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Writing » 2004

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CTRL+ALT+DEL (with photos!)

So here’s the script again, now that we’ve wrapped our latest run of performances:

CTRL + ALT + DEL

by Andrés du Bouchet

Performed November 12 & 19 at the Kraine Theater,

and December 10, 11, 16-19 at the Red Room above KGB.

NEIL – Bryan Olsen

BARRY – Michael Reisman

TOM – Anthony Devito

OFFICER CHROPUVKA – Rusty Ward

Lights up on a suburban kitchen. Neil sits at the kitchen table center stage, speaking on the phone. He is wearing rubber gloves and a bloody shirt. A very large and lumpy looking garbage bag is downstage left. A dura-flame log and box of fireplace matches sits against the wall stage right. Against the back wall upstage right is a microwave and garbage disposal.

NEIL

Thanks for talking to me Mom. I’m sure she’s fine – you know how cell phones can be. She probably left me a message which didn’t get through. Alright, Okay, I’ll let you know if I hear anything. Sorry to wake you. Alright I’ll make sure Patty calls you in the morning Ma. Go back to sleep. ‘Night.

A thoughtful beat. Then, he begins reciting to himself:

NEIL (con.)

Hello, Ellen? Have you heard from Patty? Hello Ellen? Have you or Tom heard from Patty? She hasn’t come home from work yet and I haven’t been able to reach her on her cell phone. I’m worried…I’m very worried…I’m starting to get worried.

He gets up and begins to pace.

NEIL (con.)

Hello, Ellen? It’s Neil. Have you or Tom heard from Patty? She never came home from work and she hasn’t called. I’m starting to get worried – it isn’t like her not to call and I haven’t been able to reach her on her cell phone. Alright, good.

He goes to pick up the phone. Just as he’s about to pick it up, it rings. He stares at it for several beats, his hand hovering over the receiver. He picks it up.

NEIL (con.)

Hello? Oh Hi Tom. Ellen? No, I haven’t heard from her at all. She never came home from work? Yeah, no, I know, that’s…that’s not like her not to call, right? Well I’m sure she’ll call you soon. Um…listen, have you seen Patty?

There is a knock on the door.

NEIL (con.)

Hold on Tom, someone’s at the door.

He answers the door – it’s Barry, who is also wearing a bloody shirt and rubber gloves.

BARRY

Have you seen Nancy?

They stare at each other. Neil gives Barry the “just a second” sign with his finger.

NEIL

(into the phone) Yeah Tom? Barry’s here. He’s looking for Nancy…No, I’m not kidding. And I haven’t seen Patty since this morning. Yeah, yeah. Right. Maybe they’re…all together. (He look at Barry, who shrugs) Okay see you soon. Bye.

BARRY

Nancy never came home from work and she hasn’t called. I’m starting to get worried – it isn’t like her not to call and I haven’t been able to reach her on her cell phone. And you’re saying you don’t know where Patty is either?

NEIL

She…never came home from work either.

BARRY

Oh wow, that’s…Yeah, I was out fishing all day and I just got back and was cleaning the fish, and I cut myself a little.

NEIL

Oh yeah, yeah. I was cleaning the dishes and I accidentally cut myself on a glass. And then I got on a cleaning kick and put a bunch of normal, lumpy, heavy stuff in that garbage bag and I’ve been bleeding a lot. It’s my blood.

BARRY

Yeah…can I sit down for second?

NEIL

Yeah…I think I will too.

Stunned silence.

BARRY

So I’m sure our wives are fine and all, and they’ll be home soon.

NEIL

Sure, sure. How is Nancy doing? The pregnancy coming along nicely?

BARRY

Oh yeah, she’s healthy and the baby’s doing fine. And I was fishing all day. And Patty? How is her pregnancy?

NEIL

She’s great, great. Healthy and happy – I felt the baby kick yesterday! That garbage bag is filled with regular garbage.

More stunned silence. There is a knock on the door.

NEIL

I’ll get it.

Neil opens the door.

Tom walks in, also wearing a bloody shirt with rubber gloves on.

TOM

Hey guys, have you seen Ellen…

They all regard each other.

