THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY




screenplay adaption by

Richard LaGravenese

MARCH 24, 1994, FIRST DRAFT





	Our story begins in 1965, on a hot afternoon in August.

	FADE IN

	EXT. IOWA LANDSCAPE  - DAY

	Rolling green hills, lush farmland, vast open space. Not a 
	house or sign of life in sight. On a long dusty road, a TRUCK 
	is driving across the screen. Clouds of dirt follow in its 
	tracks -- its motor, the only sound we hear.

	INT. TRUCK - DAY

	FRANCESCA JOHNSON is sitting in the front seat of the pick-up 
	truck. Her expression is distant. Her eyes are sad, as if 
	hiding a burden she can hardly bear. Her husband, RICHARD 
	JOHNSON, is driving.

			    RICHARD
		You feeling better Franny?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. I'm fine. It's just this heat I 
		think.

	He nods, satisfied. He turns on the radio as the VOICE OF 
	DINAH WASHINGTON sings a bluesy, haunting love song, "I'LL 
	CLOSE MY EYES."

			    DINAH WASHINGTON
			(SINGS)
		"I'LL CLOSE MY EYES... TO EVERYONE 
		BUT YOU... AND WHEN I DO... I'LL SEE 
		YOU STANDING THERE..."
			(CONTINUES)

			    RICHARD
			(surprised)
		What station is this?

			    FRANCESCA
		It's a Chicago station. I found it 
		the other day.

			    RICHARD
		Kinda pretty. Is this uh... jazz 
		kinda singing?

			    FRANCESCA
			(nicely)
		I don't know. Can we turn it off? I 
		have such a headache.

			    RICHARD
		Sure.

	Richard shuts it off. Francesca turns her face away from him 
	to look out at the vast expanse out of the countryside.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	The truck stops in front of an isolated FARM HOUSE. A wooden 
	gate stands twenty yards from the front door. A barn and a 
	hot house sits on either side, surrounded by acres and acres 
	of beautiful pasture.

	CAROLYN JOHNSON, a sixteen-year-old girl, steps out from the 
	vegetable garden with an arm full of vegetable. She watches 
	her parents exit the truck.

	Francesca carries her groceries, walking briskly through the 
	front gate and entering the house.

	Richard grabs a bag of feed from the flatbed and strolls more 
	leisurely. When he walks through the front gate, he notices 
	something on the ground and picks it up. It is a BUTTON with 
	RED NATURAL surrounding it. As if it had been torn from a 
	piece of clothing. His daughter approaches him.

			    RICHARD
		Your mother isn't feel well. I want 
		you to help her out tonight with 
		dinner.
			(she nods)
		Tell Michael to put this feed away.

	He puts the feed bag down. She exits. He enters the house.

	INT. FRONT HALL - DAY

	Richard enters the front hall opposite the stairs to the 
	second floor. To his left is the living room. To his right, 
	through an archway is the kitchen. He moves towards the stair 
	when he suddenly hears the kitchen radio turned on and "I'LL 
	CLOSE MY EYES" continues. It puzzles him. He looks to the 
	kitchen. Francesca is obviously there but we can't see her. 
	He is about to call to her when his son, Michael, yells:

			    MICHAEL (O.S.)
		Dad! You bought the wrong feed!

			    RICHARD
			(irritated)
		What?!

	He exits through the house to the back door.

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	The family-- Francesca, Richard, Carolyn and their seventeen-
	year-old son MICHAEL -- are eating supper. No one speaks.

			    FRANCESCA
		So what are you going to do with the 
		prize money?

			    CAROLYN
		I don't know. I might save up for one 
		of those hi-fi stereo players like 
		Peggy has.

	Francesca nods. Silence again. She asks her son:

			    FRANCESCA
		Are you seeing Betty tonight?

			    MICHAEL
			(eating)
		Nah.

	Silence. She is used to her son's one syllable answers.

			    RICHARD
		Oh! Frannie, is this yours?

	He places the button with red material on the table. Hiding 
	her surprise, Francesca takes the button.

			    FRANCESCA
		You found it! I got my dress caught 
		on that damn gate. You must have eyes 
		like a hawk.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		You must all be tired. You got home 
		so early. What time did you leave 
		Illinos this morning?

			    RICHARD
		'Bout 4:30.

			    FRANCESCA
		Well you should all go to bed early. 
		I'll do the cleaning up.

	This last remark she addresses to her daughter. Everyone 
	returns to their silent eating.

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - NIGHT

	The house is asleep and dark except for a bright light coming 
	from the kitchen. Carolyn quietly exits her bedroom in her 
	nightclothes. She was awakened by noises coming from the 
	kitchen downstairs.

	INT. KITCHEN -

	She enters to find the lights are on. An empty cake pan and 
	a half-used bowl of frosting sitting unwashed in the sink. 
	She hears the motor of the truck being turned on. She moves 
	to the front hall and looks out through the door to see:

	The truck driving away. She calls out:

			    CAROLYN
		Mom!

