Nomadland Script PDF
Nomadland Script PDF
Written by
Chloé Zhao
She is FERN.
She digs through dusty boxes and trunks, scanning for lucky
items to bring with her. A stack of plates with autumn leaf
patterns and a rusty camping lamp make the cut.
She loads them into “Vanguard”, a white Ford cargo van, rusty
and muddy, parked in the snow.
Fern keeps searching when she pulls out a man’s blue work
coat that’s too big for her. She holds it to her face like an
old friend and breathes it in. Holding back tears.
GAY
You take care of yourself out
there.
FERN
(Singing)
What Child is this who, laid to
rest/ On Mary's lap is sleeping?
Whom Angels greet with anthems
sweet/ While shepherds watch are
keeping?
PATTY
No. I don’t see your reservation.
FERN
Are you sure? I’m on the Amazon
CamperForce list.
PATTY
Ooooh, Amazon. I see. Hold on.
FERN
Try McD...
PATTY
There you are!
Fern closes the curtain dividing the drivers seat and the
back of the van. She turns on a small desk lamp and reveals
the warm and cozy DIY interior -- her home on wheels.
She pours it onto the “autumn leaf” plate she brought from
storage and eats, staring blankly out of the dark window.
She does dishes with a spray bottle and carefully wipes every
one clean and stores them away.
She uses her five gallon bucket and cat litter for a pee.
Fern sees a someone she knows - AL, a man in his fifties. She
nods and he nods back.
AL
Seems like more every year.
She works with LINDA MAY, sixty-five with long gray hair,
wearing an orange blazer that reads “Ambassador, Ask Me.”
LINDA MAY
I quit.
FERN
What?!
LINDA MAY
I know. Forty-three years. Wasn’t
as hard as I thought.
FERN
I salute you, Linda May.
LINDA MAY
Well, I had to. Doctor said I have
macular degeneration in my right
eye.
FERN
Oh shit.
LINDA MAY
Could’ve been worse.
FERN
What can you do?
LINDA MAY
Eat healthier, exercise. Definitely
no smoking.
FERN
(fans the air)
No, no.
LINDA MAY
I think I found land, Fern.
FERN
Really?! Where?
LINDA MAY
Douglas, Arizona. Right on the
Mexico border. It’s four acres in
the desert. And I just put down the
deposit.
FERN
Nice!
LINDA MAY
Yeah. Real nice. Well, I haven’t
actually seen the land in person
but the pictures on Craigslist
looked real nice.
FERN
(worried)
Linda May!
LINDA MAY
Fern! I’m taking a leap of faith!
It’s now or never!
FERN
(thinking)
Valid point. The other day I looked
in the mirror and I saw my mother.
LINDA MAY
(laughs)
Exactly. I look into the mirror and
I see my grandmother.
FERN
I put these drawers under the bed.
They pull out from both sides. Now
I can get my stuff from inside and
outside.
LINDA MAY
Very smart. Where’s your bucket?
And the carbon detector? Mr. Buddy
heater?
FERN
Here. Here. And my bucket and cat
litter is right here. I made a
curtain to cover it.
LINDA MAY
I should do that. I have to hurry
and hide my bucket whenever people
are visiting.
FERN
Oh, look. This is my husband’s old
fishing box. I made a little
stopper and when it opens...
(opens it)
It becomes a surface to work on.
LINDA MAY
Counter space is everything.
FERN
(takes out the dishes)
And I got my nice dishes that my
Dad gave me. He collected these
from yard sales and when I
graduated from high school he gave
me the whole set.
LINDA MAY
Beautiful.
FERN
It’s called “autumn leaf”. I don’t
have that many pieces left though.
LINDA MAY
Have you named your van yet?
7.
FERN
Vanguard.
LINDA MAY
Ooooh. That’s strong.
FERN
She is.
VOICE
Fern! Hi!
FERN
Hi... Hi Brandy.
BRANDY
Hey girls. It’s Mrs. M!
DAUGHTERS
Hi, Mrs. M.
BRANDY
How have you been?
FERN
Good. Real good.
BRANDY
You’re working at Amazon again?
8.
FERN
Yep.
BRANDY
How is it? You like it?
FERN
Yes. Great money.
BRANDY
You still doing the... van thing?
FERN
Yes. I’m parked at Desert Rose RV
Park.
BRANDY
We just drove by there today.
Didn’t we, girls -- ?
FERN
How’s your mom?
BRANDY
Good. Real good. She misses you.
You know...
(leans in, quietly)
You can stay with us. I mean at
least while you’re working around
here. We’re worried about you.
FERN
Don’t worry about me. I’m fine.
Thank you.
BRANDY
OK... You let us know if you change
your mind, yeah?
FERN
I promise. Merry Christmas.
BRANDY
Merry Christmas, Fern. Take care!
MACKENZIE
Hey, Mrs. M... we went to Burning
Man for field trip this year.
FERN
Finally!
9.
MACKENZIE
Right?! Well, we went before it
started. They gave us ice cream and
we got to write our names and a
message on a piece of wood, and
they put the wood on top of that
big temple thing they built and
then they burn it on the last day.
FERN
Nice. What did you write on yours?
MACKENZIE
I wrote that I wish we still lived
in Empire and all my friends that
moved away are all moving back.
FERN
You like your new school?
MACKENZIE
It’s OK.
FERN
I bet you’re still the smartest
kid.
MACKENZIE
Yeh, kinda.
FERN
You remember anything we worked on
when I tutored you?
MACKENZIE
Uh, yes...
(thinking hard)
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and
tomorrow/ And all our yesterdays
have lighted fools/ The way to
dusty death/ Out, out, brief
candle!
FERN
That’s really good. Thank you.
MACKENZIE
My mom said you’re homeless. Is
that true?
10.
FERN
No... I’m not homeless. I’m just...
houseless. Not the same thing,
right?
MACKENZIE
No.
FERN
It’s nice to see you, Mackenzie.
MACKENZIE
Yeah. Ok. Bye, Mrs. M.
LINDA MAY
Before I moved into Squeeze Inn, I
lived in a 30 FT trailer. This was
2008. The money was running out and
I was getting behind on paying for
the trailer and the rent on the
land and I still had no water or
electricity... I couldn’t find
work. I was... I’ve never been
suicidal. But, I had some liquor in
my trailer. I just thought, oh I
will just drink all this booze,
turn on the gas and pass out, and
if I come to, I will light a
cigarette and blow us all up.
(MORE)
11.
FERN
(looks up)
Bob Wells looks just like Santa
Claus.
LINDA MAY
Everyone says that.
FERN
What does RTR stand for?
LINDA MAY
Rubber Tramp Rendezvous. It’s in
Quartzsite, Arizona, in the desert
on BLM land. I’ll draw you a map.
You won’t have reception out there.
12.
FERN
I don’t think I will go.
LINDA MAY
You should! The “Big Tent” is
happening in town at the same time.
It’s a RV show, biggest in the
country. You can sign up for jobs.
FERN
What kind of jobs?
LINDA MAY
Seasonal. All kinds. Camp hosting
for National Parks, Adventureland,
working concessions at spring
training games in Texas, beet
harvest in Nebraska.
