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An anthology of seven of the best plays from VAULT Festival 2019, London's biggest and most exciting arts festival. 3 Billion Seconds by Maud Dromgoole is a hilarious, macabre love story about a pregnant couple of activists attempting to offset the carbon footprint of their unborn baby's life. Alcatrazby Nathan Lucky Wood is a thrilling play about family and social care that follows Sandy on her daring, Christmas mission to emulate Clint Eastwood and bust her gran out of lock-up. Collapsibleby Margaret Perry is a funny, furious monologue about navigating a world that cares so much about you keeping it together, it doesn't notice you falling apart. Inside Voices by Nabilah Said blends dark comedy and magic realism in its subversive portrayal of three Singaporean Muslim women challenging the bounds of freedom, feminism and faith in a place that isn't home. Openby Christopher Adams and Timothy Allsop is a frank, refreshing romance that draws on interviews, conversation and private correspondence to explore the authors' real-life open marriage. JERICHOby MALAPROP Theatre is an off-kilter, high-energy, form-pushing play about what pro-wrestling and politics have in common. It asks big questions in weird ways, like what can a pop-culture journalist do to stop the world burning down? Thrownby Jodi Gray sees a child-psychologist attempting to record what she's spent her whole life trying to forget, as the memories of former patients collide with her own. 'A major London festival … showcasing new and rising talent'Independent on VAULT Festival
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
PLAYS FROM VAULT 4
3 BILLION SECONDS
Maud Dromgoole
ALCATRAZ
Nathan Lucky Wood
COLLAPSIBLE
Margaret Perry
INSIDE VOICES
Nabilah Said
JERICHO
MALAPROP Theatre
OPEN
Christopher Adams & Timothy Allsop
THROWN
Jodi Gray
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
Welcome to VAULT
3 Billion Seconds by Maud Dromgoole
Alcatraz by Nathan Lucky Wood
Collapsible by Margaret Perry
Inside Voices by Nabilah Said
JERICHO by MALAPROP Theatre
Open by Christopher Adams & Timothy Allsop
Thrown by Jodi Gray
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
Welcome to VAULT
The magic of the theatre often lies in its transience. There’s something special in the live event, in the shared space of bodies crammed into a room to witness a good story well told. Imagine that, multiplied by ten, and you’ve got the inarticulable atmosphere of VAULT Festival – dozens of stories unfolding in one moment to thousands of captive audience members. It is theatre at its most vibrant, its most immediate, its most live.
Plays though – what makes them special is the way that they live on long after the stage goes dark. For writers, seeing their script published represents a permanent life for their work. It allows the stories they’ve dreamed up to reach out to people long after their run with us has ended. Publishing a script preserves, but it also reinvigorates – placing the story firmly into the imaginations of new readers and audience members and artists for years and years to come.
This year, VAULT Festival is honoured to welcome one of its strongest contingents of new writing yet. The emerging artists that we work with are bursting at the seams with stories, ranging from elaborate escape plans to playful ruminations on the state of the world, from measuring the value of a single life to celebrating the warmth of a community.
The writers and stories chosen here represent a small portion of the talent on offer from the VAULT Festival family. Our artists are teeming with love and intelligence and rage, they are brimming with urgency and voice and soul and ready to tear up the stage. As far as we’re concerned, they are the writers, makers and tellers of the future, and now, their stories are in your hands.
As always, none of this would be possible without the unwavering support of Nick Hern Books. Their dedicated belief in our artists and consistent investment in their talent is essential to our work. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you.
Gillian Greer, Head of Theatre and Performance
VAULT Festival 2019
3 BILLION SECONDS
Maud Dromgoole
For Jessica,
who against all good maths brought me into the world
MAUD DROMGOOLE
Maud Dromgoole is a writer from London. Her plays include Mary’s Babies (VAULT Festival/King’s Head/Fertility Fest @ Bush Theatre/Jermyn Street Theatre); Rosa, Ursula and Richard (Finalist Mercury Weinberger Prize; reading at Old Red Lion); Blue Moon (Bread and Roses/The Courtyard/Arcola – as short play). Her short plays include Sleeping Beauty (The Bunker); Milk (The Bunker/Hackney Attic); Cake (The Cockpit/Tristan Bates Theatre); The Boy James (Love Bites); A Violet in the Youth of Primy Nature (Theatre Utopia) and Selkie (Southwark Playhouse/Old Red Lion). Her sitcom Acting Up was shortlisted for BBC Writersroom Comedy Script Room and she is currently working on several short films.
