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U-Turn (1997)

by John Ridley, revised by Richard Rutowski & Oliver Stone.
Based on the book by John Ridley.
Final script.

More info about this movie on IMDb.com


FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY


EXT. SOMEWHERE IN THE DESERT SOUTHWEST - DAY

BEGIN TITLES OVER:

It is early morning and already hot.  INSECTS drone, crackle,
and scurry for shade.  PRAIRIE DOGS burrow to escape the sun.
We can see the heat shimmering off the surface of the Earth.

On a dusty highway, a pair of VULTURES dine on a dead coyote.
One of them snags an intestine and tugs a few feet of it out of
the carcass.

In the distance, where a long, dusty road meets the horizon, a
small shape appears -- a Sixty-four-and-a-half Mustang
convertible, its top down.  Its candy-apple red burns like a
brilliant fireball under the sun.  As the car drifts closer, we
see steam escaping from under the hood.  Sammi Smith's "Please
Help Me Get Through The Night" plays on the car's radio.

INT. BOBBY COOPER'S MUSTANG - DAY

At the wheel, ignoring impending disaster, BOBBY COOPER, young,
good-looking, fiddles with the RADIO dial, annoyed only to find
country stations. He's been driving since noon yesterday and it
shows -- along with a heavily-bandaged left hand resting on the
steering wheel. He finds something by Pearl Jam or Smashing
Pumpkins and he cranks it. He pops a Percodan with his good hand
as, in the shimmering distance ahead, he sees black shapes in
the road and lays on the horn.

		BOBBY
	Get off the goddamn road!

EXT. DESERT ROAD - DAY

As the MUSTANG powers by, the VULTURES move off the shoulder,
silently watching.

INT. MUSTANG - DAY

The RADIO blares as BOBBY fights to stay awake. His attention is
caught by blue and red lights flashing in the oncoming lane. He
sits up as the POLICE CAR (SHERIFF POTTER inside) closes
quickly. The SIREN starts faintly, then SCREAMS as the cruiser
roars past at speed.

		BOBBY
	Fuck you!

There is a loud pop from the front of the Mustang and a thick
cloud of steam now pours from the hood. The temperature gauge
now starts rising.

		BOBBY
	No!...Not now!...Shit!

A couple of SEMIS roar past in the opposite direction,
buffetting the Mustang with their air waves.

EXT. FORK IN THE ROAD - DAY

The car rolls into a fork in the road, limping with the droop of
an animal that won't make another hundred yards.

One sign on the larger road says "GLOBE" is 29 miles away. The
other sign, on the lesser road, tells us "SUPERIOR" is only 2
miles. A third sign confirms his destiny with "Gas, Food, 1
Mile."

BOBBY seems to have no choice. He aims the car down the lesser
road towards "Superior, Arizona."

EXT. OUTSKIRTS SUPERIOR - DAY

The car rattles on its last legs, as BOBBY mutters incantations,
noticing a old, ghostlike MINING COMPANY at the base of the
mountains overlooking the TOWN. It's deserted now, no one
visible, the gates shut, but in its vast, dark bulk, we sense
the ancient richness and power of this town. Bobby moves on.

EXT. HARLIN'S GARAGE - DAY

Down the road from the MINING COMPANY, BOBBY'S CAR pulls into a
small GAS STATION, made of weather-beaten wood, its windows long
since dusted over. The pumps themselves look to have been
manufactured in the early fifties. Above the station is a sign
so faded it's barely readable: HARLIN'S.

Bobby gets out of the car and with great care, favoring his
bandaged left hand which seems to give him a great deal of pain,
he opens the hood. A plume of steam hits him in the face.

		BOBBY
	Oh shit!

Bobby looks around for someone, anyone.  After a few moments he
reaches into the car and blows the horn.  He waits, then blows
it again.  From out of the station walks DARRELL - a
slow-looking man in coveralls caked with grease and dirty.  He
looks the part of a yokel.

		BOBBY
	You Harlin?

		DARRELL
	Nope.  Darrell.

		BOBBY
	Harlin around?

		DARRELL
	He's up at the Look Out.

Darrell points a scraggly finger at a plateau in the distance.

		BOBBY
	Will he be back soon?

		DARRELL
	Doubt it.  He's dead.  The Look Out's a
	cemetery.

		BOBBY
	You own this place?

		DARRELL
	Yep.

		BOBBY
	Then why do you call it Harlin's?

		DARRELL
	'Cause Harlin used to own it.

		BOBBY
	But he's dead.

		DARRELL
	So?

Bobby is confused, but chooses to drop the matter.

		BOBBY
	You want to take a look at my car?  I think
	the radiator hose is--

		DARRELL
	Damn.  Gonna be another hot one today.
	Sometimes I don't even want to get out of
	bed. Course don't want to get out for the
	cold one's neither.  Then of course the
	clouds come in...

Darrell mops his brow with a greasy rag.  It doesn't so much
wipe the sweat as it does streak his forehead with dirt.

		BOBBY
	Look, Harlin, I've got places to be.

		DARRELL
	Darrell--

		BOBBY
	OK. Darrell... Could you just take a look
	at my radiator hose.  It's busted.

Darrell is clearly upset at being cut off.  He leans into the
car and looks at the engine.

		BOBBY
	So?

		DARRELL
	It's your radiator hose.  It's busted.

		BOBBY
	I know it's busted.  What did I just tell
	you?

		DARRELL
	Well, you know so much why don't you just
	fix it yourself?

		BOBBY
	If I could do you think I'd be standing
	here wasting my time.  Can you fix it, or
	do I have to go somewhere else?

		DARRELL
	Somewhere else?  Mister, somewhere else is
	fifty miles from here. Only other gas
	station down in town closed 3 years ago
	when the mine got shut...

		BOBBY
	Okay, I'm stuck.  You happy?  Now can you
	fix it, or not?

		DARRELL
	Yeah, I can fix it.

		BOBBY
	Great!

		DARRELL
	Gotta run over to the yard and see if I can
	find a hose like this one, or close enough.
	Gonna take time.

		BOBBY
	How much time?

		DARRELL
	Time.

		BOBBY (rewinds his watch)
	What time is it now?

		DARRELL
	Twenty-after-ten.

		BOBBY
	Jesus.  Twenty-after-ten and it must be
	ninety already.

		DARRELL
	Ninety-two.  Course half hour from now
	might be seventy-two. These clouds move
	around a lot.

Bobby wipes the bandaged hand across his forehead.

		DARRELL
	What happened to your hand?

Self-consciously Bobby quickly drops his hand to his side.

		BOBBY
	Accident.

		DARRELL
	You got to be more careful. Hands is
	important.  Let me show you something. When
	I was a kid, now I don't know if you can
	still see it, but I gashed my fingers in a
	lawnmower.

		BOBBY
	I'm very interested in this but is there
	someplace...

		DARRELL
	Diner up a piece.  Not much, but us simple
	folk like it.

		BOBBY
	I'll be back in a couple of hours.  And be
	careful with her, will you?

Darrell slams down the hood.

		DARRELL
	Just a car.

Bobby reaches into the car, pulls out a small ugly gym bag which
he slings onto his shoulder and moves to the trunk, pops it open.

		BOBBY
	It's not just a car. It's a sixty-four and
	half Mustang convertible. That's the
	difference between you and me, and why you
	live here and I'm just passing through.

The trunk lid rises in the air, partially blocking Bobby from
Darrell, acting as a partition between them.

		BOBBY
	Now do you mind? I got to get some stuff
	out of the trunk.

He throws the car key to Darrell who takes the hint, spits
grotesquely into the dirt, scratches his nuts, and walks back
to the shack.

Concealed by the trunk lid, Bobby pulls out a GUN (a .9mm black
Baretta), wrapped in a t-shirt, from the top of the bag. Perhaps
we see a flash of green money, lots of it. Sports pages and
betting sheets are piled inside. With a look around, Bobby takes
the gun and stashes it underneath the rubber mat in the trunk.
Briefly we notice a towing ROPE under the mat. There is a small
travel bag, from which he peels a fresh bottle of Percodan,
quickly taking two, as well as the sports page.

INT. HARLIN'S GARAGE - DAY

DARRELL watches out of the darkened office through the front
window, as BOBBY slams the trunk and starts walking down the
road, with the bag on his shoulder.

EXT. DESERT ROAD - LATER

BOBBY walks along a dusty patch of road into town past a sign
saying "SUPERIOR - HOME OF THE GOLDEN DOOR RETIREMENT
COMMUNITY." As he walks on, a pair of MOTORCYCLERS roar past on
their Harleys blanketing him in a cloud of DUST.  He shouts
after them, but his words are lost under the whine of the cycle
engines.

EXT. SUPERIOR MAIN STREET - DAY

BOBBY hits town, such as it is:  The Freeway left here a few
years back. There are only a few little stores:  A general
store, a catalog outlet, a post office that doubles as a bus
depot.  All of them built for the desert heat. The busiest spot
in town seems to be the truckstop/diner with a few 18 wheelers
parked outside it.

At the corner of one street sits an old BLIND MAN dressed in
raggedy clothes, perhaps an Indian. His SEEING-EYE DOG lies next
to him. He's talking to TWO OLD MEN, veterans perhaps, Indian or
Spanish. They both have missing limbs and slide off with furtive
alcoholic looks as Bobby passes. The Blind Man yells out in an
American Indian accent.

		BLIND MAN
	Hey!  You there!

		BOBBY
	You want something, old man?

		BLIND MAN
	Don't call me old man.  Ain't you got
	no respect, boy?

		BOBBY
	You want something?

		BLIND MAN
	Yeah I want something.  I want you to run
	over to that machine and get me a pop.

		BOBBY
	You can't do that yourself?

		BLIND MAN
	Hell no, I can't do that myself.  I'm
	blind.  Can't you see that?

		BOBBY
	I'm sorry, I didn't--

		BLIND MAN
	What'd you think I was doing out here
	with these glasses on?  Sunnin' myself?

		BOBBY
	I don't know.  I thought you were keeping
	the sun out of your eyes.

		BLIND MAN
	I ain't got no eyes.  You want to see?

		BOBBY
	Christ no!

		BLIND MAN
	Lost my eyes in Vyee-et-nam.  Lost them
	fighting the commies.  Fought the war and
	lost my eyes fightin' the commies just so
	you can come around here and make fun of
	me.

		BOBBY
	I said I was sorry.

		BLIND MAN
	Don't be sorry.  Just run over there and
	get me my pop before I die of thirst.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, sure.  You got change?

		BLIND MAN
	Change?  You want my change?  I fought the
	war and lost my eyes just so I could give
	you my change?

		BOBBY
	All right, old man.  Christ.

Bobby walks across the street to a very old soda machine; it has
bottles instead of cans.  The blind man shouts to Bobby.

		BLIND MAN
	Get me a Dr. Peppa!  I don't want no Colas.
	Colas ain't nothing but flavored water.

Bobby puts change in the machine and pulls out a bottle of Dr.
Pepper.  He starts back to the blind man.

		BLIND MAN
	Don't forget to open it for me.  I can't be
	opening my own bottle.

		BOBBY
	Christ!

Bobby goes back to the machine and opens the bottle, then walks
back to the old man who pours a splash on the ground.

		BLIND MAN
	A little for Mother Earth. I'm about fifty
	percent Indian, you know. To all our
	relations.

He takes a hearty swig of the soda.

		BLIND MAN
	Ah!  Just what I needed!  Want some?

The blind man holds the bottle out to Bobby.  A string of saliva
runs from his lips to the bottle's neck.

		BOBBY
	I'll pass.

Bobby reaches down and pets the old man's dog. Flies buzz around
both the dog and the Blind Man.

		BOBBY
	I think you'd better give your pooch a sip.
	He looks sick.

		BLIND MAN
	That's 'cause he's dead.

Bobby jumps back.

		BOBBY
	Oh, Jesus.

		BLIND MAN
	I hope you wasn't pettin' him none, was
	you?

		BOBBY
	What the hell are you keeping a dead dog
	around for?

		BLIND MAN
	He's only just dead.  What was I supposed
	to do with him?  I can't take him away
	anywhere.  And nobody wants to take him for
	me.  Do you?

		BOBBY
	Hell no!

		BLIND MAN
	See.  Ain't nothing I can do but keep him
	here beside me.  That's where he belongs
	anyways.  Me and Jesse, that's my dog, not
	anymore, but me and Jesse we been pals
	since the war when I lost my eyes.  He was
	just a pup then... a companion that's
	loyal, that'll keep coming back to you no
	matter how much you kick him...I miss him.
	(as Bobby moves away) I'll see ya later,
	unless I come across something worse.

Bobby noticing a beautiful woman down the street, GRACE McKENNA,
compulsively turns and catches up to her.  She is dressed better
than the usual t-shirts and tank tops of this town -- perhaps a
mail-ordered dress or a mother's hand-me-down.  With her raven
hair and caramel skin, it is obvious she is Native American. Her
arms are full with an awkward package she can barely manage.

		BOBBY
	Can I give you a hand, beautiful?

		GRACE
	I'm just going to my car?

		BOBBY
	That's right on my way.

		GRACE
	My mother told me never to accept offers
	from strangers.

		BOBBY
	My name is Bobby.  Now I'm not a stranger
	anymore.  See how easy it is for us to get
	to know each other, beautiful?

		GRACE
	Do you have to call me that?

		BOBBY
	I don't know your real name.

		GRACE
	Maybe I don't want you to.

Grace stops walking.

		BOBBY
	Maybe, but if you didn't I think you would
	have kept on walking.

		GRACE
	You're pretty full of yourself, aren't you?

		BOBBY
	I like that about me, beautiful.

		GRACE
	It's Grace.

		BOBBY
	May I carry your package, Grace?

Grace hesitates, then gives the package to Bobby.  He has
trouble with it himself.

		BOBBY
	Jesus.

		GRACE
	You sure you can manage?

		BOBBY
	I got it.

		GRACE
	Do you want me to carry your pack for you?

Bobby blurts out emphatically.

		BOBBY
	No!

He catches himself, and softens a bit.

		BOBBY
	No, I've got it.

		GRACE
	What happened to your hand?

		BOBBY
	Accident.

		GRACE
	You should be more careful.

They start walking towards Grace's car.

		GRACE
	It's very nice of you to help me.  That
	package is kind of heavy, and it's so hot.

		BOBBY
	No trouble at all, really.

They get to a car and Bobby puts down the package.

		BOBBY
	Wasn't nothing.

		GRACE
	Oh, this isn't my car.  It's down a ways.
	I should have parked closer.  I just didn't
	think it would be so heavy.  I could drive
	up.

		BOBBY
	That's all right.  I got it.

Bobby takes up the package and they begin walking again.  The
package seems to have gained weight.

		GRACE
	It's just new drapes and curtain rods.  If
	I had known it was going to be so heavy I
	would have had them delivered up to the
	house.

Bobby struggles with the package.  Sweat starts to sheet his
face.

		BOBBY (panting)
	That a fact?

		GRACE
	I just got tired of looking at the old
	drapes. My mother made them. Had them long
	as I can remember. You ever seen something
	and just knew you had to have it?

		BOBBY (straining)
	Yes, I have.

		GRACE
	'Course they cost a little more than I
	should really be spending.  But, damn it, I
	don't hardly ever do anything nice for
	myself.  I deserve nice things.

		BOBBY (can hardly talk)
	I ... can't ... argue ...

They arrive at a JEEP SAHARA.

		GRACE
	This is it.

Bobby practically drops the package.  He is covered with sweat.

		GRACE
	Thank you, Bobby.

		BOBBY
	You're welcome, Grace.

		GRACE
	You're not from around here, are you?

		BOBBY
	Why you say that?  Just because I help a
	lady with her package?

		GRACE
	You don't have that dead look in your eyes
	like the only thing you live for is to get
	through the day.

		BOBBY
	I just drove in this morning.

		GRACE
	Drove into Superior?  What for?

		BOBBY
	Didn't have a choice.  My car overheated up
	the road.

		GRACE
	You're lucky you didn't break down in the
	desert.  Day like today, you'd be dead in no
	time. When you leaving?

		BOBBY
	Not until my car's fixed.  I don't know how
	long that's going to take.

		GRACE
	And here I've made you all hot and sweaty.

Grace steps to Bobby and places her hand against his chest.  She
rubs away some of the sweat. They look at each other a beat. A
POLICE CAR, seen earlier, pulls up beside them from behind and
idles. SHERIFF VIRGIL POTTER is a weathered, handsome,
middle-aged man with suspicious eyes, black haired in contrast
to Bobby's sandiness.

		SHERIFF
	Morning Grace.

		GRACE
	Morning Sheriff. Got my drapes.

		SHERIFF
	Well it's about time. Looks like you found
	yourself a helper too.

 Bobby wants to shrink behind the drapes.

		GRACE
	Well, he offered, and I just couldn't
	refuse. His car overheated.

		SHERIFF
	Oh?

Bobby turns to the Sheriff and forces a smile.

		BOBBY
	Morning, officer.

		SHERIFF
	Son.
	     (beat, to Grace)
	Little excitement out at the reservation
	this morning. Wayne and Dale Elkhart were
	up drinking all night and then Wayne starts
	chasing Dale around the desert with his
	shotgun. BIA handled it. I went by for
	backup.

		GRACE
	Anybody hurt?

		SHERIFF
	Hell, no. That Wayne can't shoot when he's
	sober, much less drunk. He's lucky he
	didn't kill his own danged self.
	     (beat)
	Well, anyhow, you stay cool. Nice meeting
	you, son.

		BOBBY
	Same here, officer.

The Sheriff drives on.  Pause.  They look at each other.

		GRACE
	Well, I guess I could use some help
	getting this box into the house.  Not far.
	You could shower, get something cool to
	drink.

Bobby considers the offer, but there's not much considering to
do.

		BOBBY
	Well, I could use something cool.

EXT. DESERT ROAD - DAY

BOBBY rides along with GRACE in her JEEP.

		GRACE
	Where you coming from?

		BOBBY
	All over.  Chicago, Houston, Detroit.  Just
	lately Dallas.

		GRACE
	You've been around.

		BOBBY
	I guess I've got wander in my blood.

		GRACE
	Where you headed?

		BOBBY
	I don't know.  I have to make a stop in
	Vegas.  Business to finish.  Then maybe
	I'll head to Santa Barbara.  I might be
	able to pick up some action there.

		GRACE
	So, what is it you do, Mister...?

		BOBBY
	Cooper. Bobby Cooper. Oh you know, whatever
	pays best. Little bartending, used to teach
	tennis, played a little competition ...
	(drops it).

		GRACE
	I never played tennis. You just travel
	around Bobby-- no direction, no steady
	work.  You must like taking chances.

		BOBBY
	If you're going to gamble, might as well
	play for high stakes.

		GRACE
	What happens when you lose?

		BOBBY
	I pack up and go somewhere else.

		GRACE (wistfully)
	Somewhere else.  I've never been anywhere
	else.  Just once.  Years ago.  Went to the
	State Fair. It was nice, but it wasn't
	nothing.

		BOBBY
	I couldn't stay in this place.  I wouldn't.
	I'd just pick up, do whatever I had to do,
	and get out.

Grace looks to Bobby and smiles.

		GRACE
	Sometimes I feel the exact same way.

INT. GRACE'S BEDROOM/BATHROOM - LATER - DAY

BOBBY, naked, steps into the shower and turns on the water.  It
shoots from the shower head and cascades over his body.  As the
water falls over him we hear a Russian accented voice:

		VOICE(V.O.)
	I want my money.

Bobby press his left hand against the white tile to steady
himself.  His hand is curled in such a way we cannot see his
pinky or ring finger.  Bobby leans back in the shower.  Just as
he does:

EXT. ALLEY - NIGHT

It is raining hard.  Matching the backwards motion of the last
scene BOBBY is thrown violently against a brick wall, facing
out.

