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Making History

Page 34

by Stephen Fry


  The coffee maker was hissing and spluttering so I went over and poured out two cups. The machine was a Krupps, I noticed. Some things never changed.

  “Then you went weird,” said Steve. “Your friends got all freaked out and I was left to see you to your room and check that you were okay. When I came around the next morning, I think I knew some­thing had happened to you. Because of your eyes. There was some­thing in your eyes that was different.”

  He went over to a desk, pulled open a drawer and came out with a folder. He handed it over to me and sat down in an armchair with his coffee.

  “See, I know your face pretty well,” he said as I looked through the photographs. “If anybody could see a difference in you, it would be me.”

  There were hundreds of them. Me walking across campus on my own. Me laughing in the company of Todd, Scott and Ronnie. Me in baseball uniform, pitching, batting, punching the air, leaning forward hands on hips, glaring at the batter. Me in a winter coat, shoulders hunched against the snow. Me rowing on a lake. Me sunbathing. Me reading on the lawn. Me with my arm round a girl. Me kissing a girl. Me in extreme close-up, looking straight ahead, just off camera, as if knowing that I was being watched. I closed the folder.

  “Wow,” I said.

  “So, now you see.”

  “Steve, I’m so sorry.”

  “Sorry? What’s to be sorry?”

  “You must have been so unhappy. So lonely.”

  He looked down into his coffee. “Well, I’m going to have to get used to my own company, aren’t I? For the rest of my life. So what’s new?”

  “If it’s any compensation,” I said. “I think, from the little I’ve seen of them, that Scott and Todd and Ronnie are complete bastards.”

  Steve smiled. “Ain’t that the truth?”

  “And I cannot believe, I cannot believe from what I know of myself, that I can have been very happy here.”

  “No? I used to think that about you. I used to think you were missing something. Of course I hoped that . . .” he trailed off.

  I sipped my coffee, my brain a mixture of sympathy, vanity and some serious planning.

  “What about England?” Steve asked. “Were you happy there, in this other world of yours?”

  “I don’t know. I think so. I suppose . . . I suppose like you, I was getting a bit pissed off at the prospect of getting a job, marrying, set­tling down, buying a house, all that. I had lost sight of the point.”

  “And you see the point now?”

  “The point is there is no point. That’s the point.”

  “Great. The philosophy major speaks.”

  I sat myself down on the desk. “What did you expect? I’m the guy that got you into this mess, you expect me to have answers?”

  “So life just carries on, does it? What about your world of Mardi Gras festivals and equal rights and Hawaiian marriages? I knock the heels of my ruby slippers together twice, wish hard and find myself there, do I? Or maybe I find a mystical spot where I can stick my hand through a wall and just step into this parallel universe of yours? Or maybe you tell me that it is my destiny to fight for a brave new world of brotherly love and that I am to become a rebel leader, the founder of a new America who will lead his children to the promised land. And then you disappear in a puff of smoke. Is that the deal?”

  “No, Steve,” I said, “that’s not the deal. If you listen to me I’ll tell you what the deal is.”

  I talked. He listened. The deal was struck.

  MOVIE HISTORY

  The Sting

  FADE IN:

  EXT. DICKINSON HALL,

  PRINCETON CAMPUS—AFTERNOON

  We TILT up from ground level and take in the exterior of Dickinson Hall, moving in to a window on the first floor.

  CUT TO:

  INT. STEVE’S ROOM, DICKINSON HALL—AFTERNOON

  STEVE is holding a small laminated card and gives careful instructions to MICHAEL, who is listening attentively.

  STEVE

  So that’s the library card. You remember how we took out books last time? It’s the same deal. This here’s your student number. Memorize it, okay? Every student knows their number, might look kinda suspicious if you had to keep referring to the card.

  MICHAEL nods. STEVE hands him a shopping bag.

  STEVE (CONT’D)

  And you’re sure about how the carts work? Just like I showed you. It’s real simple.

  MICHAEL

  Just like you showed me.

  STEVE

  And here’s the campus map. You know most of the landmarks now. This room. Your room in Henry. Okay . . .