3 Billion Seconds was first performed at VAULT Festival, London, on 6 March 2019, directed by Beth Pitts.
At the time of going to print the play was still to be cast.
A previous, shorter version of the play was performed at The Miniaturists, Arcola Theatre, London, with the following cast:
DAISY
Rhiannon Neads
MICHAEL
Tayla Kovacevic-Ebong
3 Billion Seconds was started on an Arvon course under the tutorage of Chris Thorpe and Alice Birch, both of whom have been incredibly generous with their time and ideas. As has the excellent Beth Pitts.
Thanks to Gill Greer and everyone at VAULT. Thanks to everyone at Nick Hern Books.
Huge thanks are owed to my Playgroup: Joel McCormack, Max Levine, Sonia Jalaly, Hatty Jones and especially to Jessica Dromgoole, Jenny Bakst and Margaret Perry who have each seen this play through many drafts, tantrums, and panicky phone calls.
Thanks to my supportive family, especially Cat Horn, Gordon Snell, Agnes Dromgoole, Matilda James and Chris Morgan. Thanks also to Greg Kyle, Jodi Gray, Natasha Magigi, Felicity Thompson, Grizzie Elliot, Laura Horton, Celia De Wolff and Olivia Ross.
Thanks to James and Izzi at The Miniaturists for giving me some space to try this play, to Eleanor and Sophie for helping it run smoothly, and Tayla and Rhiannon for giving it breath.
M.D.
One simply feels convinced that someone – the government or God – will somehow stop it, before it disturbs our comfortable and settled lives… It takes a long time to realise that as far as looking after the future of humankind and the earth is concerned, there is no one at the controls.
John Davol
The power of population is so superior to the power of the Earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race.
Thomas Malthus
Note on Play
The first word has been underlined to indicate a break of space, time or character. Characters have not been distinguished but should be obvious.
Words in [square brackets] are unspoken.
A forward slash (/) indicates an interruption, including self-interruption.
A lack of full stop indicates an open-endedness.
The world that is of interest to the characters contracts as the play progresses and this should be represented somehow physically.
Their relationship with the audience is inversely related to their relationship with each other.
The audience begins as their allies but, as they become more intimate and insular with each other, we lose them.
We are moving outwards to inwards.
We are becoming more compact.
There is a lot of love.
A clock is visible on stage showing Earth’s current population.
An example can be found here:
www.worldometers.info/world-population
DAISY
MICHAEL
We are a plague on earth.
When I was born.
1990
Yep. Thanks.
Good year.
The population stood at just over five billion.
Five point two.
Five point two nine six actually
Five point two nine six and one.
She cheesily winks at him and points.
By the time I was twenty.
The population had increased
Drum roll
By thirty per cent.
That’s loads.
In my grandfather’s lifetime
Between 1900 and 2000
The increase in world population was
Three. Times. Greater.
Than during the entire previous history of humanity.
Going from one point six
To six point one
Billion people
In just over three billion seconds.
Michael and I
Met on stage
Population Pow wow
Coventry
2016
And from the second I saw her
Hell did we hate each other.
Michael was a paralegal with a degree in superiority.
Daisy was a ‘Poet’
Don’t do the air quotes.
Daisy was a poet ‘…’
We had ‘undeniable chemistry on stage’
And unbelievable rows offstage.
But it sort of…
Worked.
We launched a small Kickstarter
Funded almost exclusively by Daisy’s estranged wealthy pare[nts] /
And toured any conference centre,
Student Union
Or village hall who would have us.
It was hell.
Michael was attempting a vegan hygiene regime and smelt vaguely of kettle chips.
MICHAEL counts out on his fingers.
Daisy spent a week
Of both of our lives speaking
Only in haiku
We didn’t care for each other
But we both cared a lot about /
Population is the single greatest threat to humanity
But we can change that.
Simply educating men and women about population can have a huge impact.
When Iran introduced a national family-planning programme
1989
Its fertility rate fell from five point six births per woman
To two point six.
In a decade.
We shared a lot of cheap B&B rooms.
And stayed up late drinking conference-centre wine out of plastic cups.
Putting the world to rights.
King of the world for the next thirty seconds.
K
Go
Solve the NHS
Scrap private health care
Solve education
Scrap private schools
Solve immigration
Scrap borders
Solve wealth distribution
Scrap inheritance
Feed the world
Scrap
Eating
So much meat.
