The Professor of Desire Presents

Anneke Schwob

The Professor of Desire Presents:
A Dramatic Performance in Two Acts
Being the Tragicomical Romance of
MR. PUNCH, a puppet, and JUDY, his wife
CHARLEY, a numbers station operator, and ___________________
…and?
…and?
…and?


ACT I
Scene i
The West Pier, an abandoned Victorian monstrosity, Brighton, UK. 1964.
JUDY
O Mister Punch, o where is our baby!
PUNCH
It is sleeping, Judy! Give-us-a-kiss.
PUNCH pursues JUDY across the stage.
JUDY
No I wont give you a kiss, Mister Punch! Not until you tell me where our baby is sleeping!
PUNCH grabs JUDY and kisses her, forcefully. His LOLLING PUPPET TONGUE invades her mouth. She batters at him but to no avail; her hands are soft and formless things, made of wool and felt, and her protest finds no purchase. At last PUNCH pulls away. The AUDIENCE laughs and laughs.
JUDY
O waily waily Mister Punch, o where is our baby!
PUNCH
I told you Judy, it is sleeping.
JUDY
turns to the audience
But where is it sleeping? It’s sleeping…
AUDIENCE
prompted by the BOTTLER
…WITH THE FISHES!
JUDY
towering over PUNCH with anger, taller than the helter-skelter, taller than the South Downs, larger than Sussex.
Then SO SHALL YOU BE, Mister Punch.
She takes up the SLAPSTICK and commences the attack. PUNCH accepts the violence, felt arms spread wide. He is grinning; he is always grinning. As her blows rain down, he begins to laugh, until he’s shrieking, gasping. In manipulating the puppet, the PROFESSOR, keeper of PUNCH and JUDY’s secrets, must walk the line between death throes and orgasm. Ineffectual JUDY collapses into sobs. PUNCH stands alone on stage, borne aloft by the PROFESSOR’s hand, satiated.
PUNCH
That’s how you do it.


Darkness.
DISEMBODIED MALE VOICE
heard as though from far away, distorted by static
…esca…esca…benthic…benthic…risen…risen…two…eight…zero…three…zero…three…

Before—before the fish and the fairgrounds, before the Punch and Judy and the Pier—Charley had rather liked the shipping forecast. It broadcast four times a day. He made it his business to try and catch all four. On days when he slept too late to tune into the earliest, at 05h20, he went through the day muddled and disappointed until the 12h01 broadcast set him to rights. His favorite was the last of the night, at 00h48, because of the music.
He can’t listen to the forecast in the station, obviously, in case the sound scrambles or otherwise obscures the transmission. He does it in his head, instead.

CHARLEY
silently
Viking, Forties, Cromarty, Forth. Cyclonic, 3-5, moderate or good, becoming very poor.

He goes through all the regions, Viking through Fastnet, Irish Sea to Southeast Iceland. He pays special attention to the forecast he makes for Wight and Dover, because those are closest to Brighton, where he lives in a secret room in the wrought iron cupola of the less-popular West Pier, and spends his days monitoring the continual, meaningless transmission of continual, meaningless numbers over the long-range wireless. His room, which is small, nonetheless has two roundish windows from which he can see outside. One faces inland, to the rocky beach and holidaymakers in their beach huts and deckchairs. The other looks out over the waters. He’s always pleased when he does the forecast right.
Charley has worked at the numbers station for some years. He didn’t seek it out. It happened to him. Most things in life seem to happen to him without his conscious input or desire. The man who offered him the job—older, with stern grey hairs at the temple and the unmistakable whiff of the City in the cut of his suit—must have seen something of the numbers in Charley, when he sought him out at Lime Street station. It’s the first and only time in his life that someone has wanted him in this way.
Still, he’s proud of his work.
His mum thinks he works in a bank. She’s proud of his work, too, though she doesn’t understand why he has to be so far away. There’s plenty banks in Liverpool, after all, and then he could still come home for his Sunday lunch.