FERN
Beet harvest.
LINDA MAY
Not the small red ones. The big
white sugar beets. I’ve done it
twice now.
FERN
Um... No... I’m gonna stay around
here. I know the area.
LINDA MAY
I’ll draw you a map anyway.
DOUG
Happy holidays Fern. See you next
year.
FERN
You too, Doug.
13.
The blue flame of a Mr. Buddy heater glows in the corner. The
sound of fireworks in the distance.
Fern makes a treat for herself -- bread with hot milk and
sugar. She adjusts her Happy New Year headband.
Fern cleans thick snow off of Vanguard when she sees a DOG
sniffing near her things.
PATTY
Carl had a stroke!
FERN
Is he dead?
PATTY
No! No. But his daughter took him
back east.
FERN
They didn’t take the dog?!
PATTY
They didn’t take the dog. Do you
want to keep him? His name is
Scout.
FERN
No. I can’t. I don’t have space.
PATTY
He’s a good guard dog. You know...
it’s not safe for a woman to be out
there all alone.
FERN
I’ve got nothing people want.
PATTY
Oooh... I’m sorry.
(beat)
You’re checking out tomorrow right?
14.
FERN
Yeah... I finished at Amazon last
week. How much is it now?
PATTY
Let’s see, Amazon paid for your
parking spot until this Thursday.
Afterwards, it’s thirty-three a
night and nine-fifty a month.
FERN
What about a discount if I don’t
use the electrical and dump? I just
got my van.
PATTY
No sorry. We’re set up for RVs. If
you live in a van, why not just go
somewhere warmer?
FERN
I’m trying to find a job around
here.
PATTY
Oh. Ok. Good luck with that.
FERN
Aright, Patty. Bye.
PATTY
So long, Fern. See you next year.
Fern steps out into the cold roar of traffic outside. Scout
still waits. Fern pets him awkwardly and goes on her way.
FERN
I went to college. I studied
English and Theater. I have skills
in the service industry. I was a
waiter while I was in school. I
also have secretarial skills. One
summer I answered fan letters for
ACDC. My husband worked at the USG
Empire mine and I worked for their
HR department for a few years, then
I stopped working because of... an
illness in the family.
15.
RECRUITER
Didn’t the Empire mine shut down?
FERN
Yeah. Last year. We all moved out.
FERN (CONT'D)
I also did a lot of part time jobs.
I tutored, I cashiered at the
Empire store and I also worked at
the Black Rock Information Center
in Gerlach during Burning Man every
year. Have you been to Burning Man?
RECRUITER
No, but my son goes every year --
FERN
Ah! So you know, people have all
kinds of questions. I took care of
it all. I just worked at Amazon
during the holidays. I’m also very
handy and I have my own tools.
RECRUITER
That’s... all very good. But you’re
not specialized in anything?
RECRUITER (CONT'D)
Have you looked into early
retirement?
FERN
I don’t want to retire! I... don’t
think I can get by on the benefits
anyway. I need work. I like work.
RECRUITER
I understand but the jobs we have
require special trainings, and
frankly they won’t be available
until the weather gets better.
Fern is wearing two hats and gloves as she shakes off a rug.
RACHEL
Hello, ma’am. I’m Rachel, I’m the
manager here at Fox Peak --
FERN
-- I asked and someone told me I
can park here overnight.
RACHEL
Yes, you’re fine. But you know the
temperature’s gonna drop. It gets
really cold at night. Real cold.
FERN
I have a really good sleeping bag.
RACHEL
I don’t want to overstep my
boundaries here, but there is a
church down by Seven-Eleven. A
Baptist church and they do have
open bed --
FERN
I’m gonna be good! Thank you.
She goes further, finds another sign, and makes a sharp turn
deeper into the desert.
LINDA MAY
That’s Bob Wells.
BOB WELLS
We not only accept the tyranny of
the dollar. We embrace it. We
gladly live by it our whole lives.
I think of the analogy as like a
work horse.
(MORE)
18.
Steaming hot chili is served and shared with all from two
large pots, similar to the old-fashioned hobo stew.
FERN
What’s that?
DAVE
This is vegan.
FERN
No thanks, I’m a carnivore.
SWANKIE
I’m a carnivore too!
BRYCE
I’m a Vietnam vet and I got PTSD. I
really can’t handle loud noises,
big crowds, fireworks. Bob helped
me. I got a pickup truck and
camper. I can live out here. And be
at peace.
DENI
I had finally convinced my grandpa,
my poppa and my momma that we
should take off in an RV and see
the country. But then both of them
were told they had cancer and they
died three weeks apart. I began
watching Bob Wells videos on van
dwelling. Then I bought my van
Paint, because ‘she takes me where
I ain’t’. And started my healing
journey two years ago.
MERLE
I worked for corporate America for
twenty years. My friend Bill worked
for the same company and he had
liver failure. A week before he was
about to retire, HR called him, in
hospice, and said ‘let’s talk about
your retirement!’ He died ten days
later... having never taken that
sailboat he bought out of his
driveway. He missed out on
everything. He told me before he
died ‘just don’t waste any time,
Merle. Don’t waste any time.’ So I
retired as soon as I could. I
didn’t want my sailboat to be in my
driveway when I died.
(beat)
And it’s not. My sailboat is out
here in the desert.
Bob Wells and Fern sit on the edge of the camp talking.
20.
BOB WELLS
I can’t imagine what you’re going
through. The loss of your husband.
The loss of your whole town and
friends. That kind of loss is never
easy.
LINDA MAY
Hey Fern! Come join us.
FERN
No. I’m just gonna take a little
walk. Be right back.
BOB WELLS
A lot of folks ask me: ‘Bob, I want
to live this lifestyle, but I work
in the city. What do I do about the
dreaded ‘knock on the door’. So I
created what I call the Ten
Commandments of Stealth Parking.
FOREST
That’s it. You gotta make the hole
bigger.
SUANNE
I love this lifestyle. Freedom,
beauty and connection with the
earth. But there is a tradeoff --
you gotta learn to take care of
your own shit!
SUANNA
(displays a medium bucket)
Most of us use a five-gallon
bucket. Most of us are in vans or
something larger. I’m in a Prius...
(displays a small bucket)
So I use a two-gallon bucket. And
If you have bad knees...
(displays a large bucket)
You can use a seven-gallon bucket!
Look, it’s like Goldilocks and the
Three Bears!
DAVE
(leans over)
You should take this one. That
one’s kinda funky.
FERN
These yours?
DAVE
Yep. There’s a black hole in every
van. One time I had seven of these
can openers.
FERN
Doesn’t happen to me.
DAVE
Really.
FERN
I know exactly where everything is.
FERN (CONT'D)
Trade you for a pot holder. I make
them.
DAVE
Thanks. First year?
FERN
Yep. You?
DAVE
Been coming here every year. I’m
what you would call a ‘FOB’ --
Friend of Bob’s. You read his book?
FERN
It’s my bible.
(picks up a tray)
Nice.
DAVE
(pretends to reach for it)
It is nice.
