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After the End
Dennis Kelly
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- English
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eBook - ePub
After the End
Dennis Kelly
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They were all in the pub when the explosion happened. Louise wakes up to find herself trapped with Mark, who has saved her life. Mark is always prepared for the worst and has everything he thinks they will need to survive; tinned chilli, Dungeons and Dragons and a knife - now all they need to do is to wait until it's safe to go outside. Can they survive the attack? Can they survive each other? After The End received its world premiere at The Traverse Theatre in August 2005.
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Middle
LOUISE: I hate it.
MARK: Well you havenât â
LOUISE: I fucking hate it.
MARK: Thatâs a bit
LOUISE: I fucking
MARK: negative.
LOUISE: hate it.
MARK: Why donât you just â
LOUISE: because I fucking â
MARK: You didnât let me finish my sentence, Louise!
Beat.
LOUISE: Finish your sentence, then.
MARK: Why donât you just try it?
LOUISE: Because I fucking hate it.
Pause.
MARK: We have to do something.
LOUISE: Not that.
MARK: We have to keep occupied, do things.
LOUISE: Not Dungeons and fucking Dragons. Do you play that?
MARK: No, when I was a kid â
LOUISE: Do you dress up like a pixie or something?
MARK: No, no, for Godâs sake, Louise and I mean you donât dress up you just, look, Iâm just, itâs just a suggestion because we â
LOUISE: Why havenât you got any other games?
MARK: It was built in the eighties. Itâs an eighties game.
LOUISE: You brought it two years ago, why arenât there games from other eras, why arenât there some nineties games?
MARK: It seemed sort of â what nineties games?
LOUISE: Pictionary.
MARK: fitting, it sort of fitted with, you know, the, the
LOUISE: Apocalyptic
MARK: nuclear, because, no not, because when I was a kid
LOUISE: Youâre not a kid.
MARK: I know, but when â
LOUISE: So you shouldnât be playing Dungeons and fucking Dragons.
Beat.
When can we try the radio?
MARK: We tried it two hours ago.
LOUISE: What I said was when can we â
MARK: Whatâs three minus two?
LOUISE: One.
MARK: You can try the radio in one hour then.
LOUISE: I donât have a watch.
MARK: I do, I can tell you.
LOUISE: Itâs like timeâs turned off. Doesnât it bother you that thereâs nothing on the radio?
MARK: Iâve made you a character, sheâs an elf called â
LOUISE: I donât want to be a fucking elf!
MARK: You could be a dwarf.
I think youâre being negative.
Beat.
Yes. Yes, actually, it bothers me. But what am I going to do about it?
Beat.
LOUISE: Sorry.
MARK: Itâs only been three days
LOUISE: Feels like three years.
MARK: We have to look after each other.
LOUISE: I know.
I know. Iâm sorry, Mark.
Pause.
MARK: When I was a kid I used to love it. Alright, yes, Iâm admitting â
Escape or something, I donâtâŠ
I associate it with caravans. Iâve never been in a caravan. I think it was because a mate of mine used to go on holiday in a caravan and we never went on holiday and I always thought what itâd be like to be in a caravan. Heâd always tell me stories of getting a girlfriend in this caravan â
LOUISE: This isnât a caravan.
And Iâm not your girlfriend.
Silence.
MARK: Would you do it if Francis asked you?
LOUISE: Oh, for Godâs sake
MARK: No, Iâm just wondering
LOUISE: No youâre not
MARK: I am
LOUISE: Youâre not because youâre mental and thatâs a loaded question designed to feed into your paranoia about Francis.
MARK: I donât have paranoia about Francis and this is, actually this is just like Jessâ party.
Beat.
LOUISE: Jessâ party?
MARK: Yes.
LOUISE: Jessâ party?
MARK: Yes.
LOUISE: Why are you bringing up Jessâ party?
MARK: Because â
LOUISE: What the fuck has Jessâ party got to do with anything?
MARK: Because at Jessâ party, at Jessâ party you were taking the piss
LOUISE: that was months ago, I mean do you ever let go of anything?
MARK: taking the piss and belittling, you were â
LOUISE: I was belittling?
MARK: Yes, you were belittling me.
LOUISE: At Jessâ party, I was belittling you?
MARK: Yes.
LOUISE: What about you!
MARK: What about me?
LOUISE: You were acting like a freak.
MARK: Me?
LOUISE: Like weâre all having a drink and a laugh and suddenly everything I say youâre like jumping on, no you donât really think that Louise, thatâs not you Louise, why are you talking about Footballerâs Wives, Louise.
MARK: You were being fake.
LOUISE: Fake?
MARK: You were pissed though, so I
LOUISE: ...