Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Dark Moonlight – Hustlers and Geisha - 1. Part One
.
Scene One: “Autumn Wind”
(Lights come up on BASS standing stage right front)
No. 1 – Cavatina con Recitativo
BASS:
The dew pretends he
Loves the love of the rush –
The rush that he loves no dew.
But the rush will bloom
And love the love of the dew –
Then, both might yet understand. [SOG]
Recitativo:
Over the course of eighteen months,
Through many moods and circumstance,
I interviewed several young men.
(lights come up on COUNTERTENOR slowly pacing around the chairs)
Their stories are different –
How they came to this path,
What makes them stick to it –
But all wound up open with me.
The stories of Montreal men,
A part of the city’s sex-trade.
(gestures to COUNTERTENOR to have a seat. Takes the chair with back to audience)
No. 2 – Dialogo
BASS:
[What do you charge?]
COUNTERTENOR:
(matter of fact)
So, usually it’s thirty-five minutes
For Twenty dollars – and we’ll, like,
Stroke each other. Depending on what
The client wants. (grins broadly) You know,
Give each other affection:
You know, having fun together,
That’s really what the customer
Wants sometimes . . . but it’s different
(rises and moves stage right – still looking at BASS)
With every client – a different show.
We all want different things, right? [MFS]
No. 3 – Canzona
COUNTERTENOR:
Beyond the chide to duty,
Below the scowl of people –
The judging looks,
The opinioned nods,
The tabby cat, and one white,
Sidle the ridge of the roof –
The knowing looks,
The fore-tasting wants,
Stronger than the fear of death
Is the calming need for love.
Above the call of duty,
Before the scheme of people –
An autumn wind
Will soon come to them
And that passionate embrace,
That driving need to make love –
Is set aside,
Will be forgotten.
How I envy just the way
Cats pick who and where to love. [SOG]
(lights fade on COUNTERTENOR and he exits)
Scene Two: “Soaked”
(Lights come up on BASS rising from his chair. He extends his hand and greets BARITONE, who enters stage left. Silently the two look at the clipboard as if ensuring the information is correct. Meanwhile TENOR enters stage right, and the lights come up on him. Near the end of TENOR’s Arietta, BASS and BARITONE take their seats)
No. 4 – Arietta
TENOR:
The pallid day,
Fractured by the bamboo blinds –
Grief sticks my heart,
As I count the bands of light –
Not knowing just why,
So forth, and so on, and such.
The nightingale
Climbing the bamboo stem,
Pauses and turns a musical head
To sing his love at every knot –
At every knot, to sing.
The season comes
Where every night is long,
Pauses and turns all the fields flame-red
To weep my love at every dawn –
(recap: “The pallid day” etc.)
(lights fade on TENOR, and he exits)
No. 5 – Dialogo
BASS:
[Have you ever been in love?]
BARITONE:
(unnerved by the question)
I’ve never been in love.
(thinking it over)
But, sometimes . . . . I’ve felt . . .
I’ve felt some strong feelings.
(wide-eyed and honest)
When a guy is sucking you off . . .
Well, I’m not made of stone.
(slowly shaking his head)
For sure I feel something.
(pause, then a return to wide-eyed honesty)
You were talking about my first time.
(thinking it over)
I remember my first time . . .
How I liked it a lot.
(slowly shaking his head)
I really liked it. (shrugging) But,
Real feelings? No.
BASS:
(consulting his clipboard)
[Tell me about your family.]
BARITONE:
I didn’t grow up in a good family.
My mother was a stripper,
(grins and nods)
So I didn’t really have
A great family life.
BASS:
But you were still spending
Time with her?
BARITONE:
(replying with a negative mutter)
Un-oh . . .
BASS:
Never?!
BARITONE:
Well. Until I was Nine.
(pause) After that,
I wasn’t with her anymore.
I only knew her until then. [MFS]
No. 6 – Duettino
BASS:
(rising slowly and moving to stage left)
The morning wakes with a fine mist
It falls on us as softly as dew
The nightingale above us is wet
And her wings beat down on us
The scent of the plum blossoms softly.
Some birds do not know
Where they may rest
When evenings come
But nightingales
Return to plum trees,
And I return
BARITONE:
(rising and going in front of BS’s chair, then stage right)
Within my heart is a mist too
A fine falling of uncertainty
Wherein mist meets mist and drop meets drop
And flutter raises the scent
Of one heart at home in another.
Soaked in the mist and rain
By dew and frost
Soon I shall be free
Of my body –
And then free to love,
For nothing else
We pretend matters.
BASS and BARITONE:
Soaked in the sky just at dawning,
The morning bird flies and hides away,
But I comb wet hair on my temple,
Wetted in the rain, and happy,
Happy that he returns to my side. [SOG]
Scene Three: “Indistinct Shadow”
(BARITONE exits, and BASS returns stage left to greet TENOR)
No. 7 – Dialogo
BASS:
[How did you get started?]
TENOR:
I met this black guy […] in Quebec [.]