FERN
(laughs)
No, no. It’s coming home with me.
(walks away)
See ya.
DAVE
(waves)
See you around.
Fern, Linda May and Swankie munch on corn dogs and sign up
for seasonal jobs. The ladies are having a great time.
23.
SWANKIE
They are HUGE!
FERN
Like dinosaurs.
LINDA MAY
Do you know how much money is
sitting right here?
FERN
Washer and dryer!
LINDA MAY
Now that’s real nice.
NOMADS
In our vans again / Just can't wait
to get in our vans again / The life
we love is in the desert with our
friends / And we can't wait to get
in our vans again.
NOMADS (CONT'D)
Fern, Linda May, Swankie and more WOMEN line dance together.
Fern is drunk and having a great time.
The RTR has come to an end. Fern walks passed a line of vans
and RVs pulling out of the campsite, like an old fashioned
wagon train, heading on to greener pastures.
She inspects the bulletin board for local jobs. She tears off
a contact number.
25.
FERN
Hey Ron! Can you come here for a
second? These guys have some really
nice stuff.
FERN (CONT'D)
This is Noodle, Roxy. This is Ron.
NOODLE
Hey Ron. Just trying to make some
gas money.
RON
Not sure we need new products --
FERN
Yeah, but these are much nicer than
what we have going on here. Look at
the details. Look, Ron, look!
VOICE
Hello, ma’am.
Fern looks back and sees DEREK, one of the travelers in his
early twenties, approaches her. He is straight out of a Walt
Whitman novel, wearing suspenders and a misshapen cowboy hat.
DEREK
Would you by chance have an extra
cigarette?
FERN
Yeah sure. Need a light?
26.
Fern lights Derek’s cigarette and notices that his hands and
forearms are covered in tattoos. The inked words on his
knuckles read “RAIL FARE”.
FERN (CONT'D)
(offers him the lighter)
Need it?
DEREK
Why sure. Thank you. I’m Derek.
FERN
Fern.
DEREK
Fern. Well, it’s nice to meet you.
I’ll be seeing you.
Derek walks away. Fern watches him go, concerned to see those
so young out here on the road.
The pirate flag is still up. Fern hesitates and knocks on the
door. No one answers at first, she knocks again.
SWANKIE
What? I’m busy!
FERN
Sorry! Swankie, it’s Fern! Can I
talk to you?
SWANKIE
Didn’t you see the flag? That means
do not disturb -- !
FERN
-- I know. I need a ride into town.
SWANKIE
Why?
27.
FERN
I blew my tire.
SWANKIE
You blew your tire.
FERN
Yeah.
SWANKIE
Go change it!
FERN
I don’t have a spare.
SWANKIE
You don’t have a spare.
(stares)
You’re out here in the boondocks
and you don’t have a spare?!
SWANKIE
You need to take this lifestyle
seriously. This is not a holiday.
You can die out here. You know
that? You can die out here. I don’t
want you to die.
FERN
I really appreciate it, Swankie.
SWANKIE
You’re welcome. You can pay me
back.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
See, I’m going on an important trip
and I got a lot of getting ready to
do. I can’t get things done fast
enough, with my arm. I can’t lift
it, look, hey, look.
(tries to lift her arm
dramatically)
Ouch! See? I can’t --
28.
FERN
Ok! Yes --
SWANKIE
Good. I really appreciate it.
SWANKIE
I’m going to leave you the rest of
my paint. You need to touch up your
van. It’s looking kinda...ratty.
FERN
What? No. She just needs a wash.
SWANKIE
Oh, she needs more than a wash.
Take my paint.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I’m digitizing home videos --
Watch! Watch!
The old laptop display a video of her skydiving with her SON
from twenty years ago. The image is fuzzy but Fern can still
make out Swankie, laughing as she jumps out of the airplane.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
Off we go. To the blue yonder.
That’s me and my son Doug. I
surprised him for his 30th
birthday. Look! He’s gonna grab me
mid-air and kisses me!
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
Ha! Did you see that!?
29.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I used to like him. That was before
he turned so goddamn boring.
Fern brushes her teeth, gargles and spits into a dry bush.
FERN
(groans)
Ratty...
Suddenly she’s got a bad stomach and needs the toilet. She
pulls out her five gallon bucket and does a number two.
SWANKIE (O.S.)
Hello. It’s me!
FERN
What?! I’m indisposed!
SWANKIE
When did I buy all this crap?
FERN
(organizing)
Well, it adds up. I got mine in
storage.
SWANKIE
I hate storage. I put an ad on
Quartzsite Chatters.
(MORE)
30.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I hope people come. I hate to throw
things away...
FERN
Why are you giving everything away?
SWANKIE
You like that chair?
FERN
I love it.
SWANKIE
Take it. It’s yours. Check these
out.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
These are coming with me.
FERN
You found all these?
SWANKIE
Oh yeah. My eyes are always on the
ground wherever I went. This one is
fossilized pinewood. This one is
jasper from around here. This one,
the red, white and blue, is...
FERN
What’s wrong? Swankie?
FERN (CONT'D)
Come and sit down.
SWANKIE
My head hurts really bad and I’m
nauseated.
FERN
Here, drink.
Fern is digitizing the home videos for her. She watches fuzzy
footage of Swankie dressed as a carpenter’s wife working at
the Living History Museum.
FERN
Are you alright?
SWANKIE
I guess...
FERN
(carefully)
Are you sure? Swankie?
Swankie hesitates.
FERN (CONT'D)
What’s this trip about?
SWANKIE
...I have cancer.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I had it a while back. They removed
it from my lung. But it came back.
Small cell carcinoma. They told me
its spread to my brain and they’ve
only given me seven or eight months
to live. Something like that. I
didn’t get the lucky gene. No, sir.
FERN
I’m so sorry, Swankie.
SWANKIE
I’m gonna take my trip. Gonna go
back to Alaska. I’ve had some good
memories there kayaking. I have
this book called Final Exit by Dr.
Kevorkian, some people call him
‘Doctor Death’. It shows you
various ways to end your life if
you need to. It’s kinda like a
recipe.
(MORE)
32.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I have it if I have to fall back on
it for some ideas, but I’m not
going to spend any more time
indoors in a hospital. No thanks.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
I’m gonna be seventy-five this year
and I think I’ve had a pretty good
life. I’ve seen some really neat
things kayaking all over the
country... A moose family on a
river in Idaho. Big white pelicans
landing just six feet over my kayak
on a lake in Colorado. Or... coming
round a bend of a cliff and finding
hundreds and hundreds of swallow
nests on the wall of the cliff. And
the swallows flying all around,
reflecting in the water so it looks
like I’m flying with the swallows.
And little babies are hatching out.
Egg shells are falling out of the
nest and landing on the water right
next to me, these little white
shells. And... it was just so
awesome, Fern! I felt I had done
enough. My life was complete. I
felt like if I were to die right
then, it would be OK. How many
people can say that?
Swankie shows Fern how to rock hunt under the orange sky.
SWANKIE (V.O.)
Maybe when I die, my friends will
throw a rock in a fire in
remembrance of me.
Swankie shows a MAN how to use her tools that he picked up.
