Book Read Free

MacTrump

Page 14

by Ian Doescher


  DESDIVANKA

  Thou’lt soon see #fratricide begin to trend,

  If thou canst not do what I say.

  [Ericson gulps.

  ERICSON

  —I shall.

  DESDIVANKA

  Be sure you do.

  DONNISON

  —I know how we may help.

  Our father is near purple in the face

  Each time he talketh of his border wall.

  Mayhap young Ericson and I can help—

  We’ll travel south and build the wall ourselves!

  DESDIVANKA

  [aside:] An imbecile’s idea. Yet if it shall

  Get these astounding fools out of the way,

  I’ll swear it is inspir’d by heav’n above.

  [To Donnison:] A notion excellent in the extreme.

  How soon, wise brother, can you two depart?

  ERICSON

  The sooner gone, the sooner done.

  DONNISON

  —Forsooth!

  Come, brother, let us southward turn our faces.

  ERICSON

  Where we shall build our father’s wall with pride.

  BOTH

  A-thump, a-thump, here come MacTrumps!

  DESDIVANKA

  —Go, then,

  And with ye both a sister’s fondest hopes.

  [Exeunt Donnison and Ericson.

  Poor folly-fallen baggages, these boys—

  A wonder ’tis we from the same womb sprung.

  I would near pity them, were they not such

  Inestimable fools. Let them unto

  Our southern border go, whilst I shore up

  The Southern Chamber for the next election.

  Republicons therein are all dimwitted,

  Mere parvenus who rode to pow’r atop

  The backs of paper tigers, snollygosters,

  Teabaggers, chicken hawks, and Prussian trolls.

  They nothing know of passing laws or how

  One may repeal rank, overreaching acts.

  Their only expertise is taking cash

  And shaming Democrati presidents.

  O’Bama, though, is gone and shan’t return.

  Sans him, these full-gorg’d dolts are useless as

  A bastard scabbard made without a slit.

  They do accomplish nothing, proffer less,

  And their most gallant speaker’s nothing but

  A toothless babe who was untimely wean’d.

  To ev’ry jot of power I shall cling,

  And shall, anon, take over ev’rything.

  [Exit.

  SCENE 3.

  In the Oval Tower.

  Enter CZAR VLAD PUTAIN above, on balcony.

  PUTAIN

  MacTrump, my droog, perhaps was a mistake.

  He is sufficiently unscrupulous,

  As any tool of mine abroad must be,

  Yet he is also unreliable,

  Far weaker than I did anticipate.

  The inclination of his heart is evil,

  And I regret I made him what he is.

  The time hath come to rectify the matter.

  [Calling:] McTweet, come forth!

  MCTWEET

  —Da, comrade?

  PUTAIN

  —Send the bots.

  MacTrump too long hath focus’d inward only.

  Make him to know there is an outer flank—

  An international community—

  That happily will goad him while he rests.

  Be certain King XI Ping and King John Ill

  Do stand prepar’d for all that lies ahead.

  Turn even allies—like Justin Truebeau,

  Andrés Matador, He-Manuel Macroon—

  Into a bother for the president.

  MCTWEET

  One universal firestorm, coming up.

  [Exit McTweet.

  PUTAIN

  The wheels are set in motion: I shall watch

  As Europe falls apart through doubt and fear.

  Sweet dreams, MacTrump. The world doth come for thee.

  [Exit Putain from balcony.

  Enter MACTRUMP, SIR JOHN MACKEELEY, and SIR MICHAEL POMPEII.

  MACTRUMP

  Pray, tell me once again what is the haps?

  POMPEII

  Vast pressure from the nations of the world

  Hath lately risen up. Our allies global

  Are worried o’er the comments you releas’d

  Before the summit of Globe7 leaders.

  Thou didst declare, “Prime Minister Truebeau

  Is ever so indignant over us,

  Yet speaks not of how Qanada doth charge

  Our dairy farmers, hurting agriculture.”

  He is a friend of Macroon, he of France,

  Who taketh to McTweet his sage advice,

  That “isolationism is a threat

  Unto the people of America.”

  He then invokes your noble name itself,

  Declaring, “President MacTrump knows that.”

  The largest problem, though, is King XI Ping—

  Who doth, as you know, lead the Middle Kingdom—

  Although you did grant him a visit, sir,

  He standeth resolutely ’gainst our hopes

  That we may seek a fairer route to trade.

  He stops at nothing to protect his int’rests,

  Which, ev’ry year, hurt our economy.

  MACTRUMP

  Cease blathering—thou lost me at “vast pressure.”

  I’ve told thee this before: make it more simple.

  MACKEELEY

  World: angry. King XI Ping: bad. Problem: big.

  [MacKeeley holds up a picture of Eurasia, on which the Middle Kingdom is marked by red arrows and has an X drawn through it.

