, isnt it? The ship is sinking. And the only one obligated to go down with it is the captain. Isnt that what we were taught in the Navy? Thats the risk you take when youre number one[R.N. goes to bar to fix himself drink.] In my place you know youd do the same thing. What sense does it make for all of us to go down together?
R.N.: Im not going down. And you know why Im not going down, you sonofabitch? Just to spite you. Im going to fight like Ive never fought before just so I can break you up into little bloody pieces. Ill tell you one thing, Richard: Ill be a hell of a lot stronger with you against me.
RICHARD: You havent got a snowballs chance in hell of getting out of this one, R.N. It would take a better man than The Old Man himself and youre not good enough for that.
PAT pokes head into study.
PAT: Theyre here!
R.N.: Well be right in, Pat. I just want to say one more word to Richard.
PAT: Just one more word now. Thats a promise!
PAT crosses to livingroom where lights rise slowly to reveal THE OLD MAN and FIRST LADY exchanging greetings with PATRICIA, DICK and TRISH.
R.N.: I just wanted to tell you, Richard, that Ive always thought of you as a complete horses ass. I didnt want you to think that you had ever, ever pulled the wool over my eyes. [Lights begin to fade on them.]
RICHARD: As long as were being frank let me just say I dont give a damn what you think about me. It doesnt matter any more. I dont think it ever did.
R.N.: [Pause.] You know, just now I was going to throw the rest of this drink in your facebut that would have been a waste of good bourbon. [Finishes drink.]
RICHARD: That should give you the courage to face The Old Man.
R.N.: Ill show you what kind of courage I have, Richard
R.N. knees RICHARD in groin. RICHARD doubles over with hoarse cry of pain. R.N. immediately sallies forth into livingroom and opens his arms wide to embrace THE OLD MAN and FIRST LADY. CURTAIN or fade to black as exuberant greetings are exchanged. The only sound is the agonizing one still being made by RICHARD in the study.
End Act One