by John Bailey
SCENE 1: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. THURSDAY, AROUND MIDNIGHT
FX: AMERICAN RADIO BASEBALL (of game in
Western time zone) COMMENTARY CIRCA 1947, QUIET IN BACKGROUND
BIG JOE: Hiya … what ‘ill it be?
SOLDIER: You
gotta beer? .. something local, not too strong.
BIG JOE: Goose
Island Red? From two blocks along ..
good ‘old country’ taste. Around
4%.. just enough kick -
SOLDIER: Yeah, yeah .. whatever.
FX: sound of pouring beer and glass landing on bar
BIG JOE: One
Goose Red. . that’ll hit the spot. ........ You look like
you need it.
SOLDIER: What does that mean?
BIG JOE: Hey . I
don’t mean nothin’. Just you look beat,
like you been travellin’ a long time.
SOLDIER: Yeah … well I have. You got a problem with that?
BIG JOE: No,
no. Like I say. I don’t mean
nothin’. I guess I just like to talk,
when it’s quiet.
SOLDIER: Well
yeah, I can see it’s quiet. Just me and the
dame in the corner .... talking to
herself.
BIG JOE: Ah,
She’s OK. She’s here most nights. Talks
into a … a voice recorder …that machine on the table
SOLDIER: -
a dictaphone. They’re called a dictaphone.
BIG JOE: Dictaphone? Yeah, could be you’re right. Dicta-somethIn’ she called it. She’s no trouble, just talks into her machine
and downs martinis. … and margoritas on
Sundays.
SOLDIER: What day is it today?
BIG JOE: Hey
fella, you are busted. It’s
Thursday … except it’s not .. it’s now turned Friday. You must’ve been on the road a long time.
SOLDIER: Yea,
well, on the road, in the air … whatever.
It’s been some week … and it
ain’t finished yet.
BIG JOE: Does
this bother you? ... the radio ... I can turn it off if you want.
SOLDIER: Naw
.. leave it on .... I played a bit, an
age ago.. It’s the Cubs I guess .. playing
away?
BIG JOE: Yessir
.. the Cubs out west. .. So you played a bit . .. I pitched at college
but was nowhere near the draft, still follow it . Did you play for real?
SOLDIER:
‘Play for real?’.... interesting words
.. I guess I know what you mean ...
and yeah I played and I hit my share of home runs in the army .. but
that’s as far as it went.
BIG JOE: So
what now? What brings you to the windy
city?
SOLDIER: Oh,
the usual. Yer know ..
buying and selling. This and
that.
FX: SOUND OF DINER DOOR OPENING, NO
STREET NOISE
BIG JOE: Oh
excuse me a moment ... Father Michael, we’re just closing, it’s too late to serve
you now ...
FATHER MICHAEL (WORSE FOR DRINK): Bless you my
son, I’ll just have the one medicinal sup for the road and I’ll be gone .. I’ll
not delay you, Joe.
BIG JOE: Father
Michael, you must leave now ... it’s too late ... I’ll not be serving you ...
careful, Father, mind youself now. Please don’t do that .... It’s OK, I’ve got
you – I’ve got you. ...Please don’t do that.
You need to let go of the bar now Father
.... We’re just going to walk
back to the door Father, and then I’m locking up for the night.
Yeah, Please
don’t do that ...
That’s it, just put one foot in front of the other and
we’ll get there... Now do you think you
can walk back on your own .... You don’t
want me to get Father Ignatious to collect you?
FATHER MICHAEL: Oh
no, no no we don’t want to trouble the ‘Revered’
Father ..no, no, no I’ll walk .. it
is only next door. Bless you Joe, and I
know we know the value of discretion don’t we ... no, no, no, ‘Father Indignatious’ really doesn’t
want to be troubled if we can help it.
BIG JOE: Well
Good Night Father ... and I’m locking
the door after you. .... Good night Father.
FX: SOUND OF DINER DOOR OPENING, CLOSING
& BEING LOCKED
SOLDIER: That man was a priest .
BIG JOE He
still is soldier, he still is! ... Was it
the dog-collar or the frock or that I called him ‘Father’ that gave it away?
SOLDIER: .. and he was blind drunk.
BIG JOE: Observer
Corps was it? Your time in the army? . the
seminary’s next door. Father Michael’s one
of our regulars. He’s surprisingly handy
with his fists when the mood takes him, and he does this thing with his ...
Anyway ... he’s gone now.
SOLDIER: So I’m locked in now am I?
BIG JOE: Only
for the four minutes it takes the good father to find his door.
SARAH: ‘Good Father’ .. my arse!
BIG JOE: Thank
you, Sarah.
SOLDIER: Arse?
BIG JOE: It’s
a limey word for ass.
SOLDIER: I
know that! ... just haven’t heard it in a while.
BIG JOE: Sarah
...... - is English. Which explains the dislike she has for Father
Michael... when he’s ‘in the mood’ he
takes to singing IRA songs and passing round the hat. That upsets her ladyship a bit.
SOLDIER: I
get the picture. .. for me, I like the limeys .. good in a firefight anyways. I’ve got time for them. .. don’t know how
much time I got for drunken priests.
BIG JOE: I
don’t judge from this side of the bar. Your
glass is empty .... another beer?
SOLDIER: Yeah, it’s a sweet drop ...
I’ll have another..
FX: SOUND OF BEER BEING POURED
BIG JOE (over his shoulder): Before
we were interupted by Father Michael you were telling me what you did.
FX: SOUND OF BEER GLASS LANDING ON BAR
SOLDIER: No,
I wasn’t. ... You were asking .... but I
wasn’t sayin’.
BIG JOE: So
what is your line?
SOLDEIR: This and that.
BIG JOE: Oh-kay?.
SOLDIER: Like
I say ... this and that .. you know, basic commerce, it’s what makes the world go
round ... I buy and sell .... this and
that.
BIG JOE: This
and that?
SOLDIER: OK...you
want an answer? ... I buy and sell paper and metals ... you know; silver, copper, brass, some
nickle. And every now and then I trade a
bit of lead. OK? ... you got a problem
with that?
BIG JOE: No
problem, no problem at all. ... just making talk. I don’t mean nothin by it.
SOLDIER: Good
... hey I’m sorry .. I’m beat OK?
.. but you know .. you stop
pitching .. and I’ll stop hitting
... I think your other customer
wants you.
SARAH: Hey
Joe! Another ‘straight up’ – a girl
could die of thirst over here.
BIG JOE: Sure
thing Sarah
(IN A WHISPER TO SOLDIER)
She thinks
she’s a writer or somethin’.
SARAH (CLOSE): It’s
nearly a week ... shame about Joe’s mirror.
A guy from out of town rolled into the bar, maybe 10 minutes ago. Joe’s doing his usual, harassing the poor devil. He sounds tired. Could put him in the next book: a tall, dark stranger, maybe.
Well I’d say he’s out of town, because he’s dead on his feet and his
accent’s different. Where shall I put
him on the character scale, zero to hero? – travelling rep in hotel linen, a private eye
or a mafia hitman?
I guess I can make him whatever I want him to be.
SARAH: Thank
you Joe, you sweetie. You do look after
me very well my dear. Who’s your new friend?
BIG JOE: (INTIMATELY) Some
fella that doesn’t say much. Bit
touchy .. could be he’s just beat. Or it could be he don’t say much cos I do all
the talkin’.
SARAH: You
don’t say.
FX: BAR CLATTER, GLASSES ETC
BIG JOE: Do
you want another Red? Or a different
beer? Or fancy a shot before you go?
SOLDIER: I’ve
had enough of what made Milwaukie famous …
I’ll have a whiskey .. an Irish if you’ve got one.
BIG JOE: Bushmills
or Jamesons?
SOLDIER: Bushmills.
BIG JOE: I
don’t know if you know it, but your Irish whiskey is chasing Irish beer. You from the old country yerself – going back
I mean?
SOLDIER: There
you go … questions, questions. … OK, put your hands down I ain’t gonna shoot. .... But
I’ve got one for you.
BIG JOE: Go
on.
SOLDIER: What’s
missing behind the bar? This place is a
temple to glass and chrome .. and behind the bar – in pride of place – there’s
a big hole in the wall.
BIG JOE: That
... that was my pride and joy… an
engraved mirror. The full size of that
there. ... what’s that? Ten feet across,
6 high? Cost me a fortune. The whole
glass was this eagle swooping with its talons open, like that. I loved it, swear to God. Stencilled across the top in 10 inch
letters ... ‘The Nighthawk Diner’. ... Gone
now. Gone in a blast from a pump.
SOLDIER: No
say?
BIG JOE: Some
guys had a disagreement that began in the bank – over there, other side of the
road – and they decided to carry on the fight in here. Over in a minute. Scary.
SOLDIER: I
bet.
BIG JOE: Never
had any trouble here, in 15 years. Nothin. Then boom. My bird’s blown outta the sky.
