The Liquid Plain (TCG Edition) by Wallace Naomi;
Author:Wallace, Naomi;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Theatre Communications Group
Published: 2016-09-06T00:00:00+00:00
Scene Seven
PROJECTED TEXT: PASSAGE OF THE POLLY.
Most of the provisions have been packed and taken away. Only a couple of crates remain. Adjua is packing gunpowder into a pistol. Cranston appears.
CRANSTON: You got to oil the inside of the barrel or it will stick.
ADJUA: We shouldâve let you drown.
(Cranston is silent. Adjua busies herself with cleaning the gun.)
The slave that got sick on your vessel, the Polly. (Beat) That was my sister. We were together on your ship.
(Adjua oils the inside of the gun.)
CRANSTON: I donât recall your face.
ADJUA: Why would you? I was nix to look at. But my sister, men remember her.
CRANSTON: I didnât kill your sister.
ADJUA: I was in the hold down below. I couldnât see. How can I know? (Beat) Tell me how she died.
(After a few moments, Cranston begins to speak. The following exchange has slight echoes of a court hearing.)
CRANSTON: There were one hundred forty-two Coromantee on board the Polly. One hundred twenty-one delivered alive.
(Adjua calmly points the pistol at Cranstonâs crotch. Cranston just looks at her. He knows sheâll use it.)
ADJUA: About my sister.
CRANSTON: The captain, he tied her to the maintop, to keep her away from the rest. Because she was sick. It was the pox.
ADJUA: Had she any victuals while in the maintop?
CRANSTON: Yes.
ADJUA: Was she alive when she was let down?
CRANSTON: Yes.
ADJUA: How do you know she was alive?
CRANSTON: Because I seen her alive about two minutes before in the maintop.
ADJUA: Then what did the captain do?
CRANSTON: After two days, when the watch was called at four oâclock, the captain called us all aft and says he, âIf we keep the slave here, she will give it to the rest and I shall lose the biggest part of my slaves.â Then he asked us if we were willing to heave her overboard. We made answer âno.â We were not willing to do any such thing. Upon that he himself run up the shrouds, saying she must go overboard and shall go overboardâordering one tar, Gorton, to go up with himâwho went. They lowered her down from the maintop.
ADJUA: Who launched her overboard?
CRANSTON: They lashed her in a chair the captain brought from his cabin. There was a tackle hooked upon the slings âround the chair.
ADJUA: Did you not hear her speak or nee make any noise when she was thrown over?
CRANSTON: No. A mask was tied âround her mouth and eyes that she could not, and it was done to prevent her making any noise, that the other slaves might not hear, lest they should rise against us. They lowered her down the larboard side of the vessel.
(Adjua lowers the gun, then takes hold of Cranstonâs face to look him closely in the eye, to see if he is telling the truth. Dembi enters in the background, sees this, mistakes it for intimacy, and exits.)
I said those very words in court. Aye.
(Adjua lets go of Cranstonâs face and spits.)
Your sister was very beautiful.
ADJUA (Cuts him off): Donât speak of her again.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
United States | Abolition |
Campaigns & Battlefields | Confederacy |
Naval Operations | Regimental Histories |
Women |
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote(3138)
Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson(2765)
The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution by Walter Isaacson(2500)
All the President's Men by Carl Bernstein & Bob Woodward(2264)
Lonely Planet New York City by Lonely Planet(2102)
The Room Where It Happened by John Bolton;(2032)
And the Band Played On by Randy Shilts(2014)
The Murder of Marilyn Monroe by Jay Margolis(1981)
The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum(1977)
The Innovators by Walter Isaacson(1972)
Lincoln by David Herbert Donald(1869)
A Colony in a Nation by Chris Hayes(1796)
Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith by Jon Krakauer(1684)
Amelia Earhart by Doris L. Rich(1585)
The Unsettlers by Mark Sundeen(1584)
Birdmen by Lawrence Goldstone(1533)
Dirt by Bill Buford(1520)
Zeitoun by Dave Eggers(1517)
Decision Points by George W. Bush(1464)
