Angels in America (28 page)

Read Angels in America Online

Authors: Tony Kushner

BOOK: Angels in America
6.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

ROY
(To Belize)
: Get the fuck away from me.

JOE
(Going toward Roy)
: Roy, please, get back into—

ROY
(To Joe)
: SHUT UP!

     
Now you listen to me.

BELIZE
(To Roy)
: Get your—

ROY
(To Belize)
: SHUT UP I SAID.

     
(To Joe)
I want you home. With your wife. Whatever else you got going, cut it dead.

JOE
: Oh. Oh I, I
can't
, Roy, I need to be with him, I need to, I'm—

(Roy grabs Joe by the shirt, smearing it with blood.)

ROY
: YOU NEED?
Listen to me. You do what I say. Or you will regret it
.

(Roy lets go of Joe's shirt, turning from him, disoriented, looking for the bed:)

ROY
(To Joe)
: And don't talk to me about it.
Ever again
.

(Belize moves in, takes Roy to the bed and begins bandaging the punctured arm.)

ROY
(To Joe)
: I . . . never saw that coming. You kill me.

BELIZE
(To Joe)
: Get somewhere you can take off that shirt and throw it out, and don't touch the blood.

JOE
: Why? I don't unders—

ROY
: OUT! OUT! You already got my blessing— WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT FROM ME?

(He has a terrible wracking spasm.)

BELIZE
(To Joe)
: Get the fuck outta here!

JOE
(To Roy)
: Please, wait, let me just wait till—

ROY
(Exhausted)
: Till
what
? You what, you want to stay and watch
this
? Well fuck you, too.

(Joe leaves
.

     
Belize finishes bandaging Roy's arm, both of them silent for as long as this takes
.

     
When he's finished with the arm, Belize straightens up a little. Roy looks blankly at the bandage, then:)

ROY
: Every goddamn thing I ever wanted they have taken from me. Mocked and reviled, all my life.

BELIZE
: Join the club.

ROY
: I don't belong to any club you could get through the front door of.

     
You watch yourself you take too many liberties.

     
What's your name?

BELIZE
(A beat, then)
: Norman Arriaga. Belize to my friends, but you can call me Norman Arriaga.

ROY
: Tell me something, Norman, you ever hire a lawyer?

BELIZE
: No Roy. Never did.

ROY
: Hire a lawyer, sue somebody, it's good for the soul.

     
Lawyers are . . . the High Priests of America. We alone know the words that made America. Out of thin air. We alone know how to use The Words. The Law: the only club I ever wanted to belong to. And before they take that from me, I'm going to die.

(Roy has a series of awful spasms, the worst so far; they shake him violently. Roy grabs Belize by both arms. Belize tries to control Roy's body as he convulses in horrible pain. Roy hangs onto Belize; they're in a tight, desperate embrace, both shaken by Roy's agonized spasming
.

     
During this seizure, Ethel appears.)

ROY
: Sssshhh. Fire. Out.

(The pain subsiding a little, Roy forces the convulsions to abate. Through the remainder of the scene, with grim effort, conserving his resources, he just manages to keep his body under his control.)

ROY
: God have mercy. This is a lousy way to go.

BELIZE
: God have mercy.

ROY
(Seeing Ethel)
: Look who's back.

BELIZE
(Looking around, seeing no one)
: Who?

ROY
: Mrs. Reddy Kilowatt.

     
Fucking horror. How's . . . Yonkers?

BELIZE
: I almost feel sorry for you.

ETHEL
: A bad idea.

ROY
: Yeah. Pity. Repulsive.

     
(To Belize)
You. Me.
(He snaps his fingers)
No. Connection.

     
(Looking at Ethel)
Nobody . . . with me now. But the dead.

Scene 2

Same day. Louis sitting alone, cold, on a park bench
.

Prior enters and sits on the bench, as far as he can from Louis
.

PRIOR
: Oh this is going to be so much worse than I'd imagined.

LOUIS
: Hello.

PRIOR
: Fuck you you little shitbag.

LOUIS
: Don't waste energy beating up on me, OK? I'm already taking care of that.

PRIOR
: Don't see any bruises.

LOUIS
: Inside.

PRIOR
: You are one noble guy.
Inside
. Don't flatter yourself, Louis.

     
So. It's your tea party. Talk.

LOUIS
: It's good to see you again. I missed you.

PRIOR
: Talk.

LOUIS
: I want to . . . try to make up.

PRIOR
: Make up.

LOUIS
: Yes. But—

PRIOR
: Aha. But.

LOUIS
: But you don't have to be so hostile. Don't I get any points for trying to arrive at a resolution? Maybe what I did isn't forgivable but—

PRIOR
: It isn't.

LOUIS
: But. I'm trying to be responsible. Prior. There are limits. Boundaries. And you have to be reasonable.
(Unable not to ask) Why are you dressed like that?

PRIOR
(A challenging, cold smile)
: You were saying something about being reasonable.