CHARLEY’S MUM
to her friends at the bingo, with pride.
My Charley’s ever so good with numbers.

In a way, she’s right.
Charley believes in the bodiless anonymity of numbers. The rise and fall of radio waves, the patterns that perpetuate themselves. He understands, abstractly, the way he understands most things, that he ought to care about what the numbers are doing. What they stand for, where they’re going.
What he does care about is that they make it there with a minimum of fuss. He aspires to be that minimum of fuss. If he could, he would disappear into those oceanic currents of information, sink below that surface and swim.


Lights up. The interior of a wrought-iron cupola, sparsely furnished: gramophone and transmitter, telegraph machine and atomic clock.
Friday 12h00, CHARLEY sits at the telegraph machine for exactly sixty minutes. Sometimes, he gets a telegram. Sometimes, no. The telegram contains a sequence of three words followed by six numbers. On days that he receives a telegram, Friday 13h00, CHARLEY reads the words and numbers into the transmitter and then plays through the gramophone record in its entirety.
Interior, gramophone.
A CHOIR
singing. Their song is the 1860 British hymn, “Eternal Father Strong to Save.”

The sound is echoey and big, like being in a cathedral. The disc is starting to pick up a scratch in the middle of the recording, a raspy hitch after “O hear us when we cry to thee.” For the briefest moment, a drowning sailor’s fate hangs in the balance. Then, the needle catches.

A CHOIR
singing
…For those in peril on the sea.
Eventually, the record wears out, leaving THE SAILOR forever drowning. Presumably, SOMEONE will send CHARLEY a new record when that happens.

A reel-to-reel machine records Charley’s transmission. It will rebroadcast the recording until the next telegram. Sometimes the reel-to-reel picks up distant, tinny echoes of the Wurlitzer organ and carnival barkers, the music of the Palace Pier’s helter-skelter and carousel. No one has ever told Charley to worry about this, so he doesn’t.
The rest of his time is his own.
Some of that time needs must be taken up in the business of everyday life, of course. Visiting the baths, the shops. Picking up the envelope of his wages (distinctly modest, but sufficient to his modest needs) from a left-luggage locker at the station.

The soaring iron arches of the WEST PIER become, with the addition of coal smoke and steam whistles, BRIGHTON STATION. The PROFESSOR may encourage the AUDIENCE to take on the rôle of HOLIDAYMAKERS in the scene. The BOTTLER, working the crowd, must conduct periodic checks to ensure that everyone is traveling on a valid ticket. FARE JUMPERS will be fined ten shillings.
HOLIDAYMAKERS pour out of the trains. FAMILIES with picnic hampers and too much luggage. MODS in shades and anoraks giving hassle to ROCKERS in crepe-sole and leather while GRANNIES clutch at their handbags and copies of the Daily Sketch.

Sometimes men come alone, hunched at first, tentatively rising as their lungs fill with sea air and their ears with the gulls’ harsh cries.

The MEN watch CHARLEY as he bends to retrieve his envelope.

Charley responds to the feeling of men’s eyes on him. His movements become a little more deliberate as he tries to slip between the edges of their attention. He thinks they want his bag, the contents of his slim envelope. He doesn’t recognize his own awkward grace, his self-consciousness that reads as a performance. Charley believes, more or less, that because he’s never wanted anyone, no one in turn has ever wanted him.
But just because he doesn’t understand the slantwise invitation in the men’s eyes and hands and hips, doesn’t mean he isn’t curious.

A STRANGER
with a pouting, feminine lilt
Bona to vada.
CHARLEY
A STRANGER
Does it arva?
CHARLEY
the secret, sublime cant means less to him than the ever-changing sequence of numbers.
When CHARLEY doesn’t answer, the STRANGER rolls his eyes. He dismisses CHARLEY with an eloquent, illegible gesture. Then he’s off, melting into the shrieking crowd, their cacophony of bright summer fabrics.
CHARLEY follows him.


