Are You Ready? A One-Act Play

I wrote a one-act play that was produced in 2014 by Redwood Writers and 6th Street Playhouse in Santa Rosa. What an exhilarating experience that collaboration was! In drafting my next newsletter, I mentioned an unusual behavior that I share with one of the characters in the play. The real-life motivations for my behavior and the motivations for the fictional character are very different, as are the respective life circumstances. I'll share the story behind that mannerism in the newsletter, which will go out to subscribers on Nov. 3, 2021.

Are You Ready?

Characters:

Charlie: A man in his early forties, fastidious about cleanliness and order, married to Kim

Kim: A woman in her late thirties, impulsive, disorganized, married to Charlie

Setting:Charlie and Kim’s home

(AT RISE: Kim waits in the car for Charlie, who said he's be right out. They're supposed to attend a birthday barbeque for their nephew today.  Meanwhile, Charlie putters in the house. Tired of waiting, Kim returns inside.)

KIM 

What's going on, Charlie? I've been waiting for five minutes.

(She plunks her purse on the table and plops in a chair.)

CHARLIE 

Go back out; I'll be right there.

(Charlie lifts a bag of garbage from the can.)

KIM 

You're obviously not ready to go if you're taking the garbage out. Do you have any idea how hot it gets in a vehicle in the midday sun? And making me wait like that in the driveway, of all places? It's so thoughtless.

CHARLIE 

You haven't been waiting that long, maybe a minute, two at most. Go on, this will just take a sec.

(Charlie exits with the bag of garbage. Kim gets up, walks to a cabinet, pulls out a new garbage bag and puts it in the can. She leaves the cabinet door ajar. Charlie returns.)

CHARLIE

Thanks, but let me finish that, love. 

(Kim steps away from the can. Charlie fiddles with it until it's just the way he wants it.)

KIM

Are you ready to go now?

CHARLIE

Yeah.

(He picks up his keys, starts walking toward the front door, but then notices she left the cabinet door ajar.)

Do you see that, Kim?

(He points to the door.)

KIM

What, Charlie?

CHARLIE

The cabinet door.

(He walks over and closes it.)

You left it wide open.

KIM

It wasn't wide open. It was ajar a teeny bit, maybe half an inch, if that.

CHARLIE

The point is you didn't close it.

KIM

It was a little crack—not a big deal.

CHARLIE

Did you know you left the back door open, too?

KIM

The back door? I closed it this morning after I went out to water the roses.

CHARLIE

No, you didn't. … You have to pull real hard. The clay soil around the house is always shifting, so now the door doesn't latch if you don't pull hard. I've told you that before.

KIM

So, it wasn't actually open, then; it just wasn't closed all the way.

CHARLIE

What would that matter to a thief trying to break in?

KIM

We don't have break-ins here, and you know it.

CHARLIE

Every neighborhood has break-ins, Kim.

KIM

When was the last time there was any crime around here, Charlie? Do you know?

CHARLIE

Can't say for sure, but I'd bet it wasn't long ago.

KIM

It was fifteen years, and that was just some teenager who stole his mom's car for a joyride.

CHARLIE

Is that so?

(He walks out of the room again)

KIM

Where are you going now?

CHARLIE

(Calls from off stage)

I forgot to check the spare room.

KIM

Oh for Christ's sake. At this rate, we'll never get out of here.

(Kim walks to the refrigerator, opens the door, pulls out a bottle of iced tea, lets go of the door and sits back down at the table. She opens the drink and takes a chug. Charlie returns, sees her with the drink.)

CHARLIE

Did you just get that out?

KIM

Yeah. So?

CHARLIE

(Charlie walks to the refrigerator and inspects it.)

Come here a sec, Kim. 

KIM

Why?

CHARLIE

I need to show you something.

KIM

What is it now?

(She sighs, puts down the drink and walks to the refrigerator.)

CHARLIE

See how the door is sticking out here just a little bit? It doesn't close automatically. You have to push it in.

