The Other Story of D
Text ?003 Roger E. Moore (roger70129@aol.com)
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent, just want to bother me,
whatever) is appreciated. Please write to: roger70129@aol.com
Synopsis: Jane discovers a short
story that Daria wrote during a low period in her life, and she gains a view
into Daria that she never imagined existed.
Author抯
Notes: The
events in this story take place shortly after the 揇aria?TV movie, 揑s It
College Yet??at the start of Daria抯 last summer at home before she goes to
college in Boston. The title comes from 揇aria?episode #505, 揟he Story of D,?the events in which are referenced briefly here. This story is strongly tied to
episode #413, 揇ye! Dye! My Darling?and the TV movie, 揑s It Fall Yet??The
events in episode #213, 揥rite Where It Hurts,?are critical to this story, as
the story-within-a-story here is an alternate-future version of the
story-within-a-story there; if a video of the actual episode is not available,
the transcript for it is at: http://www.outpost-daria.com/ts_ep213.html
Acknowledgements: My heartfelt appreciation
goes out to these most excellent beta-readers, who went above and beyond the
call of duty: Brother Grimace, Galen Hardesty, Robert Nowall, and Mike
Yamiolkoski. Your comments and criticisms helped the final work immensely. My
gratitude also goes to Kara Wild, who had a long debate with me about Daria抯
ability to say the L word, and I admit now that Kara was right. Figures.
EXT:
Exterior scene
VO:
Voice over (off screen)
1. INT: WEEKDAY AFTERNOON, EARLY SUMMER, DARIA扴 BEDROOM, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Daria
Morgendorffer types at her computer station, her back to her friend Jane Lane.
Jane lies on her stomach on Daria抯 bed, reading a printed manuscript on loose
pages. On the floor beside the bed is a small cardboard box full of files and
papers. Jane reaches the last page of the story and carefully puts the story
pages together again.
JANE:
Wow. I see why this had such an impact on your mom and Mr. O扤eill. This is
really good.
DARIA:
[still typing] If you cry on me, I抣l hit you.
JANE:
Nah, I抦 sort of immune to tissue-pullers. I get my daily minimum requirement
of angst just being an artist. [examines first page of story] You don抰 have a
title for this.
DARIA:
[still typing] I thought about 揇awn of the Blood Suckers,?but it was sort of
cutesy.
JANE:
Why don抰 you call it 揌earts? You and your family play a game of hearts at
the end, and it抯 a pretty emotional story梕specially considering its source.
DARIA:
[stops typing, sighs] You抮e right. I should burn it.
JANE:
[looks at Daria in disbelief] Burn it? Morgendorffer, you should send this out
now and get it published. I can抰 believe you sat on this for two years. I抦
serious, this is great! Get it in print!
DARIA:
Then everyone will cry on me. [gets up from computer] I抣l get the lighter
fluid.
JANE:
[rolls over on bed, holding story out of Daria抯 reach] You抮e not going to
burn this! You whine and whine about wanting to be a writer, then you produce
something like this, and you want to burn it? Get real! [looks over side of bed
at box of manuscripts] What else have you got?
DARIA:
You抳e been snorting enamel paint fumes and Crazy Glue again.
JANE:
[sits up on bed] That抯 what the little blue aliens tell me. [leans over, digs
into box] Let抯 see what the Muses tricked you into doing.
DARIA:
Hey! [walks over quickly to grab box] You can抰 read anything else. That was
it.
JANE:
[jerks a folder out of the box and hides it behind her back] This one I can!
DARIA:
[glares] Give it back! [grabs for it, but Jane holds it out of reach]
JANE:
[sweetly] After I read it and cry over it, sure.
Daria
fidgets and looks frustrated and anxious.
JANE:
You抮e scared that I抣l hate it? Look, I read your weird story about the
flesh-eating bacteria and we抮e still friends, right? And Tom loved it, silly
sentimental boy that he is. Lemme read just one more, this one.
DARIA:
[frowns, still fidgeting] Someone will be home soon, and I抣l have to hide the
box again.
JANE:
[calmly and deliberately] Daria, relax. Quinn抯 dating, your folks are at
work梬e抮e alone! Take a chill pill and cool out. Poke at your 憄ooter and let
me read. This could really suck, it could suck so bad that it drags me into the
paper itself, but梩rust me on this桰抣l still let you buy pizza for me.
DARIA:
[glares at Jane] You should work on a crisis hot line.
JANE:
I call 慹m as I see 慹m.
Daria
groans and walks back to her computer, sitting in front of it. She doesn抰 type
right away. Jane nods and opens the folder, taking out the story.
DARIA:
[nonchalant voice] What抯 the name on the folder?
