Sharkey's Place S1, E5 By Rick Regan CHAPTER 1: SHARKEY’S PLACE - MID-MORNING The doors are not open yet. Myra and Kirini are getting the place ready for a lunch crowd. Myra is working in the kitchen. The weather is not cooperating, with low clouds, blustery wind and occasional sheets of rain. MYRA Dammit! This is just not right. Sounds of dishes clattering, banging spoons on pots, general din from the kitchen. MYRA Fudge! KIRINI What’s going on in there? MYRA [exasperated] Oh, it’s fine. It’s just that nothing is working today. I don’t know if I’m all thumbs or the weather has everything all wonky. KIRINI I see. Anything else? MYRA I haven’t seen or heard from Glenn in two weeks. My mother is driving me crazy. And I caught Ethan and that little witch getting halfway naked in the front room. KIRINI I see. Anything else? MYRA I’m having a bad hair day. KIRINI Ah, yeah. I hate when that happens. This weather... MYRA And this damned weather. I’m not looking forward to winter. I want to get warm for a change. KIRINI You want to take a week off? Go to Florida? I know some people. MYRA You know people in Florida? KIRINI Well, old people, but they are still people. My Aunt Linda could put you up for a week. She’s in Fort Lauderdale. MYRA You’ve got an aunt in Florida? You never told me that. KIRINI Never came up. And look, I’ll spring for the tickets. There’s a direct flight out of Bar Harbor. MYRA How do you know this stuff? KIRINI I went down to visit her a couple of years ago. She’s got a place in a big building, view of the beach. MYRA But it’s the same ocean. Same beach. KIRINI You’ve never been, have you? ‘Cause it’s different. It’s Florida. But gimme a week to put it together for you. MYRA If you can do that, I’ll go. Thank you. KIRINI Settled. Now, back to your cauldron. MYRA [cackles] A-heh-heh! Eye of newt and locust wings! A rooster’s chin and spooky things! Myra goes back to the kitchen. Kirini moves chairs around, sweeping up. CHAPTER 2: SHARKEY'S PLACE - LUNCH RUSH - LATER The crowd is coming and going. Sandra is slinging food and drinks. Kirini is running the register. Myra has the grill and the fryer running hot. SANDRA Two specials, table six. I’ll get the drinks. KIRINI Table six. Sandra hands off the order to Kirini, who puts in on the ticket wheel by the kitchen. Sandra takes a tray of drinks a round. MYRA Order up! Plates of sandwiches come through the pass through window. KIRINI Order up! She swings the tray over to Sandra, who takes them away. Aiden and Caiden come in out of the rain. SANDRA Hey fellas! KIRINI Aiden! Caiden! What took you so long? AIDEN Lousy weather. CAIDEN Spittin’ rain. KIRINI Got your table right here. Usual for you? They sit. AIDEN Hot coffee. CAIDEN Harpoon Light. Thanks. SANDRA [has the drinks already] Been waiting for you. CAIDEN Is it cold? AIDEN Is it hot? SANDRA It’s cold and it’s hot. You want the specials? AIDEN What’s today? SANDRA What’s today? Tuesday. You want the specials? CAIDEN What’s the special? SANDRA Just get it. If I tell you, you’re just going to waste my time with a million questions. CAIDEN But what’s the special? AIDEN Is it good? SANDRA Is it good? Come on, you know Myra. CAIDEN Yeah, but what is it? AIDEN Maybe it conflicts with my dietary... CAIDEN Restrictions. SANDRA What restrictions you got? You eat fried clams and scallops every night, with coleslaw. You got a thing against dairy? Or is it gluten? AIDEN No, I got No,.. CAIDEN Restrictions. AIDEN I just want to know. CAIDEN What’s the special? SANDRA Alright. Cold-cut sandwiches. AIDEN That’s it? CAIDEN That’s all? AIDEN Doesn’t seem too special. CAIDEN Some boloney sandwiches. AIDEN What special about that? CAIDEN Huh? SANDRA You’ll love ‘em. Best you ever had. I promise. AIDEN I don’t know. CAIDEN She got any chowder? AIDEN Something warm on day like today. CAIDEN Filling. AIDEN Warming. CAIDEN Ya’ know? SANDRA No, Chowder’s on Friday. Today it’s cold-cut sandwiches. You want ‘em, or not. AIDEN Alright... CAIDEN Alright. AIDEN Go ahead with the sandwiches. CAIDEN Maybe we come back on Friday. SANDRA You’ll be back tomorrow, after you had these sandwiches. I promise ya. AIDEN Alright. CAIDEN Go’head. Sandra swings away and puts in the order to Myra. SANDRA Those two chowder heads always come in here and complain about the menu. KIRINI But they love the food! More orders come up and drinks get delivered. Soon the next order comes up. Sandra picks up the tray and delivers it to Aiden and