"THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" (1971)

STATS120pages121scenes21,266words28%dialogue60characters

Words

  • dialogue5,94028%
  • action14,24867%
  • other1,0785.1%

Scenes

location
  • INT 38
  • EXT 45
  • UNKNOWN 38
time
  • DAY 7
  • NIGHT 8
  • DAWN 7
  • DUSK 1
  • UNKNOWN 98
7

EXT. ARCHER CITY SQUARE - DAWN 1

7 ur *“*~aY ON ¥tye* ~~ ~~»I a EKBn sie,orienrshaeTeasdareie| olCODANCVEICH

a ch} rscrona—*al~a}rl OQweopbarrrryMemurtry

mane or white hair.

SONNY CRAWFORD. an appealing tcenasger,nelthnar

nandsome nor ugly ~ about 17 years old,

Sonny's best friend.

leader and 2 wholesome=Looking seventeen,

a retarded kid, in his early teens, sweet, abstracted, Tuy“2; loves movies,

rundown, older than her forty years, outattractive beneath it all.

O, stiil ost accractive,

GeNEVLEVE,ee8€ eucractive brimette, in her i creerSee

shirties, stillshavely and nigh- oreested. — .

HERMAN POPPER, ene es school agarletics coa

his la Forties or early fit an ashlete gong to seed, heir omellystout.-

local pool shark, foreman on rig, in his early thirties. witn heavy olack nair, neaviy

pleasant-looxing but weak man mid-forties.

LESTER MARLOW.ae a grinning, red-haired boy of

18, from Wichita Falls and th a Little more citified.

CHARLENE DUGGS.+. _* stcild, stocky and seventee

a stiff?permanent. *»

MISS MOSEY, a eeeeeree -eléerly ledy, pleasant and friendly,

runs the’ picture show,

ANNIE-ANNIE MARTIN,. -Boboy's girl, tall, willowy, very

a fat law man, not easily ruffled.

qwWwatenman,grizeled tyne,

WJACKIS LEE FRENCH... 62 pretty but very snort brunetta ln

SANDY SHEEN. opeeeses ~Seboy's little orother, freckled,

JSOBNNY.cee ecw eeeres wwitn @ heavy drawl and sex cn Ri ee

MBXICAN BOY.-.ceceee »sabous 10, and 2 Suide threush. the

OLD MEXICAN... ec. eee. wWater-selle*weg mite=-bearced,aand

AGNES BEAN.esse neces oa DiS ely mirl of L7 or le,

OMY LOGGAN weeeevee oa Vary fooc-lLocHint youth and a -¢

MONROB «we ee eeew seem veseveeerdCULL,Skinny deputy sheriftT,

MRS. CRARGe saree reeaeeececee ssherd-jawed, rednecx woman, *

MOLLY CLARG. wc vec eveecees neeeel five-year-olddaughter. . *

De Cee wwe er ee meee we we ee eeeseeeedCed-hnairedOxiahomaprisoner.

MAS. JACKSON. cee ee nee ee mee eeeDUaNG'SMother,athin,hesgard

CHE STERew snaaeneeeeerereseceaniolle-daaes Gytal:avive,alToot!ctiw]fo}t4,a'?*

2 MECHANICS. 2... cee ee eee eeveeDOUseedy-looxing.

MEI CAN BOYS, GIRLS.** ****4'..andlittle children o? Mexico.

A TRUCKEE Re we eee reneeen renee et adig

BOYS AND GIRLS. ...ea0eeeceee-in the Archer City end -Paduceh

pleyers, Tresnmen, seniors, ete,

Cold, windy morning in Texas. Except for one car -- an old white Nash that belongs to ANDY FANNER, the night- watchman, the square is deserted. Wind blows the curling dust down the empty main street, past the picture show, a laundry, a dinky beauty parlor, a grocery store. A black Chevrolet pickup, vintage 1941, is coughing itsway up the long road toward the square.

SONNY CRAWFORD riddles intently with the choke, trying to keep the pickup running. The radio is on but the sound of the motor all but drowns it out. In front of the picture show, the pickup dies and the popular 1951 song fills the cab. Sonny relaxes, yawns, peers at the movie posters a moment. (He wears a Levi jacket and his hair is neatly combed -~ except for a cowlick at the back, which sticks straight up; now and then, he tries to smooth it down.) Before hitting the starter again, he blows into his hands. The pickup grinds for a minute, then kicks off -~-Sonny races the engine before moving on. At the red light he looks over at Fanner, who is asleep in the front seat; his feet, in heavy brogans, aré visible, propped on the dashboard, A pickup with three horses in it goes through the light. Sonny starts to turn toward the pool- hall, but far down the street sees a figure sweeping, and drives that way instead. BILLY is sweeping down the white line, toward the city limits sign, ribbons of dust around the broom. (He too wears a frayed Levi jacket -- also an old red baseball cap.)

Sonny pulls up beside him and taps his horn. Billy looks up, grins happily, trots around and gets into the cab. Sonny makes a sweeping U-turn, reaches over and turns Billy’s cap around backwards. Billy grins. The song is over and an announcer comes on:

COTTONSEED CLARK (v.o.)
Folks, ol’ Cottonseed Clark talkin’ | at you -- we’li get some more good music out to you in a minute but first let me say a word or two about these wonderful Purina Poultry Chows...

Rev. 10/2/70 | 2.

4

EXT. POOLHALL - DAWN |

Sonny parks in front of the poolhall; he andBilly hurry in -- the dust blowing.

9

INT. POOLHALL - DAWN 5

Near the front, there’s a counter, a small candy case, and a green Dr. Pepper machine. SAM ("the lion") is bent over the snooker table, brushing the felt care- fully and slowly. (He wears an old mackinaw and a pair of thoroughly run-down sheepskin house shoes.) He winces at the inrush of cold wind, but gives the boys no more than a glance. As he bends to brush again he is seized with a coughing fit and has to stop brush- ing until the fit subsides, going behind the counter for his cough medicine.

During Sam’s seizure, Billy picks up a piece of pool- chalk and ildy begins to lick it. Sonny gets himself a Peanut Pattie and a Dr. Pepper; puts a nickel on the counter and goes over to stand right in front of the old, open-burner gas stove to warm himself. Sam starts to roll a cigarette.

SAM
(fondly)
Well, you’ve already spent a dime today an’ you ain’t even had a decent breakfast. —

Sam holds out his hand for the chalk Billy is licking. Billy, his tongue quite green, hands it to him, and comes to stand next to sonny, who grabs his cap. Sam watches as Billy lunges for it and Sonny feints and © throws it across the room. -Billy goes to get it.

SAM
| (lighting cigarette) I’m surprised you had the nerve to come in this mornin’, after the stompin’ y’all took. .
SONNY
(munching candy)
Coulda been worse.

Sonny idly takes a cue stick, as the sound of very loud MUFFLERS is HEARD. Billy looks nervously outside as Sonny does.

Rev. 10/6/70 3.

6

EXT. POOLHALL (POV)- DAWN

ABILENE is seen getting out of his souped-up, shiny Mercury, wearing sunglasses.

SAM
(duringthe above)
You can say that ‘boutnearly everything.
11

INT. POOLHALL -—DAWN | 7

SAM | (continuing) A few football teams’ve had some luck with tackling -- keeps the other team from scoring quite so often.

- SONNY Sounds too rough for me.

Abilene comes in, gives them a nod, unzips his cover- alls and hangs them on a nail. (His flannel shirt has pearl buttons, and his gabardine pants are well- pressed.) Billy begins to sweep along one side of the poolhall, restlessly.

SAM
You don’t even care if it was your last game -- you ain’t ever gonna get stomped for your own > high school again -- where’s your school spirit?
SONNY
(glancing at Abilence)
Don‘t Know --
SAM
(to Sonny)
You workin’ today?
SONNY
(nods)
The truck’s bein’ greased.

Sam reaches beneath the counter and lays Abilence’s ivory-banded, jointed cue on the counter. Abilene lays his sunglasses on the counter and Sam automatically puts them in a drawer.

Rev. 10/6/70 4.

( ) Abilene looks at Sam as he assembles his cue. Sam ~ looks at him, gets the point, takes out an oldbut well-stuffed wallet, and hands Abilene a fifty dollar bill. Both are quite cool when their eyes meet.

: SAM (toSonny) See -- this here’s what I get for bettin’ on my hometown ball team -- oughta have better sense.

ABILENE
{putting his

| cue together) .

Wouldn’t hurt if you had a better hometown.

Billy sweeps to thedoor, scared of Abilene; he goes out as Abilene comes by Sonny, who holds the cue awk- wardly, wishing he’d never picked it up. Abilene adds the fifty dollar bill to a huge wad held together by a money clip.

ABILENE
(continuing)
Mind pointin’ that at the floor till I get by? I don’t want my eye poked out.

Sonny hurriedly points the cue at the floor.

SAM

: Don’t let Billy get too far away, | will ya, son?

| | _ ABILENE | | You’re a damn sight more dangerous | | in a poolhall than you are ona

foolball field. Ever heard of tackling?

Sonny puts up his cue. Abilene breaks a rack of red- balls, moves smoothly around the table. Sam starts to cough again and Sonny goes out.

8

EXT. POOLHALL - DAY

Billy is three doors away, sweeping at the swirling dust. As Sonny catches up with him, a pickup stops in the mid- cot ddle of the street. THREE YOUNG ROUGHNECKS huddle in ( i the back, their coat collars turned up. One is DUANE 7 JACKSON, who jumps out quickly, holding an old lunch pail. ;

Rev. 10/2/70 5.

© SONNY “sence

Hey, Duane!

DUANE
Boy, I froze my ass last night.

He and Sonny grab Billy, each gettingan arm. As they hustle him back to the poolhall, the DRIVER ofthe pickup © honks his horn at them, and yells out his window.

DRIVER
Why the fuck can’t you kids learn to tackle?!

At a loss for a reply, the boys look at each other, hustle Billy back to the poolhall, and turn to go. Sam leans out the door with a green change-sack inhis hand, yells over the wind. |

SAM
How about takin’. Genevieve some change -- since you’re going?

He heaves the sack underhanded -- Duane leapsup and catches it one-handed, trous along, fades, andthrows a short pass to Sonny, who catches it, stops, stoops, and centers the sack back to Duane. They go on down the street, spiritedly throwing the sack back and forth between them. TWO MECHANICS are standing near the cafe, one of them morosely kicking at the tire of his car. They observe the boys without changing their poker~faced expressions.

1ST MECHANIC Look at that, Larry. They can catch. |

LARRY
(slow drawl )
Feisty sonsofbitches, ain't they? Wisht they could tackle.

1ST MECHANIC Or do somethin’ useful. Team weren’t worth a kiss-my-ass this year.

The boys stop and frown, but the two men sullenly stare them down, so they go into the cafe, which is rundown on the outside -- much of the paint peeling off, the sign not hanging straight.

Rev. 10/2/70 6.

9

INT. CAFE — DAY , |

Small, clean and cozy, with bright linoleum, four red
_ leatherette booths, several stools, and a shiny juke- box, which is playing. TWO COWBOYS are sitting at the counter, a DRILLER with a toothpick in his mouth is at the cash register, and some ROUGHNECKS occupy two of the booths. Duane tosses the sack one final time, but in catching it Sonny almost runs into GENEVIEVE, carry- ing several plates of sausage and eggs in her hands. Stepping back, the swinging door to the kitchen hits her on the behind; she fixes them with a fond but stern eye.
GENEVIEVE
All right, you boys, knock it off -- I got problems enough without you playing the game over again.

A cowboy looks around at them with disgust. x Sonny smiles at her and puts the sack on the counter. )

SONNY
We coulda run off to Mexico with this, you know.

The boys laugh and stand in front of the jukebox as ome Genevieve waits on tables. Sonny tosses a quarter up - and catches it, studying the selections. When he tos- Ne ses it up again, Genevieve catches it.

GENEVIEVE
(going into kitchen)
Down-payment on breakfast. Let somebody prosperous play the | jukebox.

) DUANE (grinning) : Nobody prosperous would eat here. :

Sonny laughs, and so does Duane. They take a booth and empty their pockets, pooling their money -- very little.

SONNY
Well, I ain’t so hungry.
DUANE
I am!| . (a little anxiously) Say, y’ want the pickup first tonight?

()Seong (CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/6/70

7s

SONNY
Naw.
DUANE
I oughtn’t to get it first ever! Saturday night -- it’s half yours.
SONNY
Aw, go ahead.
DUANE.
(relieved)
You sure?

A lanky COWBOY stops by their table on the way out, looks down at them, a toothpick in his mouth. The boys don’t notice him.

SONNY
Sure I’m sure. Anyways, I got lots of deliveries -- have to go clear to Ranger this afternoon.
DUANE
Okay.
SONNY
(noticing the cowboy)
Be lucky to get back in time for the second show.

Duane follows Sonny’s look to the cowboy, whose expres- sion is somber, almost grave. After another silent moment, he shakes his head, says "Tsk," returns the toothpick to his mouth, and walks on out, never once changing his expression. The boys look at each other hopelessly. |

CUT TO:
10

EXT. TEXAS ROADS — DAY

Sonny drives out of town in an old, battered, green International truck, with "FARLEY BUTANE AND PROPANE" lettered on the cab. It passes the city limits sign, goes up the long road between pastures of leafless, black mesquite, and over empty, windblown ridges. The country looks very cold, empty -- the grey ridges stretch far away. He SINGS with the RADIO.

CUT TO:

Rev. 9/24/70 8.

11

EXT. COUNTRY FARMHOUSE — DAY

Sonny is filling a butane tank. ‘Thedoor ofthe truck is open and the RADIO is playing a hillbilly hit. A couple of chow dogs are BARKING at him frombehind a fence.

cur TO:

12

EXT. PICTURE SHOW -.NIGHT |

The square is empty except for six or eight cars parked in front of the picture show. There is no one atthe ticket window, so Sonny just goes in.

13

INT, PICTURE SHOW LOBBY —-NIGHT

MISS MOSEY is scraping out the popcorn machine; she | looks up and smiles at Sonny.

MISS MOSEY
My goodness, Sonny, Frank oughtn’t to work you so late on. weekends --
18

SONNY

That’s what I keep telling ‘im.

MISS MOSEY
You ain’t got in in time for the comedy in three weeks. Hope you don’t want no popcorn, ‘cause there ain’t none.

Sonny hands her a dollar and takes a package of gum.

MISS MOSEY
(continuing)
Missed the newsreel, too. And the main show’s done started -~- E’1l just change you thirty cents.
14

INT. PICTURE SHOW - NIGHT |

There are only slightly more than a score of people seated inside. CHARLENE and MARLENE DUGGS are sitting on the aisle, near the front. Sonny comes down, taps Marlene on the shoulder; the two scoot over a seat and he sits next to Charlene, who wears his football jacket.

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 | , SA.

14 CONTINUED: | 14 *

\ CHARLENE

(notwhispering) I decided you had a wreck.

Sonny holds out the gum. The girls instantly take sticks and pop them into their mouths almost simul- taneously. Sonny nudges Charlene and gestures with his head. The two get up and move toward the back. They pass Billy sitting alone, the broom beside him, his expression one of deep content as he watches the movie.

Charlene turns to be kissed, then stops to take the chewing gum out of her mouth. They kiss, Sonny keep- ing his eye on the movie. Charlene sighs, leans back, and languidly puts the chewing gum back in her mouth.

Pome Z} ayat CHARLENE

Guess what?

SONNY
(not looking ather)
What? ) CHARLENE _ It’s our anniversary.
SONNY
(looksat her)
What? | CHARLENE We been going steady a year tonight.
SONNY
- (pouts) You shoulda got me some anniversary present. .
SONNY
Well, you can have another stick of gum -- that’s all I got on me.

He notices Duane and JACY FARROW come in a front exit.

