DAISY FOOTE | From Bhutan
Scene Two
(Twelve months earlier. The
day after WARREN’s
birthday.
FRANCES, in her pajamas and robe, comes into the
kitchen. WARREN is there, pouring himself a cup of coffee.)
FRANCES
Look it’s the birthday boy . . . did you have a good time?
WARREN
I did. (a beat) Where’s Mary?
(WARREN pours her a cup of coffee, hands her a cup.)
WARREN
Her car’s not in the driveway.
FRANCES
She’s probably driving aunt home.
WARREN
Aunt stayed here last night?
(FRANCES nods.)
WARREN
They been down to the Molly?
(FRANCES doesn’t respond.)
WARREN
What kind of shape were they in?
FRANCES
What kind of shape do you think they were in?
WARREN
Check the attitude, Lady.
(He pours himself more coffee then brings the pot
over to his sister, topping off her cup.)
WARREN
So aren’t you going to ask about my big day and night in the city?
FRANCES
I already asked if you had a good time.
(He’s had enough and walks to the door
to leave . . .)
FRANCES
Warren . . .
(He turns back.)
FRANCES
I’m sorry, I’m just really tired. Aunt kept kicking me all
night. (a beat) I want to hear all about it . . . I do.
(He grins.)
WARREN
Anna’s sister and brother in law, they’ve got a house, a
whole goddamn house on
Commonwealth, right next to the park. He’s an investment banker.
And I thought, Jesus, this
guy has to be some kind of poser. But he’s not, he’s wicked
nice. He was giving me all kinds of advice about running a small business,
how to turn it into a real money making operation.
WARREN (Cont’d)
You are not going to believe what I did this morning.
FRANCES
What?
WARREN
I went to church.
FRANCES
You did not.
WARREN
Anna’s sister and brother in law always go. Anna wanted to go—and
I didn’t want to seem
like an asshole. And you know it wasn’t so bad. I barely heard
what the sermon was. The guy
was going on about some story in the Bible and how to apply it to your
life. Whatever. But being there with Anna and her family, it was nice—it
was—orderly.
(A beat. He drinks his coffee.)
WARREN (Cont’d)
So what do you think, you think Anna would make a decent sister in law?
FRANCES
Are you serious?
WARREN
We talked about it last night.
FRANCES
Doesn’t she want to go to college?
WARREN
It’s not written in stone. Anna’s a pretty old fashioned
girl. And I think it’s always bugged her that her Ma worked full
time when she didn’t have to. Anna wants to be there for our kids.
FRANCES
You’ve already talked about kids?
WARREN
We talk about everything.
(FRANCES moves to the cupboard and takes our cereal.)
FRANCES
You want some cereal?
WARREN
No thanks.
(She pours cereal in a bowl, gets milk and so on.
She sits at the table and starts to eat. )
WARREN
Course Anna’s parents are going to go postal when they find out.
Especially her Ma, always talking about Anna being a big time lawyer
some day. But she doesn’t know Anna like I do.
(WARREN pours himself more coffee. He grabs a piece
of paper and a pencil. He starts to make a list.)
WARREN
I got a thousand things to do around here. That window in your room still
broken?
FRANCES
Yes. And the light in the bathroom is still making that popping sound.
WARREN
Gotta start making calls about Mary’s roof.
FRANCES
When are you going to tell her?
(He looks up from his list.)
FRANCES
About you and Anna . . .
WARREN
I’ll tell her.
FRANCES
When?
WARREN
(snaps)
When I goddamn feel like it.
(FRANCES backs off.)
WARREN
Come on, Lady, help me out here. I need your support. Tell me I have
your support.
FRANCES
I support you.
WARREN
Now was that so hard?
(He looks at the list.)
WARREN
Will you help me stack wood later. There’s over a cord to get through.
FRANCES
Okay.
(He makes a note on his list.)
FRANCES
What would you say if I wanted to go
to college?
WARREN
If that’s what you really want and you can find a way to pay—go
for it.
FRANCES
Mrs. Letemkin has been talking to me about Columbia in New York. That’s
where she taught.
WARREN
You’d want to live there?
FRANCES
Sure.
WARREN
That’s the last place I’d ever want to live.
(She takes her cereal bowl to the sink.)
WARREN
You know, Lady, Anna wants to get to know you better. You should give
her a call later. Ask her to meet you for coffee at the BIG SIP . .
. she likes that place.
(She’s not sure what to say.)
WARREN (Cont’d)
It would mean a lot to me.
FRANCES
Okay.
(Silence. He goes back to the list.)
WARREN
Do you still want me to build you that book shelf?
FRANCES
If you have the time.
WARREN
I’ll find it.
(He adds it to the list.)
FRANCES
Warren, remember that country I was telling you about . . . the one Mrs.
Letemkin visited before she moved here . . . Bhutan?
WARREN
Uh huh . . .
FRANCES
Don’t you think it’s weird that we didn’t know anything
about it?
(He looks up from the list.)