SOLDIER: I’m
sorry to hear that.
BIG JOE: Thank
you, sir. I appreciate that.
SOLDIER: Two
men you say?
BIG JOE: Well
no, not in here, just the one guy came
in here. He was mighty agitated .. and
it happend so fast ... boom!
SOLDIER: He
didn’t say nothing? Just started shooting?
BIG JOE: He
crashed through the door, that’s what made everyone turn .. then it was like he
was looking for someone .. he continues
walking into the bar and sees the mirror.
He fires two shots and backs out into the street and disappears. ... Now
you tell me, Army man, you been around guns and the people who use them ..
what’s your take on that?
SOLDIER: I ain’t
got a clue, but if I had to guess, hell knows
.. you said there was more than
one of them and this guy was looking for someone, and he was .. you said ‘agitated’
... so maybe he sees this guy coming towards him with a gun and shoots first
... not realising that it’s his own reflection he’s wasted. ... listen I don’t
know ...
who does, does the shooter even?
BIG JOE: Mighty
strange ... that’s all I can say .. but you could be right .. especially if he couldn’t see too good.
SOLDIER: How do
ya mean – couldn’t see too good? .. what’s that about?
BIG JOE: Didn’t
I say ... he had an eye patch. ....
SOLDIER: HA,
HA!
BIG JOE: ....
what’s so funny about that? What’s so
funny about an eyepatch?’
SOLDIER: Ha ha
.. I come into the quietest bar in the whole mid-west and you’re spinning me a
tale about wild shoot outs .. look at
this place .. it’s as good as empty .. no offence but I’ve seen more life in a
morgue. There’s a weird dame in the
window, wearing dark glasses in the middle of the night, talking to herself ...
there’s you and me crying into our beer
about them glory days we played ball ...
and on top of the drunken priest you throw in the eye patch. I’m too tired to work out who’s fooling who
and why .. is this for real? Or are you playing me or something?
BIG JOE: Buddy
... believe me it happened. Come back
tomorrow when the joint is full and you’ll see.
It’s still the only topic of conversation .. that and the Cubs.
SOLDIER: Well I’m
gonna turn in. There’s twenty bucks, put the rest to your new
mirror.
BIG JOE: Thank you.
Thank you very much.
SOLDIER: Good
night.
BIG JOE: Sleep
well , soldier.
FX: GLASSES CLASH AS JOE CLEARS UP, HE TURNS RADIO OFF
BIG JOE: Now,
Sarah are you done? cos time’s getting on.
SARAH: Yep,
I’m through. Put it on my slate dear boy.
You know, I was thinking about your new friend at the
bar … did he remind you of anyone ?
BIG JOE: Anyone
in mind?
SARAH: I’m
thinking of our visitor last week
... the one with the violent
antipathy to birds.
BIG JOE: Aw
, naw
…. I mean I’ll give you the same build, same age, .. but no.
This guy was ok – he donated a portrait of Jackson towards a new mirror. ...
and he had two eyes.
SARAH: Remember
I’m English Joe. Portrait of Jackson?
...
BIG JOE: Yer
know, on the dollar bills – the Presidents ... Washington on the £1 dollar. Andrew Jackson’s on a ‘twenty’. The ones you want are Cleavland on a $1,000,
and the cherry on the pie – Madison on
the five Grand.
SARAH: I’ll
bear that in mind – but your new customer… I know he’s not the same guy . but
he’s the same kind of guy.
BIG JOE: What
makes you say that?
SARAH: Easy
... his shoes.
BIG JOE: His
shoes?
SARAH: Yes,
his shoes!
BIG JOE: You’ve
got an over active imagination and it’s late...
I’m closing up and sending you home.
I’ll call the taxi for you, OK?
SARAH: OK,
Joe ... whatever you say.
FX: CLICK AS JOE TURNS RADIO OFF,
SILENCE
SCENE 2: AT THE
BAR IN THE DINER. FRIDAY, AROUND 6:00pm
FX: NOISY BAR CHAT FADES UP, COMPETES
WITH RADIO (JACK BENNY, JUDY GARLAND, PAT BOONE, GLENN MILLER)
BIG JOE: I
can’t hear yer, soldier, you’ll have to speak up! I said last night it would be busy!
SOLDIER: I’ll
try another beer, like last time... the same but different,. know what I mean?
BIG JOE: No
problem, I’ll find you somethin... this
is Heinrich by the way, he was here last week,
he can tell you about the shooter.
SOLDIER: Hi
Heinrich, so it’s true is it? This guy
walks in off the street, goes up to the bar, lets rip with a shotgun, and then walks
out again. That’s what happened ?
HEINRICH: Yeah, that’s right ,,,, I’m a
cab driver.
SOLDIER: Say again?
HEINRICH: You know, big yellow
cabs! I drive cabs.
SOLDIER: Are you not hearing me too
good here?
HEINRICH: Yessir, I drive them big yellow cabs, all day and
sometimes all night. That’s what I
do. I drive my cab. Say you’re not from around here are you? ....
cos in forty years I’ve driven most everyone in the back of my
cab.... and I’ve got a good memory for
faces.
SOLDIER: Oh
Great! you don’t have a clue what I’m saying. (SHOUTS) LAST WEEK! .... LAST FRIDAY!
DID YOU SEE THE SHOOTER?
HEINRICH: Yessir!
... yessir, I saw the whole game. Are
you a Cubs fan too? So how come you
follow the Cubs if you’re not from round here?
Hey, Joe whadyaknow? This outta-towner’s
a Cubs fan , whadya make of that?
BIG JOE: Try
that for size, it’s an English style, a
warm beer ... You might have had something similar in England – I am right you
did serve in England in the war?
SOLDIER: Uh
huh. .... Me and Heinrich here are
having a little communication problem.
Something tells me he’s a little deaf.
BIG JOE: You’re
wrong there soldier – he ain’t a little deaf, he’s completely deaf. And I did tell you the only topics of conversation
would be the shooter or the Cubs. .... Looks
like you drew the Cubs.
SOLDIER: A
deaf cab driver – how does he manage that?
I mean it must be a miracle anyone gets to where they need to be.
BIG JOE: Over
40 years Heinrich’s got to know his fares and where they want to go. And – this is the smart bit – he lip reads in
the mirror. He doesn’t hear too good,
but he compensates by seeing everything and remembering what he’s seen.
SOLDIER: Is
this whole town weird? .. or is it just
this bar?
BIG JOE: Who’s
weird soldier, huh? Who’s normal? . Anyways I got customers to see to ... enjoy your beer.
SARAH (CLOSE): I can hear the raised voice of our east-
coast arrival. He must have discovered
Heinrich – and he’s plugging him about last week. Why’s he so interested? ...
The book .. I need a leading lady to
pitch against my hero.
OFFICER TREMBLE: You
the fella hollering about the shooter?
SOLDIER: Who
wants to know? ... oh .. I see .. You on duty?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Relax,
Mister ... this is my downtime .. there’s quite a crowd on a Friday night doing
the same, much the same as last
week. Forty guys with forty different
versions of what happened ... I should know ... I’m the sap that interviewed every
one of them.
SOLDIER: And you saw it yourself,
right?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Right,
right ... come straight off the shift.
Had one quick beer and was enjoying a slower second when ‘BOOM, BOOM!’, Joe’s eagle was dropped from the
sky.
SOLDIER: Real
lucky that none of you was hurt bad .. all that flying glass, I mean. Would the shooter have been cut? .. was he
close enough to the bar?
OFFICR TREMBLE: What’s
with all the questions fella ... doya
fancy you can do my job better than me?
SOLDIER: Easy
Officer, easy .. you gotta admit this doesn’t happen everyday in your average
joint. I came in last night – and the
Bartender told me what happened ... I liked his beers so I came back. He said there would be two conversations
tonight – the shooter and the ‘Cubs’, and I’m really not a Cubs fan.
OFFICER TREMBLE: No .. you’re east coast right?
SOLDIER: Sorta
.. you could say I prefer red Sox to
white. ... but tell me .. I was busy all day and never got a chance to cash
money for the weekend. I guess no banks
open in this big city of yours, at this time?
OFFICER TREMBLE: No
way, Jose .... but Joe’ll cash a cheque
for you.
JOSEPHINE: Officer,
Officer, I’m real sorry to interupt ... but
I’ve been a real bubblehead and locked myself out of the apartment. Is there anyway you can help? . It’s only round the corner.
OFFICER TREMBLE: Hey
sweetie, you’ll probably need a locksmith, but I’ll come and look. Nice meeting you fella.
BIG JOE: Now
who wouldn’t walk round the corner with a looker like that?
SOLDIER: She’s sure a picture.
BIG JOE: She
is .. but scatty as hell. She lives in
the corner building – you can’t miss it, white, all corners, cuved glass –
she’s got the ugliest cat you ever saw.