JANE: [turns head sideways to read folder label] 揟he Other Story.?o:p>
With
a gasp, Daria rockets out of her chair and lunges for Jane, arms out, hands
reaching for the manuscript.
DARIA:
[panicked] No! You can抰 read that!
JANE:
[startled] Whoa! Down, girl! [carefully fends Daria off with feet and free
hand, holds manuscript out of reach] Okay, that抯 it! Leave the room! Go!
DARIA:
Hey, this is my room!
JANE:
Out! [points to the door] Go outside and kick someone. Go get a makeover,
anything, but let me read this. I swear I won抰 read anything else. Just this
one.
Daria
looks stricken, far more upset than seems appropriate.
JANE:
[frowns] There something in this story no one is supposed to see? Or do you
just think I suck at story reviews?
Daria
swallows, her face alive with fear梑ut she then turns without a word and leaves
the room at a quick pace. Moments later, her footsteps are heard descending the
staircase to the first floor, then hurrying off.
JANE:
[surprised, gets off bed, walks to doorway] Daria? Daria! Okay, I won抰 read
it! What抯 wrong?
After
a long pause, Jane walks back to the bed and settles back on the pillows.
Glancing at the doorway from time to time, she begins to read the story. We
focus over her shoulder at the top lines:
Jane starts to read the story, then frowns. She picks up the first story she read (揌earts,?the story from 揥rite Where It Hurts? and looks at it, then looks back and forth between the two stories before putting 揌earts?aside and reading 揟he Other Story.?o:p>
2. DARIA扴 STORY桬XT: A DECADE FROM NOW, FRONT DOOR, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Daria
Morgendorffer, now an adult, stands outside the front door of the Morgendorffer
home in Lawndale. Physically, she looks as she did in 揥rite Where It Hurts?(same face, hair, glasses), but she now wears a wash-worn beige outfit:
long-sleeved blouse, long pants, walking shoes. A battered subcompact car with
heavily tinted windows sits in the driveway behind her; a trail of oil drops
goes up the driveway behind it. A crying infant wrapped in a blue blanket is
nestled in Daria抯 arms. Daria stands so that the baby is shielded from the sun
at all times, keeping her own face turned away from the sunlight. Daria抯 face
is lined and tired, and her hair is uncombed. She wears no makeup. The door
opens and reveals an aged Helen Morgendorffer.
HELEN:
[cheery] Hi, sweetie. And how抯 my favorite grandchild today?
3. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, FOYER, MORGENDORFFER HOME
DARIA:
[enters house quickly] She woke up at four and hasn抰 gone back to sleep since.
We抮e both worn out.
HELEN:
[reaches for crying baby] Here, let me take her.
DARIA:
Sure. [lets Helen take the baby from her] I couldn抰 sleep anyway. The people
in the upstairs apartment were fighting, and the people downstairs had a party
and wouldn抰 turn down their music. [sighs] I抦 sorry to complain. How are you
doing, Mom?
HELEN:
[holding baby, who is now quiet] I抦 okay. It抯 harder to get out of bed
anymore. There isn抰 much to do. I fixed up the flowerbed out front. Did you
like it?
DARIA:
[turns to (closed) front door, then back to Helen] Yeah, it looked great.
You抮e wearing a hat, right? When you go out? Covering up with sunscreen,
sunglasses, all that?
HELEN:
[kisses baby] Oh, sure. It抣l take more than an ozone layer collapse to keep
Helen Morgendorffer inside.
DARIA:
Mom, that抯 not funny anymore. You have to keep covered up. The cancer rates
are through the roof. Don抰 you know that?
HELEN:
[walks toward living room with baby] Oh, Daria, for heaven抯 sake, I watch the
news, too. [looks at Daria, narrows eyes] And why aren抰 you wearing a hat?
DARIA:
[shrugs, changes topic] What抯 going on with you?
4. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, LIVING ROOM, MORGENDORFFER HOME
HELEN:
Oh, Quinn抯 in town, on her way to New York. She抯 supposed to drop in today
sometime. Why don抰 you stay for a while?
DARIA:
[grim look] Great. Maybe she抣l put her cell phone down and remember who I am.
HELEN:
[glances at Daria] Oh, Daria.
DARIA:
Oh, Daria, what? Mom, she hasn抰 called me since the funeral. She didn抰 see me
or call me when I was in labor, she doesn抰 even know what梉gestures at baby,
then puts both hands on her head]梬hy am I even going on about this? She
doesn抰 care. [drops hands] She抯 the one who抯 got a life. I sure as hell
don抰. She抯 got the jets, and I抳e got the clunker with no A/C.
HELEN:
[sharply] Daria, stop it. [nods at baby, cuddled against her] Mind if I feed
her? I still have some formula in the kitchen.
DARIA:
[flops down on old sofa] Sure, whatever. She won抰 take it from me.