She explain the origin of her doll collection to TWO WOMEN.
SWANKIE
My grandmother gave me that. Take
good care of it.
Fern closes the curtain and takes out a metal box with a few
random items and photos.
She looks through them -- Some are from her younger years:
Fern dressed up with her parents. Fern and her sister DOLLY,
smiling into camera. Fern acting in a play.
FERN
Can I tell you something, Swankie?
SWANKIE
What?
FERN
I keep thinking a lot about my
husband Beau. Did I ever tell you
about him?
SWANKIE
No. Bo, like b,o?
34.
FERN
No, B,e,a,u. It’s a nickname. It
means boyfriend. My mom called him,
“your beau”, and it stuck.
Anyway... When it got real bad at
the end, they had him in the
hospital with the morphine drips. I
would sit there at night and I
would want to put my thumb down on
that morphine drip just a little
longer... so I could let him go.
FERN (CONT'D)
Maybe I should’ve tried harder, you
know, so he could’ve have gone
sooner without all that pain...
SWANKIE
Maybe he didn’t want that. Maybe he
was trying to stay with you for as
long as he could.
(beat)
I’m sure you took good care of him,
Fern.
FERN
I did.
When it’s over, Swankie covers her now clean-shaven head with
an overly colorful floral hat.
SWANKIE
Do you like my hat? I bought it for
two dollars. You think people will
stop calling me “sir” if I wear it?
FERN
(smiles)
Maybe.
SWANKIE
One last favor?
FERN
What?
Swankie goes back into her van and comes out with a box.
35.
SWANKIE
These are all the home videos. All
digitized. I’ll give you my son’s
address and you can bring this to
him. He lives in Yuma.
FERN
Why wouldn’t you go yourself?
SWANKIE
I got no time for it.
FERN
But... What should I tell him?
SWANKIE
Nothing about any of this. I want
to be left alone. So nothing. Just
tell him it’s from me and he can do
whatever he wants with them.
Before Fern can protest, Swankie climbs into her van, the
floral hat on her head and her arm still in the sling.
SWANKIE (CONT'D)
Take care, Fern! See you down the
road!
Fern stands there for a long time, watching the white van
rattle towards the horizon.
PAUL WINER
Hey, hey, now how about a drink?
How about a toast to our friends?
Not the friends you see every day,
no. Instead we’re gonna drink to
the friends who had to go away. I
bet you know just who I mean -- the
friends who had to depart, the
friends in our hearts.
(Singing)
You hear the blues, in my boogie,
can you see the blood in my beer?
(MORE)
36.
DOUG
Yes?
FERN
Hi. My name’s Fern. I’m... I know
your mother, Swankie.
DOUG
Ok?
FERN
I’m just here to drop off some
things she wanted you to have.
DOUG
And, where is she?
FERN
She’s gone... to Alaska! To kayak.
DOUG
(sighs)
And, what’s in the box?
FERN
I’m not sure. Uh... Some home
videos. Digitized. One of them is
from your 30th birthday skydiving --
37.
DOUG
Just leave it there.
FERN
There?
DOUG
Look. I don’t know what my mother
has told you. But she’ll do
anything to get out of coming to
see her family.
Beyond the desert is the red canyons and green mountains. The
Black Hills and the Great Plains...
Fern walks around the campground, excited about her new job,
offering coffee to campers.
FERN
Hello! Coffee?
A man pops out from behind the van. It’s Dave, dressed in the
National Park volunteer uniform.
DAVE
Oh, Oh hi...
FERN
Hello. Coffee?
DAVE
I... know you.
FERN
Yes. I have your can opener.
DAVE
That’s right.
FERN
Dave.
DAVE
Fern. So, you’re working here?
FERN
Yup. First year. With Linda May.
You know her.
DAVE
I sure do...
FERN
...Coffee?
DAVE
Yes, yes, just...
39.
Dave quickly gets a camping mug. Fern pours him some coffee.
He drops the lid clumsily.
FERN
(hurries away)
It’s just black, so, if you want
anything else... OK, bye. I’m your
camp host!
Linda May shows Fern the ropes of camp hosting. Fern follows
Linda around while pushing a yellow mopping station.
The ladies clean dirty sinks and hairy shower stalls. The
toilets are the worst, but Fern is dedicated.
Fern and Linda May drive a golf cart around, welcoming the
fun and fresh air.
VOICE
Excuse me. Are you the camp host?
Fern and Linda stop messing around and sees VICTOR, a tough
looking man walking up to them.
FERN
Yes. Yes. We are.
(puts the underwear in a
trash bag)
I’d shake your hand but you
wouldn’t want to.
VICTOR
Right. Sorry to bother you but the
power is out. I think the whole
grid is down. I’m trying to set up
for my daughter’s birthday.
FERN
Is it on?!
40.
VICTOR
Yup! Thank you!
Fern and Linda May join the birthday party. Linda May is
chatting with Victor’s family and making balloons for the
kids. Fern is a little awkward and eats a slice of the
rainbow colored birthday cake by herself as the sun sets.
LINDA MAY
We are here for the tour.
TOUR GUIDE
Welcome! The tour is in fifteen
minutes. You can wait right here.
Here is a map...
While the tour guide explains away, Fern notices Dave behind
the counter, answering questions for TWO YOUNG FEMALE
TRAVELERS, drawing on a large map for them.
DAVE
About seventy-five million years
ago a shallow sea covered the Great
Plains region. Eventually the
continental plates shifted, causing
the land under the sea to rise and
the water to retreat. During this
time the Badlands looked nothing
like it does today...
She turns around and walks back towards the direction she
came from. But soon she finds herself in the same spot.
Everything looks the same.
A LOUD whistle.
She looks up and sees Dave’s tiny figure in the far distance.
Relieved, she waves.
DAVE (CONT'D)
Found anything interesting?
FERN
Rocks!
Fern climbs back onto the trail. Before she rejoins the group
she looks back at Dave, who is still on the cliff, having a
moment on his own watching the dusky sky.
Time passed. Fern and Linda May have become friends with Dave
and GREG, the bartender of a local cowboy bar.
FERN
To the Earthship!
DAVE/LINDA/GREG
To the Earthship!
LINDA MAY
See that there? See the sand?
That’s a good sign. It’s buildable.
GREG
What’s that thing?
LINDA MAY
That’s a prickly pear. You can make
jam from it. Jelly, cactus candy.
DAVE
Wine. Got any neighbors?
42.
LINDA MAY
Closest neighbor is two miles away.
DAVE
Exactly where you want them.
LINDA MAY
Exactly.
GREG
You’re gonna build this thing
yourself?
LINDA MAY
Oh yeah. I’m been in construction
most of my life. I’ve never got to
build my own house. This Earthship
will be something I’m proud to
leave for grandchildren.
LINDA MAY
I’m not gonna see you for a while.
FERN
I know...
LINDA MAY
You come and see me. You come and
stay as long as you like, whenever
you like.
FERN
Thank you, Linda May.
LINDA MAY
Thank you. You have given me so
much.
Fern can’t sleep. She tosses and turns. She fishes for her
tobacco but it’s out.