KIM

Most of the time it closes just fine by itself. I don't know why it didn't this time.

CHARLIE

It never closes just fine by itself, Kim.

KIM

Yes, it does. Most of the time it does.

CHARLIE

Well, maybe the door closes just fine occasionally, but you have to push it every time just in case.

KIM

Would you please just stop this?

CHARLIE

The cold escapes if it's not sealed, so the motor has to work extra hard. 

KIM

Okay, okay. I'll push it closed even though 99.9 percent of the time it closes fully on its own. There. Happy now?

CHARLIE

You're not going to do it, are you.

KIM

Could we just get going?

CHARLIE

We should put a sticky note on the fridge, you know, to remind you.

KIM

Seriously?

CHARLIE

(He rummages through a drawer.)

I could of sworn we had some Post-Its in here.

KIM

Chill out, will you?… I have some Post-Its in my purse. If you want to write a note, write a note.

(She rummages through her purse, doesn't see them, grows frustrated and dumps the contents on the table. A few things fall on the floor.)

Ah, here they are.

(She holds up the Post-Its.)

CHARLIE

(He rushes over and picks up the fallen items and puts them on the table, then takes the Post-Its from Kim)

Thanks, babe.

KIM

Just write the stupid note so we can get out the door.

CHARLIE

(He prints “PUSH DOOR CLOSED” on the note and slaps it on the refrigerator door.)

There! 

KIM

Now, are you ready to go?

(She grabs her purse and walks toward the door.)

If I'm ready to face this party, you ought to be, too.

CHARLIE

Um, Kim, don't you think you should at least put your wallet back in?

KIM

Oh, oh, yeah. Guess I was in a rush.

(She returns to the table, starts throwing things back in.)

CHARLIE

Slow down, hon. When was the last time you went through all that garbage you're carrying around to see if you really need it?

(He grabs a crunched up receipt)

Look, this is from Safeway. Three months ago!

(He tosses it in the air.)

And what's this doing in here?

(He holds up a half-eaten Luna bar.)

KIM

Oh, come on. Stop being so … so  impossible, will you? I'll sort it out when we get home.

CHARLIE

Do we have to go?

KIM

We should at least stop in. It's Billy's fourth birthday — our favorite nephew, by the way. He'll be over the moon if we go.

CHARLIE

But all those kids, you know, tearin' around, laughin' like there's no care in the world. … They ask questions, too. They don't have filters like we do.

KIM

Oh, Charlie.

CHARLIE

Why do you do it anyway?

KIM

What?

CHARLIE

You never used to, you know. 

KIM

Used to what?

CHARLIE

Leave things open all the time.

KIM

You mean like the cabinets?

CHARLIE

And the doors, and the windows.

KIM

What windows? I haven't left any windows open.

CHARLIE

The bathroom window was wide open just now. Why do you think I wait 'til you get out the door before doing a final check on the house? If you've been in a room even for a minute, I have to check it again.

KIM

You realize you're OCD now or something worse, don't you?

CHARLIE

But your behavior makes no sense. When we met, no one was more together than you. You kept me in line, remember?

KIM

No, Charlie, I've never been together, and you've always been anal. You've gotten worse, though. 

CHARLIE

You didn't leave doors and windows and drawers open. You didn't. Why now?

KIM

Cut me some slack, Charlie. I never ask why you've become organized way beyond reason.

CHARLIE

That's different. You've changed, Kim. Why? Why leave everything open?

KIM

I don't know, okay? I haven't given it any thought. What difference does it make?

CHARLIE

It's freaking me out. There must be a reason.

KIM

Um, I … don't … really … think … there is.

CHARLIE

Are you sure?

KIM

Yeah … I am.

CHARLIE

Absolutely certain?

KIM

Well … now that I think about it. …

(She sits back down)

It's going to sound crazy … but I think I'm leaving things open for Miranda … in case she wants to come back, see what I'm up to. She was always by my side, had to see every little thing, remember? Especially in the kitchen. She had to poke around, pull all the pots and pans out, put them back in. And she loved to stand on that little stepstool and watch me cook, especially scrambled eggs, oh how she loved to see them change as I scraped that spoon around the pan! Sometimes I let her help me stir, remember?

