Post Road Magazine Issue #25
The Winner
Don Cummings
Characters:
Lydia Jeffrey's Wife
Jeffrey Lydia's Husband
Matilda Their Servant
Place:
A remote building on the edge of North America
Time:
The year 2309
(A regal woman, Lydia, is dressed in an evening gown. Not tacky, but not your taste. She is middle aged, striking, and more to the point, has been used to getting her way her whole life. She wears a ridiculous diamond necklace. Perhaps a hand mirror lies nearby. Her husband, Jeffrey, a bit older, in a fine suit, sits across from her. He has the mien of a king. His royal air chokes the room with currents of smugness. Together they drink wine, imperial as Americans can be. Near them is one silver canister—the type used by mountain climbers to breathe at very high altitudes. Empty canisters lie about. There is a hollowness of sound, an emptiness to the world.)
LYDIA
Eighteen o’three was a very good year.
JEFFREY
The revolution did not alter the fermentation of a grape.
LYDIA
Revolutions rarely do.
JEFFREY
Those silly French. What did they ever achieve?
LYDIA
Nothing apparently. They’re all dead.
(Lydia laughs uproariously.)
JEFFREY
(Laughing)
Smug frogs.
LYDIA
(Gasping for a bit of air)
So superior.
JEFFREY
With their socialism.
LYDIA
And their long vacations.
JEFFREY
(Gasping for a bit of air, too)
Well they were wrong, weren’t they?
LYDIA
Imbeciles. My happiest day was when we bought the whole damn country. Ooh.
JEFFREY
What is it?
LYDIA
(Alarmed)
My lungs. I barely have the strength to tip my glass. Jeffrey?
JEFFREY
(Resentful)
You should never have acquired the lungs of a child. They were not developed enough for adult exertions.
LYDIA
They were the last ones available.
JEFFREY
Not true.
LYDIA
Sharon was a perfect match genetically.
JEFFREY
Lucky for you.
LYDIA
She owed it to me.
JEFFREY
She was brave.
LYDIA
She couldn’t outrun me.
JEFFREY
She was a bowlegged baby. We neglected to reset her bones.
LYDIA
She deserved what she got. I am stronger and far more clever.
JEFFREY
Your most attractive qualities have served you well.
LYDIA
Absolutely. Matilda!
(Matilda enters. She is shorter than Lydia, certainly less imperial. She is their servant. She is extremely sad, but sturdy.)
MATILDA
(Barely able to breathe)
What can I do for you?
JEFFREY
Pour us some more wine.
MATILDA
Yes, Jeffrey.
LYDIA
He’s Jeffrey now?
JEFFREY
I thought I would give her a bonus.
LYDIA
Haven’t we given her enough? You can pour me some more wine, Matilda.
JEFFREY
Please pour Lydia more wine.
MATILDA
I will happily pour the sweet mother more wine.
LYDIA
You have been a very good help to us, Matilda. Don’t push it.
MATILDA
It has always been my pleasure. There’s nothing left to push.
LYDIA
Do you know what I miss most of all, Matilda?
MATILDA
What’s that, Lydia?
LYDIA
When you would pack for me. I loved how you could pack my trunks.
MATILDA
You were very particular.
LYDIA
But fair. Wasn’t I always fair?
MATILDA
You never hit me with a hairbrush
JEFFREY
And every gown Lydia wore, every jewel she placed on her neck, every crown she wore on her head, you got to touch them, Matilda. You must consider yourself a very lucky woman.
MATILDA
Of the luckiest kind.
LYDIA
Remember Christmas of three years ago when you drilled the last one million barrels?
JEFFREY
We practically got to the core of molten magma!
LYDIA
Our picture was in all media all over the world with me wearing my Hope Diamond.
JEFFREY
You were a perfect decoration.
LYDIA
I could have worn the jewels we acquired from The Vatican.
JEFFREY
That would have been de trop. Such good times.
LYDIA
Your father was right.
JEFFREY
Yes he was. The future was in oil.
LYDIA
Oh Jeffrey, so was the past. It was always oil.
(Gasping for a breath)
The fields of oil are the greatest kingdom on earth.
JEFFREY
And we ruled them with benevolence.
LYDIA
With grace.
JEFFREY
We were the wealthiest people to have ever lived. We owned it all.
LYDIA
We were flesh Gods.
MATILDA
You were despots.
LYDIA
Despots? Matilda, you do not know what you are saying,
JEFFREY
She doesn’t know the meaning of the word. She’s just a parrot.
MATILDA
You were tyrants. You killed everyone who got in your way.
JEFFREY
We were not killers.
MATILDA
There’s no one left on earth! What are you talking about?
LYDIA
Oh Matilda. You must one day accept Darwinism.
MATILDA
One day? This is the last one!
(Matilda grabs the canister and tries to open it. It will not. She bangs it, throws it against the wall, recovers it and holds it close to her chest.)
LYDIA
Jeffrey, stop her. I can barely move.
JEFFREY
Matilda. Put it down.
MATILDA
(Barely any strength)
No.
JEFFREY
Matilda, I don’t want to waste my last few breaths on having to kill you.
(Jeffrey gets up and moves slowly toward Matilda. Almost impossible.)
