Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Moment

Moment
A Two Act Play by Joe Petrulionis April 18, 2007



Setting: Act 1 A Street in an Iraqi Village. Fall 2007.


              Act 2 A Street near Philadelphia. Winter 1777.




Abstract: Mutual antagonists discover concepts of “right,” “wrong,” “evil,” and “terrorist,” to be matters of perspective. A “moment” between the accidental triggering of an IED and the irrevocable consequences of the resulting explosion enable enemies to communicate. This play explores the possibility of understanding consequences in enough time to still make choices.



Characters (Cast of 8 plus ushers)



Tariq/Tarl: A man who lives in a village near Baghdad and Philadelphia with his wife and daughter.


Sergeant Benjamin Alexander: A U.S. Soldier and a British Grenadier on patrol in a village near Baghdad and Philadelphia.

                                      He has a wife and a daughter as well.


A wife: Same actor plays four parts, including wife of Tariq/Tarl, Alexander’s wife, an usher, and an audience member.


A daughter: Same actor plays three parts, including Tariq/Tarl’s daughter, Alexander’s daughter, and

the daughter of the couple in the audience.


The Commander: A U.S. Army Captain and a British Major


Three Soldiers: Three Soldiers on patrol.


Ushers: Ushers in head scarves.



--Scene 1 and Act 1 --


The audience is being seated into a Tigris River village already undergoing a patrol and security operation by U.S. occupation forces. There are distant sounds of a helicopter, periodic sounds of automatic gunfire, and the smell of smoke, even as the audience is being seated. The set has been designed as a street scene; several block/adobe house fronts face downstage. One house, stage left, has an open window and a doorway, both darkened. One man in regional attire periodically looks out from the darkened door, and again withdraws. Stage right is dominated by a downstage enclosure of gauze hangings interspersed with construction blocks, an assembly that might be a house. The gauze is now lit from the outside to preclude translucence using a wide spotlight aimed from house high right serving as the only stage lighting at present. Downstage center, in the middle of the street, has been placed a small rug, a prayer rug. House lights remain up as patrons are seated by ushers. Uniformed soldiers, armed, are in position at prominent exits. Ushers wearing scarves, whisper instructions and seating guidance to the patrons. Ushers continually look over their shoulders, and exude exasperation, agitation, and fear. Uniformed U.S. patrols move through isles, communicate through radios. They stop to question ushers, sometimes rudely.

Once most of the seating has been completed, with a few of the last punctual attendees being “detained” in back of rows, One usher (down front) is suddenly surrounded, thrown to the floor, searched, handcuffed, taken away screaming, “I have done nothing!” She is pulled away from a down center group of audience that must be seated by another usher. As she is carried out, her mouth is taped shut, and the screaming ceases.

Soldiers continue to interact with audience in a commanding, often arrogant manner. Periodically, small groups of soldiers move across the stage, from stage left to stage right. Some soldiers, patrolling among the audience, ask to see several patrons’ ticket stubs. Distant gunshots and helicopters are the sounds behind the shouts of maneuver and command. Wisps of smoke with gunpowder and sulfur smells move through the house. Final seating continues.

            One soldier, the “commander,” steps forward, stands near one corner of the rug in the middle of the street. He pivots to receive a bull horn by another soldier and he begins addressing the audience in an incomprehensible language, exaggerating the bearing of his command. His pivot twists and displaces the rug.


COMMANDER: Ira Pakt resitsik Ap Ga le adner derak flash photography op recording devices.”


He lowers the bull horn, shouts something else incomprehensible at an usher. An usher timidly joins him on stage. He speaks to her; she “translates” into the bull horn for the audience:


USHER: “Good Evening Ladies and Gentlemen, We have been, uh, commanded to take our seats as the situation is about to be, uh, stabilized. You are, uh, instructed to turn off your cell phones, pagers, and, uh, any other communications devices. Flash photography is forbidden. There will be a short intermission. Please remain seated from this point on and no one will be um, inconvenienced.”


The translating usher hands back the bull horn and runs toward back stage left, towards the darkened doorway.

[Arabesque Hand Drums begin]

The man in the doorway, “Tariq,” holds out his arms from his sides in a scolding, questioning pose; the usher puts her head down, shakes it and mutters something to him. She runs into the dark doorway. Tariq crosses his arms, looks at the commander, smiles broadly at the commander, and then disappears back inside as well. A small girl, probably eight years old, appears at the open dark door, wanders outside. The usher, now with her scarf removed, runs to the door grabs the girl and herds her back into the darkened doorway.