HELEN:
[turns as she抯 leaving] What?
DARIA:
I said, she won抰 take it from me. I can抰 get her to . . . to breast feed.
[turns red, looks away] She won抰 . . . she just won抰. I don抰 know what抯
wrong. Maybe it抯 because I抦 so tense or something, I don抰 know what. She and
I just get on each other抯 nerves. I dunno what抯 wrong, but I have to use a
bottle. I feel so damn useless.
HELEN:
[stares at Daria, then goes into kitchen] She needs you, like I need you.
You抮e her mother.
DARIA:
[groans, stares at nothing across the room for a few seconds] I went to see Dad
on the way over. They still haven抰 seeded his plot or killed the weeds or
anything. I went in and yelled at the director and threatened to sue, and he
just said he抎 look into it. [more worked up] I hate that guy. He doesn抰 give
a damn. He gets his money, and you know he抯 thinking, what are you gonna do,
dig him up and move him? Jeez, I hate that bastard. [pause] You know what, I抦
going to do it myself. I抣l go buy some grass seed and fertilizer and fix up
Dad抯 place like it should be. Just let that bastard stop me. If Dad could see
the mess his place is, he would have a . . . he抎 . . . [shrugs, quickly
abandons topic] I抦 sorry. I抦 not having a good life anymore.
HELEN:
[VO, from kitchen] Do you need money?
DARIA:
[tense] No, I don抰 need money. I still have some left in the trust. I抦 okay.
HELEN:
[VO, from kitchen] Have you heard back from your agent?
DARIA:
[flinches, groans, pause] He let me go.
HELEN:
[VO, from kitchen] What? [reappears in doorway, bottle-feeding baby] He let you
go?
DARIA:
[explosively] He let me go, Mom! Damn, I抦 sorry. He just let me go.
HELEN: [stares at Daria in shock] How can he do that? He抯 your agent and he抯?o:p>
DARIA:
[loudly] Mom, please drop it, okay? He let me go! Nothing of mine is selling!
I抦 . . . I抦 trying to get back on with the local newspaper, maybe as an
editor or something. I see them tomorrow. They抳e got employee childcare there
now. I checked.
HELEN:
[indicates baby] I can take care of her during the day, if you need.
DARIA: No, Mom, I抣l take her in with me if I get the job. I can抰 have you do that. [hesitates] Oh . . . can you watch her tomorrow when I go in for the interview? I have to type and everything, and I really hate to?o:p>
HELEN:
Oh, Lord, Daria, of course! She抯 my little angel!
Daria
looks at her daughter, resting peacefully against her mother抯 shoulder and
drinking from the bottle. Daria抯 face becomes very sad.
HELEN:
[hesitates, soft voice] Have you gotten anything from Marcello?
DARIA:
[pause, shaken out of reverie] Not a thing. He抯 off somewhere, probably
screwing his brains out, enjoying his freedom again.
HELEN:
[shocked] Daria!
DARIA:
[sighs] Mom, let it go. He抯 gone.
HELEN:
But I can抰 believe he抎 run off from his own precious daughter! [louder] Or
mine!
Daria
starts to answer, but cannot. After struggling for words, she shrugs and looks
away.
HELEN:
What about the child welfare people I recommended? Didn抰 they go after him?
DARIA:
They can抰 find him, and they can抰 get anything out of his estate. He hid his
money somewhere, and I can抰 afford a hotshot lawyer to dig it up. The state抣l
take years to get around to it. He抯 just gone. I don抰 even want to bother
with him anymore.
HELEN: If I could take the case, I would, believe me. Are you sure I can抰 get someone from my old firm to?o:p>
DARIA:
No, Mom, and don抰 you pay for it, either. He抎 fight it, we抎 go nowhere, and
we抎 spend all that money for nothing. Let it go.
HELEN:
Well, they抣l catch him one of these days and make him pay!
Daria
shrugs, beyond caring.
HELEN:
You want some coffee?
DARIA:
What? Oh. [gets off couch] Let me make it.
HELEN:
Oh, I can do it.
DARIA:
No, you抳e got your hands full. [heads into kitchen]
5. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, KITCHEN, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Daria
enters the kitchen and walks to the coffeemaker, picking up the glass pitcher
and filling it in the sink. Helen comes in behind her, standing on the other
side of the central counter, holding the bottle-nursing baby.
HELEN:
Quinn was on WorldWeb News again. Her company抯 doing really well.
DARIA:
[filling pitcher, dull voice] I know. Saw it on the tube this morning when
there was nothing else to do.
HELEN:
I use her new blush. I don抰 have it on right now, but it is nice.
Daria
doesn抰 respond or look at Helen.
HELEN:
[looks uncomfortable] Daria, I meant to ask you. Did the divorce go through?