  (getting serious)

  I know this might sound crazy, but from now on whenever we meet, we don’t talk about this, except in PJ’s or the A and B. Those guys we met last night . . .

  MICHAEL

  (shocked)

  You think they might put bugs in our rooms?

  STEVE

  (even more shocked)

  Hey, this may not be like the ideal nation state but we’re not Nazi Europe. We don’t do chemical warfare here.

  MICHAEL

  No, not those kinds of bugs! Listening bugs! You know, wiretaps.

  STEVE

  Oh, right. Yeah. I’m saying it’s a possibility, that’s all.

  MICHAEL

  Big Brother is alive and well.

  STEVE

  Say what?

  MICHAEL

  Big Brother. As in “Big Brother is watching you.” It’s from a novel by George Orwell that’s never been written.

  STEVE

  The George Orwell?

  STEVE has gone to his desk and started to gather up papers and a camera.

  MICHAEL

  You heard of him?

  STEVE

  You kidding? Every kid in America has to plow through Darkness Falls.

  MICHAEL

  Darkness Falls? When did he write that?

  STEVE

  (packing the camera into a blue nylon bag)

  Oh, late thirties, I guess. It’s like the masterpiece of the free world. Orwell was shot in the thirty-nine British Rebellion. I got a copy somewhere, you can borrow it.

  MICHAEL

  Thanks. And I can tell you about 1984 and Animal Farm. They’ll blow your mind.

  STEVE

  (pleased with the phrase)

  Blow my mind? That’s a helluvan expression.

  STEVE feeds a length of cable up from the nylon bag, through his shirt and down his sleeve. It ends in a small device that nestles in his left hand. We see on this device tiny control switches and a row of little red lights.

  MICHAEL watches this procedure in surprise, completely unable to understand it. STEVE nods towards the bag.

  STEVE

  Take a look at that bag.

  MICHAEL stoops down.

  ANOTHER ANGLE: From the POV of the camera inside the bag we see MICHAEL’s face loom towards us in CLOSE-UP, peering curiously.

  BACK onto STEVE’s hand, deftly manipulating the control device: the red light glows.

  BACK onto the CLOSE-UP of MICHAEL’s inquiring face, which now ZOOMS WIDER into a MID-SHOT. The contrast alters and then . . .

  Suddenly, it FREEZES.

  BACK onto STEVE who grins in triumph.

  STEVE

  There’s another one for my Michael Young collection.

  MICHAEL is impressed with the setup.

  MICHAEL

  You sneaky bastard . . .

  STEVE

  Yeah, well that’s one of the advantages of being a sad, lonely fairy, I guess. You get to learn how to be a spy.

  He winks cheerfully as he picks up the bag and holds open the door for MICHAEL to leave first.

  We hold on STEVE
’s still smiling face as MICHAEL passes by. STEVE’s eyes follow MICHAEL out of the room and then the smile disappears.

  It is replaced by a look of hunger and desolation.

  FADE TO:

  EXT. FIRESTONE LIBRARY, PRINCETON—AFTERNOON

  MUSIC

  An establishing shot of the Firestone Library, craning down from the huge tower.

  CUT TO:

  INT. FIRESTONE LIBRARY, PRINCETON—AFTERNOON

  Inside the library, MICHAEL is hauling a pile of books along a corridor. He comes to a door that says:

  FLASHING ROOM

  MICHAEL enters. One other person is there, an ELDERLY ACADEMIC, hunched over a machine, one of a dozen such devices in the room.

  MICHAEL

  (winningly)

  Hi!

  The ACADEMIC scowls over his shoulder and then turns back to his work.

  MICHAEL shrugs and goes over to the machine furthest from the grouchy ACADEMIC.

  CUT TO:

  EXT. QUANTUM MECHANICS BUILDING, PRINCETON—SAME TIME

  MUSIC continues.

  STEVE is sitting, leaning against a great chestnut tree, blue nylon bag on the ground beside him.

  On STEVE’s lap is a sketch pad onto which we MOVE. A fairly decent drawing of the bronze statue of Science Triumphant, which stands in front of the Quantum Mechanics building.