FRANCES
About the country . . . about Bhutan. That we’d never heard about
it before. A whole country and we didn’t know it was there. What
if there are some people who are meant to go to college and places like
Bhutan and then there are other people . . . no matter how much they
want to do those things . . . it just won’t happen.
WARREN
Jesus Christ, Lady, do you actually sit around all day worrying about
this crap?
(He pulls his sister to him, trying to push her out
of her mood.)
WARREN (Cont’d)
You need to make a plan, Lady. Make a plan and stick to it.
FRANCES
I don’t think it’s that easy.
WARREN
Course it is. Anna and I are getting married as soon as we graduate.
Then I’m going to open my own plumbing business. Start a whole
goddamn chain. And
kids . . . we’ll have at least four. There
I said it. It’s done. Nothing could be easier. So what do you
think?
FRANCES
What . . .
WARREN
Of my plan?
FRANCES
It’s fine . . .
(He starts to tickle her.)
WARREN
Not good enough . . .
(She’s laughing.)
FRANCES
I like it . . .
WARREN
Still not . . .
FRANCES
Great . . . (screaming) it’s great . . .
(He keeps tickling her. She keeps screaming.
MARY enters the room carrying a bag of groceries and a cake box.
FRANCES jumps off WARREN’s lap.)
MARY
Happy birthday—Did you have a good time?
WARREN
I did.
(MARY takes the cake out of the box. She shows it
to WARREN.)
WARREN
Carrot cake?
MARY
Of course. Can we count on you for dinner?
WARREN
Told you I’d be here, Mary.
(FRANCES takes her empty cereal bowl and puts it
in the sink.
The phone rings. MARY answers it.)
MARY
Hello . . . yes . . .
(She hands the phone to FRANCES:)
FRANCES
Hello . . . sure . . . what . . . really . . . no I didn’t see
that.
(FRANCES goes to the window and looks out.)
FRANCES
Sure . . . sure . . . I’ll come right over.
(She hangs up.)
FRANCES
Mrs. Letemkin’s signs were stolen last night.
(WARREN goes to the window and looks out. FRANCES
stares at her mother.)
FRANCES
I gotta help her plant bulbs.
(As FRANCES leaves . . .)
MARY
(calling after her)
That woman takes advantage of you.
(MARY goes to the window.)
MARY
Seven hundred and fifty thousand she paid for that farm, plus the new
kitchen and extending the porch. She has well over a million in that
house, but she hires Frances to work in her garden.
(WARREN joins her at the window.)
WARREN
You know anything about those signs, Mary?
MARY
No.
(MARY walks away from the window.)
MARY
What do you think she and Frances talk about?
WARREN
I don’t know. Books, all the traveling she’s done.
MARY
I bet they talk about me . . . I bet Frances tells her what a bad mother
I am.
(He walks over to MARY.)
WARREN
What about some breakfast?
(She moves to the refrigerator.)
MARY
Bacon and eggs . . .
WARREN
No. Pancakes.
MARY
All right. (searching the refrigerator) See if I have any sausage to
go with it.
WARREN
If not . . . bacon will do . . .
(She takes out the ingredients, starts to put together
the breakfast.
WARREN pours her a cup of coffee and hands it to
her and then tops off his.)
WARREN
I’m putting together my list. Anything you can think of? MARY
That water heater . . . is that on your list . . . it’s leaking.
WARREN
It is now . . .
(He writes down her request.)
WARREN
So how was your night?
MARY
Made dinner here, had a few drinks at the Molly with Aunt.
WARREN
A few?
MARY
You’ve been talking to Frances.
WARREN
Stumbling into the house shit faced is no way to earn your daughter’s
respect.
MARY
Earn her respect? Why would I have to do that? I’m her mother.
WARREN
Mary . . .
MARY
She owes me her respect. WARREN
The two of you . . . Jesus . . .
MARY
What?
WARREN
I just get so tired of it . . . always going at each other. When did
that start? I can’t remember . . .
MARY
Your sister’s never been easy . . .
WARREN
And you are?
(MARY lightly and playfully slaps his face. He throws
an arm around her.)
WARREN
You know I’m proud of you, you do know that? Your new job . . . how
hard you work . . .
MARY
Tell me all about Boston . . . did you have a good time? Were they nice
to you . . . where did you have dinner?
WARREN
They were wicked nice, and dinner was in this amazing Italian place in
the North End. Three courses with wine. Anna’s brother in law
paid
for the whole thing. And it turns out he knows a lot about small business.
He’s an investment
banker and it’s his area of expertise. He ended up giving me all
this advice. Told me I should call him when I get started . . .
(She suddenly places a hand on his cheek.)
MARY
It was really hard not having you here yesterday.
WARREN
I know, Mary. But you survived. And I did I had a wicked good time.
(He’s grinning. She can’t stay mad
at him.)
MARY
What about a cake . . . did they buy you a cake?
(Lights come down.)
Contributor’s notes
Scene One
Scene Three
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