FERN
Hi.
DAVE
Hey!
FERN
Can I bum a cigarette? I ran out.
DAVE
Oh. I don’t have any.
FERN
Really?
DAVE
I don’t really smoke. I was just
being polite at the bar. People
keep giving them to me because they
think I look like a smoker --
FERN
So you don’t have any.
DAVE
Do I look like a smoker?
FERN
(walks away)
I’m going up to Wall.
DAVE
It’s too late to drive through the
park!
FERN (O.S.)
Yep!
44.
Fern drives through the park. The pale and sharp walls of the
badlands look more menacing at night. She hums.
DAVE
(walks by)
What’s going on?
FERN
Ants! I got ants!
DAVE
Oh, ants. They’re alright --
FERN
They’re not alright, Dave! They are
in my food!
(beat)
What?
DAVE
I... got you these.
FERN
What are they?
DAVE
I think it’s better if you don’t
drive through the park at night,
just for cigarettes. So, I got you
these licorice sticks --
FERN
I can’t smoke licorice sticks.
DAVE
I know... But you can chew them. It
helps with the urge --
45.
FERN
I’m not gonna quit smoking, Dave.
DAVE
I know... But you should try these.
They are good for digestion too.
FERN
...Fine. Thanks.
She fakes a smile and carries on. Dave tries to help her with
the box she is carrying. She dodges.
FERN (CONT'D)
I got it.
DAVE
Where do you want these -- ?
DAVE (CONT'D)
Oh.
DAVE (CONT'D)
I’m sorry. I --
FERN
(explodes)
Go over there!
DAVE
Fern --
FERN
Go! Stay over there!
DAVE
You don’t have to shout. I’m going.
Dave drops the box and walks away, frustration in his voice.
Fern glues the pieces back together. She manages to save one.
She looks at it for a moment, relieved.
Fern mops the floor and cleans vomit from a toilet seat.
GRANDMA
You are one of those lucky people
who is from the Unites States.
FERN
Yes ma’am. The U.S. Of A.
GRANDMA
And you can travel anywhere. And
they sometimes call you ‘nomads’ or
‘people who don’t have a home’. I
see that you have this ring. Are
you married?
FERN
I am. But my husband died.
GRANDMA
That ring is a circle and it never
ends. That means that your love
never ends. His love for you never
ends. And you may not be able to
take it off if you tried.
FERN
I don’t think I could.
FERN
You need to eat something. I made
soup.
DAVE
Thanks. I don’t think I can.
FERN
Still over a hundred!
DAVE
Fever’s good. It burns the bad
stuff off.
FERN
It’s been burning for a couple of
days, Dave!
DAVE
I’m fine. I’ll eat some of that...
FERN
You can’t eat it, can you?
DAVE
My stomach hurts. It’s probably a
bug.
FERN
A bug, or it could be something
serious.
DAVE
Yeah. It could be.
FERN
Really?!
48.
DAVE
Yeah...
NURSE MATT
He has a case of diverticulitis,
which is an inflammation of his
intestines. They did a laparoscopic
surgery --
FERN
He had surgery?!
NURSE MATT
It’s standard. He can leave and be
back at work in a week. Would you
like to see him?
FERN
...No. It’s ok. Bye.
Fern puts a few food items on the table. Dave lies in bed,
looking much healthier.
DAVE
Woo. Cup of noodles.
FERN
It’s great when you’re sick. And...
Juice box. Animal crackers. Jello.
And this.
DAVE
That’s my favorite.
FERN
I know.
DAVE
(moved)
Thanks, Fern.
FERN
See you back at work. Two more
weeks left.
DAVE
Where’re you going afterwards?
FERN
Beet harvest in Nebraska.
DAVE
That doesn’t start until October.
FERN
What about you?
DAVE
I’m starting at Wall Drug. It’s
kind of fun, as far as retail goes.
I can see if they have an opening.
FERN
For me?
DAVE
Yes.
FERN
Why?
50.
DAVE
Good pay. Great parking. People are
nice... And, I don’t think you
should leave yet --
FERN
Get better. Bye.
DAVE
Doing OK?
FERN
Good, good, good!
After hours, Fern and Dave play a duck shooting game in the
arcade. Fern helps Dave to pick out a new hunting knife.
FERN
Oh my god. Look at him!!
Fern pets Tank with two YOUNG KIDS. Dave talks about what he
knows about Tank as if they are long time friends.
FERN (CONT'D)
No, I don't like it. Keep its head
away from me!
Dave tries to keep his cool, but is very happy with himself
that Fern is having a great time.
Fern and Dave walk towards the famed 80ft Wall Drug dinosaur,
enclosed in metal fences and stands on a strip of barren land
next to the highway.
BRAD
That’s planet Vega in the mid-
northern latitudes. Two thousand
light years away. It takes twenty-
four years for it’s light to get
here to earth. If Vega dies tonight
and goes dark, we can still see its
light for the next twenty-four
years. How about that?
BRAD (CONT'D)
The telescope is set up on Jupiter.
The largest planet in our solar
system.
52.
BRAD (CONT'D)
Stars blow up and they shoot plasma
and atoms out into space. They
sometimes land on earth, nourish
the soil and become part of you.
So hold out your right hand...
BRAD (CONT'D)
...and look at a star. Because
there are atoms from stars that
blew up eons ago that landed on
this planet and now they’re in your
hand.
FERN
Hi. Sorry, we’re closed.
JAMES
I’m looking for Dave. I’m his son,
James.
FERN
He’s in the kitchen....
JAMES
That way?
FERN
Just around the corner.
Fern watches James go. Dave never talked about his son.
Later, while Fern mops the dining room floor, James walks in
with a tray of burger and fries.
FERN
Sit there. I just cleaned it.
JAMES
(sits down)
I’ve been through here, what,
twice?
(looks around the room)
This place is so weird. Who would
wanna live here?
FERN
(keeps cleaning)
I can think of worse places.
JAMES
(shakes ketchup)
I guess so... You wanna know the
best way to get to know a place?
FERN
What is it?
JAMES
AA meetings.
FERN
...Really?
JAMES
Back then when I was with the band,
I had to travel a lot. Man, I tell
you, you don’t really get to know a
place until you show up at their AA
meetings.
FERN
You been to one around here?
JAMES
Yeah. In Rapid City. Man. So weird.
FERN
How come?
JAMES
Not in a bad way. You know? It’s
like... every AA meeting I’ve been
to around this whole fucking
country. People are all the same.
(MORE)
54.
JAMES (CONT'D)
We all got the same fucking
problems. The same shit to deal
with. Isn’t that nice to know?
FERN
How’s the burger?
JAMES
It’s OK.
FERN
Good cook, your Dad.
JAMES
It’s not that hard to make a
burger.
FERN
Oooh. Harsh.
DAVE
That’s his wife Emily. She’s about
to have a baby.
FERN
You’re going to be a grandfather!
When’s she due?
DAVE
In two weeks. James’s on his way
back home now... He wants me to go
back with him.
FERN
You should go.
