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    MacTrump

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      These ladies were but primer for our pumps,

      The op’ning act before the headliner,

      The appetizer ere the entrée comes.

      We’ll find another, better set of ladies,

      Who do not hate our noble father so

      And have not such foul notions in their brains.

      DONNISON

      [to Ericson:] When ladies have ideas, what good can follow?

      MACTRUMP

      For my part, I shall never trust a lass

      Who cultivates opinions by herself.

      ERICSON

      In troth, ’tis best t’avoid thought altogether.

      DONNISON

      Well spoken, Ericson! Let our minds be

      As empty as our pocketbooks are full.

      This talking hath giv’n me an appetite:

      Shall we to Hootersville, to get some wings

      And ogle all the waitresses therein?

      Therein, all know and love our family!

      ERICSON

      ’Twill perfect be, thus to reset our hearts!

      MACTRUMP

      Ha, ha, good boys!

      DESDIVANKA

      —Ye aptly play your parts.

      [Exeunt, laughing.

      SCENE 1.

      In the Oval Tower on the eve of the midterm election.

      Enter CHORUS.

      CHORUS

      The scene turns tragic—heavy are our hearts—

      As liberty and justice fall to hate.

      November brings new actors to new parts,

      As forty Democrati demonstrate.

      MacTrump, in seeking favor with his base,

      Shall never rest until he hath his wall.

      Each place he passionately makes his case,

      First “build,” then “finish” doth become the call.

      Shall he conclude the work that he began?

      And shall the staunch Republicons abet?

      Shall he fulfill the vows on which he ran?

      Or shall the Democrati block him yet?

      Our last act: harmony or revolution?

      Whate’er doth come, expect no resolution.

      [Exit Chorus.

      Enter MACTRUMP, SENATOR MITCH MACTUTTLE, and SENATOR GRIMSBY LINDSEYLOCKS.

      MACTRUMP

      [to Lindseylocks:] Close thou the door, I bid thee, Lindseylocks.

      [Lindseylocks closes the door.

      Nay, close it with thee on the other side.

      [Exit Lindseylocks.

      [To MacTuttle:] I do not understand. Why is that imp

      So kind to me of late? Why, verily,

      Are any of you? Loathe we not each other?

      MACTUTTLE

      ’Tis known as solidarity, my lord.

      Th’election shall begin in sev’ral hours.

      If we are not united, then we must

      At least appear to be.

      MACTRUMP

      —For whom? I do

      Not owe thee favors, nay! ’Tis thou who shouldst

      Bestow thy favor on MacTrump, for I—

      As though a pilot of a ship—do keep

      Thy candidates afloat. Republicons

      Like thee are wherefore I cannot construct

      The wall my people want. Ye could not e’en

      Destroy O’Bamacare. What is the matter?

      Dost thou propose to win through epic failure,

      Or art thou just incompetence complete?

      MACTUTTLE

      Yet, Master President, we’re confident

      We’ll keep the Northern Chamber.

      MACTRUMP

      —Confident?

      We should be on the offense, barnacle!

      McTweet, come hither now!

      Enter MCTWEET.

      MCTWEET

      —Good even, sir.

      How goes that migrant caravan you conjur’d?

      MACTRUMP

      Quit jesting, featherweight, and tell this turtle

      How we are faring in the Senate race.

      MCTWEET

      One moment, please.

      [McTweet shuffles through papers.

      MACTRUMP

      —Be faster. How goes it?

      MCTWEET

      Much like a dodo in a caucus race.

      MACTUTTLE

      Methinks we’ll capture some six Senate seats.

      MCTWEET

      According to the numbers I behold,

      It shall be more like two or one.

      MACTUTTLE

      —Thou’rt wrong.

      MCTWEET

      Art thou so sure? These pages came from thine

      Own canvassers. Seest thou the elephant?

      [McTweet shows the pages to MacTuttle. Outraged, MacTuttle snatches them and stuffs them in his pocket.

      MACTUTTLE

      Lies, Master President—disgusting lies!

      MCTWEET

      [smiling:] O? What else have you got there in thy pocket?

      MACTRUMP

      Enow of this. What of the Southern Chamber—

      Shall the Republicons still hold the House?

      MCTWEET

      It doth depend. Is Prosperosi still

      A staunch Republicon?

      MACTUTTLE

      —Was she e’er?

      MCTWEET

      —Nay!

      [Exit McTweet, laughing.

      MACTRUMP

      [to MacTuttle:] He did not even ask me for a tweet.

      Know’st thou how awkward that doth make me seem?

      MACTUTTLE

      Lord President MacTrump, as long as we

      Control the Northern Chamber, Prosperosi

      Shall never have the pow’r to stop us from

      Confirming judges popular withal

      The party ranks.

      MACTRUMP

      —What good will that do us

      If, soon, our party cedes the Southern Chamber?

      Thou art far in above thy head, MacTwerp.

