Joel Coen and Ethan Coen 1984
IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086979/
"BLOOD SIMPLE" By Joel Coen and Ethan Coen LANDSCAPES An opening voice-over plays against dissolving Texas landscapes--broad, bare, and lifeless. VOICE-OVER The world is full of complainers. But the fact is, nothing comes with a guarantee. I don't care if you're the Pope of Rome, President of the United States, or even Man of the Year--something can always go wrong. And go ahead, complain, tell your problems to your neighbor, ask for help--watch him fly. Now in Russia, they got it mapped out so that everyone pulls for everyone else-- that's the theory, anyway. But what I know about is Texas... CUT TO ROAD NIGHT We are rushing down a rain-swept country road, listening to the rhythmic swish of tires on wet asphalt. VOICE-OVER And down here... you're on your own.
"BLOOD SIMPLE" By Joel Coen and Ethan Coen LANDSCAPES An opening voice-over plays against dissolving Texas landscapes--broad, bare, and lifeless. VOICE-OVER The world is full of complainers. But the fact is, nothing comes with a guarantee. I don't care if you're the Pope of Rome, President of the United States, or even Man of the Year--something can always go wrong. And go ahead, complain, tell your problems to your neighbor, ask for help--watch him fly. Now in Russia, they got it mapped out so that everyone pulls for everyone else-- that's the theory, anyway. But what I know about is Texas... CUT TO ROAD NIGHT We are rushing down a rain-swept country road, listening to the rhythmic swish of tires on wet asphalt. VOICE-OVER And down here... you're on your own. INT. CAR NIGHT We are looking at the backs of two people in the front seat-- a man, driving, and a woman next to him. Their conversation will be punctuated by the occasional glare of oncoming headlights and the roar of the car rushing by. The windshield wipers wave a soporific beat. The conversation is halting, awkward. WOMAN ...He gave me a little pearl-handled .38 for out first anniversary. MAN Uh-huh. WOMAN ...Figured I'd better leave before I used it on him. I don't know how you can stand him. MAN Well, I'm only an employee, I ain't married to him. WOMAN Yeah... Pause, as an oncoming car passes. Finally: WOMAN ...I don't know. Sometimes I think there's something wrong with him. Like maybe he's sick? Mentally?... Or is it maybe me, do you think? MAN Listen, I ain't a marriage counselor. I don't know what goes on, I don't wanna know... But I like you. I always liked you... Another car passes. MAN ...What're you gonna do in Houston? WOMAN I'll figure something out... How come you offered to drive me in this mess? MAN I told you. I like you. WOMAN See, I never knew that. MAN Well now you do. WOMAN ...Hell. Another pause. Another car. Suddenly: WOMAN Stop the car, Ray! CLOSE SHOT BRAKE Stamped on. EXT. CAR Low three-quarters on the car as it squeals to a halt. A car that has been following screeches to a halt just behind it. Both cars sit. Rain patters. INT. FIRST CAR Close on the man, from behind. He looks at the woman. MAN ...Abby? She doesn't answer. He turns to look back and we see his face, for the first time, in the headlights of the car behind. HIS POV The car behind them waiting, patiently. Rain drifts down past its headlights. Finally it pulls out and passes them slowly, their headlights showing it to be a battered green Volkswagon. First the car itself, then its red taillights, disappear into the rain. BACK TO THE MAN Cutting between him and the woman, each from behind. MAN ...You know that car? WOMAN No. MAN What's the matter? WOMAN I don't know... I just think maybe I'm making a mistake... She looks at the man. WOMAN ...What was that back there? MAN Back where? WOMAN Sign. MAN I don't know. Motel... Abby-- WOMAN Ray. Did you mean that, what you said before, or were you just being a gentleman? MAN Abby, I like you, but it's no point starting anything now. WOMAN Yeah. MAN I mean, I ain't a marriage counselor-- WOMAN Yeah. The man is uncomfortable. MAN ...What do you want to do? The woman is uncomfortable. After a long pause: WOMAN ...What do you want to do? MOTEL ROOM Pulling back from RAY and ABBY in bed, making love. The only light is from cars passing along the highway outside. Each sweeping light-by ends in black. The pullback ends in a wide shot of the motel room. The black following the last car lingers. A telephone rings. SAME WIDE SHOT MORNING Ray and Abby are asleep. On a nightstand next to the bed, the telephone is ringing. Ray stirs, reaches for the phone. RAY ...Hello. VOICE Having a good time? RAY ...What? Who is this? VOICE I don't know, who's this? A silence at both ends. VOICE ...You still there? RAY Yeah, I'm still here. Ray listens to another silence. It ends with a disconnect. Abby is stirring as Ray gets out of bed. ABBY ...Ray? RAY Yeah. ABBY What was that? RAY Your husband. BAR BACK OFFICE NIGHT We are tracking past a man seated behind a wooden desk, towards an 8 x 10 black-and-white photograph that has just been slapped down on the desktop. The picture is of Abby and Ray in bed together in the motel room. VOICE I know a place you can get that framed. The voice is familiar as that of the narrator whose musings on life in Texas and the Soviet Union opened the movie. We cut to him. He is settling himself into a chair facing the desk. He is LOREN VISSER, a large unshaven man in a misshapen yellow leisure suit. He smiles at the man behind the desk. JULIAN MARTY Sits staring down at the photograph. Behind him a window opens on the bar proper. Country-western music filters in from the bar. Marty is not pleased. MARTY What did you take these for? VISSER What do you mean... He removes a pouch of tobacco from his breast pocket and nonchalantly starts rolling a cigarette. VISSER ...Just doin' my job. MARTY You called me, I knew they were there, so what do I need these for? VISSER Well, I don't know... Call it a fringe benefit. MARTY How long did you watch her? VISSER Most of the night... He lights his cigarette, then slaps his lighter onto the desktop. It is silver, engraved on the top with a lariat spelling out "Loren" in script, and on the side with a declaration that he is "Elks Man of the Year." VISSER ...They'd just rest a few minutes and then get started again. Quite something. Marty stares down at the photograph. MARTY You know in Greece they cut off the head of the messenger who brought bad news. A smoke ring floats into frame from offscreen. VISSER Now that don't make much sense. MARTY No. It just made them feel better. Marty rises and goes to a safe behind his desk. Visser laughs as he watches Marty. VISSER Well first off, Julian, I don't know what the story is in Greece but in this state we got very definite laws about that... Marty, hunched over the standing safe behind his desk, tosses in the photograph and takes out a pay envelope. VISSER ...Second place I ain't a messenger, I'm a private investigator. And third place--and most important--it ain't such bad news. I mean you thought he was a colored. (he laughs) ...You're always assumin' the worst... Visser blows another smoke ring, pushes a fat finger through the middle of it, and beams at Marty. VISSER ...Anything else? MARTY Yeah, don't come by here any more. If I need you again I know which rock to turn over. Marty scales the pay envelope across the desk. It hits Visser in the chest and bounces to the floor. Visser looks stonily down at the envelope; no expression for a beat. Then he roars with laughter. VISSER That's good... "which rock to turn over"... that's very good... Sighing, he leans forward to pick up the envelope. He rises, straightens his cowboy hat, and walks over to a screen door letting out on the bar's back parking lot. VISSER Well, gimme a call whenever you wanna cut off my head... He pauses at the door, cocks his head, then turns back to the desk and picks up his cigarette lighter. Returning to the door: VISSER ...I can crawl around without it. The door slams shut behind him. Marty scowls at the back door. After a moment he rises and crosses the office to the window looking out on the bar. Over Marty's shoulder we see the long bar leading up to the window in perpendicular. The camera is tracking forward, past Marty, to frame on the window. A black man is just now vaulting the near end of the bar, over onto the customer side. MATCH CUT TO: MARTY'S BAR REVERSE ANGLE VAULTING MAN Tracking back with him as he lands on the customer side and heads across the bar. This shot, from the other side of the back-office window, reveals the window to be one-way glass mirrored on this side MEURICE, the black bartender, is muscular, about 200 pounds, dressed in white pants and a sleeveless T-shirt. He is making his way through the crowd towards the jukebox. Another man stands in front of it examining the selections. He deposits a quarter. MEURICE Hold it, hold it. What's tonight? MAN What? MEURICE What night is it? MAN (studying Meurice) ...Friday? MEURICE Right. Friday night is Yankee night. Where're you from? MAN Lubbock? Meurice shakes his head and punches the selector buttons on the jukebox. MEURICE Right. I'm from Detroit (turning to leave) It's a big city up north with tall buildings. A Motown song drops. We track behind Meurice as he makes his way back toward the bar. When he reaches it, he claps a couple of people on the shoulder, who make way for him. He vaults back over the top, walks down the bar, and stops in from of an attractive white woman sitting on a bar stool and sipping a brandy. MEURICE Where was I? WOMAN You we telling me about the Ring of Fire. MEURICE Yeah, well, I may be getting in over my head here, I mean you're the geologist, but my theory for what it's worth, you got all these volcanoes and each time one pops it's the equivalent of what, twenty, thirty megatons of TNT? Enough to light Las Vegas for how long? How many years? Course, I'm no mathematician but-- MARTY Meurice. Marty is approaching from the direction of the office. MEURICE Yeah, I know. Pour 'em short. MARTY Has Ray come in yet? MEURICE No, he's off tonight. Where was he last night? MARTY (glaring) How would I know? MEURICE I don't know, didn't he call? Marty loses his glare and his gaze drifts over to the woman. After an awkward pause, Meurice clears his throat. MEURICE ...Marty, I'd like you to meet an old friend of mine, Debra. Debra, this is Julian Marty, the dude I'm always talking about. She is unselfconsciously returning Marty's stare. MARTY If he does come in I'm not here... What were you drinking, Debra? DEBRA Remy. MARTY You've got a very sophisticated palate. DEBRA Thanks. MARTY Give Debra here another drink, and give me the usual. Meurice walks down the bar. DEBRA ...What's a palate? Marty studies her for a beat, she studies him, he smiles. MARTY Listen, I got tickets for the Oilers and the Rams next week in the Astrodome. Ever sat on the fifty yard line? DEBRA I don't follow baseball. Marty laughs. MARTY You won't have to. I'll explain what a palate is. DEBRA You won't have to. I just wanted to see if you knew. Marty smiles bleakly. Debra drains her glass as Meurice returns. He sets another Cognac in front of Debra, and a glass of milk in front of Marty. MARTY What's this? MEURICE You said the usual-- MARTY Red Label. MEURICE (picking up the milk) Right. Sorry. MARTY Pour that back. MEURICE What. MARTY Don't throw that out. MEURICE Right. He wanders on down the bar; Marty's attention returns to the woman. MARTY So how long have you know Meurice? DEBRA About ten years. Marty's attention is caught by something down the bar. He half-rises from his stool. MARTY What--Waitaminute--What... HIS POV Meurice is pouring the milk down the sink. He looks innocently up. MEURICE What. BACK TO MARTY Angry but not knowing what to say. He glances around the bar, sinks slowly back onto his stool. MARTY Deuce in the corner needs help. MEURICE Right. Marty sits staring across the bar for a moment, nods a couple of times at nothing in particular, then looks back at the woman. MARTY ...So what're you doing tonight? DEBRA Going out with Meurice. Marty tosses a beer nut into his mouth. MARTY Tell him you have a headache. Debra gives him a level stare. DEBRA It'll pass. MARTY We don't seem to be communicating-- DEBRA You want to hustle me. I don't want to be hustled. It's as simple as that. Now that I've communicated, why don't you leave? MARTY I own the place. DEBRA Christ, I'm getting bored. MARTY I'm not surprised, the company you've been keeping the last ten years. They both fall silent as Meurice enters frame. He takes a bottle from the bar and pours himself a drink. MARTY What's this? MEURICE What. MARTY (pointing at Meurice's drink) This. MEURICE Jack Daniels. Don't worry, I'm paying for it. MARTY That's not the point. MEURICE What's the point? MARTY The point is we don't serve niggers here. MEURICE Where? (he looks over his shoulder; up and down the bar) ...I'm very careful about that. Marty tosses back Meurice's drink, then turns to Debra, smiling. MARTY He thinks I'm kidding. Everybody thinks I'm kidding; (as he turns to leave) if Ray comes in I'm not home. Debra watches him go, then turns back to Meurice. DEBRA Nice guy. MEURICE Not really. What'd you say your last name was? MARTY'S HOUSE TRACKING DOWN HALLWAY We are following a large German shepherd as it pads down the hall toward a warmly lit room at its end. We hear only the sound of the dog's paws on the hardwood floor, and the faint clicking of billiard balls. BILLIARD ROOM It is a paneled, carpeted room with black leather furniture and a nine-foot billiard table. Various stuffed animal trophies are scattered around the room, including a moose head mounted on one wall. Ray stands alone in the foreground, shooting pool, an unlit cigarette in his mouth. The room is very quiet. In the background the German shepherd enters from the hallway, sits down in a corner, and benignly watches Ray. UPSTAIRS