Scene ii
The streets of Brighton, winding, wind-swept. White lathe and plaster, salt-pocked stone. Briny rot hangs in the air. The sun is high overhead, its light unforgiving.
A SCUM OF FISH bob on the waves, perfuming the breezes with worm-addled flesh. Some strange signal has called to them, torn them from their mesopelagic home, sent them searching up, up, up. Out from the midnight dark, into the summer air. Into the noses of the HOLIDAYMAKERS, clinging to their polyester holiday clothes. The BOTTLER might involve the AUDIENCE at this point, instructing them to gag and cough and vomit at the stink. Remind them that they are on holiday, that they paid for this, that they are required to have fun, regardless.
THE PROFESSOR
the boardwalk hierophant, the peddler of secret knowledge. To the BOTTLER, who must not let the AUDIENCE know.
They’ve come from beneath, these dying fish. They’ve answered a call. Three to four hundred meters below the surface, an unfathomable quantity of fish endlessly circles the world’s oceans. Their scales receive and reflect sound. SONAR mistakes them for the seabed. Together, they are called the deep scattering layer. Also: false bottom. Phantom bottom. A haunting. They school together, lanternfish and oarfish and anglerfish. At night, they rise.
THE FISH
gasping, dying.
Glub, glub.
The STRANGER moves through Brighton’s streets with familiarity and purpose. He isn’t tall, and he moves in sinuous and inhuman ways. His flop of colorless hair bobs along the crowd like flotsam. Occasionally sucked under by a current, spat back out further along. One moment in the middle of a group of SCHOOLGIRLS like they’ve been friends all their lives, the next at the elbow of some YOUNG MOTHER, playing the rôle of a doting husband. It’s a fine, hot day. The SEABIRDS circle and squall overhead, echoing the crowd below. On the beach, the FISH rot.
CHARLEY follows, always at a distance.

This isn’t the first time he’s followed someone like this.
This is what Charley does, when he’s not in his room on the pier, alone with his endless numbers. He is Britain’s foremost naturalist of human desires. And where better to conduct his study than in Brighton, 1964, where someone is wanting something—desperately—all the time, and sometimes they even get it, too.
Charley has watched children at the coconut shy, winning and losing. He has cataloged their ecstasy and their heartbreak, the way that their faces crumple into wet, fleshy misery when they lose.
A FATHER
coaxingly, trying to get something for nothing
Ah, g’arn then, mate. For the kiddies, eh?
THE CARNIVAL BARKER, UNDERPAID
shrugs. It’s no good for him, if he’s caught giving out the prizes for free.
And what good’s the PRIZE, anyway, when the high of it won’t last beyond an hour, and then it’s on to the next wrenching pulse of WANT, WANT, WANT?
Charley has watched women at the tombola, clutching their tickets in sweaty hands till the card tears, mouthing the numbers, knowing-just-knowing that this time is it, the big score. Their number up, their ship come in.

THE WOMAN WHO JUST LOST AT THE TOMBOLA
wet-eyed, shaking her head and mouthing to her friends
No, it’s all right, of course it’s all right. I’m only being a bit silly.
He has watched schoolgirl pashes rise and fall. Young couples on their honeymoons, families. First kisses on the deckchairs, last kisses outside the theater. He watched, with uncharacteristic fascination, the day when the usual hassle between mods and rockers turned incendiary, blossoming into a pitched battle that spanned the beach from Brighton to Hove and resulted in no small amount of property damage; though not his property, so it was easy enough not to care about that, at least.
He’s no naïf. He’s seen all that and more, too. Teenage romance blossoming under the boardwalk, her skirts around her waist and her eyes all aflutter, him coming off into her hand, or too early, or not at all.
He watched, once, while a group of boys no older than fifteen beat a grown man for his wallet.