		VOICE(V.O.)
	I want my money.

		BOBBY
	Look, I'll get the money! You don't want to
	do this!

		VOICE (V.O.)
	Take two for now. One a week, punk...

Bobby is being pressed against the wall by two muscular GOONS.
Another MAN stands partially hidden behind the goon's frame.
With one hand one goon flattens Bobby's hand against the brick,
with his other he clips two fingers off with a GARDEN SHEAR. We
see Bobby's face in agonizing pain, then he slides screaming to
the ground until he is framed between the legs of the men.

As Bobby clutches his left hand the rainwater runs in streaks
down his ashen, blank face.

INT. GRACE'S BEDROOM/BATHROOM - MOMENTS LATER

We see BOBBY's face reliving the experience as once again we
hear the voice.

		VOICE (V.O.)
	Two weeks, asshole. Get the money or you
	gonna lose your nose and ears.

Bobby has slumped to the floor of the shower, looking to his
left hand, almost crying, unable to tolerate it.  As a streak of
blood snakes down the white tile we see that the pinky and ring
FINGERS have been cut off at the joints.

INT. GRACE'S BEDROOM/BATHROOM - DAY

BOBBY, his hand rebandaged, is putting on his clothes.

		BOBBY (to himself)
	You're still lucky.

As he does he looks at himself in the mirror.  He bends to pick
up his shirt which is draped over the gym bag.  As he lifts it we
can see, perhaps more closely than at the garage, that the bag is
3/4 filled with money.  He closes the bag and stands.  In the
MIRROR, hidden in the doorway, he sees GRACE watching him.  Bobby
slows perceptibly, but does not try to hide himself.  After a
moment Grace walks into the room carrying a glass of lemonade.

		GRACE
	Thought you might like a refill on your lemonade.

Bobby takes the lemonade and drinks it down.  He rubs the glass
against his forehead.

		BOBBY
	That's good.  Cools you right off.
	(tentatively) I saw you watching me.

		GRACE
	I'm sorry.  I didn't mean to.

		BOBBY
	I didn't say it bothered me.

		GRACE
	Did you like it; me watching you?

		BOBBY
	I guess.  I've got an ego same as any man.

		GRACE
	Good, 'cause I liked what I saw.

Bobby gives a smile as devilish as it is pleasant. Grace slides
an ice cube from the glass between her lips. He notices a framed
picture of GRACE and an OLDER MAN.

		BOBBY
	Nice place.

		GRACE
	Thank you.

Grace sits on the edge of the bed. Bobby indicates the picture,
ironic.

		BOBBY
	Who's that, your father?

		GRACE (without much thought)
	Stepfather...

		BOBBY (coy)
	Got a boyfriend?

		GRACE
	No. Not really.

Bobby senses she's lying but plays along.

		BOBBY
	Must get kind of lonely for a woman living
	by herself in a big house.

		GRACE
	I guess it must.

		BOBBY
	What do you do anyway?

		GRACE
	A little of this, a little of that.  Mostly
	I tell fortunes.

		BOBBY
	Where'd you learn to do that?

		GRACE
	From my father.  He was the tribe's shaman.

		BOBBY
	A medicine man?

		GRACE
	Those are white words, not ours.

		BOBBY
	Nice house for a shaman's daughter.  You
	must be good.

		GRACE
	Come here.

Bobby goes to Grace and kneels before her.  She takes his head
in her hands and looks deep into his eyes.  Her voice goes
thick, but soft, like a morning fog.

		GRACE
	There's something in your past; something
	you want to keep hidden.  There's a pain.
	Something ... someone you can't forget.
	And there is something you want very badly.
	It seems very far away to you, but you are
	determined, and you will do what you must
	to get it.

Bobby closes his hands on Grace's and takes them from his face.
He is more than slightly spooked by the accuracy of Grace's
reading.

		BOBBY
	My face tell you all that?

		GRACE
	It tells me what every face tells me.
	Everybody has a past, they have a pain, and
	they have something they want.
	(seductively) What is it you want?

		BOBBY
	The same thing you do.

They silently stare into each other's eyes.

		GRACE
	Really?  I want to hang drapes.

Grace walks from the room.  For a moment Bobby stares after her.
He takes an ice cube from his glass and crunches it in his
teeth.

INT. GRACE'S LIVING ROOM - DAY

GRACE is standing on a step ladder trying to hang the drapes.
BOBBY notices a photo of Grace with an older INDIAN WOMAN, her
mother?

		GRACE
	Hold me.

Bobby stands behind her, gently places his hands on Grace's
waist.

		GRACE
	Tighter.  I won't break. You know girls are
	a lot tougher than men think.

Bobby holds her tighter as she finished hanging the drapes.  His
eyes are transfixed on her ass.

		GRACE
	There.  All done.  Lift me down.

		BOBBY
	What?

		GRACE
	Lift me down.

Bobby lifts Grace down from the ladder.  He holds her, his hands
around her waist.

		GRACE
	You can let go of me now. I'm safe.(with
	a wicked smile) How do they look?

		BOBBY
	Like you.

		GRACE
	Beautiful?

		BOBBY (kidding)
	Like they're made of polyester.

		GRACE
	I like them.  I was sick of looking at this
	room.  I think they add a little life.

		BOBBY
	Nothing like a little liveliness.

With a sexy pout Grace loads the next question.

		GRACE
	No more drapes to hang.  Now what should
	we do?

		BOBBY
	I have an idea.

		GRACE
	And what would that be?

Bobby steps close to Grace and takes her by the shoulders.  He
pulls her to him and presses his lips hard to hers.  Grace
doesn't respond.

		BOBBY
	All right, Grace.  No more games.

		GRACE (innocently)
	Games?

		BOBBY
	You flirt with me, then you run cold.  You
	lead me on, then slap me down.  I don't go
	for being jerked around.

		GRACE
	Really?  And what game did you want to
	play?  You carry my box for me, and I fall
	into bed with you?

Bobby grabs up his pack.

		BOBBY
	I think I can find my own way back to
	into town.

		GRACE
	Maybe I like to find out about a man first.
	Maybe I like to know what he's made of.

		BOBBY
	I'm just flesh and blood, baby.  That and a
	few memories of bad women; just like most
	guys.  But you already know that.  You read
	my mind, remember? Thanks for the lemonade.

Bobby turns to leave.

		GRACE
	You never did answer my question.

		BOBBY
	Still playing?

		GRACE
	That's not an answer.  What is it you want?

		BOBBY
	You know what I want.

		GRACE
	Maybe I just want to hear you say it.

For a beat Bobby stands and stares hard at Grace.  His pack
slides from his shoulder and thuds on the floor.  With great
determination, like a beast closing for the kill, Bobby moves
for her.  Grace stands firm, ready for him; her head tilts back.
Her breath comes deep and hard.

Just as Bobby is about to reach her, just as he is about to take
her, he is stopped dead by the booming voice of JAKE McKENNA.

		JAKE (O.S.)
	Grace!

Bobby turns to face Jake:  An older man, still large and
formidable for his age.

		GRACE (nonplussed)
	Jake.  I thought you...

		JAKE
	Who the hell is this!?

		BOBBY
	Who the hell are you?

		JAKE
	I'm her husband.

		BOBBY (shocked whisper)
	Husband ...?

		JAKE
	Now who the hell are you, and it better be
	good, or God help me I'll break you in
	half.

		BOBBY
	Easy, chief. I... I was helping your wife.
	I met her in town.  She needed a hand with
	her drapes.  That's all.

		JAKE
	Didn't much look like you were hanging
	drapes.

		BOBBY
	I swear to you that's all that happened.  I
	haven't so much as set foot in your
	bedroom.

		JAKE
	A lot that means.

		BOBBY
	Grace, tell him.

Grace says nothing.  She picks up a glass of lemonade and sips
at it coolly.

		BOBBY
	Damn it, Grace!  Tell him.

		GRACE (coyly)
	If he says that's what happened, Jake, it
	must be true.

		JAKE
	Oh yeah, and I suppose you didn't have
	anything to do with it Grace, he just
	wandered up here by hisself. I got a mind
	to put you over my knee and paddle your
	ass raw!

		BOBBY (to Grace)
	You bitch! Is this what it's all about? You
	sucker me up here so you can watch the two
	of us beat the shit out of each other over
	you? You both... Forget it! (heads for the
	door)

		JAKE
	Where you going!

		BOBBY (exiting)
	'Scuse me, you want to take my head off,
	mister. I won't even try to stop you. I
	deserve it for being an idiot. But if
	you're not, I think I'll be on my way...
	Ow!

Jake punches him in the nose.

		JAKE
	You can't just walk in here and walk out,
	you sonufabitch! I'm gonna tear you a new
	asshole!

		BOBBY
	You broke my nose!

		JAKE
	It ain't broke.

It probably isn't, but it bleeds. Bobby feels the blood and then
sees it on his shirt.

		BOBBY
	Goddamn it! I'm... you're lucky I don't sue
	you.

		JAKE (opens the door)
	Get goin' Junior.

Bobby glares back at Grace who gives him a maddening little smile.

		BOBBY
	You people are crazy!

He storms out holding his nose.

EXT. DESERT ROAD - LATER - DAY

BOBBY, holding a handkerchief to his nose which has stopped
bleeding, hauling his bag on his shoulder, walks back to town
along the side of the road. Already he is caked with a mixture
of sweat and dust, looking up at the relentless sun that beats
down on him.

		BOBBY
	Fuckin' shithole!

A CADILLAC slows beside him, JAKE driving.

		BOBBY
	What the fuck do you want?

		JAKE
	I'll give you a lift, son. Too hot to be
	walking... People die out here, y'know.

Bobby continues walking.

		JAKE
	Aw, you're not still upset about that love
	tap, are you? If I meant you real trouble,
	I'd have given it to you by now. Get in,
	lad. Come on. Get in.

Bobby gets in.

		JAKE
	After you huffed off, Grace lied so bad, I
	got so pissed off, I pulled down her pants
	to paddle her ass raw and finger-fucked it
	instead. Sorry I lost my cool like that.
	It's a funny thing, women.

		BOBBY
	Yeah...

		JAKE
	Say, what happened to your hand?

		BOBBY
	Accident.

		JAKE
	You've got to be--

		BOBBY
	Yeah, I know.  More careful.

		JAKE
	I guess we've never been introduced proper.
	Jake McKenna.

		BOBBY
	That's a solid name.

		JAKE
	I'm a solid man.

		BOBBY
	Bobby Cooper.

		JAKE
	"Bobby Cooper." What brings you to
	Superior, Coop?

		BOBBY
	An overheated car.

		JAKE
	Oh? Darrell taking good care of you?

		BOBBY
	Darrell's a moron.

		JAKE (laughs)
	Yeah, he sure is a character. You need any
	help with that car now?... Where you
	headed?

		BOBBY
	California...

		JAKE
	Live there?

		BOBBY
	Got work.  I know a man who's got a boat.
	Wants me to sail it for him.

		JAKE
	You a sailor man?  That'd be the life.
	Drive across the country, step on a boat
	and just sail away.  A man could pretty
	well disappear like that.  Just sail away
	until all he was was a memory.  I guess a
	little place like this would just be a dot
	on a map to you after awhile.

		BOBBY
	I hope so. (beat) Listen, McKenna about
	your wife:  If I had known she was
	married--

		JAKE
	It wouldn't have made a difference to you,
	now would it?  Not a wit.  Do you know why?
	Because you're a man without scruples.

		BOBBY
	Wait a second--

		JAKE
	Ah, I can smell it on you.

Jake wipes his hand across the back of Bobby's neck and holds it
to his nose.

		BOBBY
	Hey!

		JAKE
	That's the sweat of a man who hasn't an
	honest bone in his body.  Don't be
	offended, lad.  A man who's got no ethics
	is a free man.  I envy that.  Beside, how
	can I blame you?  That Grace sure has a
	mind of her own, and a body to match, don't
	she?  Eh?

Jake nudges Bobby who smiles a nervous smile.

		JAKE
	She does at that.  I knew when I married
	her she was a free spirit.  A woman with
	her looks and a man my age; what was I to
	expect?  But you see a woman like that in a
	town like this and you don't think, you do.
	So, I married her.  What are you to do, eh?
	Women.

		BOBBY
	Can't live with them, and you can't shoot
	'em.

Jake looks at Bobby, his lips curled into a sly smile.

		JAKE
	"You can't shoot 'em!" I like that.
	(laughs) I bet she led you on good, didn't
	she?  Taking you up to the house to hang
	drapes. Oh that's a good one. Bet she had
	you hard as a rock wiggling her ass in your
	face.  I bet you just wanted to pull down
	her pants and hog her out. Then me busting
	in like some wild bear. Ha! Bet you had a
	fire going under you.

		BOBBY
	Like you don't know.

		JAKE
	Mad like a dog in heat, I bet you were.  I
	can tell you got a temper on you.

Bobby gives a little laugh.

		JAKE
	Bet you just wanted to snap her neck right
	then, didn't you?  Bet you just wanted to
	kill her.

Bobby starts to laugh heartily.  Jake joins in, then stops
abruptly.

		JAKE
	Would you?

		BOBBY
	Would I what?

		JAKE
	Would you kill her?

Bobby starts to laugh. Bobby stops laughing.

		JAKE
	Because I'm sick and tired of her little
	games.  Because you could do it and drift
	away on your boat and no one would ever see
	you again.  Because I've got a
	fifty-thousand dollar life insurance policy
	on her, and I would be more than happy to
	give the man who does her in a good chunk
	of it.

For a moment Bobby sits in silence not sure of what to make of
the offer.

		BOBBY
	I've done a few things but I'm not a
	murderer, Mr. McKenna.

		JAKE
	How do you know if you've never tried?

		BOBBY
	This is a joke, right?  You just want to
	rattle me.  Right?

They reach town and Jake stops the car near a small GROCERY
STORE.

		JAKE
	That's right.  Nothing but a joke.  That's
	all.

Bobby gets out of the car.  With a big smile Jake says:

		JAKE
	Enjoy your stay, lad.

Jake speeds away.  Bobby looks after him.

		BOBBY
	Who are these people?

INT. SMALL GROCERY STORE - LATER

The store is small and dark and empty save for a tiny, older
Mexican WOMAN who is behind the counter.  BOBBY enters.

		BOBBY
	Got any cold soda?

		WOMAN
	Eh?

		BOBBY
	Soda.  You got any soda?

		WOMAN
	Hablar slowly, por favor.  My ingles no es
	bien.

		BOBBY
	Soda.  You know.

Bobby cups his hand and brings it to his mouth pantomiming.

		WOMAN
	Oh.  Something to eat.  Si.

She holds up a pack of Twinkies.

		BOBBY
	Not eat.  Drink.  What the fuck is drink in
	Spanish ... uh, agua?

The old woman's eyes widen.  She starts to scream, but quickly
clamps her hands over her mouth.  For a moment Bobby thinks the
woman is screaming at what he has said.  Then, as if he feels a
presence behind him, Bobby turns slowly to face the TWO
tough-looking, unshaven, tattoo-covered BIKERS.  One holds a
gun.

		BIKER
	That's right, lady.  Keep it in you and
	nobody gets hurt.  That goes for you too,
	stud.  Gimmie the money.  Now!

		WOMAN
	Eh?

		SECOND BIKER
	The dinero, Senora.  Hand it over.

Bobby shifts his weight trying to hide his pack behind his back.

The woman goes to an old-fashioned cash register and rings it
open.  She hands the money to the biker.

		BIKER
	That's it?  Lady, I got kids to put through
	school.

		WOMAN
	Es all I have.

The biker turns to Bobby.

		BIKER
	Okay, pal.  Whatcha got? Give it, now.

Bobby pulls a thick wad of cash ($1,000 plus) from his pant
pocket, tosses it on the counter.

		BIKER (thumbing through it, impressed)
	Nice...Just who are you beautiful? What
	else you got for papa?

Bobby makes a show of pulling out his wallet, flings it to him.

		BIKER
	Better...you're getting tasty. Now toss the
	bag, sweetie.

		BOBBY
	It's just books.

		BIKER
	I'm a reader. Toss it.

		BOBBY (an entreaty)
	It's personal things...family things.

		BIKER
	How touching...I like family values. Give
	it to me.

Bobby takes an unsteady breath.

		BOBBY
	No.

		BIKER
	No?

		SECOND BIKER
	Hey man, forget it. Come on.

		BIKER
	No?

		WOMAN
	Senor, give him the bag.

		BIKER
	That's all right. He doesn't want to give
	me the bag...

		SECOND BIKER
	He's fucking with you man. Shoot him.

		BIKER (cont'd)
	...he doesn't have to give me the bag.

The biker grabs Bobby's bag. Bobby flinches in anticipation of a
shot but refuses to let go of the bag.  The biker swings the gun
hard, clipping Bobby across the forehead.  Bobby falls against
the counter and to the floor.  The woman starts to scream. The
biker grabs up the pack, then, looking back at the woman, sees a
ring on her finger.  He grabs her hand and pulls at the ring.
The woman screams wildly.

		SECOND BIKER
	Let's go, man.

		BIKER
	A little extra never hurt, Benji, would you
	just relax.

		WOMAN
	No!  No! My wedding ring.

He pulls the ring from the woman's finger and pushes her back.
With Bobby's bag slung over his shoulder he turns to leave.

		BIKER
	Now we go.

		WOMAN
	You go to El Diablo!

From beneath the counter the woman pulls a shotgun. The woman
fires A SHOT that rips through the bag and into the back of the
biker.  He falls to the ground, very dead, amid a shower of
blood and shredded money.

		 SECOND BIKER
	Bugger! You bitch!

The Second Biker now sees the money floating all over the place
out of the torn bag. His eyes go big with greed as he FIRES at
the old woman, who ducks behind the counter.

The Biker grabs for the bag and what's left of the money, not
expecting the feisty old lady to pop up and unload her SECOND
BLAST into him and the bag.

Whatever was left of the money on the first round is now gone to
shreds along with the bag and the Biker who is very dead.

Bobby is staggered, crawls towards the shreds.

		WOMAN (cursing in Spanish)
	Hijos de puta. Bayan a comer su propia
	mierda en el infierno. (TRANSLATION: Sons
	of bitches. Go eat your own shit in hell).

She comes around the counter to his side as he grabs his wallet
and the $1000 cash roll from the dead biker's pants.

		WOMAN
	I call the sheriff.

		BOBBY
	No! No police.

Bobby gives her a hundred dollars.

		WOMAN
	A hundred dollars? No police?

Bobby gives her some more cash. She looks at him. Finally he
gives her the entire wad.

		BOBBY
	No police until I leave.

Bobby stumbles from the store as the screen burns a bright white.

					    FADE TO:

EXT. STREET - LATER

BOBBY, dazed and holding his head, sits on the ground next to a
SPIGOT that is dripping water.  He cups his hands under the
water and splashes it against his face, lightly wiping the cut
above his eye. The SHERIFF'S CAR goes wailing by on the main
drag. Recoiling from being spotted, Bobby tries to take another
drink. A SCORPION crawls out of the faucet. He jumps back.

EXT. HARLIN'S GARAGE - LATER

DARRELL is leaning under the hood of a car working on its engine
as BOBBY walks up.

		BOBBY
	Hey.

		DARRELL
	Hey, your ... what the hell happened to
	you?

		BOBBY
	Nothing.

		DARRELL
	Don't look like nothing.

		BOBBY
	Just banged my head.  It was an accident.

		DARRELL
	Another accident?  You got to be more
	careful.

Bobby rolls his eyes. Then notices the front fenders have been
removed.

		BOBBY
	What the hell happened to my car?

		DARRELL
	Bottom hose was shot too.  Rotted clear
	through. Had to put a new one in. Runs like
	a dream now.

