STAY
A wrecked Ford Mustang burns in the middle of the empty
bridge. Empty. No other cars, no people in sight..
.
There is a gaping hole in the windshield on the driver's
side. Flames consume the backseat. Smoke spills out the
windows. The radio still plays, however: The Band's "I Shall
be Released." .
.
One of the Mustang's front tires has blown out. Scraps of
black rubber litter the accident scene.
As the camera pulls in, we see HENRY LETHAM, twenty, sitting
in front of the ruined car. His eyes are closed.
.
He looks sick-- pale, skinny, disheveled-- but he has a
presence, a magnetism that compels you to look at him.
Finally Henry opens his eyes. After a moment he stands and
walks away from the burning car, never turning around, .
heading for the illuminated towers of Manhattan.
Somewhere nearby a BABY is HOWLING, though no one is in
.
sight.
INT. MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS APARTMENT -- MORNING
.
Tuesday
The baby's HOWL continues, faintly, in the background.
.
DR. SAM FOSTER, a psychiatrist in his early forties, wakes up
in bed, disoriented, sunlight shining on the disheveled
sheets. .
For several seconds Sam looks about the apartment, confused,
as if he's never seen the place before. .
EXT. OLLIE'S NOODLE SHOP -- 116TH AND BROADWAY -- MORNING
.
Sam parks his old, battered Volvo in front of the Chinese
.
noodle shop. He checks his watch and curses under his breath.
Sam's hair is beginning to gray, but he's still built like a
college tennis player. He smiles readily but there is a
brooding quality about him, in his dark eyes, that suggests
he has seen things most of us have not.
2.
EXT. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY -- MORNING
The bells are tolling. Sam dashes through the campus gates.
Under his tweed blazer he wears a frayed navy-blue cable-knit
sweater.
As he rounds a corner he checks his watch, and before he
looks up collides with LILA CULPEPPER, knocking her styrofoam
cup of coffee to the sidewalk.
With her stylish haircut and clothing, Lila looks more like a
young editor of a fashion magazine than a graduate student.
Only the thick philosophy textbooks she carries and her red-
ink stained fingers give her away.
She shoves him.
LILA:
Watch where you're going, old man.
SAM:
Jesus, kids these days...
He kisses her on the lips.
LILA:
I don't have time to stand here
flirting with you. I've got to give
a test to Grunbaum's undergrads.
Sam stoops to pick up the empty cup, stands straight,
crumples the cup, tosses it into a nearby garbage can.
SAM:
Thank God none of the TAs looked
like you when I was a student. I
LILA:
(unimpressed)
Oh, that's sweet. Can I tell you
something?
She sidles up next to him and fixes the collar of his jacket.
SAM:
What?
LILA:
You owe me a cup of coffee.
3.
Sam hurries inside the sleek, angular, glass-and-steel
building.
Sam gets out of the elevator and waves to a RECEPTIONIST
sitting behind a desk. A sign on the wall behind her reads
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COUNSELING AND PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES.
SAM:
Hey, Toni.
TONI:
Hey, Sam. Henry Letham's waiting in
Beth's office.
SAM:
Thanks.
He walks down the hallway and opens the last door on the
left.
.
INT. BETH LEVY'S OFFICE -- CONTINUOUS
Henry, wearing paint-spattered army pants and a black long-
sleeve tee-shirt, stands at the window of the bookshelf-lined
office, looking out at the sky. He stares at Sam when Sam
enters the room. Sam smiles and nods.
SAM:
Henry?
HENRY:
Where's Dr. Levy?
SAM:
Dr. Levy had an appendectomy,
she'll be gone a few weeks. I'm Dr.
Foster, I'm covering for her.
Sam offers his hand and Henry examines it for a moment before
shaking. Sam goes behind the desk to sit and gestures for
Henry to sit inn one of the facing chairs.
Sam pulls a manila folder from his suitcase. Henry sits on
the edge of a facing chair. He looks ready to bolt at any
second.
4.
Henry holds a piece of string which he coils tightly around
his index finger, then uncoils, then coils again.
HENRY:
So you're the substitute shrink?
Sam smiles.
SAM:
I guess you could call me that.
Does it make you uncomfortable that
I'm filling in for Dr. Levy?
Henry thinks about it, coiling the string tightly.
HENRY:
Is she your girlfriend?
SAM:
No. We were classmates, actually.
So listen, I read your file-
HENRY:
Oh, really? May I read your file?
SAM:
Fair enough. How about you ask me a
question for every question I ask
you?
HENRY:
How about we don't play stupid
games.
Sam smiles and leans back in his chair. Far from being
deterred by Henry's attitude, he's intrigued. He likes
challenges.
SAM:
Okay. Tell me why you're here.
HENRY:
You read the file. You ought to
know.
SAM:
You torched your car. Why?
HENRY:
I don't know.
SAM:
What do you mean, you don't know?
.
5.
HENRY:
I don't remember.
SAM:
Were you drinking?
HENRY:
I opened my eyes and I was sitting
in the car and it was on fire.
Henry is quiet for a moment, remembering.
SAM:
Do you often set fires?
HENRY:
No. I'm not a pyromaniac or
anything. It's not like I burned
flies when I was a kid.
(beat)
Maybe a couple times I did. Is that
bad?
SAM:
For the flies it is.
HENRY:
I remember them trying to crawl
when they were on fire.
Henry is silent for a moment. He coils the string so tightly
around his finger that the tip of his finger turns bright
red.
HENRY (CONT'D)
Maybe Hell is the place where all
the bad things you've done come
back to get you.
Another pause. Sam points at Henry's finger.
SAM:
You're cutting off the circulation.
HENRY:
SAM:
You were a kid. Kids are cruel.
HENRY:
I'm not talking about the flies.
6.
SAM:
What are you talking about?
Abruptly, Henry stands, knocking over his chair in the
process. He bends down to pick it up.
HENRY:
Sorry. I better go.
SAM:
Are you sure? I feel like we're
just getting started.
HENRY:
No, no, I better-
Henry looks out the window.
HENRY (CONT'D)
We'll have hail this afternoon.
Sam watches him leave and then stares out the window. The sky
is bright blue.
EXT. RIVERSIDE PARK -- AFTERNOON
The sky is still blue on this beautiful autumn afternoon. Sam
and Lila, on rollerblades, slowly roll down the promenade
overlooking the Hudson River. Lila holds Sam's hand,
steadying him.
Lila is obviously skilled; Sam is obviously a beginner. He
wears a helmet, kneepads, and elbow pads over his long-sleeve
tee-shirt.
.
LILA:
Don't lean forward too much.
SAM:
Okay.
LILA:
Try to relax. You're too tense. Try
to get the rhythm. You want it to
feel natural.
SAM:
I have wheels strapped to my feet.
There's nothing natural about it.
Two kids on rollerblades whiz by the couple. Sam, trying to
get out of the way, nearly falls.
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"STAY" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/stay_1012>.
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