Read Expendable Page 4


  to sleep?

  LUTHER

  Look son. I’m not your guardian.

  Sleep anywhere there’s a space.

  ALFRED

  There’s an open bunk above you.

  I’ll sleep there.

  He climbs to the second bunk, sticks his head over the side.

  ALFRED

  I’ve looked everywhere for my

  mother and brothers. I’m worried

  about them – especially Joseph.

  He’s my youngest brother. He’ll

  be frightened by all of this, I’m

  sure of it.

  LUTHER

  The women stay in another area of

  the camp. You won’t see her. As

  for your brothers, they could be

  anywhere. This is a big place with

  many buildings.

  Alfred sees Luther’s forearm. There is no tattoo. He looks at his own.

  ALFRED

  You don’t have a tattoo. Neither

  do I. Why did some men get one and

  others not?

  LUTHER

  The Germans only give a permanent

  number to the ones they know they

  want to keep. The rest of us are

  expendable. I’m getting old, you’re

  too young. That’s why it’s even

  more important that you and I work

  hard. If we don’t, we will end up

  in the showers.

  ALFRED

  What do you mean?

  LUTHER

  That’s where they send the people to

  be killed. They tell them they are

  going to the showers, but they really

  gas them.

  ALFRED

  They took my mother and my brothers

  somewhere. Were they sent to the

  showers?

  Luther stops, realizes the fate of Alfred’s family. He gets up and walks to the window near their bunks. The smokestacks billow smoke skyward.

  LUTHER

  That is where your mother is now,

  son.

  Alfred stares out the window at the rising smoke as he realizes his mother and brothers are dead.

  EXT. A LARGE TRENCH - DAY

  Two dozen inmates dig. Dirt is thrown onto piles around the hole. Guards walk along the top, keep an eye on the work below. Alfred digs. Rodin comes up behind him and whispers.

  RODIN

  Alfred!

  Alfred looks over his shoulder and sees Rodin. A smile spreads across his face.

  ALFRED

  (quietly)

  Rodin! I thought you were dead!

  RODIN

  I heard the man tell your mother to

  say you were sixteen. I did the

  same thing and they sent me to work.

  (beat)

  My mother is dead.

  ALFRED

  I know. Mine, too. And my

  brothers.

  They continue to work as they talk.

  RODIN

  What barracks are you in?

  ALFRED

  314.

  RODIN

  I am too!

  ALFRED

  I looked for my brothers, but I

  didn’t see you when I came in

  last night.

  RODIN

  I was so tired I went right to

  sleep. They only gave us weak soup

  and bread. I’m so very hungry.

  ALFRED

  I ate what they gave me in less than

  a minute and I was still hungry.

  I’m starving now.

  RODIN

  You’re lucky you got to eat

  everything they gave you. I set my

  bread down for a moment while I ate

  my soup and someone took it. I

  feel like I’ll starve to death.

  We’re already this hungry and it’s

  only been two days. I don’t know

  if I can take this.

  ALFRED

  You can! Don’t let them defeat you.

  Nothing would make them happier than

  to know they’ve found a way to

  defeat us. I refuse to give them

  that satisfaction.

  A cart full of ashes arrives. A Capo orders them out of the hole. The inmates climb out and stand back. They watch as the cart dumps mounds of ashes into the hole. A second cart follows, then a third, a fourth, fifth. Rodin and Alfred look at each other knowingly. An inmate shovels the last of the ash from the last cart into the hole. The Capo motions for the inmates to get back to work. They climb into the hole, knee deep in the ashes, and distribute the ash evenly along the bottom of the hole.

  INT. BARRACKS 314 - NIGHT

  It is dark and Alfred is in bed. He hears whimpering, gets up to find the source. Rodin is on a bottom bunk holding a worn blanket over his mouth. Alfred sits on the edge of his bunk.

  ALFRED

  What is it, Rodin? Is it your

  mother?

  RODIN

  No. It’s not that. It’s as if I’ve

  run out of tears for her. I’m more

  upset that I can’t cry for her than

  I am that she’s dead. We stood in

  ashes of people all day today. My

  mother could have been among them,

  but for some reason I can’t cry for

  her.

  (beat)

  I’m so ashamed, but I almost was

  glad each time the ashes came. It

  was lighter than the mud so the work

  was easier. It was almost as if my

  mother was helping me.

  ALFRED

  You too? I thought the same thing,

  but I was ashamed to tell anyone.

  RODIN

  I miss her, but I try not to think of

  her. It isn’t hard sometimes. I’m

  so hungry, all I can think about is

  finding something to eat. I can’t

  take this.

