screenplay

Synopsis: The richest, meanest man in a little West Texas town brings home his third wife, who tries to seduce the youngest son into the murder of his dad.

* * * * * * * * * *
FADE IN

EXT CONSTRUCTION SITE – DAY

A half finished house, the wind BLOWING dust through it’s skeleton frame, which stands alone in the endless emptiness of the great brown prairie. HOLD for a moment…

NEW ANGLE

Fresh cement pours down and around rubber soled boots – creating an odd sense of entrapment.

Camera RISES on a handsome young man, COLIN, stripped to the waist, spreading the wet goo with a rake. It’s back breaking work beneath a hot sun. The young man is joined in the work by his older brother, CLAY. They are both tan, muscular, in the prime of their youth — and at the moment deeply unhappy with their lot in life.

CLAY
Ain’t nothing can kill a man like pouring a hundred yards
of this shit.

COLIN
Yeah.

CLAY
I hope the old man is having fun. What do you bet he’s
chasing some old gal around them crap tables, while we’re
out here busting a gut.

COLIN
Bet you’re right. But I bet she ain’t old.

CLAY
Humph. Got that straight.

They stop to wipe the sweat from their faces and gaze up at the high hot sun.

MAN’S VOICE
Hey, stop that goldbricking and bend those backs!

The brothers are pouring a basement foundation, and so look up at UNCLE LUKE – fat and unfriendly – who stands above them at ground level.

CLAY
I don’t know who’s worse. Daddy, or Uncle Luke.

They start back to work.

CONSTRUCTION SITE – LATER

The brothers approach Uncle Luke’s truck to get their pay. When Clay opens his envelope, he immediately sets up a howl.

CLAY
What’s this two hundred dollar deduction?

UNCLE LUKE
Paint job on that truck you wrecked.

CLAY
I didn’t wreck it. That’s just a scratch! Look! Look!

Clay crosses to truck that has Freed Construction stenciled on the door, as well as a small dent. He SLAPS the dent.

CLAY (cont’d)
That look like two hundred dollars worth of damage to
you? This ain’t coming outa my pay!

UNCLE LUKE
Take it up with your daddy, boy. I’m just the help.
(spits stream of tobacco)
Just like you.

Uncle Luke walks away from the seething Clay.

EXT HIGHWAY – AFTERNOON

A dusty piece of asphalt. On either side miles of rock and mesquite. In the distance a small town. A battered pickup powers by, HEAVY METAL MUSIC pounding out the open window.  Camera PICKS UP a beat up road sign

Texas Highway – 115

EXT MAIN STREET – LATE AFTERNOON – ESTABLISHING

The heart of the West Texas town of Pomeroy. It ain’t much. A couple of blocks of low slung buildings, weather beaten by years of wind and dust, hunkered down in the vast emptiness.

The brothers drive down Main Street in their worn out truck and park in front of the Café.  Mercifully, the HEAVY METAL MUSIC stops.

INT CAFE – AFTERNOON

A spare and dusty place. Colin is hunched over jukebox trying to decide. Something about this decision makes him nervous. He works up his courage and selects. An Emmy Lou Harris love song, sweetly melodious, fills the room.

He joins his brother at booth in front window. Clay has all his money, coins and bills. spread on the table, counting them. It’s a measly pile.

CLAY
I’ll have to work twenty years for that bastard fore
I ever get me a stake.

COLIN
(easily)
One of these days it’ll all come to us.

CLAY
You don’t know that. Why do you always stick up for
him?

COLIN
I ain’t sticking up for…

CLAY
You don’t even know how to stick up for yourself.

COLIN
(quietly stubborn)
Yes, I do.

CLAY
Now me…I got plans. I got better things to do than
get treated like trash while I wait around for him to
kick off.

COLIN
What plans?

Clay smirks. In the pause that follows, the sweetly melodious music can be more distinctly heard.

CLAY
And why you play this candy assed music?

COLIN
(again, quietly stubborn)
I like it.

CLAY
Jesus, boy. You’re gonna turn out pussy for sure.

Colin SLUGS his brother’s shoulder. Clay just smiles.

CLAY (cont’d)
Okay. My turn.

This is a ritual between them. Colin turns, exposing his shoulder.

Through the window Colin sees the Sheriff’s car pull up. From passenger side steps DELORES HUNGERFORT – in her 40’s, blonde, blowsy, full of brass. She charges out of the car and by the window as…

Clay punches his brother’s shoulder.

COLIN
Skeeter bite.

CLAY
Ha!

Behind them the door BANGS open and Delores advances under a full head of steam.

DELORES HUNGERFORT
You tell that sonofabitch father you got he’s two
months behind in his alimony.

CLAY
What’s the matter, Delores? You need more nail polish?

DELORES
Shut up you snot nosed brat. Least you could do is
call me mother.