DARIA:
[puts full pitcher into coffeemaker] Not yet. I have to wait a full year and
apply for abandonment if I can抰 get him to respond. They changed all the laws
about that. I抳e got six months left.
HELEN:
After that抯 over . . . are you thinking about looking again?
DARIA:
For what? Oh. [pause] No.
HELEN: You抮e a smart young woman, you could meet a?o:p>
DARIA:
[fiddling with coffeemaker controls] No. I was stupid once. God strike me down
if I抦 stupid twice. Marcello was enough.
HELEN: Well, what do you think got into him that he would run off?o:p>
DARIA:
[turns and shouts] He got sick of me, okay? Just drop it!
The
baby stops feeding and starts to cry. Helen puts down the bottle and cuddles
the infant, making soft noises, and the baby subsides. Daria leans back against
the counter by the sink, covering her face with her hands.
DARIA:
[muffled] He just got sick of me. Everything fell apart. He got tired of me not
getting anywhere with anything, complaining all the time, and he left. Please
let it go, okay? Please?
Daria
drops her hands, her eyes red, and fiddles with the coffeemaker controls again.
The doorbell rings.
HELEN:
Oh! I抣l get it. I bet that抯 Quinn! [leaves kitchen for front door, with baby]
DARIA:
[stares down at coffeemaker抯 control lights] Shit. [rubs at her eyes with her
palms, sniffs, straightens her clothing, leaves kitchen for the front door]
6. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, FOYER, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Helen
opens the front door, and Quinn comes in. Beautiful as a teenager, Quinn is
stunning now, a twelve on a scale of one to ten, wearing an expensive and
colorful business suit with tasteful diamond jewelry. Four men in white suits
and sunglasses梒learly hiding weapons in their jackets梬alk back to a white
stretch limousine parked by the curb. The limousine抯 windows are totally
black.
QUINN:
[to bodyguards] Two hours, okay? [to Helen] Mom, good to see you. [leans close
to kiss Helen, frowns and pauses because Daria抯 baby is in the way, manages to
give Helen a peck on the cheek] I can抰 stay long. There抯 a board meeting in
Manhattan tomorrow morning. Lots of stuff in the air. Babysitting in your spare
time now?
HELEN:
This is your little niece! Isn抰 she adorable? Sweetie, please stay as long as
you can. I haven抰 seen much of you lately.
QUINN:
[flips her long hair back] Yeah, I know. I抳e . . . [sees Daria walk into view
from the kitchen] . . . well, well. Big sis is home, too. [raises right hand,
palm down and level, to forehead as if measuring her height] I think I抦 taller
than you are, now, you know?
Daria
walks up to Quinn, but just before she reaches her sister, a cell phone rings
in one of Quinn抯 pockets. Quinn instantly holds up a hand to keep Daria back
as she fishes in her pocket for the phone.
QUINN:
Wait a second, I think this is . . . [puts cell phone to ear] . . . Quinn. Oh,
Andre. Yes, hold on a moment, let me go in the other room. I抦 in Lawndale,
yeah. Hold on.
Quinn
brushes past Daria, who had started to put out her arms to greet her sister. As
Quinn walks off into the living room, Daria stares after her in shock, then
drops her arms and looks painfully depressed. Helen stares from Quinn to Daria,
stunned at what happened.
HELEN:
[heads after Quinn] I抦 going to bring her back. She should know better.
DARIA:
[exasperated] Forget it, Mom.
7. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, LIVING ROOM, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Helen,
still carrying the baby, walks up behind Quinn.
QUINN:
[to phone] Do you have Exhibit C? You know what that抯 all about, right?
[pause] You抮e goddamn right it is.
HELEN:
[loud angry whisper] Quinn, your sister抯 here!
QUINN:
[to phone] Uh, hold a sec. [thumbs button on phone, turns to Helen in anger]
Mom, I let you interrupt every family vacation and get-together we抳e ever had
with your stupid phone calls from Eric. The least you can do is let me take
this one call. My whole career depends on this. Okay? Can I have that?
HELEN:
[taken aback] Well . . . please hurry. You haven抰 seen Daria in ages.
QUINN:
As soon as I get this wrapped up. [thumbs phone back on, flips her hair, to
phone] Andre, you still there? Good. Exhibit C is going in, or else you抮e
going to feel a nuclear pitchfork jam you right in the ass, got it?
Helen
looks startled at Quinn抯 words and tone, then turns and walks back to
Daria梑ut Daria抯 gone. Still holding the baby, Helen walks to the kitchen
entrance and sees Daria walking over to the coffeemaker.
8. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, KITCHEN, MORGENDORFFER HOME
In
the background, we see Helen enter the kitchen. Daria, her face tight, pulls
the pitcher from the coffeemaker梑ut the pitcher jams and sloshes boiling
coffee over her right hand. She jerks back with a cry, grabbing her injured
hand. She quickly puts her hand under the sink faucet and runs cold water over
it, her face reflecting terrific pain.