CHARLENE
You can give me a dollar, too - that’s what it cost me and Marlene for the show.

Sonny hands her the gum only, as Duane and Jacy sit down just in front of them, nodding as they do.

JACY
(whispering gaily) . | Hi, what you all doing back here | in the dark?

Sonny looks at her wistfully, with yearning. Charlene frowns and begins to pop her finger joints, sitting up, very prim and proper as jacy and Duane begin to kiss passionately.

CHARLENE
I don’t see why they should get the pickup first all of the time - all they wanna do is neck anyway - Why do they even come to the show?

Snare” Sonny tries to watch the movie.

Rev. 10/6/70 10/10A.

15

INT. PICTURE SHOW LOBBY - NIGHT | :

\ | ()meee Sam is opening the front doors of the theatre as a few people straggle out. Billy is already sweeping. Sonny and Charlene exit, Marlene right behind thenm..

16

EXT. PICTURE SHOW - NIGHT .

Miss Mosey struggles with a large poster that is flap- ping in the wind. Sam comes out to help her. Duane and Jacy hold hands and dash off toward her convertible, which is parked across the street. AD LIB "Good nights." Sonny and Charlene start unhappily toward the pickup, not holding hands. Marlene is left waiting at the curb, shivering, as the other couples drive away.

CUT TOs

17

EXT. CITY LAKE - NIGHT 47

Sonny’s pickup stops by the desolate, deserted lakeside ~~ after a moment the lights go out.

om Charlene sits close to Sonny -- as steadies should.

CHARLENE
Crack your window an’ leave the motor running --~-it’sstill too cold in here.

Sonny opens the window a crack. The little light from the radio shows us their faces as a TUNE PLAYS. Charlene takes off the football jacket, and matter-of- factly lifts her sweater, HUMMING along with the radio. Sonny unhooks her bra, removes it, and hangs it on the rear-view mirror. He touches her.

(CONTINUED).

Rev. 10/2/70 il.

18 CONTINUED: | 18

See< CHARLENE

Eeh! Your hands are like ice.

SONNY
(trying to kid her)
I could put. onmy gloves.

They kiss a while -- then stop. Sonny holds one of her breasts in his hand; both of them are listening to the RADIO. Suddenly Charlene looks at Sonny angrily.

|

CHARLENE
What’s the matter with you? You act plain bored.

Sonny is startled, kisses her and abruptly lowers his hand. Charlene catches it at the navel and breaks the kiss.

CHARLENE
(continuing)
Quit! Quit!
SONNY
You said this was our anniversary ~- let’s do something’ different --
CHARLENE
I like that -- you cheapskate! You never ever give me a present an’ now you want to go right ahead and get me pregnant.
SONNY
My God, Charlene -- it was just my hand!

Charlene scoots back across the seat, and takes her bra off the rear-view mirror.

CHARLENE
Yeah, and one thing leads to another -- Momma told me how that old stuff goes -- We’1l have plenty a time for that when we get married.

‘SONNY (watches her fix her bra) You wasn’t no livelier than me.

(CONTINUED).

Rev. 9/24/70 12.

(>4,aa CHARLENE

That’s ‘cause you ain’t good- looking enough. You ain’t even got a ducktail.

| SONNY _Like Van Johnson...

-CHARLENE Yeah. I’m donelate anyway -- * let’s go home -- Some anniversary.

Sonny twists the knob on his steering wheel and stares * at the water.

SONNY
If you feel that way, I’d just as soon break up, Charlene --
CHARLENE
What!?
SONNY
(backingup)
I don’t want to spoil no more anniversaries for you.
CHARLENE
That’s the way nice girls get treated in this town! I knew you wasn’t. dependable.
(taking off jacket)
You wasn’t even in the backfield, either.
SONNY
What’s that got to do with it -- ?
CHARLENE
This jacket’s got a hole in the pocket, but you needn’t as’ me to sew it up. And you can give me back my pictures. I don’t want you showin’ ‘em to a lot of other boys and tellin’ them how hot I an.
SONNY
(depressed)
You wasn’t very hot.

CUT To:

Rev. 10/2/70 13.

20

INT. CAFE (THRUWINDOW) -—-NIGHT

Sonny is sitting at the counter eating a cheesburger, wearing his football jacket. ("Co-CaptainTMstitched across the front in green thread.) Genevieve wipes the counter across from him. The JUKEBOX is playing quietly.

ai INT. CAFE - NIGHT 21

Sonny watches Genevieve a little longingly, until she turns to him, comes over. |

GENEVIEVE
I hope you ain’t down in the mouth ‘boutCharlene.
SONNY
I ain’t blue about her...
GENEVIEVE
She didn’t even have a good disposition -- what’re you blue about then? — ,
SONNY
(shrugs)
Ain’t nobody to go with in this town. Jdacy’sthe only pretty girl in school and Duane’s got her.
GENEVIEVE
I’d call that his tough luck -- y’don’t have to eat so fast... y’ain’t in a race. Jacy’1llbring him more misery than she’ll ever be worth.

Sonny watches her as he takes a last bite and hands her a ten-dollar bill.

24

GENEVIEVE

Your Dad give you this?

SONNY
(shaking his head)
He needs all he’s got.

Sonny nervously begins popping toothpicks out of a dispenser. Genevieve makes change.

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 14.

( ) Ainenel GENEVIEVE

Wouldn’t hurt you to take a little something from him once in awhile. I don’t know -- you and Duane -- both in a boardinghouse -- him with a mother, you with a father. Don’t seem right. An’ your dad’s takin’ too many pills, you know.

SONNY
(nervously)
Yeah.

Genevieve slaps at his hand to make him let the tooth- picks alone and he walks over to the jukebox and combs his hair in the reflection.

GENEVIEVE
(reflective)
But then I’m no one to talk. I never got on with Mama -- still don’t.
SONNY
Say, I hear Dan’s goin’ back to work soon -- I guess you’ll be

a;NF

quittin’ before long.

Sonny comes back and gets one more toothpick, as Genevieve draws herself some coffee.

GENEVIEVE
Honey, we got four thousand dollars worth of doctor bills to pay ~~ I’1l1probably be making cheesburgers for your grandkids.
SONNY
Well, see ya tomorrow.

He goes out; she stares after him for a moment.

CUT TO:
23

INT. ENGLISH CLASSROOM - DAY

MR. JOHN CECIL is seated cheerfully on the edge of his desk, a book open in his hand.

Rev. 10/2/70 | 15.

23 CONTINUED: | . 23

C) The class is just settling down amid much RUSTLING of ae books. Duane and Sonny throw punches across the aisle; Jacy has just taken out her mirror, and JOE BOB BLANTON is slicking back his dandruffy blond hair with a comb. LEROY MALONE pops AGNES BEAN’S bra strap loudly; she looks at him fiercely. WINNIE SNIPS and BUD WOOD are also there.

MR. CECIL
Well, I wonder what my chances are this morning of interesting you kids in John Keats.
DUANE
None at all.

General laughter; Duane looks for Jacy’s reaction -- she is studying her mouth. Joe Bob raises his hand, seriously.

MR. CECIL
Joe Bob?
JOE BOB
I read that poem of this*‘bout

-~ the nightingale, and it didn’t ey | sound so good to me. Sounded like | he wanted to be a nightingale.

MR. CECIL
No, not really -- he --
JOE BOB
I think it’s silly of all these poets to want to be somethin’ besides what the Lord made ‘em. It’s criticizing the: Lord.
MR. CECIL
I don’t think he wanted to be a nightingale, Joe Bob. Maybe he just wanted to be immortal.
JOE BOB
(smugly)
All you have to do to be immortal is lead a good Christian life. . Anybody can do it if they love the Lord.

wo Leroy pops Agnes’ strap again; she takes off her shoe ane and hits him in the nose with it. Mr. Cecil looks at wee them fondly. |

Rev. 10/2/70 . 16.

"23 CONTINUED: (2) . 23

* MR. CECIL ©a

Maybe so, Joe Bob, maybe so. Here, now let me read you this -- "When old age shall this generation waste Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe Than ours, a friend to man... "TM

While Mr. Cecil reads, Joe Bob opens his chemistry book, Duane dozes on his arms, Sonny looks out the window at two dogs sniffing around eachother on the * front lawn. Jacy studies her mouth, Leroy rubs his *

24

INT. GYM - DAY | |

The COACH sits in a bridge chair, scratching his hairy gut (part of which is visible under his sweatshirt) and spitting tobacco juice into apaper cup. The TEAM, all but exhausted, is running laps around the gym, Joe Bob far to the rear, flopping his arms des- perately. Occasionally, when they pass his chair, the Coach leans over and pops one of them hard with a towel. Bud and KENNY WOOD and Leroy are among them.

| COACH Run, you little piss-ants. Tough it out! Tough it out! You gotta be men like the rest of us -- ain’t none of you pretty enough to be women... Here --~ Joe Bob! Quit flapping your arms -- you look like a goddamn goose! | (spits, strands, still scratching) a All right, off the court. If -y'falldidn’t jack off so much maybe some of you could stay in shape. Come here a minute, Sonny.

TOMMY LOGAN comes jogging past and the Coach uncon- sciously pats him on the ass as he goes off the court. Sonny stops in front of him, dribbling a basketball, which the Coach takes and throws casually at Joe Bob, who is still flopping his arms.

COACH
Do me a favor and I’1ll1doyou one.

on SONNY

Sure, Coach.

Rev. 10/2/70

24 CONTINUED:

eM.‘ COACH ae oe

My old lady’s gotta go to th’ doctor tomorrow, over in Olney -- you know women, always something wrong with ‘em.

SONNY
(shrugs)
Yeah, I guess.
COACH
Well, take it from me. Anyway, I ain’t got time to drive her. You do it for me and I’11 get you out of Civics class.
SONNY
Be glad to -- best offer I’ve had all day.
COACH
(walking in)
Tell her you got to get back in time for practice, so she won’t stay in there too long. I got bills enough to pay already.

Rev. 10/2/70 7 18.

25 DELETED

26

EXT. ARCHER CITY SCHOOL — DAY 7

Jacy is driving her convertible, Duane and Sonny with her; the car moves away from school. Other kids’ cars are in b.g.

DUANE
(imitating Coach)
You know what’s a matter with you 1i’l piss ants ~- !? You ain’t got no school spirit.
(belches)

They all laugh. Suddenly with some flamboyance, Sonny bursts into the school SONG.

SONNY .
(to tune of "Far Above Cayuga’s Waters")
Anarene High School, we love you, Love you oh so grand-- We will always be so loyal Loyal to a man...

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/6/70 | 19/20/21/22.

26 CONTINUED: | 26

Duane and Jacy join in, and the three LOUDLY SING the song as they drive down the street, all very happy in the front seat, Jacy’s hair blowing.

THE THREE
In defeat or victory We will always be true Dear old Archer, we love you And we’ll always fight for you.

Leroy’s car goes by, HONKING LOUDLY at them; it is filled with teénagers.

27 OMITTED : | 27. *

All still in the convertible -- Jacy feeding Duane french fries -- cradling his head in her lap, RADIO PLAYING. JIMMIE SUE is getting orders.

JACY
You need a haircut.

Jacy dangles a french fry and Duane gobbles it. Sonny notices a Cadillac approaching as he takes a big bite.

| SONNY , Better watch it. Here comes your mother.

Jacy quickly makes a little room between herself and Duane, trying to look demure. The Cadillac pulls up beside them. GENE FARROW is driving, scarcely looks at the boys. LOIS FARROW rolls down her window and fixes Jacy with a stern look.

LOIS
Jacy, we’re having supper at home tonight. I’11 expect you in fifteen minutes, you hear?

( CONTINUED)

| 28 CONTINUED: | 28

_ JACY (meekly) Okay, Momma. I was just giving the boys a ride.

Abilene drives up in his Mercury as the Cadillac pulls out. Gene gives him an ingratiating smile; Abilene nods, looks at Lois through his sunglasses. She looks at him through hers, both of them expressionless. Abilene gives her a small arrogant smile. Lois gives him the finger. Gene drives the car away.

cuT TO:

29

INT. FARROW’S DEN ~—NIGHT |

The TV is on. Gene is dozing in his chair, a half- finished drink in one hand. After a moment, Lois gets up, a @rink in her hand, and goes somewhat wearily up the stairs.

30

NT. CY’S BEDROOM - NIGHT

Jacy is sitting on her bed, reading a movie magazine. On the dresser is a big picture of herself as "Football a, Queen.” A large bulletin board is covered with snapshots of herself and Duane plus a few mementoes (menu from the Junior Prom). Stuffed animals on the bedside table. Lois knocks, comes in and leans against the door. Jacy picks up a jar of blemish cream and goes to the dresser, where she cleanses her face. HerRADIO is playing.

LOIS | I guess you hate me tonight.

JACY
(opening jar)
Oh, Momma, you know I love you. But I love Duane, too, even if you don’t like it.
LOIS
I don’t care, I’d just hate to see you marry him. You wouldn’t be rich any moré, and in about two months --
JACY
I don’t care about money --

Rev. 9/24/70

30 CONTINUED:

a LOIS

(continuing) ~~ he’d quit flattering you --

JACY
Not at all --

LOIS | You’re pretty stupid then.

JACY
(shocked)
You married Daddy when he was poor -- and he got rich, didn’t he?
LOIS
(looking at china animals on bureau)
I scared your Daddy into getting rich, beautiful.
JACY
(pouting)
Well, if Daddy could do it, Duane could too.

ch

LOIS
Not married to you ~- you’re not scary enough.
JACY
Well, you’re rich and you’re miserable -- I sure don’t want to be like you.
LOTS
Not much danger of that.
(looks at Duane’s photo)
Have you slept with him?
JACY
Momma!!
LOTS
(amused)
Well, we can go to the doctor sometime and we’ll arrange something so you won’t have to worry about babies -- You do have to be careful about that.

Rev. 9/24/70 25.

a

{beyond belief) But Momma, it’s a sin, isn’t it? Unless you’re married? You know Iwouldn’t do that.

LOIS
(loudly)
Oh,don’t be somealy-mouthed-- * Ithought if you slept with Duane * a few times you’d see there * isn’t anythingmagic about hin, and thenwe can send you to a good school --
JACY
{plaintively} But I don’twanna leave --
LOIS
-~ where you’ll marry some wealthy kid -- *
JACY
Why can’t I just stay here and go to college inWichita Falls?
LOIS
{verystraight) Because everything’s flat and empty here -- and there’s nothing to do.
(picksup per- fume bottle)
May Ihave some of this -- ?
JACY
(grudgingly)
Help yourself -- don’t you have any?
LOIS
Yes, but I feel like smelling good right now -- don’t you ever feel like doing anything right now?

Lois touches herself behind the ears, puts her hands on her throat for a moment, savoring the scent, closes her eyes. The cream is off Jacy’s face and she iooks j - very young. Lois softens.

Rev. 10/6/70 26.

C)

LOIS

ieitei nit You should leave your face just Dent iive like that ~- all you really need

now isan eyebrow pencil.

Jacy looks blank and sleepy. Lois touches her hair.

LOIS
(continuing)
Okay, good night. Jus’ remember, beautiful, everything gets old if you do it often enough. So if you want to find out about monotony real quick, marry Duane.

Lois goes out. Jacy looks after her and goes sleepily toward her bed.

31

INT. FARROW DEN — T

Gene has gone. Lois freshens her drink, looks at the TV a moment, then picks up the telephone and dials.

ABILENE’S VOICE Hello.

LOIS
Abilene? Were you asleep?

ABILENE’S VOICE

LOIS
Feel like company?

'ABILENE’S VOICE Thought I’d drive out and see how my well is coming.

LOIS
Well, drill hard. You’re better at oil wells anyway.

She hangs up, and sits down at the TV with her drink.