After the rest of the audience is seated two events compete for immediate attention:

First, a down center party of a woman, a child and a man--the last group to be seated—have been directed to sit where there are already “patrons.” Several ushers with flashlights arrive to sort it out. House lights fade, somewhat, except for the area around this seating disruption. Loud but hushed whispers by ushers ask the seated patrons for their ticket stubs. The usher then asks the newly arrived patrons for their tickets. The woman hands something to an usher, “See, looks like 3d, 3e, 3f” [or some such seating designation] “Looks like we are in the right place?” She smiles.

On stage, the Commander walks to the edge of the stage to watch the discussion over seating; he gives a “finger across the throat” signal to the pit. Arabic hand drumming abruptly stops. He signals to several other soldiers two in the house rear and two from house front rush over to the group of ushers. The ushers scatter at the approach of the soldiers. One soldier asks the seated patrons for their tickets, looks at their tickets hands back the tickets. The standing woman points to the back of the house saying,

“I just gave her my ticket, where did that usher go? She has my ticket stubs!” Soldier grabs a nearby usher, pulls her to the front of the row; mutters something to the usher. The usher asks to see the standing patrons’ tickets. Standing woman explains again, “I gave our tickets to the usher who just went that way.”

Usher translates to the standing party: “Madam you and your party will have to go back to the ticket office to sort this out.”

The woman’s voice begins to rise, talking slowly and loudly, now to the soldier:

“Listen sir, we will be happy to go and sort this out. But one of the ushers just asked for our tickets. I will need those tickets to sort this out at the office. The theater must have double sold these seats. This is not our fault. Please ask the usher to bring back our tickets so we can go get this worked out.” She points up the isle toward the box office.

            A soldier grabs the woman’s outstretched arm, pulls her up into the aisle. Her escort begins a protest. Another soldier forces the man to the ground. He is handcuffed, hooded. Their daughter begins screaming. Two soldiers pick up the child and begin to carry her around the other way. The woman is screaming, “Don’t you DARE touch my baby.” The daughter is carried out of the house; as the soldiers bring the child one way, and the other two soldiers bring the parents out the other way, in handcuffs and hoods. Child holds fists above head as she is carried out. [PLENTY OF USHERS REMAIN ON HAND TO QUIETLY INFORM WOULD BE GOOD SAMARITANS THAT THIS IS ALL A PART OF THE PLAY.]

While this is happening, the commander has moved to the edge of the stage watching the seating problems. “Tariq,” the man in Middle Eastern attire peers out of the darkened doorway, looks up and down the street, shakes his head. Tariq walks out to the middle of the street and carefully straightens the rug. Then he stands up, looks around, and runs behind the corner of his house, (Upstage Center) leans there to watch.

The audience is finally all seated and the patrol continues while the house lights dim. Commander signals to soldiers and he walks off stage right.

Four uniformed soldiers walk on stage. First two reach center stage, near the rug, and they kneel on one knee. One kneeling soldier faces audience, the other covers the advance of the third soldier who is peering into the darkened window from stage left. Second soldier (kneeling) sees Tariq hiding behind the corner, signals to the third and fourth soldier. Fourth soldier, “Danny signals to third soldier and begins to walk around behind the house with the door and window.

The first soldier (kneeling and facing the audience) mutters into his lapel radio,

FIRST SOLDIER: “, uh, Roger, will comply.”

First soldier signals to the other three. The soldier beside the window signals back to first soldier by shaking his head, pointing to his eyes. The two kneeling soldiers stand and move off stage right, leaving one soldier on stage, still in front of the window.

Weapon at the ready, lone soldier “Sergeant Benjamin Alexander” moves backwards to center stage. The second soldier appears behind Tariq, freezes. He brings his weapon to the ready, pointed at Tariq, who remains unaware of the second soldier’s presence. Second soldier slowly withdraws behind the corner and out of the audiences’ sight. Alexander’s weapon is still pointed toward the open doorway. He pivots and steps onto the center of the rug. As his foot pushes down into the rug, the stage lights immediately rise, a mechanical “click” loudly sounds, and a deep bell peals once. All sounds of distant gunfire and helicopter stop. Action on stage freezes.