		BOBBY (suspicious)
	How much?

		DARRELL
	Well ... you got your parts, you got your
	labour ... let's call it a hundred-fifty
	bucks.

		BOBBY
	How much!?

		DARRELL
	Hundred-fifty.

		BOBBY
	To replace a goddamn radiator hose!?

		DARRELL
	A goddamn radiator hose in a
	sixty-four-and-a-half Mustang.  You know
	how long it took me to find that hose?

		BOBBY
	About an hour and a half, because that's
	all the longer I've been gone.

		DARRELL
	Actually, it's been about three hours.
	You're the one thinks that car's so damn
	fancy.  What you expect but fancy damn
	prices?

		BOBBY
	That's a Ford, not a Ferrari.  You going to
	tell me no one else in this shit hole
	drives a Ford?

		DARRELL
	"That's not just a Ford, that's a
	sixty-four-and-a-half Mustang."

		BOBBY
	What's that got to do with the radiator hose?

		DARRELL
	I don't know, but "it's the reason I'm living
	here and you're just passing through."  Now you
	owe me a hundred-fifty dollars.

		BOBBY
	It might as well be fifteen-hundred
	dollars, because I don't have the money.

		DARRELL
	Then you ain't gonna have the car.

		BOBBY
	Listen, man.  I got rolled half an hour ago
	for everything I had.

Bobby digs through his bloodied wallet, trying to hide it from
Darrell. He fishes out a five dollar bill. Then digs out a
bloody one dollar bill from his pocket.

		BOBBY
	I've got five...six dollars.

Darrell snatches the five from him and adds it to a thick wad of
greasy bills he carries in his overalls.

		DARRELL
	Then you're only a hundred-forty-five in
	the hole.  You can keep that dollar. Now
	why don't you just take your American
	Express Gold Card, and call that guy with
	the big schnooz on TV and have him send you
	the money lickity split.

		BOBBY
	I don't have a goddamn credit card.

		DARRELL
	Now that's too bad.  I sure hope you know
	how to wash dishes or shovel shit 'cause
	you're gonna have to work this one off.

Bobby proffers his Movado watch.

		BOBBY
	Look, I got a Movado.  It's worth at least
	seven, eight hundred. You could sell it for
	that.

		DARRELL (studying it)
	Who the hell to? Shit, can't see no
	numbers.

		BOBBY
	You don't need numbers.  That's why it's
	expensive.  Look at the gold.

Darrell doubts that, shake his head.

		DARRELL
	...got no day, got no date.  Probably ain't
	worth a duck's fart (proffers his own
	watch). This one here cost me $3.75 and
	it's got every doodad you can imagine. No
	sir I'll stick with this (walks away).

		BOBBY
	You son of a bitch! I'll have my lawyers
	shut you down.

		DARRELL
	You ain't got no credit card but you got a
	lawyer. Sweet talk me all you want.  Didn't
	you read the sign? It says...

		BOBBY
	What sign? Fuck the sign. I want my car.

		DARRELL
	I want my hundred and forty-five dollars.

Bobby stands his ground for a moment as if deciding whether or
not to fight for the car, then wheels and walks away.

Darrell looks at him, smirks.

INT. TRUCK STOP/DINER - LATER

It is a little worn diner-type stop one would find on most any
open road:  Counter with stools, laminated menus, a Wurlitzer in
the corner belching out country TUNES.  Business is slow but
it's the only restaurant in town. There is a SHORT ORDER COOK in
the kitchen, and FLO, a hard-looking waitress is behind the
counter.  A couple of regular drivers, ED and BOYD, are seated
on the stools, Boyd is flipping a coin.

		ED
	One-hundred-thirteen degrees.  That was
	back in July of forty-seven. That afternoon
	it dropped down to forty three! True story.

		BOYD
	One time last year I remember it went from
	98 to 23 same day. Wind, black clouds come
	out like...

BOBBY comes out of the men's room and sits at the end of the
counter.  He has cleaned himself up a bit but still looks like a
mess. He buries his face in the menu.

		BOBBY
	You got a beer?

		FLO
	What kind?

		BOBBY
	Beck's.

		FLO
	No Beck's. A-1, Coors...

		BOBBY
	Heineken?

		FLO
	No, we ain't got no Heineken.  We got
	Miller.

		BOBBY
	Genuine Draft?

		FLO
	No.  Just plain ol' Miller. Now you can
	fuckin' take it or you can fuckin' leave
	it.

		BOBBY
	I'll fuckin' take it. To go.

		SHORT ORDER COOK
	Flo, cheeseburger bleedin'.

		FLO
	I'll be right back with that beer.

Flo moves off.

		BOBBY
	...and a waitress named Flo.  Christ.

As Bobby stares at the money on the counter in front of him, he
hears, from somewhere outside the diner, the sound of a POLICE
RADIO crackling. He now feels something against his foot.  He
looks down and sees a CAT rubbing against his leg.  He gives it
a good kick sending it sliding across the floor with a screech.

		BOBBY
	Fucking cat.

In the background, two teenagers sit at a booth.  TOBY looks the
part of a local, wearing jeans and a white T-shirt.  His hair is
cropped close and he looks to be a senior in high school.  His
girl, JENNY, is nondescript, neither ugly nor beautiful. She is
the kind of girl most guys would pass without a second look.
Toby gets up from his booth and goes to the bathroom.  After he
is gone Jenny walks to Bobby.

		JENNY
	Hey, Mister.  You gotta quarter for the
	juke?

		BOBBY
	What?

		JENNY
	I wanna play a song on the juke.  You got a
	quarter?

Bobby looks at Jenny, then picks a quarter from his winnings and
flips it to her. He can't resist putting a little charm into it.

		JENNY
	What happened to your hand?

		BOBBY
	I cut it shaving; I know, I gotta be more
	careful.

		JENNY
	Got any requests?

		BOBBY
	That country shit all sounds the same to
	me.

		JENNY
	How about I pick one out for you?

Bobby half smiles.  Jenny plays a song.  Patsy Cline's "Your
Cheatin' Heart."  Jenny takes up a stool next to Bobby's.

		JENNY
	You like Patsy Cline?  I just love her.
	How come, I wonder, she don't put out no
	more new records.

		BOBBY
	Cause she's dead.

		JENNY
	Gee, that's sad.  Don't that make you sad?

		BOBBY
	I've had time to get over it.

		JENNY
	You're not from around here, are you?
	Where you from?

		BOBBY
	Oz.

		JENNY
	You ain't from Oz.  Oz is in that movie.

		BOBBY
	You're too quick for me.

Toby walks back into the room.  He looks at Jenny.  He looks at
Bobby.  He looks at Jenny talking to Bobby.  He loses it.

		TOBY
	No....No....No I'm seeing but I'm not
	believin'...Stop the wedding.  This can't
	be. Hey!  What are you doing with my girl?

Bobby says nothing, ignoring Toby.

		TOBY
	I axed you a question.

		JENNY
	Aw, Toby, we weren't doing nothing.  We was
	just talking.

		TOBY
	You shut your mouth, girl, and get back
	over to our table. (to Bobby) Now, I'm not
	going to axe you again, Mister.  What were
	you doing with my girl?

		BOBBY
	I wasn't doing anything.

		TOBY
	That's not the way it looked to me.  Looked
	to me like you was trying to make time with
	her.

		BOBBY
	Make time?  Is everybody in this town on
	drugs?

		JENNY
	Honest, Toby.  I just axed him for a
	quarter for the jukebox.

		TOBY
	Stay out of this, Jenny.  We got man's
	business to take care of. I ain't never
	taken no drugs, mister, and ...

		BOBBY
	Then maybe you should've. Look, pal, I
	wasn't making a play for your girl.

		TOBY
	You expect me to believe that?

		BOBBY
	I don't care what you believe as long as
	you leave me alone.

		TOBY
	Mister, I'm calling you out.

		BOBBY
	What?  You want to fight?  Over her?

Bobby looks Jenny over.

		FLO
	Toby, you go finish your soda and leave the
	man alone.

		TOBY (to Bobby)
	You know who I am?  Toby N. Tucker.
	Everyone round here call me TNT. You know
	why?

		BOBBY
	Let's see...they're not very imaginative?

		TOBY
	'Cause I'm just like dynamite.  And when I
	go off, somebody gets hurt.

		BOBBY
	Fine.  I was making time with your girl.
	Now I'm scared to death and I learned my
	lesson. Now can you go away?

		TOBY
	Not before I settle with you, chickenshit!

		BOBBY
	Christ, I don't believe this!

		TOBY
	Stand up.

		BOBBY
	I wasn't hitting on your girl!

		TOBY
	Stand up, Mister, or I'll beat you where
	you sit.

Bobby sits for a beat. he doesn't need a fight with Toby now
with his damaged hand nor does he need to be noticed either. He
sits there.

		FLO
	Toby, you stop it now! Can't you see he's
	got a hurt hand?

		TOBY
	Don't you never mind, Flo.  This is gonna
	be over real quick.

Reluctantly Bobby rises, facing off against Toby, each clenching
their fist and waiting for the other to make the first move.
The tension builds.  We see it on the faces of Jenny, Flo and
the regulars.  Just then the record on the juke ends and the
needle scratches off.  There is the crackle of a police radio as
the door to the diner opens and SHERIFF VIRGIL POTTER walks in.
The tension eases. Toby, mindful of the sheriff, steps closer to
Bobby and whispers menacingly into his ear.

		TOBY
	You're lucky, Mister.  Don't think it's
	over.  I called you out and I'm gonna see
	this through.  You hear me? (to Jenny)
	Come on, girl.  I got half a mind to make
	you walk home.

Toby takes Jenny by the arm and pulls her out of the diner.

		FLO
	My lord, that little baby of yours Virgil,
	has gotten cuter'n a bunny's nose.

		SHERIFF
	What was that all about?

		FLO
	You know how that Toby is.  Thinks every
	man he sees is after his Jenny.

		SHERIFF
	More like Jenny is after every man she
	sees.

		FLO (to Bobby)
	You pay Toby no mind.  He just likes to
	show off for his girl.  Give him a couple
	of hours, he'll cool off.  Still want that
	beer?

		BOBBY (tense, seeing the Sheriff)
	I'll take it to go.

Bobby holds his hand to his face to cover the cut on his
forehead.

		ED
	How's it with you, Sheriff?

		SHERIFF
	Already started out bad.  Couple of bikers
	from out of town tried to knock over
	Jamilla's grocery store this morning. It
	was a real shootout.

		BOYD
	What happened?

		SHERIFF
	The old witch killed 'em both.

		ED
	Holy shit!

		FLO
	Poor thing.  Is she all right?

		SHERIFF
	Sure, when the sons of bitches tried to
	steal her wedding ring. That's when she
	started shooting.  Can't blame her.  The
	ring was all Carlos left her when he died.
	Store's a mess.

		BOYD
	It's the desert.  That's what it is.  The
	desert makes everybody crazy.  Ain't that
	right, Sheriff?  People go crazy out here.

		ED
	Come on, Boyd.  I've got to make tracks.
	That yogurt's got to make Santa Fe before
	it spoils.

		BOYD
	Dr. Pepper don't have that problem.

Ed and Boyd toss a few bills on the counter and exit.  Flo
stands near the cash register with Bobby's beer.

		FLO
	I can't open off-sale for you, sugar.

Bobby pays for the beer ($1.75).  Flo opens the register.

		FLO
	Let me get your change.

		SHERIFF
	Flo, I'm just gonna help myself to a refill
	on the coffee.

The Sheriff reaches around the counter for the pot.

		FLO
	You be careful now, Virgil.

Just as the words leave Flo's mouth the Sheriff spills the pot.
It shatters against the floor spilling hot coffee everywhere.
Flo runs over to him.

		SHERIFF
	Son of a bitch!

		FLO
	Virgil!  Now look at what you done!  Are
	you all right?

		SHERIFF
	I think I burned my gun hand!

As Flo bends to wipe the counter, Virgil touches her intimately.

		SHERIFF (Cont'd)
	How 'bout we put something soft on it
	later? (a look)

		FLO
	(quietly) I could put some butter on it,
	hon'. (Her normal abrasive voice) It'd
	serve you right, you asshole.  Put it under
	some cold water. Joe, run get a mop and
	clean this fuckin' mess up.

While everyone is distracted Bobby notices that the register
drawer has been left open.  He looks around to make sure he is
not being watched.  Slowly he eases his hand towards the drawer.
It gets closer and closer.  As he is about to grab the money
there, the cat - the same one he kicked away earlier - hisses
and claws at his hand.  Bobby jumps back startled.

		FLO
	Shasta!  Now why'd you go and scare the
	nice man like that?  Sorry about that,
	mister.  Let's see, you want $3.25. (gives
	it to him) You try to have a nice day now,
	would you?

		BOBBY
	Sure, I'll try.

With the Sheriff occupied, and the Mexican Jose mopping the
floor, Bobby exits.

EXT. PHONE BOOTH - STREET - DAY

BOBBY begs on the phone.

		BOBBY
	Cici?  Cici, it's Bobby...Bobby
	Cooper...Yeah, look, I know it's been a
	while, but I'm kind of in a
	jam...yeah...One-hundred-fifty
	dollars...That's a lie. I called you on
	your birthday..Two years ago...I can't help
	it if you didn't get the message. Cici,
	honey, I don't want to argue. I need you to
	wire me the money...Because they're fucking
	going to KILL ME!  I didn't steal your
	CD's...Yeah, well where's my Mr. Coffee.
	Cici...Cici...

Bobby slams the phone.

		BOBBY
	Bitch. Cunt.

					    JUMP CUT TO:

EXT. SAME PHONE BOOTH - STREET - DAY

BOBBY is on another call, circling a local sports page betting
line.

		BOBBY
	73-11, this is Pluto. What's the line on
	Dallas?

		GAMBLER'S VOICE
	Pluto. Fucking deadbeat. We head about
	you. You owe "the commie" 13 dimes, why you
	tryin' to get in my office? Lose this
	fuckin' number.

		BOBBY
	Mike...Mike...you asshole.

		GAMBLER'S VOICE
	Mike who?
	     (hangs up)

Bobby, frustrated, clicks off.

					    JUMP CUT TO:

INT. MR. ARKADY'S OFFICE - DAY

It is the kind of cheesy, temporary office one would expect to
find in a Las Vegas apartment building overlooking the DOWNTOWN
STRIP.  MR. ARKADY, dressed in a silk suit with conspicuous
jewelry, sits behind his desk eating lunch and cleaning his
nails.  SERGEI, his goon in a shiny polyester shirt, hovers over
his boss helping feed and manicure him.  These are the TWO MEN
from Bobby's earlier FLASHBACK.  They are dangerous in an
endearing way.  Sergei answers the phone. In the background is a
very voluptuous female, obviously from the Middle East. SOFIA.

		SERGEI
	Da?

		MR. ARKADY
	Sergei, what are you, a Neanderthal? How
	many times do I have to tell you?  You
	answer a phone "hello," not "da."

		SERGEI (nods yes)
	Sorry, Mr. Arkady.(into phone)"Hello?"

		OPERATOR(V.O.)
	I have a collect call from Bobby Cooper.
	Will you accept the charges?

		SERGEI
	Mr. Arkady, deadbeat Cooper's calling.

Mr. Arkady doesn't acknowledge him.

		SERGEI
	He's calling collect.

At this Mr. Arkady's head springs up.  He snatches the phone
from Sergei.

		MR. ARKADY (overly sweet)
	Bobby, what a surprise.  I expected to be
	seeing you, not talking to you over the
	phone.

					   INTERCUTS TO:

EXT. PHONE BOOTH - STREET

BOBBY on the phone.

		BOBBY
	I know, Mr. Arkadin. I know. I was on my
	way to you, it's just ... what a day I've
	had. I know I'm coming up with a highly
	improbable story, and I know you're not
	going to believe this, but this ...is...
	what happened. I had the money, I swear I
	had it. I was on my way to Vegas when my
	car breaks down in the middle of nowhere.

Mr. Arkady cleans his nails completely disinterested in what
Bobby is saying.

		MR. ARKADY
	That's a shame, Bobby.  A real shame.

		BOBBY
	And that's not the half of it, Mr.
	Arkadin...

		MR. ARKADY
	"Arkady"

		BOBBY
	Right, Mr. Arkady. And that's not the half
	of it. I got your money, and I go into this
	little grocery store in this hicktown to
	get something to eat and then... well, it
	gets robbed!

		MR. ARKADY
	...And let me guess.  This robber -- he
	gets your money.

		BOBBY
	No. Two of them. Two robbers. And they both
	get nailed... get shot by the old lady.

		MR. ARKADY
	 The old lady?

		BOBBY
	With a shotgun!  She kills both of 'em,
	and... and the money in my bag gets all
	shredded to bloody pieces. Not one bill is
	left alive.  I mean, what are the odds?

		MR. ARKADY (beat, dry)
	Pretty long, Bobby.

		BOBBY
	Mr. Arkady, honest, I ad to beat it outta
	there before the cops showed. So now I
	don't have a cent to my name. I can't even
	get my car out of the garage.  I tell you,
	Mister... (pause) if it weren't for bad
	luck I wouldn't have nay fuckin' luck at
	all, you know? (beat, waits)  So, I was
	wondering if you could wire me a hundred
	fifty-dollars so I could get my car out of
	this garage, see?  The bus depot here has a
	Western Union thing.  And of course I'll
	pay it back with the rest of the money.

		MR. ARKADY(V.O.)
	Which you don't have.

		BOBBY
	But which I can get. No problem. Look, I
	can sell my car in Vegas. Blue book it's
	worth 16 at least. I just need the 150,
	 uh...

Sergei looks like he's ready to pound heads.

		MR. ARKADY (pause)
	Where are you?

		BOBBY (hopeful)
	Uh...a little shithole in Arizona called
	Superior. About 200 miles east of Phoenix.

		MR. ARKADY (pausing, V.O.)
	Superior, hunh?

Bobby suddenly feeling suspicious.

		BOBBY(V.O.)
	Yeah, if you could send it care of...

		MR. ARKADY
	...Now, let me get this straight. Two years
	you give me problems with your fuckin'
	payoffs. Now you owe me thirteen-thousand
	dollars, you call me - collect - then ask
	me to wire you one-hundred-fifty dollars
	just so you can get your car fixed.

		BOBBY(V.O.)
	A hundred-forty-five would probably cover it.

		MR. ARKADY
	A hundred and ... Now you listen to me
	you deadbeat little punk:  I don't care if
	you got hit by a truck and run over by a
	steamroller.  You owe me thirteen-thousand
	dollars and I want it.  I don't care how
	you get it, or where from, but I want it on
	my desk tomorrow, or I'll show you what
	real bad luck is.

Sergei snaps a pencil he's holding in his hand, which goes
flying by Arkady's head, forcing him to duck.

		MR. ARKADY
	Do you understand me you little fuck?

		BOBBY (snaps)
	Oh, fuck you too!

		MR. ARKADY
	What'd you say to me!

		BOBBY
	Shit I'm sorry!...you can't believe the
	strain I'm under. I'm just under a lot of
	strain here.

There is a sharp silence at the other end. Bobby waits.

		MR. ARKADY
	Bobby, you owed me that 'bread' 4 weeks
	ago. Now you tell me you want another week.
	That's 5 weeks, Bobby. That's also 5
	fingers, cause you and I know it's a finger
	a week Bobby. So you got balls. Good--now
	you come here tomorrow and you talk to me
	real nice and maybe I don't take the other
	3 fingers you owe me, you see? Tomorrow --
	and Bobby, don't make me come look for you,
	okay...have nice day.

He hands the phone back to Sergei.

		SERGEI (into phone)
	You got that? -- have nice day (hangs up).