TOM

She never came home from work and she hasn’t called. I’m starting to get worried – it isn’t like her not to call and I haven’t been able to reach her on her cell phone. Oh, I’ve been shearing the hedges and I -

NEIL

Cut yourself? Yeah, so did we.

BARRY

Yeah.

TOM

Can I sit down?

NEIL

Sure.

All three are seated in dumbfounded silence for a looong beat.

NEIL (con.)

Tom, I thought you and Ellen seemed really happy lately I don’t-

TOM

We are! What does that have to do with anything? I can’t wait for my pregnant wife whom I love to have our baby so we can continue our lives together until we both die of natural causes. I’m upset that she hasn’t returned from work and I’ve been making a lot of very concerned phone calls to that effect. I haven’t even had time to clean myself up from the hedge trimming accident.

BARRY

Where did you cut yourself?

TOM

I love my wife! Where did you cut yourself?

Beat.

BARRY

It’s like that time I bought an SUV.

NEIL

What?

BARRY

I bought a Ford Explorer and you guys went out and copied me.

TOM

I don’t know what you’re getting at Barry, but stop right now.

NEIL

Look. I’m just going to say what we’re all thinking.

TOM

Oh no no no no…

NEIL

Yes, c’mon we’ll all feel a lot better.

TOM

No.

BARRY

No!

NEIL

Our wives are going to be just fine.

Beat.

BARRY

Yes!

TOM

Yeah?

NEIL

They’ll be home at some point. Heck, they’re all friends, maybe they all went somewhere together immediately following work and they’re somewhere where none of their cell phones work. And we all cut ourselves cleaning, fishing and hedging. The best thing we can do is make concerned phone calls to strategically targeted friends and family members tonight … due to our legitimate concern…and then call the police in the morning. After we’ve cleaned ourselves up.

BARRY

Yes, we gotta clean up.

NEIL

Sure! I’ll collect everyone’s shirts and put them in the wash.

Everyone starts taking off their shirts and piling them onto the kitchen table. They look at Neil’s back.

BARRY

Wait, what is that, a tattoo?

NEIL

Yeah.

TOM

(inspecting) What is it?

NEIL

Careful it’s still a bit tender – it’s an airplane with luggage falling out of its open cargo compartment, and the caption says “No Baggage.”

BARRY

It’s nice.

NEIL

Thanks. I got it today.

TOM

Oh – that new tattoo parlour next to the mattress store, right?

NEIL

Yep.

BARRY

You know…you’ve got a fireplace, right?

TOM

Yes! Neil, you’ve got a fireplace.

NEIL

Yes I do have a fireplace. Or rather, Patty and I have one.

BARRY

Do you think, um…we could…

NEIL

Hey, I completely understand. If it will make you guys feel better, I can burn all of our shirts.

TOM

I think that’s a good idea.

BARRY

In times of stress, when I’m concerned about my pregnant wife whom I love, I think it helps me calm down to burn things like shirts.

Neil grabs the pile of shirts and begins to head offstage to upstage right.

NEIL

Hey I’m with you, Barry. When I’m worried, I like to clean things thoroughly and meticulously, until they’re spotless. I call it “CSI Clean”.

TOM

“CSI Clean”. I like that.

Tom starts scrubbing a spot on the floor.

NEIL

Thanks. I came up with it today.

BARRY

I cleaned my house top to bottom all day. Because I was so worried. Waiting for my pregnant wife whom I love. And then I went fishing all day.

Neil returns to the kitchen.

NEIL

Wait a second. You cleaned your house all day and also went fishing all day because you were worried that your wife hadn’t come home from work yet…tonight?

BARRY

Well. Now that you put it that way. I, um. Can you guys help me figure out what I was…

TOM

Look. After we clean up and burn everything that needs to be burned-

NEIL

For our peace of mind.

TOM

Right, for our piece of mind, we’ll all sit down and figure out what each of us was doing today. Since we’re so worried about our wives we may have a hard time remembering.

BARRY

I can prove I went fishing. I even caught some fish after I. After I…Caught some other fish.

NEIL

Alright. Well, I think we’re all on the same page here. As long as we all stay on this page, we can get through this coincidence.

