This is my newest work I've just began after taking a year off. I'm rusty. |
The Solidarity By: Casey Ross Cast of Characters: Lloyd…Manager of The Roast. 50s. Ben…New employee of The Roast. 20s. Heidi…Regular of The Roast. Somewhere in the middle. Sam...Ben’s ex. 20s. SCENE ONE (During blackout, the sound of a coffee house grinder is heard. It flips off. Tapping, metal on metal, and liquid pouring, then the sound of a milk steamer flipping on. The sound of a cup hitting a counter.) LLOYD Bill. VOICE Thanks, Lloyd. (Still in blackout.) LLOYD Repetition. The sustaining force in all human behavior. Today you may go to the grocery, the mall, the park, the sea, caving, a headshop, a yard sale, your mother’s, a restaurant…a coffee house… (The sound of another drink being created, then placed on the counter is heard.) Heidi. HEIDI Thanks, Lloyd. LLOYD The laundromat, a concert, an amusement park, court, a funeral, a wedding, a date, the pet store, a museum, an art gallery… (The sound of the grinder turns off and another cup is placed.) A coffee house. VOICE Thanks, Lloyd. LLOYD What is guaranteed, certain and repetitive is that you will wake up, barring you're not dead. And, you will do something. Something you’ve tricked yourself into thinking is new, exciting, or necessary. But rest assured, it’s always calculated. Planned. Repetitive. Most of us plan to be spontaneous and in that blinding irony, we fail to see that, on average, we do it once a month, repetitively. (The lights come up. Lloyd stands behind a coffee house bar. A girl stands, holding a cup, waiting behind a man.) Jim. MAN Thanks, Lloyd. (The man exits.) HEIDI When’s he start? LLOYD Never, if I have anything to say about it. HEIDI You took down the sign. LLOYD I didn’t touch the sign. HEIDI It’s going to be fun. LLOYD We must have different definitions of that word. HEIDI Less work... LLOYD More work. HEIDI Now how-- LLOYD Look, new people don’t know where the cups are, they don’t know where to put the coffee after it’s ground, they don’t know how to make a double white mocha macchiato, they think venti is a size, not a number, and they don’t know how to use the system. More work. HEIDI You’re impossible. I’ve never known anyone more like Oscar the grouch in my life. LLOYD Thanks, I’ve never held a title before. HEIDI You’re welcome. LLOYD I’ll hold it dear. HEIDI What’s his name? LLOYD I don’t know. HEIDI What’s he look like? LLOYD Never seen him. HEIDI Is he nice? LLOYD I’ve never met the guy. (A pause.) HEIDI Lloyd. LLOYD About 6 feet. Dishwater hair. Brown eyes. Wears too many colors, piercings, too nice, and young. Too young. HEIDI How young? LLOYD 20s. HEIDI That’s not so young. LLOYD Too young. HEIDI When’s he start? LLOYD Tomorrow. HEIDI What’s his name? LLOYD Ben. HEIDI Ben? LLOYD Ben. HEIDI Lloyd and Ben. LLOYD Lloyd. Ben. HEIDI No and. LLOYD It’s a rather offensive conjunction, Heidi. HEIDI It’s too inclusive for a Lloyd. LLOYD This Lloyd. HEIDI What kind of colors? LLOYD Blue, green, red… HEIDI Black and Brown aren’t really everyone’s first choice, Lloyd. LLOYD They’re the only choice. HEIDI Some blue might be nice. LLOYD I hope you enjoy it. HEIDI It could never replace brown. LLOYD You can’t replace brown. HEIDI And it won’t. Brown has been around for too long. No one would ever dream of replacing brown. LLOYD Not even with red. HEIDI Of course not. Red is too frivolous. LLOYD Red is too damn young. HEIDI Red isn’t that young… LLOYD Too young— HEIDI For pouring tea? I’m sure Red will catch on. Especially with Brown’s help. LLOYD Tea— HEIDI Gets two cups. He’ll pick it up, Lloyd. LLOYD I can’t wait until you get burned. HEIDI I will ask for the second cup. Bye, Lloyd. And Ben. (Lloyd looks behind him for Ben.) I was just getting used it. Bye, Lloyd. LLOYD Heidi— HEIDI No and. It offends me. (She winks, then exits. Lights fade on area.) LLOYD (In blackout.) And it was in this blinding irony that I failed to see through repeption to see that this was completely new... SCENE TWO (Lloyd enters the shop and flips