The Sketchbook Play

By Luciana Rosania

JIM and HAROLD are second semester, freshman year roommates at college. It is late at night, and JIM is sleeping is his loft bed, across from HAROLD’s. The room is fairly clean. Lights are dim.)

HAROLD

(entering through the door in a frenzy) Where is it, where is it…

(HAROLD runs over to JIM’s backpack, which is leaning against his loft. He opens it and dumps its contents onto the floor. There are some books and pencils.)

HAROLD

(grabbing a spiral bound book) AH-HA!

(A flashlight turns on from above. HAROLD is in the spotlight, and JIM is pointing the light straight down at him)

JIM

What do you think you’re doing? Rummaging through my stuff?

HAROLD

Nope, just taking this.

(Lights on. HAROLD throws the book on top of his loft and then climbs up)

JIM

Hey! You’re going to break it. Give it back right now. I need to turn in a draft of a sketch tomorrow, and it’s in the sketchbook.

HAROLD

(partially to himself) Man, you shoulda ripped it out before I took an inspection…

JIM

You’re going to open it? You can’t do that! You are invading my privacy!

HAROLD

We share a room. Consider your privacy already invaded. You’re welcome. (he starts flipping the pages rapidly.)

JIM

By the way, you’re not welcome. In my journal. Get your hands off.

HAROLD

Try me. (JIM grabs the flashlight and chucks it at HAROLD. He horribly misses.) That’s all you got? (JIM sighs.) Well, by the end of the year, you’ll have a good arm, one way or another. Frisbee, baseball, boxing, all those are- (continues to talk)

JIM

Can you just hand me the book.

HAROLD

Sports are good! You should give it a try sometime. Tell you what, I have a buddy in my English seminar that has– (continues to talk, increasingly louder)

JIM

Harold, you gotta stop this. Now.

HAROLD

Tennis is so good for eye-hand coordination, but I’m not that good at it, as you know, b–

JIM

Shut up and give me the stupid book. I’m not joking. Why do you need it anyways? (there is a pause. HAROLD starts to open the book with urgency) I told you not to open the book! If you don’t give me a reason, I’ll come over and wrestle you for it.

(HAROLD chuckles, JIM and gets out of his loft in a fury and climbs up HAROLD’s loft.)

HAROLD

Okay, chill man. I’ll give you a reason.

(JIM is now sitting, facing HAROLD)

(hesitantly) I need a blank sheet for a project I’m doing. It’s watercolor, so the sketchbook will hold it better than the ordinary printer paper.

(Beat.)

JIM

(hesitantly) I used the last sheet for the project I was telling you about.

(Beat. HAROLD slowly opens the journal. JIM puts his head in his hands.)

Someone save me from this pain. Please.

HAROLD

Explain this. This sheet looks pretty blank to me, front and back. (He flips to another random page.) And this one does too. And this one (flips to a third page.) looks- (there is a pause.) this is beautiful. Who did you draw?

(there is a long pause)

JIM

Umm… it’s-

HAROLD

It’s her, right?

JIM

Yeah. I’m sorry, I didn’t want to-

HAROLD

No, it’s fine.

(Beat.)

JIM

It is, really? Is it really okay for us to hold on for this long?

HAROLD

Well, if it’s this book, no. I’ll hold onto it for as long as I want.

JIM

Oh no you won’t! (JIM clenches his fist and goes to swing) Take this!

(HAROLD easily blocks his punch by using his hand to defer the arm)

HAROLD

Good effort. Now tell me, where did–

(JIM groans and lays down in frustration.)

JIM

You don’t understand, do you? I need that book. Have you ever thought about what life would be like without sports? Without baseball, without soccer?

HAROLD

(teasingly) Awww, man. But I can take an off day. I can take a dead week. You can’t take twenty minutes without your “prized possession.”

JIM

You’re kidding, right? Of course I can.

HAROLD

I know you can’t, stop bluffing.

JIM

(in defeat) I know I can’t, Harold. I can’t because she’s there. She’s in the pages, in the cover, in the seams and folds and cracks and bent corners.

HAROLD

And in the dried teardrops too? They left marks on a few of these ones. (Beat. No response.)

(softer) The teardrops too?

JIM

Some of them.

HAROLD

Most of them.

(There is a pause.)

JIM

Fine, most of them. I go through these sketchbooks like wildfire anyways, but when she left me, I just couldn’t stop thinking about her.

(HAROLD yawns. He continues to flip through the pages.)

HAROLD

These are amazing. This one, that’s the park bench. We had ice cream there on our second date.

JIM

We fed birds there in March for a couple of weeks.

HAROLD

And the sky was blue that day…

JIM

It was mid-morning…

HAROLD

She told me to miss soccer practice…

JIM

We got some coffee…

HAROLD

And her smile drew me in…

JIM

The twinkle in her eyes spoke to me…

HAROLD

In that moment, I felt invincible…

JIM

My head was in the clouds…

UNISON

I knew what love felt like for the first time.

(There is a long pause. Finally, JIM sits back up. HAROLD smiles.)

HAROLD

(chuckling) She played me so hard.

JIM

(laughing along) She tried to erase me from her life.

(JIM takes the book from HAROLD, and flips a page. He tears it out, and hands it to HAROLD.)

I guess you can keep this one. Here.

HAROLD

Thanks man. I guess sometimes you gotta embrace the suck, right?

(JIM climbs out of HAROLD’s loft with his sketchbook in hand, and goes to his loft.)

JIM

Yeah. And the suck, well, it sucks. (Beat.) Good night, Harold.

(JIM lays down, and HAROLD looks down at the sketch lovingly.)

HAROLD

Good night, Jim.

(lights out.)