BEDROOM It is expensively appointed; a brightly lit woman's bedroom. Abby is opening a hinged drawer in a white antique bureau. She pulls out a leather handbag, gropes nervously through its contents, then puts it aside. She crosses the room to a vanity table, takes a purse from underneath, and spills its contents out on top of the table. BILLIARD ROOM Ray pockets a couple of balls, looks over at the dog, then up at the wall at the far end of the room. RAY'S POV Hanging on the wall are a couple of framed photographs of Marty and Abby, taken a long time ago. BACK TO RAY Staring at the pictures. He looks back down at the pool table. UPSTAIRS BEDROOM Abby is sitting on a large double bed. She puts aside another purse, rises and crosses the room hurriedly, and pushes back the sliding doors of a long wardrobe closet. The upper shelf is lined with handbags--fifteen or twenty of them. She grabs the first one, looks in, tosses it aside; grabs the second, looks--and stops. HER POV Inside the purse, a small pearl-handled gun. BILLIARD ROOM Ray is now standing in front of the pictures on the wall, looking from one to the next. RAY'S POV A picture of Abby and Marty standing together on a Gulf beach. Marty is wearing a long velour beach robe, Abby is in a swimming suit. Ray's hand enters frame. He traces a finger down her leg. CLOSE SHOT RAY His head cocked to the side. After a moment his eyes shift. EXTREME CLOSE SHOT PHOTO DETAIL Of Marty's face. He is staring into the camera, at whoever took the picture. His head is thrown back slightly; he is laughing. From offscreen in the quiet room we hear a static hum and then Abby's voice over an intercom. ABBY'S VOICE Ray...? BACK TO RAY He turns from the photograph and walks to an intercom speaker next to the mounted moose's head. He presses the speaker button. RAY Yeah... He idly takes his unlit cigarette and sticks it in the moose's mouth. RAY ...You get what you wanted? ABBY'S VOICE Yeah. Let's get out of here. MARTY'S FRONT FOYER We are looking across a dark, high-ceilinged foyer toward the front door. Ray leans against the doorjamb, in silhouette in the open doorway. He is facing a curved staircase that descends into the foyer. Abby appears at the second-floor landing and starts down the stairs. RAY Why d'you wanna leave all this? ABBY You kidding? I don't wanna leave all this, I just wanna leave Marty... As she reaches the bottom of the stairs: ABBY ...Drive me to a motel? RAY You can stay at my place, I'll drop you there. ABBY Where... where you going? RAY See a guy. ABBY (nervously) Don't go to the bar, Ray. I know him, that ain't a good idea. RAY I just gotta see a guy. MARTY'S BAR The crowd has thinned out. Meurice and Debra are in the foreground. Ray enters from the street and makes his way over to them. MEURICE Howdy stranger. RAY Meurice. Sorry I didn't show last night. MEURICE Wasn't too busy. You missed a good one, though. This white guy walks in about one o'clock, asks if we have a discount for alcoholics... I tell him to get lost, but Marty's sitting here listening and I can tell he's thinking that maybe it ain't such a bad idea... He pours Debra another drink and starts to set one up for Ray. MEURICE ...Ray, this is Debra. She's a geologist. That's the theory of rocks. Ray nods at Debra. RAY Is Marty here? MEURICE Not here tonight. Wasn't here last night. He's especially not back in his office. RAY (leaving) Thanks Meurice. MEURICE For what? EXT. BACK OF MARTY'S BAR Marty is sitting on the stoop that descends from his back office to a graveled back parking lot; he is framed in the open doorway of his brightly lit office. He stares fixedly at something offscreen. MARTY'S POV In the middle distance a huge incinerator operates full blast. Orange flames lick out the sides; white smoke billows out the top. Two figures in silhouette are chucking garbage in through a large gate. BACK TO MARTY Behind him, in the office, we see the door from the bar open, and Ray entering. RAY Marty? Marty looks over his shoulder, then back toward the furnace. Ray descends the stoop and stands in front of him. RAY ...Well...? What? Marty stares past Ray across the parking lot. MARTY What "what"? RAY Am I fired? You wanna hit me? What? MARTY I don't particularly want to talk to you. RAY Well... if you're not gonna fire me I might as well quit. MARTY Fine. Suit yourself. (still staring fixedly at the furnace) ...Having a good time? Ray tenses. There is a pause. RAY ...I don't like this kind of talk. Marty still stares at the furnace. MARTY Then what'd you come here for? RAY (no more conciliation) You owe me for two weeks. Marty shakes his head. MARTY Nope. She's an expensive piece of ass... He finally looks up at Ray. MARTY ...You get a refund though, if you tell me who else she's been sluicing. RAY I want that money. If you wanna tell me something, fine-- MARTY What're you, a fucking marriage counselor? Ray breaks into a strained half-smile. Marty grins humorlessly back, mimicking Ray's smile. MARTY What're you smiling at--I'm a funny guy, right, I'm an asshole? No, no, that's not what's funny. What's funny is her. What's funny is that I had you two followed because, if it isn't you, she's been sleeping with someone else... He grabs a knee in each hand and leans forward, still looking at Ray. He is becoming only slightly more animated. MARTY ...What's really going to be funny is when she gives you that innocent look and says, What're you talking about, Ray, I haven't done anything funny... He leans back again. MARTY ...But the funniest thing to me right now is that you think she came back here for you--*that's* what's funny. Ray moves forward and Marty's eyes follow him as he approaches. Marty's smile abruptly turns to a look of apprehension. Ray enters frame and brushes past Marty as he walks up the stoop, and crosses the back office toward the bar. Marty relaxes, and his gaze returns to the furnace. MARTY ...Come on this property again and I'll be forced to shoot you... Ray opens the door to the bar and shuts it softly behind him. MARTY ...Fair notice. MARTY'S OFFICE LATER CLOSE SHOT CEILING FAN At the cut the music and all other bar noise drops out. We hear only the rhythmic whir of the fan. We tilt down from the ceiling fan to frame Marty, tilted back in his desk chair, staring up at the fan. MEURICE (O.S.) Marty... WIDE SHOT THE OFFICE Meurice is standing in the door to the bar. Far behind him we can see Debra waiting in the dimly lit, deserted bar. MEURICE ...I thought you were dead. Going home? MARTY No. I think I'll stay right here in hell. MEURICE (turning to leave) Kind of a bleak point of view there, isn't it Marty? MARTY Meurice... Meurice pauses in the doorway. MARTY ...I don't want that asshole near my money. I don't even want him in the bar. MEURICE We get a lot of assholes in here, Marty. Meurice and Debra can be heard leaving the bar. Marty looks down at the telephone in front of him on the desk, then picks up the receiver and dials. He tilts back in the chair and stares back up at the ceiling. MARTY'S POV The ceiling fan, turning slowly. EXT. RAY'S BUNGALOW FROM INSIDE RAY'S CAR In the foreground Ray sits behind the wheel of his parked car, slumped back against the seat. He is staring at his one- story bungalow, in which a couple of lights are burning. Inside we can faintly hear his telephone ringing. It rings for a long time. RAY'S LIVING ROOM CLOSE SHOT THE RINGING TELEPHONE Abby's hand enters frame, hesitates, then after another ring picks up. ABBY Hello? The is no answer. From the other end we hear only the rhythmic whir of a ceiling fan. MARTY'S OFFICE Marty listens. He says nothing, still tilted back in his chair, staring at the ceiling. RAY'S LIVING ROOM Abby listens. She shifts the phone to her other ear, listening hard to the sound of the fan. There is another long pause. ABBY ...Marty? The phone goes dead just as we hear the front door opening. Abby looks up as she cradles the phone. Ray is standing in the doorway. RAY Who was it? ABBY What? RAY On the phone. Was it for you? ABBY I don't know, he didn't say anything. RAY Uh-huh. So how do you know it was a he? ABBY (smiling) You got a girl--am I screwing something up by being here? Ray leans against the door and folds his arms, watching Abby. RAY No, am I? Abby looks at him, puzzled. After an uncomfortable pause: ABBY ...I can find a place tomorrow, then I'll be outta your hair. RAY If that's what you want to do, then you oughta do it. You, uh... you want the bed or the couch? Abby shifts uneasily, looking at Ray. ABBY Well... the couch would be all right... RAY You can sleep on the bed if you want. ABBY Well... I'm not gonna put you out of your bed... RAY You wouldn't be putting me out. ABBY ...Well, I'd be okay in here-- Ray walks toward the bedroom. RAY Okay. MARTY'S OFFICE LATER Still tilted back in his chair, Marty stares glumly at the ceiling. The bar itself is completely still except the rhythmic whir of the fan. CLOSE SHOT A CEILING FAN Turning slowly. We tilt down from the fan to frame Abby, lying under a sheet on Ray's couch, staring up at the fan in the darkened living room. The room is still. We hear only the whir of the fan and the distant sound of crickets. Abby turns her head, looking offscreen. HER POV A ray of light slants up the hallway from the direction of the bedroom. The light is snapped off, leaving the hallway in darkness. We hear a faint cough and the creaking of bedsprings. RAY'S BEDROOM Ray lies in bed, staring at the ceiling. RAY'S LIVING ROOM / HALLWAY LONG SHOT THE LIVING ROOM FROM THE HALLWAY Abby sits up. She stands and walks across the moonlit room toward the hallway. We pull her back down the hall toward the bedroom. She pauses in the bedroom doorway and looks down toward the bed. ABBY'S POV Ray in bed, his eyes closed. BACK TO ABBY We pull her as she enters the room, then tilt down with her as she hesitantly sits on the edge of the bed. ABBY'S POV Close shot, Ray asleep. BACK TO ABBY Framed against a moonlit window from the shoulders up. There is a long pause. Ray's hand enters frame and pulls Abby down out of frame onto the bed. We hold on the moonlit window. DISSOLVE THROUGH TO: SAME WINDOW SAME ANGLE PRE-DAWN Through the window the slow dissolve gradually defines the front lawn and the street beyond in the flat pre-dawn light. Abby rises into frame and quietly gets out of bed. The camera tracks behind her as she walks up the hallway into the living room. We follow her across the living room and move into a close shot on her hand as she reaches into her purse and withdraws a small plastic compact. LOW-ANGLE CLOSE SHOT ABBY She flips open the compact, then, hearing something, looks up, squinting across the room. ABBY'S POV In the shadows at the far end of the room we can just see two pointed ears and a glittering pair of eyes. The German shepherd is panting softly. OVER ABBY'S SHOULDER As she peers into the shadows, her face reflected in the mirror of the open compact. ABBY Opal-- In the mirror something moves just behind her. Abby starts to turn. Marty's hand clamps over her mouth from behind. His other hand circles her waist. Abby struggles. MARTY (quietly) Lover-boy oughta lock his door... Marty's hand drops from her waist to her thighs and slides under the robe. MARTY ...Lotta nuts out there. Still holding her from behind, Marty forces her down on her knees. Abby's cries are muffled by the hand clamped over her mouth. Marty shoots a glance down the dark hallway. There is no movement. Abby's hand is groping forward out of frame. CLOSE SHOT ABBY'S PURSE She upsets it. The contents spill out, among them a small pearl-handled revolver. Her hand gropes for the gun. BACK TO ABBY AND MARTY Marty yanks her to her feet, looking down the hallway. MARTY Let's do it outside... He is dragging her to the front door. MARTY ...in nature. He pushes her through the screen door. EXT. RAY'S BUNGALOW The neighborhood is deserted and still. The streetlamps are still on. Marty and Abby stumble down the front stoop onto the lawn. His hand is still clamped over her mouth. She reaches up, grabs a finger, and bends it back. We hear the bone snap. Marty screams. His hand drops. His other hand cuffs her on the side of the head, spinning her around. Marty is now clutching his broken finger with his good hand. Abby kicks him in the groin. He sinks to his knees, drops forward on one hand, and vomits. FRONT STOOP Ray is coming out the door, hitching up his pants. In his right hand he hold Abby's pearl-handled revolver. MARTY Slowly gets to his feet, looking at Ray. ABBY She has backed away from Marty and now stands on the lawn, breathing heavily. She looks from Ray to Marty. BACK TO MARTY Backing toward his car, a Cadillac parked at curbside, still looking at Ray. He turns to get into the car. The German shepherd lopes across the lawn and takes a clean leap into the car through the open window on the passenger side. Marty turns the ignition. The engine coughs and dies. He tries again; it starts. The car roars up the street. RAY Watching the car. He looks at Abby. ABBY Still panting. Up the street we can hear Marty's car alternately racing and stopping, shifting in and out of gear. His engine rumble starts to grow louder again. RAY Like to have seen his face when he found the dead end. In the background we see Marty's car roar by in the opposite direction. MOUNT BONNEL EVENING LATERAL TRACK Moving past a row of cars parked on an overlook near the top of the mountain. Below we can see the lights of the city of Austin. The lot is littered with beer cans. We hear the sound of rock music coming from various car radios. Several teenagers lean against cars drinking beer; inside the cars we can see the vague forms of others. TEENAGER Hey mister, how'd you break your pussyfinger? His friends laugh. TRACK PULLING MARTY Ignoring the laughter as he walks past the cars, apparently looking for someone. His right index finger is taped up in an aluminum splint. MARTY'S POV At the end of a row of cars we see a green Volkswagon bug. Leaning against the hood is Visser, still dressed in his rumpled yellow suit. He is smoking a cigarette, talking to a sixteen-year-old girl in shorts and a tube top. When he notices Marty: VISSER (to the girl) Sorry sweetheart, my date is here... The girl drifts off. Marty enters frame and Visser turns to him. VISSER ...She saw me rolling a cigarette and thought it was marijuana. (he laughs) I guess she thought I was a swinger. Visser open the back door of the car. Marty ignores the invitation, walks around to the front on the passenger side and gets in. INT. VISSER'S CAR As Visser gets into the driver's seat. A small topless doll is suspended from the rearview mirror. Visser gives it a tap. As it swings back and forth two small lights, one behind each breast, blink on and off. VISSER Idnat wild? Both men sit watching the doll intently. Finally Marty reaches up and stops its swinging with the rounded end of his splint. Visser eyes the splint. VISSER (genially) Stick your finger up the wrong person's ass? Marty is silent, but Visser is in a good mood. VISSER You know a friend of mine broke his hand a while back. Put in a cast. Very next day he takes a fall, protects his bad hand, falls on his good one, breaks that too. So now he's got two busted flippers and I say to him "Creighton, I hope your wife loves you. 