CcuTTO:.:

32

EXT. POPPER HOUSE —-DAY |

Sonny stops his pickup in front of the house.

Rev. 10/2/70 27.

Quite nonchalant, he walks up the sidewalk, looks through doorpane and sees RUTH POPPER sitting inthe living room, purse in her lap, looking rather drab in an unbecoming suit. She is listening to the RADIO. ~ When he KNOCKS, she comes to the door.

RUTH
Oh hello, Sonny, what do you want?

SONNY | Coach said you needed a driver --

RUTH
(startled)
Oh.
SONNY
Didn’t he tell you I was coming?

RUTH | (disappointed) No, he didn’t mention it. I thought he was going to drive me himself. I guess he just couldn’t get off.

She hands him the key chain and he goes to get their Plymouth out of the garage. She goes to turn off the radio.

CUT TO:

33° INT. POPPERPLYMOUTH (OLNEY)= DAY | 33

The wind is blowing, as they drive. Sonny is trying to think of something to say, looks over at her. She daubs at her eyes with a Kleenex. He looks forward again. Ruth opens her lipstick, holds it a minute and puts it back in her purse without using any.

CUT TO:
34

XT. OLNEY CLINIC - DAY

Sonny is waiting in the car -- the RADIO playing. As Ruth comes out of the clinic, the wind blows her hair. Sonny opens the door for her; she is crying as she gets in, a strand or two of hair sticks to her wet cheek. * They drive off.

Rev. 9/24/70 27A.

35

P PLYMOUTH (COUNTR — DAY

Sonny looksat her nervously. She is still crying, looking out at the bleak country.

Re ae tg vay Rev. 10/2/70 Hea xeWee Fe 35 CONTINUED: 35 oxow nz ok oe nme init SONNY irri yygge Is itsomething bad? siti ationnin ee RUTH IR No. It’s just... something dreary. I They drive on in silence.

CUT TO:

36 XT. POPPER GARA’ - y. 36 *

Sonny pulls in, switches off the car. Ruth is looking dully ahead, at nothing. Sonny fiddles with the car keys, then goes around and opens the door for her.

RUTH
Oh. Thank you.
SONNY
Here’s the keys. Guess I better ,getback to school.
RUTH
It was nice of you to drive me.
SONNY
Beats sittin’ through Civics.
ROUTH
Wouldn’t you like to come in and have a Coke -- if you can stand me for a few more minutes.

She looks at him apologetically, not taking the keys. The wind blows.

SONNY
Okay.

Reluctantly he follows her through the back door.and into the kitchen.

RUTH
I hate these northers.
37

INT. POPPER KITCHEN -. DAY

Small, messy, the breakfast dishes haven’t been washed or the table cleared. Ruth can barely find a place to set her purse. Sonny doesn’t know whether to stand or sit.

Rev. 10/2/70 29.

37 CONTINUED: | 37

RUTH
Would you prefer milk? Just sit at the table ~- or you can go right now if you like. I was just scared to be alone fora minute -- I’m sorry Imade you come in.
SONNY
I’1lltake a Coke.

She gets him one, watches him drink; suddeniy, to his amazement and disgust, she bursts out CRYING again, loudly, puts her head in her arms and sobs, body shak- ing. Sonny doesn’t even want to swallow what he has in his mouth. After a moment, she looks up and tries to stop. . |

RUTH
You’1l never forgive mé, I know. Go on, you don’t have to stay any longer.
SONNY
Thank you for the Coke.
(pushes chair back)
I guess you’ll be glad when basketball season is over.

| RUTH | Why? |

SONNY
Well, Coach probably don’t get to stay home much during football and basketball season.

She lays down her napkin and looks at him as if for the first time. Stops crying.

RUTH
My God. You don’t know a thing about it, do you?

She stares at him a long moment -- he gets uncomfortable.

RUTH
You better go on to basketball practice.

He stands up, awkwardly.

SONNY
Well, thanks for the Coke.

Rev. 10/2/70 30/31/32.

oo rt te She nods. He backs out and leaves. She looks after him unhappily.

39

EXT...POPPER USE = DAY

Sonny comes out quickly, lookingvery relieved. He runs up the street to his pickup.

thru OMITTED thru

47 EX RICAN LEGION HA ~ NICHT 47

The Christmas dance is inprogress, the hall strung with decorations. A hillbilly band SAWS away. People file in, laughing and clapping one another on the back. As Jacy drives up in her convertible, LESTER MARLOW, a more citified boy, comés to her, bourbon flask in hand. She is uninterested in him.

LESTER
Hi, Jacy.
JACY
Oh, hi.

te ol ,

Rev. 9/24/70 33. ast

,

on yt

Be | LESTER gw \(pause} eeBe we Duane coming? gg (Jacy nods) eeae say,you know Bobby Sheen, don’t you -- over toWichita Falls?

JACY
Sure --met him atthe Country Club.
LESTER
Well, he’s gonna have amidnight swimmin’ party tonight. Wanta run over there with me later?
JACY
Iocan’t --
LESTER
I guess you heard about the last one -- his folks were gone to Miami and everybody swam naked.
JACY
Yeah?
LESTER
His folks are gone again -- so it’11 probably be pretty wild. Sure wish you could come -- Bobby has great parties. A lotta kids from the Club gonna be there.

Lester and jJacysee Duane and Sonny pull in; he starts to back off.

JACY
Gee, Lester, I’d like to go -- I’m gonna have a big problem with Duane though <-
(frown)
Well, don’t go off without -- maybe I can.

As Duane comes over, Lester rakishly takes another sip of bourbon, goes into the dance. Sonny wanders in be- hind them.

JACY
(continuing)
Hi, Duane.

Rev. 9/24/70. | : 34.

47 CONTINUED: (2) | oe 47

DUANE
What’d Lester want?

JACY © Who? Oh, Lester -- he’ ssuch

citi a bore. ties.

Jacy kisses Duane, looks at him fondly. Behind then, Abilene and JACKIE LEE FRENCH, are going intothe dance.

JACY> (continuing) I love you so much tonight. I wish we could stay together all night.—

AS Abilene and Jackie come in, Lois, who has been danc- ing and is a little flushed, comes over, wearing a low- necked dress ~~ the center of most eyes. She gives Abilene a kiss on themouth, hands. lockedaround his neck. Jackie Lee is angry. Gene turns away.

LOIS
Merry Christmas .
ABILENE
Uh, this here’s Jackie Lee French. Jackie Lee, this is Lois Farrow, my boss’s wife.
LOIS
Hello, Jackie.

JACKIE | What do you mean kissin’ her like that -- I’m embarrassed to death. .

; LOIs * French? That your name or — * something you like to do? | *

Jackie Lee’s mouth falls open. Abilene is amused. *

JACKIE * I oughta slap your face. *

LOIS. * (smiling) — k You can’t even reach it, honey.» *

Rev. 10/2/70 35.

ABILENE
I never come here to referee no fight.
LOTS
Good -- then you can dance with me.

Takes his arm and pulls him toward dance floor.

ABILENE
Get yourself a drink, honey. T’1llbe back.

Stricken, Jackie Lee turns away angrily, walks toward refreshment stand, passing Ruth and Coach Popper, in a corner; he is irritated.

COACH
Hell, you never feel well.
RUTH
I’m sorry, Herman. Couldn’t you please take me home?
COACH
Take yourself home.
(gives her car keys)
I got some domino players waiting on me.

He walks away. Ruth looks after him, miserably, as Abilene and Lois dance by.

LOIS
Hi, Ruth!

49 The band PLAYS on. People take refreshments. Men play dominoes. Mr. Cecil dances with his wife. Charlene is there with a junior. Joe Bob is eating cookies. Leroy comes by and takes them out of his hand. Sonny stands about awkwardly. Jacy and Duane dance by Lester -- she signals him over Duane’s shoul- der. Abilene and Lois dance by grandly. Aware that her mother is upstaging her, Jacy pouts openly.

JACY
It’s too hot in here. Let’s go outside for a while.

(CONTINUED}

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Rev. 10/2/70 | 36.

DUANE
Okay.
JACY
I don’t want a lot of drunk hillbillies tromping on my feet.
DUANE
I got something to give you, anyway.

As they go, they pass Sonny standing alone at the side.

50

EXT. AMERICAN LEGION HALL - NIGHT

At the pickup, Duane reaches under the front seat and * gets a package, hands it to her shyly. She brightens.

JACY
You mean my Christmas present?
DUANE
Yeah.
JACY
Oh goodness. I haven’t got you anything yet.
DUANE
(starry-eyed)
That’s okay.
JACY
ZIjust couldn’t get loose for a minute to shop.
DUANE
(huskily)
I hope you like it. Saved up for six months, to get it.

Jacy unwraps the package -- it’s a wrist watch.

JACY
Oh, it’s jus’ beautiful. It’s just what I’ve been wanting. You're so sweet, spending all that money on me! {passionatekiss} Oh, you’re so sexy, Duane. TI justwish I didn’t have to leave you tonight.

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 9/24/70 37.

O) DUANE

| (surprised) You don’t!

JACY | , (lookingunhappy) |

ie Oh, I do too. I could justkill |

my mother -~

DUANE
What do you mean?

ee JACY i (mightcry) | “

She made me promise to go to a swimming party in Wichita, with

ee what’s his name -- Lester Marlow | |

-- ‘causehis folks are so rich. |

i

| DUANE Well, Goddamn! What kinda thing is that?!

JACY | | 7 “Don’t be mad at me, Duane. * |

DUANE | | I ain’t mad at you, but Goddamn -- * can’t I come too?

JACY.
No, no! It’s all Lester’s fault * ~~ he keeps askin’ Momma ~- and... *
DUANE
Well, Goddamn -~ !.
JACY
All I wanna do is stay with the man I love.

She kisses him, sprawls across his lap, takes one of his hands, guides it downward to her panties. Duane can hardly believe it. He hesitates, then proceeds. Jacy looks slightly martyred. Duane expects to be stopped, but isn’t -- grows bolder. Jacy seems about to give way, but when Duane tries to lay her down in the seat, she pushes him off.

: | | | JACY | ) No, no, Duane, I gotta go. * a : I gotta go. .

10/2/70 | 38,

She quickly gets out. Too flusteredto stop her, 51 Duane straightens his shirt, then sees Lester step out on the hall porch. Jacy gets in Lester’s convertible. Duane rushes up the steps, grabs Lester by his lapels. Straightening her hair, Jacy watches.

awe DUANE You chickenshit, you! What do you mean, asking my girl for a _—_ date?

A corwd immediately begins to form around them. Lester is scared but tries to keep up a front.

LESTER
Turn me loose.
DUANE
I’11 turn you loose any time you’re ready to fight -- let’s have it out!

As he puts up his fists, the SHERIFF looms between them, wearing cowboy hat cigar.

SHERIFF
Here now. None of that shit, boys. This here’s the Christmas season! {slapsDuane’s fist) Run on there, Wichita. I can’t stand here all night protectin’ your shoeshine.

Lester hurries down to the convertible. Duane stands fuming, clenching his fists.

JACY
I don’t know what I’m going to do about him -- he’s justso crazy about me he doesn’t have good sense.
LESTER
I’m not saying anything against Duane, but that’s a roughneck for you -~ they never are very sophisticated about these things.

As the car pulls out, the Sheriff casually slaps Duane on the back.

SHERIFF

Le

Well, Merry Christmas!

Rev. 10/6/70 39. ke

eke

52

INT. AMERICAN LEGION HALL - NIGHT 52 SE

Ssh

‘. _.A aman Sonny watches the dancers wistfully, goes into a game ete

pepsi

room where the Coach and some others are playing domi-

nace

noes. ss

nse sempeyse COACH | Heil, you askme, too bad we got we elections comingup next year -- now we got HarryTruman in there. ‘f itwas me, Iwouldn’t have no more.

DOMINO PLAYER #1 Well, Idon’t know...

DOMINO PLAYER #2 Hey, you boys heard any jokes? Iain’t heardone in amonth a Sundays.

COACH
Well, Iheard one ‘bout a guy who stuck a big ol’ fat dill pickle...

Sonny goes intothe kitchen where Ruth is gathering empty punch cups and dirty paper plates into a large trash basket. |

RUTH
Hello, Sonny.
SONNY
Hi.
RUTH
Want to help me?
SONNY
Sure,
(picksup cups)
RUTH
You’re not dancing. Don’t you have a girlfriend?
SONNY
T did have. We broke up a couple months ago.
RUTH
Why? Do you mind my asking?
SONNY
I was goin’ with Charlene Duggs -~- she thought I got fresh with her --

tm

Rev. 10/6/70 39A. blk

icc

52 CONTINUED: 52 et

eeemm

Ruth raises eyebrows, then heads for back door, carry- * ‘eens

sige

ing her basket; Sonny follows. *

ia a ite SONNY (continuing) a I never did, really. I guess we broke up ‘causewe didn’t like each othermuch to begin with. mene

53

EXT. AMERICAN LEGION ALLEY - NIGHT |

The only light comes from a street lamp a block away.

RUTH
IThope you’renot sad about it -- Tdon’t think Charlene’s nearly nice enough...
SONNY
Ididn’t see you dancing.
RUTH
No. Idon’t dance much.

NP They dump the cups into the barrel, are suddenly very close. Ruth lifts her head and they kiss. Their mouths don’t hit just right and she holds his face and gently guides his mouth to hers.

RUTH
Will you drive me to the clinic again -~ next week? 7 *
SONNY
You bet.

He bends down to find her mouth and kisses so hard that her head is pushed back. A car turns the corner and they hastily break apart, picking up their wastebaskets awkwardly.

RUTH
Better not dawdle here.
CUT TO:

tet

Rev. 10/2/70 40.

54

INT. BOBBY’SPOOL AREA - NIGHT

we SANDY SHEEN, a ten-year-old, wearing a diving mask, is swimming around underwater observing a group of teenage boys and girls playing in the poolnaked. One girl kicks him away andhe surfaces as Jacy and Lester come timidly in the door.

_ BOBBY| Hey, look! New victims.

The kids stop their water fights, swim over to the side of the pool. BOBBY SHEENmakes a big show of jumping * out of the water and shaking Lester’s hands, grinning.

BOBBY
Hi, Jacy.
JACY
(meekly)
Hi. |

BOBBY

ee

Glad you made it. We’re dressed informally, asyou see.

Big laugh. Bobby cocks his leg inacknowledgement. Jacy laughs thinly, trying not to look down. ANNIE- ANNIE MARTIN gets out of the pool, comes over, puts an arm around Bobby.

ANNIE-ANNIE
Hi, Jacy -- youwanta join the club?
JACY
sure.
ANNIE-ANNIE.
Well, you gotta get undressed out there on the diving board -- *
BOBBY
So everybody gets to watch!

Cheer from the others.

ANNIE~-ANNIE We all did the first time.

BOBBY
That’s the rule.
LESTER
-Yeah, I did it last Easter.

ee ae

Rev. 10/2/70 40A. cm mem

ee ene? ee

ANNIE-ANNIE
Okay?
58

JACY

Okay.

BOBBY
Everybody out for the strip show!

i 55 Everyone gets out of the pool and sits on the edge, 55

lai kicking their feet in thewater. The room goes quiet except for the record playing. As Jacy gets to the i diving board, she hears Lester jump into the pool behind A her. She gingerly climbs up on the diving board, so nervous she can hardly keep herbalance. nel ns

( CONTINUED)

i

——

ee

9/24/70 | 4l.

55 CONTINUED: : | 55

She is surprised to see Sandy beneathher.

BOBBY
Don’t pay any attention to Sandy -- he’s my little brother -- If he gooses you or anything, I’ill make him goto bed.

The kids laugh, then quiet. Sandy dives underwater. Hesitantly, Jacy begins to strip.

JACY | Goodness, I hope I don’t fall off. this thing.

| BOBBY Sandy can fish you out, if you do.

