Contemporary One-Act Plays - BestLightNovel.com
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LANE. I better get busy. They'll be callin' up the store in a minute.
That woman's the limit.... Send up the groceries in that slop, she'd send them down again. High-toned people like her ought to keep maids.
[_He mops out the lower shelf of the dumb-waiter, then looks at the broken bottle and the puddle of milk inquiringly._
MRS. BAUER. [_Taking the mop away from him._] I'll clean that up. I forgot--in all this trouble.
LANE. Whose milk?
MRS. BAUER. The Mohlers'. That's how it all happened. Somebody upset their milk on the dumb-waiter and the cat was on the shelf lickin' it up; my man, not noticin', starts the waiter up and the cat tries to jump out; the bottle rolls off and breaks. The cat was hurt awful--caught in the shaft. I don't see how it coulda run after that, but it did--right into the street, right into that woman--Fritz after it. Then it fell over. "You did that?" she says to Fritz. "Yes," he says, "I did that."
He didn't say no more, jus' went off, and then after a while they came for him and---- [_She begins to cry softly._
LANE. Brace up; they ain't goin' to do anything to him.... [_Comes into kitchen. Hesitatingly._] Say!... He didn't kick the cat--did he?
MRS. BAUER. Who said so?
LANE. Mrs. Nies--says she saw him from her window.
MRS. BAUER. [_As though to herself._] I dunno. [_Excitedly._] Of course he didn't kick that cat. [_Again, as though to herself._] Fritz is so quick-tempered he mighta kicked it 'fore he knew what he was about. No one'd ever know how good Fritz is unless they lived with him. He never hurt no one and nothing except himself.
LANE. Oh, I'm on to the boss. I never mind his hollerin'.
MRS. BAUER. If you get a chance, bring me some b.u.t.ter for dinner--a pound.
LANE. All right. I'll run over with it in ten or fifteen minutes, soon as I get rid of these orders out here in the wagon.
MRS. BAUER. That'll do.
[_She moves about apathetically, lays the cloth on the kitchen table and begins to set it._ LANE _goes to the dumb-waiter, whistles up the tube, puts the basket of groceries on the shelf of the dumb-waiter, pulls rope and sends waiter up_. MRS. BAUER _continues to set the table. Boys from the street suddenly swoop into the bas.e.m.e.nt and yell_.
CHORUS OF BOYS' VOICES. Who killed the cat! Who killed the cat!
LANE. [_Letting the rope go and making a dive for the boys._] I'll show you, you----
[_They rush out_, MRS. BAUER _stands despairingly in the doorway shaking her clasped hands_.
MRS. BAUER. Those are Nies's boys.
LANE. Regular toughs! Call the cop and have 'em pinched if they don't stop it.
MRS. BAUER. If my man hears them--you know--there'll be more trouble.
LANE. The boss ought to make it hot for them.
MRS. BAUER. Such trouble!
LANE. [_Starts to go._] Well--luck to the boss.
MRS. BAUER. There ain't no such thing as luck for us.
LANE. Aw, come on....
MRS. BAUER. Everything's against us. First Fritz's mother dies. We named the baby after her--Trude.... Then we lost Trude. That finished Fritz.
After that he began this hollerin' business. And now this here trouble--just when things was goin' half-ways decent for the first time.
[_She pushes past him and goes to her ironing._
LANE. [_Shakes his head sympathetically and takes up his basket._] A pound, you said?
MRS. BAUER. Yes.
LANE. All right. [_He starts off and then rushes back._] Here's the boss comin', Mrs. Bauer. [_Rushes off again._
LANE'S VOICE. [_Cheerfully._] h.e.l.lo, there!
BAUER'S VOICE. [_Dull and strained._] h.e.l.lo!
[BAUER _comes in. His-naturally bright blue eyes are tired and l.u.s.treless; his strung frame seems to have lost all vigor and alertness; there in a look of utter despondency on his face._
MRS. BAUER. [_Closing the door after him._] They let you off?
BAUER. [_With a hard little laugh._] Yes, they let me off--they let me off with a fine all right.
MRS. BAUER. [_Aghast._] They think you did it then.
BAUER. [_Harshly._] The judge fined me, I tell you.
MRS. BAUER. [_Unable to express her poignant sympathy._] Fined you!...
Oh, Fritz! [_She lays her hand on his shoulder._
BAUER. [_Roughly, to keep himself from, going to pieces._] That slop out there ain't cleaned up yet.
MRS. BAUER. I've been so worried.
BAUER. [_With sudden desperation._] I can't stand it, I tell you.
MRS. BAUER. Well, it's all over now, Fritz.
BAUER. Yes, it's all over.... it's all up with me.
MRS. BAUER. Fritz!
BAUER. That's one sure thing.
MRS. BAUER. You oughtn't to give up like this.
BAUER. [_Pounding on the table._] I tell you I can't hold up my head again.
MRS. BAUER. Why, Fritz?