Caiden. AIDEN That’s it? CAIDEN A sandwich and potato chips. SANDRA And a pickle. AIDEN I tell ya, CAIDEN The standards around here.. AIDEN Bar’s getting lowah and lowah. CAIDEN [bites pickle] Oh, Jesus! AIDEN What? [tries pickle] No! CAIDEN Is this what I think it is? SANDRA I don’t know. I’m not going to guess at what happens with the soup in your head. AIDEN Is this house-made? CAIDEN She pickled, the pickles? SANDRA Yeah. And hand-fries the potato chips. AIDEN What’s with the sandwich? CAIDEN It looks weird. AIDEN Is it weird? SANDRA I don’t know. Hang on. [loudly] Hey, Myra! The boys are here. Myra comes out of the kitchen. She is scowling and looking rough. MYRA What is it with you two? You don’t like the lunch? Then give it back! AIDEN No, no! You can’t have it back. CAIDEN We ordered! MYRA Then what’s the matter? I’m working here. AIDEN This sandwich? CAIDEN Why’s it look weird? MYRA What do you mean, weird? AIDEN [sniffs] Is that... CAIDEN Sourdough? MYRA Yeah. From my grandmother’s starter. I keep it in the fridge. You don’t like sourdough? AIDEN I love sourdough. CAIDEN You make this? MYRA Yeah. And slice it. AIDEN And the meat? CAIDEN Where’d you get it? AIDEN It doesn’t look right. MYRA Sam, the Butcher. He gets me brisket caps. I corn the beef for two weeks. The pastrami doesn’t take as long. Five days. You don’t like it. CAIDEN Lemme see. [takes a bite] Oh, Jesus! AIDEN [takes a bite] That’s good! CAIDEN Too good. AIDEN You’re too good for us, Myra. MYRA I skip the braising and just roast the whole pieces. That’s why it looks different. CAIDEN And is that mustard? AIDEN Or garlic mayo? MYRA Both. It is a mayo that I make with fresh ground mustard seeds, ginger AND garlic. Gilding-the-lily, I know, but I like it. It’s smoking the gouda that’s the real pain in the keister. I don’t like to fill the kitchen with smoke but if the cheese is too fresh, I don’t know. AIDEN It won’t deliver the flavor. CAIDEN Or the texture. AIDEN You have to. CAIDEN It’s a commitment. If you’re in... AIDEN You’re in. You’re committed. MYRA I know, right. And today, this rain, the humidity. The smoke just hangs there. It gets in my hair. You know. AIDEN Your hair looks nice. CAIDEN Very nice. AIDEN And the sandwich is a thing of beauty. CAIDEN And the pickle. That’s you too? MYRA And the chips. But with this weather, fryer is driving me nuts. AIDEN [loudly] I know! CAIDEN Right! AIDEN The fryer... CAIDEN Killing me! AIDEN We’re doing scallops, CAIDEN Clams, AIDEN Calamari. CAIDEN And the fryer is going up-and-down, AIDEN And up-and-down. CAIDEN Like it’s just eating the rain. AIDEN I’m going crazy! MYRA I know! Ugh! CAIDEN Myra, Thank you. AIDEN For this beautiful dish. CAIDEN This delivery of love and care. AIDEN You’re a wonder. CAIDEN You’re the best. AIDEN You’re the beast! MYRA [laughs] Oh, boys. You make my day. Thanks for coming in. CAIDEN Hey! The pleasure’s all mine! AIDEN No, no! Mine. This is fabulous. MYRA I gotta get back. Good luck at the Inky Squid tonight. CAIDEN Nothing stinky at the Inky! AIDEN Food so fresh from the sea, if you throw it back, it’ll swim away. MYRA [laughs] See ya’ boys. Myra heads back to the kitchen. Aiden and Caiden attack lunch plate, devouring it. SANDRA [to kitchen] Two specials, table three. KIRINI Table three! CHAPTER 3: SHARKEY'S PLACE - LATE EVENING Sandra has gone home for the night. Kirini is running the bar but there is nobody there because the rain is coming in cold sheets. Myra is sitting at the bar with a vodka and soda, a lowcalorie drink. KIRINI Myra, you should go home. Get some sleep. MYRA You know what, I’m afraid of what I will find. KIRINI What do you mean? MYRA I bet I’m going to walk in on Ethan and that girl. KIRINI Well, that’s normal, right? MYRA I mean, he’s too young. KIRINI Is he? MYRA Sure. And under my roof... KIRINI You telling me that you never fooled around, with a boy, when you were in school? MYRA Sure, but those were different times. KIRINI What’s different? Boy-meets-girl, girl-meetsboy. What’s changed? MYRA It’s my boy, is what’s changed. KIRINI Oh. MYRA I don’t want that little Godspeed witch taking him down the wrong path. KIRINI The wrong path? What path is that, between her legs? MYRA She’s paving the way. KIRINI What?! MYRA She wants to get him so wrapped around her little finger, her little crooked witch finger, that he will do whatever she wants. Snaps her fingers. KIRINI Ethan is a smart kid. She’s a nice girl. MYRA The only think he’s thinking