BARRY

Yes. Let’s take this page, and just fold the corner over, so we know where we are in the book that is this unfortunate situation. Hopefully this chapter ends better than –

NEIL

No need to expand the metaphor, Barry.

BARRY

Sorry. Same page.

TOM

Hey. Guys. I hope all of our wives are alright. Huh?

NEIL

That’s the spirit!

BARRY

What about the rubber gloves?

As he explains the following, Neil grabs a casserole dish and places it on the table, and then begins to remove his rubber gloves and place them in the dish. The other two follow suit.

NEIL

If we microwave all of them in a casserole dish for 10-15 minutes, they’ll actually lose their elasticity and become brittle – and then we can stick them in the garbage disposal in the sink. It’ll be indistinguishable from the rest of the muck in there.

Neil puts the glove casserole in the microwave.

BARRY

Really?

NEIL

Yep. I happened to read it on-line yesterday.

TOM

You know, I happened to read the same exact thing!

NEIL

Huh! Well, let me go burn the shirts.

Neil grabs the duraflame log and fireplace matches.

BARRY

Make sure there’s nothing left at all.

TOM

Hey Barry – don’t worry, alright?

NEIL

Tom, try to calm down our little friend here while I burn the shirts.

TOM

Hey, it’s a good thing it’s a bit nippy out. Perfectly normal to have a fire.

NEIL

Weather.com is always pretty accurate.

Neil heads offstage with the duraflame log and matches.

TOM

Yep.

BARRY

I am going to need a bookmark.

TOM

What? Just listen to me for a second. How long have we known each other?

BARRY

14 years.

TOM

And during that entire time, what is the one thing that I’ve known more about than pretty much everyone in the world, except maybe for those two fruitcakes in Vermont?

BARRY

Ice cream.

TOM

That’s right, ice cream. I have loved ice cream since I was a kid, and I’ve never stopped loving ice cream. I love ice cream so much, I’ve become the king of ice cream here in the tri-state area. Penguin Pop’s ice cream shops are in over 20 locations. And do you know why I love ice cream so much?

BARRY

Everybody loves ice cream.

TOM

Variety. I love ice cream because of the variety. You’re familiar with my store’s most popular original flavor, right?

BARRY

“Chocolate Armageddon”.

TOM

Yes, “Chocolate Armageddon”. Chocolate ice cream. Almonds. Chocolate chunks. Malted milk balls. Milk duds. Swirls of peanut butter. Swirls of marshmallow. Toffee clusters. Crumbled Twinkies. Those are just half of the ingredients right there. Everything you could possibly want in an ice cream, right? No reason to ever try another flavor, right? Wrong. I got hooked on it once, ate it everyday for every meal for a week. Then I needed a change. Now just imagine if the ice cream wouldn’t let you change. If it was considered inappropriate to try other flavors. And if it wasn’t a week, it was 4 years. And the ice cream made it known on a daily basis that you weren’t man enough for it. Or worst case scenario, if that ice cream were to get pregnant.

BARRY

Thanks Tom, that actually helped a lot.

TOM

Anytime.

Neil reenters.

NEIL

Alright, our shirts are burning. Who wants a beer?

Neil begins opening and handing out bottles of beer.

TOM

Is that a good idea?

NEIL

We’re worried, we’re commiserating, we’re having a few cold ones while we burn some shirts and microwave some rubber gloves.

They each hold a beer. Tom raises his bottle to toast.

TOM

To our wonderful wives!

NEIL

Here here.

TOM

This is excellent.

NEIL

It’s a microbrew. That’s pumpkin you taste.

BARRY

Mmm.

TOM

Guys, it’s getting late. I think we should start helping each other try to remember what it was each of us was doing today, so that we can better help the police find our wives who we’re concerned about.

NEIL

I agree, why don’t we start by –

The phone rings. Neil answers it.

NEIL

Hello? Patty! (Tom does a magnificent spit-take) I was worried sick about you! Where are you sweetheart?

Barry and Tom are dumbstruck.

NEIL

Oh wow. Yeah. That stinks. Nah, I’m just here with Tom and Barry, having a few cold ones. Well they’re worried about Ellen and Nancy, have you seen them? Oh, okay, well get home soon. Drive safe. I love you.