on a small sign that reads “The Roast, Now brewing...” He takes off his coat and turns on the lights on the room. He places the coat on a coat rack then picks up an apron, ties it on and looks over the room and finger checks the counter for dust. He notices a sign taped onto the counter, regards it and shrugs. He steps behind the counter. Then, with a look of terror, steps out from behind the counter and re-reads the sign. It reads: “Under New Management, Now a proud branch of Antelope Coffee.”) LLOYD Shit… (A bell rings, Heidi enters.) HEIDI (Reading the sign, behind Lloyd.) Proud? LLOYD I’m not. HEIDI The Man is after the little old Roast now? (Reading.) A proud branch of Antelope. Love their cookies. Are you going to get their cookies? LLOYD No cookies. This isn't the man, it's my man. HEIDI Marcell? LLOYD He owns the place...Guess he can sell the place. Guess he sold the place. HEIDI I thought you liked Marcell. LLOYD I did until he got this bright idea that I need help...that we needed help... HEIDI That you needed cookies? LLOYD We don't need the cookies. HEIDI Maybe you do need the help, I don't remember when I've been here that you weren't. Surely, even Lloyd has a life... LLOYD There isn't a time when this place runs that I don't run it and let me tell you why: This place is opened for a 10 mere hours a day. Just over a full shift. I make, if I am lucky, 20 bucks a day in tips…10 bucks an hour, and that’s because I’ve worked here for 10 years. What would help that? And besides, there’s not room for another person in here. HEIDI I am feeling a little cramped. LLOYD You’re here early. HEIDI So, are you. Saw the light thought I might get a coffee before I make my 11 an hour. LLOYD 11? Who’d you screw? HEIDI The pit-bull in the second cage. LLOYD Sorry I missed the show. HEIDI Wasn’t much. (She reaches into a cabinet and pulls out a filter and a bag of coffee. She hands it to Lloyd.) So, where's? (As she says this Ben enters, hurriedly) At least I didn't miss my show... BEN Sorry I'm late! LLOYD (Checking his watch.) You're early. BEN (Laughing.) Whew! Good thing I set my clocks back an hour...Been doing it so long I... LLOYD ...forget, I do the...same thing. BEN Alright, which one of you is Lloyd? LLOYD I... BEN I'm joshin' you, Bro. What do you need? Coffee brewed? Sleeves stocked? Iced tea? Where we at? (Heidi laughs.) HEIDI Tea gets two cups. BEN You don't say... LLOYD Why don't you...just sweep the bar. BEN Bar looks sweeped. You need me to open a till? LLOYD I would but your not in the- (Ben walks behind the counter and makes a few touches to the screen.) BEN Put my self in the system, hope you don't mind... LLOYD In the system, wait you what? HEIDI Well, looks like you've got a lot of work ahead of you Lloyd. I'll just be going. BEN What's your name and drink? HEIDI Heidi, small coffee. If I'm adventurous, a little steamed soy. BEN (Tapping his head.) Got it. See you tomorrow. With the soy, if you are on an adventure. HEIDI Well, until then, Ben. And Lloyd. LLOYD Until... (She exits, Lloyd turns to Ben.) Your not signed off on bar, so, don't go memorizing drinks just yet. BEN I've poured my share of coffee, Bro. LLOYD We aren't related. BEN Right. So, you own this place? LLOYD No...It's...a local... BEN (Chuckling.) Right. LLOYD What's so funny? BEN I thought you seemed a little uptight to own the place. If you owned it you'd be less freaked out about the rules. You aren't go to fire yourself, since you care so damned much, someone could fire you. Thusly, you must have a boss. LLOYD Marcell Benitot. BEN The French guy who... LLOYD Hired you, yes. BEN Thought you needed a side-kick? LLOYD I figured they were just trading in for a newer model. BEN I can dig. (Lloyd looks offended.) Not that they are trading in, that you are on to the man. The little guys need to be on to the man. (Ben is moving from area to area opening the store as Lloyd watches. He sets out some mints at the front counter and reads the sign.) It's already in the works for you guys then? LLOYD