He was looking for female prostitutes, […]
So I told him where to find them.
Then I asked him:
“Do you know where
There’s a place for
Male prostitutes in Montreal?”
He said yes. Since
I did him a favor,
The next day
He gave me a lift to
Champlain Park,
To show me where it is.
BASS:
So you left with him the next day?
TENOR:
Yeah.
BASS:
How did you know, ahead of time,
You wanted to
Get into prostitution?
TENOR:
Well, for the money. […]
(nodding slowly, happily)
First day I got here,
I made six hundred dollars.
But it went fast, because
I was doing Ecstasy.
I was doing it when
I was working the streets.
I smoked a lot of pot too
When I was working . . .
Then I’d eat, buy my smokes
And clothes, you know –
I was covering the basics. […]
BASS:
Does your mother know
You do prostitution?
TENOR:
Yeah. She knows. […]
(an odd smile appears – like he derives some pleasure in others’ pain)
She says: “You never know
What someone could do to you.
You could be doing a client
And the guy kills you –
Rapes you and locks you up,
And throws you in the river.”
(shrugs, confirming)
You never know.
BASS:
When you work, do you think
about things like that?
TENOR:
(dead serious)
Yeah. I do.
(lost in reminiscence – pausing)
Like, I was doing stupid things.
You know, like, making little
Animal noises in high school.
BASS:
(lost but intrigued by the boy’s thinking patterns)
Like?
TENOR:
Pig noises, and things like that.
Everyone appears to you
Like Seniors when you
Just arrive in Freshman year.
They treat you like
You’re in Kindergarten –
Like you’re some stray dog,
One that’s followed
Them to school.
BASS:
You are saying you looked
Younger than you were?
TENOR:
Oh, yes. Quite a bit.
BASS:
(pause)
And, you were making
Animal noises to –
Scare them away . . . ?
TENOR:
No. To make them laugh.
But they weren’t
Laughing with me –
They were laughing at me.
That’s how it was.
BASS:
(utterly lost)
What’s the connection . . .
Between that and prostitution . . . ?
TENOR:
(like a spell has been broken. Blinks)
What?
BASS:
You were saying that’s why
You got involved in the sex-trade?
TENOR:
Yes.
Well, you know,
I had a lot of problems,
With my parents.
BASS:
(pause)
What’s that got to do with sex-work?
TENOR:
It was to get back at them. […]
To get back at the world
For making me do things,
Or to get back at my parents
For what . . . for what they did to me.
Things that led me to prostitution.
Prostitution was something
I knew I’d end up doing.
Like, in school, I figured
I’d end up killing myself.
Prostitution was a step
Towards suicide, like
Getting STDs. […]
BASS:
So for you,
Prostitution is like suicide? […]
You wanted to get back
At people . . . your parents . . . ?
TENOR:
Yes. Because of my past.
(matter of fact)
My mother didn’t really love me.
She liked my sister better,
And that really hurt me.
Now my step-dad is in prison.
So I have many things to deal with . . .
Things are hard to get over. [MFS]
No. 8 – Cavatina
(lights fade on TENOR and BASS; rise on COUNTERTENOR standing stage right)
COUNTERTENOR:
I have waited all night –
It grows late, and I feverish.
Towards daybreak, I pillow
My weary brow upon my arms.
Perhaps I’ll see him in dreams –
'How I resent those
After you left me,
Two pillows
One body –
What happened to
All my thoughts
Since we met?
That is easy.
Until I met you
I had none
Worthy then
Two pillows
One body –
Where are you now?
Daylight comes and I awake –
Looking right to left – is he here?
Then slowly see – there’s no one.
Only my long, tear-stained sleeves flow
‘How I resent those
Garrulous birds of morn.’ [SOG]
(the light comes up on TENOR as he rises from his seat. He steps towards COUNTERTENOR. during the flowing number, BASS rises and exits stage left)
No. 9 – Duettino
TENOR:
I want to write him a letter
But find nothing trivial to say –
Instruct me, godlike, blank paper –
Reflect on me as moon does the day.
The breeze is so light –
That when he caresses
The green willow tree
He hardly seems to touch her.
Indistinct shadow –
Our pillows seem to touch
So close we’ve laid them
When we get ready for bed.
Mornings or evenings –
Who cares our little tiffs,
But our make-up letters
COUNTERTENOR:
I want to write him a letter
But find nothing trivial to say –
Instruct me, godlike, blank paper –
Reflect on me as moon does the day.
His pretty gesture –
A gesture so light
My letters written –
In so base a character
Still out-rivals words
Spoken in quiet falter.
I cannot touch him –
So I’ll lie on the floor.
From sleep I’m startled:
TENOR and COUNTERTENOR:
I want to write him a letter
But find nothing trivial to say –
Instruct me, godlike, blank paper –
Reflect on me as moon does the day.
If there were no moon to read by,
I’d hold his letters to the snow light.
In summer, to the fireflies,
Or without them – I’d read by my heart’s glow. [SOG]
(darkness – they exit)
_
- 1
- 2
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.