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PIGGS - A Novel with Bonus Screenplay

Page 17

by Neal Barrett Jr.


  BARTENDER

  Hi, Jack...

  CUT TO:

  Jack reaches the door that leads to the passageway to Wan's. Reaches for the knob, opens the door, and runs FLAT into Cat. Cat stares at Jack.

  CAT

  What the fuck you---

  Jack has had all the stress he can handle. As Cat grabs him, Jack lashes out before he can think, kicks Cat in the crotch. Cat drops him, howls.

  MOVING

  Jack runs, pauses at the men's room. It's locked. Someone's in there. He heads for the next door, a storage room.

  STORAGE ROOM

  Ducks inside, stumbles over mops, beer signs. Hides behind a stack of old tables. He can hear Cat's fury.

  OUTSIDE MEN'S ROOM

  Cat emerges with a broken urinal, a handful of pipe, suddenly figures it out, opens the storage room door. He blinks inside.

  CAT

  Little sum'bitch. Sum'BITCH!

  Grape comes up behind him.

  GRAPE

  What the hell you think you're doing, man? Get out of there.

  IN THE CLOSET

  Jack has found a board on the wall. He's desperately trying to loosen it.

  CAT (O.S.)

  Little sum'bitch is in there somewhere.

  GRAPE (O.S.

  Isn't nobody here but you. Shit, you tore up the john. Mr. Dupree's going to have a fit.

  CAT (O.S.)

  Huuuuh!

  GRAPE (O.S.)

  Get out of there. Clean this fucking mess up!

  Loud noise as something large crashes into the storeroom door. Jack cringes.

  CUT TO:

  OUTSIDE MEN'S ROOM

  A urinal lands atop the mess.

  CAT (V.O.)

  Little sum....bitch.

  IN THE CLOSET

  Jack has freed a few boards on the back wall. He presses against the boards. They don't seem to give, then---the whole thing gives way and Jack, head first, disappears.

  JACK

  Whoa....!

  IN THE CELLAR

  Jack, landing in a pile of rubble. He reaches out, touches a cement wall. Spears of light find their way through cracks. He can see he's below Piggs.

  He looks up, startled, as he hears DOUBLE FOOTSTEPS overhead. When he looks up he sees the underside of a stairway leading to the second floor.

  CUT TO:

  CLOSE UNDER THE STAIRWAY

  DUST falls through cracks.

  BACK TO

  JACK blinks. A DOOR opens above.

  CECIL (O.S.)

  Goddamn Cat! I ought to kick that dummy in the ass.

  GRAPE (O.S.)

  You, not me.

  CUT TO:

  ON JACK

  We catch him in the act of chinning himself on an old pipe, pulling himself up in the dark. A slit of light crosses his eye from the slats in the floor above.

  CECIL (O.S.)

  Him and Hutt fucking Kenny. Jesus.

  GRAPE (O.S.)

  The guy's a dope.

  CECIL (O.S.)

  'Course he's a dope. He's a messenger. You send a message, you send a dope. The dope scopes out the scene, takes it back to Junior.

  POV JACK

  A narrow horizontal view through the crack, from floor level. Cecil's bare feet as he crosses the room, toward us. One of Cecil's feet comes down on the crack, blacking out our view for an instant.

  CUT TO:

  CECIL'S ROOM

  His room is somewhere between slovenly and garish. To quote a guy I know: "Cecil's place is cheap, but it's in poor taste."Cecil gets a beer from his fridge, doesn't offer one to Grape.

  CECIL

  The guy Junior sends with the package, this is the guy we've got to watch.

  GRAPE

  It'll be somebody else.

  CECIL

  It'll be more than somebody. Somebody and his friends.

  Cecil crosses the room.

  CUT TO:

  THE CELLAR

  Jack has scrunched himself onto a cement ledge. Light from above comes through the gaps in the floor.

  BACK TO CECIL'S ROOM

  GRAPE

  To make sure it goes down okay.

  Cecil makes a face.

  CECIL

  Don't be a klutz. It's not supposed to go down. I know old man Ambrose. He's maybe dying, he's not dead. We don't get the goods. HE gets the money. This is how he sees it coming off. Once he sees a hundred grand sitting there for the taking...

  GRAPE

  You let him see it?

  CECIL

  Got to let him see it.

  GRAPE

  We got a hundred Gs?

  Cecil's birthmark goes dark. Grape sees his mistake, raises a protective hand.

  GRAPE

  Hey....