DARIA:
[burns self] Ow! Damn it! [runs water on hand] Damn it to hell!
HELEN:
Daria, sweetheart, are you all right?
DARIA:
[face rigid, gasps] Fine! I抦 fine!
HELEN:
[hurries to see injured hand, holding baby] Let me see that!
The
baby begins to cry. Helen gasps in horror when she sees Daria抯 hand.
HELEN:
Oh, Daria! You need to have that looked at!
DARIA:
[strained look, still in great pain, hand under running water] I don抰 have
health insurance, Mom! Just leave it alone! It抯 okay! Forget it!
HELEN:
I don抰 care if you don抰 have health insurance! I抦 taking you to have that
looked at! I抣l pay for it!
The
baby cries harder, sensing the tension and loud voices.
QUINN:
[VO, in living room, loudly, to phone] I said two one three, Andre. Dick around
with me any more, and it goes up to five one three. [pause] You think I抦
goddamn kidding? Well, you?[pause] All right, then.
DARIA:
[takes bright red hand out of water, holds it up, wiggles fingers painfully]
Look, Mom! I抦 okay, all right? [sniffs back tears] It抯 just red, that抯 all!
[looks at her baby] Look, can you get her to stop crying? My hand doesn抰 hurt
any more, I swear it. I抦 fine. [turns off water, picks up dishtowel and
gingerly dabs her burned hand dry, her face trembling each time the dishtowel
touches her hand] See? I抦 okay. I抦 fine.
Unnoticed
by Daria or Helen, Quinn enters the kitchen and stops just in the doorway. She
watches them with a look between amusement and disgust. Daria抯 baby still
cries loudly.
HELEN: Baby, you can抰 go to that interview with your hand like that! How are you going to type or write?o:p>
DARIA:
[looks at her baby, loud and anguished] Can抰 you get her to stop crying?
QUINN:
[calm, disinterested] When you two are done, I have some news.
Daria
and Helen glance at Quinn, surprised to see her. Helen rubs the baby抯 back,
making cooing noises.
QUINN:
[nods to Daria] What抯 with your hand?
DARIA:
[hides her hand, fast deadpan] Nothing. Tell us your news.
HELEN:
[kisses baby] Ssh, Grandma抯 little angel, Grandma loves you, loves you, loves
you.
The
baby subsides, but still appears upset.
QUINN:
[watches Helen] I just remembered why I decided not to have kids yet. [shrugs]
Well, the bad news, Mom, is that you抮e moving out of this dump.
HELEN:
[stares at Quinn] What?
QUINN:
I抦 moving you out of this dump. Pick a city, any city, and you抮e going there.
Pick a house, any house, and you抳e got it. [glances at Daria] You can have
this one if you want, sis.
HELEN:
Quinn, what on earth are you talking about?
QUINN:
[pauses, grins like a wolf] The Big Red Q is no more. I just sold my interest
in Q-Star Cosmetics.
Daria
and Helen stare at Quinn, thunderstruck. Daria抯 baby begins to cry again, but
Helen absently rubs the baby抯 back, and again the baby subsides.
DARIA:
Your company? You sold it?
QUINN:
My interest in it, and I抦 retiring as CEO. I sign the papers in Manhattan
tomorrow. [to Helen, deadpan voice] Sorry I was on the phone, Mom, but I had to
finish what I started. I learned that from you. Don抰 let anything stop you
from clinching the deal.
HELEN:
[stunned, weak voice] Well, it would have been nice to greet your sister first.
QUINN:
[waves issue aside, walks forward to island counter in kitchen, rests hands on
counter] I抣l greet her now. [deadpan] Hi, Daria. Long time, no see.
DARIA:
[still hiding her hand, deadpan] So, what did you sell out for?
QUINN:
[smiles, speaks slowly] Two hundred thirteen billion. [pause] Not counting the
extra annual payouts for the next ten years, of course.
Daria
stops moving; she stares at Quinn with a mixture of disbelief and dread. Helen
gasps, her eyes huge, her mouth open. Both are staggered.
HELEN:
Oh, my God. Oh, my God, you . . . that抯 . . .
QUINN:
Sold my shares to Sandi and her backers. She抯 been after my job since day one,
and she抯 got it. [wicked grin] Hope she enjoys the hot seat. There抯 a hostile
buyout waiting in the wings in just two days.
HELEN:
You said . . . how many million?
QUINN:
Two hundred thirteen billion. Billion, Mom, not million. [pause] Pick a city,
pick a house, and it抯 yours. Damn, just pick a freaking city, and it抯
yours, all right?
