It’s a common misconception and those two are nothing if not common. If y’aint got nothing you got nothing to lose and therefore if you have little, in your case little of what we’ll call future life, you by extension have little to lose. Of course you and I know different.
The reason the widow giving alms is so impressive is because it’s infinitely harder to part with what’s scarce right? Anyone can watch their surfeit dwindle slightly but try and wrest that last piece of bread from the street urchin and see where that gets you. By that analysis, if staying in this room is an invitation to Death, as seems clear, then it’s actually you who has the most to lose.
You who’ve witnessed the unspooling of a long, rich life. Who’ve tasted every possible permutation of the bitter and the sweet. Only you among us truly understands what all can be lost.
So I argued and so was I overruled by my insensate audience. There are some who would argue a form of civil disobedience at this point. Alas I cannot bring myself to say what reflexively forms on my tongue, that you may rightly controvert an authority derived solely from numbers in a matter of such importance.
The good news I suppose is that if you mindlessly accede to their decision you likely won’t live to regret it. I mean that you won’t have the sensation of realizing you were wrong if you stay so the decision to stay would be senseless in a sense. Either way don’t blame them Charles, they’re just kids.
(Charles sits up but says nothing. Nearby Ludwig is done informing Adam and moves toward Clarissa, who is preparing to leave, before pausing to think out loud.)
LUDWIG: Damn me if the mere voicing of questions hasn’t led me to question, resulting in an expanding universe of explananda. And send me further down if that’s not the way of this place where what we say with conviction determines truth more than the other way around. Yet this remains a time and place to act on not in.
(Ludwig turns and returns to Adam. Clarissa remains alone preparing.)
CLARISSA: And precisely when does an eager embrace with Death’s most trusted deputy convert into a kind of plausibly deniable self-immolation? Who wears more blame? He who sits on the piano to play poorly or she who ignores the strident notes and allows herself to be played on?
Maybe I’m more like a player piano, feed the sheet and listen to the highly predictable result. If so I aver that I’m out of tune. I can sound the notes, vary their volume and timbre, but they’ll no longer take melodious form.
At least if unjust suffering is somehow graver I can content myself with the justice of mine. After all should I not feed on the same meal I prepared and served others? And if I consume more of it and accordingly get sicker is that not just?
(Ludwig enters.)
LUDWIG: You know Clarissa I didn’t mean to suggest that you had to be the one to go.
CLARISSA: I’m sorry, you were mean to suggest what?
LUDWIG: No I’m saying I didn’t intend… to insinuate that…
CLARISSA: Don’t worry Ludwig, I think I understand.
LUDWIG: You do?
CLARISSA: Of course, you feel guilty.
LUDWIG: Guilty?
CLARISSA: Sure. I know what you did.
LUDWIG: You do? I can explain.
CLARISSA: I mean you had this great benefit to confer and four friends in great need of beneficence and you essentially chose me. Don’t think I don’t appreciate it is what I’m saying.
LUDWIG: Listen.
CLARISSA: So grateful am I in fact that I’m going to ex post facto make you feel better about your decision.
LUDWIG: Listen.
CLARISSA: Because I haven’t told anybody this. But I have a child, a son, I’ll be returning to.
LUDWIG: A son?
CLARISSA: Yes, a star so powerful his rising and setting is momentous enough to determine my days. And here’s a thing little said about the parent-child dynamic. Someone, let’s say an infant, is born. An adult, maybe two, will then fix its gaze on the reluctant arriviste and experience an emotion so strong we had to name it love. The possible commonplace is that said adult’s love for the child will continue to grow throughout the child’s lifetime despite the indubitable fact that the recipient becomes less loveable over time. Any doubters can witness the inevitable mother’s background tears as her reprobate son is led to the electric chair.
The ugly secret, of course, is that the child’s love for the adult will not grow. It will dwindle and fade commensurate with Nature’s assault on the relevant body. This lack of reciprocity may ensure an orderly revolution between the living and the dead but it can be a cruel turn for those who end up at the bottom looking up at where they once were.
LUDWIG: I didn’t know. When I said you should be the one to go… I… didn’t know.
CLARISSA: I know but now it’s all the more perfect. Let’s go (gathering her things) I’ve prepared some words.
(Clarissa leaves suddenly, moving toward the others and leaving Ludwig alone.)
LUDWIG: Do I even have to say that someone had to go and that this someone will inevitably have built human connections they must jeopardize? It would have to be the strongest connection we know of though: a mother and her son, a son folded into his mother. Isn’t an offense directed at her most powerful emblem a blow against Life itself? And wouldn’t banishment then constitute an appropriate retaliatory deprivation?
No matter because the equities cry out in my favor. Did I not feel my breast swell with truth as I declared that someone had to go? And didn’t that swelling subside only slightly when I identified her as the ideal goer? I say true words animated by false air retain their value as truth and a proper end justifies my meaning. That then settles the matter.
(pause)
Yes, quite the settlement. Any doubt as to guilt rejected as not reasonable. For like a cough in the fugitive dark the rationalization identifies and exposes the guilty. Lady and Gentleman Factfinder: he sought to rationalize his actions through florid speech and The Judge will instruct you that you may properly infer a consciousness of guilt from such a flight away from truth.
(pause)
But there remains time for the remedy to halt any poisonous progress!
(He runs toward Clarissa to find her standing with her belongings near the exit and formally addressing the others.)
CLARISSA: In sum I think the coinage heavy heart caught on more out of alliterative allure than any great metaphorical value so I’m striving here for a more genuine and revelatory…
LUDWIG: I’m sorry to interrupt Clarissa.
CLARISSA: Yes, you are.
LUDWIG: But could I have a word with you?
CLARISSA: You can have as many as you need provided you don’t take them from me.
LUDWIG: (looking at the others) Has to be a private word guys.
NESTOR: Well if that doesn’t beat all. Privacy he says as he makes a public spectacle of himself. Well never mind, Charles knows when he’s been insulted. Let’s go gentlemen.
(They don’t move but instead draw closer that they may hear better. Finally Clarissa and Ludwig move away.)
CLARISSA: What is it? I was just getting rolling.
LUDWIG: I feel I was maybe slightly less than straight with you but in my defense… um… I wasn’t honest before.
CLARISSA: That’s some defense.
LUDWIG: When I said you should be the one to go and painted a rosy picture of what you could expect, when I did that I was lying.
CLARISSA: I see. Paint me a more accurate picture then.