A BOY, BLOOD ON HIS SHOES
viciously, matter-of-fact
Poufter.
THE BOYS keep beating THE POUFTER, kicking and kicking. Stage left, PUNCH capers and laughs with glee. The POUFTER lies there, arms half-heartedly protecting his stomach. He has been expecting something like this to happen.
THE PROFESSOR
didactically, not telling the AUDIENCE anything they don’t already know.
Charley’s conclusions on the nature of human desire are: not worth it. The highs are too brief, the grief out of all proportion to the thing first desired and then, inevitably, lost. He can’t make the numbers work. But they keep wanting things, the good people of Brighton, so he keeps watching. Without understanding, like a dumb beast. He’s drawn to it, like a fish to a lure.
THE NUMBERS STATION
static, echoing. Telling the AUDIENCE things they’ve never known, and will not know, even once the transmission ends. If the transmission ends.
Esca…esca…risen…risen…


ACT II
Scene i
The Lanes. Where the streets get narrow and the buildings lean rickety-tick together, craning out over the HOLIDAYMAKERS. Tea rooms hung with bunting, platters of Bakewell tarts in the window like jewels. As soon as this idyllic seaside atmosphere is established, it should dissolve. The melted pieces of middle-class leisure pollute the stage, becoming oppressive and hard to move through. The smell of FISH and rot grows stronger.

Down in the lanes, he loses the stranger. Charley peers into windows, glances down alleys, but there’s no sign of his quarry. The atmosphere changes, becomes oppressive, like a gathering storm. He’s been here before, of course he has. Brighton’s not so big as all that. But he’d swear he’s never seen these shops before, these dark-curtained pubs. He keeps hearing snatches of something, like a half-familiar song, a hymn remembered from a childhood of churchgoing, the echo of the stranger’s non-language.

GROUPS OF MEN on street corners watch CHARLEY pass, smiling in knowing-unknowing ways, their secret smiles and glances themselves a language he doesn’t understand. They are costumed in carnival colors. Silks, satins, sequins. They move around CHARLEY, passing in and out of the buildings like the steps of an unfamiliar dance. Their entrances and exits reveal brief glimpses into secret worlds of music and laughter behind the curtained doors.
A fug of tobacco and hash and sour sweat hang in the air, a chlorinated stink. A twilit carnival world apart from the bright, clean blue and gold of the seashore and pier. And yet the sea is just on the other side of this looming darkness, its salty sweep constantly brushing against his ears.
Alone in a chaos, Charley feels the boundaries of his self dissolve. He staggers. The assault on his sensorium disorients. His mouth fills with a thick taste: salt, silt, mucous.

CHARLEY gags.
THE FISH
washed against the shore by the waves.
Glub. Blub.
A door bursts open. An OLD QUEAN and his DILLY-BOY stumble out, arms around each others’ necks. Intertwined. They reek of beer and sex. From behind them, the unmistakable stink of a semi-public facilities, a cottage. Their mouths meet and move against each other, eating each other, swallowing whole, dissolving and reforming. They pull away, until it’s only a moist string of saliva that links them, fleshy lip to fleshy lip.

Their glassy eyes, the moist sheen of their skin, remind Charley of the jellies that breach and die on the rocky beach.


CHARLEY pushes between them and dives for the loo.
THE OLD QUEAN
Oi! Vada where she trolls, eh ducky?
DILLY-BOY
laughs and laughs.


Scene ii
Interior, the cottages of the Black Lion. Filthy toilets. Glory holes, grime, doors off their hinges. But also: a homemade puppet theater of painted plywood, scarlet velvet and green baize. The theater must be placed without regard for the presence of human filth.