      Thy recklessness has galvaniz’d our foes!

      My caddy could conduct the Northern Chamber

      With far more skill than thee. If thou’rt not careful,

      I may just fire thee!

      MACTUTTLE

      —Master President,

      You do not have that pow’r.

      MACTRUMP

      —What didst thou say,

      MacButthole?

      MACTUTTLE

      —Master President, there is

      A separation of the pow’rs within

      Our government for moments such as this.

      You don’t have the power to remove

      Me from my post, though I maintain and wield

      The power to remove you, sir, from yours.

      MACTRUMP

      Who sayeth so? Where is such nonsense written?

      MACTUTTLE

      The Constitution of th’United Fiefdoms.

      In Article the First, in Section Three.

      I have it here for reading, if you wish.

      [MacTuttle pulls a copy of the Constitution from his pocket.

      MACTRUMP

      Think’st thou dost pose a threat, vain turtledove?

      MACTUTTLE

      Make me not teach you suffering, MacTrump.

      I am an expert in it—always was.

      When I was but a child, a horrid sickness

      Near robb’d me of the strength to use my legs.

      My parents gave up all they own’d to save me.

      It nearly ruin’d them. Behold me now.

     
    Their sacrifices are what brought me here,

      More powerful upon my feet than you

      Behind your desk. Should Prosperosi seize

      The Southern Chamber, then shall the decision

      Of whether to remove you from this castle

      And send you to MacMueller rest with me.

      [MacTuttle puts the Constitution in his pocket.

      The Northern Chamber’s mine, my lord, and all

      Our senators would gladly vote for your

      Removal and replacement with Lord Pound

      In less time than it takes a man to nod.

      So please, MacTrump, do try to think for once

      About the enemies you’re quick to make.

      MACTRUMP

      [narrowing his eyes:] Who told you this word?

      MACTUTTLE

      —What word?

      MACTRUMP

      —“Suffering”—

      The interesting word thou didst employ.

      Did someone order thee to speak the word?

      It soundeth so familiar to mine ears.

      MACTUTTLE

      What do you mean by that?

      MACTRUMP

      —I think thou knowest

      Exactly what I mean.

      MACTUTTLE

      —You are in jest.

      MACTRUMP

      Appear I like my jester Fooliani?

      If thou think’st we must masquerade as friends,

      Pray, tell me more about this suffering.

      MACTUTTLE

      What is this game you play?

      MACTRUMP

      —Nay, ’tis no game.

      Tell me, MacTuttle, how it made thee feel

      When thou didst lose the strength thou once enjoy’dst.

      MACTUTTLE

      I have no time for this.

      [MacTuttle moves toward the doors.

      MACTRUMP

      —Guards!

      Enter two GUARDS. MacTuttle freezes.

      GUARD 1

      —Yes, my lord?

      MACTRUMP

      My friend and I are planning to discuss

      His feeble legs. [To MacTuttle:] Wilt thou continue, sir?

      [MacTuttle is speechless.

      I see. The frighten’d turtle must be shy.

      Please, grant us privacy.

      GUARD 2

      —Yes, sovereign.

      [Exit guards.

      MACTRUMP

      Thou’st serv’d in Washingtown for far too long,

      Which warp’d thine eyesight like the slimy fishbowl

      In which thou wert conceivèd. I know how

      This swamptown works more than the senators

      Thou dost surround thyself with; ’tis an act,

      A silly circus where the sideshow freaks

      Earn fraudulent election to the jobs

      No one in their right mind would ever want.

      Thou hast no pow’r because no one desires

      To be like thee. Thou hast no following,

      No devotees, no soldiers. Thou couldst not

      Fill up a rally held inside a shoebox.

      Thou couldst not even hold O’Bama to

      A single term. Why dost thou think I shall

      Be easier? Toad, thou couldst not remove

      Me if thou tried’st! Now ev’rything makes sense:

      Thou art the reason why Putain told me

      To make thy wife one of my secretaries.

      ’Twas not so she would serve me, nay. It was

      So she would have the might to serve me thee!

      MACTUTTLE

      Do not presume to speak of her again.

      MACTRUMP

      Who? Mine own minister of transportation?

      O, foolish man, a child who reckons sums

      Would have no trouble figuring your totals—

      You both are losers, stuck in my employ!

      If thou dost threaten me again, I’ll call

      MacMueller, thereupon to talk about

      The strange behavior that my daughter notic’d

      Betwixt thy wife and thine own Senate office

      The moment she hath started working here.

      I know of ev’ry wicked backdoor dealing

      That thou and thy base wife do for thy contracts

      Within thy backwoods, thistle-chewing fiefdom.

      ’Tis wherefore thou art such a knave, MacTuttle.

      With thine experience, thou knowest how

      To take on Democrati politicians,

      But would not last one round against MacTrump.

      An Army and a Navy I command,

      With followers enow to conquer countries.

      Pray tell, what dost thou have? A constitution?

