GROSSE POINTE BLANK First Draft: Tom Jankiewicz Revised Draft: D.V. deVincentis & S.K. Boatman & John Cusack NEW CRIME PRODUCTIONS Registered WGA --address deleted --for privacy -- phone deleted MAY 4, 1994 FADE IN: ROLL CREDITS OVER: EXT. GOLF COURSE - DAWN VARIOUS EXTRA CLOSE-UPS of this luxurious patchwork of brilliant greens: A POLISHED BRASS SPRINKLER HEAD pops up from the ground and begins to water the already dew- soaked lawn. FLEET OF DUCKLINGS No mother in sight, cruise through the thrushes. GRAVEYARD OF GOLF BALLS, UNDERWATER At the bottom of a water hazard. PALM FRONDS After a neat they sway, revealing the barren desert that surrounds the artificial oasis. The sun already bakes the air. We hear the opening guitar strains of the Kim Deal-Kurt Cobain suet of "WHAT I DID FOR LOVE," as we CRANE DOWN the palms to A BRAND-NEW TITLEIST 3 BALL. Just on the edge of the rough. A pair of yellow trousers moves in. An iron confidently addresses the ball, and chips it out. The trousers walk out after it. HANDS Digging dirt out of the grooves of the iron's face with a golf tee, while on the way to the green. Both hands are gloved, instead of one, and the gloves are black. YELLOW TROUSERS In a squat over the ball, sizing up the curvy, fifty-foot journey to the hole. The figure positions himself and the putter above the ball, then pops the ball lightly. The ball rolls and bobs with purpose toward the hole, dodging hazards and finding lanes, until it finally falls off of the green and into the hole. THE GLOVED HAND Sets the ball on the next tee. The figure moves to a leather golf bag. The hands pull the wipe rag off of the top of the bag and drop it on the ground, reach into the bag, drawing out a compact SNIPER RIFLE, affixed with a long silencer. The figure drops one knee down onto the rag, the other foot firmly setting its spikes. We move the figure to see the face of the sniper, concentrating down the scope in his half- squat. He is MARTIN BLANK. We SWING AROUND behind his head to look down the barrel with him. Four-hundred yards away, on another part of the course, another green is barely visible through groves of trees and rough. Three miniscule, SILVER-HAIRED FIGURES come into view. One of them, in a RED SWEATER sets up for first putt. He could be an investment banker, or an arms trader. MARTIN'S ARM Flinches, and a low THUNK reports from the rifle. A second later in the distance, the RED SWEATER'S HEAD Seems to vanish from his shoulders into a crimson mist. His body crumples to the green. MARTIN Returns the rifle to the bag, pulls out a driver, moves to the tee and whacks the ball. He watches its path and whispers absently... MARTIN Hooked it. INT. CLUB HOUSE PATIO - LATER The outdoor post-golf luncheon area of an elite Texas golf club. Martin sits in on the fringes of a conversation between a group of executive types. CLUB MEMBER #1 has a Buddha-like peace in his eyes through the philosophical talk. CLUB MEMBER #1 I'd come to the realization that everything I'd based my life on was false. And that my life had no meaning. CLUB MEMBER #2 (to Martin) He gets this way when he hits over eighty-five. CLUB MEMBER #1 It seemed like my life was slipping away, somehow. I was a knot in the middle of a wet rope. Everything was futile and nothing had value. CLUB MEMBER #3 That's the way life is. The only meaning and value is what we create. Through structure, and discipline. Though they seem to limit our freedom, they actually give us great comfort. Your problem is you're looking for some great answer. Some ultimate truth. When what you really should do is go to work and go home. CLUB MEMBER #2 And take golf lessons. CLUB MEMBER #1 That's a tragedy. Can I finish my story please? I began my search for meaning. I was a Catholic, Jew, Scientologist, Sufi, Buddhist. I went to a Psychologist, psychiatrist, herbalist, nutritionist, a shaman, and a psychic. And they all pretty much say the same stuff. CLUB MEMBER #2 A Jew, a shaman, and a herbalist are telling you the same thing? You're insane. CLUB MEMBER #1 Basically the same thing. In a very evolved, esoteric way. CLUB MEMBER #2 Insane. CLUB MEMBER #1 To make a long story short... CLUB MEMBER #3 --Thank God-- CLUB MEMBER #1 ...at last I found the holistic system of systems that opened up the doors of heaven for me right here on earth. And everyday I see the world through the eyes of a child. A world of creation and wonder. CLUB MEMBER #2 Jesus... CLUB MEMBER #1 Overflowing with love. MARTIN Tell me about it. Club Member #1 turns to Martin. CLUB MEMBER #1 P.P.P. Personal Pan Power. All the secrets of your universe are divided up into eight easily digestible slices. Club Member #1 pulls a laminated card from his wallet and hands it over to Martin. In the distance, sirens begin to wail. CLUB MEMBER #1 See, see. It's in the accessible and everyday shape of a pan pizza. Each day you have a little slice of peace... INSERT - WALLET-SIZE P.P.P. CARD A pizza-shaped diagram showing six "sections". MARTIN Oh I see. You got your individual slices of hope, dignity, confidence, self-love, justice, and harmony. CLUB MEMBER #1 You open 'em up and there's the sayings, stories, little bites of insight. It's the P.P.P. Six Day Week. MARTIN So you eat-- read it everyday? CLUB MEMBER #1 Yes. MARTIN And these pan pizzas have opened up the doors to heaven? CLUB MEMBER #1 Correct. (re: the card) That's for you. Keep it. Sirens are getting louder, closer to the club. EXT. COUNTRY CLUB - DAY The source of the sirens are almost upon us. Martin walks toward his rented Town Car as the VALET pulls it up. He meets the Valet by the trunk, where he trades tip for keys. MARTIN AT CAR He fishes out the laminated "Personal Pan Power" card, looks at it, and tosses it onto the ground. Police cars, now visible in the distance, wind into the long club driveway. Martin gets into his car and pulls away. LAMINATED CARD As it lays on the asphalt. The wheel of a police car rolls to a stop on it. INT. AIRLINER - DAY Martin sits in a first class seat, the tray table flipped down. On the left side of the tray is a stack of magazines of all kinds - Sports Illustrated, Mademoiselle, Wired, Rolling Stone, National Review, Spin, National Geographic, and on. He draws one off the top, and flips through it, impassively taking in images and reading nothing. When he is done with one, he discards it into the empty seat next to him and draws another-- Martin's way of instantly and massively uploading the world around him: Toothless hockey player in triumph, Sony product parade, crouched starving child with vulture in the background, supermodel in suede, Tic Tacs, living former Presidents, arm in arm, smiling, etc. INT. HIRED CAR, NEW YORK - DAY The livery weaves out of the arrival lanes at Kennedy airport. Martin reclines in the back seat, a conversation having already begun. DRIVER How was your day, today, sir? MARTIN Effective. But to tell you the truth, I've lost my passion for work. DRIVER Do you like the people you work with? MARTIN I work alone. DRIVER That's it then. That's it. I've always been alone. That's why I'm a good driver. I can handle it. See, I can think on my feet. I survive, I'm a thinker. And I can sit there in front of your house for two hours and it don't bother me. Some people can't do it! Some people are ranting and raving, "Tell them fuckin' people to get out here and get in this car, I can't-- I want a go!" Where you gonna go? You're gonna wind up back in your garage at seven o'clock at night. You ain't going nowhere. You leave your house in the morning you get back to your house in the evening. What's the big deal, right? MARTIN You understand the psychology of the job. DRIVER I do. Some guys can't adjust to it; they can't handle it. INT. CAR - MANHATTAN STREETS - LATER The car cuts through the upper east side. Martin and the Driver exchange looks through the rear-view mirror. DRIVER You look like you're far away. Far away and thinking about other things. I'm right about that, aren't I? MARTIN No. DRIVER Well, let's just say that sometimes I'm right. Sometimes you are. MARTIN Sometimes I am. Sometimes. It's only natural. DRIVER (laughs to himself at this great truth) It's only natural.... The Driver pauses for dramatic emphasis DRIVER I been looking at you, and I've decided that I want to share something with you. MARTIN Okay. DRIVER Because your problem is you're bored. And you have a very big mind. (beat) I am part of what I call a brain syndicate. No reaction from Martin. DRIVER I am part of a network of minds, a group of five people who are all connected, over hundreds, even thousands of miles, through the mind. We can think with each other, think for each other. I can be driving somewhere, sleeping with a woman-- whatever it is-- and at the same time be thinking a thought in someone else's mind, far away. Running someone else's brain. MARTIN (indicates) Up on the right. DRIVER And when you think of it, it's not so surprising that a small group of people control the whole world, is it? INT. HOTEL ROOM, NEW YORK CITY - DAY A sedate and well-appointed four-star suite on the Upper East Side. Martin stands in front of one of the open windows watching the canopied entrance of an elegant high-rise across the street. He lifts an eye rinse cup to his eye and tilts it back. A cellular phone RINGS, interrupting him. He moves to the desk and draws one of three phones from his briefcase, depresses a scrambler module, flips it open, and listens for a moment. MARTIN If it's not there, I can't proceed. Tell them. Martin hangs up. Picks up another phone and dials. As he waits for an answer, he goes to a Fed Ex blueprint tube lying on the bed. MARTIN Tom. I've been waiting for an answer. I'm only in town tonight. He breaks the shipping seal and pulls out a series of finished metal parts including a long thin barrel, a scope, and a silencer. MARTIN What's different this time than the last time? I have to be down front... INT. HOTEL ROOM - SAME Martin stands in front of the window, phone in one hand, the scope in the other. Next to him, the assembled rifle rests across the arm of a chair. MARTIN ...I don't bother to call anyone else because you always take care of me. He glances over to a second window to his left, which offers a view further down the street. He goes to it. He raises the scope and sees MARTIN'S P.O.V./SCOPE- WINDOW #2 A few blocks down, small even through the high-powered scope, is your average BICYCLE MESSENGER dressed in lycra racing gear, weaving through traffic toward us. Slung low across his right hip is a black canvas bag. The Messenger's hand is hidden in it. The other phone begins to RING. MARTIN Hold on a second, Tom. I got my hands full here. He sets down the phone and answers the other, still watching the messenger. MARTIN Good. Account number 3649367, transfer to account number 96-546-38739-47825. Ask for Mr. Sanchez, tell him it's Mr. Duckman. If there are any problems, access file 673594638-IO- 98, and look at it. Martin drops the phone and moves away from Window #2 to the rifle. He mounts the scope and he looks out Window #1 at the high-rise. MARTIN'S P.O.V./SCOPE - WINDOW #1 Of a DOORMAN opening the door for a group of five men in suits. Four BODYGUARDS form a perimeter around the fifth man, a mall, avuncular figure in his forties dressed in Saville Row finery. MARTIN Takes a step back into the shadows of the room, and raises the rifle toward Window #2. MARTIN'S P.O.V./SCOPE - WINDOW #2 of an empty street. The bicycle messenger flashes past. MARTIN concentrating, tracks the path of the Messenger, leading him left to right across the blind spot of the hotel room wall between Window #2 and Window #1. STREET the bicycle Messenger bears down on the group of men, drawing a Mac-10 submachine gun from his bag. The group see him-- just as Martin's sniper FIRE explodes the Messenger's chest. Two of the Bodyguards collapse onto their boss. The other two open fire on the Messenger as he wipes out horribly into a parked car in front of them. MARTIN withdraws from the window, and picks up the phone again and begins to break down the rifle. MARTIN Sorry Tom. But look, I know it's the playoffs. That's why I'm offering a thousand dollars for one seat... Martin listens patiently as he works. EXT. STREET - SAME - INTERCUT DOORMAN'S HANDS unbuttoning his double-breasted long coat. MARTIN just finishes packing. MARTIN ...Well let me ask you, Tom. What do I have to do to get courtside tickets for the Knicks...? STREET The two bodyguards kick at the Messenger's body. The other two begin to move off of their boss, who rises cowering. The Doorman stands behind it all, unbuttoning his coat. DOORMAN a tall, dark, sharp-featured man in his forties, wearing a handlebar moustache. He moves toward the group of men as he flips open his coat back over two huge chrome .44 Magnum Charthouse Bulldog revolvers and OPENS FIRE on them. MARTIN is closing his bag when he hears the gun-thunder. MARTIN Never mind. I gotta go. Martin drops the phone, grabs his scope, and spins to the window. MARTIN'S P.O.V./SCOPE of the Doorman kicking through the pile of dead bodyguards. He gets to the man at the bottom-- their boss. The Doorman FIRES both guns. MARTIN reacts, surprised to see a second shooter. He pulls himself from the window, puts away his scope, and accelerates his exit. HIGH-RISE FOYER Outside, we see