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MacTrump

Page 18

by Ian Doescher


  DESDIVANKA

  —About as splendid as

  The weather.

  KUSHREW

  —Verily? Thou think’st it splendid?

  I find this weather passing awful. No?

  [Prolonged thunder and lightning.

  DESDIVANKA

  I know. A tidal wave of blue hath grown

  Across this nation many months. I hop’d

  Our districts might outlast it, yet hope is

  A worthless coinage when one banks on it.

  Our allies on the Hill are frauds. They’ll lose

  The Southern Chamber, half a dozen seats

  Within the Senate, and some gov’rnorships

  We should have won.

  KUSHREW

  —If doom is in thy forecast,

  Then wherefore dost thou seem at peace withal?

  DESDIVANKA

  [laughing:] My husband, hast forgotten who I am?

  Nay, not at peace, yet utterly prepar’d

  For what is next. I see the strategy

  The simple Democrati shall employ:

  They shall obstruct our lord with newfound strength,

  Which is precisely what he needs to set

  Himself apart from the Republicons

  Who fall tonight. Let Prosperosi take

  Her silly hammer to my father’s wall.

  Should she destroy it, Father’s followers

  Will have our Democrati foes to blame.

  Do not forget: it would have taken years

  To literally build my father’s wall.

  The plans alone would take us longer than

  The law allows our presidents to serve.

  By taking back the Southern Chamber and

  Then making Father’s wall a hopeless cause,

  The Democrati fools will free us from

  The burden of delivering the work!

  This shall enrage my father’s acolytes,

  And he shall play them like an organist—

  Pull out the stops on all their fear in time

  For them to reelect him two years hence.

  No adversary hath the strength to change

  The outcome of a vote—not even foul

  MacMueller, nor his base inquisitors.

  The power of our people shall secure

  My father’s rule, and I shall run as his

  Successor on the promise to complete

  His mighty wall. O, yea, sweet husband, yea!

  I see our pathway forward, lit with lights

  That stretcheth from this bedroom to the distance:

  The White Hold and the Oval Tower, mine!

  [The two embrace and gaze through the window.

  KUSHREW

  I see it too, my love! I see it plainly!

  And with some luck, perhaps thy father’s failures

  Will damage the Republicons tonight

  Beyond repair!

  [Kushrew smiles. Desdivanka does not. She awkwardly pats her husband.

  DESDIVANKA

  —’Tis right, my husband, yea.

  KUSHREW

  I cannot wait one minute more. McTweet!

  Enter MCTWEET from the balcony, wearing a cloak drenched with rain.

  MCTWEET

  I bid a second blessing to you both.

  Apologies for my most sodden state.

  KUSHREW

  Think nothing of it. Prithee, speak to us

  About the parliamentary elections.

  How do the Democrati fare?

  MCTWEET

  —One moment.

  [McTweet consults his parchments.

  DESDIVANKA

  Hath Prosperosi won the Southern Chamber?

  MCTWEET

  According to my readings, she hath not.

  DESDIVANKA

  Indeed?

  KUSHREW

  —In sooth?

  MCTWEET

  —Just as I spake! Nay. Wait.

  [McTweet unfurls the scroll.

  Most sorry—I did view the Pox Network,

  Which hardly shall admit the night’s results.

  In faith, the Democrati took the chamber,

  And Lady Prosperosi did just speak!

  She said: “Tonight historic victory

  Is in our grasp. This mighty victory

  We did not seek for our own party’s sake,

  But for America’s hardworking fam’lies.”

  KUSHREW

  O, dearest love, methinks she spake of us!

  DESDIVANKA

  I think not. Mayhap thou shouldst go to bed,

  Kind husband. It appears I still have work

  To do tonight.

  KUSHREW

  —If thou insist’st. Rest well!

  [Kushrew kisses her and then exits toward the bed.

  MCTWEET

  [to Desdivanka:] My lady, there is still another speaker

  Who’s trending at the moment. Wouldst thou like

  To watch her?

  DESDIVANKA

  —Possibly. Who is she, bird?

  MCTWEET

  One Cleosandria O’Cassio,

  The new-elected congresswoman of

  Both Queensland and the Bronxford in New Yorktown.

  She is the youngest woman e’er elected

  Unto the Southern Chamber!

  DESDIVANKA

  —Yea? I would

  Observe her speech.

  MCTWEET

  —Hast thou a mirror black?

  DESDIVANKA

  Upon the wall there. Why?

  MCTWEET

  —The feed is streaming.

  [McTweet pulls out a vial of shiny liquid from his cloak. Desdivanka takes it. Exit McTweet to growing thunder. Desdivanka hurries to her mirror, uncorks the vial, and drinks its liquid. She then stares into the black mirror. The room darkens. Smoke rises. The sound of cheers and clapping fills the room.

  Enter CLEOSANDRIA O’CASSIO above, on balcony, dressed in white, with a CROWD watching her.

