2- Trousers (pants)
January 19th, 2000
FADE IN
INT SCHOOL BUS-DAY
MRS. ALGAR's fourth grade class is climbing onto the BUS, all laughing or trying to get there things together. They all gravitate away from DAVE STUTLER, the only kid whose crotch area is darker than the rest of his pants. He sits near a WINDOW with a doodle of King Kong. A red-haired boy, ROBBIE, looks around for another seat, then reluctantly sits down next to STUTLER while trying to keep his distance.
DAVE
Jeez, my pants are so sticky. (BEAT). Robbie, please say something to me. I hate this awkward silence.
ROBBIE
(grumbling)
Isn't silence better than all this laughing?
DAVE
Great, even you're against me.
The BUS starts moving.
ROBBIE
I'm not against you. I don't want to be, I mean. But I'm the one sitting next to the pants-pisser,
no offense.
DAVE
Is that what they're calling me now?
ROBBIE
Not necessarily.
DAVE
Please don't make fun of me, Robbie. I saw what I saw. I don't care what anybody else says, there
were-
ROBBIE
I know, I know. Crazy wizard guys.
DAVE
It was true, though. I'm not crazy, I saw it with my own eyes. You know I wouldn't make this
stuff up!
MRS. ALGAR is sitting at the front of the bus. She turns around and faces the boys.
MRS. ALGAR
No shouting on the bus!
DAVE
Sorry, Ms. A.
MRS. ALGAR
I think I've heard enough apologies from you, Mr. Stutler. Whisper or don't converse at all.
BEAT.
ROBBIE
What, you want me to believe that two magicians
were trying to kill you? And that in the middle of
all this a jar fell exactly where your crotch is?
DAVE
Well… yeah.
ROBBIE rolls his eyes. BEAT.
ROBBIE
Dave, you ever heard of Schiznorena?
DAVE
No. What is that?
ROBBIE
It's this disease that makes you see things that aren't really there. I read about it somewhere. Can't exactly remember where, though.
DAVE
Oh, you mean Schizophrenia? That's not a disease, that's a mental disorder.
ROBBIE
Well, maybe you have that.
DAVE
You... you think I have a mental disorder?
ROBBIE
Well, if you're not lying about what happened in that shop it's the only explanation.
DAVE
I'm pretty sure I don't have Schizophrenia. It usually doesn't even set in until you become a teenager.
ROBBIE
I dunno. Maybe you caught it early.
DAVE
Robbie, look, I got cut with some glass right here. And a piece of my pants ripped off.
DAVE rolls up his pant sleeve.
DAVE (cont'd)
I didn't have it before today. How do you explain that?
ROBBIE
Maybe you cut your pants before and didn't realize.
DAVE
I'm telling you, a jar fell on me-
ROBBIE
But how would you really know if you had Schiznorena?!
MRS. ALGAR
Robert!
ROBBIE
Sorry, Ms. A.
DAVE
It's pronounced Skits-O-Fren-Ee-Ya.
ROBBIE
That's not the point. You could be talking to a purple giraffe right now and not know it wasn't me.
DAVE
Are you a purple giraffe?
ROBBIE
You could be talking to your mom. Heck, you could be talking to no one. The point is, you wouldn't know for sure. And since you were the only person in the store, it's the only explanation.
BEAT. Dave considers this.
DAVE
Well, sometimes there have been cases of young people getting
Schizophrenia.
ROBBIE
See? I'm not crazy to think that.
DAVE
But what if it keeps happening to me? I mean, seeing things I don't know are real. You're right, I could be talking to nothing and I wouldn't know it. Everyone would laugh at me.
ROBBIE
No they wouldn't-
DAVE
Yes they would! Nobody would understand.
BEAT
DAVE (cont'd)
Robbie, I have to transfer schools.
ROBBIE
What're you talking about?
DAVE
There are special schools where people with mental disorders are put together. Where they help you out with that stuff.
ROBBIE
Come on, you're exaggerating.
DAVE
I'm completely serious.
ROBBIE
You could fix it, though. Train not to see those things-
DAVE
Robbie, Schizophrenia's more serious than that. People go insane from it. Do dangerous things. The worst thing I did today was wet my pants. Imagine what could happen if I don't take care of it.
ROBBIE
Well, could we still see each other if you would move schools?
DAVE
Of course.
ROBBIE
Oh. If that's the case, then do whatever floats your boat. If more people will understand you there, I mean.
DAVE
I'll talk about it with my mom. See what she says.
ROBBIE
You really think this is a good idea?
DAVE glances across his seat. BECKY is laughing with a friend, completely oblivious to DAVE's conversation.
DAVE
(heartbroken)
One hundred percent.