DAVE
I was... He doesn’t like that I
wasn’t around much when he was
young. Which is, obviously, my
fault. And when he got older, I
tried to be around, but I guess I
just forgot how to be a dad.
Anyway, I wasn’t very good at it.
We are ok now. I’m just not sure if
he really wants me to be there.
FERN
Oh, I think he does.
DAVE
Yeah?
FERN
Don’t think about it too much,
Dave. Just go. Be a grandfather.
DAVE
Do you want to come with me?
FERN
Where?
Fern gives up trying to make the bag fit. She turns to Dave.
DAVE
Maybe not if you don’t want to.
FERN
I can visit sometime.
DAVE
Yeah. Great.
Fern looks down at the bag of lettuce she’s holding, not sure
what to do with it or what else to say.
Fern is awake. She can hear Dave packing up his van and
walking over. A knock on the door. She ignores it.
56.
The wind is strong. Fern sits for a moment, then holds up the
rock and looks through the hole at the boundless badlands...
Fern walks down the empty street. Her shadow gets longer as
she disappears into the night.
Cold wind blows across the dusty plains. It’s late autumn in
Scottsbluff, Nebraska.
The work and weather is harsh and Fern looks exhausted. But
she keeps going with pride in her hard work.
Fern watches them from afar. A GROUP OF MEN are talking about
football. A COUPLE are arguing.
The sound of a loud truck wakes Fern up. She tries to go back
to sleep. Her phone beeps.
FERN
You made it, Swankie.
Fern scrubs dirt off of her hair and nails. She looks at
herself in the mirror.
She freaks out and pulls the curtain shut, almost choking on
her chicken.
LOUD knocks.
MAN (O.S.)
You can’t sleep here! There’s no
overnight parking!
FERN
Ok! Sorry! I’m leaving! I’m
leaving...
Fern drives. The plains turn flatter and colder. It’s harvest
time. Tractors and field workers in the distance...
Fern hangs the beaver pelt above her bed. Happy with it.
She puts the key in the ignition and starts the van. Silence.
FERN
Oh no. No. No...
Later, Ken hands her the estimate behind the counter, while
his son JERMEY surfs the internet next to him.
KEN
This is what you’re looking at.
Parts and labor twenty three
hundred dollars with tax.
FERN
Yikes.
JEREMY
I just looked up the value on your
van. A 2004 E150. With that high
milage, you’re at best looking at
five thousand dollars.
KEN
So I would recommend taking that
money and putting it towards
another vehicle instead --
FERN
(distressed)
No, well, I can’t do that! I can’t
do that! See... I spent a lot of
time and money building the inside
out.
(MORE)
60.
FERN (CONT'D)
A lot of people don’t understand
the value of that, but it’s not
something you can just... I live in
there. It’s my home.
FERN
I’m going back to Amazon in a
couple of weeks and I can pay you
back with my first pay check.
FERN (CONT'D)
I can’t! I don’t have a car... no I
don’t want to take the bus.
(beat)
Why? You think I’m being difficult?
I think you’re being a bitch!
KEN
I’m about to lock up...
FERN
Almost done.
KEN
(peaks in)
It is a very nice van, ma’am.
FERN
Thanks... Mind if I keep it here?
I’m going to my sister’s tomorrow
to get the money. Can you make sure
she’s safe?
KEN
I got a few cars parked behind you
in the same situation. It’ll be
safe.
Fern walks up to the front porch. She presses the door bell.
No one answers. She presses it over and over again.
DOLLY
Hi Fern. That door bell works.
FERN
Well, I couldn’t hear it.
DOLLY
Woah. You cut your hair.
FERN
Yep. What? What Dolly?
DOLLY
Nothing --
FERN
Oh my god! I haven’t even stepped
into the door yet --
DOLLY
Come on in!
Fern eats a cookie from the tray. Not great. She forces it
down and takes out the beaver pelt.
62.
FERN
I bought you a gift.
DOLLY
What is it?
FERN
It’s a beaver pelt.
DOLLY
What am I supposed to do with a
beaver pelt?
FERN
It’s decorative. Put it up
somewhere.
DOLLY
Can you make your four egg cake for
me? George has some friends over.
FERN
Are you going to tell them I made
it, or that you did?
FERN (CONT'D)
I’ll make the cake. But then I have
to leave.
DOLLY
No. I want you to stay the night.
FERN
I can’t. I gotta get back.
DOLLY
Get back where?
FERN
To the garage to pick up my van!
DOLLY
It’s just a van! It’ll be there.
You can’t just stay for one night?
FERN
Dolly! You know what...?
(calms herself)
Why do you have to make me come all
the way here to lend me money? Why?
63.
DOLLY
Because I want to make sure my
sister’s still alive.
FERN
Why wouldn’t I be?
DOLLY
You never visit. When I tried to
call you, you never answer.
FERN
I never have gas money or signal.
The banter reaches a dead end. They stay quiet for a moment.
FERN (CONT'D)
Do you even have enough eggs?
FERN
Got my famous four egg cake.
FERN (CONT'D)
Dolly talked me into it. Where do
you want it?
GEORGE
Right there is fine.
FERN
I want that one.
GEORGE
It’s got your name on it.
DOLLY
This is my sister, Fern.
JIM
Hi Fern, I’m Jim. This is my wife
Pam.
64.
DOLLY
Jim has been working with George
for a long time.
JIM
George actually sold us our first
house before I got into real
estate. I’ve learned everything
from him --
FERN
Did Dolly ever tell you how they
met?
JIM
No...
FERN
I introduced Dolly to George, but I
knew George from way before. Long
story. You see, my sister’s a
flirt, Pam, she’d flirt with a
rock. So I took her out and I said
‘Listen, George is a really good
friend of mine. I don’t want you to
mess this up. If you’re not serious
about him, don’t mess with him’ --
DOLLY
And I didn’t ‘mess it up’ --
FERN
How many years have you been
together?
DOLLY
Thirty plus.
JIM
Worked out pretty good.
DOLLY
I was able to take care of things
myself after that ‘introduction’ --
FERN
You’re welcome.
GEORGE
It’s been a good year. We’ve got
more home sales and new
constructions. The stakeholders are
seriously talking about mortgage-
debt forgiveness.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
I think when we look back, we’re
gonna say, yes we hit the bottom
back in 2008. It was bad. But 2012
is the year that things are finally
looking up again.
FERN
I don’t want to disagree with you,
but I really do.
GEORGE
I’m just saying its finally getting
better. Jim?
JIM
We’ve got the numbers.
FERN
Yeah. The numbers. The numbers. But
how long do you think it lasts
before it crashes again? And what
if this time you can’t get back up?
What if you lose everything? I’ve
met plenty of people like that. I
think it’s strange that you
encourage people to use their life
savings, to get in debt, just to
buy houses they can’t afford!
GEORGE
Come on Fern. That’s a very limited
view on what we do --
FERN
Is it limited, George?
GEORGE
We help people build homes. So they
can start a family, have children,
take care of their parents. I mean,
we can’t all just chuck everything
and hit the road --
66.
FERN
Is that what you think I did?! I
chucked everything and hit the
road?!
DOLLY
...That’s not fair, George.
