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True Love Lies

Page 9

by Brad Fraser


  CAROLYN

  Kane please.

  KANE

  What?

  CAROLYN

  Don’t you see.

  KANE

  You can’t walk away from the business.

  CAROLYN

  The way this all happened. Madison moving out. Royce finishing high school. David coming back. The timing is right.

  KANE

  The timing couldn’t be worse.

  CAROLYN breaks away from KANE.

  CAROLYN

  I meant it’s right for me.

  KANE

  Carolyn don’t leave I can’t I don’t I have a belly. I’m old and I have a belly.

  CAROLYN

  Kane.

  CAROLYN moves to KANE and kisses him softly.

  KANE

  Don’t stop loving me.

  CAROLYN

  I never will.

  KANE

  Please.

  CAROLYN

  But I’ve never had another lover. Or been through a breakup or lived on my own.

  They’re kissing one another softly. Both are crying.

  KANE

  It’s not as good as you think.

  CAROLYN

  Woke up alone. Called a girlfriend up for coffee.

  KANE

  It’s not worth losing your family over.

  Their hands begin to move over each other’s bodies sensually.

  CAROLYN

  I’m just renegotiating the terms of engagement.

  KANE

  I can’t wake up without you.

  CAROLYN

  We shouldn’t.

  KANE

  It’s always so good.

  CAROLYN

  Yeah but.

  They have started to fuck.

  KANE

  Please don’t leave me.

  CAROLYN

  I have to.

  KANE

  I love you so much.

  CAROLYN

  I love you.

  They fuck. Lights rise on the empty kitchen. The door opens very carefully. DAVID and ROYCE enter. DAVID is carrying the rifle and supporting ROYCE with the other arm.

  ROYCE

  Ssh.

  DAVID deposits ROYCE in a chair.

  DAVID

  Here’s the deal. I take the rifle back to Sigfreid’s and no one knows what happened. But if you renege on what we talked about I wake your parents up right now and tell them everything.

  ROYCE

  Don’t make me.

  DAVID

  No negotiation.

  ROYCE

  They’ll hate me.

  DAVID

  Do it or I will.

  Pause.

  Royce.

  ROYCE

  Okay shut up.

  DAVID

  Remember you keep my secrets and I keep yours.

  ROYCE

  Mom! Dad! I need to talk to you right now!

  DAVID opens the door.

  DAVID

  Again.

  ROYCE

  I need to talk to you!

  KANE

  (off) Hello?

  CAROLYN

  (off) Royce?

  KANE and CAROLYN are heard approaching offstage. DAVID winks at ROYCE.

  DAVID

  Tell them.

  ROYCE

  Alright.

  DAVID exits, closing the door quietly behind him. CAROLYN enters pulling her robe on.

  CAROLYN

  Royce?

  KANE enters doing up his pants and pulling his undershirt on.

  KANE

  Son?

  Pause.

  ROYCE

  I need help.

  CAROLYN

  What?

  ROYCE

  Please.

  KANE

  What can we do?

  ROYCE

  Please help me. Please someone help me. I’m really really sad all the time and I need someone to help me. Please. Help me.

  Lights rise on DAVID at the restaurant. He’s checking the glassware for spots. MADISON enters.

  DAVID

  Everything okay?

  MADISON

  Sure. Where am I?

  DAVID

  Six. And there’s only one busboy for the entire house tonight.

  MADISON

  That blows.

  DAVID

  Labour and food costs are too high and reservations are too low. How are things at home?

  Pause.

  Madison?

  MADISON

  Royce had some kind of—breakdown. They’re doing tests in the hospital. He’s like totally bipolar or something. He’s—so sad.

  DAVID

  The doctors will help him be less sad.

  MADISON

  That’s not the same as happy.

  DAVID

  It’s a start.

  MADISON

  Mom’s moving out—but not till the Royce thing’s resolved.

  DAVID

  What’s your dad doing through all this?

  MADISON

  Drinking a lot of beer smoking like a chimney and living at the office.

  DAVID

  Great.

  MADISON

  I want to tell them. What we did.

  DAVID

  Absolutely not.

  MADISON

  The truth makes things better.

  DAVID

  This isn’t about the truth. This is about getting back at your parents and making them responsible for our bad decision.

  MADISON

  Why would I want to hurt them?

  DAVID

  It takes the spotlight off of Royce and puts it back on you.

  MADISON

  Fuck you.

  DAVID

  Time to grow up.

  MADISON

  I still think I should.