Jacy strips -- just as sheis taking off her bra the phonograph stops and clicks off. Sudden silence. Un- nerved, she almost falls, has to sit down. Just beneath the board, Sandy surfaces, lookingup at her. She yanks off her panties and indignantly throws them on his mask, jumps into the water. Everyone roars applause, jumps into the pool, starts splashing. Pleased withherself, Jacy holds onto the side and suddenly notices that she is still wearing Duane’s Christmas watch, puts it to her ear, listens for a moment, concern inher face. She shakes it and listens again; it has stopped. She looks up to see that Bobby has been watching her, smiles broadly and . shrugs at hin.

CUT TO:

Duane, already a little drunk, morosely takes a swig from a bottle of whiskey, passes it to Leroy; several other BOYS are with them as Sonny and Billy come up.

SONNY.
Hey, Duane ~-- been lookin’ for ya. Wheré’s Jacy?
LEROY
Aw, don’t remind ‘im~- we jus’ got ‘im guiet. Wanna drink?
SONNY
Okay. Where’d ya get it?
LEROY
Found it ina guy’s car. , (CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 42.

eu

es eeeie

JOHNNY tasmanian (a small teenager) aaa ne When he weren’t lookin’.

DUANE
(suddenly)
Le’s all go go something! *
JOHNNY
Good idee. Whyn’t we try an’ hunt up some pussy?
BUD
¥’couldn‘’tdo nothing ‘bout it if we found some.
SONNY
What happened, DUANE?
LEROY
Aw, Lester took his girl to a swimmin’ party --
DUANE
Le’s all go out and get a fuck!
LEROY
Hey, I know where there’s a heifer -~ belongs to my Uncle Hank --
BUDDY
Yeah! Why the hell not!
LEROY
I say a heifer beats nothin’.
JOHNNY
Pussy’sSpussy.
DUANE
I don’t want no heifer. Yeah, what we oughta do is buy Billy here a piece a ass.
LEROY
Yeah, we oughtn’t ta let ‘imdie a virgin.
KID
Yeah.

Lyi ‘Fd

56 CONTINUED: abate

LEROY can’: Macms Momma says idiot kids don’t live leng ch? anyway. EMEE"E PS

SONNY
He‘ain’t no idiot kid--he jus’ don’t talk.
DUANE
Bet he’s still a virgin though.
LEROY
Yeah! We oughta fix ‘im up with Jimmie Sue--
JOHNNY
Ugghh .
LEROY
Oh, it wouldn’t make no diff’rence to Billy--
SONNY
Look, I don’t think we should try anything like that--
LEROY
Why not? Itwouldn’t cost us more’n a dollar and ahalf--
DUANE
Heil, ifthat’s all she costs, we oughta get her ourselves.

LEROY | Shit, heifer’s better that Jimmie Sue.

57-59 DELETED

Rev. 10/6/70 , 44.

60

EXT. BACK ROAD —. NIGHT

oTM ed Under a flickering flashlight, over a dollar in change

lies in a baseball cap. Jimmie Sue is looking Billy ® cian over. | ettot

an disc LEROY We’re a quarter short.

DUANE
Sonny, you ain’t chipped in.
SONNY
What if Sam the Lion finds out -- ?

JIMMIE SUE | DUANE I oughta get at least He ain’t gonna care. two dollars -- this thing’s justa kid. SONNY

He would -- an’ I’d as soon

LEROY not get crosswise with San. Hell, no, you said a dollar and a haif. DUANE

Look, will ya lend me a a

JIMMIE SUE quarter -- (openingstick of gum) SONNY iii. nn Well -- I guess I'd jus’ It ain’t the money -- a as soon an idiot as not -~-Only thing I draw the DUANE line at is Mexicans and Aw, don’t be such a niggers. I guess I tol’ chickenshit, Crawford -- ya ‘bout that nigger man in high-heels stole ny KENNY * suitcase right outa the I got another quarter. bus station -- that time I went to Los Angeles... LEROY

Okay, that’s it.

61 Holding a flashlight, Leroy gives Jimmie Sue the 61 change; she pockets it, climbs intothe car. The boys remove Billy’s pants. Sonny hangs back unhappily.

JOHNNY
.Nobody never took up no collection fer me.

LEROY

Cocksmen like you don’t need it.

JIMITE SUE’S VOICE Get the stupid little thing in here ~~ I ain’t got all night.

They shove Billy into the car, all tight with lust.

Rew vteilt 6ow

9/24/70 45.

JIMMIE SUE’S VOICE Why, this is the dumbest thing I ever seen -- it don’t even know what to do.

Sonny looks worried. Suddenly the car begins to rock -- the boys yell encouragement.

JIMMIE SUE‘S VOICE You kids stop that yellin’ an’ get ahole of this thing. He ain’t -- why Goddamn you -- mow just look would you? Goddamn -- you stupid little thing, you couldn’t even wait! Look at this mess!

Rev. 10/2/70 46.

Billy half-falls out of the car. Jimmie Sue has bloodied “Se his nose. Sonny helps him with his pants, as Jimmie Sue gets out.

JIMMIE SUE
Well, now I know idiots is just as bad as Mexicans. Don’t bother me for that crazy thing no more -- T wouldn’t mess with him agin for less than three and a half...
CUT TO:
62

EXT. POOLHALL —NIGHT

Sam stands inthe open door, steps down onto the sidewalk as the car drives up. Sonny gets out with Billy, who runs * into the poolhall. Sam stops him for a look, then lets him go inside, looksback at the boys as they get out. Duane stays in the back seat, feigning sleep.

SAM
Which one of you bloodied his nose? I’vetold y’all not to fight with

Oe Billy --he don’t understand EE fighting. What happened, Sonny?

SONNY
Itweren’t none of us, Sam.
LEROY
Naw, itwas Jimmie Sue.
SAM
How’d he get messed up with her?
LEROY
(cocky)
We chipped inan’ boughthim a piece of ass ~ thought he was gettin’ tired of bein’ a virgin. -
(silence)
She got mad about something and bloodied his nose.
(sllence)
He didn’t even know what he was Supposed to do...

Sam gives them all a long look.

SAM
Get on home, boys. I’m done with you.
(MORE)
{ CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/6/70 | 47.

62. CONTINUED: 62

7 SAM. (cont’4)

‘ Scarin’ an unfortunate creature like Billy -- just so’s you can have a laugh or two. I’ve seen a lotta trashy behavior -~ seen a lifetime of it -- and I’m tired of putting up with it. You can * just stay outta this poolhall -- and outta my cafe and picture show, too -~-I don’t want none =" “amunae of your business. ceaapaeaaaane* ae

He looks at Sonny for a moment.

SONNY
We didn’t mean... for anything bad to happen, Sam... We...
SAM
You didn’t even have the decency to wash his face --

He goes inside, closes door, turns off light. Long pause.

LEROY
We’re his best customers -- he can’trun us off.
(pause)
Can he? —

Stricken, they struggle to the car, where Duane sits up and grins.

, DUANE | Lucky I fell asleep -~ I’d hate not bein’ ableto shoot no pool.

The boys look lost as they slowlyget into the car.

CUT TO:
63

EXT. POPPER GARAGE - DAY |

The car drives in. Sonny reaches forRuth’s hand; she scoots over to him; they kiss, awkward but warm, get out a little reluctantly and head for the back door.

62

° 64 ‘INT.POPPER BEDROOM ~—DAY

One one wall is a plaque from the Boy Scouts National Jubilee; some copies of High School Athletics lay on the bedside table. Ruth and Sonny enter awkwardly.

Rev. 10/2/70 | | 4s.

64 CONTINUED: | | 64

C) a SONNY

You sure he won’t come?

RUTH.
Youknow he won't —- he’s just starting basketball practice.

She takes his hand again; they kiss standing up. Both nervous, they hurry about their own undressing. When Ruth bends to pull the slip over her head, one of the straps catches on a bobby pin -- for an awkward moment, her face ishidden in the silk. Sonny moves to help her, but she tears it loose. Both choked with embar- rassment, they getunder the covers, Ruth first. They embrace, and he startshesitantly to move on top of her.

RUTH
It’s all right.

He moves into place. The squeak of the bedspring is not loud at first, but steadily it grows, begins to distract Ruth. She becottes even more tense, looks anguished. | Spring grows louder. Ruth twists, looks aside. Springs grow louder. f | |

66

INSERT - SPRING

shrills loudly.

67 OMITTED | | +67

68 BACK TO SCENE | , : 68

\

Ruth begins to cry. Sonny raises up to.see what’s wrong -- she forces his head down, hooks her arm around his neck, continues to cry. He finishes, the spring is silent, but tears stream down Ruth’s cheeks. He looks at her questioningly -- she shakes her head, silent, unable to speak. Sonny doesn’t know what to say. Ruth tries to smile, strokes his shoulder with one hand; a little calmer.|

RUTH

oN I’m sorry I cried. I was just Lo, scared, I guess.

Rev. 10/2/70 49.

SONNY
Aw, he ain’t going to come. They’re runnin’ plays right now, Ibet.

7 RUTH | No, not scared of that -~ I was scared I could neverdo this, Iguess. I can’t do anything without crying about it -- how could you likeme?

| SONNY (awkwardly) I like you.

RUTH
I’m glad.

He kisses her.

A69 A69 thru OMITTED | | | | thru D69 D69

69

INT. SONNY’S PICKUP (THRUTOWN) - DUSK

Sonny drives slowly through town, hair combed as if he were going someplace. He slows down passing the pool- hall. MThroughthe window he can see Sam, Duane and Billy. He drives on, slows a moment in front of the cafe to see Genevieve, serving cheesburgers and laugh- ing with the customers. Sonny stops at the red light, uncertain, slowly drives out to the Y. *

69A

EXT. CHER CITY. OVERLOOK-DUSK .

Sonny arrives at the Y, stops, sits on the hill, the * RADIO on, eating a peanut pattie and looking back at * the lights of the town. *

70

NT. POPPER BEDROOM — DA |

The bed is neatly made up, but there is a quilt on the floor that is rumpled. Clothes lie around. Sonny is sitting at Ruth’s dresser in his underpants; she has a man’s shirt on, is combing his hair for him; he watches fascinated. She parts it in the middle; he laughs. A RADIO is playing.

Rev. 10/2/70 49A.

There is a plate of cookies and a glass of milk there that Sonny is casually eating. She finishes his hair.

RUTH
There. How ad’youlike it?
SONNY
Okay.
RUTH
You're so enthusiastic. You want some more milk?
SONNY
(eating)
No, I’m full.

RE RUTH

(getting sewing things) Throw me your pants. I/’11sew that pocket for you. I never noticed how ugly this room is ar, -~what’s your favorite color -- coe

OE en

a,

eee SONNY 1.

I don’t Know -- blue

RUTH
Maybe I'll repaper it --

SONNY ° How come you’ve stayed with the Coach -- you don’t like him’ much?

RUTH
Iwasn’t brought up to leave a husband -- Iguess that’s why. Or maybe Iwas jsut scared to. I’7lihaveto get you some new pants.
SONNY
Why’d you marry him?
RUTH
I don’t know. My mother didn’t like him -—-maybe that was it.
SONNY
Long time ago, wasn’t it?

ci Mteyarom TE etese stn i Rev. 10/2/70 5A

RUTH
Um~hum... I was twenty years old and thought hairy-chested football coaches were about it. I’m gonna buy us a new quilt -- a blue one.

ie SONNY

What’d’ya think he’d do if found us?

i re, RUTH

(cheerful)

N,N Shoot us, probably. He‘’salways NE glad to have an excuse to use his

deer rifle. ume

gage

CUT TO:

A, ‘wns

A71 - H71L DELETED

ec seas oe ee Rev. 10/2/70 51A. EE UE

ars

71

EXT. CAFE -DAWN 7.

Soonny walks overto the cafe and looks in the window.

TIA = WN JIA *

Genevieve issitting in a booth, reading Ladies Home Journal; a car goes by in the reflection. *

71B

INT. CAFE -DAWN

Sonny hesitates, then timidly opens the door. Genevieve looks up, smiles.

GENEVIEVE

< Come on in —~ I’m not gonna j throw bottles atyou.

meteotechenteomcoeemenentoonmenalitenanhchrenortoreeteeen

Rev. 10/2/70

7LB CONTINUED: 7LB

SONNY
(doing it)
Hi.
GENEVIEVE
What’ve you been doin’ -~ ? You lost weight.
SONNY
Ain‘t had any a your cheeseburgers in weeks --
GENEVIEVE
Come on -~ I’11]1makeyou one. Though it wasn’t a nice thing you did to Billy... can‘t blame . Sam -- was it your idea?
SONNY
No.
GENEVIEVE
Duane’s?

| SONNY Huh? .

allli GENEVIEVE

(cooking) He wag there, wasn’t he? Just _ didn’t have the decency to own up to it. (looks at Sonny) Don’t worry ~- I won’t tell on him. Should though.

SONNY
That sure smells good,
(long pause)
GENEVIEVE
(looks athim)
One thing Iknow for sure is a person can’t sneeze inthis town without somebody offerin’ him a hankerchief...
SONNY
What d’ya mean?
GENEVIEVE
Nothin’ ~- justan awful small town for any kinda carryin’ on.

Rev. 10/6/70 53.

71B CONTINUED: {(2) 71B

SONNY
(blushing)
Don’t forgetto put some onions
GENEVIEVE
An’ some peoplegot a lotta guns.

He is embarrassed. She looksat him fondly -- then chuckles. oo, ,

GENEVIEVE
All right --you don’t need my advice anyway. Why don’tcha go play a record -- these’il be done ina minute.

Sonny grins and goes to the jukehox,plays a TUNE, takes a toothpick. The front door opens and Biliy and Sam come in. Sonny is dismayed. Billy breaks into a big grin, comes over at once. Sam looks stern. Hesitantly, Sonny turns Billy’s baseball cap around backwards. Billy is content.

SONNY
I just come in to say hello to Genevieve.

He starts for the door as Genevieve comes in and sets the cheeseburger down on the table loudly.

SAM
Sonny, your food’s gettin’ cold.

Relieved, Sonny comes back quickly, sits. Billy joins him. Sam looks at Genevieve, who is smiling.

SAM
What are you grinning about? Chicken~fry me a steak. And try to use meat this time ~~

She goes back to the kitchen, smiling. People start to come in. Sam sits with the boys.

SAM
Heard about the ball game last night -- mus’ be purt near a * record.
SONNY
Sam... I’m sorry...

‘5on

Rev. 10/6/70 54.

71B CONTINUED: (3) | 71B *

SAM

ae Guess y’all need glasses... a, Sonny grins, Sam coughs, blows his nose.

CUT TO:
72

EXT. POPPER HOUSE ~ DAY

The coach pulls intohis garage, takes some fishing gear out and goes happily in the back door. The front door opens and Sonny comes outquickly.

cuUTTO:

73 OMITTED | 73

74

EXT. TANK DAM - DAY

ores

Three fishing poles ara propped up at the water‘s edge. Sam is sitting on the grass, whittling. Sonny and Billy are on the dam, throwing stones.

' SAM I thought you boys wanted to fish. Come on, keep an eye on them corks, Billy.

Billy runsdown to the poles, Sonny sits by Sam, who starts to roll a cigarétte.

SONNY

~~ I don’t think there’s anythin’

in this tank ‘cept turtles.

SAM

SS
— That’s what I like about it, tell

ya the truth. (about cigarette makings) Wanna try one?

Sw

SONNY

———

sure.

ie SAM — (hands him makings)

I never liked to clean fish -- or eat them, either -~-ya spend half your time picking out bones. [ jus’ come out here to get a little scenery -- too pretty a day to spend in town.

Sonny fumbleswith the paper and tobacco as Sam finishes his own, looksaround sadly.