the doorman drop both guns on the pile of bodies. He walks back toward us through the glass doors and makes his way through the building toward the service exit. He sheds his uniform and stuffs it into a plastic bag. MARTIN his two parcels in hand, exits out the side door of the hotel and walks down the street. DOORMAN now wearing rich man's sweats, hops off the loading dock, walks to a Lincoln Town Car, and drives off. INT. MARTIN'S AND GROCERS CARS - DAY Martin rolls down FDR Drive in a Lincoln Town Car once again on the cellular. MARTIN ...Tell them that's not my problem. I was paid for one job-- the cyclist-- not two. See you tomorrow, Marcella. MARCELLA Wait. I have Mr. Grocer for you. MARTIN Patch him through.... Martin notices another Town Car appears in the next lane. We recognize the Doorman behind the wheel, phone in hand. He is GROCER. MARTIN What do you want? GROCER I'm setting up a concern that would enable those of us in our rarefied profession to consolidate our efforts. MARTIN Like a union? GROCER Like a club. Work less, make more. MARTIN Thank you, no. GROCER We could be working together, making big money, killing important people... I'm willing to let you in on the ground floor. MARTIN And you could be... sort of like... a father figure to me.... Grocer ignores this. GROCER It's a free-market evolution. You'll wake up to it... c'mon Kid. We used to run together when you were a rookie. I don't want to run against you. This thing's real. Everybody's in. MARTIN Not me. So don't paw at me with your dirty little guild. GROCER I'm gonna get you, kid. Martin hangs up and pulls away. INT. AIRLINER - DAY Martin sits in first class, wiping his face and hands with an airline hot towel. He folds the wet cloth and once again speeds through the images from a thick stack of magazines. He looks up as he hears PILOT V.O. It's seventy-six degrees and partly cloudy in Chicago this afternoon... INT. APARTMENT, CHICAGO - NIGHT Martin walks into a sparsely furnished apartment. He wearily drops his carry-on bag and briefcase in the hall. INT. LIVING ROOM - LATER Martin sits on a futon couch watching MTV with no sound. On the coffee table in front of him is a phalanx of vitamin bottles. Martin takes some capsules from each and washes them down with a reddish-orange beverage. INT. LIVING ROOM - LATER Martin lies on his back on the hardwood floor. His eyes are closed and he wears a set of headphones as he absently taps his chest. WOMAN (V.O.) "Dear Alumni: Can you believe it's been ten years? Where are you now...? After a moment, his eyes open, alerted. His head turns to the side, and his hands lightly cup the headphones. CLOSE-UP: WIRE from the headphones as it winds to a small metal box, with one unmarked switch and one amber light- definitely not a walkman. The wire continues out of the other side of the box, across the floor, connecting to a suction cup stuck to the floor. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Are you guiding an Outward Bound canoe trip like Brook Stinson? Or perhaps in charge of appearances for the NFL like Leslie Gunther....? MARTIN - A MINUTE LATER draws a pre-cut section of the floor, the width of a pencil and twice as long, by a string. VIDEO MONITOR - A MINUTE LATER The greenish Starlight (night vision) image of a young, HUSKY MAN sleeping on his back, as seen from above. A fine thread snakes from behind CAMERA to just above the man's slack mouth. We PULL BACK to reveal a Sony Watchman that holds the IMAGE. KEEP PULLING to reveal Martin watching it as he maneuvers the thread down past the fiber-optic cable through the hole in the floor. MARTIN - A MINUTE LATER concentrates as he applies three drops of blue liquid on the thread. As the drops run down along the thread through the floor, his attention shifts to the VIDEO MONITOR The drops, huge in the foreground, become smaller as they make their way down the line toward the sleeping man. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Could it be that you're like Chip Longfellow, at the trade-relations tank in Washington. Sandy Glasser owns a cheese shop...! MARTIN adjusts the thread minutely with one hand, and lowers the fiber-optic cable with the other. VIDEO MONITOR The face begins to fill the screen as the fiber-optic follows the drops toward it. Suddenly, the man snorts and turns his face... A DROP FALLS It misses the man's mouth and hit's his cheek. VIDEO MONITOR The man's eyes snap open in terror as he looks directly into CAMERA. His image falls away as the fiber-optic is jerked back up through the hole in the floor. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Looking at yearbooks and pictures evokes so many memories...! MARTIN (V.O.) (hushed) Fuck! MARTIN stuffs the apparati into an open duffel bag, and flies out of frame. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Some good. Some bad. But all interesting... INT. HALLWAY - MOMENTS LATER A BODYGUARD sits outside an apartment door. A muffled but dire scream is heard from within and he is on his feet, gun in hand. An exit door in the hallway slams open revealing Martin, his gun already pointed at the Bodyguard. The Bodyguard levels his at Martin. MARTIN Freeze! Police! The Bodyguard hesitates just long enough to get double-tapped through the head. WOMAN (V.O.) ...As a graduate of the class of 1984, you are someone special... Martin moves to the dead Bodyguard, and locates a retractable key chain on his belt. He unreels the ring of keys and opens the door. He lets the keys retract back to the belt and drags him into the apartment. INT. HUSKY MAN'S APARTMENT - SECONDS LATER Martin moves silently down the hall in a crouch. He comes to the bedroom and slips across the threshold. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Whenever news of you filters back, the school is excited and proud of your accomplishments... INT. HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS Martin crouches down outside the bedroom door. He points the gun at the door, and reaching up turns the knob. As the door opens, the Husky Man FIRES wildly over Martin's head. Martin returns with one shot to the hut which sits the man down on the floor. WOMAN (V.O.) ...We hope Grosse Pointe High prepared you well to lead the kind of life that makes an impact on the world... Martin kicks the gun away from the fallen man, and raises his barrel to the man's forehead. WOMAN (V.O.) ...Remember, "there's no where you can go that you haven't learned how to go in time... It's easy..." HUSKY MAN (in severe pain) Whatever it is that I'm doing that you don't like I'll stop doing it. MARTIN It's not me. Martin cocks the gun.... EXT. EAST-WEST HOLDING COMPANY, LOS ANGELES - DAY The perpetual sun shines down on a small lot of pre-fab office bungalows. INT. BLANK HOLDING COMPANY A small suite of dry-walled offices. EAST-WEST HOLDING COMPANY is stenciled on glass doors behind Martin who stands in front of a young woman reading from some kind of invitation. She is MARCELLA MAYES. MARCELLA ...So come on back to the old oak tree, acorns. Signed, the reunion committee." Marcella holds up the mauve envelope and smiles slyly. For the first time, Martin looks scared. MARTIN Throw that away. MARCELLA This? MARTIN Don't tease me. You know what I do for a living. MARCELLA It's from one of those P.O. Boxes. How was the trip? MARTIN Tedious. I now authorize you to throw away all personal mail. MARCELLA All of it? MARTIN And not show it to me. Ever again. MARCELLA That's going to cost. MARTIN I'll pay. Martin begins to walk past her into his office, but Marcella stops him. MARCELLA They're not happy, sir. MARTIN I'm not happy. MARCELLA They say their friend was suppose to have a heart attack and die in his sleep. MARTIN He didn't. MARCELLA They blame you for the compromise. MARTIN And they want me to make up for it. MARCELLA In Detroit. This weekend. MARTIN Tell them that's impossible. I need my normal lead time. MARCELLA They were very upset. MARTIN Would you describe their position as inflexible? MARCELLA Intractable, sir. You leave tonight. Marcella looks concerned. MARCELLA And sir, I also get that broken- mirror, black-cat, Friday-the- thirteenth kind of feeling about this one.... MARTIN There's nothing to be done about it. MARCELLA I liquidated the last account in Zurich, and split it into two new ones in Estonia. MARTIN Good. What else? Anything interesting? MARCELLA Mmm, not really. But you're gonna love this one. She hands him a piece of paper. He scans it. MARCELLA Enough? MARTIN Never enough. MARCELLA But it's a Greenpeace boat. It'd be so easy. Martin looks at her wearily. He puts it into the paper shredder at the side of her desk. MARTIN I have scruples. Next. MARCELLA Paperwork on the Detroit thing. It's a full dossier. Very comprehensive. She raises a thick brown dossier from the top of her desk and puts it down again. Martin moves through a door to his private office. MARTIN'S OFFICE Martin goes into his office and sits at his desk. On the walls are a couple of boring prints of tallships. A bookshelf holds trappings of a loose attempt at a cover-- a few shipping manifests, sealane tables, and other specialized reference books on import/export. He sits and stares. NEW ANGLE Time has passed, and Martin still sits at his desk massaging his gums with a rubber-tipped dental pointer. C.U. MARTIN'S TEETH The dental tool jumps across the gaps between his teeth like a hummingbird. MARCELLA (off-screen) You should get going.... MARTIN pulls back his jacket lapel and fits the utensil into a pocket protector that is also home to a toothbrush, emery board, tweezers, and comb. He stands and walks out of his office. FOYER Martin moves toward the door. As he passes Marcella she hands him the mauve envelope and a travel portfolio. MARCELLA Don't forget your identity. MARTIN See you next week. Martin stops short as he reaches the threshold. He holds up the envelope, and stares a dagger through it. On his way out, over his shoulder... MARTIN Tell Dr. Oatman I'm on my way. INT. DR. OATMAN'S OFFICE - DAY Martin slouches on a leather couch. He holds the mauve envelope, now open. DR. OATMAN (V.O.) Why don't you want to go to your high school reunion? MARTIN It's in Michigan. Honestly, what do I have in common with those people? Or with anyone? DR. OATMAN sits in the window. He is Kris Kringle-esque, and wears a sheepskin vest, rough-hewn shirt, faded Levis, and old Frye boots. Oatman nods with the suave understanding of a man happy to collect fifty thousand in fees before asking a tough question. DR. OATMAN You went to school with these people. MARTIN Come on. DR. OATMAN We've spent a lot of time discussing those years. Remember we said that fear is a transfer of the bodily hurt associated by experience with the thing feared, to the thought of the thing. Thus we fear a dog without distinctly imagining its bite. MARTIN Shouldn't you be taking notes? DR. OATMAN Tell me about your vision of the reunion. CLOSE-UP - MARTIN CUT TO: MARTIN'S P.O.V. - FROM ABOVE Of a crowded gymnasium. The alumni below stops what they are doing and look up at Martin, DRAWING GUNS OF ALL SHAPES AND SIZES AND OPEN FIRE ON MARTIN. THE UNITED FORCE INSTANTLY DISINTEGRATES, AND ALL 400 PEOPLE TURN THEIR GUNS ON EACH OTHER. A BLOODBATH ENSUES. ONE ALUMNI SHOOTS HER OWN HEAD OFF, ANOTHER MOWS DOWN THE BAR, ETC. CUT BACK TO: MARTIN AND OATMAN MARTIN It'll be depressing. DR. OATMAN How do you know? MARTIN I just know. DR. OATMAN Say more. MARTIN They'll have husbands and wives and children and houses and dogs.... made themselves a part of something. And they can talk about what they do. What am I going to say? (sarcastic) "I killed the President of Paraguay with a fork." Oatman twitches nervously, almost spilling his coffee. DR. OATMAN You needn't be so frank with me about your work. MARTIN Why not. I trust you. You couldn't turn me in because of Doctor-Patient privilege... and I don't want to be "withholding"... and I know where you live. DR. OATMAN You know where I live? MARTIN We're both professionals, Oatman. DR. OATMAN I think what you fear Martin is domesticity. It's the greatest fear that men have who belong to Western Culture. It's centuries old. Like King Phillip, in the 11th or 12th century who decided one day that he was so bored with his dreary life at home with his wife he thought, "Well, wouldn't it be great if we hit the road and fought... oh... the Saracens." So he put the word out and was amazed when a million men signed up and all of them wanted to go and fight in distant lands and do terrible things to people rather than stay at home with their families. MARTIN So you're saying that Ulysses-- everything he said to his queen when he came back--everything was a lie? He just wanted to fuck around? DR. OATMAN Yes. MARTIN Mmm. Beat. DR. OATMAN And how have you been feeling about your... work lately? MARTIN Uneasy. Dispassionate. Bored. It's just getting hard to go to work in a good mood. I'm starting to think I've been in the business too long. Last week I did a guy younger than me. INT. CHURCH - SERIES OF QUICK SHOTS: MARTIN From the back of the darkened empty church, we see him mount the altar. A priest in fact. MARTIN'S HANDS open the gilded doors to reveal the chalice. He removes it, squirts a clear liquid into the cup, and swishes it out. He returns the chalice to the cabinet. MARTIN (V.O.) The church