      If thy great constitution held true pow’r,

      ’Twould not have one like me defending it.

      MACTUTTLE

      Forgive me, sir, perhaps I did misspeak—

      MACTRUMP

      Nay, nay, methinks thou spakest candidly,

      And now I finally do understand thee.

      Be gone, and back to hell now, tattletale.

      Thou hast a wall to build, with one or two

      New senators to help thee do the task.

      So get it done.

      MACTUTTLE

      —The Democrati won’t

      Allow you to construct your brazen wall.

      MACTRUMP

      Then it is well they’re not in power yet.

      The clock doth tick, MacTuttle—build my wall;

      Or I shall close the government until

      Thou dost.

      MACTUTTLE

      —Yet, ’tis impossible! You can’t

      Construct your wall without the government,

      Nor can I help if stripp’d of ev’ry power!

      MACTRUMP

      Methought thou saidst thou wert the one in charge.

      [Smiling:] Close thou the door upon thy swift way out.

      [Exit MacTuttle. MacTrump rises from his desk and walks to the center of the room.

      Ho, Gargamiller?

      Flash of light and puff of smoke.

      Enter GARGAMILLER through the trapdoor.

      GARGAMILLER

      —Fiery rose the angels,

      And as they rose a vast, deep thunder roll’d!

      [Thunder. Lightning.

      MACTRUMP

      Pray, Gargamiller, tell it to me straight:

      Dost thou have aught within your bag of tricks

      That may help us secure the Southern Chamber?

      GARGAMILLER

      [hissing:] Pray, let me see.

      Gargamiller takes a bag out of his cloak and shakes it open. Enter the trolls BLACKFACE, COULTERGEIST, GERRYMANDER, and LA CUCARACHA from the trapdoor.

      —’Tis all of them, my liege.

      MACTRUMP

      Thou hast naught new for me?

      GARGAMILLER

      —Nay, lord and master.

      MACTRUMP

      Then it appears that Prosperosi shall

      Bring down her hammer to destroy my wall.

      [Gargamiller hisses. Exeunt Gargamiller with trolls.

      Though I have shown my bluster to MacTuttle,

      The truth is that my soul is sore afeard.

      MacMueller cometh for me earnestly,

      And if he comes I must have some defense—

      The wall, as wall, is unimportant and—

      I shall admit—unnecessary, too.

      Yet as a symbol for my fervent base,

      The wall’s important as the air I breathe—

      It
    is a battlement against my foes,

      A rampart for the coming skirmishes,

      The parapet on which MacTrump doth stand.

      Should foul men come beseeching my impeachment,

      I’ve need of citizens who shall demand

      The rescue of their hero, e’en MacTrump:

      The man who sav’d us from the coming hordes

      By shoring up our frightful, southern border.

      Mine ev’ry hope is built upon the wall,

      It is my strength, my refuge, and my all.

      [Exit MacTrump.

      SCENE 2.

      Desdivanka’s fortress, Washingtown, on the evening of the midterm election.

      Thunder. Raindrops. Enter DAME DESDIVANKA, dressed in black, stepping through a doorway to her bedroom patio. She turns and faces a large wooden box atop a table in her bedroom— the iObscura. The box has a thick cloak draped over it.

      DESDIVANKA

      [into iObscura, smiling:] The greatest privilege of being an

      American is having your voice heard.

      Get out and vote! Let not the rain stop you.

      Enter MCTWEET from beneath the cloak.

      MCTWEET

      Brava, my mistress! And courageous, too,

      Of thee to stand outside amid the drizzle!

      DESDIVANKA

      ’Twas nothing. Shall we have another go?

      MCTWEET

      There is no need. The iObscura captur’d

      Each word and body motion utterly.

      I am most grateful, damsel, for thy time!

      [Desdivanka steps back into her bedroom, and McTweet closes the door behind her.

      DESDIVANKA

      My thanks, and I would add some words as well.

      MCTWEET

      Indeed—what shall be written?

      [McTweet takes the quill from his cap.

      DESDIVANKA

      —“VOTE, VOTE, VOTE!”

      [McTweet writes upon a parchment.

      MCTWEET

      Of course, the “V” and “O” thing. Duly noted!

      DESDIVANKA

      Now fly, thou bird. A tempest comes anon.

      MCTWEET

      Indeed, she doth. [Bowing:] Be well. [To offstage:]

      The lady’s done!

      Enter LORD JARED KUSHREW.

      KUSHREW

      Thanks, birdie! I pray thou dost know the exit?

      MCTWEET

      I pray the lot of you will witness quite

      The exodus tonight! I’ll be the first.

      [McTweet takes the camera obscura and dons a cape. Exit McTweet.

      DESDIVANKA

      Good husband.

      KUSHREW

      —Dearest princess!

      DESDIVANKA

      —Nay. Say empress.

      KUSHREW

      Forsooth. For thou art both my queen and country.

      [They embrace.

      How goes the war?

     


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