Daria
looks down at her injured hand. Most of her right hand is bright red and
beginning to swell. She carefully wraps her hand in the dishcloth, adjusting it
to look as if she were carrying it. Her face betrays no emotion, though her jaw
is tight with pain.
HELEN:
[shocked, soft voice] I . . . but what if I want to live here? I mean, this is
our home, Quinn. It抯 all I have.
QUINN:
You can have a townhouse in Paris, Mom, and one in Miami and one in Hong Kong
and wherever the hell else you want. [shrugs] Think it over.
DARIA:
[low deadpan, dry mouth] Congratulations.
QUINN:
[eyes Daria coolly] Thank you. [pause] Know what? It worked out sort of
ironically, you know? Today is the tenth anniversary of the moment I got the
idea for Q-Star. Did I ever tell you how it happened?
HELEN:
[still shocked, weak voice] No. I think I抎 better sit down. [wanders over to
table and sits in chair with baby]
DARIA:
[looks down, avoiding Quinn抯 gaze] No. You haven抰 talked to me much.
QUINN:
[looks intently at Daria] It was the night of the Blush-a-thon. You remember
that? [snorts, smiles] You ought to. I had Sandi, Stacy, and Tiffany over.
Sandi was doing Stacy, and I was doing Tiffany, and I kept thinking, what抯
wrong with my color sense? I was having trouble getting the colors right on
Tiffany抯 skin. It was her skin, her eyes, her hair, her lips, everything. I
kept moving lamps around, trying to get more light, and it dawned on me. It was
a, um, revelation. [smiles] I like that word. Revelation. I suddenly knew what
was wrong with the colors I was using on Tiffany.
DARIA:
[low deadpan] And now you control Asia.
QUINN:
[grins, scratches her nose] Well, the cosmetics part of it, yeah. We grossed a
trillion last year for the first time. Funny to think of it now. Sandi in
control, right where she wants to be, Stacy running human resources, and
Tiffany our top core-product model梐nd me taking early retirement.
DARIA:
[low dry voice, still avoiding eye contact] Why did you sell out?
QUINN:
Time to move on. I抦 almost thirty, I抳e worked my ass off, and I want to enjoy
the rest of my life. I抦 not making the same mistake Dad did.
HELEN:
[shocked] Quinn! How can you say that?
QUINN:
[to Helen, tense and angry] He worked himself down to nothing, Mom. Between his
job and his bad eating habits and yelling all the time about his childhood, he
wore himself out. He ruined his heart and killed himself. I begged him to eat
better and calm down, but no, he wouldn抰 listen. Now I抦 rich as a freaking
solid-gold bitch, and I quit.
HELEN:
[shrinks back, stares at Quinn] Two hundred billion. Oh, my God.
DARIA:
[slowly] You said I ought to remember the Blush-a-thon. [pause] Why?
QUINN:
[pause, casually to Daria] Because that was the night you made out with Jane's boyfriend,
Tom Sloane, and broke them up. Still can抰 believe you did that, then went and
told Jane the next day. You were such an idiot.
Daria
gasps. She steps back and bumps into the counter behind her. Her face turns
white.
QUINN:
You were putting the moves on Tom when I was putting the moves on the world.
Daria抯
lips move as if she were trying to say something, but nothing comes out.
QUINN: That抯 how it goes. One of us had her head on right. You used to despise me for all the time I spent dealing with fashion and cosmetics and?o:p>
HELEN:
[stands up unsteadily with baby, walks toward Quinn, interrupts] Quinn, how can
you talk to her like that? She抯 your sister, for the love of God!
DARIA:
[pushes away from counter, not looking at Quinn, to Helen] I have to go. I抣l
take her now.
HELEN:
Daria, don抰 go yet! [to Quinn] You apologize to your sister!
QUINN: [coolly] For what? Giving her what抯 coming to her? All the years she made me look like a fool, always bragging how smart she was?o:p>
HELEN:
Quinn! [baby begins to cry again, Daria takes baby from Helen and quickly walks
past Quinn, leaving the kitchen]
QUINN:
[shouting after Daria] How smart are you now, Daria? You lost your best friend,
the only damn friend you ever had, then you dumped Tom right after you kissed
him, and how smart was that? If you抎 married him, you抎 be a millionaire now!
He抯 not even worth a goddamn fraction of what I am, but you would抳e had it
made!
HELEN:
[losing control] Quinn, shut up!
QUINN:
[shouting after Daria] Does the truth hurt, big sister?
9. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, FOYER AND LIVING ROOM, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Her
crying baby in her arms, Daria goes quickly to the front door. Helen is right
behind her. Quinn comes into the living room, her face alive with wicked,
gleeful rage.
HELEN:
Daria, please wait! Let me talk to Quinn!
QUINN:
[shouts to Daria] You ever hear from Jane again?