seems to be purging itself of it's pedophile. MARTIN Sits in the back pew of the church, now crowded for Mann. He watches the PRIEST lift the chalice into the air, murmur a prayer, and drink from it. The Priest collapses behind the altar. MARTIN (V.O.) It's a bull market. C.U. OF ALTAR CARPET The chalice bounces free from the Priest's hand as it hits the ground. MARTIN (V.O.) Anyway, that never use to happen. I was always the prodigy. Now I'm just one of the guys. DR. OATMAN (V.O.) Maybe some of the discomfort you're feeling is... guilt. Remorse. Over the innocent people you've killed. INT. OATMAN'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS MARTIN If I show up at your door, chances are you did something to bring me there. I don't care about that stuff, anyway. DR. OATMAN What stuff? MARTIN (dismissive) Morality. Oatman's glad the session's just about over. DR. OATMAN Go to your reunion, Martin. See those people and discover what they mean to you. Try not to kill anybody for a few days, see how you feel. MARTIN If I get antsy I'll kill a few small animals. OATMAN Now we're making progress. INT. CONDO - NIGHT Very dark. No pictures or plants. Almost no furniture, and what he does have is black. The only sign of life is a CAT. The cat watches on as Martin sorts through a cardboard box, finally coming to a photo album. CAT Meow. MARTIN Just a minute. INSERT-ALBUM A teen-aged Martin Blank: shy boy with a nervous smile. He poses with his mother, an older woman with a kind smile... but her eyes are dark; aged by a life of work and worry. On the opposing page is a gilt funeral announcement that reads: "IN LOVING MEMORY... VISTOR ALLEN BLANK...." MARTIN turns the page. INSERT-PHOTO ALBUM A photograph of a tall, thin girl: a bright smile from within a bulky winter coat. A girl he's always wondered about: DEBI NEWBERRY. Handwritten on the photo in girlish loops: "Would you rather...?!" CAT Meow! INT. KITCHEN - SAME Martin pulls himself away from the album and the cat follows him, moaning hungrily-- MARTIN Food soon... Martin opens a restaurant-style refrigerator. It holds various bottles of vitamins, spirulina, wheatgrass, digestible hydrogen peroxide, fluoride treatment, oxygenated mouth rinse, and thirty cans of CATFOOD. MARTIN Tuna or liver? CAT Meow. MARTIN Tuna it is. He opens a can for the cat and a bottle for himself. While the cat eats, he returns to the cardboard box. Finds a YEARBOOK. Flips it open.... INSERT-YEARBOOK A picture of a senior class "Blues Brothers" party: a group of teens mug to the camera in Blues Brothers get-ups. Sprinters race for a finish line, their chests stretching for the tape. DEBI NEWBERY'S SENIOR PICTURE A more mature version of the girl in the album. Her name appears under his picture... INT. GROCER'S KITCHEN - NIGHT Track light fills the gourmet-rustic kitchen. GROCER stands, wearing a burgundy Fila sweat suit, pushing beets into a vegetable juicer. Next to the juicer are piles of celery and carrots, as well. A low-key BLIP is heard from another room. Grocer tops off the glass and takes it out of the kitchen. INT. GROCER'S GREAT ROOM - CONTINUOUS Grocer enters the main room of the villa-style A-frame. He moves to an antique oak desk and sits in front of a COMPUTER. ON-SCREEN GRAPHICS "Click OK for remote access caller" OK is clicked. "Availability for two days in Detroit area" "Terms" "$560,000" "When" "Now" "OK/ FAX materials" Grocer leans back in his chair and sips the juice. After a moment, the FAX machine on the desk rattles. The computer beeps. "confirmation number of wire transfer#: AJ6687-OI99471" Grocer hits the return button after taking in the number. A graphic appears: "Connection is terminated/ Status idle" Grocer's FAX begins to moan and chatter. Grocer raises his juice glass to the computer in a lazy toast. INT. PLANE - NIGHT Martin reclines in first class, soaring toward the Midwest on the red-eye. He has already scanned his magazines and they are piled in the empty seat next to him. He sets aside a Powerbar. Martin reads Kill Without Joy. After a moment, he sets the book down and takes up Iron John. INT. DETROIT AIRPORT TERMINAL - EARLY MORNING At the edge of the airport bar sits LARDNER and MCCULLERS, two Government Spooks, agency unknown. They are both in blazers, no ties, early thirties, and they watch the passing crowd. LARDNER You always say that. You always say that. I'm telling you, you never met the man. MCCULLERS Seventeen months ago I was posting a walk in Lisbon, and he was there. He never saw me. But I saw him, though. LARDNER Lisbon? MCCULLERS In Portugal, yes. In the background, Martin passes by them as he walks down the hall. Without directly regarding him, the two stand, drop some cash on the bar, and begin to leave. LARDNER Here's the news: He hasn't been in Portugal since '90. I know that from the file. Why don't you read the file, man? MCCULLERS In fact, I think I talked with him, in Bonn. Lardner can neither confirm nor deny this. LARDNER You always say that. You always have to know everybody. Why don't I just take the weekend off and let you kill him. Since you two are so close. They exit. EXT. EXIT RAMP, DETROIT AIRPORT - MORNING INSIDE MARTIN'S CAR Martin, in a black Lincoln Town Car, veers off of the airport artery and on to a turnpike. The radio broadcasts the news. BROADCAST (V.O.) ...with highs today in the upper seventies. Related stocks on Wall Street today as scandal continues to rock the joint U.S.-Japanese Tech Center... MARTIN'S CAR blows past CAMERA and on down the road. After a beat, a mid- eighties Ford Country Squire station wagon follows, occupied by two figures. INSIDE THE COUNTRY SQUIRE are Lardner and McCullers. They listen to the same broadcast. BROADCAST (V.O.) ...An unknown "whistle-blower" has leaked a number of critical flaws in the safety designs of next year's models to authorities that could cost millions in recalls.... MARTIN flips through the dial, pausing on Rush Limbaugh who waxes fascistically. MARTIN Mein hero. ...and then turns the dial again and cuts in on "Armageddon Time," slow reggae vibe by The Clash. EXT. HIGHWAY- Martin drives down the roadway... headlong into his past. Dig it... INT. MARTIN'S CAR Martin turns up the volume as he reacts to a familiar voice.... FEMALE DEEJAY (V.O.) (on radio) --this is WFRN, all vinyl, all the time. Oldies from the eighties. It's a cold summer day in Grosse Pointe-- CUT TO: CLOSE-UP - A FULL, FEMALE MOUTH lit only by dime slivers of sunlight, in front of a microphone. Stray, gossamer strands of hair hanging in her face move in front of her mouth as she speaks.... FEMALE DEEJAY --and I'm ready for some good tunes and angry talk. Or angry tunes and good talk-- CUT TO: MARTIN looking somewhere far away, beyond what is before him in the windshield... FEMALE DEEJAY (V.O.) --Or maybe we'll just play the Cocteau Twins and get over the goo-angry- talking music. As you know-- CUT TO: THE DEEJAY'S HANDS as they distractedly toy with the wire at the base of the mic. FEMALE DEEJAY (V.O.) --for some moments in life there are no words, and a little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest man-- CUT TO: MARTIN still rapt, makes a sharp turn into a shopping district. CUT TO: HER MOUTH FEMALE DEEJAY --The Cocteau Twins, though also a band of the nineties, will be aired due to the fact that they created their own language to sing by-- CUT TO: MARTIN slows on a quaint street of cute shops. He creeps up to a storefront on hid right and stops, staring through the passenger window.... CUT TO: DEBI NEWBERRY the female deejay. She sits slumped in a well-worn executive chair, her back to the studio console and the picture window behind it that opens to the street.... DEBI --Now that's freedom-- she swivels in the chair to face the street.... DEBI'S P.O.V. of Martin's Town Car outside, Martin silhouetted in shadow. DEBI Her brow furrowed as she peers at the car, something summoned by the dark figure. Her words falter almost imperceptibly. DEBI --The best I can do is a rhyme: Where are all the good men dead? In the heart or in the head? Back later.... MARTIN Shaken from his trance by her stare, pulls back into the street and disappears.... INT. MARTIN'S CAR - MORNING Martin drives, listening to the radio. He turns the corner with an expectant look on his face. Suddenly his face drops as he slows and pulls over.... MARTIN'S P.O.V. - 7-11 STORE Martin looks left of the store, then right, behind him, then back at the store. Bewildered, he gets out of the car. WIDE SHOT of Martin as he walks with purpose. He halts in the middle of the lot. He puts his hands on his hips, stares, then moves in... We stay wide as he enters the store and addresses the clerk inside. MARTIN What are you doing here? CARL, the store clerk tries to get a grip on this question. CARL A double shift. What's it look like? (softening) Can I help you with something? Martin's head pans the room, processing. MARTIN I don't think so. EXT. 7-11 PAYPHONE - MORNING Martin continues to gaze at the structure as if it's a lunar landscape. MARTIN (into phone) Dr. Oatman. Dr. Oatman. Please pick up if you're there... It's Martin Blank. It's gone. My house. It's not here. My house is gone and now there's a 7-11 here... And that's unfortunate... You can never go home again, Dr. Oatman. Martin hangs up. He watches one-stop shoppers come and go. MARTIN (to himself) But I guess you can shop there. INT. NURSING HOME - DAY MARTIN'S P.O.V. of a NURSE leading him down a drab, antiseptic hallway. She banks into the sunlit room where a wispy woman in her late fifties sits expectantly on the edge of the bed clutching her purse in one hand, a filterless Pall-Mall in the other, a light coat on. This is MARY BLANK. She suffers from Alzheimer's or something just as debilitating. NURSE Mary, your son's here. The nurse gently eases Mary up. Martin hugs Mary stiffly and pats her shoulders. Mary takes hold of Martin's arm. They start out of the room. EXT. SUBURBAN STREET - DAY They walk past a school-yard park fitted with a set of swings, baseball diamonds, and a small grove of trees. She smokes and hacks. MARY I bought a new rug. MARTIN That's wonderful, Mom. MARY What's a revival tent? MARTIN It's a place where religious people-- MARY (knowingly) Marlin Perkins and Jim! MARTIN Jim? MARY His assistant. He acted like Marlin's son, only he wasn't. At least they never said he was... I bet they were lovers, faggots. Yes, gay lovers. Wild Kingdom my ass! Mary coughs horribly. MARTIN It's good to see you. I'm sure you're curious about what I've been doing. MARY I spoke to your father the other day. MARTIN I imagine that'd be rather difficult. MARY Nature made him then broke the mold. Martin decides to change the subject. MARTIN They told me you're taking lithium, mom. MARY Yes, they give me headaches. I have a headache. MARTIN You have a headache? MARY I have a headache. You have a headache? MARTIN No, I don't have one. MARY You don't have a headache. I have a headache. Mary leans in close, smiling. MARY We had a good laugh, didn't we? MARTIN Yeah. I guess we did. EXT. NURSING HOME - DAY As they head toward Martin's car, Mary stops and points to it. MARY Why don't you return this car and borrow mine? Have Debi follow you to the rent-a-car so you can get a ride back. MARTIN I think I'll go see Debi today. MARY Of course you will. MARTIN I can't think of anything to say to her that seems appropriate given I left and never said goodbye to her. MARY Take care of her. She's a keeper. MARTIN Yeah... MARY And a leader. Didn't she meet Castro on foreign exchange? MARTIN I have always thought about her and missed her. A nurse approaches with a wheelchair. MARY Separate the wheat from the chaff and you've got the candle cat. Together, Martin and the nurse help Mary into it. Mary gazes at Martin, taking him in. MARY Remember no matter how impossible your problems feel. I've known people without a chance in the world. And all of a sudden, they have lives. Time allows miracles. Let yourself breathe, son. Martin bends down and kisses her on the cheek. The nurse spins the chair around and heads toward the building. He is somewhat fatigued from the experience, but he tries once more to connect. MARTIN Mom... The nurse stops and turns Mary around to face him. Mary looks up at Martin and brightens. She starts to sing out like Ethel Merman, arms out Broadway style. MARY "What's up doc/ what's cookin'?/ What's up doc?/ Are ya lookin'?/ Hey! Look out! You're gonna hurt someone,/ with that old shotgun,/ Hey... what's... up... Doooooc...!