LOUIS
: I've been giving this a lot of thought. Yes I fucked up, that's obvious. But maybe you fucked up too. You
never trusted me, you never gave me a chance to find my footing, not really, you were so quick to attack and . . . I think, maybe just too much of a victim, finally. Passive. Dependent. And what I think is that people do have a choice about how they handle—

PRIOR
(Cutting to the chase)
: You want to come back. Why? Atonement? Exoneration?

LOUIS
: I didn't say I wanted to come back.

(Pause.)

PRIOR
: Oh.

     
No, you didn't.

LOUIS
(Softly, almost pleading)
: I can't. Move in again, start all over again. I don't think it'd be any different.

(Little pause. Prior looks hard at Louis.)

PRIOR
: You're seeing someone else.

LOUIS
(Shocked)
: What? No.

PRIOR
: You are.

LOUIS
: I'M NOT. Well, occasionally a . . . He's a . . . just a pickup, how do you—

PRIOR
: Threshold of revelation. Now: Ask me how I know he's a Mormon.

(Louis stares, shocked; Prior's as surprised as Louis.)

PRIOR
:
Is
he a Mormon?

     
(Little pause, then impressed and frightened:)

     
Well, goddamn.

     
Ask me how I knew.

LOUIS
: How?

PRIOR
(Furious)
: Fuck you! I'm a prophet!

     
Reasonable? Limits?
Tell it to my
lungs
, stupid, tell it to my lesions, tell it to the cotton-woolly patches in my eyes!

LOUIS
: Prior, I . . . haven't seen him for days now, I just—

PRIOR
: I'm going, I have limits, too.

(Prior starts to leave. He has an attack of respiratory trouble. He sits heavily on the bench. Louis reaches out to him; Prior waves him away
.

     
Louis cries. Prior looks at Louis.)

PRIOR
: You cry, but you endanger nothing in yourself. It's like the idea of crying when you do it. Or the idea of love.

     
So. Your
boyfriend
—

LOUIS
: He's not my—

PRIOR
: Tell me where you met him.

LOUIS
: In the park. Well, first at work, he—

PRIOR
: He's a lawyer or a judge?

LOUIS
: Lawyer.

PRIOR
: A Gay Mormon Lawyer.

LOUIS
: Yes. Republican too.

PRIOR
: A Gay Mormon Republican Lawyer.
(With scathing contempt) Louis
. . .

LOUIS
: But he's sort of, I don't know if the word would be . . . well, in a way sensitive, and I—

PRIOR
: Ah. A
sensitive
gay Republican.

LOUIS
: He's just company. Companionship.

(Pause.)

PRIOR
: Companionship. Oh.

     
You know just when I think he couldn't possibly say anything to make it worse, he does. Companionship. How
good
. I wouldn't want you to be
lonely
.

     
There are thousands of gay men in New York City with AIDS and nearly every one of them is being taken care of by . . . a friend or by . . . a lover who has stuck by them through things worse than my . . . So far. Everyone got that, except me. I got you. Why? What's wrong with me?

(Louis is crying again.)

PRIOR
: Louis? Are you really bruised inside?

LOUIS
: I can't have this talk anymore.

PRIOR
: Oh the
list
of things you can't do. So fragile! Answer me: Inside: Bruises?

LOUIS
: Yes.

PRIOR
: Come back to me when they're visible. I want to see black and blue, Louis, I want to see blood. Because I can't believe you even
have
blood in your veins till you show it to me. So don't come near me again, unless you've got something to show.

(Prior leaves.)

Scene 3

Night of the following day. Roy's hospital room. There are several new machines, monitoring Roy's condition, which is considerably worse. Roy is sleeping a deep, morphine-induced sleep. Belize enters, carrying a tray and a glass of water. With some difficulty he wakes up Roy
.

BELIZE
: Time to take your pills.

ROY
(Waking, very disoriented)
: What? What time of . . .

     
Water.

(Belize gives him a glass of water. Roy takes a sip.)

ROY
: Bitter.

     
Look
out there. Black midnight.

BELIZE
: You want anything?

ROY
: Nothing that comes from there. As far as I'm concerned you can take all that away.

     
(Seeing Belize)
Oh . . .

BELIZE
: What?

ROY
: Oh. The bogeyman is here.

     
Lookit, Ma, a schvartze toytenmann.

     
Come in, sweetheart, what took you so long?

BELIZE
: You're flying, Roy. It's the morphine. They put morphine in the drip to stop the . . . You awake? Can you see who I am?

ROY
: Oh yeah, you came for my mama, years ago.

     
(Confiding, intimate)
You wrap your arms around me now. Squeeze the bloody life from me. OK?

BELIZE
: Uh, no, it's not OK. You're stoned, Roy.

Other books

Jodi Thomas by The Tender Texan
Linny's Sweet Dream List by Susan Schild
Aleph by Paulo Coelho
Three Weeks in Paris by Barbara Taylor Bradford
A Baby Before Dawn by Linda Castillo
The Lonely Pony by Catherine Hapka
Halloween and Other Seasons by Al, Clark Sarrantonio, Alan M. Clark