Incomplete first draft
CHARACTERS:
Victoria
Boss
Janine
Mother
Father
The Council:
Voice One: Emo teen
Voice Two: Sophisticated woman
Voice Three: Cynical, vampy goth
Voice Four: Innocent girl
Dorian
Tristan
Marcus
Queen
Matthew
ACT I
SCENE I
(A split stage. To the right, Victoria works in a very small office space. To the left, four people sit at a roundtable aptly labeled “The Council”.)
(Enter Boss Stage Right)
BOSS
Did you finish those 500 cases last night?
VICTORIA
No, I only managed to make it through 43 of them.
BOSS
Well you need to get on the ball then; come end of month you’re going to be in real trouble. So, how about Howard Devito’s case? What did you do with him?
VICTORIA
I called him but his number was no longer in service.
BOSS
Did he have a work number listed?
VICTORIA
I...
BOSS
How about family and friends? Did you look them up? Did you do a web search? Did you drive by his house to see if he was home?
VICTORIA
No.
BOSS
Well there you go. You need to use all your resources and play detective to track down a client. I think a house visit is in order at this time.
VICTORIA
Yes mam.
BOSS
You know Monica managed to get her cases closed. I don’t know why you’re having such trouble.
VOICE ONE
Because I’m a stupid idiot; that’s why.
VOICE TWO
I am *not* dim-witted my friend. I’ll have you know I can read Shakespeare, Kierkegaard, Dostoevsky and Sartre with equal if not superior comprehension. *You* may be obtuse, but I am quite intelligent.
VOICE THREE
Oh darling, don’t you understand, no one gives a damn about your superior reading skills or if you’re a competent scribe or a lyrical bard. In short, your talents are utterly futile. Superfluous. Extraneous. Perhaps if you’d been born back in Socrates day or during the Renaissance you’d have a raison d’etre, but as it stands, you’re simply immaterial. I’d point to those illiterate ratiocinators known as “engineers” as supporting evidence for my case.
VOICE FOUR
Oh just leave me alone! Shut up!
(Clasps hands over ears).
(Another woman walks into the office and sits down.)
JANINE
Oh girl, I was scared out of my mind just now! Some creepy old man was staring at my booty and then he followed me upstairs and asked for my number!
(Victoria stares at her butt but is sadly disappointed.)
VOICE THREE
I don’t have a butt. I don’t have breasts either. I think I might be a man.
VOICE ONE
No, because you’ve got the whole thunder thigh thing going on. I’m gonna nickname you T-Rex cos you look like Godzilla.
VOICE TWO
Might I remind you that I’m 34-26-34 and I average around 18% bodyfat?
VOICE ONE
Yeah, but that 18% is all on your thighs.
VOICE FOUR
I am okay. I am okay for a 36 year old.
(Another woman walks in the door.)
DELILAH
Why wasn’t Howard Devito on the list this morning?
VICTORIA
Oh, I forgot to add him. I’m sorry.
DELILAH
This really isn’t acceptable, Victoria. I’ve escalated you to the Vice-President and he wants to know that this situation won’t occur again.
VOICE ONE
Stupid Idiot! I told you.
VOICE TWO
Everyone makes mistakes and I’m new. Unfortunately, imperfection is one of my vices but I am working on it.
VOICE THREE
We could kill her and hide her body in the river. No one would ever know.
VOICE TWO
No one’s killing anyone, but if you want to beat her up, I promise not to look.
VOICE FOUR
Shut-up! (Clasps hands over ears). I’m not very good with numbers. Sometimes I see them backwards. Maybe I have dyscalculia or numeric dyslexia or something.
VOICE THREE
You stand as a woman condemned if you don’t grasp numbers. The world is based on math, science and physics; there is no room in the inn for anyone else, including philosophers and poets.
(FADE OUT)
SCENE II
( To the right Victoria sits in a chair opposite both her parents. The Council remains on stage left.)
FATHER
You really must find a better job. If you haven’t found one in two months, we’re going to file to adopt your son.
VICTORIA
I know.
FATHER
And what are you doing to look for another position?
VICTORIA
I’ve been to several company websites, but they’re only hiring engineers or certified project managers.
FATHER
Well, I saw on the news the other day where a guy was laid off and wanted another job, and so he put a sign on his back and walked up and down the highway and he was hired right off the street.
VICTORIA
I’m happy for him. The fact is, no one wants me.
MOTHER
Well we told you to go back to school when you had the chance, but you didn’t do it, and now you’re suffering the consequences of your actions.
FATHER
You could go back to school – if you still had your savings. Where did all that money go?
VOICE THREE
At least half of it went to rent and Cobra so I could still live for the first month.
VOICE FOUR
Don’t say anything! Never say anything back; it just makes things worse. Nod your head in agreement and acknowledge what they said but remain silent.
FATHER
You have a child now to support; that’s another consequence of your actions. We told you to major in math or computer science, but you had to choose English because “you’re creative”.
MOTHER
You’re where you are now because of all the bad decisions you made in your life.
VOICE ONE/VICTORIA
(together)
Fine. You’re right! I’m a complete idiotic loser who no one wants working for them. In two months I will go live in a cardboard box on the street where I belong because I’m such a moron! An imbecile! Because I have no redeemable qualities!
FATHER
That’s not true.
MOTHER
You tell us you’re smart.
VOICE ONE/VICTORIA
(together)
No, I am not smart because if I was smart, I wouldn’t have made all these bad decisions, so that’s a lie! Next.
MOTHER
Well you say you’re creative, why don’t you use some of that creativity to find a job?
VOICE FOUR
Just shut up and say nothing, will you?
VOICE THREE
Oh, the great irony of this entire discussion would make me laugh if laughing were possible for a jaded cynic such as myself. They list in chronological order all my faults and flaws and expect it to motivate me into action, as if knowing I am a hopeless piece of fecal matter would inspire me to not be a hopeless piece of fecal matter. Truth is, their words only confirm what I already know about myself: I am utterly defective.
VOICE TWO
I’ve touched souls with my work. I’ve understood the misunderstood and helped the silent suffers through my poetry and prose.
VOICE ONE
But in the end, I am an absurdity.
VOICE THREE
Truer words were never spoken. My life remains unjustified as I have no means or intelligence by which I can support myself or my child. Do you see the paradoxical vanity of my existence? Perpetuating genetic abnormalities is a crime against humanity. We should allow such corruptions to die off naturally to improve the collective gene pool. Instead, we enable them to live by means of medication and scientific technology.
VOICE TWO
But without these anomalies, there would be no art. . There would be no sculptures, or painted domes, or pictures, or music or great literature, because by its very nature, creativity is an unnatural phenomenon. If everyone was creative, then creativity wouldn’t exist, but because a few individuals live outside the parameters of normal thought and experience, we have art and we have beauty.
Imagine life without art. Would it be worth living?
(FADE OUT)


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