	But she gets no response. She stands there wondering where 
	her mother could possibly being going this time of night, as 
	we -

							DISSOLVE TO:

	THIRTY YEARS LATER - SAME LOCATION

	Carolyn, thirty years older, stands in the same doorway of 
	the same house thinking back to that evening her mother acted 
	so strangely.

	A LAWYER is unpacking a briefcase in the living room off the 
	front entrance.

	Carolyn sees a car with Florida plates driving up to the 
	house. She smiles.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	Carolyn steps out of the doorway and heads for the car, out 
	of which exit her brother Michael and his country girl wife 
	BETTY, a stout buxom chatterbox. Both boast Florida tans and 
	fashion styles.

			    MICHAEL
			(to Carolyn)
		Explain to me again why we didn't do 
		this in Des Moines in an air 
		conditioned office?

			    CAROLYN
		Mom's orders.

			    MICHAEL
		Lawyer here?

			    CAROLYN
			(nods)
		I have some sandwich fixings if 
		you're hungry.

			    BETTY
			(proudly)
		No, we just had lunch at the hotel 
		with my brother and his new wife. She 
		told me all the dirt. I forgot how 
		interesting things can get around 
		here. It was so good to see them. The 
		last time we visited they were in 
		Europe. He is doing so well. He 
		ordered champagne. For lunch! I 
		nearly died.

			    MICHAEL
		I nearly died when we split the bill.

			    BETTY
		Michael doesn't understand. People 
		who make the kind of money my brother 
		makes don't carry money on them. They 
		keep it all in various accounts.

			    MICHAEL
		Then we should have had lunch at the 
		bank.

	Carolyn tries not to laugh. Betty shoots him a dirty look, 
	then stops to take in the house and its surroundings.

			    BETTY
		Boy. It sure has been a long time.

			    MICHAEL
			(correcting her)
		We were here two Christmases ago.

			    BETTY
		Well, that's a long time.

			    MICHAEL
		It's not that long.

			    BETTY
			(suddenly upset)
		Well, why don't I just say black so 
		you can say white!
			(to Carolyn)
		Don't be surprised to find your 
		brother hasn't changed an iota. He 
		hardly ever talks and when he does 
		it's in that tone! You should have 
		heard him at lunch -- not two words 
		until the bill came and then he says, 
		"Worth every penny."

			    MICHAEL
			(defensive)
		SO!

			    BETTY
			(angry)
		You said it in that tone! Like you 
		were angry at me, my brother, at 
		the world for forcing you to eat a 
		nice lunch!

			    MICHAEL
		Oh Jesus.

			    BETTY
			(staring to cry)
		I simply can not stand that tone!

			    CAROLYN
			(sympathetically)
		Come inside. You're just tired from 
		the trip.

	She comforts Betty who indulges in the attention.

			    BETTY
		I am so sick and tired of apologizing 
		and not knowing what I've done!

			    CAROLYN
		I'm sure you haven't done anything. 
		Have some iced tea. How are the kids?

			    MICHAEL
		He dropped them off at Betty's mom. 
		Where's Steve?

			    CAROLYN
			(uncomfortably)
		He's not coming.

	Betty suddenly stops crying and abrasively focuses on 
	Carolyn's problems.

			    BETTY
		Aw, is he still cheating on you, 
		hon?

	Carolyn suddenly hoses sympathy for her.

	INT. LIVING ROOM - DAY

	The lawyer hands Michael a document.

			    LAWYER
		Just sign here as having received the 
		contents from the safe deposit box.
			(Michael does)
		And this one, which clears the bank 
		of all further responsibility fo0r the 
		contents.

	Betty whispers to Carolyn.

			    BETTY
		This is kind of exciting. You think 
		we'll find out your mother had 
		secret millions lying around?

	Carolyn smiles weakly. Michael hands back the papers.

			    LAWYER
		All right. Why don't we begin.

	He takes out Francesca's Last Will and Testament.

			    LAWYER (cont'd)
		Your mother has been interred at 
		Lakeside Funeral Home until 
		arrangements can be made.

			    MICHAEL
			(to Carolyn)
		I thought everything WAS arranged.

			    CAROLYN
		Well, there's a problem.

			    MICHAEL
		What problem?

			    LAWYER
		Your mother left explicit 
		instructions that she wished to be 
		cremated.

			    MICHAEL
		Cremated?!

			    BETTY
		Eeeww!

			    CAROLYN
		I know. I don't understand it either.

			    MICHAEL
		When did she decide this?

			    LAWYER
			(reading will)
		Apparently just before her death.

			    MICHAEL
		Well, that's crazy. I don't know 
		anybody who gets cremated.

			    BETTY
		My Jewish friend's grandmother did.