CHARLEY barely makes it to the toilet before he’s resoundingly, violently sick. Overall, it’s less messy than it could be. His lack of appetite isn’t just a metaphor; he’s disconnected, uncomfortable with himself as an embodied thing. Not much in his stomach but a jacket potato with beans and a weak tea. The process of emesis is a miserable, private humiliation. Still, CHARLEY tries to experience the EMPTINESS that follows as a relief. He does not succeed. CHARLEY wipes his mouth on the hem of his jumper and realizes that he isn’t alone.
From behind, Charley hears laughter. The sound of Brighton, the sound of the seaside, of the summer. But it’s close, very close. It presses on Charley. Him on his knees, his trousers becoming wet and sticky with assorted effluvia: perhaps they are laughing at him.
But then: the familiar sound of the slapstick and swazzle as the Professor begins Punch’s song.

PROFESSOR
That Mr. Punch he’s a randy fellow
Cock bright red and his arse bruise-yellow
Rootitootitooit!
Rootitootitooit!
The shabby velvet curtains of the puppet theater draw apart. Behind them, a DIRTY TOILET. Beside it, a NELLY enthusiastically exploring the prick of a BEAUTIFUL FAIRY in a sequined gown of midnight purple, a towering bouffant in matching tones. The FAIRY’s skin prickles and shimmers diamond as her scene partner takes her into his mouth.
PUNCH chases JUDY. They fly across the stage, as fast as the PROFESSOR’s arms can flail them. He flips and flops. Her skirt rides up.
JUDY
howling through the mouth of the professor
Aa-aow Mister Punch! Waily waily o dearie me.
MR PUNCH takes up the SLAPSTICK and brains JUDY across the head. She flops down, limp-wristed, dead.
PUNCH
the swazzle firmly sealed against the roof of the mouth
That’s how you do it!
The AUDIENCE howls.
OLD QUEAN
from outside
Oooh, she’s done it now, ducks!
Behind and in front of and beside the PUPPETS, the QUEANS OF BLACK LION COTTAGE bate and cartzo together in the omee-palone dance. The immortal, anarchic coupling of queers and faggots. They dance a dance that’s older than time. They fuck as though they’ve just invented it here, now, Brighton, 1964. The BOTTLER approaches and corrals the AUDIENCE, drawing them up and placing them as part of the tableau, manipulating limbs and genitals, disarranging and removing clothes. The AUDIENCE gasps and moans and sighs. They whisper to each other. Their bodies melt and merge. They are separate; they become one.

With his left hand, the Professor makes Punch caper, too. His nose and chin hook towards each other, gleefully malicious, leering. The little cap on his head bounces, to-fro, to-fro as he moves. His right hand, fisting Judy, lies silent against the far side of the stage. Desire, violence, dysfunction. A pattern perpetuating across time and space. And yet, behind all that, Punch and Judy are forever linked: two pieces of one whole, the same electricity animating each to move upon the other. Even to hurt, even to hurt.

THE PROFESSOR
to CHARLEY
Maybe this is the moment when Charley finally understands desire, of a sort.


The OMEE-PALONE mass swells as more of the AUDIENCE join the dance. Skin grows into skin, gowns ripple and tear, fakement fills its crevices to bursting and spills. The OMEE-PALONE fills the stage; fills the cottages of the Black Lion. Seed spills. Skin bruises and tears and breaks open and seals shut in new and beautiful ways. It is torn apart and heals badly. It doesn’t heal at all. The AUDIENCE is trapped in the OMEE-PALONE’s moment of completion, its suppurating wound. They pour out into the lanes, a mummer’s play, a dance of death, thronging through the streets. CUNTS and COCKS and FISTS and FINGERS, ARMS AND LEGS and SCALES AND TAILS, LIMBS AND FINS emerging and being swallowed all at once. PUNCH and JUDY, alive and dead, lead the grand parade. HOLIDAYMAKERS flee or are taken. MODS and ROCKERS draw knives and are absorbed. They fight forever in one flesh. The EXECUTIONER, PUNCH’s great nemesis, appears!
AUDIENCE, ONE HUNDRED MOUTHS IN ONE
without prompting
Look out! He’s behind you!
The EXECUTIONER swings his axe. He dangles his rope. PUNCH gambols beyond his grasp. He taunts the EXECUTIONER, he threatens and teases. The AUDIENCE opens its hundred mouths and the EXECUTIONER is consumed. The AUDIENCE doesn’t spit, it swallows. Together, the OMEE-PALONE and the AUDIENCE bump and grind up Queen Street. They hold Dyke Road easily in their grasp.