So, you must have experience... BEN 4 Starbucks, trainer for 2, 3 locals, and an Antelope. Guess, 2 Antelopes now. (He flicks the sign.) LLOYD We don't have the cookies yet. You like coffee? BEN I know coffee. My degree is in creative writing with a minor in 2D drawing...so... LLOYD So, here you are. BEN What about you, Lloyd? How do you shoot the shit? LLOYD I'd rather not do anything with shit. BEN You know what I mean, how do you have fun, what's your real gig? LLOYD I show rabbits. BEN What do you show them? LLOYD No, I... BEN I'm just joshin', Bro. Rabbits, huh? I've heard dogs but rabbits.... LLOYD It's not a very large community. BEN Wouldn't think so. Ah well, whatever pops your rocks, Bro. LLOYD Does what now? BEN Nothing. LLOYD What do you write about? BEN Superheros. Drawing and writing, I wanted to work for comics... LLOYD Anything I've heard of? BEN Not unless you've been following my web-series...Barista Boy and Captain Coffee. It's...satirical. Two super guys trying to fight Starbucks, a rich sea-monster, from destroying all the world's actual coffee houses. Barista Boy writes poems and plays bongos and Captain Coffee still knows how to use a tamp...his tamp is sort of like Thor's hammer...only he can weld it...you could so care less... LLOYD No. That's actually pretty funny. BEN Yeah, I thought so. Don't really keep up on it. My co-illustrator quit on me. LLOYD Quit? BEN Quit, dumped, one of the two... (A long silence. Lloyd goes to the drawers and starts counting money.) So, adventurous steamed soy... LLOYD Heidi. BEN She your co-illustrator, then? LLOYD My... BEN Girl, your lady... LLOYD No just a regular. BEN Ouch! A regular...Poor kid, I'll have to tell her to stop looking so glassy-eyed at you, then. LLOYD What? BEN What's she do? LLOYD Works for the animal shelter. BEN That doesn't open till 8...She's got it out for you, Bro. LLOYD I doubt that. BEN Come on! You are running the best game on this block. I met Sam, my former co-illustrator, right here... (He steps behind the bar. Looking out to the counter.) She was sitting right there, sketching, and as I sit her cappuccino, for here, down, I look over her shoulder...Really close, she was cute...blonde, some dreads...nose ring... LLOYD Sounds...charming... BEN (Miming with his story.) And ask, “What are you drawing?” she tells me she is working on her portfolio, for DC. I cringe. I'm a Marvel guy. And there you have it, weeks of playful banter telling her why Superman is quite possibly the least interesting thing is comics, then....ya'know one thing and another and your co-illustrating web comics and buying wedding rings...and... (He stops. Collects himself) You get it. You just got to steam that soy for here, my man... LLOYD She's a friend, a regular, and a friend. Besides, she's way too young for me. BEN Right, I'm sure that's what J. Howard Marshall said to Anna Nichole. Are you a man or are you a saint? How old are you? LLOYD That's none of your... BEN All I'm saying is that it looks to me like you have a pulse... LLOYD I try to stay in shape. BEN Can't let those bunnies get away. LLOYD I leash them, they would never.... BEN Uh-huh. Well. Looks like we ready to grind. LLOYD (Flipping over a sign reading: Your barista today is Lloyd.) There. Now we're grinding. BEN When do I get one of those? LLOYD I made it myself. You can send in a request to Antelope, I'm sure. BEN I'm on your side, Dude. I don't want the damn cookies either. With the cookies comes abstract paintings, wall mirrors, new sofas, scheduled poetry, less hipsters more suits, and your sizes go from sizes to non-sense words. I've been a bean jockey since high-school man. I get it. LLOYD Right. BEN Well. Let's brew. (Ben goes to the bar and stops.) After you. (Lloyd takes his place at the bar. Lights fade on area.) SCENE THREE (The sound of thunder, then rain pouring is heard. A man sighs. In blackout.) LLOYD I've spent a total of 10,680 minutes at this stop. The only thing I can count on is that the bus never runs on time. It's either early by 3 