The soldier, Sergeant Ben Alexander, looks up, around, down at his foot on the rug. Alexander looks back up toward Tariq, back around the stage and audience, up at the lights. He can not move his feet. He throws his weapon down beside him. Not moving his feet, Alexander takes off his helmet and unlaces his boots. He stands up, looks around, at the sky, and yells,

ALEXANDER: Sh__!”

Leaving his boots in place on the rug, Alexander pulls his feet out, walks around the prayer rug in one full cycle, staring down at his boots.

Tariq peers from around corner and sings out,

TARIQ: “You’re dead, American! Say your prayers, you have about half a second to beg forgiveness of God Almighty, use the moment wisely.”

            Tariq steps up on a small wall that separates the alley from the street. His feet seem to stick there on top of the short wall as well. Tariq fumbles with his stuck sandals.

ALEXANDER: “Get your own forgiveness together, Terrorist. We saw you over there. It will just be a moment before you are killed yourself. We saw you hiding. My buddy is right behind you, and he never misses.”

TARIQ: “Terrorist” what words you Americans use. Clicks tongue. Is everyone a terrorist who does not heel at your leash? We are not dogs.

Angry, Tariq pulls his feet out of his sandals and leaves them in place on top of the short wall. He jumps down on to the stage.

ALEXANDER: “No, much worse than dogs. Dogs recognize those who feed them!”

TARIQ: leaning over looking at his sandals, tries to move them with his hands. They won’t budge. Tariq walks toward Alexander. Alexander follows him with his gaze. While walking toward Alexander, Tariq looks at Alexander’s boots still unlaced and sitting on the rug. He stops and looks back at his own sandals; then he looks up at the audience. Alexander is looking at Tariq’s shoes then back to Tariq.

Grim Laughter. “So I am a dog? Am I being paid to be here American? Am I being thrown scraps from under the table of American Oil companies? Do they dress ME up in a pretty uniform, issue ME a weapon, and send ME to my death in, where is this, Pennsylvania? Fetch Fido! No you are here, far from where you should be. And now you are dead. What do they call those little clanky things you wear on a chain around your neck?”

ALEXANDER: Reaches his hand up to fiddle with his dog tags, smiles. “And you are only a couple of seconds behind me Terrorist.” [Laughs] “I wouldn’t want to be in either of our shoes right now. A guy from my hometown is right behind you, he sees you hiding.” [Points over past Tariq’s shoes] “You have no place to run. You are a dead terrorist. I may be dead” [looks up and around] “but I am a dead hero, a fallen angel.”

TARIQ: Looking upstage center, walking over to his own shoes, looking over behind the back of the hiding place, peers slowly around the corner, jumps back as if he sees the other soldier, looks again, waves slowly at the other soldier, seems to recognize his own jeopardy. “Ok, Hero. I’ll tell you what. In five years, ask your family how smart you will seem then. Once your hero bonus money has been spent, and your country has forgotten about you, and the world has been made safer for EXXON you will see. Angels do not fall from heaven. But devils do crawl out of hell sometimes.”

ALEXANDER: “We only wanted to help you people, to remove a dictator, to make life better for you.”

TARIQ: Loudly: “Remember ‘Shock and Awe?’ Crusader? Long before you got on this notion of spreading democracy through the world, giving us a government we could call our own, you were bombing our cities, murdering our people, accusing us of preparing nuclear war. You want to make life better for us? Stay home! Mind your own business. Spread democracy in Washington D.C.!”

ALEXANDER: “Maybe we should just fly airplanes into your buildings?”

TARIQ: Walks toward Alexander, somber. Faces him, not four feet apart; Tariq takes a long breath, says “Ok, there it is. You are hitting us back for 9/11, aren’t you? You bloody idiot! You just gave your life for a cruel mistake. Even your own government knows that we did not fly airplanes into your sky scrapers. Look at a map sometime. You are dying for a wrong turn, misinformation, a case of mistaken identity.” [In a high voice] “We’re sorry, but the number you dialed is out of service and is no longer available. Would you like to invade Iraq instead?” Turns and faces the audience, “You know, you Americans should really read more. You are here to end the Oil For Food Program, let's face it.”

ALEXANDER: “The what? Oil for Food?  ...   I am dying, I, uh, died…to bring you and your family into the modern world…liberty…freedom!

