Wednesday, June 17, 2015

One Act Play

The Break Up
(Enter Lucas, 27, wearing a black sport coat, and Martha, wearing a green dress, 25, wearing a flowery dress, holding hands. Lucas has a large build and is of average height. Martha is smaller than Lucas. The couple has been dating for seven months. They approach a door.)
Martha: I really don’t want to be out tonight, babe. I’m too tired, and I have to work tomorrow, and I don’t want to ruin my only dress.
Lucas: Oh, you’re just saying things. Of course you want to go out. You always like spending time with me.
M: But not tonight. Please, can you just bring me home?
L: Stop being silly. Let’s go inside.
(Lucas opens the door and walks inside. Martha, waiting for Lucas to hold the door open for her, waits until her date closes the door, then opens it for herself. Once both are inside, they walk to a podium, where a women in a uniform stands.)
Hostess: Hi, welcome to Friendly’s… Hey, Martha. How are you? I couldn’t recognize you without your apron on.
M: I’m doing well…
L: (Interrupting Martha) We want a table for two, please
H: Ya, sure. (Grabs menus.) You can follow me.
(The hostess brings the couple to a table. The couple holds hands again, although Martha has a depressed look on her face. Lucas sits first, then Martha takes her chair and sits down opposite from him. The hostess walks back to the podium, and Martha continues to show her upset expression.)
L: (Curiously) What’s wrong, honey?
M: Nothing.
L: Are you sure? Do you want to move to a different table or something?
M: No.
L: Alrighty, then. Then why don’t you cheer up so we can eat?
M: (Exhaling) Okay.
(A server delivers food to the table. Lucas receives the Double Cheeseburger with bacon, and Martha receives the Caesar Salad. The server walks away.)
L: (With food in his mouth) Wow… This burger is amazing.
M: I’m sure it is.
(They each have a bite of their dinner.)
M: Sweetie, did you remember your wallet?
L: Of course I did. How silly of you to think that. Have some trust in me, please.
M: Okay, sorry.
(Another pause for a bite.)
L: So how was your day?
M: Fine.
L: Anything special happen?
M: No.
L: C’mon. Nothing? Not even going out with me right now? That’s gotta be special.
M: You know how I feel about being with you.
L: Just tell me this is special, for me. (A pause). Please.
M: (Reluctantly, sounding rehearsed) Our time together is very special.
L: Thank you. Now let’s get some ice cream.
(The server comes back and they each order an ice cream. The Server walks away, then comes back with their desserts and the check.)
L: Now let’s see here. (Looks at the check.) Uh, that’s a little expensive. What did you get, Martha?
M: Less than you did.
L: It doesn’t look like it here. Oh well, then. Let’s pay and get out of here. (Checks his pockets). Uh, Martha…I think I forgot my wallet.
M: You said you brought it this time.
L: Well, I guess I didn’t. Could you get it this time? I’ll pay you back, I promise.
M: Lucas, this is the third time this month. (Getting louder.) And you haven’t paid me back at all. You know I’m not a money tree.
L: I’m sorry, sweetie.
M: (Getting even louder.) No, you’re not sorry. Because you are going to keep doing this again and again until I have nothing left. And trust me, on this pace, it won’t be long until that happens.
L: (Sounding surprised) Whoa, Martha, I had no idea you felt this way. Look, once we leave, I’ll find my wallet and I’ll pay you back everything that I owe you.
M: (Takes a deep breath, and in a soft and quiet voice) No, that’s okay. You don’t have to do that. (One more breath) Lucas, I’ve been thinking about this, about “us,” for a while, and, well, I don’t want “us” anymore.
L: (Tearing up) Wha-Wha-Wha, What? Please don’t leave me. You’re the best thing that’s ever happened to me. I’ll be a mess without you.
M: I’m sorry, Lucas. We just can’t be together anymore. It’s just not meant to be. I can’t be with a person who thinks I am nothing.
L: (Crying even more) How did you get that idea? I love you, and I want you to feel super special.
M: Well then that’s how you should have treated me before. Goodbye.
(Martha stands up and walks out of the restaurant, through the door the couple entered, leaving Lucas sitting at the table with the unpaid check. He is crying his eyes out with his head his down on the table. Everyone in the restaurant is staring at him.)