HELEN:
[to Quinn] Stop it! [begins to cry] Please, stop it! Not in my house!
Daria
struggles to open the front door, using her injured right hand. Her face twists
in pain. Her baby cries loudly and shrilly.
QUINN:
[shouts to Daria] Did anything in your life ever go right after you lost Jane?
Anything at all? Do you feel smart, Daria? Where are your books, your money,
that worthless ass-wipe husband of yours? [louder] Where抯 your best friend?
You screwed her over, and where are you now? You feeling smart now?
10. DARIA扴 STORY桬XT: MOMENTS LATER, FRONT YARD, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Daria
gets the front door open and hurries outside. She stumbles on the concrete
outside and nearly falls, rushing for her car, but keeps her footing. She
limps, however, favoring one ankle. Helen, crying, hurries out after her. Daria
goes to the driver抯 side of her little car, still shielding her baby from the
sun, and manages to get the door open with her right hand though she gasps in
pain. She gets the seat to fold forward, then she reaches into the back seat,
where a child抯 car seat is strapped down. The baby cries loudly, nonstop. Two
doors open in the limousine parked by the curb, and two bodyguards wearing
sunglasses get out, watching with wary expressions.
QUINN:
[shouts from front door] Ten years, Daria! Did you ever find another friend
like her? You want me to buy you some friends, Daria? I can get you all the
friends you want!
HELEN:
[crying, to Daria] Please don抰 go! Don抰 drive like this!
Daria
gets her baby strapped in the car seat, then snaps the driver抯 seat back. Her
face is red and puffy; tears run from her eyes. She gets into the driver抯
seat, shuts the door, and starts the car without putting on her seat harness.
The baby抯 screams are heard clearly even with the car doors shut.
QUINN:
[shouts from front door] You still miss her, don抰 you? You know how I know
that, Daria? You know how I know that you still miss the only friend you ever
had?
11. DARIA扴 STORY桰NT: MOMENTS LATER, IN AND AROUND DARIA扴 CAR
Daria
throws the car into reverse, and she backs out of the driveway without watching
for traffic. A car squeals to a halt, almost ramming her from behind as she
enters the street. Two more bodyguards get out of the limo, hands on their
weapons, grimly watching Daria leave. Daria puts the car in drive and pulls
away from the house, tires screaming, heading down the street at increasing
speed. The baby抯 screams are intense and unending. Daria抯 right hand cannot
grasp the steering wheel properly, as her fingers are so burned.
DARIA:
[voice breaking, tears running down face] Please don抰 cry! Please don抰 cry,
Jane! You抮e all I抳e got! [breaks down and sobs as she drives] You抮e all I抳e
got left in the world, Jane, please, please, don抰 cry!
[story
ends]
12.
INT: A SHORT WHILE LATER, KITCHEN, MORGENDORFFER HOME
Daria
makes herself a sandwich, alone in the kitchen. Jane quietly walks into the
kitchen; the manuscript is not with her. She looks solemn.
DARIA:
[her back to Jane, deadpan] So, it sucked. The matches are in the drawer on the
left.
JANE:
[softly] No. [pause] You mad at me?
DARIA:
[pause, very low voice] No.
The
two are quiet for a few moments.
JANE:
Why抎 you finally let me read it?
Daria
does not respond, except梐fter a pause梩o shrug.
JANE:
Did you write it last summer, when you were working at Mr. O扤eill抯 weird
little 搊kay-to-cry?camp?
DARIA:
[hesitates, low voice] Before camp. [pause, very low voice] After I broke up
with Tom. The first time.
JANE:
You beat yourself up pretty good. The hand thing, the . . . the everything.
Daria
does not respond.
JANE:
[looks thoughtfully at Daria抯 back] You told me you got your inspiration for
that first story, the 揌earts?one, from your mom, when she told you to write
down what you really wanted to see happen. [pause] I got the feeling that you
thought you deserved what happened to you in the second one. [pause] You don抰
mind a little analysis here, do you?
DARIA:
[fiddling with her sandwich] The knives are in the drawer next to you. If you
use a big one, you can get this over with much quicker.
JANE:
Hmmm. You know, I thought Quinn was out of character. That wasn抰 really like
her at all, not like I抳e seen her. [pause] I think she was channeling you,
what you thought about all that stuff with you and me and Tom. [pause] I sort
of wish I抎 heard the same channeling when I met Tom, and you got dropped out
of the picture.
A
long pause develops. Daria stops fiddling with her sandwich and just stands at
the kitchen counter, staring down at her sandwich, her back to Jane.
JANE:
You and I have never talked a lot about the guys-and-dating issue. We didn抰
until it was too late, anyway. I remember at the end of last summer we agreed
not to leave each other in the lurch again if a hottie appeared on the horizon,
and I assume that we抮e past the point of beating ourselves up over Tom or
anyone else. I think that抯 all ironed out.