TARIQ: “Yes I know, liberty, freedom, addidas, MacDonalds…Well, that looks better on a tombstone, doesn’t it.” Holds his hands up towards the lights, “Killed in Action in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Fall 2007. It sounds much better than ‘Oops we really screwed up this time.’ Can you hear your funeral now? I can, there is some preacher talking about sacrifice, national need, and patriotism. He has a golf game in two hours, so your family had better handle their grief quickly.”

Both men Laugh…both awkwardly stop when they make eye contact. Tariq looks back up stage left; his eyes drift over to his own open doorway.

ALEXANDER: “So where did a terrorist learn such good English?”

TARIQ: Confused “English? Never!” spits “So do you have a family, Crusader?”

ALEXANDER: Looks Stage Right. Lights rise inside the gauze enabling the audience to see within. There is a woman and a young girl, on a couch. A door frame faces upstage. Three military officers, in dress uniform, approach the open door, facing downstage. The Woman slowly stands. Officers knock. The girl stands, clenches fists above her head. No emotional expression otherwise. Lights slowly dim inside gauze, vision fades. Alexander looks down, sits on edge of stage.

TARIQ: Watching where the vision had been, looks back at Alexander. Stands behind Alexander, says quietly “Looks about nine?”

ALEXANDER: delays a second or two…“She’s seven.”

TARIQ: suddenly angry, “So what are you doing here, now? You should be there” [points to gauze, begins crying] “instructing, fathering. She doesn’t want a hero, she wants a father! Seven! And what about her mother, did she sign off on this ‘Fallen Angel’ role? Does she get some special pew at church, with a sign that says ‘widow of dead Crusader?’”

ALEXANDER: “Enough!” Stands tries to walk away, gets to edge of the stage. Sits. “I don’t know what’s happening here. But I will be damned if I am going to spend the last seconds of my life listening to this…” Tariq had followed him, Alexander notices, tries to stand up again. Tariq, still behind him offers a hand. Alexander refuses and stands up on his own. Tariq shrugs, sits down himself.

TARIQ: Sincerely, facing the audience, “Be very careful, Crusader, how you use the Holy Language to barter your last seconds. You may well be damned. But God” Tariq looks up Glory to His Name—is most merciful, oft forgiving…”

ALEXANDER: “What? ... ” [he looks around again] “What kind of fuse did you put in that IED anyway? I never expected it to take so long to die.”

TARIQ: “God, in his…mercy, apparently, has given us this moment. The fuse was immediate, Crusader. You are already dead…So, it seems, am I.”

ALEXANDER: “Or maybe we are already in Hell…Feels like Hell…” Looks around the audience, then at Tariq, “Looks like hell… you know I only had three more months on this tour. I have already been here a year…a year in hell. Fair being fair, I should be on the way home right now.”

TARIQ: “I have a good idea. You don’t want to be here. We do not want you to be here. US Air can get you there. Delta is ready when you are. Fly the friendly skies! Back Home!

ALEXANDER: “Just walk away from a civil war. Just pull out, cut and run. That would be the height of irresponsibility.”

TARIQ: “Lets think about this for a minute, crusader… Do they issue you names? What’s your name?

ALEXANDER: “Alexander … Benjamin Alexander…Ben”

TARIQ: Counting on his fingers. “Ok Alexander, Benjamin Alexander…Ben, first, you start this war because you think we have weapons.” [second finger] “You find out that we don’t have the weapons after all, so you give us a new hand picked government to make up for the whole ‘shock and awe’ thing. Right?” [third finger] “But the new government can’t govern because an insurgency disrupts everything that has your fingerprints on it, Right?” [fourth finger] “And the insurgency is able to convince people to assist them because of the whole ‘shock and awe’ thing. Can you imagine that! In the meantime, you are still here shooting things up and patrolling our villages. Did I get all of that right?

ALEXANDER: “We are only occupying your villages because the insurgency is still fighting.”

TARIQ: Loudly, “The insurgency is only fighting because the Americans are still here occupying us.” Talking now to the audience, “So to untangle this idiot knot, WHO has to go home ... not me, I was born right over there.” Tariq points at the window.