/ We really mean it!" Mary stops short, and squints at Martin. MARY Hey, you're a handsome devil. What's your name? EXT. GRAVEYARD ROAD - DAY Martin stops the car and looks out the window at the sea of headstones. He jerks his hand in a stiff wave... MARTIN Hey Pop... You got off easy. The house is a 7-11. Mom's a psycho- pharmacological punching bag and I murder for cash. If you were here I think you'd be proud. He drives off. INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - DAY The room features a big square bed, dresser and television. Martin enters, kicks a leather bag under the bed, and grabs the steel-sided briefcase. MARTIN pries out a wall vent, slides in the case and replaces the vent. EXT. MAIN STREET - DAY Lardner and McCullers are staked out along the main strip of town. Lardner snores, face pressed up against the passenger window. McCullers lays back in his seat, a to-go cup in his lap. He taps the cup with one finger as he absently sings his favorite Bob Seeger song to himself... MCCULLERS "...Against the wind... just a young man running... Against the wind... let the cowboy's ride!... Blame on it the thuuunder! Night moves..." McCullers catches of Martin's Town Car coming down the street. He nudges Lardner, and points. LARDNER AND MCCULLERS P.O.V. of Martin pulling into a space on the street outside the radio station. He gets out, looking nervous. INT. RADIO STATION - DAY Debi flips on the "ON-AIR" switch and prepares to speak into the microphone. Martin walks in. Debi sees him. They stare at each other. The song ends. Dead air. After a moment... DEBI (on air, groping) WRFN playing all vinyl, all the time. Oldies from the eighties. That was ah... the Specials. Doing... one of their songs... Debi turns to turntable B and finds it empty. She turns back to turntable A and lets the record roll on. DEBI ...and here's another. Debi swivels around to face Martin. MARTIN "Oldies from the eighties?" After a long pause.... DEBI I just play my own collection. MARTIN It's nice to see you again. Debi says nothing, just stares at him, in shock. MARTIN How long has it been? DEBI Since you stood me up on prom night and vanished without saying a word? MARTIN Ten years, I think. What I miss? Debi slowly grooves into irony, her best defense. DEBI Well, let me see... they tore down the George Orwell monument and put up a bust of George Michael. Main Street's a four-laner, no left turns four to seven. I was married and divorced. And Grosse Pointe is now officially the new sister city to Lower Hutt, New Zealand. We have fiber-optic town meetings every two months. MARTIN Here is now there. There is here. Their eyes lock on each other... DEBI Those are the headlines. The request line buzzes. DEBI Hold that thought. (into phone) WRFN FM, Grosse Pointe. All vinyl, all the... (pauses) No Pearl Jam. Call back in ten years. Beat. Debi makes the move. DEBI Tell me about yourself. MARTIN I'm in California most of the time. Traveling a lot on business. That's about it, really. DEBI That's it? MARTIN Not much else. DEBI What's your business? MARTIN I'm a professional killer. DEBI Professional killer. Do you get dental with that? Beat. MARTIN Well, I'm in town for a few days, anyway. They run out of words, the moment too big for small talk. Martin gets the fear, breaks it off. MARTIN Well, I gotta go. But I'll come back. DEBI Okay. Martin leaves Debi sitting alone, in disbelief. EXT. RADIO STATION - DAY Martin steps out of the storefront station along the fashionable Grosse Pointe shopping district. He stops in the middle of the street with a strained look on his face. INT. LARDNER & MCCULLERS' COUNTRY SQUIRE - SAME LARDNER & MCCULLERS' P.O.V. of Martin standing in the street. LARDNER AND MCCULLERS They frown, wondering at Martin's next move. INT. DEEJAY BOOTH - Debi lost in thought, still. After a moment, she sits upright and flips the "ON-AIR" switch. DEBI (into mike) A man comes to you. He is from the past bringing you pain long since put behind you. He says peculiar things and leaves abruptly. It all comes flooding back... EXT. STREET - Martin stops in his tracks. His face softens, then becomes determined. He turns and walks back toward the station. INT. DEEJAY BOOTH - Debi broadcasting... DEBI It felt like an apparition, or some cheap, gruesome Rod Serling time warp I'd been thrust back into without warning. There's a strangeness in the air and I don't mind telling you, I'm a little spooked. He was a man from my past. A man I loved. A man who disappeared. DEBI'S P.O.V. of Martin walking back into the station. DEBI A man who's walking back into the station. Martin comes into the booth. The temperature rises as they square off. INT. COUNTRY SQUIRE - LARDNER Well? MCCULLERS I don't think so. LARDNER Well, remember when Frysal's men paid off the Deejay in Cairo to announce a bogus press conference in the -- MCCULLERS --Nooo-- LARDNER --Yes. And the Munich Olympics in '72. A local radio station started broadcasting news of the massacre two minutes before it happened. McCullers is not to be outdone. MCCULLERS That's strictly Bàader-Meinhof stuff. LARDNER It was the PLO. MCCULLERS Whatever. INT. DEEJAY BOOTH Martin and Debi locked in a passionate embrace. They break away. DEBI Sit. Martin obeys. Debi clandestinely flips the "ON-AIR" switch as she drops into her chair. The "ON-AIR" light bar goes on above and behind Martin. Unbeknownst to him their conversation is put out over the airwaves. DEBI All right mystery man. I want some answers. Let's recap. Spring of '84. Two young lovers with frightening natural chemistry. The girl sits in a seven-hundred dollar prom dress at her father's house waiting for the most romantic night of her young life. The boy never shows up, until now. So, what's the question? MARTIN Where have I been? DEBI More like what happened? What happened, Mr. Blank? MARTIN I don't know exactly. I could venture a guess but it would sound like a rationalization... I thought you know... maybe seeing you, some friends, my house... of course now a 7-11-- DEBI --Torn down in the name of convenience-- MARTIN --and I guess, sure, seeing you would be part of that whole equation... I suppose the most important thing, really. I don't know. Anyway, this whole thing's my therapist's idea. It's my shrink, really. DEBI Ohhh. You're in therapy too, Marty? MARTIN You see someone? DEBI Uh, no. So you're back now, a decade later, and you want to sort things out with me. The question now is, do I allow you... access... to my being? Martin says nothing. DEBI All right then. Would you like to share any more deeply personal thoughts with our listening audience before we go to our phone poll and see how the folks in radioland come down on this one? A beat as Martin realizes he's been had. He seems about to bolt. DEBI Should a broken-hearted girl give a guy a second chance at love.... Debi jabs a phone line on the console. DEBI (HARD) You're on the air. Martin deflates. OLD WOMAN'S VOICE I think this young man has avoided the question completely. Has not discussed "what happened" nor if he's sorry for what he has done. Therefore, I don't see any reason why you should see him until he fully discloses his intentions and feelings. DEBI Thank you caller. Stabs another line. DEBI You're on the air. DUMB GUY VOICE Are you there? DEBI Yes. DUMB GUY VOICE No, the guy. Martin looks up, humiliated. MARTIN Yeah.... DUMB GUY VOICE Uh... when you guys use to go out... Did you guys ever... heh heh heh heh... ever fuckin', ever totally fuckin' heh heh heh- DEBI Next caller. GUFF MAN VOICE I don't know, Debi. Sounds like bad gas to me. I would not allow him access to your being. DEBI Thank you. DEBI Grosse Pointe Michigan, I hear you loud and clear: "If you love something set it free. If it comes back to you it's, well... She turns to him and shrugs apologetically. DEBI ...Broken...." Martin has his answer. EXT. RADIO STATION - DAY Martin leaves the station, alone and beaten down. MARTIN Dammit. Never trust my instincts. He scans the main strip. MARTIN'S P.O.V. A MAN walks down the street. He is FELIX, a bookish, forgettable man in his forties, wearing Le Coq Sportif sweats and shoes. He looks as if he has a dark cloud over his head. Martin's seen him somewhere, and doesn't like what he remembers. Martin's POV TRACKS him. FELIX'S P.O.V. As he walks down the street, he spots the Country Squire, and eyes Lardner and McCullers in the front seat. MARTIN'S P.O.V. follows Felix's eyes to Lardner and McCullers and catches their look. Their eyes lock, neither wanting to betray that they've made each other. They all do a pretty good job. His P.O.V. swings to a square-jawed, hale fellow wearing dark sunglasses who is approaching directly and only a few feet away. The man is going for something in his breast pocket... Reaches into his own jacket, most likely for a gun.... THE MAN pulls out a glasses case, and takes off his shades-- He is PAUL SWIDERSKI. MARTIN AND PAUL Martin relaxes. PAUL (grinning ear-to-ear) Hell, I would've voted for you, but there's all this apple sauce stuck in my phone... I don't wanna talk about it. How the hell are you?! (extends his hand) Here's five good ones! No trace of recognition on Martin's face. PAUL Marty! It's me. Paul. MARTIN (realizing) Paul? PAUL (re: hand) You're leaving me hanging here... They shake. Martin looks him up and down, astonished at the respectable veneer of his old burn-out friend. PAUL Hey. Give me a break. INT. PAUL'S BMW - DAY Martin and Paul rive through Grosse Pointe, Michigan: Wide streets lined with huge, shady oaks. Castle-like homes on golf-course green lawns. A comfortable, Midwestern Beverly Hills. They are cruising their old haunts, Paul smoking a joint. PAUL This won't take but a minute. I just gotta hold their hands for a final walk-through. I'll take them in, get 'em out, then you and I can grab a little quality time. Martin looks out the window, breathing in the past. PAUL Goddamn, It's good to see you. I was afraid you joined a cult or something. I half-expected you to come back to town in a fennel wreath and paper pants. Paul offers Martin the joint. He declines. MARTIN There was no money in it. Martin regards Paul archly. MARTIN (grinning) So what happened to you? PAUL Same thing that happened to you-- I stopped poutin' there on the sidelines. Got in. Got on the team. I joined the working week, you slick fucking asshole, so why don't you valet park your high horse and take it easy on your old buddy, Paul. MARTIN Fair enough. Beat. PAUL God it's great to see you. MARTIN You too. EXT. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HOUSE - DAY MARTIN'S P.O.V. of a lovely YOUNG COUPLE on the front porch of a mid-sized Wright home... Perhaps that could be him if things were different, but for now it feels like along shot. Paul is hawking the house to them out of earshot. SOUTHTEC GUARD (V.O.) Well, we do what we have to do if we find you on the property. But we don't really enforce the law, we execute company policy for homeowners. MARTIN AND THE GUARD standing in the driveway. MARTIN So when are you authorized to use deadly force? SOUTHTEC GUARD Well, a 'course, taxes provide your basic service-- police and whatnot. But our customers need a little more than just that, you understand? This badge doesn't mean that I am a peace officer. The woman turns at Martin and smiles. Martin smiles back. MARTIN So it's not a meaningful symbol, or anything. That badge is just the badge of your company. If I look suspicious on your customers' property-- well, under those heightened circumstances you have the authority to, ah... To shoot me. SOUTHTEC GUARD To shoot you. Correct. MARTIN How did you get this job? SOUTHTEC GUARD Well, they were hiring, and it was only a two week course... MARTIN (pleasantly) Wow. Paul walks the happy couple down the steps. PAUL (to couple) ...What more can I say. HUSBAND (smiling) We'll talk soon. PAUL (much hand gesturing) You'll be raising your new family in a work of art. A work of art in a work of art. Paul looks at Martin and the Guard, inviting them into the sell. SOUTHTEC GUARD I'm sure you'll be very happy. All look to Martin.... MARTIN (heartfelt) When my time comes, if it ever does, I want a beautiful, normal place like this... and a wife like you... All are confused. Martin thumbs to the guard. MARTIN ...and you'll be safe here... Paul looks at his shoes and rolls his shoulders. EXT. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HOUSE Lardner and McCullers sit in the wagon, watching the house in the distance. INT. PAUL'S BMW - LATER Martin and Paul cut through a particularly charming neighborhood. PAUL Now. I don't make a habit of pimping my friends, but there is one prime little piece of land that you must see... MARTIN'S P.O.V. A sprawling gingerbread mansion rises into view. A long and winding driveway cuts through thickly wooded property to the house. MARTIN (V.O.) Debi's house. PAUL (V.O.) Kind of crept up on you, didn't it? C.U. OF MARTIN MARTIN No. You drove us here. PAUL Yeah, but it's still kind of eerie, isn't it? MARTIN No. Martin's not listening. His eyes track the house out the window. MARTIN'S P.O.V. of the mansion. They roll slowly by Debi's house. They drive in silence for a beat. Paul suddenly swerves to the shoulder, jams the brake, and turns on Martin. PAUL Ten years. What happened!? MARTIN I freaked out, joined the Army, worked for the government, and went into business for myself... I'm a professional killer. PAUL Thank you. Paul, satisfied, gets back on the road. PAUL Professional killer, huh? Does that come with a good HMO? EXT. ROAD - DAY Paul makes a turn. They approach a large car dealership. The sign above it says "DESTEPHANO'S BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS" MARTIN (looking ahead) He sells BMW's? PAUL He sold me this bad boy. MARTIN How could you put your hard-earned dollars into the hands of the class bully? PAUL He gave me a great deal. MARTIN Mein Dealer. Paul slows outside the lot. BOB DESTEPHANO-- a big, angry- looking man in an expensive suit-- stands in the lot, puffing up amidst his stable of expensive cars. PAUL Hey! Bob! The car's running great. BOB (dismissive) Glad to hear it. Bob turns his back on them and begins to walk away. MARTIN (shouts) Bob... BOB (turning) What? MARTIN It's me. Martin Blank. BOB Really...? So what? MARTIN Okay. See you later. EXT. RADIO STATION - NIGHT Martin climbs out of Paul's car and begins to walk toward his own. Paul calls after him. PAUL See you at the left-a-boy-came-back- a-man-made-good party. Martin nods him off. Paul pulls away. MARTIN stands across the street from the radio station, looking at Debi in the window... Martin draws a thin rifle scope from his back pocket, and lifts it to his eye... MARTIN'S P.O.V. - SCOPE of Debi, in the crosshairs, bored, tapping a pencil to the beat of an unheard song. MARTIN dejected. He puts the scope away and gets in his car. INT. 7-11 - NIGHT Martin walks into the store, looking around once again at his old home. To the left of the door, a typical suburban teenage SKATEBOARDER is lost in the "Mortal Combat" video game and something too loud from his walkman. Carl, still working the double, nods to Martin. CARL Can I help you? MARTIN What's done is done. Martin moves up one aisle to the gum rack. He picks out a pack of Beaman's and unwraps a stick as he heads to the counter. On the way, he makes a black Town Car pulling into a spot next to his own. He immediately changes course, and bee-lines for a rear aisle where he ducks down... FELIX Comes through the door, drawing a Mac-10 for each hand. MARTIN grabs the gum out of his mouth and sticks it onto the bottom of the Glock .9mm he has produced from somewhere in his suit. CARL grabs the cash drawer, sets it on the counter, and puts his hands up. THE SKATEBOARDER Plays on. FELIX AND CARL Felix shoots CARL DEAD on his way toward MARTIN Bolts up the cooler aisle. Bursts of FIRE follow him, taking out each freezer door behind him. MARTIN AND FELIX EXCHANGE FIRE John Woo-style between the aisles of the cramped store. Felix delivers a close-to-home burst as he jumps the counter, sending Martin diving out of view. MARTIN pinned behind the Slurpee machine, pauses to reload his now two Glock nines. Martin steals a glance to get a bead on Felix and is met with a salvo that rocks the Slurpee machine, spattering him with several flavors... and that's all he can take. Martin comes up BLASTING with both guns, but all that's left of Felix is swinging doors and squealing tires. Martin moves to the cashier island, low to the ground. THE SKATEBOARDER Twitches and jerks, still absorbed in his game and oblivious to the surrounding carnage. CASHIER ISLAND Martin crawls through the waist-level swinging door and moves to Carl. CARL is really dead. Martin rolls him over to check it out and finds A BOMB under the corpse. MARTIN Flips the corpse back on top of the device and leaps the counter toward the doors. He grabs the shoulder or the Skateboarder, who shrugs him off, annoyed-- SKATEBOARDER What the fuck, man?! The video game screen explodes. Shot full of Martin's bullets. The Skateboarder reacts backward and Martin jerks him out of the double doors. EXT. 7-11 - CONTINUOUS The Skateboarder is running like crazy, and Martin's car is peeling out in reverse as the 7-11 is blown to hell. INT. MARTIN'S CAR - MOMENTS LATER Martin's hair is matted with Slurpee as he tries to drive and cool out. He sees his do in the mirror, pulls out a comb and starts to comb it back into a slick Pat Riley style. EXT. RADIO STATION - NIGHT Martin walks in, not looking half bad, considering. Debi looks up from some reading. "Naïve Melody" by the Talking Heads plays in the studio. MARTIN Are you going to the reunion? DEBI No. I'm not going. Is that why you're here? MARTIN That's part of it. DEBI Well, you'll have a ball. You seem to have everything everybody wants when they go back. The car, the suit, the watch. The look. That just leaves the little things, like happiness, character, point of view... MARTIN It's always the little things. DEBI Yep. Beat. MARTIN I'm wondering how you've been. How you are. I'd like to catch up with you. If it's possible. Beat as Debi considers. She spins her seat to face him. DEBI Okay. Let's catch up. You go first. MARTIN Well, there's not much to tell. DEBI I'm sure you've done worthwhile things in the last ten years. You've had experiences. MARTIN Bad experiences. DEBI You met people. MARTIN Bad people. DEBI Watched television? MARTIN Bad television. DEBI (amused) Jesus. Marty. You're pathetic. It sounds like you need a Shockabuku. MARTIN What's that? DEBI It's a swift spiritual kick to the head that alters your reality forever. MARTIN That'd be good. Beat. DEBI What do you want? The question is open. MARTIN I figured I could pick you up tomorrow around seven o'clock. DEBI Let me get this straight, are you asking me out? MARTIN Yes. DEBI Unbelievable. MARTIN Seven it is. DEBI I'll think about it. EXT. JOSHUA TREE CAMPSITE - NIGHT Under a crisp and starry night, a man and a woman sit around a campfire. As we MOVE CLOSER we see that the woman is Marcella reading, "Women Who Run With Wolves." She tends to s'mores on the campfire, assembles one, and hands it to MONTY, her young outdoorsman boyfriend. Monty is perched on a small boulder, engaged in a Tai-Chi-like ritual, wearing Patagonia's finest. There is a path of crystals leading from the fire to the boulder. In the background is a tent and a Nissan Pathfinder. Monty's watch goes off. MONTY Baby, it's eight o'clock. Marcella gets up. MARCELLA Thanks, Monty. She tousles Monty's hair on the way to the truck. INT. TRUCK - CONTINUOUS Marcella gets in. She shuts the door and dials the phone. MARCELLA Hey there, how'd it go? INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - NIGHT - INTERCUT Martin sits on the edge of the bed in a towel. MARTIN It isn't done. Marcella pauses, taking this in. MARCELLA This is not good. MARTIN I'll do it tomorrow. Marcella considers this. MARCELLA What's it look like? MARTIN It's fine. MARCELLA You haven't looked at the dossier. MARTIN (a little defensive) I've looked at it. Martin eyes the vent. MARCELLA You have. MARTIN Yes. It's the same as usual. Nothing remarkable about it at all. MARCELLA I have to call the client and give them a reason why you're late. MARTIN Tell them my house exploded. Beat. Marcella doesn't know what to make of this. MARCELLA I'll call them and tell them you're taking your time. Being a professional. MARTIN Okay, call them. Fine. Oh-- And if you could find out why they double- booked the job, and who is trying to kill me, and call me back-- that's be great. MARCELLA Will do. Martin hangs up. He moves up to the air vent, deciding to get down to business. He pries it open, and withdraws his briefcase, putting it down on the bed and propping it open. He looks at the unopened dossier for a moment, flips it over in his hands, and tosses it on the bed. BRIEFCASE We catch a glimpse of Martin's weapons. Martin picks up the envelope and is about to tear the seal when THE PHONE RINGS Martin drops the envelope and lifts the receiver. DEBI (filtered) Are you there? MARTIN Yes. DEBI Pick me up at my father's house at around seven. And don't be late this time. Beat. DEBI Hello...? MARTIN This night, this reunion will be an important step in our relationship. DEBI You're fucking psycho. MARTIN Don't rush to judgement until all the facts are in. She hangs up. Martin smiles and replaces the receiver. He turns to the apparatus laid out on the bed. GUNS, BULLETS, ETC. What has been his life is beginning to look more like death to him. He places the envelope in the case, then returns the case to its hiding place. EXT. DINER - DAY Lardner and McCullers stake out Martin from the Country Squire across the street. MCCULLERS I wish he'd do his job already so we could do our job. LARDNER We can't do our job unless he does his job. MCCULLERS Why don't we just do his job then, so we can do our job, and get the fuck out of here. LARDNER Do his job? I'm not a cold-blooded killer. MCCULLERS Wait a minute-- LARDNER -Look. You want to kill a Good Guy, but not be a Bad Guy, you wait until a Bad Guy kills the Good Guy, and then you come in and kill the Bad Guy, and then you're the Good Guy. MCCULLERS So if we do his job, we're the bad guys. If we do our job, we're the good guys. LARDNER Yup. They both laugh, as if at some great joke. Their laughter is caught short by the sight of LARDNER AND MCCULLERS' POV GROCER moving into the diner. INT. DINER - LATE MORNING Martin sits in a window booth splitting nutrient caplets into an apple juice and looking out the window. GROCER slides into the booth, across from Martin. MARTIN AND GROCER Martin draws a nasty little PPK pistol from his waist, and levels it at Grocer under the table-- but Grocer is already drawing his pistol down there, and there is an instant Mexican breakfast stand-off. GROCER Easy, tiger. A waitress approaches. WAITRESS Hi. Welcome to B.I. McCafferty's. My name is Melanie and I'll be your server this morning. Let me tell you about some of our specials. Today we have the "Alfalfa on My Mind," our feature omelette. And there's our "Gatsby's West Egg Omelette." And if you're in the mood for something different there's the "I left my heart in San Franchezie." Martin and Grocer's eyes remain locked. GROCER I want two eggs poached, hash brown well-done. English muffin for the bread. And a coffee. MARTIN Whole-grain pancakes. And an egg- white omelette. WAITRESS What would you like in the omelette? MARTIN Nothing in the omelette. Nothing at all. The waitress nods pertly and leaves. GROCER (re: the omelette) Come on, live a little. I'm sorry about the incident yesterday. MARTIN No harm no foul. GROCER A little misunderstanding among my associates. Beat. GROCER I told them to kill you and they didn't. MARTIN Hard to get good help these days. GROCER But since we're both here, I think it's time to take a fresh look at our relationship. MARTIN I didn't get into this business to have "associates." And I don't want to join your Goddamned union. "Loner-- " "Loner gunman." Get it? "On my own." That's the whole point. Why don't you become a cop, or something. You can drink coffee in the morning... with friends! Grocer looks a little hurt. MARTIN (easing up) Look, this is a one-on-one business... Every time you get to know people, bad things happen. If it'll make you feel any better, this is my last job. So what do you say we put our guns away and forget the whole damn thing. Grocer loses it. GROCER Fuck you! No scabs! From now on, everything's regulated! Long beat as Grocer gets a hold of himself. MARTIN No deal. GROCER Fine. But we're not going to let you do your job. Because we're gonna do it. And then, after we do your job, we're gonna do another little job... MARTIN (Wry) Is that right? GROCER Yeah-- after I shoot you through the fucking forehead I'm gonna fuck you in the bullethole. MARTIN Nice talk, Sugarmouth. INT. SUITE - BATHROOM - NIGHT Martin sits at a desk, staring at the reunion card. He tosses it aside, gets up, and moves in front of a mirror. He wears a crisp black suit and practices his greeting smile... MARTIN (trying on smile) Yes, I'm a pet psychiatrist. I sell couch insurance. I test-market positive thinking. I lead a weekend men's group, actually. We specialize in ritual killings. I'm hungry, are you hungry, I'm hungry, oooh, ooh. (sarcastic) Hi, I'm Martin Blank, remember me? I'm not married, I have no kids and I'd blow your brains out if someone paid me enough... So how've you been? Where do you stand on The Issues? Are you Left? Right? Up, down, proud, shamed, blahblahblahblah-- EXT. DEBI'S HOUSE - EARLY EVENING Martin makes his way up the walk leading to the front door, holding a simple bouquet of flowers. He skips up the front steps and finds the doorbell. After a moment, Debi answers. DEBI Flowers. That's funny. MARTIN As long as I get the laugh. DEBI (taking them) Here. Let me put these in some rubbing alcohol. She backs into the house, and he follows. INT. NEWBERRY FOYER - CONTINUOUS Martin follows Debi into the hall. Both are enjoying this atavistic ritual. MARTIN You look beautiful. DEBI Okay... Hold on... MARTIN'S P.O.V. through a doorway leading into a den. All that's visible of MR. NEWBERRY, Debi's father, is a pair of legs resting in a Barcolounger. DEBI (V.O.) ...Let me get my coat. MARTIN I'll just help myself to a cocktail. DEBI moves up the stairs and disappears. MARTIN looks at the legs, rolls his shoulders, and heads into the den. INT. DEN - CONTINUOUS Mr. Newberry sits in the recliner reading a Tom Clancy novel. He is a corporate Aspen-dude-ranch sort with a good head of hair. He sighs, closes the book on his knee and looks up to Martin. MARTIN Good evening, Mr. Newberry. MR. NEWBERRY Good evening, Mr. Blank. MARTIN How are you? How's business? MR. NEWBERRY Martin, I don't know where you've been since you abandoned my daughter ten years ago, and I don't care. It was good that you left, and I'm glad you did. So what do you want to talk about? You've grown up a bit. Maybe I had you figured wrong. MARTIN How's that? MR. NEWBERRY I visualized you, in a haze, as one of the slackster, flannel-wearing, coffeehouse-misanthropes I've been seeing in Newsweek. MARTIN I took the other road. I'm more of a self-reflective young lion who does business with lead-pipe cruelty and goes home to drink light beer in milky-eyes isolation. I love sports and sex and have no real relationships with anyone. And