			    MICHAEL
		Well, no one in my family did! Dad 
		bought cemetery plots at Oak Ridge. 
		One for him, one for mom.

			    LAWYER
		It clearly states in the will --

			    MICHAEL
		I don't care what it says! Maybe Mama 
		was delirious, you know. She didn't 
		know what she was saying. If she 
		wanted to be cremated, why the hell 
		did she let dad buy two plots, huh?

			    LAWYER
		Well, she was very specific. She 
		wanted her ashes to be thrown over 
		Roseman Bridge.

			    MICHAEL
		WHAT!

			    BETTY
		How bizarre!

			    CAROLYN
		Mr. Peterson, are you sure mama wrote 
		all this?

			    LAWYER
		Well, it was notarized, and witnessed 
		by a Mrs. Lucy Delaney. Maybe you can 
		ask her.

			    MICHAEL
		Who the hell is Lucy Delaney?

			    CAROLYN
		I remember a Mrs. Delaney but Mama 
		told me years ago she died.

			    MICHAEL
		Well, I don't care if it's legal or 
		not, we're not cremating her and 
		throwing her all over some bridge 
		where we can't even go visit her 
		because she's going to be blown all 
		over the place like an ashtray.

			    BETTY
		Not to mention people driving over 
		her and doggies doing their business --

			    MICHAEL
			(interrupting)
		We're not doing it! I'm not even sure 
		it's Christian.

			    BETTY
		Maybe it's an Italian thing. Their 
		mother was Italian.

			    MICHAEL
		Doesn't matter. Move on.

	The women dare not object. The lawyer raises his eyebrows 
	and continues:

			    LAWYER
		Well, we'll come back to that. Shall 
		we open the box?

							JUMP CUT TO:

	MOMENTS LATER

	C.U. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX

	A key is inserted and the lid is opened. There are many 
	papers, deeds, et. Michael begins sorting through these.

	Carolyn notices a manila envelope addressed to her mother, 
	postmarked 1965. She opens it up to find TWO LETTERS and A 
	PHOTOGRAPH -- FRANCESCA standing NEAR A COVERED BRIDGE, her 
	hair wind blown, her expression serene, beautiful and sad. 
	She wears a RED DRESS with buttons down the front.

			    CAROLYN
		Michael, look -- I've never seen this 
		picture of mama. Have you?

	Betty and Michael look over her shoulder. He shakes "no."

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		It was in this envelope from 1965.

			    BETTY
		She's not wearing a bra.
			(takes bridge photo)
		This is Roseman Bridge in case 
		anyone's interested.

	Interested yes, but no one thinks anything of it. Michael 
	returns to the other papers. Betty takes the photograph for 
	further examination. Carolyn opens one of the letters and 
	begins to read.

	The following dialogue is heard OS, as CAMERA ANGLES ON 
	CAROLYN reading one of the letters:

			    BETTY (O.S.)
		It's a beautiful picture of her.

			    MICHAEL (O.S.)
			(to lawyer)
		Why are there two deeds here?

			    LAYER (O.S.)
		One of for the original parcel your 
		father bought and this one is for the 
		additional acres he purchased in '59.

			    MICHAEL (O.S.)
		And this?

			    LAWYER (O.S.)
		Those are bills of sale from the 
		equipment your mother sold in ..
			(CONTINUES O.S.)

	Throughout their conversation, we focus on Carolyn as she 
	reads and her expression sinks into one of shock and 
	confusion. She flips to the last page of the letter to read 
	who it is from. She can't believe her eyes.

			    BETTY (O.S.)
		What's that?

	Carolyn jumps a little, so engrossed in her discovery. She 
	lies.

			    CAROLYN
		Oh, just a old letter from a friend.

			    BETTY
			(laughs)
		No treasure maps, huh?

			    CAROLYN
			(laughs nervously)
		No.

	Betty starts inspecting knit knacks around the house she 
	might be able to take. Carolyn looks to Michael.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		Michael.

			    MICHAEL
			(reading documents)
		Yeah.

			    CAROLYN
		Michael.

			    MICHAEL
			(irritated)
		What?!

			    CAROLYN
		Come here a minute.

	Michael crosses impatiently to Carolyn. Carolyn looks around 
	to the others, then guides him OS into the kitchen for 
	privacy. He protests.

			    MICHAEL
		What? Where are we going?

	They exit. Alone with the impatient lawyer, Betty examines a 
	vase as she pumps him for info.

			    BETTY
		Did she say anything in there about 
		me? Leaving me anything in particular?

			    LAWYER
		No.

	Betty prattles on as she examines each item, much to the 
	lawyer's dismay, hiding her resentment and hurt.
	
