John and Mary meet.
What happens next?
If you want a happy ending, try A.
If you want a happy ending, try A.
A.
John and Mary fall in love and get married. They both have worthwhile
and remunerative jobs which they find stimulating and challenging. They
buy a charming house. Real estate values go up. Eventually, when they
can afford live-in help, they have two children, to whom they are
devoted. The children turn out well. John and Mary have a stimulating
and challenging sex life and worthwhile friends. They go on fun
vacations together. They retire. They both have hobbies which they
find stimulating and challenging. Eventually they die. This is the end
of the story.
B.
Mary falls in love with John but John doesn't fall in love with Mary.
He merely uses her body for selfish pleasure and ego gratification of a
tepid kind. He comes to her apartment twice a week and she cooks him
dinner, you'll notice that he doesn't even consider her worth the price
of a dinner out, and after he's eaten dinner he fucks her and after that
he falls asleep, while she does the dishes so he won't think she's
untidy, having all those dirty dishes lying around, and puts on fresh
lipstick so she'll look good when he wakes up, but when he wakes up he
doesn't even notice, he puts on his socks and his shorts and his pants
and his shirt and his tie and his shoes, the reverse order from the one
in which he took them off. He doesn't take off Mary's clothes, she
takes them off herself, she acts as if she's dying for it every time,
not because she likes sex exactly, she doesn't, but she wants John to
think she does because if they do it often enough surely he'll get used
to her, he'll come to depend on her and they will get married, but John
goes out the door with hardly so much as a good-night and three days
later he turns up at six o'clock and they do the whole thing over again.
Mary gets run-down. Crying is bad for your face, everyone knows that
and so does Mary but she can't stop. People at work notice. Her
friends tell her John is a rat, a pig, a dog, he isn't good enough for
her, but she can't believe it. Inside John, she thinks, is another
John, who is much nicer. This other John will emerge like a butterfly
from a cocoon, a Jack from a box, a pit from a prune, if the first John
is only squeezed enough.
One evening John complains about the food. He has never complained about her food before. Mary is hurt.
Her friends tell her they've seen him in a restaurant with another
woman, whose name is Madge. It's not even Madge that finally gets to
Mary: it's the restaurant. John has never taken Mary to a restaurant.
Mary collects all the sleeping pills and aspirins she can find, and
takes them and a half a bottle of sherry. You can see what kind of a
woman she is by the fact that it's not even whiskey. She leaves a note
for John. She hopes he'll discover her and get her to the hospital in
time and repent and then they can get married, but this fails to happen
and she dies.
John marries Madge and everything continues as in A.
C.
John, who is an older man, falls in love with Mary, and Mary, who is
only twenty-two, feels sorry for him because he's worried about his hair
falling out. She sleeps with him even though she's not in love with
him. She met him at work. She's in love with someone called James, who
is twenty-two also and not yet ready to settle down.
John on the contrary settled down long ago: this is what is bothering
him. John has a steady, respectable job and is getting ahead in his
field, but Mary isn't impressed by him, she's impressed by James, who
has a motorcycle and a fabulous record collection. But James is often
away on his motorcycle, being free. Freedom isn't the same for girls,
so in the meantime Mary spends Thursday evenings with John. Thursdays
are the only days John can get away.
John is married to a woman called Madge and they have two children, a
charming house which they bought just before the real estate values went
up, and hobbies which they find stimulating and challenging, when they
have the time. John tells Mary how important she is to him, but of
course he can't leave his wife because a commitment is a commitment. He
goes on about this more than is necessary and Mary finds it boring, but
older men can keep it up longer so on the whole she has a fairly good
time.
One day James breezes in on his motorcycle with some top-grade
California hybrid and James and Mary get higher than you'd believe
possible and they climb into bed. Everything becomes very underwater,
but along comes John, who has a key to Mary's apartment. He finds them
stoned and entwined. He's hardly in any position to be jealous,
considering Madge, but nevertheless he's overcome with
despair. Finally he's middle-aged, in two years he'll be as bald as an
egg and
he can't stand it. He purchases a handgun, saying he needs it for target
practice--this is the thin part of the plot, but it can be dealt with
later--and
shoots the two of them and himself.
Madge, after a suitable period of mourning, marries an understanding man
called Fred and everything continues as in A, but under different
names.
D.
Fred and Madge have no problems. They get along exceptionally well and
are good at
working out any little difficulties that may arise. But their charming
house is by the seashore and one day a giant tidal wave approaches.
Real estate values go down. The rest of the story is about what caused
the tidal wave and how they escape from it. They do, though thousands
drown, but Fred and Madge are virtuous and grateful, and continue as in
A.
E.
Yes, but Fred has a bad heart. The rest of the story is about how kind
and understanding they both are until Fred dies. Then Madge devotes
herself to charity work until the end of A. If you like, it can be
"Madge," "cancer," "guilty and confused," and "bird watching."
F.
If you think this is all too bourgeois, make John a revolutionary and
Mary a counterespionage agent and see how far that gets you. Remember,
this is Canada. You'll still end up with A, though in between you may
get a lustful brawling saga of passionate involvement, a chronicle of
our times, sort of.
You'll have to face it, the endings are the same however you slice it.
Don't be deluded by any other endings, they're all fake, either
deliberately fake, with malicious intent to deceive, or just motivated
by excessive optimism if not by downright sentimentality.
The only authentic ending is the one provided here:
John and Mary die. John and Mary die. John and Mary die.
John and Mary die. John and Mary die. John and Mary die.
So much for endings. Beginnings are always more fun. True
connoisseurs, however, are known to favor the stretch in between, since
it's the hardest to do anything with.
That's about all that can be said for plots, which anyway are just one thing after another, a what and a what and a what.
Now try How and Why.
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