minutes, or late by 6. And... (The sound of a bus pulling in fast, stopping and water slashing is heard.) You're going to get wet. (Lights up. Lloyd is drying off. He checks himself in a mirror. There is a rabbit sitting on the counter. He turns to the audience.) I don't know how I got here. I know each step I've taken, each day. Each second I've waited at the Red Line stop. And how many times I've clipped Breve's toenails. I know in reason, selection, in choice, and systematical error how I've come to be. What I fail to calculate is how I've come to accept...being. (He sits.) Existence can be so existential. And that which is existential can be so...escapist. Like this rabbit, I barely remember what it is like to be free from a cage. Although, unlike an animal I can't forget it. A water bottle and chew treat don't sustain me and I am forced to be...existential. To rise from repetition, reality, and solitude, to actualize to...to... (An alarm goes off..) run late for the first time... (Lloyd exits and the lights come up on Ben. He is filling a pitcher of milk, alone. Heidi enters.) HEIDI Lloyd... BEN He's not here yet. HEIDI Funny, is he in the back? I need to ask him a question... (She goes to the back, then re-enters.) Alright. BEN (Smugly.) Perhaps I can be of assistance? HEIDI Do you have a masters in culinary arts, specificity, animal culinary arts? BEN I can tell you where the nearest Petsmart is. HEIDI I'll wait. BEN (Setting down a coffee.) Let me know if that is too much adventure. HEIDI Thanks. BEN (He watches Heidi roam about the cafe, dusting and moving various retail items around. He chuckles, then smiles, finally after a moment, he speaks.) So, I have to ask what exactly do show rabbits do? HEIDI (Laughing.) I have no idea. BEN You've never been to one of the... HEIDI No! And I've tried...He's so secretive about anything that doesn't have to do with grounds and foam.... BEN Well, don't take it personal. HEIDI I think he likes you... BEN Me? Please, he'd leave me for dead in a war, now you... HEIDI I have boobs. And discounted rabbit vitamins. I can't be left behind. BEN Animal person? HEIDI I work at the shelter. BEN I see. HEIDI What do you show? Not rabbits, I presume. BEN Comics. HEIDI Stand-up? BEN I wish. Books. HEIDI Like Superman? BEN Not as cliché as Superman, but sure. HEIDI I offended you. BEN I'll be fine. HEIDI Sorry... BEN Don't be. HEIDI ...that you are such a nerd. BEN Ohhhh, you... HEIDI I got you. It's okay. (Winking.) You weren't my first. BEN You don't do this to poor Lloyd do you? He'd explode, go all...Gambit on the cups... HEIDI All what now? BEN Gambit, X-men, he blows up anything he touches...he's HEIDI He's not real. And Lloyd wouldn't explode, he'd calmly move me through line. BEN You think? Is he frigid? HEIDI Ice cold, Darling. BEN You two make a fine pair. HEIDI Of what? Neighboring ice cubes? BEN Dunces. HEIDI Excuse me? (Lloyd enters, hastily.) LLOYD I've never done that before. HEIDI Not in the six years I've been coming here. LLOYD Heidi. HEIDI (Mocking him.) Lloyd. LLOYD Problem? (He's going from area to area, 'catching up.' Ben watches the scene from behind the counter.) HEIDI (Following Lloyd.) I have this rabbit. LLOYD Rex or Lop? HEIDI Explain. LLOYD Up ears or down? HEIDI Down... LLOYD Lops are hard. HEIDI He won't eat. LLOYD Eat what? HEIDI Rabbit things. Carrots, pellets, hay... LLOYD Peppers. HEIDI They eat peppers? LLOYD They do if they are in the mood for something spicy. HEIDI Rabbits have developed palates and here I thought the name Gordon Ramsey was absurd for a rabbit. LLOYD It's actually quite fitting, rodants and reptiles are the most decerning when it comes to what they eat. HEIDI I come for the coffee, I stay to learn. LLOYD Your coffee. Here, I'll steam that soy... BEN No need. HEIDI Ben got me. BEN How's that adventure? A plesent saffari or a bad camping trip? HEIDI I'm with my guide, Timbweh, watching garaffes. BEN Lovely. LLOYD Ben. BEN Yes? LLOYD I like your...ear assories... HEIDI Gadges, Lloyd. BEN