			    BETTY
		I didn't expect so. She never liked 
		me. It's okay. I always knew. Thought 
		we married too young. Nobody broke 
		his arm -- that's what I said but you 
		know mothers and their sons. Also, 
		she never liked the fact of us moving 
		to Florida although what's where the 
		opportunities were. Couldn't deny 
		that. Suppose we should have visited 
		more but you know she hardly ever 
		made an effort to come to Tampa. Not 
		even to see her grandchildren. She 
		was a cold woman. They say Italians 
		are hot-blooded but not her. She was 
		cool as ice.
			(picks up a 
			 candlestick)
		She leaves these to anyone?

	Michael and Carolyn re-enter the living room. Michael's 
	expression now matches Carolyn in disbelief.

			    BETTY (cont'd)
		What's going on?

			    MICHAEL
		Um... we were just wondering how it 
		might be better if me and Carolyn 
		went over the stuff by ourselves. Not 
		keep you two waiting around. I'll 
		contact your office about the legal 
		work.

	Grateful, the lawyer packs up to leave.
	
			    BETTY
		I don't mind waiting.
	
			    MICHAEL
		Well, there's a lot of boring stuff to 
		do. Lists of people we have to write 
		to. Find mama's relatives addresses 
		in Italy -- stuff like that.
	
			    BETTY
		Well, I can help.
	
			    MICHAEL
		I said NO!
	
	That came out a bit aggressively. Betty is hurt.
	
			    MICHAEL (cont'd)
		Why don't you go to your mothers. Or 
		back to the hotel. Sit in some air 
		conditioning. Take a bath.
	
			    BETTY
			(near tears)
		I do not need instructions from you 
		to bathe!
			(gets her bag)
		I knew you'd do this! I knew I'd come 
		all the way here and be shut out as 
		usual! I came to be here for you! I 
		didn't have to come!
			(genuinely hurt)
		Lord knows I was never much welcome 
		in this house before. Apparently dead 
		or alive, nothing's changed.
	
			    CAROLYN
		Aw, Betty.
	
	Carolyn feels badly for her. An impatient Michael refuses 
	sympathy. Embarrassed, Betty starts to exit then stops at 
	the mantle.
	
			    BETTY
		Carolyn -- you want these 
		candlesticks?
	
			    CAROLYN
		No. You can have them.
	
	Betty grabs them both and exits. Carolyn looks at him 
	disapprovingly. Michael takes the letter from her hand.
	
			    MICHAEL
		Now what's this about?
	
							CUT TO:

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	Sitting at the kitchen table, Carolyn is in the middle of 
	reading the letter to Michael.

			    CAROLYN
		"-- going over and over in my mind 
		every detail, every moment of our 
		time together and I ask myself, "What 
		happened to me in Madison County?" I 
		struggle to put it together in a way 
		that allows me to continue knowing 
		we're on separate roads. But then I 
		look through the lens of my camera, 
		and you're there. I start to write an 
		article and I find myself writing it 
		to you. It's clear to me now we have 
		been moving towards each other, 
		towards those four days, all our 
		lives --

			    MICHAEL
			(rises)
		Goddamn sonofabitch! I don't want to 
		hear anymore! Sonofabitch! Burn the 
		damn thing! I don't want to hear it! 
		Throw it away!

	Carolyn continues reading silently. Michael's curiosity gets 
	the best of him:

			    MICHAEL
		What's he saying now?

			    CAROLYN
		Well, he just gets on about how if 
		mama ever needed him, she could find 
		him through the National Geographic 
		magazine. He as a photographer. He 
		promises not to write again. Then all 
		it says is...
			(beat)
		I love you... Robert.

			    MICHAEL
		Robert! Jesus! I'll kill him.

			    CAROLYN
		That would be some trick. He's 
		already dead. That's what this other 
		letter is.
			(takes letter and 
			 skims)
		From his attorney. He left most of 
		his things to mama and requested...
			(she stops)

			    MICHAEL
		What?

			    CAROLYN
		That he be cremated and his ashes 
		thrown on Roseman Bridge.

			    MICHAEL
		DAMN HIM! I knew mama wouldn't have 
		thought of that herself. It was some 
		damn perverted... photographic mind 
		influencing her! When did the bastard 
		die?

			    CAROLYN
		'82.

			    MICHAEL
		Wait a minute! That was thirty years 
		after daddy. Do you think...?

			    CAROLYN
		I don't know. I'm completely in the 
		dark here. That's what I get for 
		moving away.

			    MICHAEL
		This happened way before we both got 
		married. I... I can't believe it.
			(then, innocently)
		You think she had sex with him?

	Carolyn cannot believe he is this dense.

			    CAROLYN
			(sarcastic)
		My Lord. It must feel real nice 
		living inside your head with Peter 
		Pan and the Easter Bunny.

			    MICHAEL
		Don't talk to me like that. She was 
		my mother for Christsakes. And now I 
		find out she was... She was a --!

			    CAROLYN
		Don't say that!

			    MICHAEL
		Well, what am I supposed to think?

			    CAROLYN
		I can't believe she never told me? We 
		spoke at least once a week. How could 
		she do that?