		MR. ARKADY
	The nerva that piece of shit! And look at
	you, you Neanderthal -- don't you fuckin'
	break pencils, you goombah!

		SOFIA
	Finger? What are you, a faggot? In my
	country a man don't pay we cut off his
	head.

Arkady motions Sergei to come close.

		MR. ARKADY
	Get your ass down to this Superior,
	Arizona. Bring me this Bobby Cooper. I
	don't think he got the lesson. This is your
	last chance, Sergei.

		SERGEI
	Da.

EXT. STREET - DAY

BOBBY, desperate, stares at the bandage of his wounded hand. It
throbs, holding the hand to his ear.

We hear an OPERATOR'S VOICE:

		OPERATOR(V.O.)
	Hello?

		BOBBY
	Hello?

		OPERATOR(V.O.)
	Are you finished with your call?

		BOBBY
	Yeah.

		OPERATOR(V.O.)
	Please deposit an additional seventy-five
	cents.

Bobby slams the phone against the hook.

		BOBBY
	Goddamn rat's ass fuck! Shit! Damn! Damn!
	Damn!

He marches from the phone booth, past an old HARDWARE STORE. The
phone falls from the hook and we hear a recorded voice:

		VOICE(V.O.)
	Thank you for using AT&T.

In the store window, Bobby notices a set of garden shears for
sale.

EXT. EMPTY STREET - LATER DAY

BOBBY walks a bit going nowhere in particular.  Looking at his
watch thinking of Mr. Arkady, he shields himself with one hand
from the sun.  At the side of an old building, in the bit of
shade it throws, he twists at the beer cap which sticks and
won't turn.  Bobby tries again twisting harder -- too hard -- as
the cap jerkily twists off, cutting into his hand as it rotates.
Bobby yells in pain.  At the same time the beer comes foaming
from the bottle and spills onto his sleeve. The bottle slips
from his wet fingers and crashes on the ground, emptying. He
clutches his bleeding hand, pissed.

		BOBBY
	Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! I hate this fuckin' town!
	I hate it! Do you hear me?
	     (no answer)
	Get me outta here, please.  I gotta get out
	of this place.

As if in answer, a JEEP drives by on the main street. GRACE
looks pretty hot up there in the driver's seat, her eyes, behind
sunglasses, flicking over him but not acknowledging him as she
keeps going.

Bobby's eyes throw back his own hostility at her, but
unfortunately she misses it, as he now notices -- across the
street -- a well-kept building with the most modern decor and
signage, reading "McKenna's Realty Co."

He thinks about it, in a quandary.

EXT. HIGHWAY/CAR - DAY

In a rented convertible, we now see SERGEI racing across the
desert. His jacket off, a man with a mission. He glances at his
watch, eager to get to this "fucking hole in the wall" which is
somewhere on this incomprehensible American map he holds in one
hand.

INT. JAKE'S REALTY OFFICE - DAY

BOBBY squats, looking at a real estate model of a desert
development. JAKE smiles.

		JAKE
	What can I do for you, lad?

		BOBBY
	I was hoping we could talk.

		JAKE
	Talk?  About what?

		BOBBY
	About things.  About your wife.

		JAKE
	Sweet Grace?  What about her?

		BOBBY
	About what you said this morning.

Jake shakes his head as if he doesn't understand.

		BOBBY
	You said you had an insurance policy out on
	your wife.  Fifty-thousand dollars.

		JAKE
	I do.

		BOBBY
	You said you'd cut that up with the man who
	did her in.

		JAKE
	I did?

		BOBBY
	Don't play simple with me, Jake. You're a
	betting man. You want me to spell it out
	for you? I'll kill Grace if you cut me in
	on the money.

		JAKE
	Boy I think this heat's getting to you the way
	you're rambling on.

		BOBBY
	I'm not rambling.

		JAKE
	You're talking like a madman.

		BOBBY
	Well then, I guess that qualifies me for
	citizenship in this town. You're the one
	brought it up. This morning. In your car.

		JAKE
	Oh, that was just loose talk. Husband
	gettin' pissed off.  I don't want anybody
	dead.

		BOBBY
	Bullshit.  You wanted me to kill her.

		JAKE
	A man doesn't always mean the things he
	says.

		BOBBY
	You meant it.

		JAKE
	What makes you say that?

		BOBBY
	Because you're a slimy bastard who would
	have his wife killed just to get his hands
	on some money.

		JAKE
	And what does that make you?

		BOBBY
	The slimy bastard who's going to do it for
	you... (pause) You're a jealous man Jake.
	If you can't have Grace to yourself...well,
	you're not the sharing kind.

For a moment Jake stares quietly at Bobby.

		JAKE
	Well, I guess I have what you call a
	love-hate relationship with Grace.

		BOBBY
	You love her, but you hate her?

		JAKE
	No, I hate loving her. I hate the kind of
	person she is. I hate having to tolerate
	the little "games" she plays. Like fucking
	half of the town behind my back and
	laughing at me. The bitch. She loved to
	play. She wants me to hit her and when I
	hit her she likes it. She tortures me. But
	she's family. She's my little girl. My
	baby. I couldn't stand to watch her eyes
	roll back in her head as she sucks her last
	breath, or to see her pretty pink brains
	spill from her skull. No. Not me. But you?
	You got the killing in you, boy...How much
	you want?

A pause.

		BOBBY
	Make it twenty.

		JAKE (stressed, paces)
	Twenty-thousand?  I don't have that kind of
	money.  I won't get the insurance until
	months after she's dead.  I don't imagine
	you'll want to be stickin' around after
	poor Grace's demise.  Twenty-thousand;
	that's more money than I could ever get my
	hands on.

		BOBBY
	How much could you get?

		JAKE
	Maybe ... ten-thousand.  And that's a
	maybe.

		BOBBY
	I need thirteen.

		JAKE
	That's a bit much.

		BOBBY
	We're not talking about buying a car Jake.
	We're talking about killing your wife. It's
	thirteen, or it's nothing.

For a moment the two men stand silent.  All we hear is the
ticking of a grandfather CLOCK that stands in the corner.

		JAKE
	You drive a hard bargain, but I had a
	feeling you were my boy when I met you.

		BOBBY
	I'm not your boy.  I don't like you.  I got
	no choice but to do business with you.
	Let's just call this a nasty little
	marriage of convenience.

		JAKE
	Don't say that.  I had a marriage of
	convenience with Grace, and look where
	that's lead...  Well, looks like we got
	ourselves a contract.

		BOBBY (sarcastic)
	Do we shake hands?

		JAKE
	If you can't trust the man you've hired to
	kill your wife ...? The thing is it's got
	to look like an accident; that's the thing.
	If it doesn't, then it's no good.  I won't
	get a dime, and it's my neck that'll be on
	the chopping block while you're living it
	up somewhere.

		BOBBY
	How do you want it?

		JAKE
	How the hell should I know?  I've never had
	a wife killed before. Jesus Christ! You
	want this job, you don't know how to do
	this? I guess I should have hired a
	professional.

		BOBBY
	You want to do this yourself?  I don't have
	to do this, you know.

		JAKE
	Be quiet, boy.  I got to figure this thing.
	I'm thinking. It can't be done at the
	house. It should be...

Jake walks the office thinking.

		BOBBY
	Come to think of it, how 'bout some money
	upfront?

		JAKE
	Oh yeah sure. Why don't I buy you a plane
	ticket right out of here while I'm at it. I
	know you...
	     (then)
	This is what you do:  Go to the house to
	see her.

		BOBBY
	     (beat)
	And tell her what?

EXT. MCKENNA HOUSE - LATER DAY

BOBBY stands on the porch talking to GRACE through the screen of
the front door.  The look on his face is sincere.  Hers is
skeptical.  We see the action take place as we hear Jake's V.O.:

		JAKE(V.O.)
	...I don't know.  Tell her you had to see
	her.  Tell her you don't care if she's
	married or not, you had to be with her.
	Sweet talk the woman.  A young buck like
	you must be good at that.  Then ... maybe
	shift the conversation.  Get her thinking
	about that jeep of hers.  She loves that
	thing.  Maybe the only thing she does love.
	She'll want to take you for a ride.

		BOBBY
	I know you're not surprised I'm back here,
	cause you can read my mind and all.

She's not surprised.

		GRACE (seeing his new cut)
	That's some cut. I told you to be more
	careful.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, well I said I was an idiot. Whatta
	you say we get out of here, take a drive
	somewhere, talk...

		GRACE
	How do you know he's still not here?

		BOBBY
	Guys like me take those chances. Let's go.

EXT. DESERT - DAY

GRACE'S JEEP cuts hard across the desert.  Grace has a wild,
excited look on her face.  BOBBY sits next to her looking
somewhat nervous.

		JAKE(V.O.)
	She'll take you out somewhere in the
	desert.  She loves it out there; ridin'
	through the red rock and the mesas.  So do
	I.  I guess we got that in common.  She'll
	ride you out someplace quiet.  Someplace
	deserted.

						FADE TO:

EXT. DESERT - LATER DAY

GRACE has stopped the JEEP on a plateau.  BOBBY sits beneath its
shade while Grace walks in the sun seemingly unaffected by the
heat. VULTURES swoop above.

		JAKE(V.O.)
	There won't be anyone for miles around.
	Just the two of you and some prairie dogs.
	That's all.  You can sweet talk her a
	little if you like.  Makes no difference to
	me.  Just put her at ease, make her feel
	relaxed -- then do it.

JAKE'S V.O. ends.  The scene is now synch with real time.

		BOBBY
	Are there snakes out here?

		GRACE
	They hear you comin'.  They won't bother
	you. Just don't sneak up on 'em.

		BOBBY
	Doesn't the isolation bother you?

		GRACE
	Yeah, but I like the sun.  I grew up on a
	reservation.  The sun, the desert; they
	like a religion to us.  Jake's the same
	way.  He loves the desert.  I guess we're
	alike that way.  That's about the only way.

		BOBBY
	You love him?

		GRACE
	No.

		BOBBY
	Did you ever?

		GRACE
	Depends on what you call love. I grew up on
	a reservation. A patch of desert in the
	middle of nowhere. That's where they stick
	Indians, Bobby. That's where they leave us
	to die. My brother killed himself when he
	was 19 cause he couldn't take it anymore.
	There's no hope there... Jake was my ticket
	out. Mom and me.

		BOBBY
	Is that why you're with him?

		GRACE
	I let him think he was courtin' me, but I
	reeled him in like a fish on a line. I
	wanted him. I wanted what he could give me,
	and I would've done anything to get him. Is
	that love?

		BOBBY
	I'm guessing no.

		GRACE
	Yeah, I guess you're right.

		BOBBY
	I take it things didn't much work out the
	way you planned.

		GRACE
	I'm still here, aren't I?  See this?

Grace sweeps her hand before her across the expanse of the
desert. The vultures are very much a part of this landscape.

		GRACE(CONT)
	All this nothing? It doesn't get to Jake
	like it gets to me.  He says he don't mind
	being nothing but a big fish in a small
	pond.  More like a little fish in a dried
	up watering hole.

		BOBBY
	You could leave him.

		GRACE
	I don't know how.

		BOBBY
	Walk away.

		GRACE
	It's not that easy.  Maybe you can take
	chances; maybe you can wander around like
	some stray wherever you please.  I can't.
	I don't want to be alone.  I need to know
	I'm going to be taken care of.

		BOBBY
	You need a meal ticket is what you mean.
	Some guy you can latch onto just long
	enough for him to get you out of here.

		GRACE
	Is that so bad?  It's not like I wouldn't
	try to make him happy.  For awhile, anyway.
	I mean, I would ... do things for him.  I
	guess I'm no good that way.  I guess I
	tried to sucker you along like that.  Do
	you hate me for it?  I wouldn't blame you
	if you did.  But maybe it's like you said:
	You just got to do whatever it takes to get
	out.

		BOBBY (soft echo)
	Whatever it takes.

Grace steps to the edge of the plateau.

		GRACE
	I wish I was a bird.  I know it's stupid.
	Every child says that.  When I was growing
	up some of the old ones on the reservation
	believed people could actually change into
	animals.  I wish I could.

We see Bobby behind Grace.  He stares at her standing on the
edge of the plateau.  He rises and walks towards her slowly, but
with deliberation.

		GRACE(CONT)
	If I was a bird I would fly to Florida; to
	Disney World.  I always wanted to go there.
	I'd fly to New York.  Maybe.  I guess New
	York isn't the best place to be a bird.
	I'd fly to St. Louis, then New Orleans, all
	over Texas.  Then I'd fly to California.  I
	guess by then I'd have seen it all and I
	could die.

Bobby now stands a few feet behind Grace.  She kicks a rock and
watches it sail over the lip of the cliff into the nothingness
below.

		GRACE(CONT)
	They say you don't feel anything.  The
	shock kills you before you hit the ground.
	I don't know how they would know that.  But
	I heard it's just like flying; straight
	down into the ground.  I guess if it
	doesn't hurt it's a beautiful thing.

Bobby tenses himself.  Sweat forms on his brow as he stands
directly behind Grace with his hands extended before him.  They
hover just below her shoulder blades ready to push forward.
Suddenly Grace wheels.  Startled by Bobby she almost falls over
the edge.  Bobby grabs her, her weight still going back.
Grace's life is literally in his hands.  She looks down at the
ground far below, then up into Bobby's eyes.  She shows no fear,
but instead wears a curious smirk.

		GRACE
	Hate's a funny thing.  Right now I bet you
	don't know if you want to kill me, or fuck
	me.

Bobby hesitates, then pulls Grace close and kisses her with
great ardor on the lips.

EXT. APACHE LEAP - DAY

On a blanket on the ground, BOBBY and GRACE make love quickly,
hotly, her dress pulled up, his pants down. But Grace is
troubled and pulls out, further frustrating Bobby.

		GRACE
	No...Stop!  I can't!

Her eyes withdraw into another dimension, as she hikes her dress
back up. Bobby comes out of his own head, feels the distance
between them.

		BOBBY
	What's the matter?...Grace?

		GRACE
	Nothing.

		BOBBY
	Don't feel like nothing.

He finishes relieving himself behind a tree, puts his pants back
on.

		GRACE
	Get out of town, Bobby, as quick as you
	can.

		BOBBY
	Grace, I've been fucked over too many
	times, by too many women.  You're becoming
	the queen of hot and cold.

		GRACE
	You'd never understand.

		BOBBY
	Try me.

		GRACE
	It's just such a mess. With Jake I mean...

		BOBBY
	Nothing I understand better than a mess.

		GRACE (in great tension)
	Jake was with my Mom after my real Dad
	died.

		BOBBY
	You mean the Shaman?

		GRACE
	He was a Shaman...in the mine. We had
	nothin' after he died. Jake took us in,
	gave us a little money. He used to call me
	his "little halfbreed"... He kept Mom on
	the side y'know, cause he was married
	someplace else. He had kids in Phoenix I
	think, no one knew him around here...but
	the thing was...you see...
	     (pause)
	...he was raping me the whole time...for
	years. He loved to do things to me. Believe
	it or not, he used to say he was in love
	with my ass. Y'ever been in love with a
	woman's ass?

The dominoes are tumbling for Bobby.

		BOBBY
	Yeah.

		GRACE
	You're sick too...he loved to do things to
	me. Control me. My Mom...it tore her up
	cause she couldn't do nothing about it. She
	become alcoholic...and the funny thing is--
	I liked it. I liked being controlled by
	Jake. The truth was as far out and crazy as
	he got, I wanted more. I wanted to go all
	the way. Women say they don't want to be
	taken like, really taken -- that's bullshit
	-- they do. The first time he finished with
	me, he said I was a woman now. I was 14.
	Then he started crying like a baby...wanted
	me to hold him. It's a strange feeling to
	hate someone so much for so many years, but
	still want to hold him, comfort him... They
	found my Mom right down there (points) at
	the bottom of Apache Leap. She had cactus
	needles stuck all over her body and
	Virgil...Sheriff Potter said she was drunk
	and went insane. But I'll never believe she
	ran off that cliff by accident. She was
	born on this earth and she loved it. She
	was like me. She just wanted to fly away.

Bobby is quietly stunned. A whole world has opened up to him;
and he isn't sure yet where the story ends. There is some force
at work here, beyond his control.

		GRACE
	After he got his divorce, he forced me to
	marry him...but when I saw her body, I
	swore to her on my soul that some day I'd
	get Jake for what he did to her...

		BOBBY
	I'm sorry...

		GRACE
	Yeah. What do you want. Life, right?
	(shrugs, stoic) Have you ever been to
	California?

		BOBBY
	Yeah.

		GRACE (as if in a dream)
	Is it far from here?

		BOBBY
	Oh yeah. It's far, it's another world.

		GRACE
	Is it pretty?

		BOBBY
	Oh yeah. It's beautiful, beautiful beaches.
	Blue water and clear skies as far as you
	can see.

		GRACE (like a little girl)
	Would you take me with you?

		BOBBY (pause)
	I wish I could.

		GRACE
	Please. I won't hang on you. As soon as we
	get there you can dump me. I don't care. I
	just want to get out of here.

		BOBBY
	Honey, baby, I can't. I can't even get out
	of here myself. Believe it or not, I need a
	lousy hundred and fifty bucks to get my car
	back from that crazy mechanic...

		GRACE
	Darrell?  You know he and Jake are...

		BOBBY
	You don't have any money put away, do you?

		GRACE
	Jake never gives me more'n twenty bucks at
	a time, like a bird in a cage, he don't
	want me goin' anywhere...

		BOBBY
	...you could get me money. I'll get you
	out of here.

She looks at him.

		GRACE
	There's money. A lot.

The words hang there, thick between them.

		BOBBY
	Where?

		GRACE
	Jake hides it. In a safe. In the floor. In
	the bedroom. He counts it. He loves to sit
	there and count it.

		BOBBY
	What do you mean?

		GRACE
	At night. He just sits there and laughs and
	talks to himself and counts it. I heard
	him. My Mom told me he had a hunnert
	thousand dollars down there. Maybe more.

Bobby's eyes widen in hope.

		BOBBY
	In cash?

		GRACE
	Oh yeah. There's nothing else with Jake. He
	don't trust banks. He keeps the money in
	the floor right under the bed. He loves it
	so much, he wouldn't think of spending any
	of it on me. I never seen it but I know
	he's got more than a hunnert thousand at
	least...

		BOBBY
	One-hundred-thousand!?  That son-of-a-bitch.

		GRACE (puzzled)
	What do you mean?

		BOBBY (ignoring her)
	If it's in a safe we'd have to get the
	combination--

		GRACE
	It takes a key.  He keeps it on himself all
	the time.  I mean all the time.  It
	scratches up against me when we do it.

		BOBBY
	If the key's on him, how do we get the key?

		GRACE
	Kill him.

Spoken almost innocently, it hangs there between them. A
silence.

		BOBBY
	I can't kill, Grace. I can't kill anybody.

		GRACE
	It's not like he's a young man, Bobby. He's
	had time to live. It'd be quick. I mean, he
	wouldn't even have to feel it...
	(seductively) I mean, sometime in the
	middle of the night, when it's quiet...when
	he's asleep, you could just come up behind
	him when he's pounding on me and...

Grace lays her hands on Bobby, starting to caress him. He
bristles and freezes with fear and disgust.

		BOBBY
	Shit! Listen to you... Are you crazy,
	Grace?

He abruptly pulls away.

		BOBBY
	Jesus Christ! I think this place is making
	me crazy. I was crazy to come back here and
	see you. I'm crazy for listening to anyone
	in this town, and I'd sure as hell be crazy
	if I spent another minute with you.

Grace rises, covering her nakedness, shooting a hand to his
face, like she did when she read his fortune.

		GRACE
	But it's in you, Bobby. I see it. I see
	Death. It's in your heart. Let it out for
	me. Let it out...