'Cause for the next five weeks you cannot wipe your own goddamn ass..." Overcome by laughter. Finally: VISSER ...That's the test, ain't it? Test of true love-- MARTY Got a job for you. VISSER (settling down) ...Well, if the pay's right and it's legal I'll do it. MARTY It's not strictly legal. Visser shrugs, lights up another cigarette with his fraternally inscribed lighter and drops the lighter onto the dashboard. VISSER If the pay's right I'll do it. MARTY It's, uh... it's in reference to that gentleman and my wife. The more I think about it the more irritated I get. VISSER Yeah? Well how irritated are you? Marty doesn't answer. Finally Visser laughs. VISSER ...Gee, I'm sorry to hear that. Can you tell me what you want me to do or is it a secret? MARTY Listen, I'm not--this isn't a joke here. Visser eyes him, still smiling. Finally he shrugs. VISSER You want me to kill 'em. MARTY I didn't say that. (a pause) Well? VISSER Well what? MARTY What do you think? VISSER You're an idiot. Marty's shoulders slump. He seems less tense, almost relieved. MARTY So, uh... this wouldn't interest you. VISSER I didn't say that. All I said was you're an idiot. Hell, you been thinking about it so much it's driving you simple. They are staring at each other. MARTY Ten thousand dollars I'll give you. Visser laughs again. VISSER I'm supposed to do a murder--two murders--and just trust you not to go simple on me and do something stupid. I mean real stupid. Now why should I trust you? MARTY For the money. VISSER (sobering) The money. Yeah. That's a right smart of money... He turns and gazes out the window. VISSER ...In Russia they make only fifty cents a day. He falls silent again, still staring out the window In the closeness of the car Marty is starting to sweat. MARTY (hoarsely) ...There's a big-- VISSER (abruptly) I want you to go fishing. MARTY ...What? VISSER Go down to Corpus for a few days. Get yourself noticed. I'll give you a call when it's done... You just find a way to cover that money. Marty is slumped in his seat, not responding to the fact that Visser has just ended the conversation. Finally he rouses himself and gets out of the car, leaving Visser staring at the door he has left open behind him. After a moment we hear Marty's footsteps approaching again, and he leans back into the open door with an afterthought. MARTY I'll take care of the money, you just make sure those bodies aren't found... There's a... These words are difficult to say. MARTY ...If you want, there's a big incinerator behind my place... The two men look at each other. Marty leaves. After a moment, Visser leans over to grab the handle of the still open door. VISSER (under his breath) Sweet Jesus, you are disgusting. The door slams. INT. EMPTY APARTMENT NIGHT The apartment is dark. We are looking across a shadowy floor towards a large window, through which cold blue street light shines. Through the window we can see the facade of the building across the street; we are three or four floors up. We can hear the animated, accented voice of an Hispanic woman approaching the apartment from the hallway behind us. LANDLADY (O.S.) --big windows, paneleen and everytheen. So you want, like your own place? Like a Town House? A crack of light shoots across the floor as we hear the apartment door open behind us. A figure enters frame. As it crosses into the shaft of light we see that it is Abby. She moves across the dark apartment, in silhouette against the window. LANDLADY (O.S.) No one will bother you here, sweetie-- An overhead light is switched on and the room is bathed in light. Several feet from Abby, an old man in a dirty undershirt is asleep on a cot. Abby starts. The old man grumbles, slowly sits up, squints. With the light, the window behind Abby has become a mirror of the entire room, in which we now see the matronly Landlady standing by the wall switch. The Landlady roars at the old man in Spanish. The man glowers at her. The Landlady looks back at Abby. LANDLADY (cheerful again) I show you around. We follow Abby as she accompanies the landlady back into the short hallway-entrance foyer. Abby glances back at the old man. ABBY Are you sure this is... Are you sure this apartment is vacant?... Mrs. Esteves? The Landlady laughs cheerfully. LANDLADY Oh yes... She gestures to a kitchen alcove on the left. LANDLADY ...That's the kitchen... She turns and throws a few more barbs in Spanish back toward the old man, then opens a door on the right side of the foyer and enters the bathroom. LANDLADY ...This is the bathroom... She flushes the toilet. LANDLADY ...The toilet works and everytheen... She bustles out of the bathroom and takes the two short steps back into the main room. She gestures expansively. LANDLADY ...And here we are back in the liveen room. She gives one vigorous stomp. LANDLADY ...Good floors. Gas heat. She points. LANDLADY ...That's Mr. Garcia. The old man is now sitting on the edge of the bed, smoking a cigarette, looking for a place to put the ash. The Landlady snaps at him again in Spanish, and is again cheerful as she turns back to address Abby. LANDLADY ...I was just esplaineen to him that he moved out of here yesterday... She walks to the apartment door. LANDLADY ...You look around. Don't mind Mr. Garcia; he use do be my brother-in- law. She walks out and shuts the door. The room is quiet. CLOSE SHOT ABBY Staring at the door. She looks at Mr. Garcia, looks nervously around the apartment. She looks back at Mr. Garcia. CLOSE SHOT MR. GARCIA Staring vacantly at Abby. He blows a stream of smoke across the room. The ash falls off his cigarette. STRIP BAR NIGHT EXHORTER'S CUBICLE Hunched over the public address microphone in his small cubicle of exhortation, is the middle-aged strip-bar barker. Years of service in the bar have left his exhortations depressingly bereft of conviction. EXHORTER How 'bout it, gentlemen, let's show out appreciation for Lorraine up there, a registered nurse from Bolton, Texas, how 'bout it gentlemen, yeah... THE BAR PROPER Meurice is one of a line of men sitting at the bar, all looking intently at the same point off left. All of the men except Meurice are conservatively dressed and apparently well-to-do. An audio loop is blaring a bump-and-grind version of "Yellow Rose of Texas," punctuated by the crash of cymbals and the thumping of toms. Abby enters and sits into an empty chair next to Meurice. ABBY Looks like the state legislature is out of session. Meurice continues to stare intently off. MEURICE I thought this is where they met. All of the heads at the bar start to swivel, including Meurice's. A couple of patrons hurriedly snatch their drinks off the bar. In the extreme foreground a stripper dances on the top of the bar into frame. We crop her just above her white high- heeled cowboy boots and her bare calves. The conversation continues with Abby looking at Meurice, but Meurice and everyone else at the bar looking up at a point somewhere above the stripper's calves. ABBY Listen Meurice, you're gonna help me with a problem. MEURICE I am? The stripper drops a white leatherette vest onto the bar in the foreground. The audience cheers. ABBY You're gonna keep an eye on Marty and Ray, make sure nothing happens. MEURICE It won't? Two sheriff-star pasties drop onto the bar. The audience cheers. MEURICE ...Ever occur to you, Abby, that maybe I'm the wrong person to ask? THE EXHORTER Into his microphone. EXHORTER Let's not sit on our wallets, gentlemen. Lorraine is up there dancing her heart out, and if you let that cash money set on your hip, you might just as well be broke... ABBY AND MEURICE She is rising to leave; he is still staring off. ABBY Thanks, Meurice. MEURICE Any time. But you don't have to worry about a thing for a while. Marty went down to Corpus yesterday. An old-west gunbelt hits the bar. The audience roars. THE EXHORTER Into his microphone. EXHORTER And remember, gentlemen, we're always here, two to two, A.M. to P.M., three hundred and sixty-four days and Christmas, God willing and the creek don't rise... RAY'S BEDROOM The room is dark. We are looking across the room toward a moonlit window. Beyond, across the lawn, the lamplit street is empty. Suddenly Abby sits bolt upright into frame from the bed below. ABBY He's in the house. Offscreen we hear Ray stirring in bed. RAY What's the matter? Abby twists around to look down at him. ABBY I could've sworn I heard something. RAY Door's locked. Nothing there. He pulls her down out of frame and we hold on the window and the empty lamplit street. Then Abby rises back into frame, in silhouette against the window, looking down at Ray. ABBY I knew it. 'Cause we wouldn't have heard anything if it was him. He's real careful. Fact is, he's anal. RAY ...Huh? ABBY Yeah, he told me once himself. He said to me... She taps herself on the forehead. ABBY ..."In here, Abby. In here... I'm anal." HIGH ANGLE RAY Looking up at Abby. RAY (yawning) ...Well I'll be damned. ABBY I couldn't believe it either... SIDE ANGLE ABBY Framed against the window, looking down at Ray. ABBY ...Me on the other hand, I got lots of personality... She drops down onto the bed out of frame. The camera holds on the window through which we see the empty lamplit street. ABBY Marty always said I had too much. 'Course he was never big on personality... She rises back up into frame, in silhouette against the window. ABBY ...He sent me to a psychiatrist to see if he could calm me down some. RAY Yeah? What happened? ABBY Psychiatrist said I was the healthiest person he'd ever met, so Marty fired him. RAY (sleepily) ...I don't know if you can fire a psychiatrist, exactly. ABBY Well, I didn't see him anymore, I'll tell you that much. HIGH ANGLE RAY His eyes half-closed. RAY Uh-huh. ABBY I said, Marty, how come you're anal and I gotta go to the psychiatrist? RAY What'd he say? SIDE ANGLE ABBY Framed against the window. ABBY Nothing. He's like you, he doesn't say much. RAY (murmuring) Thanks. ABBY Except when he doesn't say things they're usually nasty. RAY ...Mm-hmm. ABBY When you don't they're usually nice. RAY ...You ever get tired? ABBY Huh? Oh, yeah, I guess. Mm-hmm. Ray's hand rises into frame and coaxes Abby back down onto the bed, revealing, through the window, a green Volkswagon now parked at curbside on the lamplit street. We hear the rustle of sheets. As we hold on the window, we begin to hear the faint, distant sound of metal scraping against metal. HALLWAY / LIVING ROOM We track down the dark hallway into the living room. As the camera advances the sound of the scraping becomes louder. We are moving across the living room up to the front door of the bungalow. The scraping is louder still as we finally frame on a close shot of the doorknob, which is jiggling ever so slightly. We hear a click as the lock finally releases. The door swings slowly open, revealing a man's hand on the outside doorknob. We follow the hand as the man advances slowly and quietly across the living room. Abby's purse comes into frame, sitting on a bureau; next to it is a large tote bag. The hand rummages through the tote bag briefly, then the purse. The man withdraws Abby's pearl- handled revolver. He breaks it open. LOW-ANGLE CLOSE SHOT THE MAN'S FACE It is Visser. As we hear a click offscreen, his face glows a dim orange. BACK TO HIS HANDS His right holds the revolver, cylinder open, inside the purse. His left holds his cigarette lighter as he inspects the chamber. Three of the holes glint silver, the other three are black--empty. We hear the faint creaking of bedsprings. WIDE SHOT LIVING ROOM Visser cocks his head, listening, and looks down the hallway. He takes a couple of quiet steps across the living room and, as the camera tracks up to him, opens the back door of the bungalow. We follow him outside onto the lawn. EXT. RAY'S BUNGALOW We track behind him as he rounds the corner of the house and approaches the open window to Ray's bedroom. He slows, moves more cautiously, then sinks to his knees under the window. As he reaches into his breast pocket the camera continues tracking up to and over him, finally framing his POV through the window. On the bed inside we can dimly see Abby and Ray, asleep. We have been hearing a faint rumble, becoming louder and louder as if approaching from a distance. Just as the rumble becomes deafening a sudden bright flash of light illuminates the room, seeming to polarize the image of Abby and Ray in bed, and we: CUT TO EXT. PHONE BOOTH DAY A huge truck roars by on the street behind Visser, and with it the