Plugs, actually... LLOYD Whatever they are, they are a lovely shade. What color would you say those are, Heidi? HEIDI (Rolling her eyes.) They look pretty red to me... LLOYD Red. Works for Ben here, too frivolous for me. BEN Didn't know colors had such 'tude. (Heidi laughs.) HEIDI (Patting Ben's shoulder.) You are going to learn a lot from Lloyd, especially about color sensibilities. BEN I can't wait. HEIDI (Throwing an arm around Lloyd) I've got a spicy lop to attend to, my friend. LLOYD Best of luck. BEN Hey, tell Timbweh, click click do be do for me. HEIDI Wonderful, you're fluent. BEN I’ve got a good tongue. HEIDI Something to remember. Bye Lloyd. (Heidi drops a bill in the tips and exits) LLOYD What the hell was that? BEN How much does she usually tip? LLOYD She has been coming here for years... BEN So. She doesn't. (he reaches into the tip jar and pulls out a 20.) Huh. (he hands it to Lloyd.) What that was, was skill. LLOYD She gave you 20$ for being persumptive and crass? BEN She gave me 20$ cus I made her feel special. Man. You could be makin' bank bro. As long as these folks have been coming to you...Jesus, man. You might as well be family. Keep that. LLOYD I am a grown man, I don't need donations from a... BEN It's not a donation, old man, it's a pitty prize for how I am about to school your tip jar. (Lights fade on cafe area and stay tight on Lloyd.) LLOYD It's official. I hate the guy. Not only can he free pour a perfect rosetta with skim, he was right. Whatever that base, vile communication he calls "skills" was, it earned him 87 dollars. His smile sickens me. I want to hold his alternative, pierced, winning smile under a group head and let the rinse cycle spew hot water all over his neat, but not too neat, stubbley face. Not since my 20s have I so militantly hated a person. We don't start this bitter. We are made this way. I used to think there was a place in the world for a kid dumb enough to think trained rabbits in tiny suits were a million dollar show. A preformance artist, I was. What’s the word for that, now, ah yes, a fool. I moved myself to a studio with nothing more than my coat that I would throw on the floor in a fashion resembling a dead man on my floor. It was my bed, my partner, and sometimes the only friend I would drunkenly chat with in the dark. I didn’t have electricity. But I was free. Free from the Midwest and here, here. Beautiful, new, perfect, here. San Francisco. A city built on a hippy migration. A city built on protest. A city built on Harvey Milk, flower children, free minds and free drugs. There were palm trees. There was grime, dirt, the smell of human and animal urine wafting into my window...I was hungry, wet, tired, and sometimes I slept in a park with strangers. But. I was happy. I wasn't normal. Normal is a death sentence and once you accept her into your bed, every moment lying next to her is one more moment gone as you tick the seconds down to your normal death. Now, I lie next to normal every night. We spoon. This world won. I got too hungry, too wet, too cold. My coat ripped. My friends stopped sending letters saying "follow your dreams!" And I, I stopped seeing street art and palm trees and started seeing price tags. You see, Before I got on my return flight back into the clutches and cold eerie fingers that dig into my heart, my core, my soul giving me that feeling, you know the hallow empty feeling? You see, before I came back here...I didn't have this tamber. I had her. The woman in row 23, seat A. The one person I hate more in this normal world, than Ben. A had 4 magazines, a book of crosswords, a blow up neck pillow, a bag of trail mix and probably some fucking sodoku to round out her 2 hour flight. A flight, that came with free TV ads projected on the back of the heads of the other poor fucks flying into Red State hell. Her headphones, stopped working, with 1/2 hour left in the sky. And as suddenly as I lost my boyish grin, the same one that flashes accross Ben's stupid stubbled face, the light to summon the over-poweringly