Barry and Tom are baffled.

NEIL

Patty’ll be home soon.

Long beat. Neil holds up a cell phone from his pocket.

NEIL

Gotcha! That was me! I called the house phone from my cell!

BARRY

What page are you on? What happened to staying on the same page? This is not the page!

TOM

Jesus Christ! Jokes are the last thing we need!

There is a knock at the door. Beat.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA (offstage)

Police.

BARRY

That’s the last thing we need.

TOM

What do we do, we can’t let him see us like this!

NEIL

Just relax, he can already see us through the window.

All three wave offstage meakly. Neil answers the door. Officer Chropuvka walks in.

NEIL

Can I help you officer?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Good evening gentlemen, I’m sorry to bother you.

NEIL

No problem.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Hey, you’re Neil Greenfellow, the songwriter!

NEIL

That’s me.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Wow. (singing) “Ain’t no woman gonna hold me back, ain’t no woman gonna drag me down…” Great stuff. I thought Rondelle did a great job with that one.

NEIL

Thanks man.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

(singing) “Bye bye ball and chain…” Willie Francis and the Charlottes recorded that one.

NEIL

Yep, you’re good.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

(singing) “Hello, I’d like to report a spouse-icide!” Jonny Sapphire.

NEIL

Amazing! Are you guys hearing this? He knows all my songs.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Big fan. Big fan.

NEIL

So, what brings you by, officer…

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Chropuvka.

NEIL

Officer Chropuvka.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Well, this neighborhood is part of my nightly route, I drive around at night looking for anything out of the ordinary and this is a nice area, so unusual things tend to stand out, like those three bloody mattresses on your curb.

NEIL

Three bloody mattresses? I mean – three bloody mattresses?

The other two look sheepish.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Yeah. Three mattresses, and they all look pretty bloody. And judging from the drag marks, at least one of them came from this house. So…hey, why aren’t you guys wearing any shirts?

TOM

Strip poker.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Strip poker. Where are the cards?

TOM

We don’t use cards. This is a game we call…Trust Strip Poker.

BARRY

Trust Strip Poker.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Trust Strip Poker?

Bing! The microwave goes off.

NEIL

I’ll get that.

Neil begins removing the gloves from the microwave and placing them in the garbage disposal. Over next few lines, the sound of the disposal can be heard in the background as Neil shoves gloves in.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

That smells awful, what is that?

NEIL

Just a pile of rubber gloves.

TOM

Yeah, Trust Strip Poker. It’s up to each person to come up with their poker hand in their head. Then, you take turns telling the rest of the table your hand, and everyone just has to trust that you’re not just making up the best possible hand.

NEIL

(over his shoulder) I have three Kings by the way.

TOM

Again with the three Kings. (takes off his belt)

BARRY

(screaming) I can’t take it anymore!

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Gentlemen, I’ve been compiling a list of questions since I arrived here. And I have to admit, the list has now gotten so long that I cannot remember what my first question was. So, let me ask the one that most recently popped into my head. (turns to Barry). What?

BARRY

Um.

TOM

Officer Corperka-

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Chropuvka.

TOM

Chropuvka, I know this whole situation must seem rather strange to you. You see a pile of bloody mattresses on this man’s curb. You come to investigate, and find three half-dressed men, half-dressed men who claim that they’re playing a game of strip poker with no cards. Then, as one of the men busily shoves a bunch of microwaved rubber gloves into a garbage disposal, one of the other men screams “I can’t take it anymore”. What are you to think? The fact is, the three of us are desperately worried about our wives. They’re all friends, you see, and none of them have come home from work today. So, after making several concerned calls which phone records will document –

BARRY

And fishing.

TOM

Right, and cleaning and trimming the hedges, we all decided to get together and support each other during this time of worry. About our wives whom we love. Sure, we’re shirtless. Sure, there’s a pile of bloody mattresses out there.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

But…?

TOM

But what?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

It sounded like you were about to add a but.

TOM

No, that’s all I wanted to say.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Fine, then I’m going to have to ask for a more detailed explanation of what’s going on here. You say all of your wives are missing?

BARRY

Here’s…here’s the receipt from where I parked when I went fishing.

Hands him receipt.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Okay.