GEORGE
Right. I’m sorry.
More silence.
JIM
I... think... What George is trying
to say is that... We can’t all do
what you do. I think the way you
live is exciting and brave. And
frankly I’m jealous. But we can’t
all take the plunge, right? What
kind of society would that be?
JIM (CONT'D)
Also I don’t think we should ignore
the problem of homelessness. My
mother was homeless when she was a
teenager. It’s a serious problem --
FERN
I’m not homeless.
FERN (CONT'D)
I am houseless. Not homeless. There
is a difference.
DOLLY
There is.
(tries to defuse the
situation)
I mean if you think about it, what
the nomads are doing is not that
different than what the pioneers
did, right? They went west in their
wagons, living on the road. Fern is
a part of the American tradition. I
think it’s great!
DOLLY
Here you go.
She hands Fern an envelope. Fern looks into it and finds the
cash needed for Vanguard’s repair. She’s relieved.
FERN
Thanks, Dol. You know I’ll pay you
back right? I will.
DOLLY
I know.
DOLLY (CONT'D)
Wes is getting married.
FERN
Who?
DOLLY
Our cousin Wes?
FERN
Oh! Good for him.
DOLLY
Everyone is going back to Gibson
for the wedding. You should come
too. People ask about you.
FERN
(sarcastic)
Tell them the usual -- I live in a
van and have no money for gas.
DOLLY
You know what? I tell people how
great you’re doing. I tell them
you’re traveling all over the
country, having a great time.
FERN
It’s not like that. It’s not some
great adventure. I just don’t want
to be comfortable anymore. I want
to take a risk and try something
different... What?
68.
DOLLY
Oh Fern, that’s what you always
want. It’s always what’s out there
that’s more interesting. You left
home as soon as you could. You
married Beau when you only knew him
for a few months. And you dropped
everything and moved to the middle
of nowhere with him. Even after
Beau passed away, you still stayed
in Empire. I just don’t get it. You
could’ve left, did something with
you life, or met someone --
FERN
This is why I don’t want to come
here.
DOLLY
I’ve never said this to you before.
Maybe I should have... You’ve
always been the eccentric one
growing up. People thought you were
weird, but really, you were just
braver and more honest than any of
us. You can see me, when I try to
hide from everyone. Sometimes you
see me before I see myself. I
needed you in my life... And you’re
my sister. I would’ve loved to have
you around all these years. You
left a big hole by leaving.
Dolly comes out and hands her a packed lunch. They hug.
Fern walks away. She looks back for a moment, hesitates, but
keeps on going.
Fern climbs into the driver’s seat of Vanguard and starts the
engine. It runs good. Ken closes the hood and walks over.
69.
KEN
She’s ready to go. I threw in an
oil change and rotated your tires.
FERN
Thank you so much.
KEN
Where’re you headed?
FERN
(beat)
I don’t know.
KEN
Well, good luck to you.
Ken walks away. Fern sits there for a moment longer. Slowly,
she gives the steering wheel a hug.
VOICE
Police. Open the door.
Fern is all smiles while OFFICER STEVE runs her ID. She
notices a WOMAN taking her trash out and glancing over at
them. From the look on her face, it won’t surprise Fern that
it was this woman that called the police.
OFFICER STEVE
Are you living in your vehicle?
FERN
Only part-time.
70.
OFFICER STEVE
You know there is no camping
allowed on residential streets in
the city limit.
FERN
Yes! I was just traveling through.
I took a nap and overslept.
OFFICER STEVE
(doesn’t believe her)
If you need a place. Out in the
county you can do whatever you
want. Just keep driving until you
hit dirt.
FERN
People say that about me.
OFFICER STEVE
(hands her the ID)
Aright, Frances. You take care.
FERN
Thank you, officer, bye.
FERN
Hi, want a sandwich?
DEREK
I think I’ve met you before.
FERN
Yes, I’m Fern. I was working at T-
Rock in Quartzsite.
DEREK
You let Noodle sell his jewelry
there, didn’t ya?
FERN
Yep.
DEREK
Would you like a beer?
FERN
Ok. I’ll trade you for a sandwich.
DEREK
Right on.
DEREK (CONT'D)
It’s cold. You should sit down by
the fire.
FERN
(considers)
Ok. Why not.
DEREK
You gave me a lighter back in
quartzite.
FERN
You still have it?
DEREK
No, that’s long gone but I do have
this for ya.
DEREK (CONT'D)
I want you to have it.
72.
FERN
(takes it)
...Thanks. It’s really beautiful.
What’s that stone?
DEREK
That right there is dinosaur bone.
FERN
Really?
DEREK
Really. But I only know what they
tell me.
FERN
Where’s the bus? And your friends?
DEREK
The bus? Oh, the bus. They went
down to New Orleans.
FERN
I thought you all traveled
together.
DEREK
No... Noodle, Roxy and all of them
you saw with the bus, they come to
Quartzsite every winter to buy
gemstones and then they sell them
during their travels for the rest
of the year.
FERN
You don’t do that?
DEREK
No, ma’am. You gotta be a people
person to sell anything. I like
helping out on ranches, working
with animals.
FERN
And travel.
DEREK
And travel.
FERN
You always been like this?
73.
DEREK
I suppose... Ever since I was
little. I never liked what other
kids my age did, playing video
games and stuff like that. I always
just walked the railroad tracks.
Once I pass all the trees and
forests, I can see it going all the
way to the horizon. And I couldn’t
help it. As soon as I was old
enough, I started to jump trains. I
like the west. I like being able to
see the horizon.
FERN
...How old are you?
DEREK
Twenty-one years.
FERN
That’s... Impressive. Where are
your mom and dad?
DEREK
Back home in Wisconsin.
FERN
Think they worry about you?
FERN (CONT'D)
You don’t get lonely? Got a
girlfriend anywhere?
DEREK
Well, to be truthful, there is one.
She lives up near Lake Superior
Small farm. She’s happy with her
life there. I’m happy with mine.
(beat)
I write letters to her.
FERN
Smart man. Letters are good.
DEREK
But I can’t write about anything I
reckon she’d care about.
74.
FERN
You ever try poems?
DEREK
Can’t say I have. I don’t think I
know one. Do you know any?
FERN
How about one I used for my wedding
vows when I was not much older than
you?
DEREK
Right on. Mind if I hear it?
FERN
Aright. Lets see if I can remember
it...
(beat)
’Shall I compare thee to a summer’s
day? Thou art more lovely and more
temperate/ Rough winds do shake the
darling buds of May/ And summer’s
lease hath all too short a date/
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven
shines.
FERN (V.O.)
And often is his gold complexion
dimm'd/ And every fair from fair
sometime declines, By chance or
nature’s changing course undimm'd.
FERN (V.O.)
But thy eternal summer shall not
fade/ Nor lose possession of that
fair thou ow’st/ Nor shall death
brag thou wander’st in his shade/
When in eternal lines to time thou
grow’st/ So long as men can breathe
or eyes can see/ So long lives
this, and this gives life to thee.
75.
FERN
Woah.
She gets out of the van, taking with her a nicely-ironed blue
jean dress on a hanger and a box of chocolate.
