Sharkey's Place By Rick Regan Season 2, Episode 9 Rick Regan Raleigh.rickregan@gmail.com 919-218-8834SHARKEY’S PLACE - INT. - MORNING, COFFEE TIME Kirini is selling coffee and Elsa is running the roaster, the grinder and the brewer. Aiden comes in. AIDEN Kiri, how are ya? KIRINI Aiden, good morning to you. Coffee? AIDEN I’d like a Harpoon but I’ll take a coffee. Black, please. KIRINI Coming up. AIDEN You know I was thinking about what happened at the soft opening the other night. KIRINI Were ya? AIDEN Yup. KIRINI (long pause) And? AIDEN I’m not sure the concept is going.... I’m not sure the customers are... I don’t know. I thought the response would be more positive, more accommodating. You know what I mean? KIRINI Aiden, you are taking risks. Not everybody likes to have things change, even if it’s an improvement. Are you improving things? AIDEN Did you see the carrots?! Did you see the turnips?! They were beautiful! Beautiful. KIRINI I saw a Jack Sparrow pour the tequila off of the carrots and drink it.2. AIDEN Pirates. Animals. KIRINI Probably the healthiest tequila he’d ever had. AIDEN Is it that hard to open minds? Open perspectives? KIRINI Well he seemed pretty open, after, what?, Four? Six? Ounces of tequila brine. I’m surprised he didn’t go outside and throw up. AIDEN I wish he had. At least he would have been outside. Instead I had to put up with him raving like a lunatic, about Elsa, if you recall. KIRINI I was gone by then. Back here at the shop. But what was he saying about Elsa? AIDEN He’d been in -the one night!- The one night that she worked for us. He couldn’t get over that fact that she wasn’t there. KIRINI Jeez! You didn’t tell him she’s here, did you?! AIDEN No, no. Caiden told him to get out. KIRINI Did he go? AIDEN Well, Caiden hauled him out. I heard the noise so I went out. Then we kicked his face in. KIRINI Holy Name! AIDEN And then we tossed him in the dumpster. KIRINI The dumpster?! He could have been killed! Did the truck come around? 3. AIDEN Naw. It was the shell dumpster, for the oyster shells. We have to recycle ‘em. That doesn’t come until tomorrow. KIRINI Did you check on him? AIDEN Yeah, on the way over here. I guess he climbed out. Wouldn’t have been a pretty sight though, sleeping it off in a dumpster full of empty oyster shells. KIRINI Doesn’t sound like you’ll have a repeat customer there. AIDEN No bother. What hurts is that the most successful dishes were the tequila carrots, the gin beets and the cherry tomatoes a la vodka. KIRINI Why’s that? AIDEN Because nobody ate the carrots or beets. They just drank the liquor. Maybe I’ve got to change my approach. KIRINI Or re-contextualize. See the customers for who they are, not who you want them to be. Remember when the college rowing team stopped at your place? AIDEN Yeah. KIRINI Well think of those boys. Would they rather have your fried clams and scallops, or gin-beets? They gotta fill up, ya’ know. AIDEN That would have been awkward. I see what you mean. KIRINI I’m not saying you shouldn’t take risks. I’m just saying you gotta give people the option to order what they really want. AIDEN But Myra made all those crazy dishes! It worked here. 4. KIRINI That was lunch. And that took time. The people who came here for her lunch, were coming for her lunch. AIDEN I guess... KIRINI When she went to Florida for a week, we had cold sandwiches. People bought ‘em. People ate ‘em. But you know what? They weren’t coming for a packaged sandwich they could get from Heather. AIDEN Cheaper at the Honk’R too. KIRINI But when Myra came back, word got around and people came back for Myra’s lunch specials. AIDEN But what about the Squid? KIRINI Ask yourself, why do people come to the Squid? AIDEN For clams? KIRINI For clams, for scallops, for shrimp, for oysters. Give them what they want. AIDEN You’re right. You know. KIRINI But if that’s not enough - for you, well, that’s another story. That means you making a change and finding a different place. We almost had it worked out here. AIDEN Would you still hire me? KIRINI I’ve got Elsa now. I think the window is closed, for now. AIDEN I can make the pancakes. 