gay steward was illuminated. As the steward floated down the isle to A, I watched in horror as this...whore...began to explain her plight. Her plight that would now last, 23 mintues. The steward explained that there was simply nothing he could do, they were out of new headphones for the now 21 mintues remaining and in about 10 they were going to end the projections anyway. To land. The fatal cocktail of my anger with myself and my anger with her finally boiled over and I tapped the monster on the shoulder and said, so foolishly and so youthfully, ’There are people on this flight who haven’t eaten in a week and you are worried about 10 mintues of Skymall ads?’ I could tell by the shock on her now reddening face that it didn’t take. Like I know today, that if I tell Ben, stupid stubbled Ben, that I used to be just as much of a fool as him, sketching his little soul away drawing men in tights and capes, that if I told him stop now. Don’t go. Don’t try. Don’t care. If I told him that, it wouldn’t take. And that’s probably why I hate him. (Lights fade back into the cafe scene. Lloyd is counting money and Ben is sweeping.) BEN I didn’t mean to piss you off. LLOYD You didn’t do a thing to me. You simply embarssed yourself. BEN Embarssed? Come on, man! I did my job. I know you think I don’t have a care in the world, but I’ve got bills to pay, if I have to bat my eyes or finger brush a cougar for enough gas to get here, I’m going to do it. There is no shame in that. LLOYD Really? Then why do you seem so ashamed? BEN Because I’m working for...for...Megatron over here! LLOYD Excuse me? BEN You are a robot! No wonder this place worked a one to one. No one, and I do mean no one, would last here! LLOYD You are still in your 90 day evaluation period, I would not... BEN (Dropping the broom) I don’t need this. No one needs this. This is insane. This is like...something out of a...a...DC comic. LLOYD Do not... BEN No. You do not. I quit. (Lloyd picks up the broom and Ben starts to exit. Ben stops and turns around, addressing Lloyd.) I’m good at this. That’s what you don’t like. Not only am I good at this, but I’m not an idiot. I’m not a fuck up. I’m just a nice guy, who did my job, and you can’t handle that, because I make you expendable. Admit it. That’s what it is. You could care less about 2 cups on tea, about signing me off to pour a latte, mind you, I can pour art in them, you could care less about my witty, fun, pleasent report with your hot little regular...All you care about is feeling like you are needed. Or at least lying to yourself that you don’t have an exparation date. We all do, bro. I do. You do. This cafe does. Heidi does. It’s been a week, man. A week. I’ve got your number, and I quit. I...fucking quit. Good luck, I filled out your cookie order for you...The orange creames are the most popular... (He exits. Lights fade on area.) SCENE FOUR (In the blackout.) LLOYD Walt Witman once said, nothing can happen more beautiful than death...I’m starting to belive him. (Lights up on the cafe. Lloyd is behind the bar mumbling and removing pieces of the espresso machine holding a screw driver. Heidi enters.) HEIDI Hi, Lloyd. (Lloyd grunts.) Alright. Hi. Lloyd. LLOYD Heidi. HEIDI Rutine maintinece? LLOYD I wish. HEIDI See? I bet you are glad to have your sidekick now...with...the...machine...where’s Ben? LLOYD Gone. HEIDI He’s off? LLOYD Permenately. HEIDI You didn’t. LLOYD No. I didn’t. He quit. Didn’t even finish the floors last night. HEIDI Oh. (She digs through her bag and sets a book on the table.) Guess I won’t be getting that back to him... LLOYD I’ll mail it to him. HEIDI Good. Um. Can you tell him I liked it? LLOYD Heidi, I’m not going to call the kid to chat, I am mailing his paycheck and his belongings. If you have a message for the mouthy little devient, find him yourself. HEIDI Costumer service with a smile. LLOYD We both know I’ve not charged you for years... HEIDI What’s wrong with it? LLOYD I don’t know... HEIDI How rare. LLOYD Watch. (Lloyd presses a button, a loud plunk is