SAM
Oh, me -- you wouldn’t.believe how this country’s changed. First time I seen it there wasn’t a mesquite tree on it -~ or a prickly pear neither.
(lightsup)
I used to own this land, you know. First time Iever watered a horse at this tankwas -- more than fifty years ago.
(pauses)
Reason Ialways drag you out here, probably -- I’m just as sentimental as the next fellawhen it comes to old times.
(MORE)

Rev. 10/2/70 55A.

SAM (cont’d@)
(pops stick against shin)
Old times.

Sonny ishaving a terrible time with the cigarette. Sam takes themakings, does it for him.

SAM
(continuing)
I brought a young lady swimming here once -- must be twenty years ago. Was after my wife had lost her mind -—~my boys was dead --
(pause)
Me and this young lady was... pretty crazy, I guess, In pretty deep. She had all the spirit in the world ~~ and we had gome times,.. We used to come out hereon horseback and swim the horses across the tank. Hell of a dangerous thing to do -- good way to get

eT drowned. She bet me a silver —

dollar she could beat me -- and she did -- my horse never wanted to take the water. She was always on the lookout for something like that ~- something wild... She’s still got the silver dollar. (Looks at the water)

SONNY
(hesitantly)
What everhappened to her?
SAM
oh, she growed up. She was just agirl then, really. :
SONNY
How come you nevermarried her when your wife died?
SAM
(after amoment)
She was already married.
(sees Sonny’s look)
She an’ her husband was young and miserable with each other --
(MORE)

Rev. 10/2/70 | | 56.

74 CONTINUED: . 74

se (conta)

SAM
But so many married folks arethat way -- young ones -- I figured they’d work it out intime. Thought they’d get comfortable when they was a little older -- didn’t turn out that way.

oe SONNY Bein’ married always so miserable?

SAM
Oh, not necessarily -- just about eighty percent of the time.
(pause) _ We oughta go to a real fishin’ tank next year. Don’t do to think about things like that too much... If she was here now I’d probably be crazy agin in about five minutes. Ain’t that ridiculous? | (pause) © | I ain’t really. Being crazy ‘bout a woman like her’s.always the right thing to do. (longpause, amused)
Bein’ a decrepit ola bag of bones -- that’s what’s ridiculous — gettin’ old...

The water is still, as Sonny and Sam stare quietly at * it. x

cuT To: |

75 I BBY’ - NIGHT . oe 75

The ‘pool is silent, empty. The phonograph is playing. In the den, two teenage couples are dancing, a couple more are hecking in corners. On a couch, Jacy ismaking no attempt to conceal her disgust with Lester, who is alternately kissing her neck and trying to unbutton the first button on her blouse. Finally succeeds.

JACY | Ma Gawd, I’m glad it wasn’t on fire. I’da burned to death before you got one button undone. *

ey, (shoves him back,

gets up) I’m going to get a drink of water.

She goes out; Lester fixes his shirt. *

Rev. 10/2/70 57.

76

INT. BOBBY’S KITCHEN — NIGHT

i\4 A Bobby is spreading himself a peanut butter sandwich as Jacy comes in.

JACY
Hi. I wondered where you went. Annie-Annie asleep?
BOBBY
Yeah.

As she comes néar, Bobby casually puts his hand on her crotch. Taken by surprise, Jacy is at a loss, but doesn’t move away. Bobby kisses her, smiles.

BOBBY
Nice. You a virgin?
JACY
I guess I am.
BOBBY
(grimaces, grins)
Too bad.
JACY
I don’t wanna be though.
BOBBY
I don’t blame you. Come see me when you’re not.

cut TO:

Rev. 10/2/70 58.

coe 77. DELETED

78

INT. ¢ — NIGHT

Sonny and Duane sit gloomily at the counter, eating some pie, the jukeboxplaying. They sit in silence for several moments. Suddenly:

DUANE
oh, why don’t we jus’take off an’ go someplace. I’m sick of this town. You're the only friend I got here -- ‘ceptJacy --
SONNY
You mean go and stay gone?
DUANE
No, I don’t know. We could go to Mexico, be back sometime Monday.
SONNY
Reckon the pickup’d make it?
DUANE
It might. How much money you got?
SONNY
Thirty bucks about.
DUANE
I got about forty -- we can make her on that ~--come on!

SONNY * Okay! *

They head for the door.

cuUT TO:

Rev. 10/2/70 | | | 59/60.

79 79 *

Moves down Main Street. Sam is sitting on the curb in front of the poolhall, scratching his ankles. Sonny drives up, sticks his head out the window.

SONNY
Better come with us, Sam -~ we‘’re headed for the Valley.

Sam comes over, puts foot on the running board.

| SAM | Goin’ where did you say?

DUANE
Mexico!

os . SONNY

Alla way to Matamoros!

DUANE
TI heardit’s. “poutthe wildest!
SAM
(astonished)
Goin’ to Mexico tonight? In this old heap of junk? My God.

| SONNY I guess the town can get along without us till Monday.

| SAM (grinning) — I reckon. If I was young enough to bounce that far I‘d go with you. |Need any money?

DUANE
We got plenty.

Sam takes his wallet out, hands Sonny a twenty dollar oe bill.

73

SAM

Better take this for insurance -- money kinda melts when you take it across a border. An’ try not to drink too much of that buggy water.

SONNY
We’l1l just drink beer and tequila.

Rev. 11/14/70 61.

79 CONTINUED: | 79

Saenti SAM

You get the clap you’11 wish you hadn’t drunk nothing. (looksat them fondly, sighs, steps back) Oh, me. (shakeshis head)

SONNY DUANE So long. ‘Bye.

The boys wave, pull away. Sam lifts ahand with a far- away look in his eye. Through the rear window, Duane and Sonny see him standing there, alone in the empty street.

cuT TO:

80-89 OMITTED B0-89

Rev. 11/14/70 | 62-66.

90

EXT. ARCHER CITY (CITYLIMITS) - DAWN

They cross past the city limits sign.

91

INT. PICKUP (ARCHERCITY) - DAWN

Sonny driving doggedly, unshaven; Duane asleep against window, mouth open. They have a couple of Mexican hats.

SONNY
Duane. Hey. Wake up. We’re back
DUANE
(eyesopen, unmoving)
My stomach don’t feel sogood. Got any more of those Tums?
SONNY
You ate ‘emall ‘forewe got to SanAntone.

DUANE — Maybe Genevieve’s got somethin’ -- My stomach don’t feel so good.

Duane closes eyes in pain. Sonny looks off, slowing.

92

EXT. CAFE - POV - DAWN - , OE

It is closed and dark.

93

INT. PICKUP - DAWN

| SONNY It’s closed.

DUANE
Closed?
SONNY
Yeah.
DUANE
(looking)
I never seen it closed before.

SONNY| Not even for Christmas.

DUANE
(holds head)
Well, Sam’11 have something--I’m sick--

Rev. 11/14/70 67.

93A

EXT. POOLHALL - DAWN

The pickup pulls up, boys get out, stagger to door. It is locked and it’s dark inside. They peer in.

SONNY
It ain’t that early--
DUANE
Must he some kinda holiday.
SONNY
(peering in} Sam don’t close on holidays.
DUANE
Well, maybe he had to gq someplace--
SONNY
Let’s ask Andy.
DUANE .
Okay.
94

EXT. BANK — DAWN

Andy is sleeping with his feet sticking out the window. Duane shakes one foot until he sits up. bewildered.

SONNY
Where is everybody?
DUANE
It’s a wonder somebody don’t steal the town.
ANDY
{angrily} Asleep-~everybody’s got any sense.

9/24/70 68/69.

SONNY
Why’d Sam close the cafe?
ANDY
(abashed,gets out, scratching head)
Oh, yeah, you all been gone, ain’t you ~~ gone to Mexico. You don’t know ‘boutit.
DUANE
‘Boutwhat?
ANDY
Sam died yesterday morning.
DUANE
Died?

ANDY | Yep -- quite a blow! Keeled over on one of the snooker tables. Had a stroke,

--KONNY Sam the Lion?

Andy nods his head. Sonny and Duane look at him Silently. | |

ANDY
Yep, Sam’s dead. He was quite a feller.

Sonny sits down on the curb, looks across the street at the dark poolhall. Duane kicks at one of Andy’s tires.

ANDY
(continuing)
He had ‘isown way of doin’ things, that’s fer sure. They found his will -- craziest thing you ever heard. Left you the poolhall, Sonny -~ what do you think of that?
(spits, scratch- ing gut)

Sonny looks up, but the information barely registers.

Rev. 10/2/70 ai | 70.

94 CONTINUED: (3) | 94 \

| ANDY Left Genevieve the cafe -- that’s the only thing he done made any sense. Left the picture show to. old Miss Mosey. Hell, she’s too far gone to even run a popcorn machine -- (spitsagain, clears throat) And the craziest thing of all -- he left a thousanddollars to Joe Bob Blanton -- the preacher’s boy -- beats all I ever heard of. He could just as easy have left it to me. I deserve it least as much as | that little ingorant bastard. |

They :are all silent.The stop light blinks. Sonny sits staring at it. Andy sits on the fender.

| ANDY | Anyhow, it’s done. They’re burying him tomorrow.

cuUTTO:

95

EXT. GRAVEYARD - DAY )

The graveyard is on a rough, gravelly hill, the wind is blowing loudly. Brother Blanton is praying. Joe Bob is near him. Sonny, Billy and Genevieve are standing together, watching the casket being lowered. Sonny’ s sportscoat is too short at thewrists -- the wind blows Genevieve’s veil. Sheis crying. Duane is standing back in the crowd, so isMr. Cecil. The Coach andRuth are there, as are most ofthe town. She and Sonny exchange a look. Lois Farrow stands slightly apart from therest. She is cryingopenly -- tears stream down her face. She wipes itwith her glove. People start to move away. .

cuT TO:

96

XT. ARC [TY - WICHITAFALLS ROAD - DAY |

A crudely~painted sign reads: "SENIOR PICNIC OR BUST-

+ +

ARCHER HIGH, 1952". It is attached to a car in a line of ten cars on its way down the road at a moderate pace. | +e

Rev. 10/2/70 71.

It is a large old model,packed with boys: Duane, Sonny, Bud and Leroy, all of them hacking around, kidding Duane with wild references to some future event. He is taking it cockily.

LEROY
Duane’s gonna get a cherry.

‘BUD Sure is a ripe one.

LEROY
I’d give a lot to pluck it.
BUD
Hairy cherry pie!!

Sonny is abstracted, not paying attention, as he sits by the back window, looking sadly out the cracked window. Past his reflection, the gray wastes of West Texas can be seen. The car passes atank dam. Tears come into his eyes as he looks out at the barren landscape, and the other boys’ wild revelry goes on behind hin.

98

EXT. WICHITA FALLS PARK - DAY. . |

The senior class, a couple of TEACHERS and ROOM MOTHERS are relaxing on the grass. Some long tables of food have been set up. A large group of the kids are playing softball. Joe Bob is in an earnest conversation with Mr. Cecil. Leroy is popping girls bra straps.

99 _ ‘EXT.WICHITA FALLS PARK - DAY a 99

At one corner of the park near some bushes, Jacy, Winnie Snips and Agnes Bean. aresurreptitiously con- gregating, glancing furtively around. They look at each other and indicate for Jacy to go. She slips away behind the bushes. After a moment, Agnes goes. Winnie looks across the field where she sees: |

100

EXT. WICHITA FALLS - DAY | 7

Sonny and Duane looking at her. She nods several times. Duane nods back, and she, too, Slips away. Sonny and Duane walk over to Bud, who gives them some keys, then walk toward the bushes with a mock-casual manner.

‘Rev.10/2/70 | 71A.

101

Winnie’s car, full of Jacy, Agnes, and Winnie -- pulls up to the office of the motel. They sit inside, egging Jacy to go out and register. She is shaking her head nervously, enjoying it all enormously. Finally, Agnes gets out and heads inside, followed by Winnie. Jacy watches excitedly.

102 102 *

|Sonny and Duane drive up in Bud’s car, looking around nervously. They pull in two spaces away from the girls’ car, where Winnie and Agnes sit anxiously. 'Their eyes meet. Winnie points excitedly toward one of the motel rooms. Sonny grins at Duane, who gets out cockily and walks over to the door. Sonny and the girls exchange embarrassed smiles. Duane knocks on the door furtively.— |

- JACY’S VOICE (fromwithin) Come in.

103 OMITTED | | ae | 103. *

104 104 *

gdacy is standing: in the middle of the darkened room, wearing a néw nightgown and a rapturous expression. — ‘Duane closes the door. They embrace. There is a long kiss.

DUANE
(huskily)
I leve you.
JACY
I love you, too,

Kisses her again, fondles her; they sit on the bed and he takes off her pajamas, looking at her with disbelief.

JACY
Oh, Duane. Hurry.

He takes off his clothes, hands shaking, rolls overon top of her eagerly. They kiss again. When they part, Jacy closes her eyes, sucks in her breath. Duane’s face begins to cloud. Jacy wiggles; after several moments, opens her eyes again.

JACY
What’s wrong, honey?

Rev. 10/2/70 : 71B.

Duane is suspended over her, raised on his arms. He has an expression of extreme dismay on his face.

DUANE
(choked)
Um -- I don’t know.
JACY
That tickles -- you know [Ican’t stand to be tickled.

( CONTINUED} ©

9/24/70 | | 72.

104 CONTINUED: | 104

See Jacy shuts her eyes again, waits, opens her eyes.

| JACY Well, what’s the matter? Aren’t you gonna do it?

DUANE
I don’t know what’s wrong.

| JACY | What do you mean? How could anything be wrong? Just go on and do it.

She shuts her eyes, screws up her face. Opens them again. |

JACY .
Oh! What’s the matter with you?

| DUANE | I don’t know. I don’t know. Something’s happened.

|JACY | Well, get off a minute, for goodness sake. You might fall and mash me.

DUANE | I don’t know what happened.

Gloomily he sits on the edge of the bed. Jacy sits up and looks with vexation at the offending organ.

JACY | | It was Mexico. No telling what you got down there. I just hate you! I don’t know why I ever — went with you.

DUANE
I don’t know. whathappened.

Jacy gets out of bed and stalks around the room, naked and furious, holding her voice down as best she can. *

JACY
Well, get your clothes on. You think I want to sit around here with you naked.

Furiously, she flings a towel across the room. Duane starts to dress.

~

Rev. 10/2/70 | | 73.

; C)‘ x

| JACY : | I might have known you couldn’t do it -- now I'll never get to not be a virgin. What do we tell everybody? The whole class knows -- I just want to cry. I think you’re the meanest boy I ever saw ~--my mother was dead right about you.

DUANE
(dully)
I don’t know what happened.

He starts to leave.

| JACY Don’t go out there! We haven’t had time to do it -- they’de know! I | don’t want one soul to know! You better not tell one soul! : (picks up panties) You just pretend it was wonderful!

DUANE
Well, I’m sorry -- I don’t know what happened.

JACY — (throws panties at him) — Oh! If you say that one more time, I’1l bite you!

CUT TO:
105

EXT, WICHITA FALLS MOTEL - DAY .

Duane comes out, dressed, pretending cockiness, goes toward Sonny in the car, avoiding the girls’ looks. He and Sonny exchange smiles.

106

INT. WICHITA FALLS MOTEL - DAY |

Winnie and Agnes pile into the room. Jacy is sitting . on the well-rumpled bed, her nightgown on askew. She , looks at them languorously, calm, a little wasted even.

WINNIE
Oh, gee -- tell us about it, Jacy. What was it like?

Rev. 8/2/70 | 74.