  He waves Cecil off.

  CUT TO:

  JACK

  CECIL (O.S.)

  Go one, get me some ribs. Don't go to that place on the highway, go on into Lockhart. And find that dumb shit Jack. Don't play with him, just bring him here.

  ON JACK

  He hears the door close, hears Grape go down the stairs. He listens. Hears Cecil go across the room, open the fridge, get another beer. Hears Cecil come back. He stops. Right on top of Jack's position. He hears Cecil squat down. Cecil uses something to pry up a floor board. Jack nearly panics. But, only a little light comes through. Jack hears Cecil pull something out of the floor. Then he hears a key click in a metal box. Cecil takes a stack of something out of the box, lays it on the floor. Then another stack. Jack can see the shadows of the stacks through the cracks. Then, Cecil picks up a stack, rifles through it. Jack's eyes go wide. There's only one thing makes a sound like that. MONEY! Cecil flicks through another stack, and another. Finally, he puts the stacks back in the box, locks it, puts it back in the hollow in the floor, snaps the boards back in place. Jack looks up, makes kissing motions with his lips. Hears Cecil go back, open the fridge. Hears him turn on the TV. Jack just sits there a moment, and grins.

  DISSOLVE TO:

  DARK CELLAR

  Jack feels his way past boxes, debris, in the half light. He reaches a cyclone fence. Looks surprised. What the hell is a fence doing down here? He walks through a narrow passage between rows of fences.

  ANOTHER VIEW

  The room suddenly ends at a rusty ladder. He climbs up. Bricks fall around him. He lifts a rusty manhole cover aside.

  EXT. PARKING LOT

  Jack peeks up.

  POV JACK

  He sees Ortega sitting on the back steps of Wan's. Headlights glare and Jack ducks as a carload of college guys roar right over him.

  CUT TO:

  PIGGS MAIN FLOOR

  Maggie is doing a lap dance for a RUBE. Rube is dazed, not listening at all.

  MAGGIE

  I was going with this guy, he had a Honda dealership in Houston? Least that's what he says he's doing, right?

  I catch him one day, he is coming out of this Nazi bookstore?

  Christ, used to be you could tell a man by what he drives...

  RUBE

  Huuh..huhh...

  DRESSING ROOM

  Gloria and Wilda. Gloria going through her costumes. Wilda is eating Ricky's chocolates, watching the tiny TV. Ricky's rose is stuck in an empty beer bottle. Minnie is in the john.

  GLORIA

  I am not a racial person at all. It's not the color of a man's skin it is what's inside. If a man is of the greaser folk, that is what God meant him to be, he cannot help that.

  FAVOR WILDA

  WILDA

  That isn't no taco he's wearing, dearie. That is your honest to God Roll-o-dex is what it is. You could buy a Lexus for that.

  BACK TO SCENE:

  GLORIA

  I do admire a man who will talk about something besides "You think the Cowboys got a chance?" I cannot go a minute on current events.

  MINNIE (O.S.)

  (from the john)

  Don't be fooled by that, hon. A man don't give a damn about talk
ing to a woman. You're lucky, he'll talk to the other end a while.

  GLORIA

  That is not entirely fair.

  WILDA

  It's disgusting is what it is.

  WILDA (CONT'D)

  Arnie Pratt, used to come in? Took me to this part in San Antone. Wasn't anyone there but these proctologists. Not a one of their wives would turn their backs on those dudes.

  MINNIE

  Isn't a man I ever saw isn't an asshole doctor, you give 'em half a chance.

  GLORIA

  Know what a guy said to me last night? "If women would go around naked, we wouldn't have to have strip clubs."

  MINNIE (O.S.)

  Sounds like something they'd say in France. Sin is not a big issue over there. What they do is get right to it.

  Your European does not share the re-pressive nature of your normal American male...

  Wilda and Gloria look blank.

  WILDA

  What?

  SOUND of toilet flushing.

  CUT TO:

  THE WOODS NEAR WAN'S

  Jack and Ortega are walking toward a grove of large oak trees.

  ORTEGA

  I think Cat is gonna kill you, Jack. Maybe worse than that. I was you, I'd go east. I would go to Maine or Delaware.

  JACK

  Why up there?

  ORTEGA

  'Cause Cat don't know where it is.

  JACK

  I'll keep it in mind.

  ORTEGA

  (pausing)

  I think the great whales are against us. I think there is evil in these creatures we have yet to dream about.

  JACK

  I never gave it much thought.