Solve population.
Scrap having babies.
Solve ageing population.
Scrap
Out of Time
Treating cancer?
That’s a lot of scrapping for thirty seconds.
I’m very scrappy.
When it comes to the three ‘F’ words.
Fuel.
Food.
And Fresh water.
We are
Fucked
Fucked
And Fucked.
And we are getting more fucked.
The more fucking
People are doing.
We didn’t get huge audiences.
Which, given we were acutely aware of how many people there were in the world
Was quite disheartening.
But we kept each other’s spirits up.
If you had to,
had to,
kill someone,
anyone in the world,
who would it be and how would you do it?
Donald Trump.
Wholly unoriginal and wholly unfeasible.
I’m very wily.
How would you do it?
Hit him.
Very ‘wily’.
With a newspaper.
Very. Ironic.
Seriously, try it. Don’t try it. But seriously.
Take like, twenty-three sheets.
‘Like’ twenty-three sheets?
Well twenty-two’s not strong enough, twenty-four’s not malleable enough.
Okay.
So right take twenty-three sheets.
Slide them apart by… three inches, roll it up,
Fold it in the middle,
Smash anything you wanna break with it.
Right.
And it’s environmentally friendly. How many murder weapons can you think of that are both recycled and recyclable.
Ice?
We’d get drunk.
And had heavy-headed mornings.
But whatever happened.
We’d always make it
To Breakfast.
We had a similar sense of value
And budget
And
Whatever happened.
We’d sit together.
And try and reach our daily calorie allowance by 10 a.m.
Eggs
Fried
Two
Two hundred and eight calories
Sausages
Three
Four hundred and eighty-six calories
Baked Beans
Half tin
One hundred and forty calories
Fried bread
Two
One hundred and eighty-two Calories
Fried mushrooms
Portion
One hundred and fifty-six calories
Hash brown
Three
Two hundred and forty Calories
Grilled Tomato.
One
Sixty-four Calories
Toast
White.
Buttered.
Two
Slices.
Two hundred and fifty Calories.
Black Pudding.
If we were lucky.
Two slices.
One hundred and ninety calories.
Ketchup
One tablespoon
Twenty calories.
Brown sauce
One tablespoon
Twenty calories.
Combining.
To make a grand total of.
One thousand nine hundred and fifty-six Calories.
Leaving a spare forty-four calories.
For a small coffee.
With a splash of milk.
And three teaspoons of sugar.
We liked the maths.
And gradually.
Very gradually.
We fell in
To a routine of semi-regular sex.
Which was good.
It was actually really great.
During China’s One-Child Policy
Fertility fell from six births per woman in the 1960s
To one point five in 2014.
Though of course their methods were highly controversial.
Effective.
Autocratic. And.
Sadly.
CanNot be replicated in other countries.
But
Women hold the /
This here is my hospital letter.
Access to proper medical care including abortion /
Tomorrow.
I am taking matters into my own hands.
Into my own balls.
From tomorrow, all I can say is, if you like your grapes seedless.
What the fuck was that?
What. I was flirting with the audience.
You
Completely overrode my female-empowerment argument,
With your vain,
Self-serving,
Vasectomy bullshit.
Hey now, I’m just trying to remove the vas deferens between us.
Daisy hates puns.
Daisy hates puns almost as much as she hates it when I forget about female empowerment.
We had a whole new bit on the Campaign for Women and Girls.
I’m sorry I forgot.
You forgot. Have you got early-onset…
Jack my er, dad does have Alzheimer’s, which is why Daisy has trailed off.
I’m so sorry.
She never used to mention dementia before she knew, but there’s a compulsive part of Daisy’s brain that always makes her say the worst possible thing.
It’s surprisingly useful.
It’s fine.
It’s not fine.
Don’t worry. We’ll both let it go.
Okay.
Jack’s very not well.
I don’t see him much.
He doesn’t know who I am any more and the more time I spend with him the less I feel I have edges.
I accidentally let slip he lived in [place] when we were touring [place] and in a deliberate attempt to piss me off, Daisy went to say
Hello.
Doll.
Daisy, actually.
Dolly… my…
Dolly was a sweetheart of my father’s who slipped off the side of a waltzer car on a trip to Margate.
He held on to her hands but her body was mangled in the motor.
She died a little too slowly.
Squeezing his hands. So tight.
They left scars.
He can’t remember her real name, only her face, which he mistakes for Daisy’s.