Unkind people say Josephine got the looks, but the cat got the
brains. Another beer? Something to eat ... eggs and sausage?
SOLDIER: Not
to eat , no. But sure, same again with
the beer ... I like the taste of Memory
Lane.
SARAH (CLOSE): Right on cue! Josephine Mankievitch ... five feet 10 inches
of stilletto heeled, melodrama-laden, buxom, red-haired narrative
dynamite. Lobbing her into a crowded
script will sort the men from the boys.
BIG JOE: There
you go .(SOUND OF GLASS ON BAR) what the Limeys call a Pint.
SOLDIER: Cheers!
So is this your normal crowd .. more or less .. for a Friday night?
BIG JOE: Yeah,
maybe up a little bit .. they’re
swapping stories of their moment of fame..
getting braver with every telling from what I can hear. ...
Hey! Pop! Great to see ya up and about
... (see ya fella, enjoy your beer)
POP: Hi
son, good to see you too! Your Mom’s
wrapping me in cotton wool, I’m suffocating.
I’ve come out to prove to her I’m OK – I even drove one of the trucks –
see, I’m right outside!
BIG JOE: Yeah
well don’t over do it .. I reckon it was driving the truck all that way that
laid you out ... you’re not as young as you were Pop..... and the truck’s had a re-spray! What’s all that about?
POP: Well
the old bird was looking tattered and down on her luck – but don’t she look
great?
BIG JOE: Yeah!
Pop! ... she looks great. ...... Yes
soldier? .. another beer already?
SOLDIER: No
I’m fine for beer but, excuse me for askin’, but is that Eagle on the truck the same as
yours – from your mirror?
BIG JOE: Yep,
it’s the same – taken from the same drawing of an American Eagle. .....
I got told all the time that it’s not a Nighthawk , but I know that! What the punters don’t get is that they’re
the Nighthawks – the bar’s named for them!.
SOLDIER: After the painting ..
BIG JOE: Well
done soldier boy, look what they teach in the Army! – about five years ago this
painting of a diner goes up in the Institute and as soon as I see it I had to
change the name of my bar. Have you seen
the picture?
SOLDIER: Only in a magazine.
BIG JOE: Well
it’s THIS bar right? (JOE STABS COUNTER WITH FINGER, 3 KNOCKS).. On a corner, all glass, me behind the bar in my whites. This is life imitating art imitating life or
whatever ... the eagle came from Pop’s business, he was
using it on his trucks.....and I’m your regular patriot and it’s the American
Eagle, right? but listen if you’re here
over the weekend and you’ve got time out from your ‘this and that’, get
yourself down to the Institute and see the picture for real. I don’t know nothin’ ‘bout art .. but I know
what I like and that picture is a picture .... just like Josephine here,
looking gorgeous ... the Lady in Red!
JOSEPHINE: Big
Joe, you’re a charmer ... hi Pop. That kind Police Officer got me into the
lobby by flashing his badge – I kinda liked that! – and whaddya know? ... the
key was still in my door!
BIG JOE: Josephine,
I’d like to introduce you to our new soldier friend here who’s come all the way
from the east coast to sample our famous beers (and to do a bit of ‘this and
that’). He wants to go to the Art
Institute tomorrow and see the picture of my diner – be an angel and take him,
would ya?
JOSEPHINE: Oh for sure ... a soldier boy
for the weekend . ..
Christmas has come early.
FX: SOUND OF BAR CHATTER FADES OUT
SCENE 3: OUTSIDE
THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. SATURDAY, AROUND MIDDAY
FX: SOUND OF ROADWORKS
(JACKHAMMER). TRAFFIC NOISE, A KLAXON
SOUNDS AS IT PASSES. SOLDIER & JOSEPHINE ARE FORCED TO SPEAK LOUDLY TO BE HEARD
SOLDIER: Thanks
sugar, I really appreciated that, now let me treat you.
JOSEPHINE: Oh yeah,
soldier boy, I’m starvin. You know
what ... I kinda like it when you call
me sweet names, like ‘Sugar’ and ‘Honey’.
You’re cute.
SOLDIER: So why
the sad look sugar?
JOSEPHINE: Oh, I
dunno .. just with me when things go so
right it means they’re just about to go so wrong.
SOLDIER: Hey,
snap outtavit! ... I’m about to treat ya to the best that Joe’s
can offer. Come on candy-girl .. smile again for your soldier boy.
JOSEPHINE: Ohhhh,
Kaaay. Are we gonna eat now?
SOLDIER: Sure
sugar, but I wanna cross the street and look at Joes from the same angle as the
picture ... (JOSEPHINE LAUGHS AND SQUEALS AS THEY DODGE THE TRAFFIC TO
CROSS THE ROAD)
I reckon if we stand by this bank
building .... and lets pretend it’s midnight.
JOSEPHINE: I’m gonna
squint ... haha .. are we crazy or what?
SOLDIER: Well
wadya think? .... it’s close ain’t it?
JOSEPHINE: Close?
... I reckon it’s a ringer!.. except this red-haired lady’s on the
outside.
SOLDIER
DRAWS CLOSE TO JOSEPHINE – TRAFFIC NOISE RECEDES
SOLDIER: Listen
sugar, can you keep a secret?
JOSEPHINE: Yeah,
‘course ... but it depends how secret I
mean if it’s really, really secret then loadsa folks are gonna want to know,
know what I mean? .. but I
won’t tell that many.
SOLDIER: The
thing is, sugar, now listen, the
painting ain’t Joe’s bar ... I know he
thinks it is ... and he’d be mighty
upset ... but the original diner’s a
long ways away ... in Greenwich Village ... or was ... I think it’s
a parking lot now.
JOSEPHINE: Hey, why
you telling me this, it’s sad stuff .. ah,
poor Joe .. you’re right it would kill the big guy. ... but I don’t care what you say, I say the
picture is Joe’s ... and Joe’s is the
picture. Now come on let’s eat!
SARAH (CLOSE): It’s
the writer’s curse that when all is going well, conflict has to rear its head. But where will the axe fall, whose breast
will the asp bite? The narrative river will race, twist and turn aplenty before
it finally melds with the redemptive sea.
But on whose fate will the pen descend, who will be written from the
book?
SCENE 4: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. SATURDAY, AN HOUR LATER
FX: SOUND OF CUTLERY FINISHING ON CROCKERY, RADIO ON
QUIETLY
JOSEPHINE: I’m
soooo full ... I’m going to pop!
BIG JOE: You
ok you two ... enjoy the gallery? ... hey, let me take those .. you’re finished
right?
JOSEPHINE: Take em away
Joe ... I couldn’t eat another thing.
And we loved your picture, didn’t we soldier boy?
SOLDIER: Sure
did honey, sure did.
FX: DINER DOOR OPENS & CLOSES, LETTING IN NOISE FORM STREET
JOSEPHINE: What’s
up Big Joe ... you seen a ghost?
FX: BACKGROUND SOUND FADES TO SILENCE.
BIG JOE: Good
afternoon Signor Falcone.
FX: RADIO STARTS BASEBALL COMMENTARY
RADIO COMMENTATOR: And the two sides are lining up
for what is an uneven contest- (CLICK, AS RADIO TURNED OFF)
FALCONE: Bon
Giorno, Signor Kay. It’s a long time
since I pay you personal visit, yes? Are
you well? ... and the family? .. your
‘Pop’ in good health? And your little
ones, are they safe?
BIG JOE: Yes,
thank you Mister Falcone. But what can
I do for you ... I hope there’s nothing wrong?
FALCONE: Why
should there be anything wrong? We are business partners, arn’t we, and I have come to check on my investment
... But ..
(PAUSE)
but you do hear stories ... and you
know... ‘Big Joe’ ... I don’t like ‘stories’ ... I like the quiet
life ... the quiet life is good for business.
So please ... tell me what going on here?
BIG JOE: Nothin’s
goin on mister Falcone ...
FALCONE: Don’t
lie to me Joe. behind your bar, there’s
a hole in the wall.
BIG JOE: Oh
that, I don’t know ... I have no idea what happened .. some maniac
let loose with a shotgun.
FALCONE: Listen
Joe ... come here .. lean over the bar, get real close, I want explain you
something. ... that’s it, real close.
FALCONE (STAGE
WHISPER): Everybody knows you pay
me for the protection this place .. OK? Everybody knows! And you let this happen! Why you do this to me? You want make me look stupid? I can’t have this, don’t you see? So this is what we gonna do ... you’re gonna find out what stray dog
cocked his leg on my block... and you’re gonna deliver him to me ... can’t be
difficult to find one-eyed ‘maniac’ with face full of glass ... Meanwhile
I’m putting your insurance up ...
gonna double each week you don’t bring me this guy.
BIG JOE: How
am I goin to do that .... how can I afford to pay you double?
FALCONE: That’s
your problem ‘Big Joe’. ... but you’ll
find a way ... for the sake of the family.
