red sumac
SCENE B
—MUSIC BEGINS—an Irish harp in a major key
Another likeness appears onscreen in color. She is smaller than the others; her contagious smile is full of joy. Her hair falls loose around her, over her shoulders and onto the floor. She has enormous brown eyes. Her name is LETTIE. She sprawls on an attic floor in her long white dress. Her pose is dreamy, her left cheek is pressed against the wide, unpainted boards of the attic floor where she rests her head on her arm. The attic itself is old and empty but brilliant smoky sunlight streams in through a pair of windows behind her with a blaze of woodland colors that spill and play about her white dress.
CHORUS (dimly illuminated)
Do we start from nihil each new day as the sun reaches far into our windows with its life-giving touch . . . or shoulder yesterday's yoke?
LETTIE (w/CHORUS LEADER, “CL”)
They lay the bricks: [CL] arrow-straight they rise and stay. [CL] Lilacs the gardener planted rush to bloom: how soon their fragrance knocks at the door to my favorite room As you voyage south, my love, I dream of sails stretched taut where canvas, wood and sea are the house your lips had promised it would also build for me We tied our horses to an isle a sea of grass enclosed on that glorious summer's eve: though we lingered but an hour how many centuries passed? The tick of the hallway clock reminds me of all the time I waste while you with eventful hands, with journeying eyes will feast on things I cannot taste When we merged our brooklets into one clear and singing stream no words were needed for that new and natural tongue spoke for us through touch My sweet, the goldenrod has just now bloomed: how like those that draped Aeneas' brow the locks I swept aside to find your eyes
CHORUS
The earth is harsh for only stone and rain live long, our moments less than the down of wings a heron leaves on wind . . .
LETTIE
Tomorrow there shall be news, I know't! Don't ask me how, I do: why ask of rain its reason or why the robin's egg is blue?
CHORUS
The sun, lying low to rest, is a yearling lost in quiet groves that skirt these golden fields . . . and unknown a world away begins the sorrow a sunrise yields . . .
LETTIE
Snagged on a rusty nail, the garden snake, disrobing, reveals a shine of reborn skin: were time that pocks our mortal flesh as easy to clothe afresh . . .
LETTIE gently picks up a translucent snake skin and examines it thoughtfully.
Evening shadows inundate these withering slopes . . . how soon will snow-light leave its silent glow in lonely morning kitchens . . . and I am left to listen, at sunrise, noon and dusk in every hall and room when with fire's kindly mouth the hearth shall speak of you . . .
CHORUS LEADER
They who wait for loves enfold their longings into hours setting tasteless, dull repasts, laying ears to doors that never open, to pillows never pressed: a letter's come . . . oblivious to the news it holds the maples shake and sway . . . and while young corn sends up its tassels a locust chants away
LETTIE
Had I the choice, a wave I'd want to be to chase your footsteps pressed into alien shores, their hollows to fill with me . . .
LETTIE turns and props herself up on her elbows and looks out the bright window and we cannot see her face in the sun’s glare, only the aura round it. Her image fades, her manikin in turn.