THE END

Monday, June 1, 2015

"Picture Perfect" Passages

#1) The Mushroom


Standing on my porch for the last time in a long time, I began to reminisce on the wonderful things that happened on the green grass of my backyard. All of the wiffleball and badminton games, all of the water balloon fights, they were all going to temporarily go away as soon as I left for college a thousand miles away.
As I looked around, trying to find the memories, I looked upon the only abnormality on the lawn. It was brown, and round on the top. It looked like it was elevating in the air, until I noticed a long and narrow stem attached to the ground that kept this half-sphere above the surface. It seemed odd to me. 
I had seen things similar to this before, but I had never remembered seeing it on my yard. Living here for fifteen years, it seemed like I would have noticed it before. But I just couldn't recall that it was ever there.
I asked my mom how long I had before I had to leave, and she replied that I had only a few minutes before I needed to depart for Florida. So, I walked off the porch, and sprinted across the lawn, toward this interesting object. From a distance, it seemed rather minuscule, but as I approached it, it grew and grew until I saw that it was more the size of the wiffleballs that scattered the grass for years. I reached down, and I touched it. It had the smoothness of the round tips of badminton birdies that used to fly around on the days filled with the shining sun. Finally, I decided to pick it up, with the delicateness I had picked up water balloons in the summers, and I stuck it in my pocket, to remember my home and everything that was a part of it. I walked back onto the porch, turned around to scan the yard one final time, and walked inside, and eventually I left for the airport.

And to this day, I carry that object with me wherever I go.

#2) Happy Dog


After twenty minutes, the rain started to fall on me and my dog. Her fur began to fill with this water from the sky and was shivering because of it. With both of us completely soaked, I decided that we end our walk and head back home. Grabbing on to her leash tightly, I turned my dog in the opposite direction and started for home.
We turned to the right into the driveway, and we made our trek up it toward the house. The trees protected us from the rain, so we stayed outside and played on the driveway. Grasping a tennis ball from my pocket, I took it out and threw it into the front yard. My beautiful lab sprinted towards the ball, opened her mouth, used that mouth to capture it, and sprinted back, placing the ball in front of me. From past experiences, I knew that this action was a sign for me to throw the ball again. I threw it seven more times, until she continued to hold the ball in her mouth and sat down next to my feet. I knew now that it was time to go inside. But then, she heard a noise.
The dog jumped up and dropped the ball from her mouth. I stared at her to see what the matter was, and I saw her turn her head to the left. I turned my head to the right to look at what she saw. 
Just as I turned my head, a car pulled into the driveway. Not just any car, however. It was a car that my dog and I have seen for many years. The car stopped right in front of us, and my mom stepped out of the driver's side of the gray Camry that pulled in. Wagging her tail and panting to show her excitement, my dog ran towards my mom and jumped up onto her legs. I thought that my dog had been happy before, but I had never seen her so happy than when my mom hopped out of that car.

#3) Coming Home

                                                         

About every two months, with school in my rear-view mirror, even if just for a day or two, I come home to the same scrumptious scene.
A two hour drive from rural New Hampshire brings me back to my home I had lived in for nineteen years, 231 Reginald Avenue in Haverhill. I park parallel to the road to the left of me, and I turn right to stare at it. Just looking at the house makes me ecstatic to be home again. I check for cars on the road, open the door slowly for extra caution, and then I jump out of the driver’s side door and sprint behind the trunk so I almost guarantee that I do not get hit. I unlock the trunk with the turn of a key, and it flies open, revealing the gym bag containing all of my clothes and eyewear for the weekend. I grab the strap with my right hand, then take the bag out and wrap the strap around my shoulder. I close the trunk with my left hand, and then lock the car. After checking that the entire car is secure, I turn again toward the home.
I look at the five steep, cement steps that lead to the front door. I remember that I cracked the corner of the fourth one when I smashed a hammer into it at age 9, so now it looks crooked from the bottom of the flight. I remember all of the days I got off the school bus and walked up these stairs, anticipating what the afternoon would bring. After staring at the steps, I look up slightly.
I look at the front of my childhood home. I remember the small, but fun, Thanksgiving football games that were played in my undersized front yard. I remember all of the reading I did on the lawn when my sister had the TV on too loud inside. I remember painting the house white one afternoon because my mom just thought it needed something new; and staring up at it at any time- in the rains of April or the sun of July or the snow of December, I knew that she made the right choice.
I walk up the stairs, through the yard, up more steps to the front door, and I ring the doorbell, always using my left index finger. And every time, I sit there, waiting for someone to answer the door, and it takes only a second to get excited about seeing my family again.