CHARLIE

Kim, Kimmie, Kim …

(He joins her at the table)

KIM

You do remember, don't you, Charlie?

CHARLIE

You know Miranda's never coming back.

KIM

Yes … yes, of course. 

CHARLIE

Well then, are you trying to torture me?

KIM

You're the one who asked. Not wanting to close Miranda out is just what came to mind. … Maybe a person can know something, I mean,  you can know what the facts are, know they're indisputable, but somewhere inside, you just don't really believe it. Is that possible?

CHARLIE

I guess anything's possible … except, my love … our daughter is never coming back.

KIM

I didn't mean to do it, you know.

CHARLIE

It was my fault. I was supposed to be watching her.

KIM

But I should have been paying attention. It just never occurred to me that

(She begins to cry)

CHARLIE

You did nothing wrong.

(He reaches across the table, puts his hand on hers.)

There's no way you could have seen her right at the back wheel. 

KIM

I killed my own child, Charlie. I backed the car right over her.

CHARLIE

It's my fault, not yours. 

KIM

Don't say that. You're just trying to make me feel better. It won't work.

(She pulls her hand away.)

CHARLIE

No, it's the truth.

(He gets up and begins to pace the floor.)

I said I'd watch her, but I didn't, Kim. I didn't do what I promised … It didn't happen like I said. I didn't just get distracted for a moment. I wasn't keeping an eye on her. I was stacking her wooden blocks on the shelf instead … I didn't see her leave the room because I turned my back on her and told her to go pick up her stuffed animals in the living room. I was angry because she griped about helping me straighten up. … She was only two years old, twenty-four months ... I wanted her to act like a little adult.

KIM

Oh, Charlie, Charlie, love. You weren't a perfect parent. Neither was I. Nobody is. You didn't know she could open the front door. She'd never done it before. … Come back here, will you?

CHARLIE

(He sits back down)

I thought she was safe.

KIM

So did I. But we were wrong, and we'll never be able to do it over. … I keep asking, why did I decide to go to the mall right then? Why didn't I take Miranda along? I usually did, and she loved to go. … Why was being alone for a couple hours so important to me? … We're both full of regrets. Maybe we'll never really be right again. Maybe we'll have to live each day with the unbearable slapping us in the face over and over. We didn't just lose our only child; we both had a hand in killing her, but we didn't mean to. We didn't mean to, Charlie.

CHARLIE

Can you ever forgive me, Kim?

KIM

Can you forgive me?

CHARLIE

Oh, Kimmie, I already have. … I think forgiving ourselves will be the hard part.

KIM

We don't have to go to the party. I can call and say it's too soon. I've been pushing too hard, haven't I. They'll understand. There'll be other birthdays, other parties. 

CHARLIE

It's been over a year. Everyone says we should move on, try to put it behind us. 

KIM

True.

CHARLIE

And we've gotten so out of touch with our family, with little Billy. … I keep forgetting he and Mianda would squeal with glee whenever they saw each other. … He lost a cousin, and now he's losing us.

KIM

What are you saying, Charlie?

CHARLIE

Maybe you're not pushing too hard.

KIM

They grow up so fast, don't they. 

CHARLIE

Yes, my dear, they do.

KIM

I don't want our life to just be a series of missed chances from now on, you know?

CHARLIE

We could brave it then, couldn't we, and maybe not stay too long, like you said?

KIM

We could … but I'm not going out first. I'm not waiting for you to check everything one last time. I need you to walk out the door with me. And I don't mean just for today. Can you do that?

CHARLIE

I can try, my love. I can try.

(He stands. She stands too.)

KIM

Okay, then. Let's go. 

(They lock arms and walk out the door together.)

THE END

I'll publish this play, along with three or four other one-act plays that have also been produced, in a little book one of these days. What do you think?

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