Now what we have here ... what Do We have here? Well, well, well .... what’s a beautiful dame like you doing in a
dump like this? Come here beautiful ... and
I’ll take you to the choicest spots in town ...away from all this.. and all these lonely losers.
SOLDIER: She’s
with me fella ... and she ain’t goin nowhere.
FALCONE: Who the
hell are you? . talkin to me like that? Don’t you know who I am?
SOLDIER: Don’t
care who you are ...you got a problem with that?
JOSEPHINE: It’s OK
soldier boy .... you done your bit. This gal can look after herself from here. Hello Enrico
.. it’s been a while.
SOLDIER: You
don’t have to sugar -
JOSEPHINE: I
said it’s OK didn’t I?
FALCONE: Are you
getting the picture .. ‘soldier’?
... ‘Sugar’ wants a taste of the sweet
life. I’ll see you around Joe .. remember, I want that schmuck on a plate ..
soon. Come with me, bella, let’s get
out of this place.
FX: THE DINER DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES – TRAFFIC NOISE SWELLS AND FADES.
CHAT RESUMES, SLOWLY.
BIG JOE: She
did the right thing soldier. She saved
my bar and your life ... she’s not as
dumb as she makes out.
SOLDIER: Give
me a whiskey, a large one. And put the
radio back on ... gimme somethin blue.
FX: BIG JOE TUNES RADIO TO ELLA FITZGERALD ‘ALL BY MYSELF’
FATHER MICHAEL: Let
me have the honour of paying for that.
SOLDIER: Father!
... As you wish.
FATHER MICHAEL: There’s not many men
would have spoken out against Falcone – certainly none in this bar at this
time.
SOLDIER (BITTER): And certainly not you,
Father ... not have enough dutch
courage?
FATHER MICHAEL: Ah... even strangers
know my reputation – or lack of one. ... Signor Falcone is not one of the God fearing
Italian-Americans .. we never see him in
Church, unlike his countrymen who grew up here.
Falcone is from away. Can’t
remember exactly from where .. or when
he appeared, suddenly he was in our lives causing trouble. He would not have noticed me. There’s nothing I can do against the likes of
him.
SOLDIER (RELENTING): Don’t say that Father .... don’t
underestimate yourself .. I’ve seen
things you people wouldn’t believe
... I’ve seen the bravest men paralysed
with fear and I’ve seen cowards do amazing things .. you
may yet play a part. Cheers! (DOWNS WHISKEY IN ONE, GASPS, BANGS GLASS ON COUNTER) Can I buy you a drink Father? I like the idea.... corrupting a man of the cloth.
FATHER MICHAEL: Thank
you my son, but no. I’ll not be staying.
BIG JOE: Father
Michael, not for you? ... Soldier, how about you .. another Bushmills?
SOLDIER: Yeah .. make it another large one.
OFFICER TREMBLE: This one’s on me Joe.
BIG JOE: Sure
thing, Officer.
SOLDIER: What
is this, can’t a man buy hisself a drink in this town? Were you in here for that Officer .. and
you don’t do nothing?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Listen
soldier, I admire what you did, speaking up like that, I really do ... but we
live here, we can’t pack our bags in the morning and catch the next flight. We gotta stay.
SOLDIER: He saw your uniform and
took no notice.
OFFICER TREMBLE: I’m
just a beat cop .. I’ve got nothing but my night-stick and 30 years service
.. I’ll never put bracelets on the likes
of Falcone.
SOLDIER: Like
I said to the Priest .. never say never ... you don’t know what you may do.
OFFICER TREMBLE: Well
whatever .. I’m on my way. Take care soldier, don’t expect folks to
stick their necks out for you. See ya around, .. I hope.
BIG JOE: You
OK soldier?
SOLDIER: Oh
Yeah, Joe, I’m just fine ... considering
I’ve just been castrated for all to see, But Falcone is a sideshow anyways ..
what about the mirror shooter? ... you
gotta find him now, Joe. And, Joe, I
gotta start moving things on myself ... can I clear my slate? There’s the dinner for two, and some beers
and stuff from last night.
BIG JOE: Yeah,
Yeah .. your check’s ready .. here... $15,
50 cents .... what’s all that?
FX: SOUND OF A LOUD CLATTER AS A PILE OF COINS ARE DUMPED ON THE BAR
SOLDIER: Dollar
coins Joe .... 11 , 14 and 15. And
another five for your tip. Why, What’s
the matter? ... you gone ghost-white again Joe .. anyone would think ‘Signor Falcone’ walked back in. Is it the coins? My money not good enough for you?
BIG JOE: No, ... no, no problem soldier. That’s just fine.
SOLDIER: Over
the last coupIa days I give you portraits of Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln,
and you don’t bat an eye. But I give you
a load of brass and nickle and you go white as a sheet
whoa! ..
FX: ANOTHER BANG AS THE GLASS IS
SLAMMED ON THE BAR
that
whiskey’s gone to my head ... shouldn’t
drink in the middle of the day. .. I’m goin back to the hotel ....
(SOLDIER TALKS TO SLUR)
but I’ll see
you another time ..
tomorrow, I’ll be in for sure. ..
We need to
talk, you and me. ...
You know
Joe, you just need to find that shooter and all your troubles will fall away. (VOICE RISING AS HE EXITS) Find
the shooter, Joe. Find the shooter!
FX: SOLDIER EXITS TO THE SOUND OF COUNT BASSIE ON THE RADIO – ‘OPEN THE
DOOR RICHARD’.
SARAH (CLOSE): The river’s picking up speed, the twists
and turns are coming thick and fast. Boy
meets girl ... boy loses girl.
SARAH: Hi
Joe, is that for me you sweetie? - you are good to me.
BIG JOE: Sarah,
I got a question for you. The other day
you were saying something about Soldier reminding you of the shooter .. remember? .. something about shoes?
SARAH: Has
our friend from the east upset you Joe?
I thought you were getting on so well together.
BIG JOE: I
don’t know ... just he’s always on about the shootin .. and
why did he turn up when he did? .. and why’s he so cagey about what he does? I don’t know ... is he a Fed, is he a gumshoe? Maybe he wasn’t phased by Falcone because it
takes one to know one, yer know what I mean? .. is he an east coast
mobster? Jes -
SARAH: Joe,
Joe -
this is so like you! You ask a
question and then you do all the talking ..
You asked about what I meant by the shoes ... well it’s simple; they sound the same.
BIG JOE: They
sound the same?
SARAH: Yes,
sound the same. Our soldier friend will
have carried some old habits into civilian life – like keeping his kit in tip-top
condition. Next time you see him, look at
his shoes. Highly polished, I’ll bet, even
the leather soles – he squeeks when he walks. Well ... the guy with the shotgun
.. he did the same. I played my
‘dictabelt’ back the other day. You can hear on the recording .. the guy
crashes open the door, and walks towards the bar. There’s a shout to ‘Get down!’ from Officer
Tremble .. then it’s silence ... and then it’s squeek, squeek .... boom, boom!
BIG JOE: So
the shoes sound the same.
SARAH: Yes
Joe, the shoes sound the same.
BIG JOE: So
..?
SARAH: Oh
come on Joe, do I need to spell it out?
The shooter’s army ... just like
soldier boy! That raises the possibility
they know each other ... yes?
BIG JOE: Guess
so ... he says he’s coming back tomorrow – he made it sound like a threat.
SARAH: Joe
... you need to speak to Pop –
BIG JOE: -
Hey, I was just goin to... how do you
keep doing that Sarah? .. you seem to know just what’s going to happen next.
FX: RADIO FADES INTO SOUND OF ‘PHONE DIALING
BIG JOE: Hi
Mom ... can you put Pop on the line?
MOM (‘PHONE DISTORTED): Hello
Joseph ... He’s just sat down in his chair ... I don’t want to wake him right
away. To be honest Joseph, I was
thinking of calling you, he’s gone that
colour, like before, when we had to take him to the hospital. He says he dosen’t want the doctor – which
means he dosen’t want to pay for the doctor – but I don’t know son, I just don’t
know.
BIG JOE: I’ll
come round now, Mom, and see for myself.
If he needs the doc, I’ll pay.
FX: SCENE ENDS WITH ‘PHONE BEING
CRASHED DOWN
SCENE 5: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. SUNDAY, AROUND MIDDAY
FX: NO BACKGROUND CHAT, BAR IS EMPTY,
ECHOEY – RADIO PLAYING BIG BAND MUSIC, QUIETLY.
DINER DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES LETTING IN A LITTLE STREET
NOISE – FOLLOWED BY THE SOUND OF
SQUEEKING SHOES .
BIG JOE: Hi
soldier .. how ya doing?
SOLDIER: Fine
.. how did you know it was me, with no mirror ?
BIG JOE: Easy
... your shoes squeek.