			    MICHAEL
		How did she meet him? Did Dad know? 
		Anything else in that envelope?

			    CAROLYN
		No, I don't think so. I --

	She dumps it over and a SMALL KEY FALLS OUT. Pause, as 
	Carolyn and Michael look to each other -- they grab the key 
	and run out of the kitchen, almost comically falling over 
	each other in their obsession to put this puzzle together.

	A SERIES OF JUMP CUT --

	From one lock to another as they try to find the keyhole that 
	fits the key -- they try closets, attic doors, jewelry boxes, 
	night tables, vanity drawers... Finally --

	INT. BEDROOM - DAY

	At the foot of their parents bed sits an WALNUT HOPE CHEST, 
	covered with a tapestry. Michael and Carolyn look to each 
	other first, before one removes the tapestry and the other 
	tries the key. It fits. They open the chest to find:

	Camera equipment, a chain with a medallion that reads 
	"FRANCESCA," three leather bound notebooks -- and a sealed 
	envelope with "Carolyn or Michael" written on it.

			    CAROLYN/MICHAEL
		You read it!

	Carolyn relents. She takes out the lefter and reads:

			    CAROLYN
		"January, 1987. Dear Carolyn. I hope 
		you're reading this with Michael. I'm 
		sure he wouldn't be able to read it 
		by himself and he'll need some help 
		understanding all this, especially 
		the parts about me having sex..."

	Insulted, Michael pulls the lefter out of her hand and 
	defiantly attempts to read it aloud himself to disprove his 
	mother's claim. But after looking at a few lines, he 
	surrenders and hands the lefter back to his sister.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		"First, and most of all, I love you 
		both very much and although I feel 
		fine, I thought it was time to put my 
		affairs, excuse that word, in order."

			    MICHAEL
		I can't believe she's making jokes.

			    CAROLYN
		Sshhh. "After going through the 
		safety deposit box, I'm sure you'll 
		find you're way to this letter. It's 
		hard to write this to my own 
		children. I could let this die with 
		the rest of me, I suppose. 
			(cont'd)
		But as one gets older, one fears 
		subside. What becomes more and more 
		important is to be known -- known for 
		all that you were during this brief 
		stay. Row said it seems to me to leave 
		this earth without hose you love the 
		most ever really knowing who you 
		were. It's easy for a mother to love 
		her children no matter what -- it's 
		something that just happens. I don't 
		know if it's as simple for children. 
		You're all so busy being angry at us 
		for raising you wrong. But I thought 
		it was important to give you that 
		chance. To give you the opportunity 
		to love me for all that I was..."

	Carolyn and Michael look to each other like two school 
	children about to take a difficult exam. They continue.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		"His name was Robert Kincaid. He was 
		a photographer and he was here in 
		1965 shooting an article for National 
		Geographic on the covered bridges of 
		Madison County. Remember when we got 
		that issue and looked at those 
		bridges we'd seen for years but never 
		noticed? How we felt like 
		celebrities? Remember when we started 
		getting the subscription?

	They don't remember.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		I don't want you to be angry with 
		him. I hope after you know the whole 
		story, you might even think well of 
		him. Even grateful.

			    MICHAEL
		Grateful!?

			    CAROLYN
			(reads)
		"... It's all there in the three 
		notebooks. Read them in order. 
		If you don't want to, I suppose 
		that's okay too. But in that case I 
		want you to know something -- I never 
		stopped loving your father. He was a 
		very good man. It's just that my love 
		for Robert was different. He brought 
		out something in me no one had ever 
		brought out before, or since. He made 
		me feel like a woman in a way few 
		women, maybe more, ever experience..."

			    MICHAEL
		That's it!

	Grabbing the letter, he starts putting everything back in the 
	trunk.

			    CAROLYN
		What are you doing?

			    MICHAEL
		This is crazy. She waits till she's 
		dead to tell us all this. Well, I got 
		news for you. She was my mother. 
		That's enough for me. I don't have to 
		know who she was.

			    CAROLYN
		Well, I'd like to read them.

			    MICHAEL
		No. We're going to lock this up and --

			    CAROLYN
		STOP IT!
			(Michael freezes)
		I want to read them! If you don't 
		want to, then just leave. But don't 
		you push me around like I'm some mule 
		you paid for -- I already GOT A 
		HUSBAND!

	Michael is stymied.

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	Carolyn opens the first notebook which is dated AUGUST 1965. 
	Michael sits beside her with a cup of coffee.

			    CAROLYN
			(reads)
		"I suppose his coming into my life 
		was, in many ways, prepared for 
		weeks, maybe even months before. 
		There was a restlessness I feeling. 
		Out of the blue and for no apparent 
		reason. There's nothing more 
		frightening to a woman whose been 
		settled down for almost twenty years 
		than to suddenly feel unsettled. I 
		don't know when it started ... I do 
		remember one night in particular, a 
		little over a week before Robert 
		arrived..."