  MACTRUMP

  At last, a briefing I can understand!

  We levy tariffs on the Middle Kingdom,

  On Qanada and Mexitlán as well,

  And ev’ry nation of Europa, too!

  POMPEII

  This shall enrage our allies dreadfully.

  Methinks this plan will have vast repercussions.

  MACTRUMP

  Didst thou e’er build a business from the ground?

  POMPEII

  Nay, sir, yet—

  MACTRUMP

  —Art thou skill’d in ways of commerce?

  POMPEII

  The international—

  MACTRUMP

  —Methought not—when

  A country like the great United Fiefdoms

  Is losing many billions on our trade

  With virtually ev’ry country we

  Do business with, I say: trade wars are good.

  Moreover, they are effortless to win.

  Example: when we’re down one hundred billion

  With certain countries and they would be coy,

  We trade no more—we win big. Easy ’tis!

  [Pompeii is aghast and falls silent, with his mouth open.

  MACKEELEY

  The tariffs shall be set in motion, sir.

  MACTRUMP

  What of Pompeii? It seems he may erupt.

  MACKEELEY

  He shall be fine.

  [MacKeeley takes Pompeii by the arm to help him leave.

  MACTRUMP

  —MacKeeley, ere thou goest.

  MACKEELEY

  Yea, Lord MacTrump?

  MACTRUMP

  —Bid Robert Wormwood come.

  MACKEELEY

  It shall b
e done.

  [Exeunt MacKeeley guiding the shocked Pompeii.

  MACTRUMP

  —My head is sore with care.

  This situation international

  Is more than I can bear—or understand.

  Combin’d with the MacMueller inquisition

  And Democrati foes who rear their heads,

  I’ll gladly speak with Robert, whom I’ve known

  For decades, ere I was the president.

  Besides, this Wormwood’s book may boost my woes

  If he doth paint a picture bleak of me.

  The people, for whatever reason, seem

  To put excessive stock in his faux news.

  Mayhap I shall convince him to relent

  Of any bad—and false—report he’d make.

  Enter ROBERT WORMWOOD.

  WORMWOOD

  Good even, Master President. You rang?

  MACTRUMP

  Holla, Robert, my thanks that thou didst come.

  WORMWOOD

  Of course, sir. I’ll record our conversation,

  If ’tis acceptable.

  MACTRUMP

  —Indeed, indeed.

  [Wormwood pulls out a quill to begin writing.

  WORMWOOD

  How may I help thee, President MacTrump?

  MACTRUMP

  I sit here, pond’ring over yesteryear.

  Remember when we spoke, an age ago,

  Whilst in the Tow’r MacTrump?

  WORMWOOD

  —I do, indeed.

  MACTRUMP

  By now, ’tis twenty years ago, at least.

  Thou wert, back then, considering a book

  That thou wouldst write about my simple life—

  Successful businessman and slick tycoon.

  Who would have thought these moons and orbits since

  That thou wouldst pen a very diff’rent book?

  Thy new book was not in the cards back then.

  WORMWOOD

  ’Tis pity my book could not diff’rent be.

  Know that I spake with many people, sir,

  Thus to present a whole full and fair account.

  MACTRUMP

  ’Tis well.

  WORMWOOD

  —You know, sir, we are living in

  A pivot point in history, methinks.

  MACTRUMP

  Alas that thou couldst not have talk’d with me.

  Thou knowest I am open e’er for thee.

  A most fair man thou art, for a news man.

  We shall see what transpires for thou and me.

  The country, as thou know’st, is faring well,

  The strong economy hath ris’n beyond

  All other eras in our nation’s past.

  The unemployment numbers sink so low,

  That it shall soon be six feet under, ha!

  Large companies return to UF soil,

  Which was unthinkable two years ago.

  WORMWOOD

  I understand your point of view. Know this:

  I’ve written books on eight past presidents,

  From Richard th’Worst to Lord Banquo O’Bama,

  And have learn’d something of reporting, see—

  As if your presidency were a house,

  One must stand outside it to see the whole.

  ’Tis not by talking solely unto you,

  Which opportunity I was denied,

  That I shall learn the most about you, sir.

  I must see from the outside, and discuss

  These topics far from people’s offices—

  ’Tis there I gain both documents and insight.

  The book I writ of you doth frankly look

  At three main themes: the globe entire today,

  Your full administration, and yourself.

  MACTRUMP

  Thou sayest it sans saying it at all:

  I take it ’tis a negative report.

  Yet I am half accustom’d to such things—

  The half of me that’s harden’d to the world.

  Some that is writ of me is bad, some good—

  This one shall be a bad one, verily.

  WORMWOOD

  ’Twas chance that did deny the chance to speak—

  MACTRUMP

  Communication here is far too chancy.