CLAY
You ain’t our mother.

DELORES
Close as you’ll ever get.

Something catches Colin’s eye out the window.

HIS POV

SHERIFF FRANK – tall, thin, rawboned tough – is writing out on ticket for the boys’ pickup.

CLAY (v.o.)
What are you doing in here anyway, Delores? They
don’t serve gin in here. You lose your way?

COLIN
Clay.  Clay!  Look!

EXT CAFE – LATE AFTERNOON

The brothers emerge from the cafe, Clay in the lead.

CLAY
What the hell you think you’re doing?

SHERIFF FRANK
(taps it)
Meter’s expired.

CLAY
These meters ain’t been used in twenty years.

Wordlessly, Sheriff Frank tears out ticket, stuffs it in Clay’s shirt pocket.

CLAY (cont’d)
For a first cousin, you’re a first class asshole, Frank.

Clay rips up ticket, throws pieces to the ground. Calmly, the Sheriff takes out ticket book and resumes writing.

CLAY (cont’d)
Whattaya doing now?

SHERIFF FRANK
Looks like littering to me.

Clay starts for the Sheriff, but Colin grabs him in a bear hug and dances him away.

COLIN
C’mon, Clay! C’mon!

He still has his arms around his brother as Delores emerges from cafe and passes, licking an ice cream cone.

DELORES
Lookee here, Frank. Got us a couple of queers,
right here in Pomeroy.

CLAY
ARRAAGGHH!

Clay again tries to break the grip of his brother, this time to go after Delores. But Colin holds fast.

EXT BIG HOUSE – DUSK – ESTABLISHING

The pickup ROARS down a long dirt drive and parks in front of a big white house. The house, once proud, is now in a state of disrepair. Overgrown weeds and abandoned farm/ranching equipment dot the front yard. A second beat to hell pickup is on the cement part of the drive.

Clay SLAMS out of the truck, heads through “breezeway” to the back yard, ranting.

CLAY
I can’t take it anymore! I can’t fucking take this!

INT BOYS’ ROOM – EVENING

The phone is RINGING as Colin comes up the stairs. Through open window Clay is seen below on a half finished patio that surrounds an empty swimming pool. There are piles of dirt about and the empty pool is filthy.

This room is over a detached garage or pool house. In far b.g. is a broken down barn with board fence corral.

COLIN
(answering phone)
Hello.
(listens)
Hi, dad.

HIS POV – THROUGH WINDOW

Clay picks up a shovel on the half-finished patio and starts throwing dirt into the air and into the empty, filthy pool. Dogs start BARKING.

CLAY
No more! No more! No fucking more!

COLIN
(on phone)
Oh no, everything’s fine.
(listens)
You what?

POOL

Clay BEATS the shovel against the kennel fence near the pool and patio. The two hunting dogs inside are GOING CRAZY.

CLAY
Shut up! Shut up, you fucking dogs!

EXT POOL, PATIO – NIGHT

The two brothers, slightly drunk, sit on a pile of dirt by the empty swimming pool, each sipping a beer. After a few moments…

CLAY
He even tell you her name?

COLIN
No.

CLAY
Heh. Wife number three. Can hardly fucking wait.

COLIN
You’re supposed to get him at the airport. Something
about the Caddy acting up.

CLAY
Let him fucking walk. Tomorrow morning I am gone,
boy.  Alaska.

COLIN
What’s up there?

CLAY
Ain’t no Jesse Freed up there. That’s good enough
for me.

Clay finishes beer, throws the bottle far into the night. It CRASHES with a distant TINKLE of glass.

CLAY (cont’d)
(an after thought)
You wanna come along?

Colin considers, shrugs.

CLAY (cont’d)
I knew you wouldn’t.
(pauses)
You ask him something for me someday, will ya?
Cause I ain’t ever had the guts.
(Colin doesn’t respond)
You promise to ask?

COLIN
What?

CLAY
(slowly)
You ask him how our real mother really died. I wanna
hear what he’s got to say to that.

A drunk Clay stumbles off into the dark.

REACTION Colin – surprised, confused, uncertain.

INT BOYS’ ROOM – EARLY MORNING

Outside the sun is barely up. Inside, Clay is packing. The phone starts RINGING. Colin starts for it.

CLAY
Let it ring!

Colin stops. The phone keeps RINGING. Clay continues packing.

EXT BIG HOUSE – MORNING

Colin watches Clay throw his stuff into the back of the pickup.

COLIN
Why don’t you just go away for a coupla weeks, like
you did last spring?

CLAY
Nope. Going for good.
(pauses)
Let me give you one last piece of advice, little brother:
don’t ever trust a single damn one of our relatives. Got me?

In far b.g. a Yellow Cab turns into the dirt drive. Colin catches sight of the cab.

COLIN
Bet that’s him.