  ORTEGA

  Look at a whale sometime. Look him right in the eye.

  JACK

  What do you know about Chavez? What's he do? Big guy. Comes over here from San Antone.

  ORTEGA

  (frowns, as if insulted)

  I know who he is, Jack. You don't got to tell me who he is. A white man is thinking, both these dudes are enchiladas, they gonna know each other, right?

  JACK

  You been drinking, pal.

  ORTEGA

  Si. We are all borracho. Read you fucking Hemingway. It is this thing of the drink, Ingles.

  JACK

  I feel I've caught you in a bad frame of mind.

  Jack and Ortega reach the far edge of the grove, where Ortega has set up a shabby tent near his BEAT-UP CAR.

  ORTEGA

  Chavez owns a bank in San Antonio. He has about a billion acres near Carrizo Springs.

  JACK

  Jesus. That explains the gold-toed boots.

  ORTEGA

  People of the Hispanic culture say a man like this has the suerte, the luck. Good fortune.

  JACK

  That's what people of the gringo culture say too. You going to go anywhere, you going to be here?

  ORTEGA

  Why don't you just ask? Give me the courtesy of that.

  JACK

  Okay. You think I could use the car?

  ORTEGA

  There is very little gas. I will hold you responsible, you run out and leave it somewhere.

  JACK

  (frowns, like his feelings are hurt)

  I wouldn't do that, amigo.

  ORTEGA

  Good. Because you have done this a number of times before.

  Jack lays an arm on Ortega's shoulder, gets close, confidential like. Ortega shows he's suspicious of such an action from Jack.

  JACK

  Besides, buddy, changes are rapidly taking place in my life. I can't say a lot about it right now, but I will likely be buying you a new car of your choice right soon.

  ORTEGA

  Good. Do not lose this one until you do.

  JACK

  You people are a very suspicious race.

  ORTEGA

  I wonder where the fock we get that?

  MAIN ROOM -MUCH LATER THAT NIGHT

  The contrast is startling. The place is almost empty. A couple of strippers are leaving. Hutt, under the weather, talks to the aging lady bartender.

  HUTT

  This....and do not take offense... This is not--not my idea of a really swinging town. You know?

  BARTENDER

  Uh-huh.

  HUTT

  (glances at the bartender)

  You get off?

  BARTENDER

  I used to. How about you?

  Hutt sits on the floor. Bartender raises a brow. Cat comes out of shadow, carries Hutt toward the door.

  CUT TO:

  DOWN THE ROAD

  Jack slumps in Ortega's car, trying to read a Discover in the dark, and keep one eye on Gloria's Rambler in the nearly empty parking lot of Piggs.

  POV JACK

  A car picks up Wilda and Minnie.

  DISSOLVE:

  MOMENTS LATER ON JACK

  Jack wearily opens his eyes.

  POV JACK

  THROUGH WINDSHIELD

  Maggie Thatch leaves in her pickup with a British flag painted on the door.

  ON JACK

  He picks up another magazine, one with a whale on the cover. Looks puzzled.

  ON HUTT

  Hutt staggers out alone, drives off erratically.

  BACK TO JACK

  He yawns. Closes his eyes. Opens them quickly, looks up.

  POV JACK

  Gloria stands by her Rambler, sees a tire is flat, kicks it in disgust. At that moment, Cecil's car lights go on, and he pulls up beside Gloria. He gets out, talks to Gloria. Gloria argues a minute, then gets in the car.

  ON JACK

  Jack gapes, pounds on the steering wheel. This is too much.

  INT. CECIL'S CAR -NIGHT

  MOVING

  Cat drives, Grape beside him. Cecil sits in back with Gloria.

  GLORIA

  It's very nice of you, Mr. Dupree, you don't have to do this.

  CECIL

  What are you talking about? People help each other, that's what people do. And not Mister Dupree, please. I feel old, a young lady like you calls me that. You get to be my age, that is not a title you care to hear.

  GLORIA

  Oh, I don't think I could.

  CECIL

  Could what?

  GLORIA

  Call you that. I feel it would be a presumption on my part, me being in your employment and all.

  CECIL

  Well, as your employer, I say it's Cecil, I say Cecil's just fine.

  GLORIA

  If you say so.

  CECIL

  So say it.

  GLORIA

  Do what?

  CECIL

  Say it.

  GLORIA

  Say what?

  CECIL

  Say it. Say "Cecil."

  GLORIA

  You mean all by itself?

  CECIL

 

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