  O’CASSIO

  We have made history tonight, my friends—

  The youngest woman serving Parliament.

  ’Tis what is possible when people come

  Together in collective realization

  That all our actions, whether small or large,

  Are capable of making lasting change.

  [Desdivanka steps closer towards the mirror. Her expression changes from curiosity to horror. As the crowd cheers louder, lightning flashes.

  When people talk about the strong pursuit

  Of our more perfect union, that, itself,

  Commandeth us to progress as a nation,

  To better grow and better be, as well.

  Right now, our nation’s on a crookèd path,

  Yet ’tis our time to make the crookèd straight.

  [A roll of thunder shakes the bedroom, and Desdivanka makes a fist.

  They’ll ever call ambitious folk naive.

  They’ll say we’re uninform’d and radical,

  For we would change the country’s power balance.

  We’ll fight to put more power in the hands

  Of working, ev’ryday Americans—

  Which is, methinks, where truly it belongs.

  [Hatred washes over Desdivanka’s face. The vial breaks in her hand.

  I am most proud to stand, shoulder to shoulder,

  With ye in this most worthy, vital fight.

  Today, friends, is our milestone, verily

  ’Tis a beginning—only the beginning.

  [O’Cassio�
�s audience breaks into applause. They chant her name. Thunder and lightning. Desdivanka screams. Exeunt O’Cassio and crowd.

  DESDIVANKA

  Fie! Fie! A thousand curses on the wench!

  DESDIVANKA punches the mirror, smashing it to pieces. Enter LORD JARED KUSHREW.

  KUSHREW

  Is aught amiss, mine empress?

  DESDIVANKA

  —Get thee out!

  [Exit Kushrew.

  DESDIVANKA

  The future rears its ugly, fearsome face—

  One who may yet unite the people like

  O’Bama with his messages of hope,

  And “Yea we can!”—’tis hubris in the height!

  The people, though, respond to promises

  Of freedom, progress, liberty, and justice

  Like sailors to a waiting siren’s call.

  It makes me sick, for peasants do not know

  What’s best for them—’tis wherefore they fear us.

  These whining, stooping liberals would give

  Their pitiful supporters far more pow’r

  Than any ordinary, middle-class,

  Uneducated plebeian should have.

  O, how it makes my insides burn with hate

  At peons gaining pow’r instead of me—

  Of House MacTrump—who surely doth deserve’t.

  I’ll rule the Democrati like a queen.

  My father still hath power over all,

  And we shall grind their system to halt.

  We’ll pull the precious government they would

  Reclaim from out beneath their worthless feet.

  Were there a hundred years of history,

  No upstart fiend shall get the best of me.

  [Exit.

  SCENE 3.

  Atop the Oval Tower.

  Enter MACTRUMP above with VICEROY MICHAEL POUND, LADY SARAH PUCKABEE, LADY KELLEYANNE BOLEYN, and GUARDS. They turn their attention to LADY NANCY PROSPEROSI, below, who enters Parliament to the applause of Republicon and Democrati PARLIAMENTARIANS. Among them is the recently elected CLEOSANDRIA O’CASSIO. PROSPEROSI waves and ascends the speaker’s rostrum, where SPEAKER PRYAM, a boy roughly ten or twelve years old, struggles to lift the wooden gavel.

  PROSPEROSI

  [to Pryam:] Thou canst that keep. I have brought mine own hammer.

  [Prosperosi raises a warhammer from her robes. The Democrati erupt in cheers.

  MACTRUMP

  That damnèd hammer of hers I can see

  From here. ’Tis most unfair. Why doth she have

  A hammer while I’ve none? I’m president!

  I should be deck’d in armor, as she is.

  PUCKABEE

  You do command the strongest military

  In all the world, my lord.

  MACTRUMP

  —Yet if I hold

  No hammer yuge as hers, what good is it?

  I feel as impotent as I am mad.

  [Exeunt parliamentarians below.

  All right. The party’s over. Back inside.

  [Everyone descends the turret and enters the interior of the Oval Tower below. Exeunt guards.

  What have we on the docket for today?

  How shall you losers help me build my wall?

  KELLEYANNE

  My lord, methinks we have a plusgood answer.

  MACTRUMP

  I’ll gladly hear’t.

  PUCKABEE

  —With Lady Prosperosi

  And all the Democrati back in pow’r,

  We cannot hope to have the funds we need

  To build the mighty wall that you desire.

  MACTRUMP

  No wall? This doth not start as I had hop’d.

  PUCKABEE

  Pray, listen on. You may yet compromise—

  They’ll give you some concessions on the wall,

  Though not the billions for which you do ask,

  And in the bargain thou shalt fully fund

  The government, and thus avoid a shutdown.

  You shall be seen as generous and fair,

  A statesman at the apex of his might.

  MACTRUMP

  What of the wall? What shall my base think of it?

  KELLEYANNE

  Sir, they shall think whate’er we tell them to.

  No follower of yours shall ever check

  To see if there is verily a wall.