  DAVID

  Don’t do it Madison. I mean it.

  MADISON

  Are you threatening me?

  DAVID

  Yes.

  MADISON

  But I feel so guilty.

  DAVID

  That’s how we adults remember our mistakes. Now get set up. We open in fifteen minutes.

  MADISON

  You’re an asshole.

  DAVID

  I know. Now do your fucking job.

  Lights rise on CAROLYN in a hospital room with ROYCE.

  CAROLYN

  The doctor says you’re doing quite well.

  ROYCE

  Yeah.

  CAROLYN

  The talks with the therapist?

  ROYCE

  Okay.

  CAROLYN

  The pills?

  ROYCE

  Helping.

  CAROLYN

  You’re not having compulsive suicidal thoughts are you? We’re supposed to watch for that.

  ROYCE

  No.

  CAROLYN

  They said something about possible—sexual side effects.

  ROYCE

  I’m asexual Mom.

  CAROLYN

  Is that—official now?

  ROYCE

  Yes.

  CAROLYN

  We accept you for who you are.

  ROYCE

  The doctor suggested some websites and support
groups.

  CAROLYN

  I’m sure you’ll find them very helpful.

  ROYCE

  They’re for you and Dad.

  CAROLYN

  Right of course. Do you feel like you might want to come home soon?

  ROYCE

  Are you still sleeping in the den?

  CAROLYN

  It doesn’t matter where I’m sleeping as long as we’re all together.

  ROYCE

  I miss those horrible sounds you guys made when you got it on.

  CAROLYN

  Stop.

  ROYCE

  Can’t you?

  CAROLYN

  I don’t think I can.

  ROYCE

  Why not?

  CAROLYN

  My feelings have—changed.

  ROYCE

  Love can’t just go away.

  CAROLYN

  No but it does become—other things. Other kinds of love.

  ROYCE

  And this is all because of the Montreal thing?

  CAROLYN

  No.

  ROYCE

  Does every marriage fail?

  CAROLYN

  No but a lot of them expire.

  ROYCE

  Then why get married?

  CAROLYN

  When you fall in love with someone you have to believe it’s forever. It’s not real otherwise.

  ROYCE

  Are you on medication?

  CAROLYN

  Just half a lorazepam before I came in. My doctor prescribed them. They help a lot. Anyway love—you know—that one word doesn’t really do the job of describing how mixed-up those feelings really are. My feelings for your father have changed. I don’t love him the way I used to but I do still love him.

  ROYCE

  But not enough to stay.

  CAROLYN

  Right.

  ROYCE

  Thanks.

  CAROLYN

  For what?

  ROYCE

  Not lying to me.

  CAROLYN

  Come home Royce. You’re ready

  ROYCE

  Okay.

  KANE enters.

  KANE

  Things at the school took longer than expected.

  CAROLYN

  And?

  KANE

  And I’ve got all of your assignments for the rest of the term so you never have to go back there again.

  ROYCE

  Thanks Pop.

  CAROLYN

  Royce is ready to come home.

  KANE

  You’re sure?

  ROYCE

  Yeah. This place is boring.

  KANE

  Alright.

  ROYCE

  They want me to come in every other day for a while—I start group therapy next week—and I have to stay on the meds.

  CAROLYN

  Of course.

  ROYCE

  They want me to do some sessions with you guys too.

  KANE

  Of course. Royce. We.

  ROYCE

  Yeah.

  KANE

  We love you.

  CAROLYN

  More than anything in life.

  ROYCE

  Even if I’m crazy.

  KANE

  You’re not crazy.

  ROYCE

  But I’m.

  CAROLYN

  Recovering. You’re recovering.

  KANE

  Let’s go.

  Lights rise on DAVID at the restaurant checking cash envelopes. MADISON enters with her envelope.

  MADISON

  One of the chairs is off-kilter at five C.

  DAVID

  I’ll get it fixed. How’s Royce?

  MADISON

  He’s started talking to me again. For real. He told me about the gun thing. Thank you.

  DAVID

  It was a cry for help.

  MADISON

  But pretty fucked up.

  DAVID

  He’s getting what he needs now.

  MADISON

  You were right about telling my parents too. It would have made everything worse. I just—secrets have a way of getting out.

  DAVID

  Not when it’s shared by only two people. A secret’s not the same as a lie. There’s cassoulet left over. Are you hungry?

  MADISON

  Yeah but well no—I told some of the guys I’d meet them in a few minutes.

  DAVID

  Is Willett going?

  MADISON

  He’ll probably be there.