SOLDIER: Well
how about that. ... Open on a Sunday? You work seven days?
BIG JOE: Yep,
I work every hour God sends .. when it’s
yours you have to. What can I get you.
SOLDIER: I’ll
have your famous egg and suasage and a coffee, strong with just a dash of milk.
FX: ESPRESSO STEAM SOUNDS, CROCKERY LANDING ON BAR.
BIG JOE: There’s
your coffee, add your own milk – the food’ll be a minute. Manolo will bring it through when it’s ready
– over easy, right?’
SOLDIER: Right.
BIG JOE: You
said we needed to talk ... what’s on your mind?
SOLDIER: I
though I’d come in while you’re quiet – not expecting many Sunday, middle of
the day?
BIG JOE: Naw
– just a few.
SOLDIER: Well,
to do with the shooter ... Why did you say there were two guys? .. and why did
you say they were coming out of the bank? I checked the times with the beat
Officer, the banks are all closed at that time.
(SIPS FROM HIS COFFEE, SOUND OF REPLACING IN SAUCER)
And there
never was a second guy was there? No one
else saw one, Police ain’t looking for another ... not even the well-informed Signor Falcone
thinks there’s another. ... so?
BIG JOE: Who
are you? .. and what are you after? I don’t think you’re so clean in all this. Why you so interested?
SOLDIER: Why
did you say there was two, Joe? ....
I’ll tell you what I think, ... (PAUSE)
You were giving a false lead .. by saying
there was two means the fight was between them, and you and your bar are in the
clear ... but Joe, we both know that’s
not true.
BIG JOE: Why
would I be the target? What have I done? I have no idea who this guy is (PAUSE)
but I’ve a
notion you do.
SOLDIER: Oh yeah? .. what makes you
say that.
BIG JOE: He’s
an old army buddy of yours, right?
SOLDIER: No
offence, fella, but I don’t think you worked that out by yourself.
BIG JOE: I’ll
take that as a ‘Yes’ then.
SOLDIER: Maybe ... maybe not. .....(PAUSE)
How’s Pop, Joe?
BIG JOE: What?
.... what the hell do ya mean by dragging him into
this?
SOLDIER: Why’s
he so wasted Joe? .. was it that big job
the other week, the long haul to the east that needed all three trucks. And the load was real heavy right? Back breaking stuff .. and they drove back
mighty quick .. long hours behind the
wheel .. must have been in some kind of hurry.
BIG JOE: Listen
fella you are getting well out of line – my Pop’s not so good, he’s back in
hospital. I’m not in the mood for this –
I’ve a mind to throw you out.
SOLDIER: Easy
big fella ... you’re not throwing out
the one guy who may know your shooter ... You might not know all that’s gone
on, and you might not like me bringing ‘Pop’ into it - but it ain’t me that’s dragging him in. He’s in this up to his neck –and I didn’t put
him there. So we goin to discuss this
like grown men or what?
BIG JOE: Say
what you got to say ..
SOLDIER: I’m
guessing .. but I’ll bet our friend Falcone has his talons into your old dad,
am I right? I’m thinking Pop’s got
serious money problems; IRS, the bank ... the local mob?
BIG JOE: If
he has it ain’t none of your business.
SOLDIER: What
makes your Pop my business, and you my business are these .... these here $1 coins that spooked you so
much. I told you I was trading in metals.
Each one of these is 88.5% copper, 3.5%
Manganese, 2% nickle and 6% zinc.
BIG JOE: Well
that’s all very interesting, but we don’t get much call for them round here,
except for kids at Christmas – this is a greenback town.
FX: SOUND OF DOOR OPENING& CLOSING
ONTO STREET
SOLDIER: Still
playing it cute ain’t you Joe ... like you don’t know what I’m talking
about. There’s one other big call on
Dollar coins, Joe, and it ain’t for kids
–
MANOLO: One
egg an’ sausage! There you go sir.
FX: PLATE AND CUTLERY LAND ON BAR COUNTER
BIG JOE: You
eat up .. I’d better see to my other customer.
SOLDIER: Take
as long as you like, Joe, I’m not goin nowhere.
BIG JOE: Father
Michael .. I don’t think I’ve seen you
in here on a Sunday before .. to be honest Father you don’t look too good
... you’re looking kinda yellow .. are
you alright?
FATHER MICHAEL (WHEEZING & OUT-OF-BREATH): Bless you Joe .. always thinking of
others ... I’ve not come for the usual ...
I just
wanted to tell you that I may not be in again ..
I feel a
state of grace approaching ..
it’s so hard
to breathe ...
the good
Lord has smiled on me Big Joe -
BIG JOE: Father,
you’re not making a lot of sense .. and
I think I should get you back, you’re really not looking too good.
FATHER MICHAEL: Joe,
it’s hard to talk ..
but I’m so
happy today ...
the Lord
will receive me in his arms on a Sunday .. and sober ..
Joe it’s
getting hard to see, and I’m feeling very dizzy -
BIG JOE: Hey!
Soldier! Put your food down and help me
with the Father will ya? No steady
Father, no don’t try walking back on yer own
FX: SOUND OF FURNITURE SCRAPING THE
FLOOR
Father ..
Father! ... Oh Christ!
FX: FATHER MICHAEL CRASHES INTO TABLE ON WAY TO THE FLOOR
SOLDIER: Jesus, he’s gone down like
he’s shot.
BIG JOE: Help
me soldier, for chrissake!
SOLDIER: Mind
out Joe, I’ll feel for a heart beat. We
need to turn him over.... (SOUND OF
EXERTION TURNING BODY OVER) that’s it ....
I need to clear his airways... Jeez,...
Joe I ain’t getting a pulse, not a flicker. .... I’ve been here before
big man – too many times – we’ve seen the last of Father Michael.
BIG JOE: He’s
dead? ... just like that?
SOLDIER: I
could try pumping his chest, an’ mouth-to-mouth but ... little point ... sorry
Joe but he’s gone. .... hell, I guess he’s where he wants to be.
BIG JOE: I’ll
call the hospital – they’ll send a doc to certify he’s dead.
SOLDIER: OK
... no, just hang fire a minute Joe ... (PAUSE)
Joe I’ve got an idea ... the good Lord is about to deliver us from
evil ... give me a hand will you. We
need to get him out of sight ... you got a cold store or something?
BIG JOE: The
cellar’s cool .. what are you thinking
soldier?
SOLDIER: I’m
thinking this could be Father Michael’s finest hour.
FX: RADIO FADES TO SOUND OF THE TWO MEN STRUGGLING WITH THE BODY
SCENE 6: IN THE
CELLAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. SUNDAY, AFTER MIDDAY
FX: ECHOEY. SOUND OF FEET SCUFFLING ON FLOOR AS THEY
STRUGGLE TO CARRY THE BODY
THEIR VOICES ECHO AGAINST THE BUZZ OF A FLURESCENT TUBE,
A SINISTER ATMOSPHERE
SOLDIER: Jez
.. he’s heavy .. put him down on this surface here. Phew! ...
what is this place?
BIG JOE: Before
it was a diner it was a butchers ... and
this was the cold store ... and this here was the butcher’s block.
SOLDIER: Yeah?
.. is that appropriate? Now there’s stuff to do -
BIG JOE: Hey! . what
are you doing?
SOLDIER: Listen,
I’ll tell you what we’re goin to do .. but don’t get all squeamish on me now. I’m doing this to save your neck ... just
remember that. This is a bit of glass
that he broke when he fell... I’m going
to cut his face with it. Listen
Joe .. listen good .. you need to call
Falcone now, I mean right now, so he gets his ass over here pronto. He doesn’t know the Father .. so we’re gona pass the priest off as the
shooter ... doya get it? He’s lookin for
a one-eyed guy with his face cut from the mirror, remember? Are you with me?
BIG JOE: Oh
Jesus .. I don’t believe this... we’ll have to get rid of the frock.
SOLDIER: Good
... now you’re starting to think straight .. have you got a suit here? .. No?
.. OK .. I guess he’ll have to
have mine .... and I’ll play priest for a while.
BIG JOE: I’ll
go make the call.
SOLDIER: Hey
Joe .. keep it simple .. the less detail the better .. tell him the shooter
won’t be troublin nobody no more ... and
he’s here for him to looksee.
BIG JOE: OK
... hey where did you get that?
SOLDIER: The
eye-patch? .. I’ve been busy while I’ve been in town. I found the same spot – a theatrical store - where the shooter bought his .. not far from here ... and not far from the
drugstore where he got iodene to treat his cuts ... Jesus Joe .. go make that
call for chrissake! ... (SPEAKING TO
HIMSELF) ... now how the hell do you defrock a dead priest?
FX: BUZZ FROM LIGHT FADES DOWN AND UP AGAIN AS BIG JOE’S FOOTSTEPS RETURN
SOLDIER: Well,
what did he say? You’re going to have to do this on yer own Big Joe ... he can’t see me in the frock. And how’s Manolo, and have you got any
customers?