He's mesmerized. Then:

		GRACE
	Do it for me, Bobby, you'll never regret
	it. I promise you. I'll do anything for
	you. Anything.

Bobby pauses, terribly torn.

		BOBBY
	I...take me back to town...

He turns away, towards the jeep. Grace has a tone of desperation
in her voice.

		GRACE
	You need the money, Bobby. It's a lot more
	than $100,000. A lot more. How are you
	going to get out of here? You need the
	money. Whatever it takes, Bobby, remember?

Bobby walks past the jeep, on his way back to town alone.

		GRACE
	Where you going? I'll give you the
	ride...Come back! Bobby? It's three miles.

Bobby doesn't look back. Her eyes drift backwards into her
solitude.

		GRACE (to herself)
	Bobby?...Whatever it takes.

EXT. DESERT/ALONG THE ROAD - LATER DAY

BOBBY walks through the desert parallel to the road, still in a
rage. Desert insects produce a cacophony of drones, buzzes, and
clicks. A rattlesnake darts off a rock into the brush. A VOICE
whispers to him.

		JAKE (V.O.)
	You've got the killing in you, boy.

Bobby turns and looks around. Just desert. He continues.

		JAKE (V.O.)
	Next time you'll do just fine.

		BOBBY
	No!

The screen burns a bright white.

EXT. STREET CORNER - DAY

In a news pot, further down the street from where he was first
seen, the old, BLIND MAN sits with his dead DOG, speaking as if
into camera, sipping on a Dr. Pepper.

		BLIND MAN
	It's the desert that makes you crazy. The
	loneliness out here. Nobody to talk to.
	People on the run. Trailer parks. White
	trash. I seen some peculiar things on a hot
	day.  I seen a scorpion sting itself to
	death.  It just keeps driving its tail into
	its body again and again.  A little killer
	killing itself.  Seen a coyote kill itself
	too.  Just kept on biting and tearing at
	its own legs.  Near tore one clean off
	before it bled to death.  And what a white
	man'll do when it's freezing one moment,
	hot as hell the next. A man could get
	hisself killed just for rubbing shoulders
	with another (smacking his lips) kiss kissy
	kiss. Nice pussy y'see, see it coming. I
	don't know what it is about the desert. I
	figger it's sort of like putting a kettle
	of water over a fire.  People is mostly
	water.  We boil when it's hot.  'Cept when
	we boil the water's got no place to go.  It
	just churns inside of us until we can cool
	off.  If it's not too late.

BOBBY is now revealed standing next to the blind man, and we
realize the blind man has been talking to him all along. Bobby
sips a Dr. Pepper as well.

		BOBBY
	You sure seen a lot for a blind man.

		BLIND MAN
	Just 'cause I ain't got eyes doesn't mean I
	can't see.

		BOBBY
	That a fact?

Bobby noticing now all the little NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS that the
Blind Man keeps around him in a sort of inchoate stall.

		BLIND MAN
	I can see just fine.  For example:  You're
	a young man who thinks he's got someplace
	to be.

A POLICE RADIO crackles, Bobby tensing.

		BOBBY
	Maybe I do.

		BLIND MAN
	Or maybe you just think you do. Just
	another small town. One guy chasing you.
	You go big town. Just gonna have four guys
	after you instead. Kiss kissy kiss. It gets
	down to one thing -- are you a human being
	or are you one of those hungry ghosts out
	there never satisfied with nothing? Cause
	you gotta remember you can run just as far
	as you can, but wherever you go, that's
	where you gonna be.

		BOBBY
	I think I've heard that before.

		BLIND MAN
	What do you want for free?

		BOBBY
	You sure got a lot of philosophy, old man.

		BLIND MAN
	Seems like I do but only cause end of the
	day we're all eyes in the same head. And
	everything is everything.

		BOBBY
	What?

		BLIND MAN
	...And everything is nothing too.

		BOBBY (shakes his head)
	Maybe one day I'll get to sit on a corner
	and spout wise.

		BLIND MAN
	Think you'll live that long?

Bobby is clearly unnerved by this. Suddenly the blind man
stands, pissed and powerful, sniffing the air with the police
radio in it.

As SHERIFF POTTER cruises by, glancing at Bobby shrinking. The
car goes on up the street.

		BLIND MAN
	Cocksucker motherfucker! Cops. I hear you.
	Always sneaking around. Thinks I can't see
	him. Well he's right. Motherfucker. But
	that ain't mean I don't know what's going
	on around here. They're all cursed. Yes
	sir.

		BOBBY
	Who's cursed?

		BLIND MAN
	All them miners last century. Hungry
	ghosts, killed off all the Indians. Up at
	the mine. Earth ran red with blood, think
	I'm fooling around here. White sky was on
	fire. Grown men cried like babies. I saw a
	flash, then darkness descended upon me.
	They put me in the joint. Took my eyes. I
	cursed them. White people can't seem to
	stay away from Indians (grabs his bandaged
	hand, smelling the blood). You gotta watch
	where ya put your fingers. Pussy pussy
	pussy, Indian pussy.

It sounds demented. Bobby, checking him out to see if he's
really blind, walks quietly around him during this monologue and
peeks over his glasses trying to see the blind man's real eyes.
Although he thinks the Blind Man thinks he's on the other side
of him, the Blind Man fools him by suddenly swivelling around
and cranking a gob of spit into Bobby's face as if Bobby were on
the other side.

Bobby, pissed, wipes the spittle from his face.

		BLIND MAN (finishing)
	...but they gotta know you don't fuck
	around with Indians.

		BOBBY
	I thought you said you lost your eyes in
	the war?

		BLIND MAN
	So now you're going to tell me where I lost
	my eyes. You don't think I know where I
	lost my eyes? I was there when I lost them.
	I lost them in the war. The war in the
	joint. There's always wars in the joint.
	Cause I was a code talker in the joint and
	in the war too.(sniffs) Mmmm, nothing like
	the smell of a naked lady. Be careful, boy.

		BOBBY
	Musta been some bad ass nuclear tests here
	in the 50's. This town's all inbreeding.

		BLIND MAN
	Well, people gotta get by somehow. That's
	the curse. The mines done it. All that
	uranium, plutonium, fuffonium, fuckononium,
	assononium, all that "om"! Everybody's got
	a mother. You don't rip up your mother. You
	don't rip up the Earth and take everything
	out. It's like the Cracker Jack box says,
	"the more you eat, the more you
	want...."...

		BOBBY
	I got things to do.

		BLIND MAN (offended)
	Oh well, go do 'em. You don't see me
	stopping you...

Bobby starts to walk away. The Blind Man rattles his tin cup.

		BLIND MAN
	...But ain't you got a little something for
	the infirm?

		BOBBY
	I'm a little short Pops. I'll catch you
	next time.

		BLIND MAN
	Your lies are old, but you tell 'em well.

EXT. STREET - DAY

BOBBY, depressed, is heading towards Harlin's gas station,
passing JENNY sitting on a corner drinking a soda, almost as if
waiting for him. She runs to him, and follows him, as somewhere
a POLICE RADIO crackles and buzzes.

		JENNY
	Hey mister. Mister, I just... I just wanted
	to thank you.

		BOBBY
	For what?

		JENNY
	For defending my honor this afternoon.

		BOBBY
	I hate to bust your bubble honey, but I
	wasn't defending you.

		JENNY
	But you was going to fight for me.

		BOBBY
	I wasn't going to fight for you.  I was
	just going to beat the shit out of your
	boyfriend.

		JENNY
	He's not my boyfriend.  I mean, I let him
	take me out and stuff, but I ain't spoken
	for.  Not yet that is.

		BOBBY
	Get it through your head, little girl; I'm
	not going for you.  If this Toby likes you,
	then if I were you I'd marry him.  You're
	not going to get much better in this town.

		JENNY
	That's what I thought until you came riding
	in.  I saw your car over at the gas
	station.  It's a cool car.  Want to take me
	for a ride?  Desert's kind of lonely this
	time of day.

		BOBBY
	How old are you?

		JENNY
	     (beat)
	Eighteen... Well, I'm gonna be eighteen in
	two years, but that don't mean you can't
	take me for a ride if you want.

		BOBBY
	No, I don't want to take you for a ride.
	What I want is for ... Hey, you don't
	think you can get $150 from your parents,
	could you?

From OFF CAMERA we hear TOBY.

		TOBY(O.C.)
	Mister!

		BOBBY
	Oh, shit!

Toby moves menacingly up the street towards Bobby.

		TOBY
	That's right, Mister.  You better be
	afraid.  I told you it wasn't over, but you
	didn't listen.  Now I find you sneakin'
	around with my girl behind my back.

		BOBBY
	I wasn't sneaking around with your girl.
	Would you please tell him?

		JENNY
	You're too late, Toby.  We're going to get
	in his fancy car and ride off and leave you
	behind.

		BOBBY
	What the hell are you talking about?

		JENNY
	What's your name anyway?

		TOBY
	Oh, that tears it, Mister.  I'm gonna bust
	you up but good.  I'm gonna bust you into a
	million pieces and then ... and then bust
	those pieces up, and then ... and then
	spread them all around.  That's what I'm
	gonna do.  You don't know what you're
	dealing with, Mister.  I'm crazy.  I'm
	psycho crazy.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, I know.  You're TNT.  Just like
	dynamite.  When you go off somebody gets
	hurt. (at his wit's end) All right.  Let's
	do this.

		JENNY
	Toby Tucker, it don't matter to me if you
	beat him all up and knock out all his teeth
	and he's just drooling and bleeding all
	over hisself, 'cause we love each other and
	we gonna run off, and I'm gonna have his
	love child.

		BOBBY
	Will you shut up!

		TOBY
	You gonna pay for that, Mister.

Toby and Bobby square off, sizing each other up and preparing
for a violent confrontation.  Just as the two are about to clash
we hear the voice of SHERIFF POTTER from OFF CAMERA.

		SHERIFF(O.C.)
	Toby!

The two men freeze in their tracks, as Potter drives up fast.

		TOBY
	Hey, Sheriff Potter.

		SHERIFF (tough)
	Toby, I just came from your mother's place.
	She's worried sick about you.  She says she
	ain't seen you since this morning.

		TOBY
	That ain't true, Sheriff.  I was home for
	lunch.

		SHERIFF
	Boy, I'm not trying to hear nothing from
	you except that you're heading home.  Now
	run along.

		TOBY
	Yes, sir.  Come on, Jenny.

		JENNY
	I want to stay.

		TOBY
	I said come on!

Toby grabs Jenny by the wrist and literally pulls he along.  As
she goes she yells back to Bobby.

		JENNY
	Bye, Mister.  Don't go nowhere without me.
	I wanna have your love child.

Toby points a vicious finger at Bobby.

		TOBY
	Next time, Mister.  Next time.

Toby and Jenny exit leaving Bobby and the Sheriff alone. Bobby
would also like to exit fast.

		SHERIFF
	Where ya goin'?

		BOBBY
	Harlin's.

		SHERIFF
	Get in.

Bobby has no choice. He gets in.

		SHERIFF
	Seen you popping up a little bit of
	everywhere today.  You're not planning on
	staying are you?

		BOBBY
	No, sir. I'm not going to be around long if
	that's what you're worried about.

		SHERIFF
	That's a nasty cut you got there.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, fell down and hit a rock. Not as bad
	as it looks.

		SHERIFF
	There was a young fellow over at Jamilla's
	today when it got hit.  Way she tells it he
	got whacked around good by one of the
	robbers.

		BOBBY
	Sounds like it. I wish I could help
	Sheriff, but I just want to get my car and
	get on up the road.

JAKE drives up in his GOLD CADDY. His windows whirr down.

		JAKE
	Everything all right, Virgil?

He eyes Bobby.

		SHERIFF (a little nervous)
	Just fine, Jake. Where you going?

		JAKE
	I was just up at Darrell's. How's the wife?
	That little eskimo baby walkin' yet?

		SHERIFF
	Oh just fine.

		JAKE
	You haven't seen Grace around, have you?
	I'm looking for her.

		SHERIFF
	No. But if I do, I'll tell her you're
	looking for her, Jake.

		JAKE (looking at Bobby)
	Whatcha got there, some trash?

He drives off. The Sheriff drives on.

		SHERIFF
	Peculiar, how things happen. A man's car
	breaks down. There's a hold up. People die
	and all that money -- and now old Jake out
	looking for his young wife. And then you
	show up...

The Sheriff looks right through Bobby, who knows this is more
than a conversation. He pulls up to Harlin's garage. Bobby gets
out.

		SHERIFF
	Time's running out, son. I'll be seeing you
	in the morning...

With this thinly veiled threat, the Sheriff drives on. As Bobby
watches, feeling the pressure to get out now while he can.

EXT. HARLIN'S GARAGE - LATER DAY

DARRELL is cleaning his tools.  Bobby's MUSTANG sits prominently
in the car bay, washed and gleaming, as BOBBY walks up.

		DARRELL
	Hey there.  I was beginnin' to think you
	wasn't comin' back...  You don't look so
	good.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, well, I've been around the bend a
	bit.

		DARRELL
	One of those days you feel like you been
	runnin' in circles and you ain't no closer
	to where you tryin' to get than when you
	started?

		BOBBY
	You've been there?

		DARRELL
	Hell, I've had days I would gladly trade
	with a whippin' dog.  Ain't much you can do
	when you feel like that 'cept tough it out.

		BOBBY
	You believe that?

		DARRELL
	You think bad, and bad is what you get.

		BOBBY
	That's a good piece of advice, Darrell.

		DARRELL
	No charge.

		BOBBY
	Listen, Darrell, about that hundred-fifty
	bucks for the car, as soon as I get where
	I'm going I swear I'll--

		DARRELL
	Two-hundred.

		BOBBY
	What?

		DARRELL
	It's going to cost you two-hundred dollars.

		BOBBY
	You said this morning the hose was going to
	run me one-fifty.

		DARRELL
	Yep.  For the hose.  But while you was gone
	I replaced a gasket.  That's going to run
	you another fifty.

		BOBBY
	I didn't tell you to replace any gasket.

		DARRELL
	Yeah, but it was shot.

		BOBBY
	I don't give a fuck! I didn't tell you to
	do it!  You can't just do unauthorized
	work.

		DARRELL
	Well, now, you just know all there is about
	bein' a mechanic, don't you?  Didn't you
	read the sign.

		BOBBY
	What sign?

		DARRELL
	The goddamn sign on the wall. I can't do
	unauthorized work?  What am I suppose to
	do? Just let you ride out of here with a
	bad gasket.  Then you get in an accident
	and get killed.  Or worse.  Who they gonna
	blame then?  They gonna blame me, and there
	goes my reputation.

		BOBBY
	What reputation?  You're nothing but an
	ignorant, inbred, tumbleweed hick.

		DARRELL
	Is that an insult?  Are you insulting me.

		BOBBY
	Listen you stupid fuck, I want my car.

		DARRELL
	Listen to me you sorry sonufabitch. You owe
	me money, and this car ain't going nowheres
	until I get it.  And if you take another
	five hours I'll find another fifty dollars
	worth of work to do on it. Is that clear?
	Now get out of here 'fore I call the
	Sheriff, who knows me.

Bobby is in a rage.  He turns to leave and walks a few paces.
He sees a WRENCH lying on a table.  For a second his mind reels,
then he snatches up the wrench and turns ready to smash it down
on Darrell's head.  He stops cold.  Because ol' Darrell holds a
CROWBAR in a batter's stance ready to smash it onto the Mustang.

		DARRELL
	You want to play, Mister?  I'll play with
	you.  You want to smash something?  So do
	I.

Darrell pulls back the crowbar, ready to swing.

		BOBBY
	No! Okay! Okay!

		DARRELL
	What's the matter?  The fight gone out of
	you?  I'm just gonna smash a headlight.
	Maybe two.

		BOBBY (pleading, almost crying)
	Please, just leave the car alone!

		DARRELL
	Mister, you already pissed me off but good.

Darrell lays the tip of the crowbar on the hood of the car, and
drags the tip of the bar across the hood leaving a long scratch.

		BOBBY (about to lose it)
	Goddamn you!  You son of a bitch!

		DARRELL
	There you go, sweet talking me again.

Darrell begins to laugh. Bobby, desperate, looks to the trunk,
thinking of his gun in there.

His POV -- the trunk. A FLASHBACK of the GUN goes through his
mind.

		BOBBY
	Look, Harlin.

		DARRELL
	Darrell.

		BOBBY
	Darrell. I'll get you your money. I just
	have to get something out of the trunk.

Using his TRUNK KEY, he tries to open it but realizes the lock
has been changed.

		BOBBY
	What the fuck did you do to my trunk?

		DARRELL
	Well, that key's not gonna work. I had to
	pop the lock. You didn't leave me the trunk
	key.

		BOBBY
	And you had to go into the trunk, didn't
	you?

		DARRELL
	When I work on a car, I work on a car.

		BOBBY (snaps)
	You motherfucker! (etc.)

		DARRELL
	You can't help yourself, can you mister?
	You're out of control.

Darrell starts to laugh. It is a repetitive, almost demonic
laugh that grows louder as the camera slowly dollies in on
Bobby's anguished face.

EXT. STREET - DAY

As BOBBY steps out into the glaring sun, he notices down at the
other end of the town, GRACE'S JEEP parked right outside the
SHERIFF'S OFFICE, empty.

Presently, GRACE and the SHERIFF walk out TALKING, and she gets
in, says a few last words and drives away.

Bobby backs around a corner into a sidestreet. Is she selling
him out? He's very confused, turbulent.

INT. BUS DEPOT - LATER DAY

BOBBY enters the BUS DEPOT.  The interior is poorly lit.  There
are a few benches for people to wait on, but they sit empty.
Old, faded travel posters hang on the wall.  A bored FEMALE
CLERK is behind the counter.

		BOBBY
	I need a ticket.

		CLERK
	Where to?

		BOBBY
	Out of here.

		CLERK
	But, in particular?

		BOBBY
	I ... Mexico.  You got a bus that goes to
	Mexico?  That's where I have to go.

		CLERK
	Mexico is a large country. Where in Mexico
	would you like--

		BOBBY
	I don't care, just get me there.

The clerk is a little put off by Bobby. He seems delirious. She
goes through her schedule looking for a bus.

		CLERK
	How about Ciudad Juarez? You could take a
	local, arrives in two hours, and transfer
	in Albuquerque. It'll get you across the
	border.

		BOBBY
	How much?

		CLERK
	One way, or round trip?

		BOBBY
	One way.

		CLERK
	30.55. Twenty more will get you back.

Bobby counts his money.

		BOBBY
	Twenty-seven, fifty.  That's all I got.

		CLERK
	The ticket is 30.55.

		BOBBY (rifling his pockets)
	I bought a beer.  That was a dollar
	something. Then I gave that girl 25 cents
	for the juke box. And the blind man...the
	soda...I..I'd have 30 if...if...

		CLERK
	I'm sorry, sir.  It's $30.55 for the
	ticket.

		BOBBY (to himself)
	Yeah.  Just a little short.  Figures.  I
	just wanted to get out, that's all.

Bobby starts to walk away. Suddenly he turns, runs back at the
clerk, proffers his money, half-crazed, near tears.

		BOBBY
	Please, ma'am, you don't understand! I have
	to get out of here.  They're going to come
	looking for me.  They're going to kill me.
	If I can't get this ticket then I'm going
	to have to do things to get out of here.
	You know what I mean! I don't want to hurt
	anybody, I just want to leave. Please. I
	can't...I can't.

He's so desperate and in her frightened but neutral expression,
Bobby experiences the only compassion he ever finds in this
whole town.

		CLERK
	Okay, I'll give you the ticket, sir,
	but...just...just, please calm down,
	please!

her sane tone reminds Bobby of how far down he's come. He
shrinks, suddenly ashamed of himself. She takes the cash on the
counter, hands him a ticket.