NEIL

You’ve got quite a five-o-clock shadow going on there, officer.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

No I don’t.

NEIL

What type of razor do you use?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Oh, uh – the Mach 3.

NEIL

Right, I could’ve pegged you as a Mach 3 man.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Alright.

NEIL

Myself, I use the old fashioned kind. The kind you buy loose. You know, just blades. You need to load them into the shaver.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Those are pretty old-fashioned.

During the following exchange, Barry and Tom begin slowly, awkwardly carrying the large garbage bag offstage. Neil keeps rotating as he talks to Officer Chropuvka, so that Chropuvka’s back is to Tom and Barry.

NEIL

They sure are. Well, this morning, at 7am, our alarm goes off – and my wife, who is normally pretty lucid in the morning, trips out of bed, knocks the alarm clock and lamp off the bedside table, topples over the entire dresser, walks face first into the full length mirror and then says “I don’t feel so good, I think I took too many horse tranquilizers last night.”

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Horse tranquilizers?

NEIL

I know! Weird, right? I didn’t even know she had them hidden in her lingerie drawer which is where the bottle still is now with only her fingerprints on it. Anyway, she apparently had an addiction to them that I didn’t know about. She goes into the bathroom, pulls the shower curtains off the shower rod, and collapses on the floor. That’s when I fell back asleep.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Wait, you fell back asleep? Weren’t you concerned about your wife?

NEIL

I sure was, and I had some very concerned dreams for the next half hour or so. Anyway, when I finally wake up again, there she is, back in bed, shaving her legs with my old-fashioned razor! I say “honey, what are you doing?” Because she’s cutting herself all over the place, bleeding everywhere, but she just keeps saying “I gotta shave my legs and get to work!” So once she went off to work I threw the mattress on the curb and went to the mattress store.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

And you bought a new mattress?

NEIL

You think I would have. But no, I just ended up getting a tattoo at the parlour next door. Anyway, I’m beginning to feel like maybe I shouldn’t have let my wife leave the house in that state. She didn’t even take the car. I wonder how she got to work.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

How long is her commute?

NEIL

When she drives, it’s like…90 minutes.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

But she didn’t drive, she just wandered off.

Barry and Tom return from offstage. They are all clustered around the officer now.

NEIL

I’ve been calling her cell phone all day with no success. My phone records will back that up. And cleaning. Cleaning like a madman. I clean when I’m worried. My wife’s diary will back that up in handwriting that matches the rest of the diary.

BARRY

You can see on my parking slip that it’s for today’s date.

TOM

Alright, one of those bloody mattresses is mine as well. And yes, it’s my wife’s blood on there too!!

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

And?

TOM

And what?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Gentlemen, I am growing increasingly impatient here.

Neil pulls Tom away and hands him a saw. He picks up a hatchet and they head offstage. Sounds of chopping and sawing start coming from the other room and continue throughout this exchange.

BARRY

What the hell was I supposed to do? Can you tell me that? What? I’m up to my eyeballs in debt. I can’t afford to have a baby. My whole life has been a sham, a lousy fake sham of a failure! My wife deserves better than me, you know? I did the only thing I could do!

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Which was what?

BARRY

To attempt to win the fishing contest today.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Fishing contest.

BARRY

I did not win.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

What fishing contest?

BARRY

The Secret Fishing Contest Of Mystery Bay.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Alright, I’ll give you that. I’m from Mystery Bay, and today we held our annual Secret Fishing Contest. You were there?

BARRY

Yes.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

What was the secret fish?

BARRY

Perch.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Okay. Were you the one who dumped that large object wrapped in a tarp into the water – the one that everyone was pointing and yelling at?

BARRY

Tarp baiting is a very popular technique for priming the water for fish. I wrapped approximately 140 pounds of sardines in a tarp and dumped it in to prime…prime the water. About 140 pounds. Back in the early 90s it would’ve been 115 pounds, but the sardines…really let themselves go.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Is one of those mattresses yours?

BARRY

Okay.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Well?

BARRY

Are you married, officer?

During this exchange, Barry gets Chropuvka a beer and they sit at the table.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Yes, I am.

BARRY

For how long?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

We’ve been married for 11 years. Since, well since the end of high school.