about is her. He won’t listen to me any more. KIRINI Come on! Don’t you remember, remember what it’s like? When you fall in love with a boy, and try out what it’s like to be a girl-inlove. MYRA Do I remember, the joy and the pain, the suffering and anguish? Will he call? Will he pick me up? KIRINI Does he really like me? MYRA Are we going to get married? Is he thinking about a ring? KIRINI What if we have a girl and a boy? What names should we give them? MYRA Can I use my grandma’s wedding dress? KIRINI What’s the perfect spot for our heavenly wedding? MYRA All the other girls will be so jealous. KIRINI Oh, times we had. But I wouldn’t do it again for a million. MYRA If I could go back, if I could do it again... KIRINI What? What would you do? MYRA I’d have never married Glenn, for one. KIRINI Well, he is the father of Ethan, so that’s not so bad. Ethan is smart. A handsome fellow. MYRA There was a boy in my school. I had a crush on him that I thought would kill me. If I could go back, I’d go right at him. KIRINI Would you now? MYRA I think of him when I look at my Glenn. He is taller than Glenn. Better looking. Very successful. My life would’ve been better. Ethan would be taller, smarter, better looking. Maybe we’d have had a girl too, and he’d dote on her like a princess. She’d deserve it. I deserved it. KIRINI But what happened? What happened to Captain Wonderful? MYRA I was too scared to say boo. KIRINI Ah huh. MYRA And then Charlene... ah, I can’t believe I’m telling you this, rehashing the hash of my past. KIRINI Come on! You came this far. Tell me the story. MYRA I saw it with my own two eyes. A spring day, seniors at Narraguagus High. I see him across the quad. And I will not speak his name. KIRINI Fair enough. MYRA And I’m on fire with the longing, the squeezing crush on my heart. And he’s sitting there in the sunshine, a beautiful boy. KIRINI OK. Got it. Then what? MYRA Charlene, the head cheerleader, she’s in her outfit because it’s a Friday and it’s game night. She’s just come from the pep-rally at lunch, her and her sister Arlene. And Charlene, even though she’s sweaty from the rally, walks right up to him, stands right there. She’s glowing in the sunshine, her hair tossed by the sea breeze. KIRINI Oh boy... MYRA And she takes his two hands. She holds them for a second and then puts his hands on her hips. Then puts her hands on his face and leans in for a kiss. KIRINI What did you do? MYRA I’m close enough that I can hear them. And she says, come to the game tonight and watch me, in that stupid, little-girl voice. She still talks that way. And he says, OK. KIRINI Hmmm. MYRA And she had him, hook, line and sinker. I never had a chance. She reeled him in like a prize tuna. If I could have done that... If I could go back... and do that..., I’d do it. KIRINI So what happened? You married Glenn and Captain Wonderful married the cheerleader? MYRA No, That’s not what happened. KIRINI Well, then... MYRA So we graduate as a class. Almost everybody heads up to Bangor to U-M. KIRINI Was Glenn there? MYRA No, He was down in Portland. KIRINI Oh. MYRA And I wash out of U-M my first year. I realize I’m wasting my time and my folks money studying psychology and poetry. So I switch to culinary program at Eastern, in Bangor. But the teachers are telling me there is a better program at Southern Maine Community in Portland. That’s where I meet Glenn. KIRINI And that’s where you learned to cook. MYRA No, I learned to cook from my mother. I learned to plate up dishes and run a menu at Southern. I learned to work in hospitality at the Hyatt Harborside. While I was in school, I worked in the restaurant, eventually going from waiting tables to station prep and finally sous chef. KIRINI And what are you doing here? I never understood that. You working for Giorgio, in Milbridge, Maine. At a dive bar. MYRA Not a dive anymore. KIRINI Thanks to you. MYRA No, thanks to you. These louses would love to keep it as a snug in the harbor, a place to hide out and soak their heads. But you, you have turned it into a destination. KIRINI Thank you. MYRA But it’s going to run off the rum-heads, as you make it nicer. KIRINI We’re getting a better class of boozer now. MYRA Ha! That’s true. KIRINI So let me guess, you get pregnant so you want to move back home to family. MYRA Right. KIRINI And you marry Glenn, but realize after the shock and awe of a baby that he’s Mr. Nowhere. MYRA You’ve met my ex. KIRINI Let’s call him your first husband. MYRA