I brought you a beeswax wrap.
Daisy found a new way to upset me.
You use it instead of cling film.
And Jack found his lost
Lovely pattern isn’t it.
Can I hold your hands Dolly?
Not just now.
Maybe later.
Maybe later.
He gasps.
Ten past two!
Time for Countdown.
Is it? Is it time for Countdown Dolly?
I think we might just catch it.
I take the only tape from the shelf and put it into his crumbling VHS player.
Nine hundred and fifteen.
Ten minus the one. Times one hundred. Seven plus the eight.
She’s memorised the maths.
She hasn’t memorised the maths.
I just can’t do the maths.
How can eight point one seven four MILLION people AFFORD to live in London.
Where the fuck is Plaistow?
Plaistow.
Where?
No you pronounce it. Plaistow.
I’m pretty sure you don’t…
Our tour’s coming to an end and our new favourite hobby is fighting over digital listings.
One thousand two hundred and forty pounds.
It’s a bit like Settlers of Catan
A month!
But less realistic.
How could it possibly be so expensive?
It has a wet room.
It has a shower over a toilet.
How does anyone afford to live on their own?
I think most people have friends.
And jobs.
That’s a nice spreadsheet.
Thanks.
It has a sexy pie chart.
It has several sexy pie charts.
What’s this bit?
Outgoings.
Nice. What’s this bit?
Income.
–
Shit.
Yeah.
You can afford precisely half a flat.
Yep.
Perhaps if you agreed not to use the bathroom.
Just shat in the sink.
Yeah.
Yeah. Landlord would love that.
Went through all doorways sideways, using half the space.
Yeah. No good.
Or.
Yeah.
Or!
Yeah.
Just don’t use the top half, cos you’re actually not that tall and if you found somewhere with high ceilings or just like crouched a bit you could get away with /
What?
No.
What?
No really it’s nothing it’s just not the or I thought you were gonna say?
What ‘or’ did you want me to say?
No, I didn’t want you to say it. I’d actually rather live in a bin.
Than…?
Me and Michael move in together.
Ex-council block.
[Amount of money] plus bills.
Split between us.
It’s a good deal.
It’s a nice place.
It has shit water pressure.
It is south-facing.
It has blinds that we leave halfway open so that we never have to actually open or close them.
It has IKEA furniture.
It is above a crack den.
It has a double lock.
We’re not really together.
Other than the fact that we are together, all of the time.
Neither of us have ever been particularly happy.
And so adapt pretty well to living with someone, we don’t particularly like.
And sometimes
We do things together.
We plant a seed
We plant several seeds.
The block has a square of very dead grass.
No ball games
No loitering
No dogs
No fun
So
We dig it up.
We plant runner beans
Green beans
Tomatoes
Carrots
Potatoes
Enough to feed the whole estate
Fennel
Lettuce
Butternut squash
Chard
More chard
So much chard
Like ‘we might need to invent a collective noun for chard’ amounts of chard.
A really obscene amount of chard.
Chinese leaf.
What the Ant and Dec is that?
Chinese leaf.
That’s not a Chinese leaf.
If anything it’s a…
Somewhere-else leaf. It looks like it’s wearing a burka.
Okay. I don’t think you can equate the pious elegance of the burka with thick black rot
It is very dead.
Why is everything dead?
Something’s growing.
Nothing’s growing.
We’ll try again.
We can’t try again. It’s like a plague pit of vegetables.
It’s not a /
An army of burka-wearing cabbages.
Sharia encroaches.
Okay. That’s not funny.
It was a little funny.
You know that bit you’ve added about Muslims being the fastest growing population on earth.
It’s a fact.
I know it just sounds a bit scaremongery
It’s true though.
I know it’s true. It just sounds a bit racist.
I think you sound a bit racist.
What?
You’re the one who thought it was scary.
I just said it as a fact.
You.
The racist.
Decided it was frightening.
I’m not a racist.
M’kay.
I’m not.
Sure.
How can I be a racist when…
What?
You what?
What because of me?
You think you can’t be a racist because you’re having sex with me?
No I.
Donald Trump has slept with a lot of women.
Doesn’t make him any less of a misogynist.
More of one if anything.
Yes.
So.
Actually. By that logic. Sexing me makes you more of a racist.
You are my white oppressor.
You are my glass ceiling.
You are /
Crying oh my god why are you crying?
I’m so sorry.
I was joking.
I thought we were.
I don’t actually think you’re a racist.