deafening rumble recedes. It is a painfully bright day. Visser stands sweating in the phone booth with the receiver pressed to his ear. We hear the phone ringing at the other end. Finally, it is picked up. VOICE Hello. VISSER Marty? MARTY Yeah. Is it... VISSER Ya catch any fish? MARTY ...What? VISSER Ya catch any fish? MARTY Yeah... VISSER ...What kind of fish? MARTY Listen, what is it? Is it done? Visser forces a chuckle. VISSER ...Yessir, you owe me some money. MARTY'S OFFICE NIGHT CLOSE SHOT TWO STRINGS OF FISH Being plopped down onto Marty's desk. WIDER THE OFFICE Visser sits facing the desk. He lights himself a cigarette and sets the lighter down on the desk in front of him. Marty settles, fidgeting, into the chair behind it. The bar is quiet, shut down. We hear only the whir of a fan somewhere offscreen. Marty and Visser are lit by a lamp on the desk between them. Light streams into the room from a bathroom in the background. Visser is looking at the dead fish. VISSER (dully) They look good. Marty half-rises from his seat and picks up one of the strings. MARTY Want a couple? He drops them on Visser's side of the desk. Visser's head draws back: he was only being polite. VISSER Just the ten thousand'll be fine. MARTY Got something to show me first? Visser hands a 9 x 12 envelope across the desk. Marty stares at it for a moment, then quickly bends back the flap and takes out an 8 x 10 photograph. THE PHOTOGRAPH It is a black-and-white shot of Abby and Ray in Ray's bed. The sheet that partially covers them is pocked with three dark bullet holes and is stained with blood. MARTY Staring dully down at the picture. MARTY Dead, huh? VISSER So it would seem. CLOSE SHOT THE TOP OF THE DESK Visser is pushing the fish away from his side of the desk with the eraser end of a pencil. MARTY What did you... BACK TO MARTY Still looking at the picture. He traces the outline of Abby's body with his finger. MARTY ...What did you do with the bodies? VISSER It's taken care of. The less you know about it the better. MARTY Jesus, I don't believe it... Marty slips the picture back into its 9 x 12 envelope. His face is pale. MARTY ...I think I'm gonna be sick. He rises and heads for the bathroom, still clutching the envelope. CLOSE SHOT VISSER As his eyes follow Marty's exit. The bathroom door doesn't close all the way; a narrow shaft of light slices the office from the bare bulb in the bathroom. VISSER I'll want that picture back... He turns to look across the desk. VISSER'S POV The standing safe behind the desk. BACK TO VISSER Still looking at the safe. Beads of sweat have popped out on his forehead. He fans himself with his cowboy hat. VISSER ...and you did say somethin' about some money. We hear a toilet flush offscreen. LONG SHOT MARTY'S OFFICE As he reenters the office. MARTY Your money, yeah. Visser stares dully down at the desktop. VISSER Something I got to ask you, Marty. I've been very very careful. Have you been very very careful? MARTY Of course. VISSER Nobody knows you hired me? HIGH ANGLE CORNER OF THE OFFICE Marty is hunched over the open safe, still holding the envelope. Blocking Visser's view of the safe with his body, he slides the picture of Abby's and Ray's corpses from under the envelope into the safe, then withdraws two packets of money. MARTY Don't be absurd, I wasn't about to tell anyone... He shuts the safe and spins the dial. MARTY ...This is an illicit romance--we've got to trust each other to be discreet... He walks across the room and throws the money and the envelope down on the desk. MARTY ...For richer, for poorer. Visser looks from the money down at his hands. They are sweating. VISSER Don't say that. Your marriages don't work out so hot... He wipes his hands on his pants. VISSER ...How did you cover the money? Marty sits and props his booted feet up on the desk. MARTY It's taken care of. The less you know about it the better. He smiles. MARTY ...I just made a call about that. It'll look fine. VISSER (shaking his head) I must've gone money simple. This kind of murder... He nods toward the envelope on the desk. VISSER ...it's too damn risky. MARTY Then you shouldn't have done it. Can't have it both ways. He pushes the money across the desk with his boot. MARTY ...Count it if you want. VISSER (reaching into his coat) Nah, I trust ya. His hand comes out with a gun pointing at Marty and--BAM--he fires, an orange lick of flame spurting from the gun. Both men sit frozen. Visser's hand is the only thing that moved. CLOSE SHOT MARTY Staring at Visser. After the gun blast we hear only the whir of the fan. CLOSE SHOT VISSER Staring at Marty. MED SHOT MARTY OVER VISSER'S SHOULDER His eyes are now shut. Otherwise he hasn't moved. A blood stain is growing on the front of his shirt. WIDE SHOT THE OFFICE The two face each other across the desk. Visser's gun is still trained on Marty. After a moment Visser starts fanning himself again with his cowboy hat. The only movement in the frame is the slow back- and-forth of the yellow hat, rhythmically in and out of shadow as it catches and loses the light from the desk lamp. There is a long pause. Finally one of Marty's feet slips from the desk and hits the floor with a THUD. Visser lays the gun on the desk. CLOSE SHOT VISSER As he reaches into his breast pocket and withdraws a handkerchief. He wipes his forehead, then picks up the gun and wipes it off. He leans down with the gun. CLOSE SHOT THE GUN As Visser places it deliberately on the floor near the desk. It is Abby's pearl-handled revolver. THE DESKTOP FROM DESK LEVEL As Visser straightens up in the foreground. From our head-on angle shooting across the desk we can see the bright metallic glint of Visser's cigarette lighter underneath the dead fish. Visser's hands move over the near part of the desk, picking up the money and the 9 x 12 picture envelope. EXTREME HIGH SHOT THE OFFICE As Visser turns from the desk and walks across the room out of frame. We hear the back door opening. VISSER Who looks stupid now. The door slams shut. The only sound is the whir of the fan. A pause. The camera tracks slowly forward, tilting down to keep Marty and the desktop centered in frame. As the camera moves the noise of the fan grows louder. When Marty's body and the desk are directly beneath us, the blades of the ceiling fan cut across the immediate foreground and effect a: WIPE TO: MARTY'S BAR LATER It is completely still. We are looking from the bar, across the dark empty floor, toward the pebbled windows at the front of the building that catch a hard blue light from the streetlamps outside. The jukebox in the middle distance glows in the darkness. A pair of headlights catches the pebbled glass and grows brighter as we hear a car pull up to the bar and stop. We hear a car door open and shut, then the sound of feet on gravel. A huge shadow appears on the pebbled glass as the figure crosses in front of the headlights. The man tries the door, finds it locked, and walks back in front of the headlights to cup his hands at a window. He walks back to the door, and a moment later it swings open--framing him in the doorway in silhouette. We follow him as he moves across the floor, behind the bar and up to the cash register. He switches on a small fluorescent light clamped to the top of the cash register. It is Ray. He punches a key and the register rings open. He lifts up the empty cash drawer and takes some papers from underneath it. RAY'S POV As he flips through the papers; bills, receipts, no money. BACK TO RAY As he finishes flipping through the papers. RAY (muttering) Damn... He slips them back under the cash drawer and slams the register shut. Turning from the register he glances around the bar, the pauses, noticing something. RAY'S POV Light is spilling out from under the door to Marty's office. BACK TO RAY As he starts across the floor to Marty's office. RAY Marty... He reaches the door and knocks sharply. No answer. He turns the knob. RAY Marty... The door is locked. We hear the muffled whir of the ceiling fan inside. A pause. Ray withdraws a ring of keys from his pocket and uses one on the door. The door swings open. Over his shoulder we see Marty, still at his desk, his back to us. On foot is still propped on the desk. RAY What's the matter, you deaf? No answer. Ray stumbles toward Marty. He stumbles slightly and we hear the sharp blast of a gun and the sound of something metallic skating across the floor. Ray, startled, steadies himself against the desk, then studies Marty. RAY'S POV There is a dark pool of blood under Marty's chair. BACK TO RAY He looks back up at Marty, then walks behind his chair and throws a wall switch. The room is bathed in light. His eyes still on Marty, Ray crosses behind the desk. RAY'S POV TRACKING SHOT The camera moves in a slow arc around the back of Marty's motionless head. BACK TO RAY Still moving. He looks away from Marty, scans the floor. He gets down on his hands and knees and peers under the safe. RAY'S POV There is a glinting silver circle in the darkness under the safe. It is the business end of the revolver that Ray half- stumbled over, half-kicked. BACK TO RAY Still on his hands and knees. He reaches in and we hear a rattle as he gropes under the safe. He withdraws the gun, looks at it. THE GUN It is Abby's revolver. BACK TO RAY For a long moment he doesn't move. Then, slowly, he starts to get up. WIDER The desk, Marty behind it, Ray straightening behind him. Ray looks from the gun to Marty, slowly sets the gun down on the desk. A pause. He begins to hoist Marty from the chair. There is noise from the bar, as of someone entering. Ray reacts. THE DOOR Separating the bar and back office. Ray hurries to it. MEURICE (O.S.) Marty? Footsteps approach the door. EXTREME CLOSE SHOT RAY'S HAND ON THE DOOR BOLT He turns it gently. The bolt clicks shut. BACK TO RAY Meurice's footsteps draw nearer. MEURICE (O.S.) Marty, ya home? There is a rap at the door; Ray stands frozen. The doorknob rattles. Ray reaches out compulsively to grab it, but stops himself before actually touching it. Now Meurice's footsteps can be heard going casually back into the bar. We hold on Ray's rigidly set face. MEURICE (O.S.) What day is it today, Angie? WOMAN (O.S.) Tuesday. MEURICE (O.S.) Tuesday is ladies' night. WOMAN (O.S.) What? MEURICE (O.S.) Tuesday night is ladies' night. All your drinks are free. We hear a record drop on the jukebox and a Motown song blares. Ray crosses to Marty's chair and takes off his nylon windbreaker. He stoops down and tries to mop up the pool of blood with his windbreaker. This isn't going to work. He rises and walks over to the bathroom, the windbreaker dripping blood. MARTY'S OFFICE BATHROOM CLOSE SHOT FAUCET The song continues faintly in the background. The faucet is turned on and Ray's hand enters frame, holding a dirty white towel under the stream of water. BLOOD-SPATTERED FLOOR The song continues in the background. Ray's hand enters frame holding the balled-up towel. His windbreaker is wrapped inside. The camera follows as he pushes it across the trail of dripped blood to the pool of blood under Marty's chair. CLOSE SHOT MARTY He still has not moved. Ray rises into frame and takes him under the armpits. He notices something on the desk in front of him. CLOSE SHOT THE GUN ON THE DESK Ray's hand enters frame and picks it up. CLOSE SHOT MARTY'S COAT POCKET Ray's hand enters frame and slips the gun into Marty's pocket. Marty is hoisted up. EXT. BACK OF THE BAR / PARKING LOT Ray appears in the doorway. The music from the bar, though fainter, can still be heard. There are three or four wooden steps going down from the back door to the small gravel parking lot in back. Ray backs down the stairs; Marty's feet THUMP-THUMP-THUMP down the stairs after him. The rear door of Ray's car is open. Ray heaves in Marty's torso. Marty's legs rest on the ground outside the car. Ray takes an ankle in each hand and pushes. CLOSE SHOT RAY As he shuts the door. He looks up across the parking lot. RAY'S POV The incinerator belching fire and smoke. We hear its distant roar over the bar song. We hear the car door slam. HIGH-ANGLE TRACKING SHOT TOWARD INCINERATOR We are looking down on Ray's car as the camera tracks behind it towards the incinerator. At the cut the roar of the incinerator is suddenly louder. It grows louder still as we approach it. Ray's car draws even with the incinerator without slowing or stopping. The wadded-up towel is chucked out of his window into the fire. We hold on the fire as Ray's car rolls on out of frame. INT. RAY'S CAR As he drives down a deserted country highway. We hear the rhythmic sound of the wheels clomping over asphalt. The radio is broadcasting a fundamentalist's sermon, periodically interrupted by static. Ray is sweating. EVANGELIST --so there were three signs, the second of which is Famine, this famine which I have already pointed out is devastatin' Africa and the Indian subcontinent. And the third of these signs is earthquakes. Now I don't know why he threw that in but if you talk to a geologist, and I've talked to many, he'll tell you that earthquake activity-- Ray twists around and looks in the back seat. RAY'S POV Marty is lying inert. EVANGELIST --has increased almost eighty percent in the past two years, and what's more, in two years' time we'll be experiencin' what's knows as the Jupiter Effect-- BACK TO RAY He looks back at the road. A car roars by. EVANGELIST --wherein all the planets of the known universe will be aligned up causin' an incredible buildup of destructive gravitational force. Now in Matthew Chapter Six, Verse Eighteen the Lord out and tells us that these are the signs by which we shall know that He is at our door. There are many good people disagree with me, but it's my belief that this Antichrist is alive today and livin' somewhere in Europe, in that ten- nation alliance I spoke of, bein' groomed for his task-- Ray switches off the radio. We hear the sound of