		CLERK
	Keep your change.  Bus three-twenty-three.
	Leaves at seven fifty two, tonight.

		BOBBY
	I'm sorry.  It's just ... you know ...

She nods, puts a "closed" sign in the ticket window, disappears.

EXT. BUS DEPOT - LATE DAY

We hear the crackle of the same POLICE RADIO again, OFF CAMERA,
as BOBBY walks out of the depot. ticket preciously held in his
hand, and suddenly reels as he sees SERGEI, about a 100 yards
down the main stretch, slowly rolling into town in his
convertible, looking for guess who.

		BOBBY
	Holy shit!

INT. SERGEI'S CAR - SIMULTANEOUS

BOBBY turns away, but not fast enough. SERGEI spots him, hits
the pedal.

		SERGEI
	Got you, shitface! Bobby Cooper. Bobby
	Cooper...

EXT. MAIN STREET - SIMULTANEOUS

BOBBY, ducking around a corner, hears the brief "Whoop" of the
sheriff's POLICE SIREN. He glances back.

His POV - sure enough, the SHERIFF'S having a field day. He's
just pulled SERGEI over. At this distance, we catch snippets of
conversation as the Sheriff ambles from his car, checking
Sergei's out-of-state plates.

		SHERIFF
	Where's the fire sweetheart? Don't know how
	they work things in Nevada, but we got
	speed limits in this state.

		SERGEI
	Vat? I am going 5 miles an hour! I am
	looking town. I not even moving.

We pop in closer to their conversation -- Bobby relishing this
in his mind's eye. Sergei is constantly looking off to where he
last saw Bobby. But the Sheriff, strangely, pays no attention to
these looks.

		SHERIFF
	Whoa, what kind of accent you got there?
	You one of them Russians?

		SERGEI
	I am Russian, da! I am also rich Russian,
	da? Maybe we work something out, my friend
	Sheriff?

		SHERIFF
	What? You trying to bribe me, mister? Just
	cause you Russians ain't commies anymore,
	don't think money can buy everything...

Down the street, Sheriff Potter is holding up a concealed GUN.

		SHERIFF
	What's that? (He grabs the gun)
	..."concealed" is a definite no no in this
	town, Ivan. You know anything about
	Jamilla's grocery store?

		SERGEI
	What fuckin grocery store, you fucking
	shithead idiot! You call yourself a
	police...

Sergei looking Bobby's direction.

		SHERIFF
	Get out of the car, spread them. You can
	jawbone all you want or you have the right
	to shut the fuck up! You commie
	motherfucker. Either way you're goin' to
	the can.

		SERGEI
	I want my lawyer!

Sheriff cuffs Sergei and sticks him in the police car.

Bobby can't help smiling as he turns away to the SODA MACHINE
seen in an earlier scene.

He comes up with the change the bus clerk left him and, dying
for a drink in this heat, inserts the coin. Though still under
considerable pressure from all sides, this lucky break with
Sergei seems like it might be the beginning of something new
today -- some luck.

The icy cold soda bottle shoots out. Bobby raises it to his
lips, about to taste it, about to relax for once. Violently it
explodes out of his hands as he doubles over in blinding pain
from a KIDNEY PUNCH. He stumbles forward into the soda machine,
gasping. The legs of his assailant are close to him, but the
face is unseen.

Bobby doubles his agony as his bandaged left stump takes the
brunt of the blow into the machine, re-opening the wound. Blood
starts to seep through the bandage.

		BOBBY
	Ow!

Bobby crumples to the ground as TOBY now towers over him with
his fists curled and a snarl on his lips.

		TOBY
	Get up, Mister!  Don't ever let it be said
	Toby Tucker beat the living shit out of
	someone without giving them a fair chance.

		BOBBY (gasping)
	What the hell are you doing?  You fucking
	psycho!

		TOBY
	I'm doing what any man would do if he'd
	been offended.  I'm stompin' your ass.

		BOBBY
	You idiot!  You don't even know what you're
	fighting over!

		TOBY
	My honor, that's what I'm fighting over.
	Now get up off the ground, or do I have to
	whoop you where you lie?

JENNY comes running up the street.

		JENNY
	Toby!  Toby Tucker, leave him alone!

		TOBY
	You stay away, Jenny.  I aim to mess him
	up, and that ain't a thing for a woman to
	see.

Jenny runs to Bobby and cuddles him where he lays.

		JENNY
	Don't be afraid of him none.  I don't care
	what he does to you, we can still be
	together.

		BOBBY
	Get away from me!

Bobby sees his bus ticket on the ground.  He grabs for it, but
Toby beats him to it.

		TOBY
	Now, what's this?

		BOBBY
	Give it to me!

		TOBY
	Mexico?  You going to Mexico?

		BOBBY
	I'm leaving.  You never have to see me
	again.  Just please, give me the ticket!

		TOBY
	This means something to you?  Jenny means
	something to me.

Toby sticks the ticket in his mouth and chews it up whole.

		BOBBY
	Nooo!

		TOBY (between bites)
	I'm gonna beat you so bad you gonna be
	eatin' nothing but soup the erst of your
	days.  Rain dogs is gonna be prettier than
	you when I'm done.  I'm gonna mess you up
	so bad you gonna make your own momma sick.
	I'm gonna ...

Toby's words drift to Bobby from a million miles away.  The
world around him is like a dream, or a nightmare.  A primal rage
wells inside of Bobby that rises up in a howl as he swings the
soda bottle up out of nowhere across Toby's head, smashing him
backwards. Then he lands blow after blow with his right hand on
the boy's face and head.

Jenny screams:

		JENNY
	Stop it!  You're killing him!

Jenny grabs Bobby's arm, literally hanging all her weight on it,
stopping him from striking Toby again.

		JENNY
	You're killing him!  Toby!?  Toby!?

Jenny sinks to the ground and cuddles Toby.  Bobby stands.  He
looks at Toby, then at his bloodied knuckles in disbelief. His
bandage is soaked with his own blood, but his adrenaline numbs
the pain.

		JENNY
	You killed him! You killed him!

She wails in the background as he backs away, around the corner,
into Main Street, crossing to where the PHONE BOOTH is.

EXT. PHONE BOOTH - LATE DAY

BOBBY is on the phone.

		BOBBY
	Hello, Grace?  It's Bobby.

					   INTERCUTS TO:

INT. MCKENNA HOUSE - SIMULTANEOUS

GRACE, in the kitchen, is also on the phone.

		GRACE (coolly)
	I thought you'd be on your way to Vegas by
	now.  Is there something you wanted?

		BOBBY
	I wanted to talk.

		GRACE(V.O.)
	I don't think we have anything to talk
	about.

		BOBBY
	What about us?

		GRACE
	There is no us, remember?

		BOBBY
	Except I can't get you out of my head,
	Grace.
	     (beat)

		GRACE
	Stop it.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	Why?  Am I making you hot, or does the
	truth scare you?

		GRACE
	Because I know you're full of shit.

		BOBBY
	I mean it, Grace.  I'm getting out of here,
	and I want to take you with me.

		GRACE (V.O.)
	I thought you couldn't get your car.

		BOBBY
	I could if I had Jake's money.

		GRACE (V.O.)
	Is that what changed your mind?  The money?

		BOBBY
	I don't give a damn about the money.  I
	want you, and I want to get us out of this
	shithole.  There's only one way to do that.

Pause.

		GRACE
	Are you sure?...  About me, I mean?

		BOBBY
	I came back for you; this morning I came
	back.  Before I even knew about the money.
	You're what I want.
	     (then)
	The only reason I stormed off is because
	you spooked me talking about Jake.  But
	I've had nothing but time to think about
	it.  It keeps coming back to you and me and
	us getting the hell out of here.  But we've
	got to get the money, baby.  We get the
	money, I get the car, then we get the hell
	out.

		GRACE
	You said you couldn't kill anybody.

		BOBBY
	We don't have to kill him.  Just knock him
	out and tie him up 'till we get away.
	     (beat)
	It was your idea, remember?  I'm doing this
	for you.  I'm doing this so you can
	fly...fly like a bird.

Grace bites at a nail and fidgets, but says nothing.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	Grace ... Grace?

		GRACE
	After dark.  I'll leave the back door
	unlocked.

She quickly hangs up the phone.

Bobby also hangs up the phone, an unreadable expression on his
face.

INT. MCKENNA LIVING ROOM - LATE DAY

JAKE sits in an easy chair reading a paper.  Puffs of smoke from
his pipe rise from behind the paper and hang like a cloud over
his head.  GRACE stands in the doorway, body stiff and arms
crossed, staring at him.

		JAKE
	Who was that on the phone?

		GRACE
	Wrong number.

		JAKE
	You spent a long time talking for a wrong
	number.  But then you make friends so
	easily.  Don't you, Grace?

Grace has no answer for that, so she says nothing.  A long
moment passes, then:

		GRACE
	I put up new drapes, Jake.

		JAKE
	I know.  I was here when your apprentice
	was helping you.  Remember?

		GRACE
	You never said anything.  About the drapes.

		JAKE
	They look nice.

		GRACE
	You haven't even looked at them once.

Jake lowers the paper, looks at the drapes.

		JAKE
	They look nice.

		GRACE
	I picked them out for you, Jake.  I thought
	you would like the colors.

		JAKE (softly, admiring)
	You look just like your mama when you move
	like that against the light.

Grace stares at the CHAIN now visible around Jake's neck that
disappears under his shirt.  She knows that hidden there is a
key, and she fixes on it intently.

		JAKE
	What the hell you looking at, girl?

		GRACE
	Nothing, Jake.  Absolutely nothing.

EXT. DESERT - EVENING

The SUN is setting. It strikes the horizon sending a ripple of
golden light through the sky.

EXT. PORCH OF HOUSE - EVENING

A MAN dances in the evening light with a small child in his
arms.

EXT. CORNER OF HOUSE - EVENING

A DOG and CAT huddle together in sleep.

EXT. POLICE STATION - EVENING

SHERIFF VIRGIL POTTER is tossing horseshoes with his DEPUTIES.

EXT. MCKENNA HOUSE - EVENING

GRACE watches the sun going down outside her house, cradling
herself in her arms. A desert wind gently caresses her.

EXT. STREET CORNER - NIGHT

The BLIND MAN, along with his dead DOG, sits on the side of the
street.

		BLIND MAN
	Well, that's it.  Sun's going down.  People
	go home, trade stories over dinner.
	They'll talk about the day, about the heat,
	laugh about something crazy it made them
	do.  They'll kiss, sleep a few hours, then
	do it all over again.

BOBBY now appears next to the blind man holding two Dr. Peppers.
He hands one to the blind man, takes a sip of the other one, and
offers him his own change.

		BOBBY
	The day wasn't so bad.  We all got through
	it all right.

		BLIND MAN (giving back the change)
	Keep it.

There's a suggestion of cockiness in Bobby, feeling his luck
coming back with the night. His humour is enhanced by his POV
down the street:

As DARRELL, with his dilapidated truck, readies SERGEI'S
convertible for towing.

		BLIND MAN (OVER)
	Ain't over yet.  Night is part of day;
	separate, but equal.  Night is when you let
	your guard down; when you see things in the
	shadows and hear things in the dark.

		BOBBY
	Difference between you and me, old man, is
	I see the glass half full, you see it half
	empty.

		BLIND MAN
	Night is when you want to sleep, but the
	dry heat keeps you tossin' and turnin'.
	It's when you wish the sun was bakin' high
	in the sky so you could see what it is
	you're afraid of.

		BOBBY
	You afraid of the dark?

		BLIND MAN
	Afraid of it?  Boy, I live in the dark. All
	cause of a woman who made me this way.
	People are afraid of what they can't see.
	I can't see nuthin', so it's all the same
	to me.  Kiss from a beautiful woman, kissy
	kissy kiss, a lick from a dog, slurp,
	slurp, the kiss of death (he makes a
	strange sound). It's all the same to me.

		BOBBY
	So, we're all just floating along like
	twigs in a stream, so enjoy the ride.  Is
	that it?

		BLIND MAN
	More or less.

		BOBBY
	Not this twig, friend.  I got plans.

		BLIND MAN
	Nothing makes the Great Spirit laugh harder
	than a man's plans. We all got plans. I
	planned on seeing all my life. I know you
	didn't plan on straying into town.

		BOBBY
	No and I don't plan on sticking around
	either.

		BLIND MAN
	Well, don't say I didn't warn you when
	things go your way.

		BOBBY
	You got a lotta philosophy in you, old
	timer but you don't fool me for one second
	with all this blind man crap. One minute
	you lost your eyes in Vietnam, next it's
	the joint. Now it's a woman? I'm hep to
	you.

The Blind Man slowly lifts his glasses, showing his EYES at
last. Where his eyes should be are scars and dead flesh. An ugly
sight that even takes Bobby back a step.

		BLIND MAN
	Used to be a young smartass like you. Then
	I got smart with the wrong man's daughter.
	Got some acid poured on my peepers for my
	trouble. You know human beings ain't always
	just human -- they got animals living
	inside 'em too...People give spare change
	to war heroes not fools. All fools get is
	pity. May not have eyes, but I see. And
	you, boy?

The Blind Man puts his glasses back on.

		BLIND MAN
	You got my pity.

		BOBBY (doesn't believe him)
	Hope she was worth it.

		BLIND MAN
	Oh, she was worth it.  She was worth every
	black minute since.

Bobby looks at his watch, gets ready to go, drops a coin into
the Blind Man's cup.

		BOBBY
	Time's up. Any last words of wisdom?

		BLIND MAN
	Things ain't always the way they seem. You
	got to ask yourself: is it worth it? Day
	comes Earthmaker is going to look in your
	fucking heart! Then you better know what it
	is you're doing. Are you a human being --
	or just one of them hungry ghosts out there
	floatin' around?

Bobby walks away, smiling.

		BOBBY
	You are crazy, you know. Be seeing you, old
	man.

		BLIND MAN
	You know I won't be seeing you.

The Blind Man lifts his sunglasses and peers into the cup as if
he sees. We don't really know. He reaches into the cup and pulls
out the coin Bobby tossed in.

		BLIND MAN
	Cheap bastard. Gives me back my own
	money... Well, Jesse, time's up, let's go
	for a walk.

The Blind Man now stands up and pulls the seeing-eye dog's
harness. The DOG struggles to its feet and they walk off down
the street together.

INT. MCKENNA HOUSE - NIGHT

GRACE stands by the back door staring at the bolt lock. JAKE
yells to her from another room.

		JAKE(O.C.)
	What the hell you doin', Grace?  Are you
	coming to bed, or aren't you?

For a moment Grace's hand wavers above the lock.  Suddenly, like
a snake striking, her hand shoots out and unlocks the bolt.
Just as quickly she turns from the door and heads to the
bedroom.

EXT. YARD - MCKENNA HOUSE - NIGHT

A LIGHT is on in the bedroom window.  After a moment it dims and
the house is dark, silhouetted against the horizon by moonlight.
BOBBY steps into frame, carrying an iron pipe.

INT. MCKENNA HOUSE/BEDROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

We start close on GRACE -- a KEY slapping against her buttocks
as bedsprings groan.  We reveal Grace copulating on all fours
with JAKE from behind.

		JAKE
	Ya little bitch, you like it don't you! You
	like it this way -- rough and hard. Gotta
	go fuck around on me, like your Mama, but
	you always gotta come home to Daddy, don't
	you, cause you know Daddy's the best.

		GRACE
	Yes, yes, hit me...beat me, please.

		JAKE
	You been a bad girl, Grace. You took my
	heart from your Mama, didn't ya? You
	betrayed her! Like you did me. There ain't
	no forgivin' ya, girl!

		GRACE
	Oh no! Oh please forgive me, Papa!

		JAKE
	You broke her heart! You broke your Mama's
	heart. You stole me! That's right. Fuck it
	away. But it ain't ever goin' away, cause
	your Mama -- she's like a hungry ghost
	baby, she won't go away, she won't leave ya
	alone.

		GRACE
	No! No! Please!

He hits her. Harder.

In a strange flashback of his mind, he now sees Grace's MAMA
beneath him, receiving his punishment.

He stops, abruptly. He can't go on. Fear coming into his eyes.
He starts to whimper, begging for his punishment and/or
forgiveness.

		JAKE
	Oh baby, I'm so sorry... I'm so sorry...
	     (he starts to cry)
	I didn't mean to hurt you so bad. It
	just...got away...

He drops down, burying his face between Grace's legs.

		JAKE
	Forgive me, baby, forgive me!

He hides there from the world that he has created, crying to
himself.

Grace has an unreadable expression, but that's certainly not a
new occurrence in their strange relationship.

INT. MCKENNA HOUSE/BACKDOOR - NIGHT

The knob of the backdoor twists and the door opens.  BOBBY slips
quickly through the space and into the house quietly closing the
door behind him.  It is nearly pitch dark, and he has no
bearings.  He steps gingerly through the hall, but in the
darkness he bumps into a table nearly knocking over a lamp only
to catch it just before it crashes into the floor.

INT. MCKENNA HOUSE/BEDROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

JAKE hears the noise.  He raises his head and cocks an ear to
the air. She knows who it is, and is concerned; he's too early.

		GRACE
	What's the matter?

		JAKE
	You didn't hear something?

		GRACE
	Yeah, I heard a key slapping against my
	ass.

		JAKE
	There's someone in the house.

		GRACE (nervous)
	Maybe...maybe the wind blew something over
	(encouraging him to continue). Come on
	baby, keep going.

Jake climbs out of bed, throwing on some pants, reaching into a
drawer in the chest of clothes, pulling out a small dark
metallic OBJECT.

		GRACE (realizing)
	What's that? Jake -- where's you get that?

		JAKE
	Relax baby. Stay here.

He goes to the door. She follows, tries to block the door.

		GRACE
	Jake, don't go out there. Call the sheriff.

		JAKE
	Shhhh! Just like your Mama, always scared
	of things...

He maneuvers her aside and slips out the door into the corridor.

INT. LIVING ROOM/MCKENNA HOUSE - SIMULTANEOUS

Crowbar in one hand, BOBBY makes his way slowly through the
living room, banging against the edge of a table. He hops
silently in pain, then waits at the door to the next room and
listens.  Hearing nothing he slowly pokes his head into the
darkness.  A moment later Bobby backs from the door and we see
the barrel of his own black .9mm BARETTA pressed against his
forehead.  JAKE appears now, backing him into the living room.
He switches on a LAMP.

		JAKE
	Well, well.  As I live and breathe.  I
	didn't expect to be seeing the like of you
	again.  Thought you'd be long on your way
	by now.

Jake continues to press the gun to Bobby's head.

		BOBBY
	That's my gun...(then) That fucking
	Darrell!

		JAKE
	I like Darrell.  He may be an idiot, but
	he's my half brother. We own Harlin's
	together, yeah, that little redneck manages
	to get paid no matter how things work out.

		BOBBY (realizing)
	You been workin' me the whole time.

		JAKE
	I guess this is what they call "ironee"?
	Hunh?

		BOBBY
	It's not what you think, Jake.

		JAKE
	No, but it don't matter anyway when you're
	lying there with your brains all over my
	carpet and I'm telling Sheriff Potter about
	this drifter, didn't have enough money to
	fix his car. And Darrell happened to find
	his gun, and through maybe this drifter
	heard old Jake got some money stashed away,
	and figgered he might try to break in and
	steal it!

		BOBBY
	Wait a minute.  Just listen to me...

		JAKE
	...And he thought he'd clock old Jake
	McKenna and turn his brains into wall
	paper...and then maybe borrow $200 or
	$20,000, or $200,000...

		BOBBY (very serious)
	That's not the reason I'm here, Jake.

		JAKE
	There's another reason? It better be good.