  DAVID

  He makes you laugh.

  MADISON

  Yeah.

  DAVID

  Not too hard on the eyes either.

  MADISON

  Okay now you’re starting to sound jealous.

  DAVID

  I’d gotten used to—having someone to eat with.

  MADISON

  We’ll eat again.

  DAVID

  But not like we used to.

  MADISON

  No and that’s totally my fault. I just have this thing where I have to fuck every guy I meet. I need to work on it and I will really. But right now I gotta.

  DAVID

  Don’t worry. Good night.

  MADISON exits. DAVID goes to the kitchen briefly and returns with a bowl of food, a glass and a carafe of wine. He pours himself a large glass of wine and sits down to eat alone. Lights rise on the kitchen of the Sawatsky house, empty. MADISON enters dressed entirely in black. She moves to a counter, pulls out a bottle of vodka and pours a slug into a glass. She downs the shot and pours more. ROYCE enters, also in black. He shares a look with MADISON, reaches into his pocket and takes out a pill bottle. He takes a pill using what’s left of MADISON’s vodka to wash it down.

  MADISON

  Those help?

  ROYCE

  It’s like being wrapped in something cloudy.

  MADISON

  But you don’t feel as down.

  ROYCE

  I don’t feel as anything.

  MADISON

  Great.

  KANE enters dressed entirely in black.

  Shot?

  KANE

  Set me up.

  MADISON pours a shot into a glass and hands it to KANE. KANE downs the shot and holds the glass out to MADISON. She pours another shot into it.

  MADISON

  Funerals are vile traditions.

  KANE

  They help with closure.

  CAROLYN enters dressed in black.

  CAROLYN

  Closure’s overrated.

  MADISON waves the bottle at her mother.

  MADISON

  Takes the edge off.

  CAROLYN

  Okay.

  MADISON pours her mother a shot. KANE raises his glass.

  KANE

  To Herbert Carver.

  CAROLYN

  It was nice of so many of his former students to show up.

  MADISON

  They were so old.

  CAROLYN

  He loved to read. It was like a religion to him. He picked a book for each year of my childhood and read it to me until I was old enough to read myself. Then he gave me a book for every birthday until he—got sick. It was how we communicated.

  MADISON

  Who besides me
needs another drink?

  ROYCE

  There’s something I should probably tell you guys.

  Pause.

  CAROLYN

  Well?

  ROYCE

  I’ve met someone. Special.

  KANE

  Someone?

  CAROLYN

  Special? But I thought you were.

  ROYCE

  I am.

  KANE

  And is she he?

  ROYCE

  She. Her uncle raped her repeatedly between the ages of two and seven so she hates sex. She’s the sister of this guy I know from group. Her name’s Tasha. She’s not very pretty but she’s really smart. And funny.

  Pause.

  CAROLYN

  Good for you.

  ROYCE

  We share feelings of inadequacy and internalized self-hatred.

  KANE

  It’s important to have things in common.

  ROYCE

  And our med cycles are simpatico.

  MADISON

  Great.

  ROYCE

  The doctor says it’s a sign of progress.

  MADISON

  I have an announcement of my own.

  CAROLYN

  What’s that?

  MADISON

  Willett and I are going to try monogamy.

  Pause.

  KANE

  Who the hell’s Willett?

  MADISON

  My boyfriend.

  CAROLYN

  Boyfriend?

  MADISON

  I’ve been seeing him for nearly two months.

  CAROLYN

  Is he—nice?

  MADISON

  He thinks he’s far smarter and better looking than he actually is but I really kinda like him.

  ROYCE

  And he’s a waiter?

  MADISON

  Just part-time while he goes to university.

  CAROLYN

  Great. What’s he taking?

  MADISON

  Political science don’t even get me started. If the relationship lasts another two months I’ll introduce you.

  CAROLYN

  I found an apartment.

  Pause.

  It’s just a few blocks away. Walking distance.

  Pause.

  I also found a job. I’m going to be doing the books for a trucking company.

  MADISON

  Trucking company?

  ROYCE

  Whoa.

  CAROLYN

  I liked the women in their bookkeeping office.

  MADISON pours KANE a shot. He downs it.

  ROYCE

  I guess if it’ll make you happier.

  MADISON

  Right.

  CAROLYN

  There are two extra bedrooms. You kids can stay

  whenever you want.

  ROYCE

  Great.

  MADISON

  I wouldn’t be very comfortable sleeping there.

  CAROLYN

  You’ll get used to it eventually.

 

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