Big Joe: Yeah, yeah he’s on his way. And no, no customers and don’t worry about
Manolo, it’s not the first time he’s
seen me shut up for Falcone. Anyway he’s
got one of them televisions in the kitchen.
SOLDIER: As
soon as Falcone’s gone we gotta work at the double, switching the Father back
upstairs, then calling the doc.
BIG JOE: Here,
take this, I brought down some iodene. It maight make the cuts look older.
SOLDIER: Smart
thinking Joe .. you’re warmng to this.
BIG JOE No
I ain’t ... I feel sick. I don’t know how you could cut him like that!
SOLDIER: Well
listen Joe ... you’re goin to have to look away one more time ‘cos there’s one
last job I gotta do. Look away Joe ...
look away.
FX: A SQUELCHING SOUND
BIG JOE: Oh
Jesus Christ! ... what did you have to do that for .. Jesus, that’s disgusting!
SOLDIER: It had to be done Joe.
BIG JOE: But
why?... you’d got an eye-patch for him..
SOLDIER: Falcone
wants to see a one-eyed jack – so that’s what we’re giving him.
FX: BANGING IN THE DISTANCE
BIG JOE: He
didn’t waste no time. Right .. I’d
better go and bring him in.
SOLDIER: I’ll
be in the shadows ... best of luck big man.
SARAH: I
got the next bit from officer Tremble, among the city’s longest serving but
least challenged boys in blue. Officer T
has worn his own path in this city’s sidewalks for 30 years with a singular and
resentful lack of drama, until today. He milked it for all it was worth ..... never dreaming he would top it.
SCENE 7: IN THE
NIGHTHAWK DINER. SUNDAY, AN HOUR LATER
OFFICER TREMBLE: Whatcha
reckon Doc? Was it his drinking that did
for him?
DOCTOR: I
don’t know officer, other than he looks jaundiced which can be a sign of liver
damage. A massive heart failure or a
stroke of some kind possibly. I’ve never
seen that before – with the eye I mean. You
say he was a drinker? ... an usual past time for a Priest .. was he a heavy drinker?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Yes,
Doc ... a real problem in later years ..
he got real drunk, real quick.. and he
used to do this thing, when he was well gone, where he would .. oh , never mind ... Right I want to wrap up
my report .. just sign here that he’s
stiff and I’ll check out the guys who were with him at the end ... Hey, Joe!
FX: SOUND OF TREMBLE’S BIG BOOTS MARCHING ACROSS THE
FLOOR
OFFICER TREMBLE: Hi
Joe, you too soldier, so .. exactly what happened? Big Joe, startin with you.
BIG JOE: Only
the two of us in. The English lady‘s due
about that time so I made her Margorita and took it to her table. As I’m walking back Father Michael comes wheezing in and follows
me. He tugs my sleeve and starts saying
weird stuff about God waiting for him. He
was real breathless ... he started to stagger.
He took small steps towards the door .. and then suddenly , as the soldier says, it was like he was shot
... he went down straight onto her ladyship’s table , taking the Margorita glass with him.
OFFICER TREMBLE: So
that’s what cut his face you reckon? ..
yes soldier, you were sayin?
SOLDIER: I
turned him ... I was thinkin of what we used to do in the army .. resuss.. I had to pick the bits of glass outta him to
do the mouth to mouth ... but o’course as soon as I turned him we saw this
business with the eye that kinda put us back a bit. At first we couldn’t work out where it was ..
and then I looked at the table and there in the remains of the glass was the cocktail
stick ... and on the stick was an olive
and ... well you’ve seen for yourself .....
next to the olive, skewered like a pickled onion ... was Father
Michael’s eye.
FX: STUNNED SILENCE
SCENE 8: IN THE
NIGHTHAWK DINER. SUNDAY EVENING
FX: FADE UP RADIO MUSIC QUIETLY, EXCITED CHATTER
SARAH: Joe,
my angel .. if it’s all the same with you I’ll skip the Margorita this evening
and stick with the Italian .. not sure I’ll brave another olive ever again.
BIG JOE: Oh
don’t Miss Sarah .. don’t go there.
SARAH: Have
a drink yourself .. go on .. have it on
me. Whatever tickles your fancy.
SARAH: Thank
you, your ladyship, I’ll have whatever’s got the biggest kick.
SARAH (CLOSE): You do that Joe ... get some strong spirit in you ... you never know what’s round the next bend in
the river.
FX:The Murmur Of Chat Underscores
The Clink Of Ice On Glass
Soldier Boy and Big Joe are listening
to the baseball on the radio – where the commentator talks of a ‘double
whammy’. Poor Joe.
FX: RADIO IS TUNED TO BASEBALL
SOLDIER: You
done good, Big Joe – especially that line to Falcone when he asked who did for
the shooter; ‘Well Signor Falcone, I
heard you did.’ He’ll be speading
that around like muck on the fields.
HEINRICH: So
will I Big Joe – everyone in my cab’s gonna hear how Falcone closed the other eye
of the Nighthawk shooter. Don’t ya worry
ya friends will see you right. Falcone
will leave you alone now, right enough.
BIG JOE: Hey,
Heinrich .... how many times have I told
you it’s rude to lip read private conversations!
HEINRICH: Ha
Ha ... today’s a good day eh Joe. Let’s drink to the success of the Nighthawk
bar .. and to you soldier boy. Eh, you know I understood every word you said
the other night? Ha! I loved the way you started shouting , real s
l o w - you know soldier when you’re deaf the world
can shout as loud as it likes, I’m still not goin’ to hear a word you say! –
how ever slowly you say it.
SOLDIER: Let me buy you a drink
Heinrich.
HEINRICH: Well
thank you soldier, I’ll celebrate with a .... Big Joe I wanna be the first to say this cos
you’re goin to get asked a hundred times a day from now on ... Soldier, thank you ... I’ll have one of them, you know long tall
drinks, whadathey called Joe? .. oh yeah ... an ‘ighball! Ha Ha!
BIG JOE: Ahhh.
Don’t! I swear to God it was lookin at
me!
SARAH (CLOSE): They’re having a good time at the bar –
great to see Joe smiling. But then
there’s that writer’s curse again ... you build them up, just to knock ‘em
down..
MANOLO: Ola!
... Senor Joe .. for you .. on telephone
.. the hopital.
FX: BAR SOUNDS FADE TO OUT
SCENE 9: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. MONDAY 7:00PM
FX: RADIO MUSIC FADES UP QUIETLY, CHATTER
SOLDIER: So
who’s smart idea to put the deaf guy behind the bar?
HEINRICH: Hey
soldier, howsya head? Good to see
ya! I’m regular stand in ... When
it’s real noisy I’m the only one that can tell what people are saying ... what can I getcha?
SOLDIER: A
beer Heinrich, one of them warm English ones. So no Joe?
HEINRICH: Ahh. You didn’t hear .... sorry to say that ‘Pop’ passed away ... his
heart failed him one last time.
SOLDIER: No
say! ... that’s too bad ... Joe’s having an interesting time of it....
Well, well what have we here ... of all the
bars in all the world, why did yer have to walk into this one?
JOSEPHINE: Hello
soldier boy ... didn’t you just love
that movie? ... it’s my absolute fave.
Ain’t yer pleased to see me?
... and I came all this way to be
with ya.
SOLDIER: Sugar
.. you live around the corner. What you
mean is this is the first time you’ve been home – but I see you’re wearing a
nice new dress ... and what’s that on
your wrist? .. an expensive looking
watch .. .. real diamonds?
JOSEPHINE: Soldier
darling, I can’t help it if I like nice expensive things and nice expensive
things like me ... they positively fling themselves at me.
SOLDIER: So I see.
JOSEPHINE: Listen
I can’t stop ... Henrich, be an angel
and give this card to Joe .. I did like
‘Pop’.
HEINRICH: Sure
thing beautiful, no problem – Joe’ll be along shortly.
SOLDIER: News
travels fast, Sugar - how did you know about Pop?
JOSEPHNE: Well,
I heard Enrico – that’s Signor Falcone to you - saying to some of his friends
that they needed to go pay their respects to Joe’s family.
SOLDIER: Sugar
... they’re not ‘friends’, those hoods work for Falcone .. and they won’t be paying ‘respects’. Pop will have owed your lover-boy money, a
lotta money. (MUTTERS) No sooner
has Joe dodged one bullet, than another heads his way.
JOSEPHINE: Well
I’m sure I don’t know what you’re talking about, but I gotta get ready. Enrico’s picking me up here at 9:00 – see ya
soldier, and cheer up for chrissakes. If
you didn’t act so glum a girl might want to spend more time around ya .. lighten up a little, why dontcha?
SOLDIER: So long ...... Sugar.
