ACT ONE
Casting On
āBeginning anything new can be daunting, and knitting is no exception. Mistakes made while casting on can trouble you right through to a garmentās completion. Take care, and take your time. Imagine the finished piece. Nothing spurs a young girl on to success more readily than the thought of a well-knitted bedsock.ā
A Girlās Guide to Knitting & Crochet, Janice Thripp (1962)
Scene One
A room with a sofa. A door at the back leads to the bathroom, from which splashing is heard. STITCH comes out of the bathroom, damp, with a worried expression. He shuts the door, leans against it, looks up and sighs.
STITCH. Bugger.
STITCH sits down on the sofa and starts knitting. His expression is approaching shell shock. A Transformers lunchbox rests on the floor by his feet, and next to the sofa is a rolled-up sleeping bag and a bag stuffed haphazardly with clothes. In front of the sofa is a low table with a CD player and some chunky headphones. On the back wall is a telephone. LIZ enters, heavily pregnant, waddles over to the sofa and sits down (heavily).
LIZ. I want this bump out. Now.
STITCH. Iām sorry.
LIZ. Itās so uncomfortable. And I need the loo.
STITCH. No help with that either Iām afraid.
LIZ (starts to get up). Oh, well. If you want something doingā¦
STITCH (holds onto her). No, Liz. You canāt.
LIZ. Iāve had three mango lassis, Stitch. I canāt not.
STITCH. Itās just.
LIZ. Like drinking sunlight at the time. Now this.
STITCH. Samās in there. Had a bit of an accident earlier. Heās having a bath.
LIZ. Poor lad. He had one at the jumble sale and all. They sent him home in floral culottes.
STITCH smiles.
Itās not funny.
STITCH. No, just. It wasnāt that sort of accident.
LIZ. Oh. Oh God, is he alright?
STITCH. Yeah, heās fine. Just a bit. Wet.
LIZ. What happened?
STITCH. Well, you know. Not much. Fell in with the penguins. A bit.
LIZ. What was he doing in with the penguins?
STITCH. Thatās what I thought.
LIZ. You were looking after him.
Pause. STITCH shrugs.
Remind me never to let you take the bump out.
STITCH (smiling). Thought you wanted it out. Now.
LIZ. I meant to, wherever youāve been. Feed it to the sodding lions, you will. Then shrug.
STITCH. No lions.
LIZ. Whatever, tigers.
STITCH. Liz, itās an aquarium. The penguins are only there for half-term.
LIZ. They must have something in the way of predators.
STITCH. Squids, I suppose. Theyāre quite shifty-looking.
LIZ. What do they eat?
STITCH. Dunno. Fish maybe. Seaweed. When I was there this bloke tried feeding the stingrays Battenberg. They werenāt keen.
Beat.
LIZ. I could just eat a bit of Battenberg.
STITCH. Well. Youāre in luck.
LIZ. Wahey.
STITCH. Mum sent one with me for the journey. Should be just in my bag down there. Can you reach?
LIZ looks in STITCHās bag at the side of the sofa. She takes out a few crumpled T-shirts, then finds a bottle of pills, looks at them quickly and puts them back. She finds the Battenberg.
LIZ. Got it. Oh, hang on. You donāt think itāll make matters worse.
STITCH. Nah, probably soak a bit up. Looks quite absorbent really. For a snack. Iāll get a knife.
LIZ (who has already bitten into the whole thing). Youāre alright. Iāll manage like this.
Pause. LIZ chews thoughtfully. STITCH examines his knitting.
I love Battenberg.
STITCH (carries on knitting). Mm.
LIZ. Dāyou think you could live off it?
STITCH. You seem to.
LIZ. I meant for ever though.
STITCH. Donāt see why not. Sponge. Jam. Marzipan. Three of your five-a-day.
LIZ. Odd though, isnāt it? Wonder who first thought: cakeās okay, but. Taste better in a grid. And it does. Sort of genius, that.
Pause. STITCH is still knitting.
Okay. If the biggest risk is a squid, you can take the bump out when itās ready.
STITCH. Cheers.
LIZ. Not the penguins though.
STITCH. I didnāt push him in.
LIZ. Well, why was he there in the first place?
STITCH. Itās complicated.
LIZ. If it takes my mind off my bladder, Iām in.
STITCH. Fine. Dave was there. Working.
LIZ. Who?
STITCH. You know. Markās mate. I met him Saturday.
LIZ. Oh, that Dave.
STITCH. He let us in to help feed them.
LIZ. I didnāt realise he worked there.
STITCH. Yeah. Travels round with the penguins. Various places.
LIZ. Come on then, what happened?
STITCH. Well, I didnāt know it was him, to begin with.
LIZ. Mustāve looked different without the vodka.
STITCH. I suppose. He was dressed as a giant penguin though, so.
LIZ. Really?
STITCH. Some sort of promotional thing.
LIZ. Dressed up as a giant penguin.
STITCH. Enormous, yeah.
LIZ. And you still fancy him?
STITCH (quietly). Mm.
Silence.
LIZ. Give it time, eh. Eh?
STITCH. I am.
Silence.
Seemed quite pleased to see me.
LIZ. Great.
STITCH. Mm.
LIZ. Sounds nice.
STITCH. I suppose he is, yeah. Knows his sea life.
Quite sweet, really, the other night. He told me about these penguins in New York. Gay penguins. When all the others, the straight ones, were looking after the eggs and that, they looked afte...