Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes: Revised and Complete Edition (12 page)

BOOK: Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes: Revised and Complete Edition
7.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

HARPER
: You were going to save me, but the whole time you were spinning a lie. I just don’t understand that.

PRIOR
: A person could theoretically love and maybe many do but we both know now you can’t.

LOUIS
: I do.

PRIOR
: You can’t even say it.

LOUIS
: I love you, Prior.

PRIOR
: I repeat. Who cares?

HARPER
: This is so scary, I want this to stop, to go back.

PRIOR
: We have reached a verdict, Your Honor. This man’s heart is deficient. He loves, but his love is worth nothing.

JOE
: Harper . . .

HARPER
: Mr. Lies, I want to get away from here. Far away. Right now. Before he starts talking again. Please, please—

JOE
: As long as I’ve known you Harper you’ve been afraid of . . . of men hiding under the bed, men hiding under the sofa, men with knives.

PRIOR
(Shattered; almost pleading; trying to reach him)
: I’m dying! You stupid fuck! Do you know what that is! Love! Do you know what love means? We lived together four and a half years, you animal, you idiot.

LOUIS
: I have to find some way to save myself.

JOE
: Who are these men? I never understood it. Now I know.

HARPER
: What?

JOE
: It’s me.

HARPER
: It is?

PRIOR
: Get out of my room.

JOE
: I’m the man with the knives.

HARPER
: You are?

PRIOR
: If I could get up now I’d kill you. I would. Go away. Go away or I’ll scream.

HARPER
: Oh God . . .

JOE
: I’m sorry.

HARPER
: It is you.

LOUIS
: Please don’t scream.

PRIOR
: Go.

HARPER
: I recognize you now.

LOUIS
: Please . . .

JOE
: Oh. Wait, I . . . Oh!

     
(He covers his mouth with his hand, gags, and removes his hand, red with blood)

     
I’m bleeding.

(Prior closes his eyes and screams.)

HARPER
: Mr. Lies.

MR. LIES
(Appearing, dressed in Antarctic explorer’s apparel)
: Right here.

HARPER
: I want to go away. I can’t see him anymore.

MR. LIES
: Where?

HARPER
: Anywhere. Far away.

MR. LIES
: Absolutamento.

(Harper and Mr. Lies vanish. Joe looks up, sees that she’s gone.)

PRIOR
: When I open my eyes you’ll be gone.

(Louis leaves.)

JOE
: Harper?

PRIOR
(Opening his eyes)
: Huh. It worked.

JOE
(Calling)
:
Harper?

PRIOR
: I hurt all over. I wish I was dead.

Scene 10

The same day, sunset, in front of Hannah’s house in Salt Lake City. Hannah and Sister Ella Chapter, a real-estate saleswoman and Hannah Pitt’s closest friend

although Hannah is never friendly and Ella is severely intimidated by her
.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Look at that view! A view of Heaven. Like the living city of Heaven, isn’t it, it just fairly glimmers in the sun.

HANNAH
: Glimmers.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Even the stone and brick it just glimmers and glitters like Heaven in the sunshine. Such a nice view you get, perched up on a canyon rim. Some kind of beautiful place.

HANNAH
: It’s just Salt Lake, and you’re selling the house
for
me, not
to
me.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: I like to work up an enthusiasm for my properties.

HANNAH
: Just get me a good price.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Well, the market’s off.

HANNAH
: At least fifty.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Forty’d be more like it.

HANNAH
: Fifty.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Wish you’d wait a bit.

HANNAH
: Well I can’t.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Wish you would. You’re about the only friend I got.

HANNAH
: Oh well now.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Know why I decided to like you? I decided to like you ’cause you’re the only unfriendly Mormon I ever met.

HANNAH
: Your wig is crooked.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Fix it.

(Hannah straightens Ella’s wig.)

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: New York City. All they got there is tiny rooms.

     
I always thought: People ought to stay put. That’s why I got my license to sell real estate. It’s a way of saying: Have a house! Stay put! It’s a way of saying traveling’s no good. Plus I needed the cash.

(She takes out a pack of cigarettes from her purse, lights one, offers the pack to Hannah.)

HANNAH
: Not out here, anyone could come by.

(Ella smokes. Hannah looks out over the ledge.)

HANNAH
: There’s been days I’ve stood at this ledge and thought about stepping over.

(This is news to Ella.)

HANNAH
: It’s a hard place, Salt Lake: baked dry. Abundant energy; not much intelligence. That’s a combination that
can wear a body out. No harm looking someplace else. I don’t need much room.

     
My sister-in-law Libby thinks there’s radon gas in the basement.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
(Immediately alarmed)
: Is there gas in the—

HANNAH
: Of course not. Libby’s a fool.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
(Still alarmed)
: ’Cause I’d have to include that in the description.

HANNAH
(Ending it): There’s no gas, Ella
.

     
(Little pause, then)
Give a puff.

(Hannah takes a furtive drag of Ella’s cigarette. Then she hands the cigarette back to Ella.)

HANNAH
: Put it away now.