106 CONTINUED: | . | 106

JACY
(aftera pause)
I just can’t describe it -- I just can’t describe it inwords.
107

INT. ARCHER CITY SCHOOL AUDITORIUM — DAY ~

Graduation ceremonies. On the stage the teachers are singing the State Song... Standing in the first two rows is the entire Senior Class, who are intheir grad- uation robes. Also there are the parents of many of the seniors; also, a score of other students. Winnie, Agnes, Sonny -~ all singing. Jacy istoo, but Duane standing next to her, is whispering something. She just shakes her head grimly, keeps on singing. His voice rises slightly. .

DUANE
But I can do it now -- Iknow I can.

Jacy just looks annoyed.

108

EXT. WICHITA FALLS MOTEL - DAY ,

It is the same motel. The pickup is parked in front of one room. After a moment the door opens and Jacy comes out, looking cross, followed by Duane, who acts pleased and cocky. He shuts the door, smirks at her smugly, as they head for the pickup. | | ,

JACY
(coldly,with authority)
Oh, quit prissing -- I don’t think you did itright, anyway...

cuT TO;

109 OMITTED | . 109

110

INT. POPPER KITCHEN (THRUWINDOW) — DAY

Sonny comes in the back door. Through the window, we see Ruth’s face brighten as he enters. They embrace and kiss. She touches his cheek. The RADIO is playing. She takes his hand, leads him into:

L1OA INT. POPPER BEDROOM — DAY : 110A

Ruth goes to bureau, takes a package from a drawer, and gives it to Sonny, eyes shining.

9/24/70 75.

O RUTH

It’s your graduation present.

He opens it quickly, finds a leather billfold with his name on it.

SONNY
I never seen one as nice.

They kiss again.

CUT TO:

lil INT. JACY’S BEDROOM - DAY , | 111

Phone RINGS. Jacy is doing her hair, lets it ring * twice, then unhurriedly picks it up, cradles it in her neck.

JACY
Hello. —

INTERCUT with:

112

INT. POOLHALL - DAY

Duane is on the pay phone.

DUANE
Jacy?

_ WJACY What’s on your feeble mind, Duane?

‘DUANE | Same as it’s been... I want a date!

_JACY Uh-uh -- why don’t you go back to Mexico -- I guess girls are just easier to please down there.

DUANE
Just go with me once more. Just one more time. You can at least see me. |
JACY
Uh-uh. You find someone elsé to pester. I’ve got a new boy friend now and I can’t be talking to you.

( CONTINUED)

9/24/70 76.

DUANE
What new boy friend? Who?
JACY
(lazily)
Bobby Sheen, of course.
DUANE
Bobby Sheen? Are you crazy?
JACY
I certainly am not. I guess I’ve just been wanting to go with him all along and didn’t realize it. Maybe we’il see you in Wichita some time.

She calmly hangs up, and turns her attention back toher eyes. Duane throws a pool ball as hard as he can at the back wall. It scares an OLD MAN sitting there half to death.

DUANE
Goddamnit! Goddamnit to hell!

He throws another two. Billy and Sonny look on, amazed. Duane storms out.

CUT TO:
113

EXT. ARCHER CITY SQUARE — DUSK — 413

Sonny, Duane and Billy stand near a large cattle truck. All look solemn, even Billy, but Duane has also a kind of sullen stubbornness. Hecarries a cheap suitcase. Sonny shakes his head.

SONNY — Hate to see you go, Duane.

DUANE : Not a Goddamn thing to stay for. All the roughnecks say you can get a job out in Odessa any time.

SONNY .
Come on back, if you don’t --

Duane turns Billy’s cap around, sadly, and climbs up in the truck, which starts up slowly. Duane leans out.

ieoa ooi nevd me- BeaaaePenOURGeSane.Steereenthe.WoareustUMMCMNnentSeumeurenatvcrumesSeow

| Rev. 10/2/70 77/77A/78/79.

CONTINUED: 113 \ itun

we | DUANE ‘esis wataen Listen, ifyou hear they busted up, let me know. Seremiuepeitin emmempreanse

Sonny and Billy stand looking after the truck.

CUT TO:

| 114 114 | and OMITTED and

116

INT...F. OW TD - NIG

Jacy, in shorts, isglumly watching TV, her face slight- ly puffy; she twitches restlessly from time to time, sniffs. Abilene comes to the door,raps on the doorjamb.

JACY
oh, hi. Ididn’t hear you.
ABILENE
Gene home?
JACY
No. He and Momma went to the club.

He looks at her silently a moment.

ABILENE
What’re you doin’ home on a Saturday night?
JACY
Bobby Sheen ran off an’ got married ~-
ABILENE
oh.
JACY
To Annie-Annie Martin. {pause}

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/6/70 80.

_ JACY |

Want me to turn the TV off?

ABILENE
Naw, I’m gonna go shoot a little pool. Just tell him the well came in okay.
JACY
(small pout)
Wish I could go to a poolhall -- I’ve always wanted to. ‘s terrible the things girls are allowed to do. /
ABILENE 7
Why hell, come on ~~ I’11 show you the poolhall.
JACY
Aren’t there people there?
ABILENE
If there are they’1llbe in back asleep now -- won’t bother us -- I got my own key.

Jacy gets up a little nervously, smooths her hair.

JACY
Okay -- I will then.
CUT TO:

A117 EXT. POOLHALL - NIGHT A117

Abilene unlocks the door and they come in.

117

INT. POOLHALL -—NIGHT . |

Only the light from the street lamp comes through the window. Jacy looks around.

JACY * Goodness, it sure is dark in . here.

She gets a pool cue, goes to hit the ball, while Abilene takes off his coverall. He comes over behind her, takes away the pool cue and pulls her to him into a kiss. When they part, he lays the cue down on the table, gets a cloth, lays it on too, and lifts her to the table. She hooks her hands into the corner pockets.

(

CUT TO:

weage eeu

Rev. 10/6/79 SOA.

— 118 NT. ABILENE’SC OW STREET) - NIGHT 118 * 5 i a On the dashboard isa nude woman with tiny bloodstones * for nipples. Jacy is rumpled, uncertain, subdued. Abilene is inscrutable. The RADIO plays.

JACY
What a night. Inever thought anything like this would happen.

She leans over to kiss him but he turns his face away.

ABLLENE
How ‘bouthoppin’ out.

Jacy gets out, very puzzled, starts across the yard, carrying her sandals. Abilene races his motor, making the mufflers ROAR, as he backs out.

119

INT. F QO N= GHT .

Lois is in her bathrobe, watching TV. She has heard the mufflers and heads for the kitchen, a d@rinkin her hand. In passing, she glances in a mirror and fluffs her hair.

9/24/70, | 81.

120

INT. FARROW KITCHEN -—NIGHT '

Ss Jacy comes in as Abilene guns away. Still barefoot, hair | tangled, she looks scared and confused. A lookof pain crosses Lois’ face when she sees her. Jacy starts to cry, sits helplessly at the kitchen table.

JACY
Oh, he’s awful, Momma -- why do you fool with him? Daddy’s a nicer man than him, isn’t he?

Lois just shakes her head, puts her drink down, wipes Jacy’s face with aKleenex.

LOIS
He sure is, beautiful. Your Daddy’s a very nice man. I oughta have given Abilene hell, instead of him.
JACY
I din’t know what I’m going to do, Momma. Bobby was the luh-ast one * ~- I‘ll jus’ be an ol’ maid --

LOIS * Oh, no, that’s just the way it goes, you know -- win a few, lose a few --

JACY * What do you do? Nothing’s ever the way it’s supposed to be at all.

LOIS
(smooths Jacy’s hair)
You’re right, but what I’ve done hasn’t worked very well -- Maybe. we better work out something different for you. ©

Lois embraces her, and leads her into:

121

INT. F OW DEN - NIGHT

The TV is still on. Lois sighs.

~LOIS

97

| RIGHT NOW I GUESS RUTH POPPER’S

got about as good a setup as anybody. ,

Rev. 10/2/70

ener” JACY

(incredulous) Ruth Popper?!

LOIS
Yeah. Sonny’s reasonably good looking and he’s young...
JACY
Sonny?! Sonny Crawford?
LOIS
Sure -- hadn’t you heard about them? Been goin’ on about six months -- I thought you kids knew everything.
JACY .
Why, that’s the silliest thing I ever heard of -- she’s forty years old.
LOIS
So am I, honey. It’s kind of an itchy age. You want an orange?
JACY
(flabbergasted)
I don’t believe it.
(sniffs; to herself) © Sonny’s always wanted to go with me...
CUT TO:
122

INT. POOLHALL - DAY 122 %*

Sonny is racking for eight-ball, as the Sheriff aims his cue; MONROE, the deputy, bursts in.

MONROE
Sheriff, we got some trouble!

The Sheriff shoots and the cue-ball bounces onto the floor.

SHERIFF

a Goddamn you, Monroe! You made me a

scratch. |

Rev. 10/2/70 §3.

122 CONTINUED: | 122 (()

MONROE
Sorry, Sheriff, never meant to, but Johnny Clarg’s little girl’s kinda been kidnapped. Folks seen the preacher’s boy putting her in his car ‘bouttwo hours ago -- front of the drugstore.

Sonny and others in the hall are listening.

SHERIFF

mn What the hell? Maybe Joe Bob give her a ride home -- be doing her a favor, hot as it is. Why’d he want to kidnap Molly Clarg?

MONROE | Don’t ask me. But she ain’t at home -- Miz Clarg’s all upset -- she’s done looked everywhere for ‘em. They was seen drivin’ out of town toward Olney. Miz Clarg’s afraid Joe Bob might be goin’ to mo~lest her or something.

The Sheriff frowns gravely, quickly slaps his cue into a rack, heads for the door.

SHERIFF-
Sonny, you and some of these boys come with us. If that’s the way it is, no tellin’ what we’ll find.

Sonny and the others come forward quickly.

CUT TO:
123

EXT. ARCHER CITY ROAD — DAY | 123.

Three cars roar down the road, the Sheriff’s in the lead.

124

INT. SHERIFF’S CAR (ARCHER CITYROAD) - DAY

Sonny is sitting in the back seat with two men. The Sheriff mops his sweating brow on his shirt sleeve.

SHERIFF

a

Boys, I don’t know what to think, but I fear the worst... (seeing something) There he is!

Rev. 10/6/70 | 84.

125

EXT. ARCHER CITY ROAD - DAY |

2D The preacher’s old Plymouth stops as the three cars come skidding up. The Sheriff quickly gets out, rolling down his shirt sleeves. Joe Bob sits in the Plymouth, look-. ing miserable. Everyone gets out of the cars and starts looking indecisively at the Plymouth. A couple of men ! spit. Sonny is apprehensive and confused. MRS. CLARG suddenly becomes hysterical, runs over and yanks MOLLY out. She is five, holds and all-day sucker and a stuffed dog and doesn’t have her panties on. |

MRS. CLARG
Get ‘em -- ain’t you goin’ to? Here’s my little girl -- he’s the one done it -- why don’t. you get him?! If my husband was here he’d kill ‘em dead!

The Sheriff and Monroe pull Joe Bob out of the car.

| SHERIFF What’d ya do to that child? We all know you done something’.

Joe Bob starts to say something but is too scared and nervous to get it out. He catches Sonny’s eye and looks pathetically at him. Mrs. Clarg goes berserk: as Joe Bob hangs from the arms of the Sheriff and Monroe, she suddenly beats at him with the stuffed dog.

MRS. CLARG
Filthy! Filthy! Filthy!

In her fury she hits the Sheriff and Monroe, knocking one man’s glasses flying.-

SHERIFF | Here now, grab her! None of this Goddamn frenzy!

A couple of men hold her off; the Sheriff and Monroe hustle him toward the car as Brother Blanton runs up, yelling almost incoherently.

BROTHER BLANTON
It’s the Lord’s justice, son. You’ll have to suffer with the murderer and the thief -- the Lord’11 help you now --
SHERIFF
{going right on) Sonny, you drive that Plymouth in for me -- we got to get this man to jail.

Rev. 10/2/70 85.

They half-drag, half~carry Jqe Bob to the Sheriff’s car. ed A couple of men help Mrs. Clarg who still clutches the stuffed dog. Molly trails behind, still lickingthe all-day sucker. Sonny goes to the Plymouth where ha finds her underpants an the front seat.

cuT TO:

126

EXT. ARCHER CITY JAILHOUSE - DAY

There is a crowd of people gathered in the street talk- ing to one another, shaking their heads. Sonny comes from the jail as Jacy drives up in her convertible, honks, waves. He comes over.

JACY
Isn’t it terrible, Sonny? Were you there? Did ya see anything?
SONNY
Wasn‘t nothin’ to see -- ‘cept Mrs. Clarg. If she’d had a gun, she mighta killed us all. Joe Bob didn’t do nothing.
JACY
Oh, you know he must have done something. It scares me to death -~ you jus’ never can tell when something terrible is gonna happen.
(takes his hand)
SONNY
‘S okay -- they got him now.
JACY
I called you before --
SONNY
You did? rn
JACY
Uh-huh -- I felt lonesome -~- thought.you might wanta drive around a while.
SONNY
(glances at watch)
I’m supposed to be some place.
JACY
(squeezes his hand)
I’m still a little scared. Please take me riding.

plcdiccklladsid MainaelaNPSsSe lindaAgdle ale 5tls “a Hellerac AMil9AeR”Oe orik,siaMee4“ts_

Rev, 10/6/70 86.

Sonny looks at her, then opens the door. a,

SONNY
Where‘ll we drive?

CUT TO: !

127

INT. POPPER BEDROOM ~—DAY

Bright afternoon sunlight fills the room. Ruth has re- papered the walls and is just putting on some finishing touches. Fresh, expectant, she looks out the window, then glances at her watch, a little anxious. The RADIO is on,

CUT To:

128 ‘ TTY E E = : i2& *

Jacy‘s arm is stretched out as Sonny drives. RADIO playing. She sighs.

JACY | | You ever hear from Duane?

: SONNY I had a postcard.

JACY
I really feel sad about that.
SONNY
He‘s makin’ three-twenty a month -- said he bought a car.
JACY
I guess I'll always be a little bit in love with Duane. We just had too much against us =--wasn’t easy being the one to break up.

She scoots over, sits close to Sonny. He glances at her quickly.

129 EXT, ¢ = 129

The car pull up and stops.

130 _JACY’S C ITY EB)- : 130

They sit together for several moments, Sonny scared to look at her.

ea:20h seinansindel Wicmr-SdaiandMalesiatahRt os" Whnaraananinnlaaanbaal:RStieeeeCMTSEEReeen

Rev. 10/2/70 B6A.

lan 130 CONTINUED: 130

3 JACY

Sonny.

SONNY
(turns to her)
What?

She closes her eyes, leans forward and sighs. Hesitant- ly, not quite sure he can believe it, Sonny kisses her. Jacy puts her arms around his neck.

CUT TO;

131 T E ROOM ~ DUSK | 131 *

It is almost dark. Ruth sits on the bed, her face blank, RADIO still on. A car pulls into the driveway, door SLAMS, garage door SCREECHES, back door SLAMS. Mechanically, Ruth gets up.

CcuTTO:

132

INT F TY L = DUSK —

The water is tranquil, the sky is beautiful. The kiss-~- ing has become more passionate. Jacy’s blouse is un- buttoned, her breasts are bared. He works her down on the seat. Suddenly she puts hand over his mouth, speaks huskily. |

‘ JACY Not here. I’m too old for screwing in cars. ‘(kisses him) I don’t like to be in a hurry.

SONNY
Why don’t we go to Wichita an’ get a motel roon.
JACY
(closing blouse). I’m afraig to right now... I think my folks are watchin’ me. They know I don’t wanna go to college ang they might think we’re going to run off and get married.
105

(NUZZLES HIS

A ear)

We'll do it when it’s safe... we've got all summer...

CcUTTO:

Rev. 10/2/70 87/88.

Driving past Ruth’s house, he looks guiltily at it; turns the corner.