CLAY
Shit!
(leaps into truck, fires it up)
Good luck! And remember, you promised to ask!

Clay PEELS OUT just as the Yellow Cab SCREECHES to a halt and out hops JESSE FREED – an enormously vital man in his 50’s, imposing, a legendary conniver, a man so hungrily alive it’s hard not to be fascinated, even if you are repelled.

JESSE
Where the hell is he going?

COLIN
(doesn’t know how to lie)
Alaska.

JESSE
What?

COLIN
That’s what he said.

JESSE
Well he ain’t going in my truck he ain’t. He can’t steal
that truck. I’ll have him arrested!

COLIN
He bought that truck from you, daddy.

JESSE
When?

COLIN
Last year.

JESSE
For what?

COLIN
Year’s wages.

JESSE
(considers this)
I probably didn’t charge him enough.

The CAB DRIVER – a sorrowful string bean of a fellow – has opened trunk and taken out several packages and boxes, booty from a department store somewhere. Vaguely seen in the back seat, packages on her lap, is the new bride.

CAB DRIVER
That will be ninety-seven dollars and fifteen cents, sir.

JESSE
Why in San Fucking Hell weren’t you at the airport?

COLIN
Clay took the truck, sir.

JESSE
Bad luck to him anyway.
(spits)
What’s it say when I’m related to half this county and
can’t get a ride home from the airport?

CAB DRIVER
(innocently)
Probably says you don’t have many friends.

Jesse gives the man a withering look. This is one Cab Driver who’s going to have a hard time collecting his fare.

JESSE
Pay the man.

COLIN
Daddy…

JESSE
You were supposed to be there. I ain’t gonna make
good your mistakes.

COLIN
I don’t have that kind of money.

JESSE
Wanna flip me for it? Double or nothing on your wages?

COLIN
No.

JESSE
Chickenshit.

COLIN
Dad…

WOMAN’S VOICE
I think one of you had better shut up and help me outa
of this here car!

Suddenly cavalier, Jesse hustles over to help out his new bride. ENID PICKNEY is a smoldering blonde, juicy as ripe fruit. She’s got a few miles on her but is only hard around the edges, not hard through and through. Not yet.

ENID
Thank you.

JESSE
Son…this is Enid. She’s your new step mom.

She crinkles up her nose at him – almost a conspiratorial wink and sashays by headed for her new house – hungry anticipation in her eyes.

Jesse watches her pass with pride, Colin and the Cab Driver with open mouthed appreciation.  It’s the Driver who snaps out of it first.

CAB DRIVER
Ahem.

JESSE
Pay the man.

COLIN
But daddy…

But Jesse has already loped away after his new bride.

INT BIG HOUSE – DAY

If the outside of the house is in disrepair, the inside matches and exceeds that condition. The rooms are large but horribly dirty. The furniture is decrepit junk. Enid’s lips curl into a practiced pout as she inspects the premises.  A nervous Jesse hovers nearby.

JESSE
Got 18 rooms in this house. Course, only use the
kitchen and bedroom mostly. And my office. Hell,
rest of the house hain’t hardly been lived in. Good
as new.

ENID
How dare you insult me like this, Jesse Freed.

JESSE
Huh?

ENID
This is not going to do.

Colin enters with a double armload of suitcases and packages, which he drops to the floor with a CLATTER. The Cab Driver is right behind him with another double armload.

ENID (cont’d)
I will not live in a pig sty!

JESSE
Honey…

She picks up the dusty cushions from the broken down couch and begins throwing them.

ENID
This stuff goes out. Out! It’s garbage, you hear me?
Trash! I won’t have trash in my house!

Jesse is at a loss for words, as is Colin. He has never seen anybody speak like this to his dad, and looks worriedly from him to her and then back again. A moment of tense silence passes.

CAB DRIVER
I hate to interrupt the happy couple. But I need ninety-seven
dollars and fifteen cents. Then I’ll be right on my way.

JESSE
Pay the man.

COLIN
I didn’t ride in no dang cab.

JESSE
(to Driver, meaning Colin)
Keep after this dead beat. He’ll be good for it.

COLIN
No!

ENID
Oh pay him, you old tightwad. And give him a big tip, too.
Brought us all the way from that damn airport.

JESSE
All right, honey. Don’t get your drawers in a bunch.
(to Colin)
Can I borrow fifty bucks?

COLIN
I don’t have fifty bucks!

And Colin leaves the room, casting a nervous but much interested look at this new woman.  Jesse, knowing he’s whipped for the moment, finally takes out his wallet, fingers up some bills, smiles at the Driver and can’t help but ask…

JESSE
Now are you sure instead of this here fare, you
wouldn’t be interested in a good deal on a couch?

Jesse smiles at the worried Driver. In b.g. through the dirty windows, Colin is seen staring into the house, staring at Enid.