I think you’re lovely. And great. And. Why are you crying?
Please tell me why you’re crying?
I don’t know.
You don’t know?
I don’t know.
Agh. Okay.
Um. Fuck.
I don’t think I’ve ever actually seen you cry before.
I didn’t really.
I didn’t really think that was a thing that you did.
Can I /
No. You don’t want me to touch you that’s.
That’s fine. I’m Sorry.
Please I beg you.
Please stop crying.
I’m sorry.
He gets on his hands and knees.
No I’m sorry.
I’m sorry I made you cry. And I. Please. Please stop /
Are you laughing or crying?
Bit of both.
Well that’s half-good.
Do you really think I’m LovelyandGreat.
What? You’ve not. You’ve not really admitted that…
You’ve never.
Really, like said I’m a positive. Thing. In your life at all.
How stupid are you Daisy Taylor?
How could you not know that?
I quite like you on your knees.
Oh yeah?
Yeah.
Okay. Do you like it when I do this?
Yeah. Yes.
Yeah, okay.
I mean if you wanted to, you know, make up for the whole, ‘calling me a racist’ thing like, um…
Yep. Just kinda like. Yep. That’s nice.
You’ve stopped crying.
Yep. Shut up. Keep going.
What?
What?
No nothing. You just. You just taste a bit different.
What!?
Not like bad different.
Well obviously bad different or you wouldn’t have said anything.
No not bad different. Just a bit, I dunno, just a bit sharper or, I dunno discharge is a bit thicker /
What are you doing?
What am I doing?
You’re pulling up your knickers.
Yes of course I am. You just used the word discharge in a sexual context which makes you essentially a psychopath.
I’m just saying your discharge /
I want to die.
Is a bit th-ick-er than normal.
I think it’s good if we feel comfortable talking about…
I feel sick.
I just wanted to check everything’s okay with you.
Yes. Of course it is. Yes. It’s probably just like an adjustment period after I got my coil out.
After.
You got your…
Coil out. Yeah. Since you got your vasectomy, I saw no reason to pump myself full of needless hormones, making myself fat and depressed.
Since I got my vasectomy.
Yes.
When did I get my vasectomy?
Um! I imagine the day after you waved your hospital letter at three hundred people shouting about getting a vasectomy ‘tomorrow’!
You did get it didn’t you?
Michael?
Yes! Of course, darling.
Of course, I did.
Ha. Oh my god.
Yeah I really got you right.
S’not funny.
So Daisy’s pregnant.
No way dude. Congratulations.
Congratulations?
Yeah!
We’re population activists with a combined salary of just under thirteen thousand pounds a year, and we live above a crackhead called Janice.
Oh. My. God.
What part of ‘Daisy’s pregnant’ do you think sounds like a positive.
Um… The pregnancy test?
Right, strong joke that. Well worth sacrificing being there for me in my time of need.
Michael’s best friend is a girl called Sarah which I used to be really jealous about but now don’t care at all because we’re just such great mates.
So, she gets an abortion, what’s the big deal, OR leave her, come out and be fun with me again. Stop spending nights in watching The Queen.
The Crown.
The Crown. Which is shit B-T-Dubs.
Very high production values though.
How does that not make it worse?
What does Daisy think?
Oh she loves it, I think she secretly covets a tiara.
And about the pregnancy?
Oh she doesn’t know.
Right. You gonna tell her?
I dunno, I’m guessing she’ll probably figure it out.
Is it yours?
Yeah.
Would you rather, that it was yours, but you thought that it wasn’t.
OR
That it wasn’t yours but you thought that it was.
I’m not playing this game.
Would you rather have a nose made of bogey
Or a bogey made of nose.
Sarah.
Oh. Would you rather I died. Right. Not your fault. Of like, polio or something.
Or, I survived, but you had tried to kill me and I knew that and hated you.
First one.
Well that’s fundamentally bad ethics.
You’re gonna have to improve on that.
You know why, because You’re Gonna Be A /
Dad.
Hi, um nice…. Er, nice, nice, curtains look I’m sorry that it’s been a while.
Look I’m sorry that I stopped coming.
I never really meant to
I meant to, I never meant to make you feel unloved I brought you some flowers.
They’re peonies, or pansies. They’re not they’re. Pegonias.
Begonias.
They’re begonias. I. You need to plant them.
Me and Daisy we, we planted out window boxes for, our, neighbours and that
We’re trying t’ grow.