#4) His Last Beach Day (TEST)

September 3rd, 2012, a day that will live in infamy, at least for Tommy.
Holly and Tommy, instead of staying home and having a cookout, always went to the beach on Labor Day. They had done this every year since they had gotten married over six years ago. So on this day, they packed their beach equipment-towels, chairs, umbrellas, drink coolers- in the back of their green sedan, and they drove the hour and a half drive to Hyannis.
Once they arrived in the town, they parked their car a half mile away from the main beach, grabbed their stuff, and began walking on the right sidewalk toward the ocean. Walking down the sidewalk, something felt strange to Tommy. The ground felt like it was shaking under him, although there was no earthquake anywhere on that day. The buildings felt like they were going to collapse on him and his wife, although none of them have not or will not collapse for another seventy-five years. Tommy felt so frightened that he grabbed Holly’s left arm and picked up their speed to get out of he thought as a horror town.
When they got to the main parking lot of the beach, they turned east and walked down a cement path to their “secret beach” where nobody else would go to swim and relax.  As they walked, the beach continued to get farther and farther away from them as the couple ascended up the cliffs. Reaching the top of the cliffs, the couple turned to a sign that reinforced the danger of where they were going. It read: “Danger, Sliding Cliffs, Keep Back.” But they had never and would not keep back from the cliffs.
Tommy and Holly found their spot. Throwing their beach things over the cliff, they fell onto the tan sand below. Now they were ready to jump onto the beach. Holly moved left of the things, and with her large, strong legs, jumped over the cliffs, falling almost seventeen feet, and landing on her size eight feet like a gymnastics champion. Now it was Tommy’s turn. He, using the balls of his size twelve feet flew from the rocky plateau, flowing through the air the same way as his spouse did a minute earlier, but a little closer to the Atlantic. And instead of landing on his feet, like he had done for the past five years, he thought it would be funny to land like a cannonball in the ocean. But unlike a cannonball in the ocean, Tommy landed on his back and blacked out.
When Tommy woke two days later, room 241 of Mass General was the only thing he saw. A doctor walked in, and told him everything. He told them about the immediate response to the beach. He told them about the hours of surgery just to keep him alive. And in the end, he told him about how he can never use his legs again.

#5) The Voice (TEST)

I had been walking for about a mile, just admiring the unique scene that this new country presented to me. The unfamiliar architecture that was worn by these century-old buildings, the confusing language that was spoken by these fascinating people, it seemed so odd to me. Sure, I loved living here for the past month, but I could still not understand anything that went on here. And worst of all, I had nobody to talk to: international phone calls were much too expensive, letters took much too long to write, mail, and receive, and I could not talk to anybody without getting the weirdest looks imaginable. I was lonely, very lonely, in this brand new world, and I wasn’t sure if I could stand it for the next year.
As I kept walking, I wandered into a new place that I had never been since I arrived. To my left was the light blue sea that I had looked upon many times before. But to my right, I stared into a long and narrow alleyway. In this alley, I could see many doors on both sides, which I assumed to be doors to people’s houses. So, I turned my body to where my eyes were looking, and I began to walk down this narrow road.
Just a few meters after I entered, I heard a noise from one of the doors. It seemed like a scream, so I ran to the noise to see what was going on. The noise kept getting louder and louder as I got closer and closer to the noise. As I neared it even more, it stopped sounding like a scream, and I could pick out words that were being spoken in a loud manner:
                “Hello? Hello? Is anybody there?”
Those were the first words of English I had heard since I arrived. Hoping it was someone I could actually communicate with, I picked up speed and sprinted to the noise as fast as Usain Bolt in the Olympics. When I arrived at what I thought was the door where the voice originated, I stared at it for a moment. It had a lot of scratches on its oak-colored frame. Seeing there could be trouble inside the house, I opened the door.

#6) Growth

Boston has progressed greatly over the years.
First, it was land and nothing else. Rolling hills, green summers, white winters, nobody living anywhere near.
Then came the Native Americans with their basic technologies. They had spears for their hunting of deer and duck and fishing for bass and tuna. They had one room huts made of long branches to live in that were much smaller than the hills that surrounded them. They grew together as a group and relied on each other to survive the hot, humid summers and the cold, killing winter. Years flew by until everything changed.
The year sixteen-twenty was when Plymouth is claimed, and ten years later, the same occurred to Boston. These Puritans smashed the inhabitants of hundreds of years before, and they took over everything that had been there earlier. Guns had arrived with the capability of killing anyone and anything. Families lived in wooden, multi-room homes, still not the size of the mounds of soil they are put on top of. The people were brought together by religion and family values. The “City Upon a Hill” had been born.
Wood was replaced with stone and brick, and the buildings began to inch taller and taller. Floors instead of floor, baths instead of bath. People wanted more, and they were getting it, and lots of it. But then they wanted even more than that. And when demand was at its highest, there came steel. A more potent material, the city started to fly above the hills that have captured the city for years. Low-to-the-ground houses became sky-high apartments and hotels. Tens of feet above the earth became hundreds and hundreds. Skyscrapers became the norm in the city.
Today, it is more of the same from a hundred years ago. When I look up, I stare upon buildings higher into the air that anybody would imagine at the beginning of this city’s history. Some square, some circular, some with analog clocks, some with narrow bars rising above it, but all had lights flashing through the windows when the sun came down. The city is powerful, very powerful, a lot more powerful than it was when it was long, green grass and flowing hills on the coast.