5. KIRINI But that’s not what you want to do. You know that. You’ve got to find a new place, in a new town. Milbridge isn’t big enough for you. Not enough people here will understand what you are trying to do. Some, but not enough. AIDEN Yeah, I mean, look at Myra. KIRINI Right. AIDEN Maybe I’ve got to go. KIRINI Or maybe... maybe, you tweak your menu, tune it up, based on the ‘feedback’ from the customers, and keep taking Turbo’s money. AIDEN Might work. KIRINI Give the people what they want, and make what you want too. But without the expectation that the customers are interested. AIDEN Just do it? KIRINI Myra was like that. I thought I had Yoko Ono in the kitchen some times. She’d just make what she wanted and if the customers didn’t like it, well it was because they didn’t understand. But she adapted too. AIDEN Got to adapt. KIRINI I got to sell more coffee. Excuse me. AIDEN Sure. Kirini pours more coffee for customer. Aiden goes to leave. Elsa pops out of the kitchen and sees Aiden. ELSA Aiden? Aiden? 6. AIDEN (sees her) Hey, El. How are you? ELSA Good, Aiden. You OK? AIDEN Sure. ELSA I’m sorry I didn’t make it to the open, with your new menu. Kiri said it was great. AIDEN Did she? Well, she was the only one who liked it. ELSA But did you like it? AIDEN I guess it doesn’t matter if I like it, if the customers don’t like it. ELSA Yeah. AIDEN But, I have to say, your coffee is marvelous. Better than the Honk’R. ELSA Aw, thanks, Aiden. That’s sweet. AIDEN Well, I gotta... ELSA Listen, are we OK? You and me? I mean... AIDEN You and me? I didn’t think there was a you and me. ELSA Well... there’s not, really. AIDEN But, yeah, we’re OK. ELSA OK. AIDEN OK. So, I have to go. 7. ELSA OK. AIDEN See you round. ELSA OK. AIDEN OK. Aiden goes out. The coffee service resumes. INT. SHARKEY’S PLACE - INT - EARLY EVENING Kirini and Sandra are working the light crowd. KIRINI Say Sandra, did you and Cap get squared? SANDRA Squared? KIRINI About the pictures? SANDRA Yeah. He put them up on his lobster boat. KIRINI Front and back? SANDRA I guess. But the weather will beat the paint off ‘em, I think. KIRINI In a tough winter? SANDRA Something like that. KIRINI Sandi? SANDRA Yeah? KIRINI Sandi, we should talk. 8. SANDRA I’m here. Are you feeling blue? KIRINI I mean, going forward. SANDRA Go ahead. KIRINI They say for a manager this is the hardest job you’ve go to do. SANDRA You letting me go? KIRINI No! No. Of course not. It’s that I’m worried about you being the manager. SANDRA Worried? Why? KIRINI I know you want to be the manager, and I talked about having another place. SANDRA In Bangor. KIRINI But I’m not going to do that. SANDRA Have the extra place? Because I wanted to talk to you about the manager role. KIRINI Right, about the manager role... er, position. SANDRA It’s just that, I don’t think I’m the right one. KIRINI What? SANDRA I did it, and... but... I don’t think I want to do that. I don’t want to be the manager. I thought I did but I realized that I don’t. KIRINI I don’t know what to say. 9. SANDRA I’m sorry. I know I’m letting you down. KIRINI No, no! I was thinking that I don’t want to open a place in Bangor. I don’t want to franchise. I don’t want to leave Milbridge. SANDRA But you need a manager. KIRINI Right. Me. SANDRA But I thought you are going back to New York. KIRINI Not anytime soon. Too much here. SANDRA So what do you want to do? KIRINI I want to sling the coffee with Elsa, and sling the beers with you. SANDRA But the money’s in the Bluefin. KIRINI For Myra. Not for me. SANDRA But she’s a good horse. You could have ridden her for years. KIRINI She’s got to go. She’s got to do better and rise higher than us. Do more than Sharkey’s. SANDRA But what about us? Should we rise above Milbridge and Sharkey’s? KIRINI I don’t know. If you have the talent. If you have the drive. Like Aiden. He wants to be a notable chef. Is he any good? Not for me to say. SANDRA Aiden? 10. KIRINI And Caiden. They can’t stay here. Or, they can, but they won’t be happy. Are you happy? SANDRA If I don’t have to manage, then I’m happy. KIRINI What do you think about the stage? SANDRA Well, Neil was awful. We know that. But the Cap and Boots spun some good yarn. KIRINI What about you? Have you got some stories to tell? SANDRA Me? KIRINI Yeah! SANDRA Me? I have to keep my stories to myself. But, there is one thing. KIRINI What’s that? SANDRA I was coming over to work today. KIRINI Yeah? SANDRA Walking. Up the street. KIRINI Uh-huh. SANDRA And I saw my father coming the other way, across the street. KIRINI Oh? SANDRA I couldn’t believe it. He looked like he looked, maybe 20, 25 years ago. He usually wore a hat when he went out. Dapper. A man with flair. Class. 