  ALFRED

  Yes you can, Rodin. Make yourself

  think of something else.

  RODIN

  I try to think of something else,

  but I always come back to food. If

  I try to sleep, I dream about food.

  ALFRED

  (sighing)

  Me too.

  (beat)

  What kind of food do you dream

  about?

  Rodin smiles, his tone changes.

  RODIN

  I dream about rich cream on bread

  and yams from our garden.

  ALFRED

  Do you know what I dreamed about

  last night? I dreamed about a huge

  table and everyone was there. My

  father, mother, brothers, aunts and

  uncles were all around mounds of

  food. The table was full of soup

  and meat and vegetables. There was

  plenty for everyone.

  RODIN

  That sounds better than my dreams.

  Next time invite me into your

  dream.

  Both boys giggle. Alfred reaches into his pocket.

  ALFRED

  Here. I was saving this for later.

  You can have it.

  He hands Rodin a small piece of bread. Rodin doesn’t take it.

  RODIN

  But you’re hungry too.

  ALFRED

  I know, but you eat it. I’ll be

  alright. Like my mother always said,

  God will provide for us. I guess

  this time Alfred will provide.

  Alfred smiles. Rodin hesitates, then takes the bread and devours it.

  ALFRED

  Mother always told us to trust God,
/>
  but that’s getting difficult to do

  that.

 

  (beat)

  Can I tell you a secret?

  RODIN

  (nodding)

  Sure. What?

  ALFRED

  I don’t know if I can still

  believe in Him, Rodin. I want to,

  but look around us. I think right

  now I want to believe for my mother,

  but not for me.

  RODIN

  I want to believe too, but I’m

  afraid God will punish me if I

  stop believing.

  Alfred chuckles.

  ALFRED

  What else can he do to us?

  RODIN

  Even if God isn’t with us, we will

  stay together, won’t we Alfred?

  You and me?

  Alfred takes a deep breath.

  ALFRED

  Right. You and me, Rodin.

  EXT. A LARGE TRENCH – DAY

  INSERT TITLE: ELEVEN MONTHS LATER

  Inmates dig another huge hole. Piles of dirt surround the hole. Guards walk along the top. Alfred pauses. He’s very worn, thin, and looks defeated. He looks at his hands, scraps of cloth are wrapped around them. He unwraps the dirty cloth to reveal chapped and bleeding hands. Luther is behind him, calls to Alfred to warn him that Frankl, now a Capo, is coming.

  LUTHER

  Alfred.

  Alfred looks up, but it is too late. Frankl has seen him.

  FRANKL

  You! Get up here at once!

  Alfred humbly and quickly climbs out of the hole and stands before Frankl.

  FRANKL

  What do you think you are doing?

  Did we call for you to stop

  working?

  ALFRED

  I’m sorry, sir, but my hands.

  I was…

  FRANKL

  (interrupting)

  I don’t give a damn about your hands.

  I care about the work you are

  supposed to finish. If you think

  your hands hurt, wait and see what

  this baton will do to your back.

  This trench must be completed within

  The hour.

  He slams his baton onto Alfred’s back hard. Alfred winces.

  ALFRED

  Yes sir.

  Alfred looks at Frankl closely.

  ALFRED

  I know you. You are from Bilke.

  INT. BOXCAR – DAY – (Flashback)

  Alfred is a foot away from Frankl in the crowded car.

  FRANKL

  You’ve shit on my shoes, you

  bastard. There’s scarcely any air

  and this car smells like a

  shithouse already. Don’t add to

  it.

  EXT. LARGE TRENCH – AFTERNOON (PRESENT)

  Frankl is embarrassed.

  FRANKL

  Where I’m from is none of your

  concern.

  ALFRED

  Yes, I know you. You were in the

  car with us when we were brought

  here. Why do you do this to your

  own people?

  Frankl looks furtively around, then quietly speaks.

  FRANKL

  Look, you little turd. Even if I

  am from Bilke, as least I’m not

  starving and working my ass off in

  a wet and freezing hole. I sleep

  in a warm bed and eat three times

  each day. In six months you’ll be

  dead, but I’m determined to go

  home when all this is over. Now,

  get back to work, all of you!

  ALFRED

  I’m going to go home, too.

  Alfred returns to his work as MAJOR VOGEL rides up on horseback.

  FRANKL

  That is a beautiful animal, Major.

  Major Vogel dismounts, holds the horse’s head close to him, pets its jaw.