CUT TO:

134 OMTTTED . 134 *

135

EXT. POOLHALL - DAWN

A bright, second-hand Mercury is parked infront of the poolhall, as a pickup full of ROUGHNECKS pulls up and Sonny jumps out, dirty and greasy. He looks inthe car, sees Duane just sitting up, blinking in the sunlight. Sonny is unéasy.

9/24/70 | 89.

| SONNY Hey, Duane. |

Tanned dark, Duane gets out, wearing a Levi shirt with the arms cut out; they shake hands.

_DUANE | | Hi, buddy. Didn’t know you’d turned roughneck.

SONNY
Got to make a livin’ somehow, so’s I can afford to keep the | poolhall open. When’d ya get in?
DUANE
‘Bout two. Thought I’d surprise you. a

A moment of stiff silence; both grin, but they’re not really friendly. Sonny looks at the car.

| ‘SONNY This yours?

| DUANE Yeah, how about that? Thirty-— eight thousand miles on her. Runs like new. (lights a cigarette) © Wanna beer? | *

SONNY | ; Not me.| *

DUANE
(getting one from front seat)
*‘Sabout all I eat for breakfast * anymore. | | *

SONNY> Sure is a nice car. * : * DUANE I like to drive it so much I thought I’d run home for the weekend.

QL

Rev. 10/2/70 90.

: “TM,

136 Duane drinks his beer and absently wipes bugs off 136 the grill with a kerchief.

_ DUANE Can‘t take too good care of a car like this. I wash her évery week.

SONNY
Looks great.
(pause)
You heard about Joe Bob?
DUANE
Yeah. I always Knew he was crazy.

SONNY | Doctor said he didn’t really do nothing ~~ just got her to take off her underpants.

DUANE
(skeptical)
Yeah? Hey, you still screwin’ that old lady?
SONNY
No. Yeah. Been kinda busy,
DUANE
Seen old Jerry last week... said he thought you and Jacy’d been going together a little.

SONNY | Yeah, we have, a little -- she’s been kinda bored... once and 4 while we eat Mexican food or something.

DUANE
Way I hear it that ain’t all you been eatin’.

SONNY| Whoever told you didn’t know what he was talkin’ about. Sure, I been ggin’ with her, why not?

Rev. 10/2/70 91.

136 CONTINUED: : . 136

DUANE
I never said I blamed you for it. I don’t blame you much. I ‘jus’ never thought you’d do me that way -~-I thought we was still best friends.
SONNY
We are. What are you so mad for? I never done nothin’ to you.
DUANE
I guess screwin’ my girl ain‘t nothing to you.
SONNY
I ain’t screwin’ her.
DUANE
The hell you ain’t.
SONNY
Well, I ain‘’‘t--but she’s not your girl anymore, anyway.
DUANE
She is my girl -~ I don’t care if waedid break up.
SONNY
Hell, you don’t even live here anymore.
DUANE
Don’t make no difference -- 1/11 always live here. An’ I’m gonna get her back, I’m tellin’ you right now. She‘s gonna marry me one of these days, when I get a little more money.
SONNY
Why, she won‘’tmarry you.

{ CONTINUED)

DUANE
Sure she will! We always meant to get married.
SONNY
She‘’sgoin’ off to college. I doubt I’1lever get to go with her agin myself, once she gets off. I never saw what itcould hurt to go with her this summer, though. She’s never gonna marry you.
DUANE
She is, by God! Don’t you tell me she won’t. She’ll never let you screw her, that’s for sure. Hell, I was just seein’ how honest you was -- I knew Jacy wouldn’t let you screw her... You ain’t that good acocksman. You never even screwed Charlene Duggs all the time you went with her.
SONNY
‘Course I didn’t. You know why? ‘Cause you had the pickup all the time Saturday nights... nobody coulda screwed her in the time I had left.

DUANE

\ (smugly)

I coulda screwed her in five minutes - I wouldn’t even need no pickup.

SONNY , Yeahi? Well, the only.reason Jacy went with you long as she did was ‘cause you was in the backfield. I was in the Goddamn line!

DUANE
What are you talkin’ about... me an’ her was in.love.
SONNY
You was! She likes me as good as she ever liked you.
DUANE
That’s a lie!

9/24/70 93.

ox 136 CONTINUED: (3) 136

SONNY
I’1l stay all night with her, too, one of these nights. She’s done \ promised.
DUANE
You won't either!
SONNY
Yes, I will -- why shouldn’t I? She’s done told me you couldn’t even do it that time in Wichita * Falls -- What about that? *

Enraged, Duane hits him with the bottle, catching him * on his eye. They slug at one another wildly, close, and struggle. Sonny’s eye bleeds, almost closed. Some men run out of the cafe; Genevieve behind them. Sonny Slowly collapses to his knees. Duane goes to hin, scared. Sonny passes out as the others run up.

CUT TO:

Sonny is in bed, one eye bandaged, trying to roll a cigarette. The RADIO is playing. A NURSE comes in.

NURSE
A lady’s down in the waiting room. Sent you this.

She hands him a note; Sonny opens it.

138

INSERT - NOTE

It reads: "May I come in and see you a little while? Ruth."

139 BACK TO SCENE 139

Sonny looks at the Nurse, unhappily.

SONNY
Could you tell her I’m asleep?
NURSE
Sure, I could. But you’re not asleep.

9/24/70 94.

-_ SONNY | at If I go to sleep right now will

you tell her I’m asleep? Please?

NURSE
All right.

She goes out. Sonny lowers himself uneasily in the bed.

140

EXT.HOSPITAL — DAY

Ruth walks out the door slowly, heading for the car.

CUT TO:

Sonny sits behind the counter, eating a cheesburger. He looks drawn, but is dressed. The bandage on his eyé is smaller. Billy is sweeping, Genevieve cleaning up the counter for him.

GENEVIEVE
That too cold?
SONNY
Naw -- ‘s great... I heard Duane joined the Army...
GENEVIEVE
Good place for ‘im, too.
109

SONNY

Oh, he was jus’ holdin’ that * hottle ~- Gidn’t mean to hit me * with it -- *

GENEVIEVE
That boy’s always had meanness in him -- ‘couse Jacy’s jus’ the kinda girl brings out the meanness in a man.

She looks him in the eye, but Sonny turns to his sandwich.

GENEVIEVE
She’s just like her grandmother... * Ooh,I oughtn’t to talk about ‘em -- we was all good friends once -- Dan roughnecked with Gene Farrow. * Be and Lois lived in a little one * room place over the newspaper office.
(MORE)

9/24/70 95.

GENEVIEVE (cont’d)
Lois couldn’t afford a flour-sack, much less a mink.
(staresat floor) : I’ll always have a soft spot for her, though... Iwondered a lotta * times what would’ve happened if Dan * had made the strikes Gene made -- they offered the rig to Dan first -- but then Dan Morgan never took a chance inhis life
SONNY
-Do you wish y’all had made it?

_ GENEVIEVE | (tiredsmile) Oh, sure, Iwish we’d made it.

SONNY
(aftera pause)
I guess the Army won’t take me, now I justgot one good eye.
GENEVIEVE
Oh, you wanna go over to Korea * and get yourself killed -- you % ain’t got your senses back yet * -- what few you ever had. - (going) Well, the cafe won’t run itself -.-you rest up now. If’llbring you some dinner.
SONNY
(opening wallet)
Thanks. Here’s for the cheeseburger.
GENEVIEVE
Okay... I’11 bring you change when I come back.

She waves at Billy, who grins back. Sonny layshis wallet down.

142

EXT, POOLHALL - DAY

Jacy is just getting out of her car as Genevieve comes out. She looks at Jacy hard, which flusters her.

9/24/70 96.

143

INT. POOLHALL - DAY

Ne Billy brings Sonny a peanut pattie as Jacy comes in, looking sorrowful.

JACY
Sonny?
SONNY
Come on in.

She comes over, gives him a big kiss... she looks at Billy, who moves away warily; Jacy clearly doesn’t like hin. oe

JACY
Oh, I was so worried I just had to see you --

SONNY — | I been missin’ you -- I’m a lot better’n I was.

7 JACY You just can’t believe how famous we are -- we’re all anybody talks about in this town now --

SONNY
(unhappily)
Iguess so.
JACY
Iwant us to getmarried.
SONNY
What?!
JACY
I really do -- just as soon as you want to.
SONNY
Get married?
JACY
Don’t you want to?
SONNY
Oh yeah, yeah.

She picks up the wallet Ruth gave Sonny and fondles it, _ which makes him a little nervous.

- (CONTINUED)

9/24/70

JACY
Ibet the whole town’1l be knocked for a loop if we do. They’1llnever forgetit. .
SONNY
But ain’t you goin’ to college?

— JACY| I don’t care about that -- I love you -- that’s more important. You were so dear to fight for me. My folkswon’t like it, butwe can run off.

SONNY
They’11 kill us --kill me, anyhow.
JACY
Oh, they won’t. They’ll get over it. You’re workin’ for Daddy now anyway, and pretty soon they’1l loveyou as much asTI do.
(Kisseshim)
Can we?

SONNY | Sure. I justhope I cansee to drive.

|TACY | Now don’t you worry --I can drive.

Cur TOs

\S

144

EXT. OKLAHOMA ROAD #1-—DAY

A sign says, “Madill, Oklahoma, 5 miles." Sonny and Jacy drive by in. herconvertible; she’s driving.

a

Sonny, wearing and eye patch, looks extremely happy. Jacy’s hair blows, her smile a little strained. Sonny puts his hand on her leg,under her skirt. She pushes it off, looks at himnervously. The RADIO plays.

JACY
Don’t do that, Sonny.

| SONNY Why not? We’re man andwife now -- we cando anything.

JACY | ; Not while I’mdriving. I might have a.wreck.

Sonny leans over and kisses her on the neck. She flinches.

: JACY Goodness, wouldn’t it be just awful ifMomma and Daddy got the police after us?

SONNY
They don’t even know where we are.
JACY
Well, Ihad to leave ‘em a note, so they wouldn’t be worried out of their minds.
SONNY
You shouldna done that.
JACY
I had to -- I figured they’d have to know some time.
SONNY
Well, what could they get us for? We got a right to get married, ain’t we?
JACY
I guess so. .
(irritably)
I wish you didn’t have that stupid eye patch. It’s really creepy. . (CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 99.

145 CONTINUED: . 145

SONNY
I can take it offpretty soon... . We’1l be to Lake Texoma in two * hours --have a room to ourselves. *
JACY
(annoyed)
My goodness, you’re sitting so Close I can barely drive.

CUT TOs:

146

EXT. OKLAHOMA ROA 2_— DUSK

The sun is setting as they drive by.

147 147 *

Sonny is nat sitting so close but Jacy looks even more nervous. A patrol car comes toward them. Jacy is hopeful, Sonny worried. It goes by. Jacy looks dashed; glancing _ in her rear-view mirror, she sees the car make a U-turn behind them. Her face brightens, but she feigns otherwise.

JACY
Oh, goodness.

Sonny looks back miserable. Police car pulls them over, lights flashing. PATROLMAN gets out. *

PATROLMAN
Howdy ~--what part of Texas y’all from?
JACY
Abalene.
PATROLMAN
Newlyweds, ain’t you?
(theynod)
Well, better follow mein. I think somebody’s a~lookin’ for you.
SONNY
We ain’t done a nothin’ wrong -- ain’t we got a right to get Married? How can you arrest us, Just like that?

Rev. 10/2/70 100.

PATROLMAN
(peeling stick of gum)
Iain’t arrestin’ you. TIjust want you to come with me, till we find out. I don’t have no idea what you got a right to do.
JACY
(happily) | I guess we better follow him, honey, I’‘1l justbe heart-broken if my folks have done this.

The Patrolman goes to his car. Jacy kisses Sonnylightly as she puts the car ingear.

CUT TO:

Rev. 11/14/70 | | 101.

148 OMITTED | | 148

149

EXT. OKLAHOMA JAIL - NIGHT

Gene Farrow is coming out with Lois, Sonny and jacy, whom he grabs by the arm away from Sonny.

GENE
Think I worked like a dog all my life so my daughter could end up in a poolhall? eae

ES _ SONNY

~~ We was gonna get another apartment.

OE = ee GENE

svar I bet youwas. Where’s your car —

ee

keys, hon? —

a Sniffing, Jacy fishes themout. —

GENE
It’s a hell of anote, a hell of a note.
LOIS
Oh, shut upand take her home.
GENE
It’s just ahell of a note.
LOIS
I’m tired ofthis.
GENE
You bet Iwill. You take her car. So far as I’mconcerned he can walk.

Jacy looks back. Gene leads her to the Cadillac, spins off with her. Sonny stands watching her go off. Lois comes over, taps his arm.

LOIS
Not much of a wedding night.
SONNY
No, not much of one.

She brings out a little flask.

Rev. 11/14/70 102.

LOTS
(drinks)
Here. Have a little bourbon--take the rest of it--might pick you up--I'‘ve gotta drive.

Sonny sips from it several times. Lois grins. They walk back toward the car.

LOIS
You won’t believe me, Sonny, but

Fl

you're lucky we got you clear of her quick as we did... you’d’ve been a lot better off stayin’ with Ruth

ee

Popper.

SONNY

Se Does everybody know about that? —

LOIS
‘Course. Sounded like a good thing to me, Kiddo--you shouldn’t’ve let Jacy turn your head.
SONNY
She’s prettier. I guess I shouldn’t’ve though.
(pause)
Guess I treated her terrible.
LOIS
I guess you did.

They get in the car.

150-151 OMITTED , 150-151

152

EXT. OKLAHOMA ROAD #3- NIGHT :

They drive hy. Thunder is heard.

153

INT. JACY’S CAR(OKLAHOMA ROAD #3) -—NIGHT

Lois frowns at the sky as Sonny sips; she turns on radio.

Rev. 11/14/70 LO2A.

oe LOIS

That'll be a big help if you mean to live your life in Anarene.

SONNY
T don’t.
LOTS
(Shakes her head)
Strange to have a daughter who

ae wouldn't go through with her

wedding night. When I was her age

ee

Ifd go through with just ‘bout any

old night.

SONNY
(sips bourbon)
I guess I can’t get in the Army now--

SS not with this eye.

Se IDGE — NIGHT 154

eS Moonlight on the water; they drive into Texas again. a aia

155

EXT. POOLHALL - NIGHT

— The car pulls up in front.

SONNY
Sure wasn’t outta Texas very long.
LOIS
Well, Oklahoma’s not much of an improvement.
SONNY
(sips bourbon, pauses)
‘Snot the same now. Nothing’s really been right since Sam the Lion died.

Rev. 10/6/70 103.

LOIS
(stares;sadly)
No, it hasn’t.
(eyeswater slightly)
I get sad when Ithink of Sam for long. Did you know he had * beautiful hands?

| SONNY I guess you likedhim, didn’t you? I guess everybody did.

LOIS
No, it was more than that with me, honey -- I loved him. He loved me. . .

, Surprised, Sonny looks at herand it dawns on him.

SONNY _ are you the one he used to take swimming? Out to the tank?

|LOIS (looksat him; sniles) He told you about that, huh? > Oh yeah, I was the one. (pauses) _ If it hadn’ta been.for hin, you know, I’d have missed it -- whatever it is. I’d have. been one of those Amity types that think bridge is the best thing life has to offer. He’s the only man I ever met who knew what I was worth. Sam the Lion. (smiles) | Sam the Lion. Nobody knows where he got that name. I gave it to him -- one night. Just came to me. He was so pleased. I was twenty- two then -- can you imagine?

Looks at Sonny briefly, holding back her tears; a few . spill over.

LOIs (continuing) You know something, Sonny? It’s terrible only to find one man your whole life that knows what you’re worth. (MORE).

Rev. 11/14/70 104.

