FYI. A "beat" is a natural break or pause in the dialogue (the term is used in actual scripts-- how technical am I?!) "Rise" signifies the beginning of the scene (the literal rise of the curtain).
I haven't written descriptions of the characters yet, but they are in their early 30's. So, try to use your imagination. Any ideas?
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ACT 1, SCENE 1
Rise. [Kitchen in a suburban house. A few askew items suggest the owners are relatively on top of chores, but are`not obsessively clean. The decorations indicate a modern-retro look. A few pieces of framed tattoo art hang on the wall. A kitchen table sits just off center in the room. A pool of liquid lies beneath the table.]
[Enter Chloe from stage right. She walks into the kitchen and then sees the liquid on the floor. She looks exasperated and grabs a dish towel to wipe it up. She kneels down to wipe while mumbling profanities under her breath.]
[Enter Dan from stage right carrying a newspaper. He stops short, almost bumping into Chloe.]
Dan: Wha- what are you doing down there? Another mess?
Chloe: Yes, of course! I just don’t know what to do about him.
Dan: Unbelievable. (sits down at the table while Chloe continues to wipe the floor with the cloth). He’s all yours, that one.
Chloe: Listen! It wasn’t just me that wanted a dog.
Dan: I don’t think you could call that a dog. A deer sexed a gerbil. That’s what happened there. I wanted something I could run with.
Chloe: You don’t run.
Dan: It’s amazing how much urine comes out of him considering how small he is.
Chloe: Stop it. It’s not like you’re on the floor cleaning this up.
Dan: Yeah, well, it often is! He hosed down the laundry bin two days ago. Who redid an entire load of clean laundry?
Chloe: You didn’t have to rewash everything. He just hit part of it.
Dan: I didn’t want to sniff each sock to see if there was piss on it. That’s even worse that redoing the laundry, plus I had to wipe down the outside—
Chloe: Stop! Fine. I don’t want to talk about it.
Dan: That’s the deal with male dogs. All they want to do is spray everywhere. That’s what they do. Heck, that’s what I’d do. Nothing sends a clearer message than urine. It says, ”Yeah! That’s mine! I’m a dude! I did that! My penis still works! I don’t have balls, but I can spray something else!” It’s like being omnipotent but with urine. What would that be? Omni-uranous? Hehe. Omni-urinous? The all-pissing. Get it?
(beat. Chloe rolls her eyes and goes back to wiping the floor)
Don’t know why he needs to piss on clean laundry, though—what is he covering, fabric softener? That’s a threat to his manhood? You gotta stake a claim to that?
(beat)
‘Specially if you get a stray. You need to cut off their nuts when they’re young, before they realize their weapon of self-expression.
Chloe: We rescued him. We did a good thing.
Dan: Rescue? Um, sort of. I’m sure someone would have adopted him. He’s cute.
(beat)
Pees like an elephant, but he’s cute.
Chloe: I said stop!
Dan: OK, I gotta go to work before he lifts his leg on me while I’m sitting here. Where’s that little piss-ant anyways? He’s almost always under the table for breakfast.
Chloe: He’s probably in his crate.
Dan: He’s probably pissing in our closet--
Chloe: Stop!
Dan: Ok, that’s the last one. I’m going—I’m gone. (kisses Chloe) See you later, babe.
[Chloe stands up, throws the washcloth in the sink, and sighs].
End scene.