BARRY

High school sweethearts.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Yeah.

BARRY

Married early.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Sure.

BARRY

Because you knocked her up?

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

(laughs) Yeah, pretty much. You got me.

BARRY

And since then, that feeling of regret gnaws at you. What could your life have been without those shackles you willingly put on oh those many years ago. How would your life be different now if you hadn’t been such a reckless teenager, and if you hadn’t then bowed down to the social pressures of a family, nay, an entire society, that expected you to throw away your freedom, your future, because of one little mistake! What if you HAD gone to the creative writing program in Iowa? What if you HADN’T just stayed in this town, toiling away as a discount tax prep accountant?

The sawing sounds stop, and Tom reappears. The chopping sounds continue.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

I love my wife.

TOM

That’s what we’ve been saying! And that’s why we’re worried sick about them!

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

(to Barry) I’ll get back to you. What about you?

TOM

I flail in my sleep.

The chopping sounds stop and Neil reappears. He hands the hatchet to Barry, who goes offstage. Neil follows. The chopping and sawing sounds resume.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

What?

TOM

When I sleep I flail around, waving my arms, sometimes. Sometimes I’ll throw an elbow or kick, when I’m having one of my “No Father Conroy” dreams. Last night I accidentally in my sleep gave my wife a bloody nose. But she didn’t even wake up when it happened, she kept sleeping. So by the time we both woke up, her blood was all over the place, soaked through the sheets and the mattress…I told her I would drag the mattress out of the house, which I did. She then walked to work high on horse tranquilizers.

NEIL

(poking his head out) Hey.

Tom shrugs apologetically.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

And did you buy a new mattress today?

TOM

You think I would have. But all I got was this tattoo.

Shows the tattoo. Neil emerges.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

What is it?

TOM

It’s a half and half caricature – the face is split down the middle between Jack NIcholson from the Shining and Mel Gibson from Braveheart, and he’s saying “Heeeeere’s Freedom!”

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

And you got this today.

TOM

Yep.

The chopping sounds come to a complete stop – and Barry is heard yelling offstage…

BARRY (offstage)

Ow, my foot! My foot! Ah my foot!

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Alright what the hell is going on in there.

NEIL

Wait!

Officer Chropuvka rushes offstage. We hear a massive thump. A long beat. Barry comes running on, bloodier than ever.

BARRY

Alright! The cop’s out of the picture.

TOM

What?

NEIL

Barry, did you just kill Officer Chropuvka?

BARRY

What else could I do, he was expertly picking apart our nefarious web of lies!

NEIL

How’s your foot?

BARRY

That was nothing but a clever ruse.

NEIL

Okay. It looks like we’re on a different page now.

BARRY

I’m sorry I turned the page.

TOM

What kind of a person kills a police officer? I’m disappointed in you, Barry.

BARRY

Hey, your ice cream sucks!

NEIL

Whoah, whoah. Let’s not let our emotions get the better of us now. This is just another small wrinkle in -

A gunshot rings out. They all flinch. Officer Chropuvka stumbles back onto the stage, clutching his bloody neck with one hand and waving his gun back and forth at them. He leans and slumps against the wall stage right. The other three back away to stage left.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

I’m beginning…to think…you guys…are full…of shit.

TOM

So you didn’t kill him. I’m disappointed in you, Barry.

NEIL

Officer Chrovupka, you really caught us at a bad time.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

It’s Chropuvka. Put your hands up, all of you. And put down the fucking axe.

They all do.

NEIL

Officer Chropuvka, I’ve got some rare autographed albums of my songs that are yours if you just put down the gun.

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

The classics?

NEIL

All the classics.

CHROPUVKA

Wow, that sounds-

Officer Chropuvka’s gun goes off by accident, hitting Neil. He slumps down onto the floor.

NEIL

Shit…

OFFICER CHROPUVKA

Oh man, that was an accident. I totally would’ve taken the al…bums.

Officer Chropuvka and Neil both die. Barry and Tom take it all in for a long beat.

TOM

You don’t like my ice cream?

BARRY

It’s too airy. Alright, this can work to our advantage.

TOM

It can? This is ten times worse than before.