faint, labored breathing. EXTREME CLOSE SHOT RAY His jaw tightens. He whips his head toward the back seat. His head snaps forward again and he slams on the brakes. The car screeches to a halt. EXT. HIGHWAY LONG SHOT THE CAR As Ray's door flies open. He is bolting from the car. The camera, at waist level, tracks toward him as he races out into the field that abuts the highway. Fifty yards in he finally stops, panting, framed from a low angle. His breath vaporizes in the crisp night air. We hear only his breath and the chirring of crickets. He is looking back toward the road. RAY'S POV LONG SHOT THE CAR Standing abandoned on the shoulder of the deserted highway. Its headlights cast a lonely beam up the road. No movement. BACK TO RAY His panting slows. He is in a cold sweat. After a long moment, he starts walking slowly, reluctantly, back toward the car. RAY'S POV TRACKING Toward the car. Still no sign of movement. BACK TO RAY He slows as he draws up to the back of the car. He looks in the back window. RAY'S POV BACK SEAT OF THE CAR It is empty. The door on the highway side is ajar. BACK TO RAY No reaction. He walks around the back of the car onto the highway. He looks up the road. RAY'S POV Marty is crawling up the road on his hands and knees, leaving a trail of blood. The headlights of Ray's car give a fantastically long shadow. BACK TO RAY Still no reaction. He gets into the driver's seat and stares through the windshield as he gropes for the ignition key. RAY'S POV Marty, crawling. BACK TO RAY He throws the car into drive, looks at his target, thinks-- decides. He pulls the key out of the ignition and goes around to the trunk of the car. He opens it and pulls out a shovel. MARTY LOW ANGLE From in front. The headlights glare behind him. His breath vaporizes. In the background Ray is walking toward him, dragging the shovel, which scrapes along the asphalt. As Ray moves into the foreground and turns to face Marty only his lower legs and the shovel are in frame. The shovel rises out of frame. CLOSE SHOT RAY Both hands hold the shovel tensed over his shoulder. He stares down at Marty. A long pause. We hear a distant rumble. CLOSE SHOT RAY'S FEET Inches away from Marty. Marty's hand slides forward and wraps around one of Ray's ankles. BACK TO RAY He shudders. He adjusts his grip on the shovel. The rumble grows louder. RAY'S FEET He jerks his foot away, breaking Marty's grasp. BACK TO RAY Looks up from Marty. The rumble grows louder. RAY'S POV Headlight beams, although not yet the headlights themselves, are visible a long way down the road. BACK TO RAY Staring down the road. Finally he lowers the shovel, walks back to the car and throws it viciously into the trunk, walks back up into the foreground and stoops down. CLOSE SHOT MARTY As Ray grabs him under the armpits and starts dragging him back to the car. Just before Ray heaves him into the back seat, Marty coughs weakly. A fine spray of blood comes out with the cough. The engine rumble is quite loud now. MED SHOT RAY FROM ACROSS THE ROOF OF THE CAR As he slams the back door shut. He presses himself against the side of the car. Headlights glare over him; the truck roars by just behind him. EXT. OPEN FIELD FULL SHOT RAY'S CAR Sudden quiet at the cut. We are looking at Ray's car in profile, parked in the middle of a deserted field. From offscreen we hear the sound of a shovel biting into earth. We track laterally down the car, along the beam of its headlights, to finally frame Ray as he climbs out of the shallow grave he has just finished digging. He plants the shovel and walks back to the car. VERY WIDE SHOT The grave in the middle background; the car's headlights beyond it. Ray is dragging Marty toward the grave. He dumps him in. HIGH SHOT THE GRAVE As Marty thumps to the bottom, face up. CLOSE SHOT RAY As he bends over to pick up the shovel, dripping sweat. We hear the shovel biting into earth. HIGH SHOT THE GRAVE Ray, in the foreground, pitches the first shovelful of earth onto Marty. Marty moves slightly. LOW SHOT RAY As he pauses, looking down into the grave. He stoops down and resumes shoveling, bobbing in and out of frame as he hurls dirt into the grave. BACK TO HIGH SHOT As Ray shovels, Marty is moving under the loose dirt. A faint, inarticulate noise comes from the grave. Almost imperceptibly, Marty's right arm starts to rise. LOW SHOT FROM INSIDE THE GRAVE Ray stands on the lip of the grave, hunched over his shovel, crisply illuminated by the headlights. In the shadowy foreground Marty's arm rises, extended toward Ray. He is clutching Abby's gun in his splint-fingered hand. CLOSE SHOT RAY As he straightens up and stands motionless, expressionless, watching Marty, making no attempt to get out of the way. HIGH SHOT MARTY The gun extended into the foreground. His index finger splinted, he slides his middle finger over the trigger of the gun. LOW SHOT RAY Watching. HIGH SHOT MARTY The gun trembling in the foreground. His knuckle whitens over the trigger. The trigger releases and we hear the dull click of an empty chamber. LOW SHOT RAY Staring blankly down at Marty. SIDE SHOT Of Marty's gun hand as Ray slowly sinks down on the lip of the grave, bracing himself with the shovel. His hand reaches for Marty's. Marty squeezes off two more empty chambers. Ray's hand slowly closes over the barrel of the gun. As he pulls, the gun slides from Marty's fingers. CLOSE SHOT THE BLADE OF THE SHOVEL Biting into the earth. MED SHOT RAY Furiously shoveling dirt into the grave. HIGH SHOT THE GRAVE Marty barely visible under the dirt. MED SHOT RAY Shoveling, panting. HIGH SHOT THE GRAVE Half full. MED SHOT RAY Working furiously. His breath comes in short gasps. HIGH SHOT THE GRAVE It is filled. Ray is packing down the earth, slamming the shovel furiously against the bare patch of earth. CLOSE SHOT THE BLADE OF THE SHOVEL Being slammed down against the earth. Again and again. EXT. OPEN FIELD SUNRISE The staccato beat of the shovel slamming against earth drops out at the cut. There is perfect quiet. The sun is just peeping over the horizon. In the foreground Ray is sitting in the open door of his car, smoking a cigarette. His gaze is fixed on a spot offscreen. HIS POV A house. Quite near by. The house and its perfect green rectangle of lawn are set incongruously in the middle of the open field. BACK TO RAY Staring, without emotion. He takes one last, fierce drag on the cigarette, then flicks it away. He takes the shovel, walks over to the grave and stares at it for several seconds, shovel clasped firmly in both hands. He walks back to the car. HIGH SHOT House, car and grave. Ray throws the shovel into the car, gets in, and turns the ignition. The engine coughs weakly and dies. He tries again. Same result. One more time. The engine coughs, sputters, and fires to life. The car runs over the grave and rattles on across the rutted field towards the highway in the distance. INT. RAY'S CAR DAWN As Ray drives down the straight empty highway in the flat early-morning light. CLOSE SHOT RAY Pale and unblinking. RAY'S POV THE HIGHWAY In the distance we see a beat-up white station wagon approaching. It's headlights wink on, then off again. BACK TO RAY He squints at the approaching car. RAY'S POV The car is closer. It's headlights wink again. BACK TO RAY His jaw tightens. He stares intently at the car. Then, abruptly, he looks down at his dashboard. CLOSE SHOT HEADLIGHT KNOB ON THE DASHBOARD His headlights are on. Ray's hand enters frame and pushes in the knob. SIDE ANGLE RAY Watching the approaching station wagon. As it passes we catch a glimpse of its occupant. He grins and cocks a you-got-it finger at Ray before roaring out of frame. EXT. DESERTED GAS STATION HIGH ANGLE The station hasn't opened yet. Ray's car, empty, stands alone in the lot. Flat prairie stretches to the horizon. No movement in the frame. At the cut we hear the faint sound of a phone ringing through a receiver. After four or five rings the phone is picked up and we begin a slow crane down. ABBY (through phone; sleepily) Hello? RAY (present; very hoarsely) Abby... you all right? ABBY Ray?... What time is it? RAY I don't know. It's early... I love you. A beat. ABBY ...You all right? RAY I don't know. I better get off now. The continuing crane down reveals Ray in a phone booth in the foreground. ABBY Okay, see ya... Thanks, Ray. RAY Abby-- The phone disconnects. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT ABBY Her sleeping head on a pillow. Offscreen we hear a door open and shut. A moment later Ray's dirt-caked hand comes into frame and gently brushes a wisp of hair back for Abby's face. We hear Ray walk across the apartment and a moment later the sound of water running. Abby stirs. She looks offscreen. LONG SHOT RAY Standing in the doorway to the bathroom. He is wiping his hands on a towel. ABBY (sleepily) ...Ray? RAY You're bad. Still half asleep, Abby smiles. ABBY ...What? RAY I said you're bad. There is a long pause. Finally: ABBY (smiling) ...You're bad too. Ray swings a chair out and sits down behind a table at the far end of the room. He leans back and props his legs up on the table. He is staring across the room at Abby. RAY We're both bad. FADE OUT BLACK As we hear the click of a pull-string the camera is dropping: down past an orange safe light, down the length of the string, down to a metal darkroom tray where two short strips of negative are burning. Visser's hand and yellow sleeve cuff (now orange) enter frame, with an 8 x 10 black-and-white photograph. The photograph is dropped into the tray. As it burns we see that it is the same picture of Abby's and Ray's "corpses" as Visser showed Marty, except that in this print the bullet holes and blood are less convincingly brushed in. Another print is dropped into the tray and ignites. In this one we see bullet holes but no blood. A third print is dropped in and ignites. It is the original undoctored shot of Abby and Ray asleep in bed. Visser's hands enter frame holding the picture-envelope that he took away from Marty's office. Visser rips it in half and is about to drop it into the tray, but stops abruptly. There is posterboard, not a photograph, peeking out of the torn envelope. Visser's hands pull the two halves of the placard from the envelope and fit them together. The stenciled 8 x 10 placard says: "All Employees Must Wash Hands Before Resuming Work." LOW-ANGLE CLOSE SHOT VISSER Staring at the placard in disbelief. After a moment his hand rises into frame to deposit a cigarette in his mouth. His hand drops back down, groping in a pocket. His hand jumps back into frame, empty; he thumps at his breast pockets; he can't find his lighter. He wheels and exits frame. The light snaps off. A door slams shut. ABBY'S APARTMENT DAY CLOSE SHOT RAY He has dozed off in his chair. Offscreen we hear a door slam, and his eyes open. ABBY Emerging from the bathroom. Her voice has a flat echo in the bare apartment. ABBY Why didn't you get into bed? RAY (groggy) I didn't think I could sleep. I'm surprised you could. Are you all right? ABBY Yeah... She walks over and sits down on the bed. ABBY ...You called me this morning. RAY Yeah. Abby looks at him, expecting more. Finally: RAY ...I just wanted to let you know that everything was all right. I took care of everything. Now all we have to do is keep our heads. ABBY ...What do you mean? Ray finally looks directly at her. RAY I know about it, Abby. I went to the bar last night. Abby is looking at him in alarm. ABBY What happened?--Was Meurice there? RAY Yeah. He laughs shortly. RAY ...He didn't see me, though. Nobody saw me. The chair grates back as he stands up and looks vaguely around the room. RAY ...Is it cold in here? Abby is looking at him nervously. ABBY Well... what happened? RAY I cleaned it all up, but that ain't important... He starts nervously pacing around the room, looking for something. RAY ...What's important is what we do now; I mean we can't go around half- cocked. What we need is some time to think about this, figure it out... He moves a packing crate aside, still hunting around the apartment. RAY ...Anyway, we got some time now. But we gotta be smart. ABBY Ray-- RAY Abby, never point a gun at anyone unless you're gonna shoot him. And when you shoot him you better make sure he's dead... Ray's pacing is more agitated as he looks distractedly around the apartment. RAY ...because if he's not dead he's gonna get up and try and kill you. He pauses, seemingly at a total loss. RAY ...That's the only thing they told us in the service that was worth a goddamn--Where the hell's my windbreaker? ABBY What the hell happened, Ray? Ray is walking to the window. Sunlight streams in around him. RAY That ain't important. What's important is that we did it. That's the only thing that matters. We both did it for each other... He stoops down to look through a pile of clothes by the window. RAY ...That's what's important. ABBY I don't know what you're talking about. Ray's head snaps around. Staring at her he slowly rises to his feet and then remains still. ABBY I... I mean what're you talking about, Ray? I haven't done anything funny. RAY ...What was that? Abby, startled, can't contain her agitation anymore. ABBY (rapidly) Ray, I mean you ain't even acting like yourself. First you call me at five in the A.M. saying all kinds of nice things over the telephone and then you come charging in here scaring me half to death without even telling me what it is I'm supposed to be scared of. I gotta tell you it's extremely rattling. RAY We track toward him, isolating him against the window. He is perfectly still. For a long time he can't speak. RAY (quietly) ...Don't lie to me, Abby-- BACK TO ABBY Still worked up. ABBY How can I be lying if I don't even know-- The ring of the telephone cuts her off. She looks at the phone, pauses for a moment, then continues, struggling. ABBY ...I mean if you and him had a fight or something, I don't care, as long as you... Her