You optimist. KIRINI But what about the cheerleader? And the guy? MYRA She and her sister Arlene, they both became nurses. Together they run almost the whole show at the hospital in Machias. KIRINI And Captain Wonderful? MYRA Ah, I don’t want to think about it... KIRINI Come on! Tell me. MYRA He became a lawyer. He’s in the statehouse. He’s going to run for congress next time. KIRINI Wait! Charlie Goodman? That’s your crush? I don’t believe it. MYRA I will not speak his name. KIRINI He’s a handsome guy, don’t get me wrong, but he’s not exactly your type. MYRA My type? I have a type, do I? What’s that? Losers and barflies? KIRINI No, No, That’s not what I mean. MYRA What do you mean? KIRINI I mean Charlie Goodman is a regressive jerk. He is in the pocket of the big money corporate people. MYRA And have you seen his wife? KIRINI No, MYRA Big hair and a smile that’s like a lighthouse beam when she turns it on you. Those gleaming white teeth, it’s not natural. KIRINI Kids? MYRA Three boys. They’re in middle-school but they look like linebackers. I saw the picture on his website. All blue blazers and bow ties. And her, skinny as a flagpole. KIRINI You were cyber-stalking? MYRA Look I’m just not feeling good about myself right now, is all. KIRINI But what did you want to do? Did you want to be the chef at the Hyatt? MYRA Someplace, yeah. KIRINI And now you’re stuck here. MYRA Look, Georgios gave me a job when I needed a break. It’s been a good gig for me. KIRINI But.. MYRA But I’m trying out new recipes, new ingredients, and you know what? It’s pearls before the swine. These sailors and rummies wouldn’t know good food if I hit them over the head. KIRINI That’s not true. The boys come in a couple of times a week and marvel. They see what you are doing. MYRA Great. Recognition by my peers: twins who fry clams. KIRINI We’ve got a lot of new customers now. You notice that. People talk about your food. The guy on the radio, he talks you up all the time. MYRA [dismissive] Because you buy ads at the station. KIRINI So I buy ads. I want more customers. Don’t you? MYRA I gotta think about my future. I have to think of my life when Ethan is gone. Glenn is down in Portland. Maybe I move down there and see if we can work things out. I don’t know what I want to do. KIRINI Listen, take a week, go to Florida and relax. Hang out with my aunt Linda. She’s a riot. MYRA You have it worked out? KIRINI Not yet, but I put the word out. Anyway, we’ll get it worked out. You deserve some time off. MYRA You think? KIRINI You are corning your own beef, and for these chowderheads! It’s ridiculous. I love it, but it’s ridiculous. Take some time. MYRA Maybe I could use some perspective. KIRINI Aunt Linda will take you to all kinds of places. MYRA Like what, restaurants? KIRINI Restaurants, cocktail bars, tiki bars, whatever. She’ll take you to a strip club if you’ve never been. You should go. MYRA What? Why would I want to go to a strip club? KIRINI Usually the food’s pretty good. MYRA Go to a strip club for the food? KIRINI You’d be surprised. And it’s a lot like in here. MYRA What do you mean? KIRINI The men, they want to look at beautiful women. MYRA Naked. KIRINI If possible. They don’t care if the women are smart or interesting. They just pay the women to look at them. No romance. No relationship. No baggage. MYRA And the women? KIRINI They take the money, just like us. And when they get home at night, the money is still green. And at a good place, no hassle from the manager, no time card, stupid reports or email. Just the money and no baggage. Like here. The sailors come in here for your food. They don’t care if you are a nice person, they just want the food. Then the night crowd, they want to ogle Sandra, in her tight sweater and elastic pants. They don’t care if she doesn’t love them. Let their moms do that. And remember, I don’t hassle you. Right? No baggage. MYRA And at a big hotel it’s all staffing issues, sanitation inspections and all the rigmarole. I get it, but have to start to think bigger, for myself. KIRINI I’m just saying take some time and see some of the world. Without Glenn. Without Ethan. Just for you. Get some new ideas. MYRA Sounds like a dream. KIRINI That’s because you are already asleep. Go home. MYRA You’re right. Thanks Kiri. I’ll see you tomorrow. KIRINI Get some sleep and we’ll do it all again tomorrow. MYRA Goodnight. Myra heads out the door. Kirini cleans up, switches off the beer sign and goes out the door. END