And we
I thought we could do it together.
Or not.
Or you and Daisy could
Daisy’s here a lot. Isn’t she.
Daisy loves you, Dolly I think you call her.
So that’s good isn’t it.
She’s here [a lot] pregnant.
She’s pregnant.
I suppose that’s why I’m here
I think, I think I’ve been telling myself I haven’t told her
Oh she doesn’t know [by the way]
I think I’ve been telling myself I haven’t told her because, it’s my fault and I
Oh it’s [my fault] yep
Because it’s my fault and I can’t face, her, Cross, and
I think it’s not that.
I think it’s not that.
I think, what it is is, I, for the first time since, you looked at me and didn’t know know know know know
Didn’t know who I was, did, couldn’t,
For the first time I feel like
Connected?
Like literally the reason we’re even together is
but, but I feel like maybe,
(We can’t even raise a carrot)
I know, I think, somewhere you feel the absence of me, I guess, and I’m really sorry about that. And it’s not because I don’t love you
At all
It’s basically the complete opposite of that.
It’s because you are Everything I’ve Ever wanted to Be.
And the only person I’ve ever wanted to please.
And.
Just the thought.
Someone might look at me with half the /
That I look at you
Just
I would give ten years of my life
Or
Twenty.
Or.
But even that, wouldn’t come close to enough.
There’s just no [calculation] that /
I know we can’t
But just for the minute
Just in this exact minute
I’ve got a family again
I’ve got a family again
And I’m not quite
Ready to let that go
He gasps.
Do you know what I mean?
Two. Ten.
Right
Time for Countdown!
Yep
Is it?
Is it?
Yeah. I’ll get it going, I’ve got to
Go on
Janice put a fucking TV in the recycling bin today.
Not that
It makes a mockery of our recycling.
I know
Do you know what an effort it is to recycle?
Yes
And food. What is the point in sacrificing half our flat to segregated recycling if she’s gonna shit on it with her Kentucky-fried telly
Jack?
I’m calling the council
How was Jack?
What I went to see him. It was fine.
Did he… [Recognise you]?
Did he, was he?
No, he didn’t, he doesn’t he never will again, can we just watch whatever depressing issue-based documentary
Kids on Xanax?
Mm
Plastic in the Ocean
Stop it you’re making me hot
I feel like plastic in the ocean, is like, when you need to piss and you sit down and the seat is already like, soaked, and you are literally wet with someone else’s urine, but, by the time you realise, it’s so too late to do anything about it so you just have to decide it’s fine even though it’s totally not, and in your heart it makes you sick but you have a false sense of calm in the face of disaster. Know what I mean?
I don’t sit down to piss so
Do you want turkey dinosaurs or sausages?
We should really go vegan
Yeah
Yeah
But one of us would need to learn how to cook.
Shotgun not
Shotgun not
Is that a gun?
Daisy
Daisy is it?
Don’t confuse me.
I know you’re Daisy.
Right. You know guns kill people, right, you’ve not forgotten that one.
This one hasn’t.
This was my father’s.
He left Jamaica in 1943 with this gun and very little else.
For King and Country
It wasn’t his country at the time but he certainly made it so.
Hard graft.
Laying down roots.
Would be a shame not to see that tree grow.
So he went off to war, didn’t kill anyone, and then he came home, here and he deactivated that gun, so that future generations would never accidentally shoot their sons’ girlfr/latmate.
I have a favour to ask you Daisy.
I’m very happy, my boy found you
I feel I’m leaving him in good hands
Leaving. Booking a one way flight to Switzerland are you?
I don’t think there’s any need to go that far.
Good. You scared me.
We can do it here.
Do what.
I need you to kill me Daisy. I’m not strong enough to do it myself.
Oh good you’ve gone mental
I am mad Daisy I don’t know my toes from my toothbrush on a good day
And this is a bad day, is it?
This is a great day. I know who I am. I know who you are and I know I want to die.
As a benchmark for a great day that seems pretty low
Exactly.
I’ve got maybe another forty like this.
More maybe. Even.
Life shouldn’t be wasted on me
There are new souls who will make much more of it than me.
Forty years of intensive medical care and a high-meat-content diet.
That might come close to enough.
What are you talking about
Kill me
No
I want you to
I’m running out of things I can do right
Please
No.
It’s true, babies born in Britain add on average one hundred and sixty times more greenhouse emissions than babies born in Ethiopia
Hideous
I think we should put it in the talk
Right