heard, then smoke.) HEIDI It’s not supposed to do that? LLOYD Heidi. HEIDI Lloyd. (Lloyd sets down the screw driver and stares Heidi down.) I’m trying to make you smile, Frosty. LLOYD (Sitting on the counter.) I know. HEIDI It’s broken. LLOYD It’s at least beyond me. HEIDI Let’s get breakfast. LLOYD I’ve got to call matience, I can’t... HEIDI I won’t tell. LLOYD Heidi, that’s not how it works, it’s my job to... HEIDI We’ve established that I am no longer a costumer today, correct? LLOYD Right... HEIDI Then, Lloyd, as your friend, maybe not even friend, as...a fellow inhabitant of this planet, as...a passer by...it’s not your job to stop living. That’s nobody’s job... (She exits. Lloyd rubs his temples and sighs. He pushes himself off the bar, and bends down to retrieve the phone he begins to dail, then glances at the book on the counter, left by Heidi. He set the phone down and picks up the book.) LLOYD The Grinding Tales of Captain Coffee and Barista Boy, by Benjamin Shaffer. (He flips to a random page near the end and begins to read, as the lights fade.) This is the end, the end my friend. My tamp is empty. My foam has fallen. I’m burnt and I’m bitter. My acidity is biting not bright and I know now, that my shot times are off. Beans were never so fresh, the roast was never so pure, and... (He stops, reading now more quiet and reverant.) And...never was the sound of steam such beautiful music as it was when I knew you were by my side, desipite Starbucks’ reign, I had you. Always you, to battle the cooperate, to battle fear, and to battle the herioing aging, battle of my own... (A pause) My own solidarity... SCENE FIVE (Lights up on the cafe. There is no business. Lloyd is reading Ben’s comicbook. A young woman enters.) LLOYD Restroom’s in the back... SAM Thanks. (She walks by Lloyd, who is still reading, notices the book, then stops.) Where did you get that? LLOYD It was left here. SAM By who? LLOYD (Looking over the book to Sam.) By a responbility-less mouthy youth. (Sam laughs.) SAM By Ben? LLOYD (Closing the book.) Know him? SAM I almost married him. LLOYD My condolences. (He goes back to reading.) SAM Did he work here? LLOYD For the totality of a week. Do you need the restroom or an interveiw? SAM Sorry. LLOYD Do you want to see this? SAM I...didn’t know he finished it. Ben...never finishes anything...he LLOYD Here. (He hands her the book. She flips to the end and reads in silence.) SAM Can I...have this? LLOYD Don’t you think I should return it to it’s owner? SAM Half of it is mine... LLOYD (He takes the book.) Prove it. (She flips it over in his hands.) SAM I’m Samatha Franklin...I’m kind of surprised he...I mean I quit so... LLOYD He’s mouthy but he never struck me as a theif. SAM No... (Lloyd sets the book down and begins to take food from the case.) LLOYD I close in 20 mintues. SAM Oh. Sure. I’ll just... (She exits towards the rest room. Lloyd regards the book, sighs and goes back to moving the food. Sam emerges from the restroom.) Thanks... LLOYD (Handing her a cookie.) Here. SAM Orange creame. My favorite. LLOYD I had a huntch. SAM (Beginning to exit, she turns back.) Thanks...um... LLOYD Lloyd. SAM Thanks, Lloyd. (Heidi enters as Sam is exiting.) HEIDI Who’s the late comer? LLOYD One of Red’s little friends... HEIDI I see. Well, are you ready? LLOYD Heidi... HEIDI You’re sick. You’re busy. Something came up. Which one? LLOYD I just don’t... HEIDI I know. You just don’t. Lloyd, I don’t know why I bother. I really don’t. LLOYD I’m sorry. HEIDI You really have been lately... LLOYD I... HEIDI We were going to a pet fashion show. We weren’t going to a dimly lit resturant. We weren’t meeting my parents. We weren’t comitting to anything. We were only making plans to interact as more than latte exchangers. I’ve known you for 6 years. Damnit, 6 years, and I don’t even think I’ve ever seen you step out from behind that counter. LLOYD That’s absurd, I clean the cafe... HEIDI You know what I mean. What are you afraid of? LLOYD Living. HEIDI What? LLOYD I’m afraid to live... |