INT. HALLWAY - SIMULTANEOUS

GRACE makes her way down the hall in a nightgown, and now hides
in shadow, listening.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	I came for Grace.

		JAKE (V.O.)
	You came to take my wife from me?

INT. LIVING ROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

		BOBBY (sincere)
	No. I came to kill her.

INT. HALLWAY

GRACE'S eyes get real narrow and angry.

		JAKE (V.O.)
	Shhh! Liar.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	It's the truth, Jake.

INT. LIVING ROOM

		JAKE
	That's a thick change of heart from this
	afternoon.

		BOBBY
	Maybe I don't like being played, like she
	played us today.  Maybe I don't like that
	at all, Jake. I'm just pissed enough, maybe
	I'll rip the neck off my own grandmother.

		JAKE
	You have a lot of talk in you, whole lot of
	talk.

		BOBBY
	Damn it, Jake. There is a guy coming to
	kill me, and if it comes down to me or
	Grace, then I pick Grace.  You were going
	to give me thirteen-thousand.  Give me
	two-hundred.  I'll kill her and dump the
	body where no one will ever find it. She
	showed me the perfect place. There won't be
	enough left for an autopsy.  But I need the
	the money.  I've got to have the money.

Jake is silent.  He takes his time thinking.  Finally:

		JAKE
	She's in the bedroom.

INT. HALLWAY

GRACE, distressed, starts backing off towards the bedroom.

INT. LIVING ROOM

BOBBY stares at the automatic in JAKE's hand.

		BOBBY
	Wanna give me my gun?

Jake laughs, a "don't even think about it" look.

		JAKE
	A strangling'll do just fine. Go to work.

Bobby holds up his eight fingers with a "you try" look. Jake
shrugs. Bobby points to the crowbar on the carpet.

		BOBBY
	How 'bout the pipe?

		JAKE (sarcastic)
	She's got a slender neck.

Bobby turns and walks towards the bedroom. Jake follows into an
adjoining room.

		JAKE
	Hold on a second! Come here!

Bobby turns to Jake, who is suddenly extremely upset.

		JAKE
	How the hell did you know where the
	bedroom's at?

		BOBBY
	What are you talking about!

		JAKE (getting closer)
	This morning when I came in on you and
	Grace, you swore you hadn't been near the
	bedroom. Now you make straight for it.

INT. HALLWAY

GRACE returns to listen. This thing is like a seesaw battle of
wills.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	Come on, Jake --

		JAKE (V.O.)
	Don't Jake me boy! It's a big house. You
	probably didn't even make it out to the
	desert this afternoon...

INT. LIVING ROOM

JAKE has come right up on BOBBY in a rage.

		JAKE
	...Or did you just ply the afternoon away
	between my sheets putting your lips all
	over her, you little horndog...

		BOBBY (changing tactics)
	What difference does it make if I slept
	with her? We're gonna kill her.

		JAKE
	You're right! I don't give a damn about
	her. But killing her's one thing. Fucking
	her behind my back, that's another!

Suddenly Jake swings his arm, clipping Bobby across the side of
the head with the pistol and opening another bloody gash.

Bobby crumbles to his knees, crying out.

Jake suddenly grabs Bobby by the hair, forcing his face back and
smearing his lips with his own in a vengeful kiss. The blood
from Bobby's wound runs down to his lips and mixes with Jake's
lips.

		JAKE
	Now you've tasted both of us!

He pulls back the hammer on the gun and levels it at Bobby's
head. Bobby sees it coming, plays his last card on his knees.

		BOBBY
	O.K.! I admit it! I fucked her! But it's
	her you have to worry about, not me! She
	wants you dead, Jake. She wants you dead
	and she wants your money.

		JAKE (hesitates)
	What are you babbling about?

		BOBBY (talking fast)
	Think about it! How do you think I got in
	here? Did you hear any glass break? Did you
	hear a door splinter?

INT. HALLWAY - SIMULTANEOUS

GRACE listening.

		BOBBY (V.O.)
	How did the evening end?  After you went to
	bed did she linger a bit?  Maybe just long
	enough to leave the door unlocked?  Is that
	what happened?

INT. LIVING ROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

Like an old rag, JAKE gradually soaks all this up becoming
heavier with the weight of the knowledge.

		JAKE
	You'd tell me anything to save your
	pathetic life.

		BOBBY
	You know what kind of woman Grace is, Jake.
	You know how badly she wants to get the
	fuck out of Superior.  What's she to you,
	Jake; a woman who wants you dead?  Let me
	kill her.  All I want is two-hundred
	dollars to get out of here with.

		JAKE
	Two-hundred dollars?

		BOBBY
	Two-hundred dollars...I'll do it!  I'll
	kill her!

A beat. Jake stares down at Bobby on the floor.

		JAKE
	Sweet Christ, I'd be doing the world a
	favor, ridding it of the likes of you. Get
	your miserable ass off the floor. You're
	positively pathetic... Go on, go kill
	Grace.

Bobby slowly stands.

		JAKE
	I'm not letting you walk for nothing. Two
	hundred dollars. Do it, boy. Kill her.

Bobby goes.

INT. HALLWAY - SIMULTANEOUS

GRACE bolts back to the bedroom, the camera following her as she
flies.

INT. BEDROOM HALLWAY - NIGHT (MOMENTS LATER)

BOBBY walks it. His POV -- the door. Every step seems freighted.

INT. BEDROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

GRACE is in a quandary. How many seconds before Bobby walks in
to kill her? Or can he really kill her? She's not sure.

She looks around the room frantically. Picks up a lamp, puts it
down. She looks quickly through her closet, rummages below in
the boxes. Suddenly she finds it.

A dangerous looking Indian HATCHET with a feather hanging off
its bindings. It's a formidable piece of iron, quite capable of
splitting a skull or impaling flesh.

Grace hears the footsteps just outside the door. She runs behind
the door.

A moment later, the bedroom door creaks open and BOBBY quietly
enters, approaching the bed. We sense the doubt in his eyes as
to whether he can kill her.

In a reverse POV, Bobby sees the outline of Grace in the bed as
victim...closer, closer.  He now lifts the edge of the bedcover
but sees a blanket bunched up to resemble a human figure.

He suddenly hears a foot fall behind him, then he feels her
presence. He spins.

She's directly behind him, hatchet raised. His life is in her
hands.

His eyes, locked in an eternal moment.

Her eyes, the hatchet.

					    SNAP CUT TO:

INT. HALLWAY - SIMULTANEOUS

As JAKE, anxiously torn, waits, there is a LOUD CRASH, followed
by SOUNDS of struggle, of murder, of death. Then...

		GRACE
	Jake!

It is a desperate cry for help. Jake can't help himself. He
breaks into a roaring run down the hall to save his beloved.

		JAKE
	Grace!!

INT. BEDROOM - SIMULTANEOUS

JAKE bulls into the bedroom. It's a mess, furniture overturned,
sheets and blankets all over the floor. The lights broken.
Waiting for him, face down on the floor, is BOBBY'S BODY in a
pool of liquid. A broken bottle lies nearby. Bobby's body heaves
in its final death throes, and then shudders quiet...  Over
there, by the bed, is GRACE, who still clutches the HATCHET.
The look on her face is pure shock.

		JAKE
	Well...looks like you got him, Grace.
	That's good...that's real good.  He must of
	slipped past me, but you got him.  Looks
	like that drifter from this morning.  Got
	to be careful who you make friends with,
	sweetheart.

Jake eyes the weapon in Grace's hand.

		JAKE
	Why don't you put that down? It's all over
	now.  Put it down.

Grace eyes the gun in Jake's hand.

		JAKE
	Go on, girl.  Put it down.

What choice does Grace have?  She lets the hatchet clank to the
floor.

		JAKE
	Aww, that's my Grace:  Not about to let
	someone get the best of her.  That's what I
	love about you.  As dangerous as you are
	unpredictable.

behind Jake, the lifeless BOBBY rises up from the floor, very
much alive, and clobbers Jake with a golf club. Jake is
staggered, but he's one tough old customer as he manages to spin
slowly, gun still in one hand, as if to fire.

Before he can, Grace grabs up the hatchet from the floor and
drives it straight into his back.

He gurgles, stunned from both sides, but it's like trying to
kill Rasputin. He still has the gun as Bobby jumps him from the
rear, trying to get his neck in a chokehold. The gun FIRES once,
discharging into the wall. The hatchet is ripped from his back.

Grace watches as the two men bang into the walls in a rugged
rodeo-type fight, Jake seeking to dislodge Bobby off his back.
An expression of fear and excitement in her eyes.

Finally the two men go crashing to the ground, rolling around,
Bobby maintaining his stranglehold, but calling to her, his
hands full.

		BOBBY
	Grace, goddamit, do something!

Jake's eyes rolls up at her like a beaching whale, pleading for
help.

		JAKE
	Grace...?

She commits. Jumping into the fray, it's not clear whose side
she's really on as the three of them roll across the floor,
strangling, biting, hitting, spitting, scratching, gasping. It's
a Guignol, but the pressure from Bobby's forearm is taking its
toll on Jake. Trying to bite Jake, Grace bites Bobby instead,
but then she scratches Jake's face. Jake is grabbing her hard as
Bobby chokes him, trying to use her to leverage himself away.
But she manages to rip herself from his grip and scrambles on
her knees across the floor.

She grabs the hatchet. And stands, moving back towards the two
men locked on the floor. Bobby looks up at her, hatchet in hand,
no longer sure which way she'll go.

Jake, however, gasping for air, eyes bulging, spittle dripping
from his mouth, looks at Grace with some inner certainty that
she will help him. He gasps the words.

		JAKE
	Help me, Grace, help...

		GRACE
	Like you helped her, Jake?

Grace stands there, deciding, the power of the hatchet in her
hands. She raises it suddenly over the two men.

It flashes downwards. Deep into the gut of her husband Jake,
almost transfixing him to the floor.

In the silence that follows, Jake's eyes roll up to meet hers.
But all she has for him is a cold, distant stare.

Jake's head drops as the life rushes out of him. Bobby falls
back from the body puffing and dripping with sweat.

		BOBBY
	What the hell'd you wait for?

She doesn't answer, turbulence in her face. He rolls Jake's body
off, upset. She may have made it a murder, but he was part of
it, and he feels the shift in himself. They're both in new
territory, feeling an apartness between them.

Suddenly JAKE gasps, still alive! It is too much for Bobby. He
grabs the hatchet and plunges it down on Jake, silencing him one
last time.

Grace is pushing the bed away from the wall, slipping down on
her knees and prying open several floorboards.

		GRACE
	The money's right here! Get the key!

		BOBBY
	No! You get it!

He doesn't want to get close to Jake. Grace coldly runs over to
his corpse, ripping the chain, key and all, from the neck. The
action pulls Jake's head up, then she lets it thump back on the
floor. She runs back to the floorboards.

The top of a thick steel floor safe is revealed.

Bobby watches -- his whole life, it seems, hanging on the
outcome.

With the key, she opens the safe. Inside are rolled-up bundles
of cash -- in hundred dollar denominations. She looks up at him,
offering it as she reaches in for more. Bobby also gets down on
his hands and knees and grabs more and more, sucked into the
fever of freedom, far more money than he lost at the grocery
store, overcome now with emotions of fear and freedom.

They see each other.

		GRACE
	Didn't I tell you?

		BOBBY (plunging into the cash)
	There must be 150, 200 thousand here!
	Goddamnit Grace, you were right!

		GRACE
	We done it, Bobby. Oh my God!

They laugh excitedly and start kissing, rolling in the stacks of
cash, some of which sticks to Bobby's sweating back. The day
didn't turn out so bad after all for Bobby.

		GRACE
	Fuck me baby!

		BOBBY (looking at Jake)
	What about him?

		GRACE
	Let him watch. I want him to know what he's
	missing.

As they consummate their violent relationship for the first
time, Jake's lifeless eyes watch them.

EXT. MCKENNA HOUSE - LATER NIGHT

The LIGHT in the bedroom window is low candlelight, but we sense
something watching them. GRACE's silhouette moves across a
window.

BOBBY now comes out of the house, cautious, walking down the
driveway.

He stops, thinks, and walks back to open the hood of GRACE'S JEEP.

He reaches into the ENGINE and disconnects something, then
closes the hood and walks on.

EXT. HARLIN'S GARAGE - NIGHT

BOBBY walks up to the SHACK near the garage and bangs on the
door. A light goes on in the window.  DARRELL shouts out.

		DARRELL (O.C.)
	What you want?

		BOBBY
	Open up!

		DARRELL (O.C.)
	We're closed.  Come back when the sun comes
	up.

Bobby, in a hurry to get back should Grace pull any tricks,
bangs and kicks against the door. Darrell yanks the door wide.

		DARRELL
	What the hell ... oh, it's you.  Might've
	figgered. Listen I got a waitress coming
	over.  What do you want?

		BOBBY
	I want my car.

		DARRELL
	You got the money?

Bobby pulls the money from his hip pocket and hands it to
Darrell.  The mechanic fingers it suspiciously.

		DARRELL
	Two-hundred dollars in hundred-dollar
	bills.  And this morning you was broke.

		BOBBY
	That's none of your business.  Get the keys.

		DARRELL
	I don't want no dirty money.  I run an
	honest business.

		BOBBY
	Yeah, like Al Capone on tax day. Get the keys?

		DARRELL (pause)
	Well, there's a $50 overnight storage
	charge we got to talk about.

Bobby is ready at first to explode, but then just laughs out
loud. You got to give it to a guy like Darrell. He holds up a
$100 bill.

		BOBBY
	All I got's a hundred, Darrell. You got change?

		DARRELL
	No.

		BOBBY
	Figgers. There's a scratch on the hood and how
	much you make selling my gun? Deduct it.

Bobby pulls the hundred back from Darrell's grasp.

		DARRELL (going to get the keys)
	Don't know nothing about no gun.

		BOBBY
	Course you don't. Tell me something
	Darrell. Forty thousand people die every
	day! How come none of them are you?

		DARRELL (throws him the keys)
	I think you know where to find her.

		BOBBY
	And the trunk key.

		DARRELL (pulls out the trunk key)
	Topped off the tank for you. No charge.
	Just my way of doing business.

		BOBBY (jovial, confident now)
	Listen up good, Darrell. I'm getting outta
	this shithole. You're staying! And one
	little peep outta you -- remember that gun
	makes you part of the food chain. Your
	prints are all over it. I'd be awful
	careful whose rectum I was pointing my
	finger in, Darrell.

Bobby hops in the car, a free man. As Darrell glares at him,
bewildered and frightened at the same time.

EXT. MCKENNA HOUSE - NIGHT

BOBBY turns the MUSTANG up the drive. THE HEADLIGHTS cut the
darkness and land on an empty patch where Grace's jeep had been
parked.  Bobby jumps from the Mustang and runs around
frantically. His look is devastated. He falls to his knees,
about to sob when:

GRACE opens the front door and pokes her head out, putting out
several suitcases.

		GRACE
	Bobby?  What the hell's the matter with
	you?

		BOBBY
	I ... nothing.  I just stubbed my toe on
	a rock.  Hurt like hell.

		GRACE
	I got the money all packed.  I put the jeep
	and his caddy in the garage. People'll
	think maybe me and Jake went away.  Buy us
	some time...I know a back road we can take.

		BOBBY
	Good thinking. (looking at her four bags)
	What's all this?

		GRACE
	I'm not coming back.

		BOBBY (accepting)
	Awright, let's go. I want to be fifty miles
	from here before the sun comes up.

		GRACE
	Funny thing; the jeep wouldn't start. I had
	to push it.

		BOBBY (dryly)
	Funny thing... I'll get the bags.

EXT. MCKENNA HOUSE - LATER NIGHT

Bobby's MUSTANG is backed towards the front of the house.  We
see a silhouette of BOBBY and GRACE carrying something wrapped
in a BLANKET and dumping it in the trunk.

EXT. DESERT HIGHWAY - NIGHT

A lone pair of HEADLIGHTS illuminate the night as the Mustang
cruises through the dark.  As the lights brighten the screen we:

						FADE TO:

INT./EXT. MUSTANG - NIGHT

GRACE sits next to BOBBY peering out the windshield, clutching
the money in a backpack. She's humming an Indian song.

		BOBBY
	I can't see it.

		GRACE
	It should be just up ahead.  Hold on ...
	there!  There it is!

A SIGN illuminated by the HEADLIGHTS.  It reads:  YOU ARE
LEAVING SUPERIOR.  THANKS FOR VISITING.

Grace lets out a scream of joy, leans over and hugs him.

		GRACE
	Oh, God!  I can't believe it.  I'm out.
	I'm finally out!

The MUSTANG begins to swerve along the road.

		BOBBY
	Hey!  Take it easy.  Want to get us killed?

		GRACE
	You don't know what it feels like to be
	free of that place.

		BOBBY
	I don't know about that?

		GRACE
	You spent a day in Superior. I wasted my
	entire life there. I feel like someone just
	took a million pounds off my shoulders.

		BOBBY
	We've still got some dead weight to get rid of.

		GRACE
	Can't we just dump him fast someplace?

		BOBBY
	I want a place where only the vultures will
	find him...(then) It'll be over soon,
	Grace.

		GRACE
	Then will you take me on your friends' boat
	with you?

		BOBBY
	I'm not sailing his boat.

		GRACE
	But I thought --

		BOBBY
	We're going to buy a boat of our own baby,
	and sail it wherever we want to go.

		GRACE
	Anywhere?

		BOBBY
	What the hell? Why not? Where should we go?

		GRACE
	Hawaii. I've read all about it. I've
	dreamed of going there and just lying on
	the beach while the water licked up against
	my feet. Oh, God. I'd kill to go there.

		BOBBY
	You already have.

She gives him a funny look.

		BOBBY
	You know I thought you'd left me back
	there.

		GRACE
	What are you talking about?

		BOBBY (emotional)
	When I got back from the garage, and your
	jeep wasn't there, I thought you'd gone and
	left me and taken the money.
	     (off her look)
	...Cause I never had any luck with women,
	Grace. You don't know what I been through.
	The shit I've taken. I thought you were
	like the rest of 'em... but when you came
	out of the house... well you're here Grace
	and we might be starting in the shit but
	we're starting where I never been --
	together with someone -- together with you
	Grace.

She responds with a luminous smile.

		GRACE
	I love you Bobby.

He looks back at her with trust and love in his eyes.

		BOBBY
	We're gonna pull this off, Grace.

Just then a HEADLIGHT rakes them from the rear as we hear,
again, the ominous crackle of a POLICE RADIO and the short
brutal "Whoop" of the siren, as Sheriff Potter's VEHICLE rolls
up quickly behind them. Grace's face is caught like a surprised
deer in the headlamps.

		GRACE
	Oh, my God!
	     (then)
	Don't stop!

Bobby is in a bind. The siren whoops again. The lights flash to
highbeam.

		BOBBY
	He must've seen us swerving on the road,
	that's all, just gonna give us a ticket for
	swerving...

But even Bobby has trouble believing that as the POLICE VEHICLE
pulls out sharply alongside his and SHERIFF POTTER motions to
him aggressively to pull over on the shoulder.

		SHERIFF (into loudspeaker)
	Pull over, goddamnit, pull over!

		GRACE
	Keep going!

She seems to be panicking. Bobby pulls over.

		BOBBY
	Fuck this!...Just shut up, Grace. We done
	nothing! Be cool. Let me do the talking. He
	doesn't know anything.

His vehicle pulled up on the shoulder in front of them, the
Sheriff gets out, shining his power flashlight into their faces.

		BOBBY (starts)
	'Evening Sheriff, sorry bout that but this
	jackrabbit...

Bobby has no time to react as the Sheriff is suddenly there at
his window, jerking his door open, angry. A GUN in his hand,
pointed at them, his eyes on Grace.