voice trails off. The telephone won't stop ringing. Abby and Ray are staring at each other, seemingly oblivious to it. Finally: RAY ...Pick it up. CLOSE SHOT TELEPHONE Still ringing. Abby's hand enters frame and picks it up. ABBY What. Through the phone we hear only the rhythmic whir of a ceiling fan. Abby shifts the phone to her other ear, listening hard. It is the same sound we heard earlier when she picked up the phone at Ray's house. As before, the line clicks dead. ABBY (looking at Ray) ...Welp, that was him. There is a long moment of silence. Then Ray's voice comes from across the room: RAY ...Who? ABBY Marty. There is silence again. LONG SHOT THE APARTMENT Ray shifts in front of the window. He laughs humorlessly. The laugh stops abruptly. ABBY ...What's going on with you two? RAY (quietly) All right... He starts across the room. RAY ...You can call him back, whoever it was... He is heading for the door. RAY ...I'll get out of your way. He pauses at the foyer and pulls Abby's gun out of his pocket. He sets it on a shelf by the door. ABBY Watching. We hear the door open. RAY (O.S.) You left your weapon behind. We hear the door slam shut. CLOSE SHOT CEILING FAN We hear the rhythmic whir of the fan. We tilt down from the ceiling to reveal that we are in the living room of Ray's bungalow. In the foreground Visser sits in a chair with the cradled telephone in his lap, facing the front door, which stands open in the background. The contents of Abby's tote bag lie strewn on the bureau next to Visser. Her purse is not there. After a moment Visser rouses himself and starts to sweep the articles back into the tote bag. INT. MEURICE'S APARTMENT DAY LOW WIDE SHOT LIVING ROOM It is dark, lit only by the morning light leaking in around the drawn blinds. It is a small modern apartment such as one sees in large apartment complexes--shag carpeting, built-in bar. In the extreme foreground the small red "Power" light of a telephone answering machine glows in the darkness. The front door opens in the background, spilling bright sunlight. Meurice stoops down, picks up two newspapers, enters, and shuts the door. He walks toward the camera and his hand enters frame in extreme foreground to punch the rewind button on the machine. His hand leaves frame. A few pieces of mail are flipped down onto the machine table, piece by piece, as the machine rewinds. He reaches down again and hits playback. After a beep: WOMAN'S VOICE Hi Meurice, this is Helene, Helene Trend, and I'm calling 'cause I wanna know just what the hell that remark you made about Sylvia's supposed to mean... Mail continues to flip down onto the table, piece by piece. WOMAN'S VOICE ...She says you're full of shit and frankly I believe her. And hey, I love you too. Sure. Anyway, you better call me soon because I'm going to South America tonight--you know, Uruguay? Dial tone. Beep. MARTY'S VOICE (barking) Listen asshole, you know who this is. I just got back from Corpus and there's a lot of money missing from the safe... The mail stops dropping; Marty has Meurice's attention. MARTY'S VOICE ...I'm not saying you took it but the place was your responsibility and I told you to keep an eye on your asshole friend. Don't--uh, don't come to the bar tonight, I've got a meeting. But tomorrow I want to have a word with you, and with Ray--if you can find him. Dial tone. Beep. Meurice's hand drops into frame. WOMAN'S VOICE Meurice, where the hell have you been? I-- His finger presses the stop button. MATCH CUT TO: RAY'S FINGER Pressing into a dark stain in the upholstery of the back seat of his car. When he raises it the fingertip is red--the seat still wet with blood. CLOSE SHOT RAY Looking down at the seat. He backs out of the car and walks up the driveway to his house. INT. RAY'S LIVING ROOM As he comes through the screen door. It bangs shut behind him. As he crosses the living room we see, and he hears, Meurice's Trans Am pulling up and stopping at the foot of the lawn. Ray turns and looks out the window. CLOSE SHOT CLOSET DOOR Ray throws it open and hurriedly pulls out the first thing at hand--a sheet. We hear the door of the Trans Am open and slam shut. EXT. RAY'S BUNGALOW TRACKING SHOT ON RAY Exiting the house as the screen door bangs and shudders behind him. He hurries down the walk. TRACKING SHOT RAY'S POV Meurice is rounding the bottom of the lawn and starting up the drive toward the incriminating car. Its back door is standing ajar. MEURICE I hope you're planning on leaving town. BACK TO RAY Reacting to the line as he reaches the car. He bends over to throw the sheet over the seat just as Meurice walks up behind him. RAY (his back to Meurice; arranging the sheet) Got a problem, Meurice? MEURICE No, you do, cowboy. You been to the bar? Ray is still hunched in the open doorway. He freezes momentarily in arranging the sheet. RAY ...Why? MEURICE You shouldn't have taken the money... Ray doesn't reply or turn around. Meurice is getting more strident. MEURICE ...Look at me man, I'm serious. You broke in the bar and ripped off the safe... Ray backs out of the car and turns around. MEURICE ...Abby warned me you were gonna make trouble. Trouble with you is, you're too fucking obvious; the only ones with the combination are me and you... Ray looks evenly at Meurice. Behind him the sheet has been arranged over the seat. He puts an unlit cigarette in his mouth. MEURICE ...and Abby. Maybe. But as far as I'm concerned that only leaves one fucking possibility. RAY (tonelessly) What's that? Meurice reaches out and swipes the unlit cigarette out of Ray's mouth. MEURICE Those things are nothing but coffin nails. He turns and stares down the street, exasperated. MEURICE ...Look. Personally I don't give a shit. I know Marty's a hard-on but you gotta do something. I don't know; give the money back, say you're sorry, or get the fuck out of here, or something... Mow that his temper is gone, he realizes he has nothing much to say. He shakes his head and turns back down the drive, muttering as he lights himself Ray's cigarette. MEURICE ...It's very humiliating, preaching about this shit. CLOSE SHOT RAY Standing in front of the back door of his car, watching Meurice walk away. His right hand rises into frame to deposit another unlit cigarette in his mouth. Offscreen, Meurice calls from the end of the drive: MEURICE I'm not laughing at this, Ray Bob, so you know it's no fucking joke. We hear his car door slam. After a moment Ray exits frame, heading for the house. The camera tracks slowly in to the back window of the car. Traces of blood are starting to seep up from the upholstery into the sheet. INT. MARTY'S HOUSE DAY LOW WIDE SHOT FRONT FOYER We are looking across the tiled floor toward the front doorway. The room has the dim gray cast of daytime inside a shuttered house. We hold on the empty foyer as we hear an intermittent high whining sound. We hear the padding of feet on carpet, and then the clatter of nails on tile as Opal, Marty's German shepherd, trots into frame and circles the foyer, still whining. She jumps up and scratches desperately at the front door. A slow, rhythmic pounding is very faint on the track. EXT. MARTY'S BAR DUSK Abby has just gotten out of her car and is walking up to the front of the darkened bar. The faint, rhythmic thumping continues over the cut, its source somewhere offscreen. As Abby takes a key out of her purse and lets herself into the bar, the thumping stops. INT. MARTY'S BAR Abby switches on the lights, looks around, goes to the back- office door. Locked. As she fits her key into the lock: ABBY (quietly) Marty? The door swings open, fanning a shaft of light onto the darkened room. MARTY'S OFFICE BATHROOM We are looking from the inside at the bathroom door that won't close all the way. As the light fans into the office beyond and seeps in through the crack of the bathroom door, we see Visser's sleeve cuff and his hand pressing against the door, to hold it near-shut. BACK TO ABBY Standing in the office doorway. We pull her into the room. She stops abruptly, looking past the camera, and wrinkles her nose. ABBY'S POV Marty's fish, now half-decayed, still lie on the desk. Some of the desk drawers stand open, with some of their contents strewn across the surface of the desk. BACK TO ABBY She takes a step forward. We hear the crunch of glass underfoot. She looks down at the floor. ABBY'S POV Shards of broken glass lie on the floor. BACK TO ABBY She looks up from the floor toward the back door. ABBY'S POV The pane of the back-door window closest to the knob has been shattered from the outside, scattering broken glass into the office. BACK TO ABBY She crosses slowly to the desk, staring at the rotted fish. She looks up from the desk. ABBY'S POV On the standing safe behind the desk lies a white towel. Abby's hand enters frame ans picks up the towel. In slow motion a hammer that's been wrapped inside slips out of the towel, falls end-over-end, hits the floor with a dull thud. BACK TO ABBY Stooping down to pick up the hammer. At eye level as she stoops down is the combination dial to the safe. The dial has been battered by the hammer. Abby looks from the hammer to the floor under the desk chair. ABBY'S POV Blood stains. ABBY Staring down at the floor. She rises and looks at the desk. As she rises we hear glass under her feet. ABBY'S POV The dead fish. Beyond them, on the floor around the desk, broken glass. BACK TO ABBY Staring. ABBY'S POV The dead fish. BACK TO ABBY She seems to be falling slowly backwards. The camera falls with her, keeping her in close shot. Her head hits a pillow. We pull back slowly to reveal that she is lying on the bed in her apartment, staring across the room. She lies motionless on the bad, her eyes wide. ABBY'S POV Across the darkened apartment we see the curtainless windows, and beyond them, across the lamplit street, the facade of the opposite building. LONG SHOT ABBY Lying still. After a moment she gets out of bed, crosses to the front door of the apartment, locks it, then walks unsteadily back to the bed. FADE OUT FADE IN: SAME LONG SHOT ABBY IN BED She opens her eyes, lies still for a moment, coughs. She gets out of bed and walks across the still dark apartment to the bathroom. She shuts the bathroom door. BATHROOM Abby looks at herself in the mirror above the sink, then turns on the tap water. From a neighboring apartment we hear a dull rhythmic thumping on the wall. She pauses, listens for a moment, then starts to splash water on her face. From somewhere offscreen we hear the sharp sound of glass shattering. It reverberates for a moment, then dies. Abby looks up at the bathroom door. We hear a scraping at the lock of her apartment door. Abby listens. Suddenly we hear the lock springing open, and the front door swinging on its hinges. CLOSE SHOT ABBY Startled. She shuts off the water and stands motionless. Droplets of water are streaming down her face. We hear the sound of footsteps in the next room, crunching across broken glass. ABBY Ray...? There is no answer. After a moment we hear bedsprings creak in the next room. Abby opens the bathroom door and walks out. MAIN ROOM A shaft of light slices across the floor from the open bathroom door. Broken glass glints on the floor. In the semi- darkness we can see that someone is sitting on the bed. The person looks up. It is Marty. Abby recoils. MARTY Lover-boy oughta lock his door. Abby looks nervously at Marty. Droplets of water are still running down her face. She brushes one from her eye. MARTY I love you... He smiles thinly. MARTY ...That's a stupid thing to say, right? Abby takes a step back. ABBY I... I love you too. Still smiling, Marty shakes his head. MARTY No. You're just saying that because you're scared... He stands. We hear glass under his feet. He unbuttons the middle button of his coat and reaches inside. MARTY ...You left your weapon behind. He withdraws something from an inside pocket and tosses it to her. CLOSE SHOT ABBY'S HANDS As she catches the object. It is her compact. CLOSE SHOT ABBY She looks from her hands up to Marty. MARTY He'll kill you too. Marty gags, leans forward, doubles over to vomit--blood. The blood washes over the floor at his feet. ABBY Bolts upright in bead with a muffled groan. Sweat pours down her face. She brushes a drop of sweat from her eye and looks around. ABBY'S POV Moonlight glints through the windows across the hardwood floor. Through the windows we can see the facade of the opposite building. The apartment is dark and still, just as we left it before she fell asleep. BACK TO ABBY She slumps back onto the bed. One hand gropes down out of frame and comes up holding an illuminated alarm clock. She looks at it, drops it back to the floor. She turns on her side and stares across the room toward the window. ABBY'S POV The window. DISSOLVE THROUGH TO: SAME WINDOW SAME ANGLE PRE-DAWN It is still not quite light. The few lights that shined in the windows of the opposite building before are now off; the facade of the building is a flat, undetailed gray. CLOSE SHOT ABBY Still lying on her side on the bed, her eyes open, staring at the window. BACK TO LONG SHOT WINDOW After a moment Abby enters frame. She picks her coat off a chair and puts it on. We hear a car door slam. EXT. RAY'S BUNGALOW PRE-DAWN Abby has just gotten out of her car in the foreground and is crossing the lawn to the house. Down the road the street lights are still on. One light burns in the house, in the window of Ray's bedroom. Abby approaches it. THROUGH THE WINDOW Over Abby's shoulder, as she leans against the sill of the open window and looks inside. Ray sits on the bed in the empty room, smoking a cigarette, his profile to the window, gazing fixedly at the wall. ABBY Ray. Ray starts and looks toward the window, squinting. INT. RAY'S BUNGALOW WIDE SHOT LIVING ROOM Abby is coming through the screen door. The room is strikingly bare of everything except furniture. All personal effects have been