  If we tell them the wall is near complete,

  They shall believe it.

  MACTRUMP

  —Truly?

  KELLEYANNE

  —By my troth.

  [Pound produces a sheet of paper.

  POUND

  We have here, sir, the bill that you must sign

  To fund the government, avoid the shutdown,

  And make this plan of ours reality.

  Today, when Lady Prosperosi doth

  Arrive, with Charles Soother at her side,

  You shall surprise them both by giving them

  The very thing they seek of you—’twill shock

  Them, make them grateful. They shall owe you much.

  MACTRUMP

  Doth this plan have the blessing of my daughter

  And finest aide-de-camp, Dame Desdivanka?

  [Puckabee, Kelleyanne, and Pound glance nervously at each other.

  KELLEYANNE

  I double-doublethink it doth indeed?

  MACTRUMP

  Then I shall do it. Ye advise me well.

  Fetch me a quill that I may make it so.

  [Puckabee, Kelleyanne, and Pound breathe a sigh of relief. Puckabee hands MacTrump a quill.

  Enter DAME DESDIVANKA.

  DESDIVANKA

  Cease all this pageantry! Bestill thy pen!

  I hope for all your sakes the ink is out

  So that our liege not strike it through your names!

  MACTRUMP

  Sweet daughter, why so serious? This plan—

  [Desdivanka stares at the others coldly.

  DESDIVANKA

  What plan?

  MACTRUMP

  —To fund the government anon,

  Make compromise to gain a partial wall,

  But tell it to the public an ’twere whole.

  DESDIVANKA

  [to Puckabee, Kelleyanne, and Pound:] Yield.

  [Exeunt Puckabee, Kelleyanne, and Pound hastily.

  [To MacTrump:] —Set the feather down; we need it not.

  MACTRUMP

  This plan was not devis’d by thee, my pet?

  DESDIVANKA

  O Father, you have sorely been abus’d!

  If ever I present you with a plan

  That maketh you look ignorant and weak,

  And setteth our cause backward many months,

  You may declare me nevermore your child.

  MACTRUMP

  It could not be!

  DESDIVANKA

  —A shutdown must commence.

  To do so carefully shall demonstrate

  That you alone do hold the winning cards.

  The Democrati jacks in Parliament

  Shall find themselves both weak and ill-prepar’d.

  MacMueller, who may think he holds the ace,

  Shall have no choice but forfeit all his chips—

  The stakes shall rise above his finances.

  Vile Prosperosi and her puppet Soother—

  As rank a pair of jokers e’er there was—

  Shall find themselves in a prolong’d debate

  About the wall, which shall but work them woe.

  The
y’ll dig themselves a ditch with their own spades

  Whilst you do capture all your foll’wers’ hearts.

  Hold ’em with words as strong as any club,

  And harvest mines of diamonds ’mongst your base.

  Then let the game go on for weeks or months—

  The shutdown never ending, peradventure—

  Each passing day your pow’r shall grow, employing

  Exec’tive orders, taking ev’ry trick.

  You’ll bring them down an ’twere a house of cards—

  MacTrump doth hold the trump card. Do you see?

  MACTRUMP

  Forsooth! Thou art my greatest counselor.

  How shall I play the hand, when they arrive?

  DESDIVANKA

  Appear to be both generous and kind.

  This pitfall, though, avoid: let them not put

  The burden of the shutdown on your shoulders.

  The fault must be upon the Democrati,

  Or this strange beast may turn around and bite.

  You must be ruthless as the lion and

  As clever as the fox for this to work.

  Does that make sense?

  MACTRUMP

  —Inherently, my dear.

  When they arrive, I shall be naught but smiles,

  And no responsibility assume

  For shutting down the government anon.

  Meanwhile, what of this bill they’d have me sign?

  [Desdivanka holds the paper over a candle until it burns completely.

  DESDIVANKA

  Would that the paper were your enemies,

  Each of them disappearing into smoke.

  [There is a knock at the door.

  MACTRUMP

  What is’t?

  Enter GUARD.

  GUARD

  —My sov’reign, Viceroy Pound withal

  The Democrati leaders is come hither.

  MACTRUMP

  We are prepar’d! Pray, send them in at once.

  [Exit Guard.

  Enter LADY NANCY PROSPEROSI, SENATOR CHARLES SOOTHER, and VICEROY MICHAEL POUND.

  MACTRUMP

  [smiling:] My viceroy Pound, come in. And Cryin’ Chuck,

  How nice of you to join us.

  SOOTHER

  —Lord MacTrump.

  [They shake hands.

  My thanks for giving us a reason to

  Shed tears of joy this past November, sir.

  MACTRUMP

  We won the Senate, Chuck. Is that not so?

  SOOTHER

  When one doth brag o’er winning North Dakastor

  And Indriana, too—both fiefdoms with

  Immense Republicon support—methinks

  One is in trouble.

  MACTRUMP

  [smiling:] —Yet we won both, nay?

  And little Nancy—

 

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