		SHERIFF
	You had to fuck him, didn't you!

		GRACE (nervous cool)
	I would never do that to you, baby... He
	killed Jake -- said he'd kill me if I
	didn't come with him. All he wants is the
	money.

Bobby looks at her. He cannot believe what he just heard.

		BOBBY
	What!

		SHERIFF (flipping, yelling)
	Don't lie to me!

Grace knows the jam is up.

		GRACE
	OK...but he never made me cum! Really
	Virgil, I was only doing what I had to do
	so we could be free. Just like we talked
	about. It meant nothing.

A pause. Virgil wants to kill her, but he also wants her back
badly.

		BOBBY
	You fucking him too Grace? Is everybody
	fucking everybody in this town?

She ignores him. Her attention on the backpack with the money
between her legs -- the gun is there, inside an outer flap of
the bag.

		SHERIFF
	You fuck this guy -- get him to do your
	dirty work and you think you can take the
	money and dump me?

		GRACE
	No baby, you got it wrong.

		SHERIFF
	This road don't go to Globe, Grace -- where
	were you going to meet me?

His flashlight on the four suitcases in the backseat. She
doesn't have an answer to that one.

		GRACE
	It's not like that it... Look, Virgil, I
	got the money here.

She gets out of the car on her side, comes around to him, the
pack of money slung on her shoulder, hard to see in the dark.

		SHERIFF (hurt)
	Oh Grace, you can say what you want...but,
	I watched you fuck that pervert for years
	while you're telling me you loved me? What
	happened to going to Milwaukee together?
	You and me -- gonna open up the finest
	sporting goods store that city ever did
	see? Get us a place on the north shore, by
	the lake? Season Brewer tickets! Just you
	and me, Grace. What happened?

		GRACE
	All talk, that's all you did was talk, and
	all I did was sit around getting older
	waiting for you to free me! You never did
	nothin' Virgil, you're weak! (pointing to
	Bobby) He did!

The Sheriff, deeply wounded, casts a hot vicious gaze on Bobby.

		SHERIFF
	This is some girl you and me got here
	Bobby, yessir, an excellent cocksuck too,
	wouldn't you say? (back at Grace)... Course
	you had a lotta practice haven't you
	darling, going way back to your crazy mama!

		GRACE (deadly)
	Shut up, Virgil! Take your share of the
	money. It's not so bad.

		SHERIFF
	I don't want the fuckin' money! I'm not
	gonna give up everything I got for a lousy
	50,000 dollars. It's you. You Grace or
	nothing. The whole thing... I want you to
	be my wife...(hopeful). What do you way
	Grace?

		GRACE
	You sound just like Jake... I did see into
	the future, Virgil, but you weren't in it.
	Go back to your family. They love you.

Bobby gets out of the car, misunderstanding the situation.

		BOBBY (misunderstanding)
	Look, we got more. We got $200,000 at
	least. Split it three ways, we all walk
	away...

The Sheriff snaps and smashes Bobby with his flashlight,
knocking him to the ground, kicking him again and again,
gathering the psychic force to murder him. Grace tries to
approach.

		SHERIFF
	Shut up, boy! You don't know shit round
	here! (to Grace) Get back. Did she tell you
	that story about the bird flying away?

		BOBBY (rolling on the ground)
	Ow! Look, I ... ow!

		GRACE
	Stop! Stop it!

		SHERIFF (kicking again and again)
	Were you going to help her fly away,
	asshole? What'd you think, you were the
	first boy to drift through this town she
	came on to? She tell you the story about
	old Jake forcing her to marry him? That's a
	good story... How he killed her crazy Mama?

Bobby in bloody agony. Grace stunned that Virgil would reveal
this now publicly.

		GRACE
	Goddamnit Virgil, stop!  Don't!

		SHERIFF
	...But I bet the story she didn't tell you
	was the best story of all. How old crazy
	Jake was really her Papa. And she liked
	fucking Papa! And now she's killed the
	sonufabitch! Just like she's gonna kill
	you!

Grace plunges into the pack, pulls the gun and shoots Virgil
across the car in the gut.

		GRACE
	No...you! You!

The Sheriff flies back onto the road, stunned, not realizing
what's happened.

Bobby watches unbelieving as Grace quietly steps up over the
Sheriff.

She puts the next round in his nuts, a modern fury enacting
ancient wrath.

		BOBBY
	Grace. No!

The Sheriff is wide-eyed, dying in shock. Grace then fires right
at his head in a coup de grace that blows his brains out the
back of his head.

Grace and Bobby both stare, then Grace jumps into action,
dragging the body. She snaps to Bobby.

		GRACE
	Help me get him off the road. Into the car!
	We'll ditch his car... Get the fuck up!

Bobby stares at her.

EXT./INT. MUSTANG - NIGHT

They're driving. GRACE and BOBBY, wordless, each thinking in
separate worlds. Grace wipes her hands. The bag with the money
between her legs. The Baretta is back in the bag.

		BOBBY (finally)
	Jesus, did you have to kill him?

		GRACE
	Get real Bobby. He was gonna kill you and
	me.

		BOBBY
	He was in love with you Grace. He would've
	done what you wanted, you could've made a
	deal and ...

		GRACE
	The only deal he had in mind was killing
	you for Jake's murder and blackmailing me
	into sucking his dick for the rest of my
	life... no thanks.

		BOBBY
	He was a cop, Grace, they never stop
	looking for you when you kill a cop...

		GRACE
	He was a scumbag!... He wanted me, Bobby.
	These guys don't let go! Even when they're
	dead... (softer) You don't know what it was
	like, Bobby. Those two, they were the same.

A silence. The oncoming road.

		GRACE
	So, aren't you going to ask me?

		BOBBY
	Ask you what? You mean what kind of
	horrifying sick shit is coming next?

		GRACE
	Don't you want to know...? I bet it's
	burning a hole in your brain just now?

		BOBBY
	Let it go, baby. It's the past. I got a
	past...

		GRACE
	Don't you really want to know? Was Jake my
	Daddy? Was I fucking my own Daddy? Don't
	you want to know that?

		BOBBY (shouting)
	What do you want me to say!

She's yelling, emotionally out of control.

		GRACE
	Yes! I was! I was fucking Daddy! And I
	married him!... I married him...okay?

She looks at Bobby, forces him to look at her. Finally:

		BOBBY
	Why?

		GRACE
	I don't know why!

She drops back in her seat. Tears come.

		GRACE
	All I wanted was to be a kid... He took
	that from me... They all did... (very
	quietly, dangerously) They treated me like
	meat. A piece of meat. Fuck me. Blow me.
	Bend over. Stick their fingers up my ass...
	Fuck them! Fuck the whole town! They
	deserved to die!

A pause.

		BOBBY
	And us Grace? What do we deserve?

		GRACE (crying quietly to herself)
	"Nin chonk, nin chonk," my Mama used to say
	in Apache. "Your worst is doing this to
	you," she said, "your worst has killed
	you." And "Be go tsee" -- "you will find
	out the result of what you have done..."
	Just when you think it's over, when you've
	gotten away, it begins. Cause you never get
	away.

Bobby stares straight ahead at the oncoming road. Can he still
love her? She seems to be reading his thoughts, like she said
she could.

		GRACE
	It's easy to judge someone else when you
	don't know nothing about it... I'm Apache,
	Bobby. You don't eat what I eat. You don't
	see what I see. Don't judge me.

A silence. Two former lovers in the dark of a car moving through
the strangeness of an Arizona desert at night.

		BOBBY
	I don't want to think anymore.

		GRACE (quietly)
	Then drive...

The lights of the car fade until there is nothing but darkness.

				       THE SUN COMES UP:

EXT. CANYON - END SPOT - DAWN

In the vast reaches of a deserted canyon, where VULTURES circle
in a hot white sky, we find the MUSTANG parked at the edge of a
drop. We hear the SOUND of a body being dragged.

		D.J. (V.O.)
	...Nobody's sure where it was heading so
	fast but the way it hit the semi, it won't
	be getting home now! Hey area weather is
	gonna be hot! Hot! Hot! Then cold! Cold!
	Cold! Just like yesterday. Just like every
	day. Some surprise, huh? So if you're
	planning on anything, don't. You don't like
	the weather, just wait one minute. Got any
	brains, get up to Alaska and get yourself
	some trailer park where you don't see no
	desert for miles and miles...

		BOBBY (over)
	Right there... Drop it there. I got it.

BOBBY is giving GRACE instructions as they drop SHERIFF VIRGIL
POTTER'S corpse over a drop onto some rocks 30 yards below.

		GRACE
	See ya, Virgil. God bless.

Bobby pushes him over, his hand hurting. The body crashes below.
It's hard work. They head back for the Mustang, to retrieve
JAKE'S body in the popped trunk. But Grace notices Bobby
glancing at the Baretta now tucked in her waist.

The silence is tense between them, the rocks and gravel
crunching under their shoes as they walk.

		GRACE (indicates the gun)
	Is this what's bothering you Bobby?

		BOBBY
	No Grace, my hand's bothering me.

		GRACE
	You think now that Jake's dead, there's all
	that money there and I don't need you
	anymore, and I might just sneak up behind
	you sometime and...pop!

She pulls an imaginary trigger on Bobby, mimicking the recoil of
a gun. Bobby is nervous.

		GRACE
	Don't you think I would've done it if I wanted
	to? What can I do to make you relax, baby?

		BOBBY
	You could give me my gun back.

Grace smiles.

		GRACE
	Why don't we just finish what we started.

She stares down at Jake. She can't help feeling some old
feelings. As Bobby walks back to the front of the car, turns off
the annoying radio. He watches as she softly prays over Jake,
whose face is concealed by the blanket in which he is rolled.

		GRACE (after a moment with Jake)
	What do you think happens to someone's
	spirit when they die?

		BOBBY
	I think nothing happens. You're dead meat.
	That's it.

		GRACE
	You don't believe in anything do you,
	Bobby?

		BOBBY
	I believe in this moment, that's all. There
	is nothing else.
	     (lifting Jake by the shoulder)
	Come on. He must weigh 300 pounds.

Grace leans into the trunk to take his boots when he makes his
move, quickly, closing on her when she's off guard. He slams her
hard in the face, coldly sending her sprawling to the ground,
dazed.

He steps over her and grabs the gun in her waist, checks it.

She puts her hand to her mouth, feels the blood on her finger
tips. She looks at him and laughs a wild crazed laugh that cuts
into Bobby like a knife.

		GRACE
	You hit me, Bobby? You hit a woman, you
	motherfucker! Didn't your Momma ever teach
	you anything...?

Her eyes go to the gun in his hand and she stops laughing. Her
calm is extraordinary, as if expecting to die.

		GRACE
	Well?

For a moment, Bobby does nothing, then he slips the gun through
his belt.

		BOBBY
	Well, nothing. We dump Jake, we split the
	money, then you're on your own.

		GRACE
	Don't leave me. I want to say with you,
	Bobby.

		BOBBY
	Why? So when the cops catch up with us you
	can sell me out again?

		GRACE
	I was just baiting him! Bobby, I had to
	tell him that to get his guard down. Just
	like you told Jake you was going to kill
	me!

		BOBBY
	You lied to me all along! Lies, all lies.
	Your mother, your father, what story are
	you on now?  How come the town didn't know
	you was his daughter?

		GRACE (in pain)
	Cause my Mom slept around. A lotta men!
	Anybody could've been my father. But we
	knew.

		BOBBY (not listening)
	Well you got what you wanted all along by
	fucking me.  I wish you had told me the
	goddamn truth in the first place!

		GRACE (screws out)
	I didn't want you to know! Don't you...
	unnerstand?

Bobby's got a headache now. It's too much to understand, too
much talk. Too much history has taught him to doubt.

		BOBBY
	When you're finished with me, I'm next! I
	been there, baby. I been there with other
	cunts...sorry, not anymore. I'll take you
	as far as California. If we can make that.
	After that you're on your own. Try Mexico.
	With all this bread, you can live like a
	queen.

		GRACE
	I don't want to go to Mexico, Bobby!
	Please, I really want to be with you. Don't
	blow this. Don't you think I care about
	you?

		BOBBY
	I think you're a lying, back-stabbing
	psycho bitch, and one day you'll kill me.
	But it's nice to know you cared...

The expression on Grace's face changes as rapidly as the desert
weather, a coldness passing over and through her.

		GRACE
	You don't know your own mind. It blocks
	your heart.

Keeping a wary eye on Grace, Bobby starts hauling Jake out of
the trunk.

		BOBBY
	Give me a hand.

He wrestles Jake up to a sitting position. He grabs a can of
beer from a warm six-pack in the trunk and shoves it into a
pocket of Jake's coat.

		BOBBY
	Poor old Jake, a few drinks, a fight with
	the sheriff over his wife. And both of 'em
	ended up dead.

Grace takes his boots.

		BOBBY
	Time to go for a walk, Jake.

		GRACE
	My mother died in this canyon.

		BOBBY
	Save the Mom routine, will ya Grace. It
	doesn't work with me. One, two, three...

They lift the corpse, and with great effort, haul it towards the
edge of the drop. As they pause on the way, Bobby, wary of
Grace's strange coldness, tries to soften the blow of
separation.

		BOBBY
	Look, it's not so bad we split up. It might
	be months before they find these guys. If
	at all. I mean with the mountain lions
	around here. Remember, if they can't find
	no bodies, there's no crime... (She doesn't
	respond.) We'll be in Phoenix by noon. Lose
	this car, get another one. Texas, Mexico
	are big countries, all that money Grace,
	you'll meet someone else, you know, there's
	a lot of hope with a $100,000...

They lift Jake again, and move to the edge.

		GRACE
	Hope is a four-letter word.

		BOBBY
	But we all need that too. Hold him.

He props Jake at the edge, standing, and transfers the weight
onto Grace. Jake's head is on her shoulder.

		BOBBY
	You make a pretty couple.

It seems he might push them both over but instead takes the gun,
wipes it of his prints, and slips it through Jake's belt.

		BOBBY
	Won this in a poker game in Reno. God knows
	who it's registered to.  You shoulda been
	more careful, Jake. See you later.

As he takes Jake's weight off Grace and pushes it over the drop.

Grace watches him go, her eyes shifting to Bobby, his back
momentarily to her, also watching. She moves towards him.

Bobby turns, slips on the edge.

		BOBBY
	Now all we got to do is try and--

He feels a blur of motion, almost like a bird, and he is
falling...falling, his life coming to an end.

Grace is standing somewhere up above, briefly seen. Did she push
him? He doesn't know.

He's stunned as he falls on the rocks next to the bodies of Jake
and Virgil. He screams out in sharp pain. His leg feels broken.
But he is alive.

Grace walks away, cutting it all off, deeply shaken. She must
get away from the past and all these hollow men. She closes the
trunk of the Mustang, gets in the driver's seat, reaches for the
ignition key. Her hand fumbles for it a moment. It isn't there.

		GRACE
	Shit!

She sits there. Bobby is calling from below.

		BOBBY
	Grace! Help me, Grace...! We been through
	too much together.  We've only had one day,
	but you and me have been through more than
	most people ever will. I know you were
	angry at me, and, you know, you were right!
	I'm sorry I hit you. I was wrong about
	leaving you. You don't belong in Mexico.

She finally gets out and walks back to the edge of the cliff,
looks down.

		BOBBY
	Thank you. Thank you. I...I knew you
	wouldn't leave me, Grace.

		GRACE
	Bobby? Are you all right?

		BOBBY
	I busted my leg!

		GRACE
	Can you make it back up?

		BOBBY
	Grace -- in the trunk of my car is a tow
	rope. It should reach down here. Go get it,
	throw it down.

She looks. Of course the trunk is closed. She closed it.

		GRACE
	Bobby, the trunk...it's locked. Throw the
	keys up to me. I'll get the rope.

Bobby's eyes pass over Jake a few feet away, his eyes staring
upwards in death. They take in the gun still attached to his
waist. He knows the trunk wasn't locked when they took Jake out.

		BOBBY
	I can't throw that far. You got to climb
	down here and get the keys. You can make
	it. It's the only way Grace.

Grace looks down at the drop.  It's a tough descent but she
knows she could make it and get back up as well.

		BOBBY
	Grace!...Please, Grace!  You have to help
	me.

Grace takes a look around.

		GRACE
	Okay. I'm coming. Calm down!

She starts down the cliff face. As she descends, he talks
deliriously.

		BOBBY (off)
	I knew you'd help me. I knew you wouldn't
	leave me baby, cause we're tied together
	too close. We belong together always.

Grace makes it to the bottom of the drop, and walks cautiously
towards Bobby.

		GRACE (yelling back, echoing)
	Bobby! Don't flip out on me. I can't do
	this alone. I know you don't trust me, but
	you gotta pull yourself together, I'm not
	gonna leave you...I never wanted it to go
	down like this. It was different with you
	Bobby. You had dreams like me. You
	listened... I would've gone anywhere with
	you, Bobby. We can make this work. I'm
	sorry...I really am. I didn't wanna hurt
	you.

Can he believe her? She sounds so sincere this time.

She's heading for the body of Jake. And the gun. Bobby knows
that and is already crawling there.

		BOBBY (as he crawls)
	They're right here, Grace.  The keys.  Come
	get me out of here... Know why else I could
	never leave you?

		GRACE
	Why's that?

		BOBBY
       'Cause I love you.

Inching closer.

Closer. They meet at the apex of Jake's corpse.

		GRACE
	And I love you too.

		BOBBY
	And love's a funny thing.  Sometimes I
	don't know if I want to love you...

Grace leans close to Bobby.  He dangles the keys out in front of
her, but she doesn't reach for them. Her eyes go to Bobby. She
reaches for him. At that instant Bobby's hands shoot out and
clamp hard around her.  A sharp gurgle is all that escapes Grace
as Bobby twists the life from her, as Jake leers up at them.

		BOBBY
	...or kill you.

Grace twists and flails in Bobby's hands, but in spite of his
bleeding stump, he holds her like a bear trap holds a grizzly.

		BOBBY
	I love you Grace, but I just can't trust
	you!

She looks at him, trying to protest, shaking her head. Grace's
flailing goes into overdrive. Somewhere in his semi-delirious
state, Bobby's eyes might notice the gun at Jake's waist is no
longer there.

Grace manages one word:

		GRACE
	Jake...

		BOBBY
	He can't help you now, honey!

Bobby is in agony as he kills her, part beast, part lover, he
kills that which he loves.

Suddenly, a SHOT is heard. Bobby buckles with the blast, hit in
the side. He kills her with one last wrenching thrust of his
hands, breaking her neck.

Bobby looks down at Jake's gun, which she clutches in her hand,
and sees the hole in his side and the river of blood that flows
from it.  He manages to stand, looks at Jake; their bodies lying
side by side.

Bobby, with great difficulty, claws his way back up the rocks to
the car, his fast-flowing wound staining the white rocks with
blood.

He makes it to the top and, losing more blood, climbs into the
driver's seat. He checks the money in the bag. All there. All
his.

As he pulls a huge clot of blood from his side, the vultures
circle. Perhaps one, smarter than the others, lands close by. It
spooks Bobby but he's okay. He looks in the mirror.

		BOBBY
	You're still lucky.

He puts the key in the ignition, the engine comes to life.

		BOBBY (waves back)
	Adios --

Suddenly, the RADIATOR HOSE Darrell installed blows apart
loudly. Bobby knows exactly and immediately what it is as a
cloud of steam now rolls from under his hood. He shakes his
head, frustrated.

		BOBBY (sighs)
	Oh shit!...(then) Arizona.

He can't help but laugh at his bad luck. As we rise off the
desert floor and take flight with the vultures, eventually
leaving them all as specks of earth in the vast empty canyons of
Arizona.



		     THE END
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