  MAJOR VOGEL

  Do you know what kind of horse this

  is? It’s a Nooitgedachter. There’s

  no other horse in the world like

  this one. This is a very rare horse.

  Not only that, but he is strong,

  courageous, loyal and affectionate.

  I love this horse.

  He takes an apple from his pocket, feeds it to the horse. The inmates watch with envy as the horse consumes it.

  MAJOR VOGEL

  I have apples shipped in for him.

  To tell you the truth, I’d rather

  eat them myself, but he loves them.

  He pats the horse lovingly.

  MAJOR VOGEL

  This animal is perfect! Do you

  know, there are no imperfections

  with this breed. They originally

  come from a very cold,

  mountainous region of Africa where

  the environment is so harsh that

  only the strongest survived to

  breed.

  The officer mounts the horse, looks, sneers at the men in the trench.

  MAJOR VOGEL

  We could take a lesson from this

  horse, no? No mutants, no sick or

  weak. Only the strongest and the

  best. Only a dream, perhaps.

  Major Vogel rides away.

  INT. BARRACKS 314 – EARLY MORNING

  Alfred is in bed as inmates rise for the day. A man in the bunk next to Alfred has died. One by one, they take items of clothing from him. One man takes his coat, another his worn gloves. Alfred hesitates for a moment, looks at the man’s shoes, then his own. The man’s shoes look better than his. Alfred joins the scavenging, removing the man’s shoes. He puts them on his own feet. When the man is left wearing nothing but his striped uniform, everyone walks away.

  EXT. OFFICERS’ MESS – LATER

  Alfred and Luther carry boxes. Several German officers, including Major Vogel, leave the building, talking to each other. As they near Alfred, he drops his boxes in the mud. Mud splashes on one of the officer’s polished boots.

  ALFRED

  I’m so sorry, sir.

  He picks up the boxes. Luther remains still.

  GERMAN OFFICER

  You idiot! Look at what you’ve

  done to my boots.

  ALFRED

  Can I please clean them for you, sir?

  He kneels at the officer’s feet and tries to wipe the officer’s boots with the hem of his shirt.

  GERMAN OFFICER

  Get the hell away from me!

  He spits in Alfred’s face. The officers laugh and walk on. Luther sets down his boxes and kneels beside Alfred and puts his hand on Alfred’s shoulder. Alfred wipes his face with his muddy shirt. Tears stream down his face.

  LUTHER

  I’m sorry, Alfred.

  Alfred looks off into space.

  ALFRED

  I was near the fence the other day

  and I saw a deer just beyond – mere

  meters away. He looked at me and

  it seemed like hours that we just

  stared at each other. It was as if

  he knew I was no threat to him. It

  almost made me laugh that freedom

  was only an arm’s length away and I

  could see it, but I knew it was far

  beyond my reach. It might as well

  have been on the other side of the

  world.

  LUTHER

  There’s much irony in this place,

  Alfred. We are inside the fence and

  we may die here. But those Germans

  with the hate in their hearts are

  bound in a prison far more secure

  than this one. Their hate will keep

  them prisoner, even when they walk

&nb
sp; beyond the barbed wire. A fire much

  hotter than the ovens of this place

  awaits them.

  They continue walking.

  ALFRED

  How can you believe in a God that

  would allow this to happen?

  LUTHER

  That is one of life’s oldest

  questions, Alfred. No one likes it

  when bad things happen.

  ALFRED

  Nevertheless, how can this be? We

  are the “chosen people.” I

  sometimes think God chooses to

  torment us. I cannot believe in Him

  anymore.

  LUTHER

  You want everything to be easy? That

  is the way a child thinks, not an

  adult.

  ALFRED

  It isn’t just that. Since the day

  they took my father, it’s become

  more clear to me that the world is

  evil. There can be no more evil

  than we have seen in this place.

  LUTHER

  Do you hear yourself? You find it

  easy to believe in evil – a force

  you cannot see. Yet you refuse to

  believe in the God of good.

  (beat)

  You see the evil that men do and

  believe an evil force drives them.

  Isn’t it possible that the good men

  do is driven by a force that’s

  good? You only see evil because

  that’s what’s most obvious to you,

  but the existence of both good and

  evil is equally obvious or equally

  cloaked. You can use your own

  argument to prove or deny either

  of them.

  ALFRED

  I suppose the real issue is that my

  hurt is too deep to believe in good.

  Luther stops and looks at Alfred.

  LUTHER

  Don’t give up so easily, Alfred.

  Alfred smiles a weak, teary smile.

  ALFRED

  I’m glad you’re here with me,

  Luther. Thank you.