Extract from "The Caretaker", 1960
During Aston’s
speech the room grows darker.
By the close of the speech
only ASTON can be seen clearly. DAVIES and all the others objects are
in the
shadow. The fadedown of the light must be as gradual, as protracted and
as
unobtrusive as possible.
ASTON: I used to go there quite a bit. Oh, years ago now.
But I stopped. I used to like that place. Spent quite a bit of time in
there.
That was before I went away. Just before. I think that... place had a
lot to do
with it. They were all... a bit older than me. But they always used to
listen.
I thought... they understood what I said. I mean I used to talk to
them. I
talked too much. That was my mistake. The same in the factory. Standing
there,
or in the breaks, I used to... talk about things. And these men, they
used to
listen, whenever I... had anything to say. It was all right. The
trouble was, I
used to have kind of hallucinations. They weren’t hallucinations,
they... I
used to get the feeling I could see things... very clearly...
everything... was
so clear...everything used... everything used to get very quiet...
everything
got very quiet... all this... quiet... and... this clear sight... it
was... but
maybe I was wrong. Anyway, someone must have said something. I didn’t
know
anything about it. And... some kind of lie must have got around. And
this lie
went round. I thought people started being funny. In that café.
The factory. I
couldn’t understand it.
Then one day they took me to a hospital, right
outside London. They... got me there. I didn’t want to go. Anyway... I
tried to
get out, quite a few times. But... it wasn’t very easy. They asked me
questions, in there. Got me in and asked me all sort of questions.
Well, I told
them... when they wanted to know... what my thoughts were. Hmmnn. Then
one
day... this man... doctor, I suppose... the head one... he was quite a
man
of... distinction... although I wasn’t so sure about that. He called me
in. He
said... he told me I had something. He said they’d concluded their
examination.
That’s what he said. And he showed me a pile of papers and he said that
I’d got
something, some complaint. He said... he just said that, you see.
You’ve got...
this thing. That’s your complaint. And we’ve decided, he said, that in
your
interests there’s only one course we can take. He said... but I
can’t...
exactly remember... how he put it... he said, we’re going to do
something to
your brain. He said... if we don’t, you’ll be in here for the rest of
your
life, but if we do, you stand a chance. You can go out, he said, and
live like
the others. What do you want to do to my brain, I said to him. But he
just
repeated what he’d said. Well, I wasn’t a fool. I knew I was a minor.I
knew he
couldn’t do anything to me without getting permission. I knew he had to
get
permission from my mother. So I wrote to her and told her what they
were trying
to do. But she signed their form, you see, giving them permission. I
know that
because he showed me her signature when I brought it up.
Well, that night I tried to escape, that night. I
spent five hours sawing at one of the bars on the window in this ward.
Right
throughout the dark. They used to shine a torch over the beds every
half hour.
So I timed it just right. And then it was nearly done, and a man had
a... he
had a fit, right next to me. And they caught me, anyway. About a week
later
they started to come round and to do this thing to the brain. We were
all
supposed to have it done, in this ward. And they came round and did it
one at a
time. One a night. They used to come round with these... I don’t know
what they
were... they looked like big pincers, with wires on, the wires were
attached to
a little machine. It was electric. They used to hold the man down, and
this
chief... the chief doctor, used to fit the pincers, something like
earphones,
he used to fit them on either side of the man’s skull. There was a man
holding
the machine, you see, and he’d... turn it on, and the chief would just
press
these pincers on either side of the skull and keep them there. Then
he’d take
them off. They’d cover the man up... and they wouldn’t touch him again
until
later on. Some used to put up a fight, but most of them didn’t. They
just lay
there. Well, they were coming round to me, and the night they came I
got up and
stood against the wall. They told me to get on the bed, and I knew they
had to
get me on the bed because if they did it while I was standing up they
might break
my spine. So I stood up and then one or two of them came for me, well,
I was
younger then, I laid one of them out and I had another one round the
throat,
and then suddenly this chief had these pincers on my skull and I knew
he wasn’t
supposed to it while I was standing up, that’s why I... anyway, he did
it.
So I did get out. I got out of the place... but I
couldn’t
walk very well. I don’t think my spine was damaged. That was perfectly
all
right. The trouble was... my thoughts... had become very slow... I
couldn’t
think at all... I couldn’t... get... my thoughts... together...
uuuhh... I
could... never quite get it... together. The trouble was, I couldn’t
hear what
people were saying. I couldn’t look to the right or the left, I had to
look
straight in front of me, because if I turned my head round... I
couldn’t
keep...upright. And I had these headaches. I used to sit in my room.
That was
when I lived with my mother. And my brother. He was younger than me.
And I laid
everything out, in order, in my room, all the things I knew were mine,
but I
didn’t die. The thing is, I should have been dead. I should have died.
Anyway,
I feel much better now. But I don’t talk to people now. I steer clear
of places
like that café. I never go into them now. I don’t talk to
anyone... like that.
I’ve often thought of going back and trying to find the man who did
that to me.
But I want to do something first. I want to build that shed out in the
garden.
8/10
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