The Bus Stop At The End Of The World by Robert Iles
This Play is the copyright of the Author and must NOT be Performed without the Author's PRIOR consent
EXTERIOR. AT THE BUS STOP - DAY
One or two benches on a cliff path overlooking the sea. A lamp, a bus
stop (remote rural) and a bin. We are on a remote road at the end of
the bus route where buses stop, take a break and turn around - think
the car park near Lands End or on a peninsular in Suffolk. There is
nothing much for miles except a car park and beautiful views and cliff
walks.
It is very early morning, still before dawn, the lamp is lit, morning
birdsong, possibly quite windy. Mammas and Pappas "Dream a Little
Dream". It gets lighter as the play goes on, ending at dawn
Steve enters carrying his daughter Claire wrapped in a blanket, she is
dying of cancer - though she is lucid it is hours to days rather than
days to weeks. He checks she is ok then rushes off indicating silently
that he will be back quickly.
Martin enters from the other direction, he is singing "Dream a Little
Dream" to himself, music fades into his voice. He sees Claire, seems
confused, looks around, crouches in front of her, gently pulls the
blanket from her face, looks around again ...
MARTIN
Hello
No answer
MARTIN
Are you alright?
No answer
MARTIN
Are you cold?
CLAIRE
Not yet
MARTIN
But you will be
CLAIRE
Soon
MARTIN
I mean, if you sit here like that for long
CLAIRE
Whatever
MARTIN
I'm... I mean, .... are you alright?
CLAIRE
I'm ok. Thanks for asking.
MARTIN
That's ok, but you don't look ok, if you don't mind me saying
CLAIRE
I do
MARTIN
Sorry. [BEAT] What are you doing here?
CLAIRE
God knows. [LOOKING AROUND] We just arrived.
MARTIN
We?
CLAIRE
I bloody hope so. [LOOKING AROUND] My father? [PAUSE, WEAKLY] Dad?
[STRONGER BUT STILL WEAK] Dad?
MARTIN
[LOUD]Dad?
CLAIRE
What are you doing?
MARTIN
Sorry, I ... helping, I just thought ... He just left you?
CLAIRE
Nothing new there
MARTIN
Here, I mean, he left you here? [BEAT] Just now?
CLAIRE
Here. Just now. Home, when I was a baby, boarding school, twice, once
when we were on holiday. Spain. Just upped and left us
MARTIN
Us?
CLAIRE
Mum and me. Took off with the cash, passports
MARTIN
A bit unreliable then
CLAIRE
Not really, we could always rely on him to bugger off at some point
MARTIN
Is he coming back?
CLAIRE
He usually does
Steve returns carrying a cool box of medicines and bits and another
blanket, he sees Martin who gets up and steps back
CLAIRE
Dad, what are we doing here?
STEVE
We're having a holiday, daddy-daughter time, like we used to,
remember
CLAIRE
Only this man was asking
MARTIN
[PUTTING OUT HIS HAND] Martin
STEVE
[IGNORING IT] Why?
MARTIN
Because that's my name?
STEVE
Why were you asking?
MARTIN
Just curious, I saw your daughter here, she looked cold, lost, I was
concerned
STEVE
She's fine
MARTIN
She said
STEVE
So?
CLAIRE
I'm fine
MARTIN
Ok, I was just asking
STEVE
And you are?
MARTIN
Martin
STEVE
I mean, you are here for why?
MARTIN
Watching the sun rise
STEVE
Its very early
MARTIN
Sunrise often is
STEVE
You do this regularly?
MARTIN
Yes
STEVE
Bad sleeper then
MARTIN
Regularly, not frequently
CLAIRE
Reliably even
STEVE
Sorry?
MARTIN
Once a year, I do this once a year. Regularly. Not every day.
Frequently.
STEVE
Really. I didn't know there was anyone else here
MARTIN
Neither did I. There usually isn't.
STEVE
We didn't see you
MARTIN
I was walking. Over there. You must have just arrived
STEVE
Hours of driving to be alone in the back of beyond only to find
someone here
MARTIN
You've driven all night? Keen to start your holiday, you wont even be
able to get into your hotel at this time
CLAIRE
Are we staying then?
STEVE
Yes. No. I'm not sure. We can stay, I mean if you'd like that, we
could stay at the Anchor, you remember, we used to like it there [HE
POINTS]
MARTIN
There [HE POINTS IN A DIFFERENT DIRECTION]
STEVE
Wherever
MARTIN
You can't
STEVE
Can't what?
MARTIN
Stay at the Anchor
STEVE
We have in the past, B and B
MARTIN
That was then and this is now
STEVE
Well, we'll have a meal there, find somewhere else to stay
MARTIN
No meals either, like I said
STEVE
The Anchor? In the village? We passed it on the way in
MARTIN
It's shut
STEVE
Well obviously, at this time of day, it's shut. Remember it Claire?
CLAIRE
Not really
STEVE
We used to have dinner there, every holiday, always booked so we could
sit round the old well with the glass table over it
MARTIN
Not recently you didn't
STEVE
Well no, not recently, but "regularly", in the past, when we had
family holidays here
CLAIRE
When we were a family
STEVE
We've always been a family
CLAIRE
Mr and Mrs Dysfunctional
STEVE
Still a family
CLAIRE
And their drop dead gorgeous daughter
STEVE
Not funny.
CLAIRE
You're the expert
STEVE
In dysfunctional?
CLAIRE
In "not funny"
[End of Extract]