	CAROLYN'S VOICE BECOMES FRANCESCA'S VOICE AS WE:

							DISSOLVE TO:

	1965

	INT. JOHNSON'S BEDROOM - NIGHT

	Richard is fast asleep while Francesca sits up in bed reading.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"It was late at night after a long 
		day. Your father was tired -- fighting 
		all afternoon with that new 
		equipment Robert Harrison convinced 
		him to buy. But I wasn't tired. 
		Lately, I could hardly sleep more 
		than two hours a night. I was reading 
		some John O'Hara novel, skimming the 
		words, turning the pages without 
		absorbing what I was reading. My mind 
		was far away. And no matter how I 
		tried, I couldn't call it back."

	Francesca closes the book and turns off the light. She 
	nestles into the bed and tries to sleep. After a beat, she 
	opens her eyes and turns on the light. As she gets out of bed 
	she awakens Richard.

			    RICHARD
		What time is it?

			    FRANCESCA
		Later. Go back to sleep.

			    RICHARD
		Where you going?

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm not tired. I thought I might 
		finish Carolyn's skirt.

			    RICHARD
		Now?!
			(checks clock)
		It's after eleven.

			    FRANCESCA
		I can't sleep.

			    RICHARD
		Again? Maybe you should see a doctor.

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm not sick, Richard. I'm just not 
		tired, now go back to sleep before 
		you're up for the whole night too!

	Francesca exits. Richard nestles under the covers, mumbling:

			    RICHARD
		If you're not sick, how can it be 
		contagious?

	INT. ATTIC - NIGHT

	Francesca sits at her sewing machine, working on Carolyn's 
	skirt. When the thread runs out, she checks her sewing box 
	for another spool of that color. Not finding it, she raises 
	and walks to an opened closet. She pulls on a light cord and 
	checks her supplies.

	There are shelves of boxes, crates, old clothes and shoes all 
	crammed together. She pulls out one shoe box and an entire 
	stack of items tumble off the shelf onto her head.

			    FRANCESCA
		Damn it! Shit!

	She looks at the mess and decides it's time to re-organize.

	LATER:

	The clock reads 2:30 AM. The closet has been emptied. 
	Francesca rummages through box after box.

	Two huge piles have been created -- one for items to be thrown 
	away, another for items to be kept. Francesca is wiping the 
	bare shelves down with a rag and some cleanser. Looking up to 
	the bottom of the next shelf, she notices A SHOULDER STRAP 
	hanging, wedged between the wall and the shelf. Pulling over 
	a stool, she steps up to be eye level with the shelf.

	It is an OLD HANDBAG -- of a style not seen since the forties 
	when she was a young girl. She pulls it down to examine. It 
	is very dusty and worn, but the snaps still work. She places 
	it against her side to see if it would still be fashionable. 
	She opens it and finds an old lipstick -- reading the bottom 
	where the name of the shade is located.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Ha, they don't even made this color 
		anymore.

	She exits the closet and moves to an old mirror, trying the 
	lipstick on. As she decides whether or not she likes it, a 
	thought occurs to her... she remembers something.

	She crosses back to the handbag and feels the inside for a 
	compartment hidden by a flap of material and a snap. She 
	unsnaps it and an old BACK & WHITE PHOTO slips out. She 
	looks at its image -- two young people against an Italian 
	background. Francesca is twenty years younger with her arms 
	around a handsome, black-haired charmer named --

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"Niccolo. I couldn't remember the 
		last time I had seen that face. And 
		then the memories wouldn't stop. 
		Like an avalanche..."

							CUT TO:

	FLASHBACK -

	EXT. NAPLES COUNTRYSIDE, 20 YEARS EARLIER - DAY

	A hot, breezy summer day. A young vibrant Francesca is 
	storming through an open field, angry, while Niccolo calls 
	after her in pursuit.

	The following scene is played in Italian with subtitles.

			    NICCOLO
		Francesca! Francesca! Where the hell 
		are you going?

			    FRANCESCA
		Leave me alone!

			    NICCOLO
		You play these games and I'm supposed 
		to follow -- run after you like a 
		schoolboy. Well, I'm not! I'm fed up!

	Niccolo stops. Several yards ahead of him, Francesca stops 
	and turns. Suddenly, she storms back towards him until they 
	are face to face.

			    FRANCESCA
		So that's it! You just give up!

			    NICCOLO
		What "give up"? You agreed with them! 
		Mommy and Daddy said stay away from 
		me and you said all right. What am I 
		supposed to do?

			    FRANCESCA
		Fight for me!

	Niccolo grabs her violently.

			    NICCOLO
		ENOUGH! You don't know what you want! 
		Stop looking for me to tell you! STOP 
		IT!

	Francesca knows he's right. He releases her.

			    NICCOLO (cont'd)
		We can go back now and end it or we 
		can go back and you tell them off. 
		This is your choice! Not mine. But I 
		won't do this anymore. This is for 
		children!