They claim the boardwalk, they pack the piers till bursting. They dance and thrust and fuck until the West Pier vibrates, until it sparks and smoulders and shakes apart.

The WEST PIER begins to collapse. In this moment of rupture, the OMEE-PALONE finally takes the AUDIENCE entirely into itself. From now on, they are united.
PROFESSOR
as someone explaining to a small child.
The deep scattering layer schools together, endlessly circling. They move muscular through their own secret currents. They are not beautiful and they are not seen. They sheen. Their bodies baffle. They keep their secrets. They are called by a signal so strong that its sender cannot possibly understand its scale. They feel it in their scales. They heard the signal, they seek the sound. They swim up, up, up. They swarm. They sound. They die.
The OMEE-PALONE is a deep scattering layer. It is a gale force warning in Wight and Dover. Cyclonic, becoming poor, later moderate to good. The vibrations of its dance move forward and backward in time.
PROFESSOR
heartbroken.
On March 28, 2003, long after being abandoned to the elements, Brighton’s West Pier catches fire. The enamel paint bubbles and breaks, glass shatters, wrought iron twists and breaks in the heat. The West Pier falls. It is commonly attributed to arson.
NUMBERS STATION
over and over, growing weaker until consumed by flame
…esca…esca…benthic…benthic…risen…risen…two…eight…zero…three…zero…three…
Exterior, Brighton. 1964, again. Forever. Never.
The WEST PIER burns, the OMEE-PALONE burns. The PIER collapses. The OMEE-PALONE falls. The OMEE-PALONE is caught by the RAFT OF DEAD MESOPELAGIC FISH that coats the surface of the North Atlantic Ocean.
RAFT OF DEAD MESOPELAGIC FISH
in a language unknowable by human ears
…O hear us when we cry to thee
For those in peril on the sea.
The SEA takes the OMEE-PALONE and changes it. The FISH and the OMEE-PALONE school together into a single being, an enormous SEA QUEAN, always living and forever dying, monstrous and beautiful.
JUDY
floating, abandoned on the scummy sea
O Waily waily, where is my Charley?
CHARLEY
has been watching, has been standing on the beach, at the edge of the stage that is the world, the last audience of the final performance. Gentle waves lap the toes of his shoes.
THE PROFESSOR
dismissive
The play has forgotten about Charley.
THE SEA QUEAN
roaring, her mouth as big as an ocean, her jaw ringed with furious ranks of teeth
NO I HAVEN’T
As CHARLEY watches, THE SEA QUEAN changes. She shrinks but is undiminished, she sinks and rises, she rides the waves to shore. She comes to CHARLEY a great anglerfish, a scaly monstrosity deformed by strange surface pressures, a being hideous even in the deep. She comes to CHARLEY like something that is hunting, like something that has been called. She wears her bioluminescent lure like a crown. She changes and he remains the same. He appears to CHARLEY now, THE STRANGER from before, with a flop of colorless hair and a thin khaki shirt laid open at the neck. THE SEA QUEAN takes CHARLEY’s hand. His touch is rough and slimy.
THE SEA QUEAN
What do you want?
CHARLEY
I want
THE SEA QUEAN
What do you want?
CHARLEY

fin.
Anneke Schwob's short fiction has appeared in Strange Horizons, Baffling, Kaleidotrope, and elsewhere. Their debut novel is forthcoming from Orbit UK and Grand Central Publishing in Fall 2027. Follow their work or register complaints at annekeschwob.info or on Bluesky at @ernerker.bsky.social.