you? MR. NEWBERRY Oh, you know me, Martin. I'm the same old sell-out baby-boomer, exploiting the oppressed I got shot for at Kent State. But why don't we have a drink and forget the whole thing? Newberry lays down his book, and moves behind the wet bar. MARTIN Why not? MR. NEWBERRY So what are you doing with your life now, son? MARTIN I'm a professional killer. MR. NEWBERRY That's good. Debi's footsteps are heard coming down the stairs. DEBI (O.S.) Okay Mr. Newberry watches Martin turn and walk out of the room. EXT. DEBI'S HOUSE Martin and Debi pull away from the curb. INT. CAR - DUSK Martin and Debi drive through that to Debi is town, and to Martin is a widening pool of quicksand. MARTIN Do you want to get a drink first? DEBI I think they'll probably have booze there. MARTIN Right. Martin's right hand shakes off of the wheel a bit. He grips it tighter. Suddenly, Martin turns the wheel and pulls into a gas station parking lot, halting next to a pay phone. MARTIN I'll just be a second. Debi nods, a little confused but going with it. DEBI Okay... EXT. PAYPHONE - MINUTES LATER Martin stands at the kiosk next to the Town Car, mid- conversation. MARTIN (defensive) ...Well, I didn't kill anyone, but someone tried to kill me and the guy in the middle got killed. So if I see that guy again I'm definitely going to kill him, but I won't kill anyone else. Oh, except for the guy I was sent here to kill. I don't know... INT. OATMAN'S OFFICE - INTERCUT Oatman treats his patient. DR. OATMAN What else? Say more. MARTIN Saw my mom... I'm with Debi, and I'm on my way to the reunion. In the background, Lardner and McCullers drive past the station. DR. OATMAN Okay. Repeat this after me. MARTIN Out Loud? Martin looks to Debi. She looks up and smiles. We hear Dr. Oatman's command, Martin mumbles them back. MARTIN ...I am at home with the me. I am rooted in me, who is on this adventure. DR. OATMAN Take a deep breath and realize, that this is me breathing. MARTIN This is me breating. Martin takes in a few breaths. MARITN Alright, look. I gotta go. DR. OATMAN And don't kill anyone. MARTIN Right. Don't kill anyone... INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - SAME Felix rummages delicately around the room. He goes to the NIGHTSTAND The reunion invite. FELIX picks it up and scans it. EXT. GROSSE POINT HIGH SCHOOL - DUSK Lardner and McCullers sit it the parking lot. They watch Martin and Debi pull into a space. LARDNER He's falling for her. Look at him. MCCULLERS He using her. LARDNER You're wrong. Look at his face. MCCULLERS One cannot love and kill. LARDNER (defensive) I love. I kill. MARTIN AND DEBI climb out of the car. Martin, breathing deeply and wiping his sweaty palms, leans against the car and tries to calm himself. Eighties music echoes from the gym. MARTIN (to himself) Shoulda brought my gun. DEBI What? He pulls himself off the car and heads toward GROSSE POINTE HIGH SCHOOL A sprawling red-brick Gothic structure with many wings. It is topped by church-like towers. It's scary. INT. GYM - NIGHT Martin and Debi enter and pause to take in the entire scene. A benevolent Ronald Reagan hangs crookedly above. Basketball nets are swung back, draped with crepe. Lights are half-low and the music is loud. Alumni are dancing. ARLENE Welcome back! I'm Arlene Oslott- Joseph. MARTIN I'm Martin Blank. DEBI Debi Newberry. Debi heads off into the gym, smiling back as she strands Martin. Arlene rises from a card table. They have little to say. Martin wasn't part of her crowd. ARLENE Marty, you haven't changed a bit! MARTIN Don't say that. Arlene gives him a NAMETAG. As a special torture, the tags have YEARBOOK PHOTOS. Martin looks at the name tag uncomfortably. ARLENE We had pictures put on, that way everybody knows who everybody was! MARTIN Wonderful. ARLENE So, what are you doing now? MARTIN Whatever I can get away with. She smiles at his joke and is immediately distracted by the next arrival. Martin moves off... ARLENE (to the next person) Isn't it cute. It's so everybody knows who everybody was! He circles the crowded gym. Looking for familiar faces. He stops at the open bar. BATENDER What can I make you? MARTIN Beer. The bartender gets him a beer. Martin recognizes a guy at the bar. He is well-appointed and shiny. He is KEN ALDRIDGE. MARTIN Hey, Ken. How have you been? KEN (glancing at Martin's name tag) Hello Martin. How have you been? MARTIN Not bad. You? Bob Destephano arrives next to them and orders a drink. Eye contact is made. KEN Hello, Bob. MARTIN Hey, Bob. Bob turns slightly toward them. They continue in their conversation. KEN I'm an attorney. I'm with Moss, Brice & Fromeyer. MARTIN That sounds pretty interesting... Bob wants to join the conversation but doesn't know how. KEN Sometimes. I'm in divorce, mainly. Some property. Some personal injury. MARTIN Those all seem kind of related... Bob takes another drink and mopes off, Martin watches him go. MARTIN Tragedy makes you thirsty. Ken chuckles. The bartender arrives with the bottle. Martin grabs it and begins to move off. MARTIN Well... I have to take this over to Debi. KEN Here. Take my card. Wait a minute... here's a special one. For top-shelf clients. Ken hands Martin a Monte Blanc pen with Ken's title and business address printed on the shaft. Martin reads it and puts it in his kerchief pocket. MARTIN Thanks. Ken goes back to listening to the Guys at the bar. MARTIN makes his way through the upbeat crowd of well-wishers. TERRY emerges like an inkspot on a clean white whirt, and intercepts Martin. His angst is barely under control as he sidles up to Martin. TERRY I don't know, Blank, all these fucking people, driving me crazy. Look at them over there, memorializing old times, acting all like it was something "life-changing." And the people in the National Honor Society? The name tags? Martin shrugs. TERRY They have special blue starts on them like it fucking matters now that they were in the honor club ten years ago. I'm getting fucking nauseous from all this sentimental bullshit. It's making me sick. Terry stops suddenly as if he's finished. Martin reads this man's nametag. MARTIN Why are you here... Terry? Terry turns on a dime. TERRY I wanted to see a couple people. But I don't want to talk about the old days... What did we have together, Martin? Typing? MARTIN (remembering) Drafting. TERRY Yeah, I couldn't stand that fucking class. But I appreciate you helping me out, man. MARTIN Don't mention it. TERRY Yeah, thanks. Well I'm going to try and get out of here, man. I'll see you later. Terry slinks off. BAR - SAME Bob Destephano grabs two more scotches off the bar and turns to leave, thoroughly morose. In his path, he finds DAN KORETZKY, the good-looking side of brainy. DAN Bob. Bob Destephano. BOB What? DAN I'm Dan. Dan Koretzky. BOB Computer guy. DAN Yeah... Hey, I saw you at your dad's dealership the other day. BOB I sell BMW's. What do you do? DAN Not much, actually. My software company just went public so I'm just... hanging out, really. There's a sudden lull in the conversation. Bob tries his drunken hand at relating... BOB Remember high school? DAN Sure. Listen. Why don't you join us up in the grandstands? Dan points up to a group of happy, laughing people. Bob walks off shaking his head and smiling bitterly. INT. GYM - LATER Debi and Martin are seated at a round table with six others in an area blocked off for dinner. Plates of gumbo are arriving and the wine is poured. DARIUS, an African-American, is in mid-conversation with AMY, who looks like she walked out of a Laura Ashley catalog and sits on the other side of Martin. DENNIS and MIKE are two suits in the midst of a non- stop sports conversation. MIKE ...You gotta hold the fans responsible, though, Dennis, because they're the ones putting up with the mediocre product. DENNIS I guess, though, you know, if you look at it Mike, that park is a beautiful park, I've gone to that park many times - I've had the greatest time of my life at that ballpark and let's face it, I tell you this, Mike, by the sixth inning, if you're having the fun you should be having at Tigers Stadium, you don't even know what the hell's going on anyway... They both crack up at this. ANGLE ON DARIUS, MARTIN, & DEBI DARIUS Have you two been together since high school? DEBI No-- MARTIN --Yes. Actually we just bought that little Frank Lloyd Wright on Pine Avenue... Debi's a social worker and I mow down insurance claims at Aetna-- DEBI We haven't seen each other since high school. DARIUS I figured. You two look too happy together. I shouldn't say that though, I'm married... So, Martin-- what are you up to these days? What do you do for a living? Debi perks up; this should be interesting. MARTIN I'm in pro-active international relations. It's a very specialized company. We execute economic investment opportunities. Sort of economic clean-up... with an emphasis on personnel. It's boring, you know, it's boring. I don't like to talk about it because I don't think what a man does necessarily reflects who he is... Martin begins to draw strange looks from all over the table. Martin may be in trouble. MARTIN ...I've always tried to refrain from a black-and-white moral lexicon--you know, good, bad, right, wrong--I've been more interested in the gray areas. Silence. Martin pushes on. MARTIN But that's no way to live. I guess you've got to just take the leap of faith. Believe in something. Fuck it. DARIUS Sounds complicated, Martin. Are you happy? MARTIN I just have to close this one last account. I'd like to just stop now, today, but I can't... It's a step in the right direction. DEBI I don't know, Martin. It sounds like you're feeling compromised. Live the way you want. The only thing that's inexcusable, to me, is cynicism. That's the biggest cop-out there is. Nods of assent come from around the table. A brief silence, and then... AMY But wait. I still don't understand what you do. MARTIN I work at Kentucky Fried Chicken. Debi suppresses a laugh. AMY You do not. MARTIN Yes I do. AMY You don't... MARTIN In the corporate offices. AMY Oh... really? MARTIN Yeah... AMY What do you do? MARTIN I sell biscuits to the Southland. AMY You do not. MARTIN It's what I do. AMY You're so funny... MARTIN I sell biscuits and gravy all over the Southland-- AMY --Stop it-- MARTIN You know those horsey biscuit gravy packets? I move all of those-- AMY --No. MARTIN Sometimes we sell them to McDonald's and just change them to special barbecue sauce. Across the table from Martin and Debi, Dennis turns to Darius. DENNIS What do you think about black coaching in the NFL, Darius? Because I think it's great. DARIUS I don't pay much attention to football. MIKE I have to agree with you Dennis. It's good to see that the owners are willing to put the franchise behind a black head coach or QB when for years in the league they've been kept out of the thinking positions and relegated mainly to the physical game. DENNIS But now, you see, you have Warren Moon at the helm, Cunningham, Art Shell, and the coach up at Minnesota... MIKE Dennis Green. And if you remember, Doug Williams was the first black man to prove that on a Superbowl Sunday. Amy leans in to Martin. AMY (to Martin) I'm teaching art at Cedar Junior High School. DENNIS ...Yeah, listen. Where do you stand on this whole Louis Farrakhan issue...? DARIUS (facetious) I'm a De Klerk man myself. Debi nods, indicating to the deejay stand. DEBI I'm going over to play some tunes. Martin watches her walk away. INT. GYM - GRANDSTANDS - LATER Dan Koretzky sits with two other FORMER-SQUARES-turned- handsome-fellas who now enjoy a confidence that comes with early investment in Microsoft. Martin looks out over the milieu below, enjoying the seene. He eavesdrops on a group of men from a few rows back. GROUP OF MEN DAN Look at her. There it is. Jenny Slater. The finest thing that ever walked these halls. FORMER-SQUARE #2 I believe she married the state of Maine. DAN Yeah, he's around here somewhere. What a shame. She would have looked great in my fucking Bentley. FORMER-SQUARE #3 No, my friends, Jenny Beam. Not only was she as fine, if not finer, than Slater, but she had the "bad girl" thing going for her. And the red hair. C'mon. DAN She's a paramedic in Skokie, Illinois. FORMER-SQUARE #2 You both are mistaken. Jenny Maretti was the finest. No question about it. FORMER-SQUARE #3 The three Jenny's. Three Jenny's. All named Jenny... DAN You know what I'm really hoping? That Jenny Slater gets divorced. And she's twenty-eight-- FORMER-SQUARE #3 --she's got half the state of Maine-- DAN She's twenty-eight years old, with two kids, she's still really really fine, and I see her at a bookstore or something, and she sees me for what I was then, and what I am now: the redemption for all her failure. FORMER-SQUARE #3 You mean the redemption for all your failure. They ponder this. Martin looks down on the gym, concentrating on Debi. BOB DESTEPHANO Dancing drunkenly, miserable, like an unbalanced orangutan. CUT TO: INT. GYM - DEEJAY BOOTH - LATER Martin stands by Debi as she sits in for a set in the deejay booth, on a raised stage. They are playing an old sophomoric game. DEBI Which would you rather...? MARTIN Okay... Would you rather... commit yourself sexually to a four-by-nine cell with former President George Herbert Walker Bush dressed as a super-model for a month, or make love to a otter on crank for a week? DEBI Soft. I'll