11. KIRINI A hat? SANDRA Yeah. And there he was. And, I was just about to call out to him, “Daddy!”, but then I remembered. He’s been gone ten years now. KIRINI It was just a guy in a hat? SANDRA Just a guy in a hat. But he walked the same way. Same grey slacks. But I think, maybe I just was thinking about him and wanted to see him. You know? KIRINI I don’t know. Sometimes I wake up and I lie in bed and talk to Georgios. Ask him what I should do. Tell him what we’ve been up to. SANDRA Yeah? What does he say? KIRINI Heh! Not too much. I think he liked the stage though. That was his kind of thing. SANDRA Elsa was telling me that Bella plays guitar. And maybe she’d come sit in once in a while. KIRINI A guitar? A woman with a guitar would be good. Our own Jewel. SANDRA Or Johnny Rotten, you never know with these kids. KIRINI That would be something, wouldn’t it. The Pistols in Milbridge. Anarchy indeed. SANDRA Yeah, I think Bella Godspeed is more likely to have an all-girl folk trio. But we’ll see. KIRINI Anybody up for tonight? SANDRA Elsa wants to do another spot. Says she’s working on new material. 12. KIRINI But she bombed last time. Nobody laughed at anything. SANDRA That thing about her peeling potatoes and making her own ninja outfit. That was funny. KIRINI You think so? SANDRA I laughed. Well, chuckled. KIRINI Hmmm. Well, if we don’t have Bella and the Mainer Sisters yet, we’ll take what we can get. SANDRA We’ll see who turns up. KIRINI Say, you heard from Gordon? I haven’t seen him in a couple of days. SANDRA He went up to Canada. KIRINI Canada? SANDRA With Boots. On her book thing, movie thing. He said he wanted to see how the sausage on TV gets made. KIRINI Gordo went to Toronto with Boots? SANDRA Yeah. And Guelph. KIRINI Did they travel together? SANDRA I don’t know anything about it. He just said he was going. Support for Boots, you know? Why? You still holding a candle for the Captain? KIRINI Maybe. SANDRA Blow it out. You can do better. 13. KIRINI With who? Turbo? SANDRA No. Fuck that guy. KIRINI Yeah. But look around. What am I supposed to do? SANDRA What do I do? KIRINI I don’t know. You’re Sandra. Everybody wants you. SANDRA Cast your net wide. Throw back the runts, then measure up the keepers. Maybe use one for bait. KIRINI Bait? SANDRA Yeah. Like, one of Alexi’s buddies texted me. KIRINI A Russian? SANDRA American. Black guy. Real sweet. But a lot of New York cash. KIRINI Wow! You’re really working the field. SANDRA Like I said, cast your net wide. KIRINI What’s his name? SANDRA Raymond, but they call him Romeo. He’s kind of a player. KIRINI You’re kind of a catch. SANDRA We’ll see. I’m going to take a couple of days off next week and head down to the City. Maybe we hit it off. 14. KIRINI Maybe bring him to Milbridge. SANDRA Eh, Milbridge isn’t his kind of place. KIRINI Why? Is he real tall, like a basketball player? I mean he would be the only Black person in a hundred miles. He’d probably stand out. SANDRA No. He’s not as tall as me, at least in heels. He’s like a professor, quiet, smart. KIRINI Huh? A Black guy? SANDRA Yeah. KIRINI What’s he doing with Alexi and his crowd? SANDRA They are all money people. It’s ‘derivatives’, ‘tranches’, ‘leverage’, all of it. I don’t know what Ray does. KIRINI I’d like to meet him. Bring him up. SANDRA We’ll see. Take a trial-run next week. KIRINI You’ve earned it, sister. SANDRA You think? KIRINI I just want you to come back. I couldn’t do it without you. SANDRA Sure you could. KIRINI But I wouldn’t want to. If you were gone, and Myra gone, it’d be just me and Elsa. And who knows how long she’ll stay. It makes my heart heavy just thinking about it. Lonely. 