	Frustrated and sad, Francesca sits upon the ground. Niccolo 
	knows she cannot face her parents yet he looks sympathetic.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAWN 1965

	Francesca sits on the back porch in her bathrobe, looking out 
	over the pasture as if she were watching the previous scene 
	happen right before her eyes.

	In the pasture stands NICCOLO as he was twenty years ago. 
	Memories have overlapped. A field in Naples is now a pasture 
	in Iowa and Niccolo is as real to her as the grass. He is 
	staring at her seated on the porch of her Iowa home, a woman 
	twenty yards older than when he knew her. He smiles.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"I had forgotten this. I had somehow 
		remembered it being more his fault, 
		his decision. Then I remembered we 
		made love in that field before we 
		left for home. And I remembered it 
		was my idea. I remembered tearing 
		his shirt and biting his body, hoping 
		he would kidnap me. I had forgotten 
		that too. And I wondered, as I sat 
		there... how many other things I'd 
		forgotten."

			    RICHARD (O.S.)
		Frannie.

	Startled, Francesca turns as if she were caught in the act. 
	Richard is fully dressed, prepared to start the day. 
	Francesca turns back to the pasture -- Niccolo is gone.

							CUT TO:

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - EVENING

	It is a week later. Francesca is making dinner. A COUNTRY 
	STATION is tuned in on the radio.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"The following week was the Illinos 
		State Fair. The two of you were going 
		with dad to exhibit Carolyn's prize 
		steer. It was the Sunday night you 
		left. I know it sounds awful but I 
		couldn't wait for you all to leave. 
		You were going to be gone until 
		Friday. Four days...
			(beat)
		Just four days..."

	Francesca's expression looks as if she needs a break from her 
	family for more like four years.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Michael! Carolyn! Richard! Dinner!

	She sets down a bowl of potatoes, a plate of sausages, coffee 
	and corn as one by one her family enters and sits down.

	Michael enters through a screen door from the back, letting 
	the DOOR SLAM SHUT.

			    FRANCESCA
		Michael, what did I tell you about 
		that door?

	Richard enters after Michael, letting the door SLAM THE same 
	way. Francesca is about to say something, but gives up.

	Everyone begins eating -- in complete silence.

	When Michel can't open the ketchup bottle, Francesca grabs 
	it, palms the top skillfully and twists it off. She hands it 
	back to Michael who makes no comment.

	When Richard scans the table for something that obviously 
	isn't there, Francesca is up out of her seat before he can 
	ask, at the fridge, grabbing the sour cream, closing the 
	fridge and back at the table with incredible swiftness.

	When Michel moves his big arm to reach for the salt, he 
	knows over his cup and saucer, which Francesca catches with 
	both hands before they hit the floor. Her reflexes are like 
	a trained athlete.

	Finally, Francesca is able to sit and sip her coffee. She 
	watches her teenage daughter fill her plate with a blank 
	expression that lets nothing slip through -- no indication of 
	all the tempests of emotions that go through a teenage girl.

			    FRANCESCA
		You excited about going, Carolyn?

	Without looking up, Carolyn fakes a smile. Looking at her, 
	Francesca remembers Carolyn as a three-year-old girl:

	FLASHBACK.

	In the same kitchen, THREE-YEAR-OLD CAROLYN runs around her 
	mother's feet completely naked, squealing with delight as 
	Francesca flicks her water from the tap.

	FLASHBACK ENDS.

	Francesca watches as Carolyn eats in silence, distant, locked 
	in her own secret teenage thoughts and dreams.

	Francesca then looks to her son, shoveling food into his 
	mouth at an alarming rate. She attempts a conversation.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		How was your date last night?

			    MICHAEL
			(w/o looking at her)
		Okay.

			    FRANCESCA
		What's her name?

			    MICHAEL
		Betty.

			    FRANCESCA
		What's she like?

			    MICHAEL
		Okay.

	Silence. Frustrated, Francesca has a fantasy -

	FANTASY:

	Francesca picks up a blunt butter knife, rises out of her seat, 
	grabs her son and shoves the knife at his throat:

			    FRANCESCA
		Do you like her?

	Michael finally reacts with more than one word -- frightened 
	for his life.

			    MICHAEL
		Uh... Yeah. Yeah. She's real nice.

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, what's nice about her? Tell us!

			    MICHAEL
		Well, she's... she's real pretty and
		... and she's got a cute shape... 
		she's a good sport, ya know, for 
		laughs and 
			(desperate)
		... she loves fried chicken wings and 
		beer.

			    FRANCESCA
		Isn't that nice? You should bring her 
		home to meet us!

	FANTASY ENDS.

	Francesca looks at Michael in disgust.

			    RICHARD
		We better get moving.
			(to Francesca)
		You sure you don't want to come?

	Francesca looks at Richard with complete conviction.