The lights inside Tariq’s house have slowly risen. The mother is seen at the window looking out into the street. Her scarf is now off, her hair visible. Before the lights rise, Tariq’s daughter slips outside again, and is now leaning against the front wall, intently staring at the boots on the rug. Tariq jumps up shouting and waving at the girl who ignores him; evidently, she can neither hear nor see him.

TARIQ: “Back into the house! Now!, Go!” Tariq waves his arms in front of the girl but the girl does not respond. “Go Back! Woman where is your child?” He urgently screams and waves but the girl does not seem to hear him. Tariq stands between the girl and the rug, protectively.

The woman, unhurried, walks out into the doorway. Looks both ways, refocuses on the rug. Pulling her scarf back into place, she says something to the girl who smiles and runs inside again. The woman stops smiling and apprehensively looks up and down the street, ignoring or not seeing Tariq. Then she quickly goes back into the house. The lights fade inside the house. Tariq stands watching the lights fade. He walks toward the window, looks inside. Alexander moves up behind Tariq.

ALEXANDER: quietly…”So I am not asking about the insurgency. What are YOU doing here? You can’t think you will win this war? Shouldn’t YOU be thinking about being a father, not a terrorist?”

TARIQ: Tariq notices that Alexander is behind him looking into the window, also. Tariq begins walking away in a wide arc, trying to draw the soldier away from his house. “Win? ...WIN?” “What do you Americans think wars are? Baseball games, football games? You don’t win a war. Best one can do is to survive the loss of a war, since everyone loses…” Looking at the audience, shaking his head… “You Americans really should read history books!”

ALEXANDER: “Ok, point taken…but why do YOU plant IEDs and kill Americans. Not them…” Alexander points down the street. “I mean YOU, why you? Did we do anything to YOU?”

TARIQ: Slowly, “American, I AM those people” points down the street. Hitting his own chest, he screams “THAT is who I AM. The object of your ‘shock and awe…ME…right here! ... in there!” points inside the window. Stops, with his hands out to sides now, quietly, “No, we can’t win this war. Neither can you. But my people might survive it. That beautiful little girl in there MIGHT survive it! And when you finally do go home…and you will…” laughs and then cries, “when those of you who survived it go home…finally… then we will have outlasted you…those of us who do survive.”

“So what is YOUR rationale? Why are YOU here to die in a place you should never have been? YOU, Ben Alexander.”

ALEXANDER: Walks back over to the rug. Walks one full turn around it saying… “I don’t know…trying to survive too, I guess… Listen, we are stuck here waiting for something. When that fuse goes, I am dead. When the device blows, Danny is going to fill you with bullets. You won’t survive either.” He continues walking around the rug. Suddenly, he Stops. “Go into the house!”

TARIQ: “What?” Tariq stands, watching Alexander.

ALEXANDER: Pushes Tariq towards the house. “Go in the house and do not come out!”

TARIQ: “What are you… Tariq goes just into the doorway. He watches while Alexander finds his helmet, straps it on, steps into his boots, he laces them up. Alexander picks up his weapon, makes jumping motion. His feet still won’t move.

ALEXANDER: “Stay there. Don’t move. When you hear the explosion, stay put! Don’t go outside until many other Americans arrive. Comply with their demands and admit nothing! Stay in there…with your family. Stay with your family.” Alexander keeps jumping, but feet won’t budge.

[Lights Fade: Arabesque Drums]

[But just before house lights come back up the Arabic Drums turn into a roll on a snare and a march being played. Drum Fades.]


Intermission


Act II: Similar Street Scene. (Perhaps a palm is replaced by a pine.)

Lights rise on a small patrol of British Red Coats, Grenadiers. One Drummer beats out the march as they march across the stage. The commander orders halt and left face. The patrol now faces the open doorway of the house. The sergeant (Same actor as Alexander) is sent to knock at the door frame. Turl, (same actor as Tariq) dressed in Colonial American attire (leather breeches, boiled shirt with long bow tie, and a leather apron) comes to the door. Standing in the doorway, Turl looks at the patrol and then at the commander.

COMMANDER: Sharply marches to the front of the detachment to make a pronouncement. “You, sir. Do you deny that your name is Turl Allen?”

TURL: Steps out of his doorway. Turl’s daughter steps into his place in the doorway. “I, sir, make no such denial! M’ name is Allen. If I may ask, why do ye trouble one of his Majesty’s loyal subjects? Not, because ‘is name be Allen?”