MATILDA
I’m in your way just like everyone else then? Just like the last few Italians, and all those Chinese? Did you think you could turn all your enemies into cash? It took the Woolly Mammoth thousands of years to become fuel. And you thought you could do it in a few months?!! You were a tyrant. A killer.
LYDIA
Jeffrey bought me Antarctica. Right after South America.
MATILDA
You talk of Darwin? That was a natural thing. Not what you did—
LYDIA
When we purchased Mars from the Russians, I wore the red silks of Catherine the Great at the acquisition ball.
JEFFREY
(To Matilda)
You killed Sharon.
MATILDA
That shit ain’t true.
JEFFREY
You plunged a knife into my daughter’s belly.
MATILDA
Only because Lydia made me.
JEFFREY
You killed her.
MATILDA
Lydia held her down. She needed her lungs.
JEFFREY
But you killed her.
MATILDA
She was a brat. I was happy to do it.
JEFFREY
You must be executed.
(Jeffrey gets to Matilda. She hides the canister inside her clothes. Jeffrey rips open her garment and grabs it. Matilda slaps it out of his hand. Jeffrey slaps Matilda so that she falls. She plunges herself onto the canister and rolls with it. Jeffrey gasps. He reaches out his hand to insist on a handover. Matilda stops all the fighting and looks at the canister, calmly, to see if she is missing some sort of trick.)
LYDIA
(To Matilda)
You’re so stupid, you can’t even open it.
MATILDA
(Hating Lydia for eternity)
You put some sort of lock on it.
(Jeffrey grabs Matilda so she drops the canister. He kicks it toward Lydia.)
JEFFREY
You have to be executed, Matilda. This is your day of reckoning.
MATILDA
You’re gonna kill me like everyone else?
JEFFREY
It is time to go outside, Matilda.
LYDIA
Go outside and get some fresh air, you hard worker! You deserve it.
(Lydia thinks this is the funniest thing anyone has ever said.)
JEFFREY
It’s time for your federally approved execution, mandated by me.
LYDIA
By us.
MATILDA
Spare me.
JEFFREY
You are to be executed right now. WALK OUT THAT DOOR, GRACIOUSLY.
LYDIA
(Smug joke to herself)
I love executions. I feel so vindicated when the less advantaged die.
JEFFREY
Lydia, go open that door.
LYDIA
With pleasure.
(Lydia holds her breath, runs to the door and opens it and then sits back down, trying to pretend she didn’t just exert herself. She is exhausted.)
LYDIA
Quick! Quick! Get her out of here and close it!
MATILDA
You don’t rule the world, Jeffrey.
JEFFREY
Yes I do.
(There is a huge scuffle between Jeffrey and Matilda, Jeffrey trying to get Matilda out the door, Matilda hanging onto him for life. During the fight, there is one passionate embrace, to commemorate what was once between them. Matilda looks up at Jeffrey, asking for love and mercy.)
MATILDA
I want to live. The sunsets are even more beautiful now. Why can’t we figure out how to live?
(Jeffrey is softened for a second and then--)
JEFFREY
Go.
(Jeffrey tosses Matilda out the door. Lydia secrets away the canister.)
MATILDA
(From outside)
Fuck me and kill me like everyone else!
(Matilda struggles and dies.)
LYDIA
Such a shame the scientists couldn’t figure out a way to make oxygen.
JEFFREY
They were morons! Could you imagine the expense?
LYDIA
Remember in Geneva when we executed the last seven of them?
JEFFREY
It was the best day of my life. Smug bastards.
(Jeffrey sits in his chair.)
JEFFREY
Open the canister. I can barely get a—
LYDIA
You exerted yourself too much dear. She wasn’t worth it.
JEFFREY
Open it.
LYDIA
I—I don’t know how to dear. It’s so tricky.
JEFFREY
Give it to me. I can do it.
LYDIA
I can’t walk all the way over there. It would waste too much energy.
JEFFREY
Lydia, come here now!
LYDIA
Oh Jeffrey, I cannot right now…I’m enjoying my long and graceful neck.
JEFFREY
(Gasping)
Lydia, I command you to bring that canister to me right now.
LYDIA
Have Matilda do it. She did so many other nice things for you—Oh that’s right. We just executed her. Goodbye Jeffrey. You were a great provider.
JEFFREY
(Lightheaded)
Lydia, please. Lydia! Lydia, my prize. Sharon was such a nice little girl. She called me Daddy. She would have loved Antarctica. Remember the penguins?
LYDIA
That was over three hundred years ago. You just remember the footage. Jeffrey…
(Jeffrey is dead.)
LYDIA
Jeffrey?…They say you never know what it’s like to be a widow until it actually happens. It’s not so bad.
(Lydia opens the canister with ease and takes a breath and gains strength.)
I had the most beautiful life ever lived. It was glorious.
(Lydia takes another breath.)
I won.
(Lydia takes another breath from the canister.)
No one is better than me. I own everything.
(Lydia thinks to stand up in triumph but realizes it is best to conserve her energy. One arm goes up, the champion. But there is no one to witness the glory. She knows she is on the brink of death. Lydia takes one more breath.)
I have such a pretty necklace.
Fade to Black.
Fade up to Orange and the shadows of Roaches.
Lydia is frozen stiff with her hand to her necklace.
To Black.
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