15. SANDRA Hey, hey! It’s OK. I like it here. I’ve been here a long time. It’s going to be OK. You got this. KIRINI Thanks. INT. SHARKEY’S PLACE - LATER Kirini and Sandra are handling the crowd. The stage is down and the lights are ready to go. Aiden and Caiden are at a table near the stage, with beer bottles on the table. AIDEN You think we ought to do it? CAIDEN Stand up? AIDEN Yeah? A buddy act. CAIDEN Brothers. AIDEN Quick, you know? CAIDEN People like that, when things move along. AIDEN Yeah, but what could we talk about? Sports? CAIDEN TV? AIDEN Restaurants? CAIDEN Customers? AIDEN Customers. Like that guy we had to throw in the dumpster. CAIDEN Or the chick who was complaining on Yelp. 16. AIDEN About napkins. CAIDEN Sheez! She deserved it. AIDEN But the look on her face. CAIDEN When you slapped her. Priceless! AIDEN Might’a left a mark. CAIDEN Gave her a lesson though. AIDEN Or that smug punk. CAIDEN That guy. That face. AIDEN I’ve said it before, but he had a very punch-able face. CAIDEN Very. That attitude. AIDEN Changed quick though, didn’t it. CAIDEN Everybody’s got a plan, AIDEN ‘Til they get punched in the face. CAIDEN Mike Tyson. AIDEN Mike Tyson. CAIDEN Iron Mike. AIDEN What’s he doing these day, you suppose? 17. CAIDEN That guy? If I’m him, I’m laying on my king-sized bed, swimming in hundred-dollar bills. AIDEN With a model. CAIDEN Maybe a different one every day. AIDEN Different bed? CAIDEN Different model. Don’t want to get bored. AIDEN That’s how you blow through the cash though. Those models are expensive. It’s like leasing a Mercedes. An oil change costs you three hundred bucks. CAIDEN Or more! Forget rotating the tires. It’s leased. Give ’em back bald. Take it street racing. AIDEN Hill climbing! Like Pike’s Peak. Leave the sticker in the glove box: This Car Climbed Pikes Peak. CAIDEN Or dirt track racing. It’s leased. You’re going to give it back. Maybe wash it first. AIDEN What, the car, or the models? CAIDEN Good point. AIDEN The models, taking a bath. I’d pay for that. CAIDEN Top dollar. AIDEN I wonder where you sign up to have models come to your house every day? CAIDEN Is there a menu? Like, I get to pick? 18. AIDEN Like when you go to the Chinese place. I can’t say the names. Just point at the picture. CAIDEN That one. The blonde one. Then the black-haired girl. AIDEN Then the red head. CAIDEN For dessert. AIDEN Save the sweets for the final course? CAIDEN As you do. Traditionally. AIDEN Yeah, if I’m Mike Tyson, I’m swimming in hundred dollar bills. CAIDEN With a model. AIDEN While some guy waxes my leased Benz. CAIDEN Resting up after the nighttime dirt-track racing. AIDEN With a beer. CAIDEN Champagne, if I won. AIDEN And I’m Iron Mike, of course I won! CAIDEN Of course. You’re the Champ. AIDEN You know it. CAIDEN Speaking of... (waves at Sandra) SANDRA Another beer there, boys? (MORE) 19. CAIDEN Couple of Harps wouldn’t go wrong. SANDRA Coming up. Elsa approaches Sandra. They say a few words. SANDRA (CONT’D) (to Aiden) Here you go, fellas. She drops off the beer and goes to the stage. Kirini turns the lights down and the microphone on. The mic is in a common mic stand in the center of the stage. The crowd cheers. Sandra shows off, swiveling and waving for the crowd. SANDRA (CONT’D) Hey guys! Hey! Thanks for coming out tonight. We’ve got another barn-burner for you coming up. But I need to mention that we’ve got a musical act coming to the stage soon. Bella Godspeed sent word that she wants to entertain you screw-heads. Can you believe that? Yeah, I know. Listen, I’ll be coming around with drinks but let’s be respectful tonight. We’ve got Elsa Godspeed back. And, I know, I know, maybe it didn’t go so well last time but she’s working it out. Now let’s see, real quick, who needs a beer? Show of hands. She looks out at the crowd, seeing the hands around the room. SANDRA (CONT’D) Hank? Couple for you. Steve, in the back. Gotcha. Officer Williams, couple of Harps? OK? OK. Well let’s get going. Back to the stage tonight, we are pleased to have our very own Elsa Godspeed. Give it up for Elsa! The crowd claps and cheers. Sandra picks up the beers, moves through the room and things quiet down. ELSA (at the mic) So….. I'm in the market for a new whistle. ELSA (CONT’D) (MORE) 20. I was watching a game on TV and whenever something happened, a guy would blow a whistle. The referee, he's the guy with the whistle. TWEET! Stop the play! In basketball. In football. In hockey and soccer. The referee blows the whistle. And then he says what the penalty is - and they all listen to him. TWEET! I want a whistle! I want to be like the ref. A guy is tailgating me when I’m driving. TWEET! That's encroachment! 