COMMANDER: “We have good information, sir, that may stir wonder at this your claim of loyalty. Smithy services to seditious insurgents, is the purpose of this call, I’ll warrant. I demand you pronounce, here and now, your intention to live by your oath of loyalty to His Majesty King George, Sovereign by God, or to those rascally dogs starving, even now, at Valley Forge. By God, speak man! And be measured in your choice!”

TURL: “My choice has been made, as witnessed by these neighbors and the warrants already executed under threat of lost liberty. ‘Is Majesty is my lawful Sovereign and I ‘is loyal subject. I’ll have no allegiance to curs of any sort, be they of four legs or two legs beneath red top coats. Me smithy services are for honest men, who gladly pay me for my efforts. And those efforts are wanting while I pass the day at my door, correcting malicious rumors from drunken spies with fresh coin and large imaginations.

COMMANDER: “You are aware of the consequences, good day to you sir.” Commander bows, nods to drummer who starts a cadence. “March!” The patrol moves stage left. Before the patrol is entirely off stage, the commander places his hand on Danny’s shoulder and signals him to move behind Turl’s house to keep watch. Danny departs from the patrol, takes up a position behind the house, out of sight of the audience.

[Drums Fade]

[Lights fade on stage. Lights rise inside the house.]

Turl appears at the open door several times. He looks up and down the street; then he disappears back inside the house.

Two men approach the home from stage right. They walk past the house. Stop. Turn. One stands in the middle of the road watching; the other goes to the front door. He Knocks.

Turl appears at the door. The audience can hear whispers and mumbling. Turl looks both ways. Turl and the man at the door go inside. Several seconds later, the man emerges with several cloth bags, apparently full. He splits the load with the other visitor. Turl is standing at the doorway. The two men walk off stage right with their bags. Just then, Danny emerges from behind the wall and levels his bayoneted weapon at Turl. Startled, Turl raises his hands and steps out of his house. Lights fade to dark.

[Hold Full Dark for seven seconds.]

TARIQ: Laughs, “That won’t work, Crusader.

[Stage Lights Come up. With no scene change indicating the setting is back to Iraq, (uniforms are now back to U.S.)]

Sergeant Alexander, with Helmet on and weapon at the ready is still trying to trip the IED. Tariq is watching him from his doorway. Tariq (back in a long shirt, Arabic style) turns abruptly and walking back toward the wall, says,

TARIQ: “But it was a nice idea, very touching…yes,” stops, turns toward Alexander, says “thank you… But everything has to be back in place, EXACTLY back in place. The future emerges only out of the EXACT present. And the present falls out of the EXACT past. So we only have this one little moment, just a little bit before right now…There is no past… and no right now, quite yet… just this little, bloody eternal, moment in the middle….” Looks up at audience, says “you know?” Then he looks down at his sandals, looks back at the audience and says, “There wouldn’t be a phenomenologist in the house, would there?”

Tariq walks toward the wall where his sandals are still waiting, looks at his shoes for a long moment. Tariq stops, turns to the audience and holds out his hands, palms up. “Of course, YOU could fix this with the flick of a few million little switches.” Throwing his hands towards the audience, mumbles something inaudible. He takes a heavy breath. Tariq steps up on the wall, turns; he looks down at his sandals again.

Tariq steps into his shoes slowly. Before he pushes his second heel down, he looks up to Alexander. Alexander looks back at Tariq. The lights flash out. In the dark, an explosion on stage is immediately followed by automatic rifle fire, smoke, screams, a groan, helicopter sound, a child’s cry, rapid gunfire in the distance. As the stage lights come back on, “Danny” the soldier behind the house is jumping over the wall, running toward Alexander, who now lies in the middle of the street. Tariq lies in front of his house. His daughter runs out into the street, drops to her knees beside her father.

The girl shows no emotion, just a hard stare at “Danny.” As stage lights drop, only a small spotlight is left on the girl. She brings her two fists above her head and holds them as the spot fades to a dark stage.

[Arabesque drums]

When the stage lights rise again, the soldiers are moving across the stage with some prisoners in head scarves. They stop and bow to the audience. They spread apart. The Wife and the Commander, still in Colonial and British dress, come in from stage right. They bow. From back stage left the girl, holding the hands of both Tariq and Alexander, walks up to the center and bows. Then whole group bows.

[Arabesque drums fade].