removed. Abby looks around, bewildered, as Ray enters from the hallway. ABBY ...Where is everything? RAY In the trunk. Abby, still standing in front of the door, looks at him uncomprehendingly. Ray walks over to a couple of cardboard boxes stacked in the corner. RAY ...In the car. He ties a knot around the top carton with a piece of cord, then cuts the cord with a collapsible fishing knife. ABBY ...You leaving? RAY Isn't that what you want? She slowly shakes her head. RAY Wanna come with me? He leans back against the boxes, watching her. ABBY ...But first I gotta know what happened. RAY What do you want to know? ABBY You broke into the bar. You wanted to get your money. You and Marty had a fight. Something happened... Ray shakes his head, smiling. Abby squints at him, looking for help. ABBY ...I don't know, wasn't it you? Maybe a burglar broke in, and you found-- RAY With your gun?... He puts the knife in his pocket and walks over to the door. As he approaches her: RAY ...Nobody broke in, Abby. I'll tell you the truth... Ray faces Abby in front of the door. RAY ...Truth is, I've felt sick the last couple of days. Can't eat... Can't sleep... When I try to I... Abby... It's difficult to bring out. Ray's hand gropes for the cross- slat on the screen door. Finally: RAY ...The truth is... he was alive when I buried him. Abby stares. An object materializes in the sky beyond them. It is flipping end-over-end in slow motion, moving toward Abby and Ray and the screen door. Abby and Ray, each staring at the other, fail to notice until-- THWACK--it bounces off the screen. Abby starts; Ray doesn't. The spell is broken, Abby pushes hesitantly at the screen door. Ray's hand slides off the cross-slat; he makes no move to stop her. CLOSE SHOT THE FRONT STOOP As Abby steps over the rolled-up newspaper that hit the screen door. TRACKING SHOT ON ABBY Hurrying down the driveway to get to her car. A low rumble is building on the soundtrack. Abby glances at Ray's car as she passes it. ABBY'S POV TRACKING FORWARD THE CAR More blood has seeped into and dried on the dropsheet covering the back seat. The bass rumble grows louder, punctuated by a rhythmic thumping. EXT. MEURICE'S APARTMENT DAY OVER ABBY'S SHOULDER As she pounds frantically on the door--the sound continuing over the cut. After a moment the door edges open. Meurice is standing in the doorway in a long bathrobe. A sleeper's blindfold is pushed up over his forehead. MEURICE Abby. What's the matter? ABBY I... I'm sorry, Meurice. I gotta talk to you... Can I come in? He looks at her hard. MEURICE Yeah... yeah, come in... He steps aside to let her pass. MEURICE ...but I gotta tell ya... INT. MEURICE'S APARTMENT As Abby enters. MEURICE ...I'm retired. Meurice switches on a table lamp; the curtains are drawn against the sun. Abby follows Meurice over to the bar. MEURICE Jesus, I got a hangover. Want a drink? ABBY No, I-- MEURICE Well I do... He pours himself a drink. MEURICE ...For you I answer the door. If you wanna stay here, that's fine. But I'm retired. ABBY Something happened with Marty and Ray-- MEURICE (sharply) Abby... He glares at her. MEURICE ...Let me ask you one question... He slams back the drink. MEURICE ...Why do you think I'm retired. He grimaces. MEURICE ...Ray stole a shitload of money from Marty. Until both of 'em calm down I'm not getting involved. ABBY No Meurice, it's worse than that. Something really happened, I think Marty's dead-- MEURICE What?! Did Ray tell you that? ABBY Sort of... Meurice sits her down on the sofa. MEURICE That's total bullshit. Marty called me after he was jacked up... He tries to coax her into lying down. MEURICE ...I mean, I don't know where he is, but he ain't dead. ABBY Meurice-- MEURICE You don't look too good. You sleep last night? Her head meets an end cushion. ABBY Meurice, you gotta help me... Meurice rises from the sofa, sighs. MEURICE All right. Just sit tight. Try to get some sleep... He leans down to the table next to the sofa. MEURICE ...I'll find Marty, find out what's going on. CLOSE SHOT ABBY Her head on the cushion. We hear engine rumble. Abby twists her head back, following Meurice. As we hear the table lamp being switched off we: CUT TO: EXT. HIGHWAY NIGHT POV FROM A CAR The engine rumble continues over the cut. There is no other traffic on the highway. A light fog covers the road. A green highway sign says: "San Antonio 73 mi." We hear a car radio playing softly. CLOSE SHOT RAY Driving. He is gently lit by the light from the dashboard. He reaches forward to turn off the radio. The only sound now is the hum of the engine and the rhythmic clomping of tires on pavement. The look and sound of the scene are close to those of the first scene of the movie. Ray takes a cigarette out of his pocket and puts it in his mouth, but leaves it unlit. RAY'S POV The headlights of an approaching car materialize in the fog. The car passes with a roar. Up ahead a traffic light is turning amber. BACK TO RAY The engine hum drops as he slows. We hear the low engine rumble and the squeaking brakes of another car. Ray is now stopped in front of the deserted intersection. He looks up in his rearview mirror. RAY'S POV Another car is stopped just behind him, the fog floating up past its headlights. The headlights halate in the fog; none of the rest of the car is visible. BACK TO RAY The unlit cigarette still in his mouth. He looks down from the rearview mirror to the intersection ahead of him. There is a long pause, during which we hear only the steady purr of Ray's car and the knocking rumble of the car behind him. Ray looks up at the traffic light. RAY'S POV The light is just turning from red to green. CLOSE SHOT RAY'S FOOT ON BRAKE He takes his foot off the brake, hesitates for a moment, the replaces it on the brake. CLOSE SHOT RAY He looks up in his rearview mirror. RAY'S POV The headlights of the other car remain motionless behind him. The car makes no move to pass. BACK TO RAY He slowly takes the cigarette from his mouth and drops it onto the seat next to him. His eyes shift from the rearview mirror to the traffic light. RAY'S POV Green fog floats past the green light. BACK TO RAY His face frozen. He turns slowly to look behind. RAY'S POV The other car is still motionless. We hear the muted rumble of its engine. BACK TO RAY His eyes shift back to the mirror. He gropes for his window handle and slowly rolls it down. He sticks out his left arm, eyes still on the rearview mirror, and waves for the other car to go around him. RAY'S POV The other car remains still for a moment. White fog floats up beyond the red fog created by Ray's brake lights. Finally the car pulls out slowly to the left to pass. BACK TO RAY Watching the car pass. RAY'S POV As the car pulls out into the light from the intersection and Ray's headlights, we see that it is a battered green Volkswagon. First the car itself, and then its red tail lights, disappear into the fog. BACK TO RAY Watching, for a long moment. Finally he takes his foot off the brake, turns the steering wheel hard left and hangs a U-turn. MARTY'S LIVING ROOM WIDE A light is switched on in the expensively appointed room. Meurice enters, walking silently on the carpet, looking around the room. He throws the light off at the far end and leaves. MARTY'S BEDROOM WIDE The door swings open. Meurice throws the switch near the door and the room is bathed in light. We are once again in the bedroom where we earlier saw Abby looking through her purses. We start to hear the faint buzzing of a fly. Meurice glances around, throws off the light, and shuts the door. Black. MARTY'S OFFICE Somewhere offscreen a light is switched on and we are looking in close shot at the dead fish. The sound of the fly is louder with the cut. CLOSE SHOT RAY Standing in the doorway from the bar, staring down at the fish. WIDE SHOT THE OFFICE Ray glances around at the broken glass lying on the floor. His gaze shifts to the safe and the hammer in front of it. He walks over to the safe and stoops down. CLOSE SHOT RAY AT SAFE He works its battered dial and it swings open. He shuffles through the contents and brings out a small pile of photographs. RAY'S POV As he flips through the photographs. The first four are Ray and Abby in the motel room bed. The last is a mounted 8 x 10: Abby and Marty on a Gulf beach. BACK TO RAY Looking. HIS POV PICTURE DETAIL Marty is still laughing. BACK TO RAY He scowls at the shots Visser took, then puts them back in the safe. When his hand comes out he is holding another photograph--this one folded twice. He unfolds it. RAY'S POV His and Abby's corpses. BACK TO RAY FROM ACROSS THE DESK As he straightens slowly from the safe in the background. At desk level, we again see the glint of Visser's lighter under the dead fish. Ray crosses slowly around the desk into the foreground and lays the picture flat on the desktop. For a moment he stares down at it, then wheels abruptly and leaves frame. INT. RAY'S CAR CLOSE SHOT RAY Driving. He glances up in the rearview mirror. MARTY'S KITCHEN As Meurice enters and throws an overhead light. The white room is bathed in bright, shadowless light. As Meurice steps into the kitchen his foot strikes something on the floor below frame, which clatters hollowly away. CLOSE SHOT PLASTIC DOG-FOOD BOWL The empty bowl skids into a wall, bounces back, and wobbles, spinning on its bottom rim. MARTY'S BILLIARD ROOM DUTCH-TILT TRACKING SHOT TOWARD MOUNTED MOOSE HEAD On a low skewed axis the camera is tracking in toward the impassive trophy head on Marty's billiard-room wall. The moose still has Ray's cigarette protruding from its mouth. REVERSE TRACKING SHOT MEURICE As he walks toward the moose, head cocked to one side, frowning quizzically up. He hears something, and looks through the door to his left. MEURICE'S POV The long shadowy hall. We hear panting. CLOSE SHOT MEURICE Squinting. MEURICE ...Opal? THE HALLWAY A form starts to materialize in the shadows. MEURICE Taking a step back. HIS POV The dog bounding down the hallway. Its panting has become a low growl. FROM BEHIND MEURICE He wrenches a cue stick from the rack and squares. HIS POV Opal snarling, leaping. INT. MEURICE'S APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT TOP OF A COFFEE TABLE The splintered top half of the pool cue is slammed down to rest on top of the coffee table. MEURICE (O.S.) Even the fucking dog's gone crazy... MED SHOT ABBY Sitting on the sofa, looking down out of frame. Behind her Meurice agitatedly paces back and forth, waving the splintered bottom half of the cue stick. His voice is unnaturally loud. MEURICE ...Something pretty fucking weird is going on. Put your coat on and I'll drop you at home. But don't talk to either of 'em until I do. And don't worry. Believe me. These things always have a logical explanation. Usually. ABBY'S POV The splintered top half of the cue stick on the coffee table. INT. ABBY'S HALLWAY Abby approaches her door in the foreground and lets herself in. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT Looking toward the window. The room is dark. Through the window we see the facade of the building across the street. Abby enters frame in the foreground, in silhouette against the window, and throws an overhead light switch. The bright light reveals Ray standing by the window, looking out. RAY (abruptly) Turn it off. Abby jumps, startled. ABBY Ray... EXT. ROOF OF FACING APARTMENT BUILDING From the roof of the building across the street we are looking down on the facade of Abby's building. Most of its windows are dark, but in a brightly lit fourth-floor window we can clearly see Abby and Ray. A man is on the roof in the foreground, hitching a rifle to his shoulder. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT Ray turns from the window which, with the switching on of the overhead light, has become a mirror of the interior of the apartment. RAY Just turn it off. EXT. FACING ROOF The light goes out in the apartment across the street; its window goes opaque. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT Dark now. Ray still stands by the window, looking out. Abby still stands by the light switch. RAY (answering a question) No curtains on the windows. Abby is clearly apprehensive--about Ray, not about anything outside. ABBY ...So? RAY I think someone's watching. Abby doesn't understand, and has had enough. As she throws the light back on: ABBY So what'll they see? Ray turns angrily from the window. RAY Just leave it off. He can see in. EXT. FACING ROOF Ray and Abby are once again clearly visible. Ray is starting across the room. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT Abby takes a fearful step back as Ray strides toward the light switch, next to her. ABBY (abruptly) --If you do anything the neighbors'll hear. This brings Ray up short. He stares at Abby. It registers that it is him she's afraid of. RAY You think... He shakes his head. RAY ...Abby. I meant it... when I called... Abby takes another step back. Her voice comes out, after a pause, half-strangled: ABBY ...I love you too. Ray winces. He slowly shakes his head with a pained half- smile. RAY Because you're scared. We hear the dull report of a rifle and the deafening sound of shattering glass. The gun shot hits Ray in the back, knocking him to the floor. He lies still. CLOSE SHOT ABBY She stares dumbly down at Ray. She looks slowly up to the window. THE WINDOW It has a gaping black hole. The sound of shattering glass still reverberates in the apartment. Small shards of glass chink down from the window and shatter on the floor. BACK TO ABBY Staring at the window, paralyzed--almost in a trance. Quiet except for the chinking of glass. EXT. FACING ROOF We are looking through the telescopic sight of a high-powered rifle. The rifle sweeps up from Ray's body across the brightly lit room, and centers Abby, still staring at the window, in the cross hairs. INT. ABBY'S APARTMENT We are looking past Abby toward the shattered window at the far end of the room. A brass lamp stands in the foreground, between Abby and the camera. Abby still stands paralyzed. Glass has stopped chinking from the window to the floor; there is a painful silence. Suddenly Abby dives to the floor just as CRASH the rest of the window falls away and PING the brass lamp somersaults toward us from the impact of the bullet. The window is now completely gone--just a black hole in the brightly lit wall. ABBY Scrambles into a corner at the window end of the room. The only sound is her heavy breathing. She looks over at Ray, then up at the bulb on the ceiling. ABBY'S POV CEILING BULB BACK TO ABBY Breathing heavily, almost hysterical. She looks down at the floor. ABBY'S POV Ray is sprawled on the floor in a pool of blood and broken glass. BACK TO ABBY She reaches down and pulls off one of her shoes. She throws it at the ceiling bulb. We hear the bulb shatter and the room goes black. Abby rises and makes her way cautiously across the glass- littered floor toward Ray. She stoops over him. LOW SHOT THE DARK APARTMENT Its front door in background. Abby rises into frame and backs toward the doorway, staring down at the floor. One of her hands is covered with blood. ABBY Ray-- She winces and almost loses her balance as we hear a piece of glass crunching under her bare floor. She turns and moves to the front door, favoring one foot, and throws the door open. HALLWAY Abby lurches from her apartment and pounds on the neighboring door. No answer. She pounds on the door across the hall. OLD WOMAN'S VOICE (frightened, in Spanish) Get away! I'll call my son-in-law! ABBY (groping for the words, in Spanish) No no--you don't understand-- OLD WOMAN'S VOICE (in Spanish) He has a gun! Abby heads for the stairway at the far end of the hall. The heel of her shod foot is throwing her weight onto her bad foot; she kicks off the shoe. CLOSE SHOT ABBY As she reaches the top of the stairs. She takes one step down, then brings herself up short. She looks over the railing down the stairwell. It is quiet. An innocent-sounding cough echoes somewhere in the building. We hear the sound of footsteps from somewhere below. Abby turns and hobbles back to her apartment. The bareness of the hallway sets off her abandoned shoe. ABBY'S APARTMENT As she enters and slams the door behind her. She scrabbles at the lock, finally manages to get it shut, then turns and looks frantically around. ABBY'S POV Ray is lying still in the darkness. We can hear footsteps approaching up the hallway. Abby enters frame and kneels down next to Ray. She fumbles around him briefly in the darkness. The doorknob rattles. Abby freezes, listening, trying to control her breath. After a moment we hear a scraping at the lock. Abby moves to the bathroom adjoining the main room and shuts the door behind her. BATHROOM It is very small. Abby presses her palms against the door and slowly eases her ear against the door to listen. The scraping in the apartment door lock continues. Sweat streams down Abby's face. She brushes a drop from her eye. We hear the snap of the lock springing open, and the front door swinging on its hinges. CLOSER ON ABBY Her ear pressed to the door. From the next room we hear the sound of footsteps crunching across broken glass. Abby backs away from the door, stares at it, then turns and moves to the bathroom window. She looks out. ABBY'S POV A sheer drop to the narrow backyard of the building four stories below. Next to Abby's window is another window, separated from hers only by the breadth of the wall, that separates the two apartments. ABBY'S APARTMENT Visser hunches, hands on knees, over Ray, who lies on the floor out of frame. VISSER (grimly) All right... He hunkers down closer to Ray. VISSER ...You got some of my personal property. He is rummaging through Ray's pockets but comes up empty- handed. VISSER ...One of you does. Visser looks down at Ray, glances around the room, looks back down at Ray. VISSER ...I don't know what the hell you two thought you were gonna pull. His hand, gripping something, flashes down out of frame. We hear a dull crunch. BATHROOM Abby has drawn her head back from the bathroom window. She moves back to the door and braces herself against it. ABBY'S APARTMENT Visser straightens up from Ray's body. He drops something to the floor, out of frame, that lands with a thud. He goes over to the light switch on the wall and flips it back and forth. No light. He goes over to the brass lamp, sets it upright, tries its switch. Again nothing. He disappears into the kitchenette as we hold on its open doorway. After a moment we hear a refrigerator hum as a cold blue light plays in the doorway. There is the rattle of a can being pulled off the refrigerator rack, and the snap of its pull-tab being opened. After a couple of audible slurps we hear the can go back on the rack and, as the blue light disappears, we hear the refrigerator door close. Visser reappears in the doorway. He surveys the room, fixes on the bathroom door, goes over, turns the knob. The door swings open. He walks in. BATHROOM Visser looks around the cramped space. The shower curtain is drawn. He casually draws it back. The shower is empty. He goes to the window and leans out. VISSER'S POV The sheer drop below; the other window to one side. BACK TO VISSER He draws his head back in, presses his palms against the adjacent wall, and eases his ear to the wall to listen. Perfect quiet. After a moment he goes back to the window, braces himself against the sash, and sticks his arm out--groping for the window of the adjacent apartment. EXT. ABBY'S BUILDING / BATHROOM WINDOW CLOSE SHOT VISSER'S FACE Pressing against the glass as he leans against the upper half of the bathroom window. CLOSE SHOT VISSER'S HAND It finds the adjacent window and starts to raise it. BACK TO VISSER'S FACE Again we see him through the window. His jaw is set as he gropes offscreen. Suddenly his body jerks violently forward, his head smacking against the glass and cracking it. QUICK CUT TO: INT. ADJACENT APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT VISSER'S HAND Abby (out of frame) has grabbed it and now THUMP she slams the window down on his wrist, catching it between the window sash and sill. Her other hand flashes across frame to THUNK pin Visser's hand to the sill with Ray's knife. QUICK CUT: BACK TO VISSER We hear the shatter of glass as the shock causes his head to break through the window. His hand is nailed into the apartment next door. He is in pain. ADJACENT APARTMENT Abby back slowly from the window, staring at the hand. From the ground below we hear the faint and echoing sounds of the shards of glass shattering against pavement. ABBY'S POV THE WINDOW Visser's pinned hand is writhing. As we hear a muffled CRACK, a circle of light opens with a puff of plaster dust in the wall that separates the two apartments. A line of light shoots across the dark apartment from the bright bathroom next door. BACK TO ABBY Staring at the wall. We hear a second CRACK. ABBY'S POV A second hole has opened in the wall, letting through a second shaft of light. Four more sharp reports in rapid succession: With each gun blast a bright circle opens and a new shaft of light penetrates the dark apartment. Finally we hear the CLICK of an empty chamber, and the clatter of the empty gun being dropped to the floor of the bathroom next door. CLOSE SHOT ABBY Staring at the lines of light that crisscross the apartment. There is a long moment of silence, then a sudden THUMP. ABBY'S POV THE WALL Six circles of light. The circles go black momentarily as there is another THUMP. And another. Each time Visser pounds his fist against the wall, there is a muffled THUMP and his swinging arm strobes the bullet holes. BACK TO ABBY She turns and hobbles toward the door of apartment. The muffled thumping continues, as in her dream. HALLWAY As Abby emerges from the adjacent apartment. She stops and looks down the hall. ABBY'S POV The stairway is at the far end of the hall. The door of her own darkened apartment stands slightly ajar. ADJACENT APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT THE WALL The bullet holes strobing. The pounding, more purposeful now, grows louder and more intense. Finally, with a crash, Visser's fist penetrates the wall in an explosion of light and dust. HALLWAY We pull Abby as she limps hesitantly down the hall. ADJACENT APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT VISSER'S HAND Waving aimlessly through the ambient dust. He is blindly groping for the sill--and the knife that pins his other hand. His outstretched middle finger just grazes the handle of the knife. ABBY'S HALLWAY / APARTMENT Pulling Abby as she draws even with the door of her apartment. ABBY'S POV Her pearl-handled revolver sits on the shelf just inside the door, where Ray left it. It catches the light from the hall. ADJACENT APARTMENT EXTREME CLOSE SHOT VISSER'S FINGERTIPS The side of his middle finger rubs against the knife handle; the tip of his index finger barely touches it. Visser's fingers are trembling, indicating that his arm is stretched to its uttermost. A surge against the wall gives his fingers another inch or so and they curl around the handle of the knife. ABBY'S APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT ABBY As she steps in from the hallway to pick up the gun. She looks around the apartment. ABBY'S POV The window of the apartment, its glass now completely gone, lets in streetlight. Ray's corpse is a dark form in the middle of the floor. A bright shaft of light slices across the room from offscreen. It glints on the shards of glass that litter the floor, just as in Abby's dream. BATHROOM CLOSE SHOT VISSER As he slowly, quietly draws his hand in from the hole in the wall. He is holding the knife. He turns slowly to face the door, listening. ABBY'S APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT ABBY She steadies herself against the wall and turns to look toward the bathroom. ABBY'S POV The bathroom door stands slightly ajar. The interior of the bathroom is a bright band in the shadowy recesses of the back of the apartment. BATHROOM CLOSE SHOT VISSER Moving quietly toward the door. ABBY'S APARTMENT CLOSE SHOT ABBY Staring, almost transfixed, at the bathroom door. She raises the gun, trembling, and trains it on the band of light. ABBY'S POV Visser's shadow falls across the crack in the doorway. BACK TO ABBY She shifts the gun slightly and fires. ABBY'S POV With the roar of the gun, a small circle of light opens in the door. As the door waffles under the impact, we hear Visser collapsing behind it. BACK TO ABBY Leaning against the facing wall. She lowers the gun. She slides down the wall to finally rest seated on the floor. She brushes a drop of sweat from her eye. HER POV The cracked bathroom door spilling light. BACK TO ABBY A pause. After a moment, her voice comes out half-choked: ABBY ...I ain't afraid of you, Marty. HER POV The bathroom door. Quiet for a long moment. Then, from inside the bathroom, we hear laughter. BACK TO ABBY Staring at the door. We hear the laughter subside, to leave the sound of labored breathing. Finally: VISSER (O.S.) ...Well ma'am... BATHROOM Visser lies on his back, his head underneath the bathroom sink. His good hand is pressed against his belly, which rises and falls with his heavy breathing. Blood seeps out between his fingers. He is smiling. VISSER ...If I see him, I'll sure give him the message. HIS POV The underside of the sink, its convoluted chrome works beading moisture. VISSER Looking, with mild interest. HIS POV A condensed droplet trickles down the chrome. Directly overhead, it hangs for a moment from the lowest joint of the pipe. It fattens, wavers, wavers--and falls, spelling... FINIS. [DELETED SCENE FROM 1st. DRAFT] "...In an early draft of the script, Ray, the befuddled bartender who for want of a more compelling character served as our story's hero, fled the scene of the tale's protracted central murder and checked into a motel outside of San Antonio:" MOTEL LOBBY DAY DUSTY RHODES, a lean man with a weathered face and large Adam's apple, stands behind the Formica check-in counter. KYLE, a heavyset man of thirty wearing a feed cap, sits in the lobby's one piece of furniture, a beat-up leatherette sofa. He sips from a can of soda. Ray, begrimed and haggard, enters out of the glare of the noonday sun. RHODES Hey there, stranger! What can I do you for? RAY I need a room. Calling out from the divan: KYLE He needs a room, Dusty. RHODES I reckon I can hear him... (to Ray) ...Room rate's eight sixty-six a day plus sales tax, plus extra for the TV option. RAY How much extra? KYLE (calling out) He wants the TV option, Dusty. RHODES I reckon I can hear him. TV option, that's a dollar twenty, makes nine eighty-six plus tax. KYLE (calling out) Tell him the channels, Dusty. RHODES Channels, we got two and six. Two don't come in so hot. RAY Just a room then. KYLE (calling out) He don't want the option, Dusty. RHODES I reckon I heard the man. RAY (after shooting Kyle an irritated glance) Does he work here? KYLE (calling out) Sure don't. RHODES See, Wednesday's the special on RC Cola. I don't know if I explained about the TV option. If there's a TV in the room, you got to pay the option. KYLE (calling out) And how many room got TV, Dusty? RHODES Ever durned one. RAY (gamely) Okay, I'll take the TV option. RHODES Well see the thing about that is, we're booked. "Looking at this scene now, years later, it strikes us that revising it out of existence, as we did, constituted too much rewriting. Indeed, the more prosaic scene we replaced it with, involving Ray stopped at a traffic light, can be found in the finished script but not in the finished movie. It was shot but then deleted in order to more quickly get to the carnage, which was the picture's raison d'^etre..." JOEL & ETHAN COEN
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