50-yard penalty. Back up! Back off. I don't like to be rushed, have people pushing me to hurry. But I don't like it when somebody slows me down either. I'm at the Hannaford and an old lady has a tomato and one apple. And she wants to write a check. TWEET! Delay of Game! Go to the penalty box! Write your check in there. Two minutes. Come out when you are ready. Don't slow everybody else down. Or my boyfriend, he's always wants to grab me, groping, going for the boob-honk. TWEET! Illegal Use of the Hands! Five Yard Penalty. Back up. Keep your hands to yourself. And it happens on the Web too. You know what I'm talking about. I'm looking for a specific thing, right, like my bank balance. I want to know how much money I've got, or how little, if it's after the weekend. I click on the thing that's going to show me the number, and BOOM!, here's an ad for the shoes I was looking at two-weeks-ago! "Hurry in! We've got a BOGO sale!" TWEET! Unnecessary obstruction! Go away! "But we have these kitten-heels in yellow-and-blue! Slava Ukraine!" TWEET! Unnecessary Bullshit! There is no way that youselling shoes, is me-supporting Ukraine. It's like the "support the troops!" charities. (sarcastic) "You want to support the troops, don't you?" TWEET! Excessive Guilt Tripping! I support the troops. I pay taxes! That's what the VA is for. Don't nickel-and-dime me for your bogus charity. If the Veterans Administration is underfunded, go talk to Congress about it. Don't hassle me for your nakedgrift. Leave me alone. I wish somebody had a big whistle for when a politician is lying. ELSA (CONT’D) (MORE) 21. (exaggerated) "My esteemed colleague, across the aisle, is a philandering-homosexual space-alien and a pedophile." TWEET! Unsubstantiated ad-hominem attack! Go to the penalty box! Sit down and think about the consequences of your actions. Try learning how to be a decent human being! But that's no use. It’s all lies. It would just be all whistles, all the time. That's all it would be, constant whistles. And it defeats the purpose, because when the ref has a whistle, he's the only one that gets to blow the whistle. If anybody else has a whistle then it messes up the whole game. You have to agree that somebody is in charge. Like the old traffic-cop, standing there, waving people through an intersection, blowing the whistle. I still think it would be great though. Wear the striped shirt. You know, black and white stripes. It's a good look. Slimming. And nobody messes with the ref. It's like when I'm at the drug store, stocking up on tampons and I'm already in a bad mood. A guy wants to cut-in-line. If I was in the striped-shirt and had a whistle, I'd let him have it! But I'm not. I'm just standing there, in my blue-andyellow kitten-heels. And I've got to yell at the guy, "Hey, buddy, there's a line here." And he says, "Yeah? Now I'm in line. What are you going to do about it?" At this moment, I think, I'm not a violent person. I'm all for Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. But right now I'd like to drop a Hellfire missile on this jerk's head. I'd like to call-in a coordinated airstrike to vaporize him right in front of me. But I don't. I say, "OK. You probably have a lot going on in your life. It's hard. I get that. You've probably got issues. ELSA (CONT’D) 22. But I don't think I'm really the person to help you sort out the alcoholism, porn-addiction and general lack-of-direction in your life. You've got to tackle those things yourself. But, if it makes your day a little better to step ahead of all of these other people, then, g'head." See that's turning the other cheek. Without a whistle, we've got to each do our part. But it's not easy. I'd really rather have a whistle. Thanks for listening. I’m Elsa Godspeed. Elsa comes off stage. The crowd has a smattering of applause. Sandra goes back up into the light. The crowd cheers loudly when she appears in the light! SANDRA Alright, boys! Let’s give Elsa a big hand. Thank you, Elsa. Good stuff. Maybe we all need a whistle. So that’s it for tonight. Let’s turn down the lights, turn up the music and have some fun! Woo-Hoo! The crowd cheers and the party rolls on. END