FX: SOUND OF STILLETTO HEELS TAPPING AWAY
HEINRICH: You still sore about that
one soldier?
SOLDIER: Ahhh
... can’t make her out ... is she really that empty beteen the ears? .. somehow
I don’t think so. Maybe I’m better off
without a woman ... hey, Joe .. real
sorry about Pop .
HEINRICH: Yeah,
me too Joe, listen you didna have to
come over, I can handle the bar you know that.
BIG JOE: Hi
Heinrich .. thanks, thanks ... but there’s stuff I gotta sort. Starting with you soldier ... Heinrich you OK to stay?
HEINRICH: No worries boss .. you wanna
a drink?
BIG JOE: Nah
.. I need a clear head. Soldier, come over
here we need to talk.
SARAH (CLOSE): Watching Big Joe and Soldier is like
being ringside – one minute they’re bashing six bells out of each other, and
then they’re hugging. Just can’t tell which
way this one’s going to go.
BIG JOE: What’s
with these Dollar coins soldier?
SOLDIER: You
ready for this .. what with Pop and all? ... and I gotta tell ya that Falcone’s
coming here tonight .. in less than an hour.
BIG JOE: What’s
with the coins, for chrissake? .. I’ll deal with Falcone later. When Pop came back from that long-haul east – Atlantic City, I think he said – he was flush
with Dollar coins. He was like a kid at
Christmas. .. and then you start fishing
them outya pocket. That’s all I know ..
other than all this is connected somehow
.. Pop going on that job, the shooter, you. So talk to me soldier, talk to me.
SOLDIER: This
could take some telling .. sure you don’t want a drink? .. OK. Pop was into Falcone for a lot –we’’ll find
out shortly how much. (PAUSE) The shooter’s name is Bartoli – I knew him as
Corporal Bartoli, he led my platoon ... Sicily and then Italy. He took a blow to the head at Anzio and was
never the same again – but then nor was any other soldier that began the battle
as a human being .. I’m getting
sidetracked ..
BIG JOE: The
Dollar coins soldier, the coins.
SOLDIER: Yeah
the coins .. remember me saying there
was another big call on the coins, other than Christmas? .. yeah? Does Atlantic City and Dollar coins not ring
alarm bells for you . it should do .. it’s a hellova dangerous
combination. Let me spell it out.. Casinos.
BIG JOE: I
gotcha .. I think.
SOLDIER: Have
ya, Big Joe? Just think it through and
see if you can work out how bad the trouble is we’re in here ... who owns the casinos Big Joe, who’s coming
after us?
BIG JOE: Oh
Jeez .
SOLDIER: Oh
Yes, Big Joe, Oh Jeez .. these guys have the likes of Falcone for breakfast.
BIG JOE: But
I’m not involved ... what the hell’s it got to do with me? And where do you come in?
SOLDIER: This’ll
take some tellin an’all. If you’re not
drinkin, I am. (GLUGS BEER AND LANDS GLASS HEAVILY ON BAR. GLEN MILLER
STRIKES UP IN THE MOOD)
There’s
these three guys, kicked out the army after the war is over. No prospects, no skills other than killing
other human beings. What use are we to
decent society, eh? Well my corporal –
remember, the guy with the blow to the head – has a brainwave ‘cos he met a guy
in the war who knew someone who was related to someone who was married to
someone’s sister .. you get the picture.
He learns of these special mints of Dollar coins the Fed Reserve does
for Christmas and for the casinos .. you
wouldn’t believe the amounts involved. .. .. (REPEATS DRINK FROM BEER GLASS)
So my
corporal finds me two years after demob, doin nothin, goin nowhere and puts
this plan together. We gonna rob the
mint’s delivery to the casinos in Atlantic City
- but what he doesn’t tell us
until the day .. is that we’re gonna
leave the bank notes behind and we’re only gonna take the coins – cos the notes
are traceable and the coins are not.
This is were the tap on the head he took at Anzio plays its part – how
did the mutton-head think we were goin to get rid of $2 million in coins
without anyone noticing?
BIG JOE: Oh
Jeez ... but how did Pop get involved?
.. and are you telling me the Feds are after you for knocking off a government
bank?
SOLDIER: Oh
no .. we’re not that smart .. no, you see, the casinos – that is the mob – buys
the money from the mint and as soon as it leaves the government compound it
becomes their property. My corporal,
myself and this other fella only robbed the meanest sons-of-bitches on the east
coast.
BIG JOE: What
other fella?
SOLDIER: He’s
kinda important isn’t he? In Italy
Bartoli hooked up with a GI by the name of Jerry Walsh ... mean anything? No?
What if I tell you he was born with a different name? ... Jerzy Kowalkski?
BIG JOE Oh
wow! ... now he was a cousin of sorts ..
don’t remember too much .. didn’t he do
time?
SOLDIER: Oh
yeah, he did time. That’s where he got
into the habit of changing names. Jerry knows a guy thats got three big removal
trucks that can take the bulk and the weight of $2 million in coin –
BIG JOE: Oh
no, don’t say – Pop!
SOLDIER: Sorry
brother, but yeah your cousin pulled your Pop into this stupid, dumb deal. Pop painted the eagles off the trucks and
told his drivers where to leave them while we loaded and to come back when
done. The drivers never knew, we never
seen the drivers. After the robbery the
guys drive back and park up in Pop’s yard and he gives them a month off.
.... and gives hisself a heart attack.
BIG JOE: But
the shooter. And you ...?
SOLDIER: Joe
.... no easy way to say this, your Pop
double crossed us. They were supposed to
take the trucks to Nevada and we would flood the machines and the tables there
with the coins – like how stupid was that? – but we went to Nevada and the
trucks never showed.... Bartoli went
beserk. But before asking him any
questions like where might the money be, or who were the truckers – cos we
didn’t know – he slit Jerry’s throat.
BIG JOE: Oh
Christ! ... and he’s still alive this Bartoli, he’s still around here ... he’s
the shooter.
SOLDIER: Yes
he is Joe ... you got a heap of problems big man ... you got Falcone here any
time now, you got Bartoli - a homicidal madman
who could turn up any time, you got your
pop’s trucks – now your property – that were used in an armed robbery, and at
some point the east coast mobsters are going to find out who ripped them off.
BIG JOE: And
then there’s you, soldier - what are you after, apart from your $2
million I mean?
SOLDIER: Ain’t
that reason enough? I split after
Bartoli did his knife act– decided I’d make my own mistakes from then on. Couldn’t do any worse.
BIG JOE: So
how did you find us?
SOLDIER: Your
mirror Joe, your treasured eagle mirror ....
you see these new kinda lights you got .. these tubes here?
BIG JOE: The
flurescent lights?
SOLDIER: Well
they were used in the underground garage where Pop had parked up the trucks –
except they were a bit blue. And they
have strange effects these new lights ...
when we were loading the loot you could see the trucks had been
repainted – you could even read the old paint underneath, ‘Eagle Transport’ and
‘Joseph Kowalski’. And of course there was your eagle -
exactly the same eagle that Bartoli saw on your mirror that night he
walked in. In daylight they looked plain
white trucks, but those tube lights gave the game away. Of course when he got back Pop had to paint
them back again. It wasn’t difficult
after that for Bartoli to track you down – I was just a bit slower, took me a
week longer to work it out, by which time it was too late.
BIG JOE: What
do ya mean, too late?
SOLDIER: Bartoli
found you before I found Bartoli. ... So
now you know Joe. Anyway here’s your
next problem; striding in likes he owns the place.
BIG JOE: Signor
Falcone .... what can I do for
you? I wasn’t expecting you.
FALCONE: Good
evening Joseph. I have come to pay
condolences - is OK to call you Joseph, now your father has
so sadly passed away? It seems only proper to address you in his name. You inherit his property, you inherit his
name ... and ... of course his .... obligations.
BIG JOE: Obligations?
FALCONE: Debts
BIG JOE: What
debts? .. I know nothing about any debts.
FALCONE: I
put a lot into helping your father ...
when no one else would ; no bank, no help from family, I was there ... as a true friend ... I kept giving him more and more.... and more.
BIG JOE: What
do you want Falcone?
FALCONE: I
want what is mine ... Kowalski. I have drawn up legal documents for the
transfer of your father’s business and house to me.
BIG JOE: House?! ... my
mother lives in that house ... it’s hers .. you can’t have that house.
FALCONE: I
am a generous man .... and considerate
man at this time of your family’s need.
Your mother may remain in the house ... rent free. Am I not reasonable?
(PAUSE)
Rent free to
her of course, you’ll have to pay it for her.
I’ve had the documents prepared ... just sign here Joseph
BIG JOE: I’ll
not sign ... not my mother’s house!
FALCONE: Joseph,
I have already documents signed by your father giving his business and his property
as security against the money I loaned him.
I am here to get what is legally mine.
If you don’t sign – I go through the courts, and I take everything,
house .. everything. Who knows – this
bar too?