(Ella carefully knocks the ash off the cigarette, extinguishes it and returns it to the pack. Desolate, she looks at Hannah.)

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: So I guess it’s good-bye.

HANNAH
(Uncomfortable)
: You’ll be all right, Ella, I wasn’t ever much of a friend.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: I’ll say something but don’t laugh, OK?

     
(Tentative, careful)
This is the home of saints, the godliest place on earth, they say, and I think they’re right. That mean there’s no evil here? No. Evil’s everywhere. Sin’s everywhere. But this . . . is the spring of sweet water in the desert, the desert flower. Every step a Believer takes away from here is a step fraught with peril. I fear for you, Hannah Pitt, because you are my friend. Stay put. This is the right home of saints.

HANNAH
: Latter-day saints.

SISTER ELLA CHAPTER
: Only kind left.

HANNAH
: But still. Late in the day . . . for saints and everyone. That’s all. That’s all.

     
Fifty thousand dollars for the house, Sister Ella Chapter; don’t undersell. It’s an impressive view.

ACT THREE:

Not-Yet-Conscious
,

Forward Dawning

December 1985

Scene 1

Late night, several days after the end of Act Two. Prior’s bedroom, completely dark. Prior is in bed, having a nightmare. He wakes up, sits up in bed, and switches on a lamp. He looks at his clock. Seated by the table near the bed is a man, fierce and gloomy, dressed in the clothing of a thirteenth-century British farmer/squire, carrying a scythe. Prior is terrified
.

PRIOR
: Who are you?!

PRIOR 1
: My name is Prior Walter.

(Little pause.)

PRIOR
: My name is Prior Walter.

PRIOR 1
: I know that.

PRIOR
: Explain.

PRIOR 1
: You’re alive. I’m not. We have the same name. What do you want me to explain?

PRIOR
: A ghost?

PRIOR 1
: An ancestor.

PRIOR
: Not
the
Prior Walter? The Bayeux tapestry Prior Walter?

PRIOR 1
: His great-great-grandson. The fifth of the name.

PRIOR
: I’m the thirty-fourth, I think.

PRIOR 1
: Actually the thirty-second.

PRIOR
: Not according to Mother.

PRIOR 1
(Angry!)
: She’s including the two bastards, then; I say leave them out. I say no room for bastards! The little things you swallow . . .

(The ghost snatches up a plastic pill bottle from Prior

s night-stand.)

PRIOR
: Pills.

PRIOR 1
: Pills. For the pestilence.
(He struggles to open the bottle but can’t get past the safety cap)
I too—
(He throws the bottle aside)

PRIOR
: Pestilence . . . You too what?

PRIOR 1
: The pestilence in my time was much worse than now. Whole villages of empty houses. You could look outdoors and see Death walking in the morning, dew dampening the ragged hem of his black robe. Plain as I see you now.

PRIOR
: You died of the plague.

PRIOR 1
: The spotty monster. Like you, alone.

PRIOR
: I’m not alone.

PRIOR 1
: You have no wife, no children.

PRIOR
: I’m gay.

PRIOR 1
: So? Be gay, dance in your altogether for all I care, what’s that to do with not having children?

PRIOR
: Gay homosexual, not bonny, blithe and—never mind.

PRIOR 1
: I had twelve. When I died.

(A second ghost appears, this one dressed in the clothing of an elegant seventeenth-century Londoner.)

PRIOR 1
(Pointing to the new ghost)
: And I was three years younger than him.

(Prior sees the new ghost and screams!)

PRIOR
: Oh God another one.

PRIOR
2: Prior Walter. Prior to you by some seventeen others.

PRIOR
1: He’s counting the bastards.

PRIOR
: Are we having a convention?

PRIOR
2: We’ve been sent to declare Her fabulous incipience. They love a well-paved entrance with lots of heralds, and—

PRIOR
1: The messenger come. Prepare the way. The infinite descent, a breath in air—

PRIOR
2: They chose us, I suspect, because of the mortal affinities. In a family as long-descended as the Walters there are bound to be a few carried off by plague.

PRIOR
1: The spotty monster.

PRIOR
2: Black Jack. Came from a water pump, half the city of London, can you imagine? His came from fleas. Yours, I understand, is the lamentable consequence of venery—

PRIOR
1: Fleas on rats, but who knew that?

PRIOR
: Am I going to die?

PRIOR
2: We aren’t allowed to discuss—

PRIOR
1: When you do, you don’t get ancestors to help you through it. You may be surrounded by children but you die alone.

PRIOR
: I’m afraid.

PRIOR
1
(Grim)
: You should be. There aren’t even torches, and the path’s rocky, dark and steep.

Other books

The Tangled Bridge by Rhodi Hawk
The Jewel of St Petersburg by Kate Furnivall
Feral by Gabriel, Julia
Vacation by Deb Olin Unferth
The Dain Curse by Dashiell Hammett
The Lost Estate by Henri Alain-Fournier
Evil Eye by Joyce Carol Oates
Poster Child by Emily Rapp