take the junkie otter, clearly! I'd let the little beast scratch and claw all he wants... Okay. Would you rather make love to the candied corpse of Phyllis Diller-- MARTIN --She's not dead--- DEBI It's just a game...! Alright. Candied Diller, or... wear a hot pork vest across the desert with a fully digested crab apple in your mouth? MARTIN Wow. I have to give this some thought. DEBI No time. MARTIN Okay, then. Clearly candied Diller. STACEY breaks the moment, looking up at the two, horrified and unsure at what she's heard. STACEY Marty! Debi! How are you! So many people came, but I never expected to see you Marty. Or you Debi... I mean... because of what your divorce... I didn't mean to say that. I just meant you look so good. DEBI Thank you. STACEY Do you think you could play "Too Shy'" by Kaja Goo Goo? DEBI Stacey, why don't you come up here and take over for a little while? STACEY I'd love to. Stacey nods thanks and makes her way up into the booth as Martin and Debi make their way down. DEBI (to Martin) Everybody thinks they know me now that I'm divorced. She leads Martin toward the exit. DEBI It's time to see you in private. INT. SCHOOL HALLWAY Martin and Debi walk down the hallway, alone together. MARTIN Even though I left, you never left me. Not just memory but a substance in my blood. DEBI (smiling) Like heroin? MARTIN Too junky-kitschy. Deeper, deeper. DEBI (enjoying this) Like love? MARTIN Could be. The physical substance of love. Debi stops. DEBI I'll accept that. Follow me. Together they move into what appears to be the Nurse's Office, and close the door behind them. INT. NURSE'S OFFICE Martin and Debi make wild banshee love. EXT. PARKING LOT - SAME Lardner and McCullers watch Felix into the gym. MCCULLERS Looks like someone keeps trying to do our job for us. LARDNER If he does our job, he's our job. MCCULLERS I get it. INT. GYM - SAME FELIX steps through the doorway he's standing in and strolls into the crowded gym. He wears the standard khaki-pants-blue-blazer combo, with no nametag. He's clearly too old for the class of 1984. INT. HALLWAY - LATER Martin and Debi come out of the Nurse's Office. The post- coital mood is broken as they hear The Human League's "Don't You Want Me, Baby?" blasting from the gym. Martin and Debi tune in on the song for a moment, unhappy at remembering that particular moment in pop music history. Debi looks to Martin, something must be done about it. DEBI I'll be right back.... Debi kisses him. They split up. Martin walks off, the happiest we've seen him.... INT. SCHOOL HALLWAY Bob and several others from the muscle-to-fat crew play a drunken scrimmage with a papier-mache table ornament footbal that is coming unwound. Bob quarterbacks and begins to recite a long, complicated, and forgotten play. Martin approaches from behind Bob and glides through the ad-hoc line-up, continuing down the hall. Bob yells "hike" as he stares after Martin, distracted. Bob's rushed upon and sacked. He lets the papier-mache ball drop and crack on the floor. INT. SCHOOL HALLWAY - LATER Martin walks down a silent, deserted hall of lockers and classroom doors. The only sounds are his footsteps and the echoed strains of Iggy Pop's "Wild Child" from the distant gym. He stops at locker number 1963 and flips the dial: Right- back left-right again. It opens. He pops up the steel false ceiling in the empty locker, fishes his hand in the opening, and withdraws what he is looking for: an ancient joint. He holds it up and examines the now brown and dried reefer. He grinds it into dust in his hand. INT. HALLWAY Debi comes out of the gym and starts down the hall, the music changed for the better. INT. HALLWAY - SAME Martin senses he is not alone. He turns to find Bob Destephano. The big man holds a glass unsteadily and slurs slightly when he speaks. Bob is looking sad and scary. He leans into Martin BOB So. You and Debi. Gonna hit that shit again? MARTIN Fine, Bob. How are you? BOB Never better. MARTIN Really? Bob crumbles. BOB Ahhh... it's all fucked up. Nothing adds up to nothing... you work your whole life, day in and day out-- try to make sense of it all. One day you're twenty-seven and what do you get to show for it... MARTIN You could've been a contender, huh? Bob realizes he can't even express his own tragedy without the use of cliches. BOB Smart boy. Real smart. Let's see how smart you are with my foot up your ass! I'm gonna kick your ass! Martin steps to Bob. MARTIN Why would you want to hit me, Bob? Do you really believe that there's some stored up conflict that needs resolution between us? We don't exist. There's nothing between us. So who do you want to hit, Bob? It's not me. Bob slumps against the lockers, deflated. BOB What am I gonna do? MARTIN What do you want to do? BOB I want to be an actor. MARTIN Then express yourself, Bob. Bob frowns, trying to think of a way to express himself. MARTIN (catching him) Be honest... Bob backs up and lets out a huge, drunken caveman scream, then stops abruptly, and smiles. BOB Later, Martin. Bob backpedals down the hallway and out of sight. Martin watches him stumble out of the hallway and bang through the doors of a stairwell, disappearing. INT. STAIRWELL - CONTINUOUS Bob slams through the doors and begins to stumble down the stairs. He encounters Debi, on her way up. He glances at her but does not break stride. Debi gives him wide berth, and quickens her pace up the stairs... INT. HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS Martin watches the doors swing to a stop. He exhales and relaxes... AND THEN Spin-pivots on his right heel, as a BURST from a silenced pistol pierces the space where his head was a split-second before/ As he spins around, his right hand withdraws Ken's give-away pen from his kerchief pocket, pops the cap off, and drive the pen up and through the throat of his attacker-- FELIX impaled through the throat on the pen, his head snapped back. MARTIN AND FELIX are frozen for a moment. Blood runs quickly down the front of Felix's body, off of his shoes, and on to the floor. The stairwell doors band open. Martin's head turns toward the sound. His eyes lock onto DEBI who is frozen, horrified for a moment. She flees. MARTIN looks back at FELIX Dead. THE FLOOR A growing pool of blood. MARTIN Looks around wildly, holding Felix up against the lockers. Above the lockers is a plastic banner proclaiming "SPANISH CLUB FIESTA FUN-RAISER SATURDAY JUNE 1" MARTIN rips it down from the wall with his free hand, wraps it around Felix, stuffs the body into his open locker, and slams it shut. He pulls off his shoes and socks, puts a sock over each hand like mittens, and wipes up the small pool of blood. He stuffs the socks into his pockets, takes off down the hall, and bangs through the doors. INT. GYM - GRANDSTANDS - MOMENTS LATER Martin blasts through the upstairs doors to the grandstands looking for Debi below. She is nowhere to be found. He scans the party in progress-- It is the same frame of image as the one in Oatman's office. In the middle of the floor, Terry slowly turns up to meet Martin's eyes. MARTIN pulls the doors shut, and takes off down the hall. INT. HALLWAY - MINUTES LATER Martin opens his locker, withdraws the corpse, and hefts it over his shoulder. INT. STAIRWELL - A MINUTE LATER Brick-walled, darkly lit, and narrow. Martin bounds down the steep steps with his load. INT. BASEMENT LOCKER ROOM HALLWAY - MINUTE LATER Martin hustles toward a cage door in front of him. He kicks through it and dumps Felix into a canvas laundry cart on casters and begins rolling. INT. PUMP AND FURNACE ROOM - A MINUTE LATER The door bangs open and light pours into the room from behind Martin. He negotiates the cart over the dirt floor and stops next to the furnace that heats the swimming pool. He pauses and looks to the ceiling: the music from the reunion pulses into the floor above him. Martin picks up a large metal bar and works open the door on the hulking cast-iron furnace. A white-hot blaze roars within. INT. GYM - NIGHT The party is winding down. A harried-looking Martin walks in and looks around once more for Debi-- nothing. MARTIN'S POV of the Deejay booth. It is empty. He moves over to the bar and joins Ken Aldridge. He motions to the bartender who opens a beer for him. MARTIN Have you seen Debi Newberry? KEN Nope. They both look around at the last of the reunion. KEN The more things change, the more they Goddamned well stay the same. MARTIN I guess. Before Ken can get started again... MARTIN Take care of yourself, Ken. Thanks for the pen. Martin walks out of the gym. EXT. HIGH SCHOOL PARKING LOT - CONTINUOUS Paul is leaning against his Beemer, having a smoke. PAUL What the hell happened to you? MARTIN I was catching up with Bob Destephano. PAUL As long as you had a good time. Beat. Martin scans the lot for sign of Debi. PAUL What now? Chase the girl? There is a beat of silence. Nothing seems worth saying. MARTIN It didn't work out. PAUL That's too bad. MARTIN I have to get my head back into my work. PAUL Work's good for the soul. Martin gets up to leave. MARTIN When you see Debi, tell her I'm sorry. PAUL See you in ten years. Paul watches him leave. He almost stops him, but thinks better of it. INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - NIGHT Martin hunches over his briefcase that lays open on the bed. MARTIN PULLS THE DOSSIER from the briefcase. It's seal is broken, but the contents remain enclosed... He withdraws the package and dumps the contents on the bed. His face registers muted shock. MARTIN Dumb fucking luck... THE CONTENTS include various photos of MR. NEWBERRY, Mr. Newberry with Debi, and the house. The photos are mingled with official- looking papers including credit reports, medical records, etc... Newberry's life. He cocks his head toward the door anticipating a... KNOCK. He freezes, then plucks a gun tapped under a desk, and moves toward the door, pointing. Halfway to the door, his face and body slacken. He lobs the gun onto the bed. With everything gone wrong, there is nothing left to defend. He goes to the door and opens it, body relaxed, expecting a bullet... Debi moves past him into the room. She is completely calm. DEBI He was trying to kill you, right! MARTIN Yes. DEBI Not the other way around...? MARTIN No. DEBI Is it something you've done? MARTIN It's something I do... Beat. MARTIN ...Professionally... Beat. MARTIN ...About five years now. DEBI (stunned) Get the fuck outta here. MARTIN Seriously, when I left, I joined the Army and took the service exam. They found my psych results fit a certain profile. A certain "Moral flexibility" would be the best way to describe it... I was loaned out to a CIA- sponsored program. It's called "mechanical operations." We sort of found each other... DEBI You're a government spook? Martin says nothing. MARTIN I was, but no... yes... I was before, but now I'm not. It's irrelevant, really. The idea of governments, nations, it's mostly a public relations theory at this point, anyway. But I'll tell you something, until about five months ago, I really enjoyed my work. DEBI Jesus Christ! MARTIN Then I started losing my taste for it. Which usually means your time is up. But then I realized it was something entirely different... I started getting the sneaking, dark suspicion that maybe there was... meaning to life. DEBI Okay. Great, Martin, that's just great. Meaning to life... Mmm.... MARTIN Like, that there's a point? An organic connection between all living things. DEBI Let me help you along, Martin. You're a sociopath! MARTIN (defensive) A sociopath kills for no reason. I kill for money. DEBI You never could have kept this from me. MARTIN I was leaving. DEBI That's probably a good idea. MARTIN Will you come with me? DEBI I'm staying here. MARTIN What if I come back? DEBI I'll hide. She goes for the door. MARTIN Don't go. She stops at the door. Slowly, she turns. DEBI You don't get to have me. You are a monster, I'm a human being. We're not going to mate. MARTIN You don't understand... DEBI That's because I speak human, and you speak monster. Debi bolts out of the room. Martin is left alone. Martin looks over at his gear on the bed. After a beat, he walks slowly over and surveys his tools. He picks up a cleaning rag and begins to go over the weapons, absently singing to himself... MARTIN "What's up Doc? What's cookin'? What's up Doc, are you lookin'...? INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - DAWN Morning light comes through the slit in the curtains, picking up four or five exquisitely clean guns are laid out on the bed, almost geometrically spaced. Martin lifts one at a time, checking their bores and actions... INT. COUNTRY SQUIRE - MORNING Lardner and McCullers gear up. They each finish loading the last of many clips... EXT. MICHIGAN HIGHWAY - MORNING Grocer and Company, not in a Ford Passenger Van, veer off onto an exit ramp. Grocer has assembled a team of about nine. They draw different guns from their kit bags and begin loading... INT. COUNTRY SQUIRE - SAME Lardner and McCullers jam clips into their service autos and knock the slides... INT. MARTIN'S SUITE - SAME Martin finished loading his guns, and puts them in his case. He shuts it and moves for the door. On the way out he stops and looks himself in the mirror before exiting. EXT. THREE DIFFERENT ROADS - INTERCUT Each car whooshes by camera, on its way to the inevitable... INT. EASTWEST