PART ONE
Scene One
Thoroughbreds
NOW
Court.
Thoroughbreds.
Every single one.
Primed for the race.
Every muscle pumped
trained and ready for the sprint.
Hold it together.
Hold back.
Keep the blood
at just the right temperature.
Just below boil.
Waiting at the starting gates,
thenā¦
āall standā,
out of the stalls.
Hold back.
Push forward.
Know when to have restraint,
when to find an opening.
Ready to jump when the other side falters.
Poised.
Watching, waiting.
Nerves taut,
mind operating on ten tracks at once.
Blood pumping.
Muscles
tightly wound,
waiting to spring.
Waiting.
Itās starting to open up,
wait.
Wait.
Careful.
This is the measure of your skill set,
the calm before.
And,
there it is.
Instinct pushes me forward.
āYOUR HONOUR!ā
[Hold everything in one place.]
Iām on my feet.
Eyes
zooming in on me.
āSubmission granted.ā
Yesss.
My client,
big guy,
looks stunned.
Doesnāt quite know Iāve won a point,
but he feels the shift.
Likes it.
My client hates the witness,
but for me,
the witness is just
āthe witnessā.
I sit down.
The prosecution finishes.
Then itās time.
The judge looks at me:
āItās your witness Ms Ensler.ā
Yes.
The witness is mine!
The witness breathes in.
I stand up,
slowly, do up the button on my jacket.
Courtroom silent,
charged,
waiting for moi.
Keep it cool,
cooool.
Voice,
measured.
And
confident.
Play it.
Play it,
itās yours.
[Youāre holding it in the palm of your hand.]
Play with it.
Stretch it out,
itās yours.
Cross-examination.
Itās the best part.
All instinct.
Ask the question.
Repeat the answer;
repeat it again.
Watch his face,
let him think Iām getting mixed up;
that Iām a bit slow in understanding what happened.
Flick through some pages;
let him think Iāve lost my way.
Hear breathing.
A snicker from prosecution counsel.
Good.
Good.
Very good.
Again,
flick through papers.
My client shifts uncomfortably in the dock.
Good.
Then I repeat the question,
watch the witness relax.
Shoulders move back;
āThis one doesnāt seem to know what sheās doing.ā
Judge expressionless.
This judge has seen me before,
seen the likes of me.
Question one.
Question two.
Look worried about the answers.
This emboldens him.
Watch, yes,
here he goes.
Let the witness talk,
over talk.
Let him āclarifyā.
Good
āThanks for that, I wasnāt sureā¦ā
See his eyes dismiss me,
āThis one must be straight out of uni or something;
sheās not that good.ā
Huh!
TESSA laughs.
It relaxes him.
Heās got the upper hand
he is now not careful
not afraid
no longer
vigilant.
He says something inconsistent.
I let him explain it to me.
Nodding.
Iām nodding.
He digs himself in deeper.
āOkayā I say āthatās a bit clearer now, butā¦ā
He volunteers more information.
I see the prosecutor
put a finger to his own forehead.
He knows.
And I know.
But the guy about to bury himself talks on and on.
I circle him,
nodding approval.
āOh I see, but why did that happen?ā
Judgeās face a mask,
but the judge knows.
Thereās blood in the water and I let the witness swim on.
No one can help him.
And he
swims right into it.
He leans back,
flash of confidence across his face.
I let him
feel his control.
Feel SAFE.
Then,
tiptoe,
tiptoe.
He crosses his arms as I approach.
I circle.
Circle again.
Stop,
flick through some pages.
The judge and the other lawyers know whatās coming.
They know,
they cringe for him.
But they love it, they lean forward.
The jury, the people in the public gallery,
no idea.
And him, in the witness box,
the one I am talking to,
no clue.
Still.
No. Fucking. Clue.
āAnd, sorry but, just to clarify, I do have one more question ā
I hope you donāt mind ā it will help me get the full pictureā /
Was that an eye-roll from him?
Perfect.
But if he was watching the prosecution counsel
the guy whoās turning his head down to the table.
He night know
he might sense.
If he wasnāt so sure, so cocky,
heād feel it.
Danger.
Something is about to go down.
But nup, heās in his element.
Thinks he is the cat
and I am the mouse.
[Perfect.]
The prosecution counsel looks up.
[A moment.]
I stop moving.
Stop paper shuffling.
Look right at the witness.
I ask my question.
A strange flicker across his face,
he glances quickly to the prosecutor.
Prosecutor canāt say anything,
but his eyes,
the prosecutorās eyes are straining, trying to say:
āDonāt.
Donāt.
Keep your wits about you.
Donāt fall into this trap.ā
AND,
my last circle.
Then,
BANG!!
I fire four questions like bullets.
Bang.
Bang.
Bang bang.
Face,
shock.
Utter annihilation.
And the look I get;
dawning.
You fucking idiot.
You thought you had this.
But here I am.
Watch the witness sweat.
Silence.
The people in the gallery lean forward;
Imitates them with glee.
āWow,
Sheās good.ā
My client, the accused,
is awestruck.
My eyes are on the witnessās face.
Now for the first time he actually sees me.
Heās furious
āAnswer the question please Mr Bateman.ā
Professional.
The prosecutor sits at the bar table, head down.
Itās all over now,
he knows it,
I know it,
the judge knows it,
and the witness is about to really know it.
āYour honour, the witness is not answering the question.ā
Sweetest voice ever.
The judge reminds Mr Bateman that he must answer the question.
āAnswer counselās question please Mr Bateman.ā
A look of sheer hatred,
at me.
He is cornered.
He is fucked.
His head is down,
he mumbles something.
āIām sorry I didnāt hear that.ā
Judge: āYou need to speak into t...