VOICE
Fern!
DAVE
You made it!
FERN
Yeah. Hi!
Dave shows her in through the gate and introduces her to his
daughter-in-law EMILY, who is working in the garden.
DAVE
This is my daughter-in-law Emily.
FERN
Hi! Here --
76.
EMILY
(takes the chocolate)
Oh, thanks. So nice to finally meet
you. We’ve heard so much about you.
DAVE
Hey everyone, this is Fern.
VOICES
Hi Fern! Hello! Welcome!
FERN
You’ve got a flat.
DAVE
Huh?
FERN
Your van. One of your tires is
flat, Dave.
DAVE
Oh. Ok. I haven’t noticed.
FERN
Because you’re staying?
DAVE
Yeah...
77.
FERN
Good.
DAVE
I never expected to. Never thought
I’d spend another night under a
roof, but... It was getting pretty
lonely out there.
FERN
You had friends.
DAVE
Yeah...
FERN
What about Bob? You’ve known him
for years. And your friends at RTR?
DAVE
Yeah... But every time I say “bye”
to them, I don’t know If I’m going
to see them again. And most of the
time, I never see them again. It’s
fine at first... but, a decade of
that is something else.
FERN
Well, it’s really nice here.
DAVE
Yeah. It’s not bad... you can stay.
FERN
Great. Thanks. I gotta do laundry.
DAVE
(smiles)
Yes. Laundry.
FERN
And a bath.
DAVE
I meant staying longer, Fern. They
have a guest house.
DAVE (CONT'D)
I’m serious.
78.
FERN
What do they think about that?
DAVE
I asked them already.
DAVE (CONT'D)
I like you. You’re a really good
person. You get along with people,
for the most part and... I like
being around you.
DAVE (CONT'D)
We should drive to the beach
tomorrow if the weather is good.
(to the baby)
What do you think? We should take
her to the beach, yeah? Yeah...
DAVE
I just want to say a little welcome
to Fern. To the new one and the old
ones too and everyone in between.
So welcome Fern.
FERN
Thank you. Happy Thanksgiving!
Fern chows down the delicious food. She looks around and
considers the option of a second chance at a family life.
EMILY
Could I have one of those?
FERN
Yeah, sure. They’re roll-ups.
EMILY
That’s OK. I’m trying to quit, with
the baby and all. But...
FERN
I’ve given up trying. My friend
Linda May quit over night after
forty-three years. How about that?
EMILY
I’m really glad you’re here. Dave
talks about you a lot.
FERN
Yeah?
EMILY
He really likes you.
FERN
Yeah?
(changes subject)
You have a nice garden.
EMILY
It looks a lot better in the
summer. Did you have a garden?
FERN
No. But we had a really great lawn.
EMILY
Was that hard to do? Empire’s in
the desert, right? I like that
name, Empire.
FERN
When I first went there I couldn’t
believe how green the whole town
was. Everyone’s got green lawns.
Stupid to waste that much water I
guess. We even had a public pool
and a golf course.
80.
EMILY
Like an oasis.
FERN
It was.
FERN (CONT'D)
Our house was right on the edge of
the town. The backyard looked out
at this huge open space. It’s just
desert, desert, all the way to the
mountains.
(beat)
There was nothing in our way.
Fern takes a bath. Bliss. Like it’s the first time in years.
Fern carries her laundry down the stairs. She hears music and
looks into the study --
She climbs in, closes the door and lies under the covers.
She sits down at the empty dining room table and looks
around. Silence.
Fern drives through the quiet town lashed with wind and rain.
Fern walks around the cliff in the heavy wind and rain. She
takes off her hat and lets the rain wash down her face.
AL
Seems like more every year.
Fern smokes in the cold air as she facetimes with Linda May.
DOUG
See you next year, Fern. Happy
holidays.
FERN
You too, Doug.
She smiles watching and adjusts her Happy New Year headband.
Fern, with her head down, hikes the desert, looking for a
rock. She finally picks up one and feels its rough edges.
Bob Wells walks to the fire and looks down into the flames.
BOB WELLS
So long, Swankie. See you down the
road.
Fern stands next and tosses another rock. The embers rise up
into the night sky, disappearing amongst the stars.
FERN
I’ve been thinking a lot in the
past year about why I didn’t just
leave Empire when my husband Beau
died. I could’ve left and started a
new life sooner. But... I think I
somehow made up my mind that if I
just packed up and left, it would
be as if Beau never existed. You
see... Beau never knew his parents
and we never had kids. But he loved
Empire. He loved being there. He
loved his work. Everybody loved
him. So I stayed. Same town, same
house. It’s like my dad used to say
‘what’s remembered, lives’.
(beat)
I might’ve spent too much of my
life just... remembering. Know what
I mean, Bob?
BOB WELLS
I can relate... I rarely talk about
my son, but he took his own life
five years ago... Like you, I think
I’ve made up my mind that I’m going
to be his rememberer. I carry him
everywhere I go. I realized I could
honor him by helping people. It
gives me a reason to go through the
day. Some days thats all I’ve got.
Gay, the storage unit owner, and his grandson NICK, load
everything from Fern’s unit into a pick-up.
NICK
Is that all, Mrs. M?
FERN
That’s it, Nick. Thank you. You got
taller.
NICK
Yeah? Well, thanks. See ya, Mrs. M.
GAY
Sure you don’t want to keep any of
it?
Fern looks over at the possessions from her past. They look
foreign to her now.
FERN
No. I won’t miss any of it. Yard
sale?
GAY
Sure. But it’s hard these days.
Those Burners, they have money now.
They don’t stop here to scavenge
anymore. They’ve got their big rigs
flew in from San Francisco and all
over the place.
FERN
Really.
GAY
Yeah. Time has changed.
Fern walks towards the factory. She runs into ALBERT and
BERNIE, the mine’s last caretaker and his wife.
ALBERT
I’m the last employee. Kind of. I
just go around and make sure things
aren’t vandalized. And make sure
the llamas are alright.
FERN
Llamas?
ALBERT
Well, the company got some goats to
keep the lawn weeds down. But the
coyotes came and started to get the
goats. So, they got two llamas to
keep the coyotes away. But the
coyotes got the goats anyway. Now
those llamas are out of work. They
just live here now.
86.
ALBERT
It was around two o’clock. All the
workers were in here. And when it
was time, I pushed the button.
Everything just came to a halt. It
was quiet in here. Too quiet. The
last thing you want to hear in a
factory is silence.
(beat)
I thought of Beau on that day. I
wish he was here. We would’ve asked
him to stop the production line. It
was an honor to be able to do that.
The longest running mine in America
and he was one of our best. And he
was a good friend too.
Fern stands in front of her old house for a moment, the small
red mailbox is covered in rust.
She walks through the empty house, stepping over broken floor
tiles and tumbleweeds, onto the backyard where she shared
happy memories with the man she loved. The rosebushes she
planted are still there, withered.
Then she walks on, leaving the yard behind, passing the fence
door, towards the endless desert lies beyond, stretching all
the way to the horizon.
FADE TO BLACK.