HOLDING COMPANY - INTERCUT Marcella has a cordless tucked between her shoulder and ear, and holds a two-gallon gas can. She moves from room to room pouring gasoline onto the computers, desks, and piles of paper stacked on the floor. She adds a splash to her copy of "Women Who Run With the Wolves." MARCELLA I'm bringing down the office now. She picks up her hard drive and smashes it on the floor. It's cathartic. INTERCUT WITH MARTIN IN THE TOWN CAR - MARTIN I'll put things right. Then I'll find you. Silence on the line. MARCELLA (apprehensive) Uh... why? Martin finishes his weapons check, and pulls out the dossier. MARTIN Don't worry. I left you a little something under your desk. Martin hangs up. Marcella goes to it and pulls loose from underneath a shrink- wrapped brick of $100 bills, probably a $100,000 or so. MARCELLA All right!! INT. MARTIN'S TOWN CAR Martin makes his way down the road to the Newberry's. In the distance, he sees a lone figure jogging on the shoulder, away from him. INT. GROCER'S VAN - SAME Grocer and Company are parked off to the side, watching Newberry, in the distance, jog toward them. A SNIPER prepares to blow Newberry's head off. INT. MARTIN'S TOWN CAR - SAME As he approaches the figure, he recognizes it as Newberry, he accelerates. INT. GROCER'S VAN - SAME Grocer spots Martin's car speeding at Newberry. GROCER Oh shit... EXT. ROAD - SAME Newberry stops jogging and turns to face the Town Car bearing down on him. His face goes slack, expecting to be creamed. INT. TOWN CAR - SAME Martin roars straight at Newberry, his engine shrieking. As the distance between them turns from yards to feet... Martin swerves hard, just missing Newberry and comes to a halt next to him, blocking the Sniper's line of fire. After a moment, Newberry opens the passenger door. NEWBERRY What the fuck is the matter with you?! MARTIN Well, I was hired to kill you. It's what I do, and come to think of it, I told you that, but... Okay. I'm not going to do it. Get in the car. He does. They drive on. MARTIN It's either because I'm in love with your daughter, or because I have a new-found respect for life. Or both. But I don't know. INT. GROCER'S VAN - SAME Grocer and company watch in amazement. GROCER'S P.O.V. of Martin's car disappearing into Newberry's long and wooded driveway. GROCER That punk is either in love with that guy's daughter or he has new found respect for life... Let's go. EXT. NEWBERRY HOUSE - SAME Martin pulls up in front and stops. Both men scramble out and head toward the front door at a quick clip. Newberry is shaken; Martin seems at ease, at home in his element. NEWBERRY Why? I build cars! They're paying you to kill me? Why? MARTIN It was a cost-cutting effort. They can't afford a recall. NEWBERRY It was a leaky sunroof! A design flaw! I reported a leaky sunroof! You want to kill me because of that? MARTIN It's not me! Why does everybody think it's personal?! They go through the front door and shut it behind them. INT. GROCER'S VAN - SAME Grocer drops the van into gear and heads toward the driveway. INT. COUNTRY SQUIRE - SAME Lardner and McCullers approach the scene. They get within viewing distance in time to see Grocer's Town Car turn into the driveway. LARDNER We'll go in through the woods. INT. NEWBERRY HOUSE Martin's briefcase is open on the large oak table. The contents of the dossier are spilled out onto the table. Newberry and Debi watch him, dumbstruck, as he draws a huge Desert Eagle automatic and jerks back the slide. He turns to Debi. MARTIN I was sitting in my house on prom night wearing that Goddamned rented tuxedo, a corsage in one hand, a bottle of champagne in the other. So I was just sitting there, and then the whole night flashed before my eyes, and it struck me like a bullet in the head-- I realized, finally, and for the first time, that... I wanted to kill somebody. So I figured because I loved you so much, that'd it'd be a good idea if I didn't see you anymore. But now I'm different. He turns and points the gun at the front door and FIRES two shots through it, leaving two baseball-size holes in the door. Martin bolts out of the room toward the back of the house. Debi and Newberry run as fast as they can away from Martin. Newberry opens the front door, preparing to rush out with Debi. They stop at what they see: NEWBERRY'S & DEBI'S P.O.V. As ASSASSIN lies on the porch, shot dead through the door by Martin. IN one hand is a gun, in the other is a Fuller Brush kit. Two men, GROCER and an ASSASSIN, clamber out of van, their guns rising up fast toward us. Debi pulls Newberry inside, slams the front door, and locks it. They dive away just before ten rounds hit the door from outside. INT. KITCHEN - SAME Martin rushes toward the back door which is already opening. A barrel comes through and FIRES at Martin. Martin pulls back behind the refrigerator and returns FIRE. An ASSASSIN comes through the door in a crouch and takes cover behind the cooking island. Martin, yelling back to Debi... MARTIN I'm in love with you. I know we can make this work! MARTIN rushes toward the island, grabbing an iron skillet off the range, and holds it up like a crossing-guard stop sign. He steps toward the hidden Assassin just as the Assassin rises SHOOTING. The skillet takes two rounds before Martin hammers the Assassin's head with it. Debi and Newberry arrive in the kitchen. NEW ANGLE - LOW DUTCH Martin bashes the skillet into the Assassin's skull, which is beyond our view. He rises spattered with blood and looks at Debi. MARTIN I was afraid to commit to a relationship, but now I know I'm ready to make it happen. Martin drops the skillet and grabs Newberry and Debi gently be the wrists. MARTIN I just need time to change. He ushers them past the bludgeoned corpse and up the back stairs. He spins and FIRES twice back down the stairs at another ASSASSIN coming up, blowing his arms off. HALLWAY He leads them quickly. MARTIN It's not easy for me. I was raised to close off, to control my feelings... He takes them into a bedroom, and BLOWS AWAY, an ASSASSIN coming in through the window, emptying his auto. Martin pushes Debi and Newberry into an adjoining bathroom. He backs out through the doorway. MARTIN Lock the door. They do. Martin starts away, but stops to get something straight. MARTIN I wasn't raised in a loving environment. (beat) But that's not an excuse. It's a reason. INT. FOYER Martin corners the banister and springs half-way down the stairs, then hears the front door begin to open. MARTIN My soul was empty-- Martin jams in another clip, and chambers a round. He sees Grocer beginning to slip in. MARTIN --and it's up to me to fill it. Martin FIRES the twelve-round clip into the door until the slide locks back empty again. Grocer backs out fast. Martin hears a gun REPORT from upstairs and moves back toward it, tossing the spent weapon. INT. BEDROOM An ASSASSIN slams his body against the bathroom door while Debi and Newberry scream from within. Martin flies at him. The Assassin wheels on Martin FIRING. Martin pivots out of the line of fire, still moving forward. He takes hold of Assassin's neck and snaps it. Martin drops the corpse. MARTIN (through the door) It's okay. It's Martin The door begins to open revealing Debi and Newberry. MARTIN I know what I do isn't moral, per se, but if you could just look past that, you'd see a man worth loving. GROCER (O.S.) Don't listen to him, he's a professional. Martin stops short and cocks his head toward Grocer's muffled voice coming from the vent. Grocer continues... GROCER (O.S.) You're breaking my heart down here, Blank. I can't shoot through the tears. Martin, incensed, bends down and takes the gun from the dead man. He runs out of the bedroom, gun poised for a kamikaze firefight... EXT. NEWBERRY HOUSE - SAME Lardner and McCullers are poised outside the front door, about to enter the mix. McCullers peers through the window. LARDNER Did you see Blank in there? MCCULLERS No... LARDNER Good. For a second there I thought we were in trouble. INT. NEWBERRY FOYER - CONTINUOUS MARTIN reaches the top of the front stairs to find Grocer heading up the stairs at him. They lift their guns at each other to FIRE, when they hear... LARDNER AND MCCULLERS power through the front door, guns BLAZING at floor-level, ala Butch and Sundance. Martin and Grocer, above, spin on them instinctively, and FIRE, killing them. Grocer dives off of the stairs and rolls out of view. KITCHEN - INTERCUT GROCER heads up the back stairs. MARTIN works his way toward Grocer, moving with stealth toward the kitchen. GROCER hears him and starts back down. Martin dives behind the cooking island just as Grocer comes out of the stairwell blasting. They unload at each other as Grocer runs a pattern across the kitchen, FIRING at Martin, crouched, who BLASTS back. Grocer vaults himself through the air toward a serving window from the kitchen to the dining room, still firing. C.U. - MARTIN'S GUN - SLOW MOTION The last casing floats out of the chamber into the air, and the slide on the auto locks back-- empty. NORMAL SPEED GROCER Flying through the air disappearing through the shuttered serving window, his flight carrying him past a television that sits on a lazy susan. MARTIN AND GROCER - INTERCUT Martin and Grocer sit on the floor, backs up against opposite side of the counter-- Martin in the kitchen and Grocer in the dining room. The hulking old television sits on the counter above and between them. Martin looks up and spies the TELEVISION GROCER ...How about I sell you two rounds for a hundred grand a piece? MARTIN Okay. Martin takes out a checkbook, and tears one free. He wads it into a loose ball and tosses it over the counter. BALLED CHECK sails over the television and comes down, bouncing off Grocer's head and into his lap. MARTIN There you go. I left it blank. GROCER Excellent. Here they come. Grocer pulls two rounds from the clip of his semi-automatic and pushes the clip back into the gun. Grocer arcs the TWO BULLETS into the air. MARTIN rises and springs at the television, gripping it. The TWO BULLETS sail past his head. GROCER begins to rise from his side of the counter, cocking his gun. MARTIN puts all his weight and motion behind the television. Martin and the television careen off of the counter toward Grocer. GROCER gets off one round before MARTIN flies onto Grocer, smashing the seventy-five pound television over his Goddamn head. Martin sails past the collision, landing on his back in the dining room. He rolls over to see GROCER Body crumpled, neck is snapped, head encased in the shattered picture tube. He is dead. MARTIN runs up the front stairs, retrieving the spent gun he discarded earlier, and heads into the bedroom. INT. BEDROOM - MINUTES LATER Martin opens the bathroom door. Inside, Debi sits on the edge of the tub, her face in her hands. Newberry kneels with his arms around her. Martin takes this in, and walks back into the bedroom. Newberry stands and follows him out. MARTIN AND NEWBERRY MARTIN a bloody, tattered mess, wipes off the gun and puts it into Newberry's hand. Newberry, in total shock, grips it. Martin looks past Newberry. MARTIN'S P.O.V. Of Debi, head in hands. MARTIN (V.O.) Debi... will you marry me? Debi doesn't look up. After a moment, she reaches out, head still down, and closes the bathroom door... INT. RADIO STATION - DAY Outside is a Michigan autumn. Debi sits at her console, bringing in the mike as she fades out of a tune... DEBI This is WRFN Radio Free Newberry cause that's what it does. Bringing you New Ones for the Nineties, a fresh new format designed to pull you out of what's come before, and reel you into what's coming soon-- THE PHONE CONSOLE lights up with an incoming cal... DEBI I tell you what's coming soon for me, or at least what I dreamed this morning in that weird time just before you actually wake up. But first this commercial. Back after this... She pushes a couple of buttons, slaps a cartridge in a player, and answers the phone. We hear the commercial over the studio monitor: ANNOUNCER Don't miss the show of the season at Bilkin Community Center! "Brigadoon!" A musical for all ages! "Brigadoon," starring Carol Plummer, Thomas Canchola, Bob Destephano, and Lee Ordman!... Debi picks up the phone. DEBI RFN... Her face goes slack as she listens... not good, not bad... Then she hangs up slowly. The commercial ends. A moment of dead air, then she snaps to. DEBI Hey out there... Okay... I'm going to finish up that fantasy later. First I'll give you an hour of nonstop music... If I don't come back on after that-- well, nevermind. Debi turns on a reel-to-reel, and leaves. EXT. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HOUSE - DAY Debi pulls up and gets out. She begins toward the door but stops dead when she sees MARTIN sitting on the front steps. Debi moves slowly up the walk and sits next to him on the porch. They sit, gazing out over the grass and trees beyond. After a while... DEBI This will never work out. She turns to him, serious. DEBI You kill people. (beat) MARTIN I have no illusions about the future. What is, is. We make choices. And we become the sum total of our choices. I can live with that. DEBI Other people can't. Martin looks at her earnestly... And smiles ever so slightly. She does the same, and then just a little wider. He the same. They turn back out to face the lawn, and they share a laugh... THE END