DARIA:
[doesn抰 look up] So, there抯 nothing else to say. Stop talking.
JANE:
[leans against center island counter, crosses arms] You know what took me the
longest time to work out in my head, about Tom and everything, was realizing
how much you needed me. I need you, too, but I don抰 think now that I
understood how much you needed me.
DARIA:
[low voice] I抦 glad I抦 not paying you eighty dollars an hour for this.
JANE:
You抣l get my bill. I thought a lot about what you said when you came to see me
last August at the art colony, about me being a confidence-building role model
for you, and I thought about how I cut you off when Tom and I were seeing each
other. I actually think you and I had more time together when you were dating
Tom than when I was.
DARIA:
[still looking at sandwich] So, when we go to Boston, I抣l date, and you won抰.
JANE:
[laughs] Oh, you wish! College is where the hormones are rockin? and the
parents and siblings aren抰 there knockin? We抮e both gonna be seeing people,
Daria. You get something from a guy that you can抰 get from anywhere else.
DARIA: With food poisoning, I can get nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, cramps, and near-death experiences. Just like dating, except there抯 no one there to take you for granted or argue with you梠r get you pregnant, or give you an STD, or?o:p>
JANE:
Daria, I know it isn抰 the driving force in your life, and it isn抰 the
number-one thing in my life, either, but . . . let me ask you something. You
liked it when you first kissed Tom, didn抰 you?
Daria
stops moving. Her face slowly turns red all the way to the back of her neck.
DARIA:
[low voice] I抣l tell you where the jewels are hidden. Stop the torture.
JANE:
That抯 real life, Daria. You know it. I think you can accept it and deal with
it better now than anytime before. We抮e both headed there. [pause] You know
what I抎 like? I抎 like someday to meet someone who accepted me as I am, who
loved me for being me, who needed me to be me, and who was also a guy. I need
that last part.
DARIA:
Except for the guy part, you . . . [stops herself, quickly picks up sandwich
and plate and puts them in the refrigerator] Lost my appetite. I gotta go.
JANE:
Except for the guy part, I had you nailed, didn抰 I?
DARIA:
[frozen, fearful look] No! [tries to leave kitchen quickly, not looking at
Jane]
JANE:
Hey! Stop right there, Morgendorffer! Stop, I mean it! [Daria stops on other
side of center island, just short of entryway] Stop . . . right . . . there.
Jane
walks around the counter to stand before Daria, who looks down.
JANE:
[softly] I抦 going to tell you something I抳e never said to you before.
DARIA: [anxious look, fast deadpan] What you do decide to do with any number of consenting adults and farm animals in the privacy of your own room is fine with?o:p>
JANE:
I love you, Daria.
Daria
backs up a step, still looking down. She appears small and extremely
frightened.
JANE:
Look at me. Really, I mean it. Look at me. I love you.
Daria swallows, then slowly raises her gaze and looks at Jane, her face reddening. She looks scared and vulnerable and near tears.
JANE:
I will never have another friend like you. No one will ever mean as much to me
as you do.
DARIA:
[eyes glisten, voice hoarse and low] Please don抰 . . .
JANE:
Don抰 tell you how I feel? I think you need to know this.
DARIA:
[hoarse] I . . . I already know. [rubs her eyes] I . . . [sniffs] . . . you,
too. Please stop. I don抰 want to . . . I hate to . . .
JANE:
We抣l stop, but I had to tell you. I read your story, and it really affected
me, and I just wanted you to know where you are in my life. That抯 all I wanted
to do.
DARIA:
[takes off glasses, wipes eyes with palm of right hand] Okay. Stop now.
JANE:
[smiles] Hey, c抦on, that didn抰 hurt, did it? At least I didn抰 cry all over
you.
DARIA:
[clears throat, puts glasses back on] This was almost as bad.
JANE: You know, I didn抰 cry at all when I read your story, in fact, until I梉voice suddenly breaks, Jane bursts into tears, pitch of voice rises quickly]梘ot to the part where you named your baby after meeeeeeeeeee!
Jane grabs the startled Daria and hugs her tight, crying all over her.
DARIA:
Jane! Jane!
JANE:
[cries hard] You抮e my best friend in the whole world! I want you to have lots
of babies and name them all after me!
DARIA:
[struggles to get free] Let go! Jane!
JANE:
[sobs but begins to laugh at the same time] I抦 going to call Tom and Trent and
have them come over and start making babies with you right now!
DARIA:
[flails one free arm, desperately tries to escape Jane] Damn it! It抯 the paint
fumes, Jane! Paint fumes and Crazy Glue!
Original: 7/19/02
Revised: 1/29/03
Script
FINIS