BARRY

No. Listen. Neil Greenfellow, long term drug abusing singer/songwriter, has terrible acid flashback, goes on a murdering spree. Kills our wives, and even kills a cop – who manages to get one lucky shot in before dying.

TOM

Go on.

BARRY

His two friends, concerned about their wives, arrive to confront Neil, and witness the whole horrifying scene unfold. We’re in a whole new book now. I gotta..I gotta figure out whose fingerprints should be on what.

TOM

Well, yours shouldn’t be on that hatchet for starters.

BARRY

Okay. You see? Now we’re getting somewhere.

Barry starts to head offstage.

TOM

(calling after him) And make sure you wipe our prints off the garbage bag.

BARRY

(heading offstage) I know.

Tom grabs a cloth and begins wiping down various spots in he kitchen as he sings to himself.

TOM

(singing) Hello! I’d like to report a spouse-icide!

BARRY

(from offstage) Ow, my foot! I really hurt my foot this time! Tom, help!

TOM

(heading offstage) Barry, are you okay?

Another scream and thump. Barry re-emerges, and places the axe on the table. He picks up the phone. Puts it back down, and rehearses to himself:

BARRY

Hello, police? I’d like to report a…quint…sext…Hello police? Something’s happened. Something terrible has happened. Hello police? Something terrible has happened, I walked in and they were all on the floor and Oh My God! (beat) Okay, good.

As he goes to pick up the phone, BLACKOUT.

THE END!

TWENTY-ONE DOLLAR BURGER!

Last week on Twenty-One Dollar Burger

KYLE

You’re shittin’ me.

BO

No man, seriously.

AND NOW WE RETURN TO TWENTY-ONE DOLLAR BURGER!

KYLE

How was it?

BO

Awesome.

TUNE IN NEXT WEEK FOR MORE TWENTY-ONE DOLLAR BURGER!

Slab… Trawlmuergsen…… Southern……… Massapequa………… Community……………

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ABC PROUDLY LAUNCHES NEW ‘INTERSTITIAL DRAMA’ TO TAKE PLACE ENTIRELY WITHIN THE PAUSES BETWEEN WORDS UTTERED BY LINEMEN AS THEY INTRODUCE THEMSELVES DURING MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL

ABC unveiled its newest show, Disparate Housewives today, in which housewives are extremely different from one another. “It may sound like a rather limiting premise,” said Glenn Glenndennon, ABC’s Senior Vice Producer of Interstitial Development, “but a show like Disparate Housewives is perfectly suited for our new line of interstitial programming, that is, programming which takes place entirely within the pauses between the words uttered by linemen as they introduce themselves during Monday Night Football.”

In the debut episode of Disparate Housewives, Charlene and Sarah, one blonde and tall, the other brunette and short, argue briefly about their opposing viewpoints concerning couch texture. The entire episode takes place between the words “Burt” and “Farmpletog”, which are, respectively, the first and last names of Minnesota’s Nosetackle. ABC was kind enough to provide us with a clip (hell man, I can’t be expected to maintain the press release format, I’m typing this crap at work during pauses in my secretarial day – how appropo!):

DISPARATE HOUSEWIVES EPISODE ONE

JOHN MADDEN

…which should play a big role in determining run to pass ratio.

AL MICHAELS

As they line-up, let’s meet the Viking’s starters.

[loud swooshing noises accompany a robo-mechanical themed computer graphic, in which the football players' heads appear one by one with their names underneath -- as each head rotates into view, it becomes live video, with the player speaking - very very slowly - into the camera]

BURT FARMPLETOG

…Burt…

[another graphic appears next to Burt's face as he pauses to recollect his own last name - in this graphic two women appear - one tall and blonde, one brunette and short]

CHARLENE

I prefer couches with a plush texture.

SARAH

I strongly disagree. I like a nice, coarse texture.

BURT FARMPLETOG

…Farmpletog…

CHARLENE

No, a plush texture, like a velour, is much more appealing.

SARAH

No it isn’t, it’s nicer to have something that you can idly rub while you watch tv.

BURT FARMPLETOG

…Eastern…

The other night, a fellow comic was mentioning to me that I have a tendency to abandon premises mid-post. Interesting.