  STEVE gives the impression of drawing: looking up and down between the statue and the pad on his lap.

  Series of SHOTS of:

  STEVE’s FACE, as he apparently looks in the direction of the statue . . .

  STEVE’s POV: ACADEMICS and STUDENTS entering and leaving the building . . .

  STEVE’s LEFT THUMB: manipulating the little control device . . .

  THE BLUE NYLON BAG, and the small hole in its side, through which we can just make out the reflective surface of a lens.

  CUT TO:

  INT. FIRESTONE LIBRARY, FLASHING ROOM—SAME TIME

  MUSIC continues:

  MICHAEL stands in front of the flashing machine and looks at it, finding it slightly forbidding. It is like a scanner, but the styling and design of the switching gear are very alien to him.

  He opens the first book of his pile. We see its title. Gloder: The Early Days by Charles B. Flood. A bright orange sticker on the top right of the jacket reads: “FLASHABLE TEXT.”

  MICHAEL opens the book and flips through it to about the middle of the book, speed-reading blocks of text. He turns the book over and examines the spine, he looks down it from the top and feels with his thumb. He is puzzled that he can’t feel anything.

  Next, he places the book, SPINE DOWNWARDS, into a little channel on the machine, where it is firmly gripped. There is a gentle beep from the machine as the book fits into its slot.

  A display on the front panel asks him to “Enter Student Number.”

  MICHAEL does so.

  The display requests: “Welcome, Michael D. Young.” MICHAEL smiles.

  The display changes to: “# of pages? 1= ALL 2= RANGE.”

  MICHAEL taps in “2.”

  The display reads: “Range?”

  MICHAEL taps in “1-140.”

  The display reads: “Insert Cart.”

  MICHAEL takes a small black cart from his bag and slips it into a port below the main display panel.

  There is a small hum from the machine and the display says “Flashing, please wait.”

  MICHAEL looks at the next books in his pile: among them we see Gloder: The Nobleman by A. L. Parlange, Prince Rudolf? by Mouton and Grover and Gloder’s Kampf Parolen: A New Translation with Notes, by A. C. Spearman. They all have the same bright orange sticker on them saying “FLASHABLE TEXT.”

  A beep comes from the machine, the cart is ejected. MICHAEL looks at the display, which reads: “Flashing complete: remove cart.” MICHAEL does so.

  The display reads: “Flashdata will delete 06/29/96.” MICHAEL scribbles Gloder: The Early Days on the cart’s label and readies the next book for flashing.

  CUT TO :

  EXT. QUANTUM MECHANICS BUILDING—SAME TIME

  MUSIC continues:

  STEVE is still sitting serenely under the chestnut tree, apparently drawing.

  We see the nylon bag.

  We see STEVE’s left hand.

  Close on the lens in the bag.

  The MUSIC builds to a climax.

  Now, a montage of SHOTS that go from movement to STILLS of people entering and leaving the building:

  A PAIR OF LAUGHING WOMEN, ARMS AROUND EACH OTHER’S SHOULDERS.

  A NERDY-LOOKING STUDENT, STRAIGHTENING HIS SPECTACLES.

  A COOL OLDER MAN IN SUNGLASSES.

  AN ECCENTRICALLY SHOCK-HAIRED OLD PROFESSOR.

  FOUR YOUNG STUDENTS, EATING ICE CREAM CONES.

  AN OLDER MAN, IN PROFILE, TALKING TO A WOMAN.

  ANOTHER NERDY STUDENT, LOOKING LIKE A TIMID RABBIT

  SUDDENLY—

  A huge human THUMB comes into shot and pulls the last PHOTO away to reveal behind it the one before: the OLDER MAN, IN PROFILE, TALKING TO A WOMAN.

  MICHAEL (OOV)

  (whispering excitedly)

  That’s him!

  CUT TO:

  INT. PJ’S PANCAKES, NASSAU STREET—EVENING

  MICHAEL and STEVE are sitting at their table by the window in PJ’s. MICHAEL has the pile of photographs in front of him. He pulls one free.

  MICHAEL (CONT’D)

  The beard’s gone, thank God—but it’s him all right.