7 155 CONTINUED: (2) | 155

LOIS (cont’d)
It’s just terrible--Iwouldn’t be tellin’ you if itwasn’t. I’ve looked, too--you wouldn’t believe how I’velooked. When Sam... was Sixty-five years old he could jus’walk intoa room where I was and do more for me...
(pause)
Nobody was like him.
(fallssilent)
SONNY
(hesitantly)
Now Iknow why Sam likedyou.
LOIS
Loved me!
SONNY
,Loved you, I mean.
LOIS
Aw, do you?
(looksat him, gently puts hand on his cheek)
I can kinda see what hesaw in youtoo.

She looks forward again, then back at him amoment, with a reckless smile. He looks back, curiously. Finally:

LOIS | Nope. I’11ljust go on home.

SONNY
Think I could learn to drink?

Throws back his head and swallows, then coughs and sputters. Lois is amused. He hands her back the flask.

LOIS
You might. Keep practicing.

She drives away. He goes into the poolhall.

cur TO:

155-160 OMITTED | 156-160

118

161 EXT. BALL PARK -—DUSK 161

Teams are warming up, much activity on the sidelines, inthe stands. Band warming up.

Rev. 10/2/70 a | 105.

161 CONTINUED: _ | | | i es 161 —TM! ae, Sonny, cleaned up and inhis football jacket, is on the sidelines, holding one@nd ofthe firstdown chain. A middle-aged man named CHESTER holds the other, watching the warm-up intently. —Coach Popper strides up and down| the sidelines, waving and yelling, cheerleaders lead cheers, drum majors twirl. Sonny tries: not to be de- * pressed. Tommy Logan runs by.

| CHESTER | | That Logan.boys a quarterback, now ain’t he? Boy, we finally got us ateam... Didn’t back in your day, did they, sonny?

SONNY > No, we wasn’t much good.

CHESTER
Well, you jus! never learned the fundamentals. You know, blockin’ and tacklin’. Not like this team. When was it yougraduated?
SONNY
Last year.
CHESTER.
(unperturbed)
You don’t mean it. Seems like longer that that since you and .Duaneplayed ball. Seen old Duane awhile ago -- he’s home on leave ~- wearin’ his uniforn.
SONNY
(surprised,looks around)
T ain’t seen him yet.

162 As the Coach comes by, towel over shoulder, chawing 162 tobacco, he scarcely glances: atSonny, but shakes Chester’s hand.

COACH
(confident)
Chester, see if y’can stretch that Goddamn thing a little. You know, a man never oughta cheat ‘ceptin a good cause.

oe, (winks, goes on)

Rev. 10/2/70 106.

a | | | CHESTER

He’ Ssa good ol’ Poy, ain’t he?!

163 Everything grows quiet, players take off helmets | 163 Coach takes offhis cap; ahushed moment -- then the band begins the school song and whole school ‘begins -toSING:

| ALL | . "Anarene High School, we love you... Love you oh so grand. We will always be so loyal, Loyal to a man...

Whether in defeat or victory, We will always be true. | Dear old Anarene, we love you, And we? li fight for you..." cee

The song sweeps over the quiet field, the still town. Sonny moves his lips, but doesn’t really sing. Caught by a strong emotion, he loooks around the stands, at the players, theband. The song comes to an end.

CUT TO:

164 ~ 164

The scoreboard indicates that Archer city won. Sonny and Billy walk from the ball parktogether, down a ~road of departing cars. Sonnygives Billy his eye patch. Gradually, the carsthin and Sonny and Billy walk on.

164A 3 164A *

Sonny and Billy walk past the quiet lake, Billy * sweeping occasionally. :

164B DELETED

—164¢c XT. GRAVEYARD - NTIZ : 164C *

Sonny and Billy walk past the cemetery.

Ned

Rev. 9/24/70 | | 107.

164D

EXT. ARCHER CITY SCHOOL - NIGHT |

\ate Sonny and Billy continue walking past the school. Horns are HEARD celebrating hometeam victory.

164E DELETED

cold, windy. Sonny drives the pickup to the shabby little unpainted three-room house, off an unpaved | road; no walk. Duane’s Mercury is out front. Sonny KNOCKS on the door. MRS. JACKSON answers with some washing in her arms. .

_ SONNY | Hi, Mrs. Jackson -- Duane here? —

MRS. JACKSON
That’s his car, ain’t it? He’s here if he ain’t walked off.

She goes back inside. Sonny shuffles nervously onthe porch, Duane appears in uniform, hair is slicked down. Nervous, he steps outside. Wind catches the screen door and SLAMS it back against the house; Duane shuts it.

DUANE
Hi... how you been?

SONNY > Oh, pretty good.

- DUANE ts Been thinking all week I’d run into you.

SONNY
Heard you was goin’ off toKorea. * Thought I’d better come by and see you ‘fore you got off.
DUANE
Glad you did. I’m takin’ the bus out, early in the morning.
(lights cigarette adroitly)

( CONTINUED)

CS

Rev. 10/2/70 108.

“— od

SONNY
Thought you might wanna go to the picture show --Miss Mosey’s havin’ to close it --tonight’s the last night.
DUANE
Yeah, might aswell go -- hate to miss the last night. We can take the Mercury -~be the last chance I’llhave to drive it for awhile.

They head toward the car.

166

INT. PICTURE SHOW - NIGHT

They sit stiffly, awareof one another, only eight or ten people inthe theatre. Billy sits in the balcony watching. The western ends and Duane and Sonny get up and start out.

DUANE
That was a good movie.
SONNY
Yeah. I seen ithere before, once. Why don’t we run over to Wichita, drink a littlebeer.
DUANE
Okay, Igot lotsa time till mornin’.
SONNY
sure.

Billy comes sweeping down the aisle. The boys grin at him as they pass.

167

INT. PICTURE SHOW LOBBY - NIGHT

Miss Mosey is scraping out the popcorn machine, close to tears.

SONNY
So long, Miss Mosey.

DUANE |

a, Sorry you’re closin’ the show.

(CONTINUED

10/2/70 109.

167 CONTINUED: | oe 167 —_ Nae,

MISS MOSEY
Nobody wants to come to shows no more -~ kid baseball inthe summer, school in the winter -- television all the time... IfSam had lived, I believe we could’ve kept it goin’. But I justdidn’t have the know-how...
DUANE
Won’t be much to do in town with the picture show closed.
SONNY
Yeah.
DUANE
Well, so long.
MISS MOSEY
Duane, you watch out now, overseas.
168

EXT. PICTURE SHOW — NIGHT -168

Marlene Duggs is shivering at the curb. The boys glance at her as they pass. The wind is blowing trash from the gutters into the street. They get into the Mercury, drive away. The picture show’s neon sign goes off.

CUT TO:

170 170 *

The boys sit drinking beer. The MOTOR is running, RADIO on. Sonny rolls a cigarette.

| DUANE Sure no women around tonight -- guess the next piece of ass I get’1l be yellow.

| _SONNY Wisht I was goin’ with you.

DUANE _

\ (looks guilty).

Hey, why don’t you look after the car for me?

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 1O9A.

SONNY
Your Ma don’t need it?

‘DUANE , I wouldn’t want her drivin’ it, not better than she can drive. You might help her run the | groceries. home if youhave the time.

| SONNY Okay.

171 *

Trailways bus pulls in; Sonny gets Duane’s dufflebag from back seat,hands it to him. They stand a minute in the cold singing wind. Duane doesn’t look athim.

‘DUANE. Ever hear from Jacy?

SONNY
No, hot a thing. She don’t get home much. Ain’t been back to town sincé August -- I guess she just stays inDallas ail the time.
DUANE
Probably does. Must be lots to do, down in Dallas.

A gust of wind hits them, they turn their backs to it.

DUANE
(continuing)
I ain’t over her yet, you know. I ain’t over her yet -- it’s the damndest thing. That’s the only reason me and you got into it that time. Reckon she likes it down in Dallas?
SONNY
Hard tosay... maybe she does. - Reckon you and her woulda got it all straightened out if I hadn’ta butted in?
DUANE
Aw, no -—-they’d’ve annulled me too, even if we had. You all never even got to the motel?

Rev. 9/24/70 | | | 110-113.

171 CONTINUED: . we | 171

SONNY
No.

~DUANE. Well, better get on, before we both freeze. | | (handshim car : x keys) Here’s the keys. So long,buddy. *

They shake hands awkwardly, their eyes not quite meeting.

SONNY
So long, Duane -- be careful. I/11 | take care of the Mercury for you. - *

About to step on the bus, Duane turns back.

_DUANE. See you in a year or two, if. 1 don’t get shot.

The bus drives away down the dusty street. -Sonny walks slowly across the square toward the car.

CUT OUT:

Billy walks up with his broom, but the doors are locked. Mystified, a little sad, he goes across the street, sit on.the curb, looking at the picture show.

173 DELETED

Rev. 10/2/70 | | | 114.

174

INT. POOLHALL -—DAWN . .

Sonny comes shivering fromthe back room, goes tolight + the old gas stove, sneezes severaltimes. Lighting the jets,he HEARS a big cattle truck ROAR past inthe streets, then, alarmingly loud, the SCREECH of air brakes. Sonny looks around, but goeson, lights the fires. Then goes to the door, looks out.

175 175 *

The big truck is stopped in frontof the courthouse, several PEOPLE standing in frontof it.

176

EXT. ARCHER CITY SOQUARD-DAWN | «176

Sonny steps outside, curious. The cold wind makes him catch his breath. The Sheriff’s car pulls up and the Sheriff hurries to the front of the truck in his bathrobe. A cowboy, passing in a pickup, stops. Sonny turns to go back inside when he suddenly sees Billy’s broom lying in the street... he runs toward the truck, then jogs toward it, then slows to a walk. The Sheriff, a TRUCKER, two COWBOYS, a GAS STATION MAN, a PUMPER are gathered around Billy, who is lying in front of the truck, dead. The truck is full of Hereford yearlings, bumping one another. ,Numb, Sonny approaches the men, who look at Billy indifferently, spitting, shuffling. -

TRUCKER
The sand was blowin’.

PUMPER _ Yeah -< hard to see.

TRUCKER
I never noticed hin, never figured nobody would be in the street.

114A,

oN el GAS STATION MAN

He was a kinda wandering ol’ kid -- always inthe street.

10/2/70 115.

176 CONTINUED: (2) | | | 176 *

-PRUCKER . What was he doin’ out there anyway, carryin’ that broom?

SHERIFF .
Aw, he weren’t doin’ nothin’. He was justan ol’ simple-minded kid -~-never had no sense.

| COWBOY | Sorta retarded, you know. Wasn’t your fault.

SHERIFF
Hell, no, Mister, I can see that.
PUMPER
He was just an’ ol’ dumb kid -- never was good for much.
COWBOY
Didn’t even know enough to get his ass out of the cold, morning like this.
PUMPER
Been me, I’da been home in the sack.

COWBOY | Let’s go to the cafe, Ira. I ain’t had no breakfast.

TRUCKER
I’d still like to know what he was doin’ luggin’ that broom aroun’ this time of day.
SONNY
He was sweepin’, you sons of bitches! He was sweeping! |

177 Crying, Sonny grabs Billy under the arms, picks up hat, 177 and drags him - trying to run - across the street, lays him on the curb in front of the picture show; takes off his old football jacket and covers him. The men follow, slowly, looking at Sonny curiously. For several moments he looks at Billy’s cap, then lays it down next to hin, walks away.

TRUCKER
Yall got some crazy kids in this town, you ask me.
(spits again)

( CONTINUED)

Rev. 10/2/70 116.

177 CONTINUED: (3) o4177—~«*

SHERIFF
Yeah, I don’t know what the times are comin’ to. Well, guess I > better go call the undertaker -~-

Sonny has walked across the square to the poolhall, where he’s leftthe dooropen, the wind blowing in. The place looks empty, cold. He gets in Duane’s car, still crying.

Drives fast past the city limits sign, slows stops. The wind blows through the mesquite, over the grey ridges. Sonny sits aminute, then turns the car around. | / |

Sonny drives intotown. The truck is gone, the square empty again.

180, 180

Sonny drives to Ruth’s house and parks.

181

EXT. POPPER HOUSE - DAY A

Sonny walks numbly up the sidewalk,KNOCKS on the door. Ruth opens it in her bathrobe, lookingvery faded. Surprised, she makes a movement to hold her robe to- gether. Sonny barely glances at her.

SONNY
Hi. oe
(pauses)
Could I have a cup a’ coffee with you?
RUTH
(reluctant)
I guess. —

She holds the door open for hin.

182

INT. POPPER KITCHEN — DAY |

They go through the living room, into the disordered kitchen. Sonny sits at the table, while Ruth gets the coffee, moving awkwardly. A RADIO is playing in another room.

pegnaie Ae aAAME Fn yl So Mestaie:biesieORARaaerte okleesllhesetailamiananeSolaBr oredievielir habiantet oe aliiaBllbvecnebsaaieninsoiendamaiinianen. 5ecdeaaibashhocadtuchidasasctenilibedt

LIGA.

RUTH
I’msorry I’m still inmy bathrobe.

Sonny cannot lookat.her. As she begins to pour the coffee, her face tightens with anger. Suddenly, she flings Sonny’s coffee cup at the cabinet, then herown, then the coffee pot at the wall. It breaks. A great brown stain spreads over the wallpaper and drips to the linoleun,

aoLou

Rev. 10/2/70 | L117.

182 CONTINUED: (2) | 182

S

RUTH
What am I doing apologizing to you? Why am I always apologizing to you, you little bastard? Three months Ibeen apologizing to you, without you even beinghere. I haven’t done anything wrong -- why can’t I quit apologizing. You’re the one ought to be sorry. I wouldn’t be inmy bathrobe if it hadn’ta been foryou -- I’da had my clothes on hours ago. You’re the one made me quit caring if I got dressed ornot. Iguess just becuase your friendgot killed you want me to forget what you q@id an’ make itall right. I’m not sorry foryou! You’d’ve left Billy, too, just likeyou left me. I bet you left him plenty a nights, whenever that girl whistled. I wouldn’t treat a dog that way!

Sonny begins to say something.

| RUTH (continuing) I guess you thought Iwas so old and ugly you didn’t owe me. any explanations. Didn’t need to be careful of me. (pauses, struggling) | There wasn’t anything I.could do about you and her -- why should you be careful of me? You didn’t love me. Look at me! (sitsopposite) Can’t you even look at me?

Sonny looks, finally, but doesn’t know what to say.

RUTH
(continuing) . ¥’see? You shouldn’t have come here. I’m around that corner now. You’ve ruined it and it’s lost completely. Just your needing me won’t make it come back.

Ruth’s hands are nervously clasped on the table. Sonny reaches out andtakes one of them. She is startled and ‘J stiff, but Sonny holds on and in a moment, disconcerted, she lets him hold it. His fingers weave through hers. Ruth looks at him, cautiously. He sits blankly.

Rev. 9/24/70 : | 118.

i82 CONTINUED: (3) 182

With the fingersof her other hand, she begins to smooth the hair at the back of his wrist, then turns his hand . over, traces the lives in his palm up tothe wrist, presses the tips ofher fingers against the blue viens athis wrist and goes upward under the sleeve of his shirt. All at once tears spring inher eyes. She takes Sonny’s hand and presses itto her throat, to her wet face. She is on the verge of saying something fine, something wise or brave or beautiful, gasps with it, squeezeshis hand, loses the words. After a moment, quieter, she puts his hand on the table, strokes his fingers with hers. She notices his shirt collar iswrinkled, under his jacket, and tenderly reaches to straighten it.

RUTH
Never you mind, honey... never you mind.

PULL AWAY from them slowly.

LAP DISSOLVE TOs: *

183

EXT. ARCHER CITY SQUARE ~ DAY. | .

The street is empty, and so is the square. Thewind is blowing, raising the dust, andthe picture show is closed.

FADE OUT.