  WORMWOOD

  The book is transcrib’d carefully by scribes—

  And bas’d upon real incidents.

  MACTRUMP

  —O, Robert,

  Dost thou know I am doing a great job?

  WORMWOOD

  The book is factual and accurate.

  MACTRUMP

  ’Tis accurate that I am doing great—

  No one has ever done as well as I.

  WORMWOOD

  Hear, Master President: I do believe

  In our United Fiefdoms and, as such,

  I wish you ev’ry fortune in all things.

  MACTRUMP

  My thanks. Farewell.

  [Exit Wormwood.

  Enter MCTWEET.

  MCTWEET

  —My lord, a word.

  MACTRUMP

  —Alas,

  I did not bid thee come. An thou art here,

  It means some dreadful news befalls myself.

  Pray, tell me quickly.

  MCTWEET

  —Trending even now:

  The new book Present Fears by Robert Wormwood.

  His tale of your administration doth

  Both shock and madden people ev’rywhere.

  MACTRUMP

  Fie, fie upon it! Out, give me some air!

  [Exit McTweet.

  Words! Sland’rous, cutting, overthrowing words!

  How shall a man survive a surfeit of

  Verbs, nouns, and prepositions thrown like knives,

  Assailing him from ev’ry side? O, Wormwood!

  Thy good opinion I so much desire—

  Thou hast thy horrid words sicc’d on MacTrump.

  That ever I should see this wretched day.

  Would I could make return unto the past,

  When mine affairs were not affairs of state,

  When I could spend a night with Tempest Daniels

  And no one car’d or thought to care a whit.

  O for a simpler time, with fewer words.

  This book shall ruin sleep, though I do need it—

  To think that I shall never even read it!

  [Exit.

  SCENE 4.

  Columbia Island. Across the river from Washingtown.

  Enter DONNISON and ERICSON agallop.

  ERICSON

  Are we there yet? O, have we reach’d the south?

  DONNISON

  Methinks we must have, brother. We have trotted

  Through Washingtown at least an hour or more.

  ERICSON

  Where is the river?

  DONNISON

  —We just cross’d its banks.

  See thou the bridge that now is far behind us?

  [Ericson turns around.

  ERICSON

  A-ha! So that is what ’twas. Brother, thanks!

  Let us dismount t’embrace the southern land

  That Father captur’d so triumphantly.

  DONNISON

  Avast!

  [The brothers stop galloping. Donnison steps forward and throws his arms out.

  ERICSON

  —Behold the land, mine elder kin!

  The fertile southern fiefdom of…[He reads a road sign.] Vagi
na?

  DONNISON

  ’Tis Virginía, Ericson.

  ERICSON

  —Of course!

  DONNISON

  The Virginía colony: the neighbor

  Of presidents, the Old Derision, too.

  We shall begin to build our father’s wall,

  Here on the southern side of th’Rio Grundy.

  ERICSON

  A plan fantastic, older sibling wise!

  What shall we build it with?

  DONNISON

  —I do not know.

  What of those stones?

  ERICSON

  —Where?

  DONNISON

  —Yonder, down the road.

  [Donnison points off.

  ERICSON

  Methinks not, brother, for that cemetery

  Is hallow’d such that not e’en our bold father

  Will set a foot therein.

  DONNISON

  —Yea, point well ta’en.

  We shall persist with what we haply scrounge,

  And build one of those stonewalls Father’s lawyers

  Are so well-known for.

  ERICSON

  —Wonderful idea!

  Shall we dig through the dirt to find some stones?

  DONNISON

  E’en better: what if thou dost dig for stones

  Whilst I observe?

  ERICSON

  —My toil in soil beginneth!

  [Ericson starts digging but is interrupted by the sounds of protestors chanting.

  PROTESTORS

  [offstage:] No wall!

  DONNISON

  —Dost hear that sound?

  ERICSON

  —What?

  DONNISON

  —Take thou heed!

  PROTESTORS

  [offstage:] No wall! No wall!

  ERICSON

  —The voices cry, “No wall.”

  DONNISON

  What luck! There must not be a wall at that

  Location. Brother, come! Vacate your hole

  That we may answer th’orisons of those

  Demanding Father’s mighty wall be built

  Where there is none.

  ERICSON

  —Let us away to help!

  [Exeunt Donnison and Ericson.

  Enter PROTESTORS carrying signs, with MARIANNE and JUSTINE among them.

  PROTESTORS

  No wall! No wall!

  JUSTINE

  —The people speak as one.

  It seems to me they want their country back.

  MARIANNE

  We’ll take it, too! MacTrump has unified

  His foes against him. Now we stand united!

  JUSTINE

  It is a welcome sign of things to come,

  Yet we must also stand for one another.

  A despot happily forgives his subjects

  If they do love him not, provided they

 

‹ Prev