SOLDIER: Hey Big Joe ... sign it.
BIG JOE: Stay
outta this soldier .. this is my fight.
SOLDIER: Trust
me Joe ... this is the right thing to do
... do as Signor Falcone says. As soon
as you’ve signed it he’s outta here.
Just make sure you get a copy.
BIG JOE: I
don’t have a choice. Do I? ...
(PAUSE)
OK ... show me
where to sign.
FALCONE: Glad
you were able to talk sense to him, Soldier.
I’m impressed. I maybe see you
around.
SOLDIER: Maybe
.... I’ll keep an eye out for ya.
SARAH (CLOSE): That’s heartbreaking to listen to ...Joe
down, and taking a kicking ... and he’s still got the east coast gangsters and
the madman with the shotgun to worry about .... and soldier of course.
SCENE 10: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. MONDAY 9:00PM
FX: NORMAL BAR CHAT AND BACKGROUND MUSIC
BIG JOE: What
am I going to tell Mom?
SOLDIER: You’re
not going to tell her anything. She need
never know. But listen.. you’re not done
yet. I need to speak to the beat officer
– does he come in every night?
BIG JOE: Yeah
.. he’ll be in. What game you playing soldier?
Whose side you on?
SOLDIER: You’re
going to have to trust me Joe .. well, hello
sugar .. you’ve missed lover-boy he left an hour ago ... hey sweet Jesus, what happened to your face?
JOSEPHINE: Oh soldier darling .. he hit me.
SOLDIER: Falcone?
JOSEPHINE: Well
that rather nice wrist watch ... I
didn’t think his wife would miss it .. but he went crazy.
SOLDIER: So
he didn’t buy you that watch? ... you just took it?
JOSEPHINE: Uh huh.
SOLDIER: And
what’s with this suitcase – you planning on going somewhere?
JOSEPHINE: Well
it’s quite a long story – do you think a gal could have a drink sometime soon?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Soldier I heard you were looking for me?
SOLDIER: Yes
Officer – how would you like the drop on
Signor Enrico Falcone?
OFFICER TREMBLE: Are
you playing me soldier, or is this for real?
I’m warning yer ..
SOLDIER: Hey
Joe, get sugar what she wants will ya? I
need a quiet word with the Officer here.
FX: BAR NOISE DIMS
SOLDIER (CLOSE): This
is how we get Joe out the jam. Falcone
is sitting on $2 million in cash from an east coast bank job – you don’t need to know how I know. You’ve just witnessed what’s gone on here –
Falcone now has legal ownership of Eagle Transport and all its assets.
OFFICER TREMBLE (CLOSE): And
so .. just where’s all this headin?
SOLDIER (CLOSE): You
need to get down to Joseph senior’s yard, like right now. The 2 Million is still sitting in the three
trucks in the yard. But you’ll need to
move fast – as soon as the east coast mob get wind they’ll sort Falcone out and
there won’t be much left of him for you.
OFFICER TREMBLE You’d
better not be bulling me soldier –
SOLDIER : There’s
only one way to find out .. and take Big Joe’s copy of the document he just
signed.
FX: BACKGROUND NOISE SWELLS AGAIN
BIG JOE: What
you playing at Soldier .. what did you
want with Tremble?
SOLDIER: Less
said the better.. you’re just goin to have to trust me Big Joe.
JOSEPHINE: Big
Joe, are these any use to you? .. here, I put them in the case as I was
leaving. I think they’re some kinda papers
to do with Pop.. I found them in Enrico’s safe.
BIG JOE: Let’s
see (PAUSE)
They’re the
securities for the loans. Josephine you
are a miracle! Say .. that’s some shiner
you got there.
JOSEPHINE: Yeah
well, he’s paying for it now... so what do you say soldier .. did I do right?
SOLDIER: Sugar,
sounds like you did just fine .. But you’re gonna have to back track a bit .. I
thought you were at your own place.
JOSEPHINE: Yeah,
I was. But Enrico came round early in a
rage about his wife’s stupid little watch, that I never liked that much anyway. In the fight I managed to fetch his keys
outta his suit. The second he left to
come here I hoofed it round to his place.
His wife was drunk in bed as usual so no one bothered me while I went
through his safe. I put what I wanted in this suitcase and came to find my
favorite soldier boy.
SARAH (CLOSE): The drinks are flowing freely and
alcohol wraps the usual crowd in its
warm embrace.
Suddenly the mood changes, the noise
falls away to a threatening silence ..
FX: THE BAR DOOR ONTO THE STREET OPENS AND CLOSES, CHATTER FALLS AWAY, ALL THAT REMAINS IS ELLA FITZGERALD
SINGING ‘LITTLE YELLOW BASKET’
(PAUSE)
FOOTSTEPS PROGRESS IN MEASURED STRIDE TOWARDS THE BAR, THE SHOES SQUEEK.
SOLDIER: Hi, Corp ..
BARTOLI: Private. I see you worked it out .. Let’s get what we came for and then we can
leave these people alone.
SOLDIER: I’ve
got what I want Corp, and anyways .. (PAUSE) you’re too late ... the money’s gone.
BARTOLI: You
went AWOL private, you abandoned your unit.
I’m prepared to overlook the matter if we just get the money and go ..
now.
SOLDIER: For
Chrissake Bartoli, we’re not in the army now – quit playing soldiers and get
real will ya? And I’ve just told yer –
there ain’t no money
BARTOLI: You
double-crossing snake ..
FX: THERE ARE SCREAMS AND SHOUTS TO ‘GET DOWN’
SARAH (CLOSE): Just like before there are two shots in
quick succession .. except this time they are not the Boom, Boom of a shotgun –
but two loud cracks.
FX: TWO LOUD CRACKS, MUSIC FADES
SCENE11: AT THE
BAR IN THE NIGHTHAWK DINER. MONDAY 11:00PM
FX: RADIO MUSIC FADES UP, ON QUIETLY, CHATTER
SOLDIER: Do
you remember what I told you Joe when you asked me what I did? I said I dealt in metal – a bit of brass and
nickle. ... and every now and then I traded lead.
BIG JOE: Yeah
I remember. (PAUSE) I get the
picture.
SOLDIER: I
came for him, Joe – I didn’t come for the money. It was never about the money. It was always about him. When you’ve been through the stuff we went
through, you’re more than brothers. I knew his scheme was madness, but I’d follow
him whatever. But when he opened your
cousin’s throat as casually as slitting a rabbit – I took off. Over the following days I realised what I had
to do. So I followed the trail of the
coins. I knew they would lead me to
him. I had to stop him, Joe. I couldn’t let someone else do it ..... and I couldn’t see him in a prison ... or a straight-jacket.
BIG JOE: What
happens now soldier? Falcone may or may
not end up inside, he still legally owns Mom’s house – where do I stand?
SOLDIER: Don’t
worry – Falcone isn’t goin to spend more than a day on the inside.
BIG JOE: I
don’t follow ..
SOLDIER: We
can’t trust the police or the justice system to deal with the likes of Falcone
– if we want him out the picture we need the Atlantic City mob to take him
out. Last I looked they weren’t in the
‘phone book – but I’ll bet that within two hours of his arrest the east coast
will know who’s in the frame, and within another hour the contract will be out
for Enrico Falcone. A coupla hours after
that he’ll be at the bottom of Lake Michigan ... wearing cement boots.
JOSEPHINE: Soldier
darling, I did tell ya you’ve got to lighten up if you want to get the girl at
the end of the movie.
SOLDIER: You
did sugar. I’m done now. Now what we going
to do you and me?
JOSEPHINE: Soldier
boy, cos I love you and I want to look after you I’ve orgainsed it so we can do
whatever we like.
SOLDIER: Go on Angel, how have you
managed that?
JOSEPHINE: Well,
I know you trade in paper and metal so I thought you might like a break from
the heavy stuff.
SOLDIER: I’m listening sugar ..
where’s this going?
JOSEPHINE: And
I know you like art ‘cos you and I spent a wonderful morning together at the
Institute .. so when I was looking in
Enrico’s safe I thought to myself – what would my soldier boy like from
here? .. and do you know there it was
right in front of me .. so I brought you as many as I could in the biggest
suitcase I could find.
SOLDIER: Sugar,
what have you done?
JOSEPHINE: Who’s
your favourite President, Soldier Boy? Washington,
Lincoln, Jackson, Cleaver? Shall I tell
you who mine is soldier boy?... of all
the Presidents the one I like the best is Madison.
SOLDIER: Honey
are you telling me what I think you’re telling me? ... what’s in the suitcase
sugar?
JOSEPHINE: Because
I love you so much, I left behind all that lovely jewellry just so I could fill
this case, art lover, with portraits of presidents; including a whole bundle of
Cleaver and Madison.
FX: PLAY OUT TO ‘BOOGIE WOOGIE BUGLE BOY OF COMPANY B’