  STEVE takes the photos and replaces them in a folder. He looks around.

  The place is not very full. The nearest table to them contains a couple of students, male and female, holding hands and obviously paying no attention. It seems safe enough.

  STEVE

  Good. Tomorrow I’ll find out where he lives. And how are you getting on in the library?

  MICHAEL

  All done. It’s a piece of piss.

  STEVE

  Excuse me?

  MICHAEL

  Easy. It’s ridiculously easy.

  STEVE

  Sure. But the next problem is, I’ve gotta show you how to use the Pads. So we’ll go to your room and I’ll take you through it. But remember . . . we don’t say anything about all this.

  JO-BETH the waitress comes forward.

  STEVE

  Hiya, Jo-Beth.

  JO-BETH

  Don’t you “Hiya Jo-Beth” me, you prick.

  STEVE

  (puzzled)

  I’m sorry?

  JO-BETH

  So, we’re seeing each other, are we? Well, it’s the first I ever did hear of it. Some kinda sick joke?

  MICHAEL

  (gulping)

  Oh-oh . . .

  STEVE

  What are you talking about?

  JO-BETH

  Just where the heckfire do you get off, Steve Burns, telling Ronnie Cain that you and I are seeing each other?

  STEVE

  What?

  MICHAEL

  Oh, no . . . that’s my fault . . . see . . .

  JO-BETH and STEVE turn to him, surprised.

  MICHAEL (CONT’D)

  (in some confusion)

  See, I told Ronnie how Steve admired you, Jo-Beth. You know, how he was plucking up courage to ask you out one of these days. I guess he got hold of the wrong end of the stick . . .

  JO-BETH

  (a blushing smile)

  Yeah? Well why didn’t you tell me, Steve?

  (hitting him playfully with a menu)

  Honestly, you guys . . . you’re supposed to be smart, but you don’t know nothing about women . . .

  STEVE makes an effort to grin. His blush
only seems to confirm his devotion.

  JO-BETH

  Sure I’ll go out with you, Steve. You’re cute.

  MICHAEL

  (nudging Steve cheerfully)

  There! See! What I tell you?

  JO-BETH

  So . . .

  STEVE

  Um . . .

  JO-BETH

  There’s a movie on at the Prytania . . .

  CLOSE ON STEVE’s confused expression.

  CUT TO:

  EXT. PRINCETON CAMPUS—NIGHT

  MICHAEL and STEVE are heading for HENRY HALL.

  STEVE

  Jesus Christ. Mikey . . .

  MICHAEL

  I’m sorry. It’s just that that guy, Ronnie. He was being obnoxious, you know. Dropping hints to me about you in the most pathetic, jocky way . . . so I . . . so I . . .

  STEVE

  So you told him I was seeing Jo-Beth.

  MICHAEL

  Well, it shut the prick up at least . . .

  STEVE

  What the hell am I gonna do? I’m supposed to go see a movie with her Friday night.

  MICHAEL

  Come on, don’t be such a wimp. You know how to watch a movie.

  STEVE

  Yeah, but what if she puts her arm around me? What if we’re then supposed to go somewhere and . . .

  MICHAEL

  Putting her arm round isn’t going to make you throw up, is it? Come on! She’s a nice girl.

  STEVE

  You don’t understand, do you? You just don’t understand. It wouldn’t be fair to her. It wouldn’t be right.

  MICHAEL

  Okay, okay. Tell you what. I’ll go. I’ll tell her you’re sick. I’ll bring along a note from you and I’ll go in your place.

  STEVE

  (miserably)

  Right. Then the pair of you go off to your room and screw, right?

  MICHAEL

  I don’t know. Maybe. Jesus, I’m sorry! I thought I was doing you a favor.

  STEVE

  Yeah, well next time you wanna do me a favor, you ask, okay?

  MICHAEL

  It’s only a week or so. A few more days even, if Leo is doing what I guess he’s doing. Here we are.

  He looks up at the ivy-clad mock Gothic of Henry Hall.

  CUT TO:

  INT. MICHAEL’S ROOM, HENRY HALL—NIGHT

 

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