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm positive.

			    RICHARD
		I'm going to miss you.

			    FRANCESCA
		It's only four days.

	He gives her a sweet peck on the lips. Francesca smiles, 
	anxious for them all to leave.

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - LATER THAT NIGHT

	Alone, dressed in her bathrobe, Francesca checks the front 
	door. She crosses to the living. Noticing two throw pillows 
	on the floor, she arranged them neatly on the couch. She sits 
	herself in an easy chair then flicks on a reading lamp and 
	opens her book. After five seconds, she closes the book. She 
	crosses to the TV and turns it on, then turns it off before 
	the picture tuned in.

	She turns and leans on the TV, flicking the ON/OFF switch on 
	and off as her mind wanders. She gets an idea. She crosses to 
	the hi-fi and looks through several albums she got from her 
	Columbia Record Club. But nothing inspires her and she 
	quickly loses the desire for music. She's antsy. She has this 
	time alone and she doesn't know how to spend it.

	She walks through the dining room, passing a china closet 
	filled with fancy dishes and glasses. She stops. Shoved in 
	the corner behind is an old, un-opened bottle of BRANDY. She 
	removes up, setting atop the dining table to open it.

	But when she catches a reflection of herself in the window 
	opposite her, she stops. She sees a lonely, frustrated woman 
	in a tattered bathrobe anxious to open a bottle of liquor. 
	Deflated, she returns the brandy to the cupboard and exits.

	EXT. BACK PORCH - NIGHT

	Francesca sits on the porch with a book in her lap, gazing 
	out over the pasture. It's a hot night. She opens the top of 
	her rope a bit. Feeling the air against her skin, she decides 
	to open it a bit more. She gets an idea.

	Standing, she looks to see if anyone is around -- though 
	rationally she knows there isn't a soul for miles. She turns 
	off the porch light. With a brave and daring impulse, she 
	sheds her bathrobe and stand naked under the night sky. The 
	air feels good against her body. She opens her arms up 
	against the night sky and moon like an Indian priestess.

	Suddenly, she starts hitting her body as mosquitoes begin 
	attacking her bare torso. Thwarted, she quickly covers 
	herself with a robe and runs into the house.

							CUT TO:

	INT. KITCHEN - MORNING

	Francesca trudges into the kitchen. As if on automatic, she 
	takes the coffee pot and fills it with water. She gets the 
	coffee and begins spooning it out. She stops. She gets the 
	idea of taking herself out for breakfast and dumps the coffee 
	pot out.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. MAIN STREET; WINTERSET - MORNING

	A one street town. On either side are rows of storefronts, an 
	old coffee shop/diner, a bank, a medical center, a newspaper 
	building, a courthouse and a movie theater showing CAT BALLOU. 
	The steeple of the local church is the highest structure, 
	towering over the town from the end of Main Street.

	INT. COFFEE SHOP/DINER - MORNING

	Dressed in jeans and a light summer blouse, Francesca sits 
	alone -- treating herself to breakfast and the paper. Some of 
	the gossip news includes rumors of Frank Sinatra, 49, 
	marrying Mia Farrow, 19: Cary Grant 61, marrying DYAN CANNON, 
	27. Francesca shakes her head in disbelief at such news.

	She tries to continue reading, but is distracted by the loud 
	conversation in the booth beside her:

	TWO MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN and ONE MIDDLE-AGED HUSBAND sit after 
	breakfast discussing the local gossip.

			    ELEANOR
		Oh, this heat! Times like this I wish 
		we took that offer from your brother 
		and moved on up to Michigan.

			    HENRY
		They got heat in Michigan.

			    ELEANOR
		Not this kind of heat.

			    HENRY
		Heat is heat.

			    ELEANOR
		Heat is not heat! There's different 
		kinds! And this heat is much hotter 
		than what they got in Michigan. You 
		go and call your brother and see if 
		he don't say the same thing.

			    HENRY
		I'll get right on it.

	Mrs. Delaney, an attractive well-off woman in her forties, 
	enters the shop and heads for the counter.

			    GLADYS
			(whispers)
		Mrs. Delaney.
			(Eleanor looks)
		Did you hear the latest?

			    ELEANOR
		No, what?

			    GRADYS
		Apparently, she caught them.
			(Eleanor gasps)
		Ran right into them in Des Moines in 
		the middle of her shopping.

			    ELEANOR
		Oh, what a horror. Poor woman. That 
		Redfield girl's got no business 
		showing her face in daylight.

			    GRADYS
		I don't know how that tramp stands 
		living here. No one can bear even 
		speaking to her. She has no friends.

			    HENRY
		Well, nobody put a gun to his head.

			    ELEANOR
		Oh, shut up! It's the woman who's in 
		control of these situations. Men 
		don't know which end is up till a 
		woman points.

	Mrs. Delaney acts as if nothing is wrong. Yet, she knows 
	everyone knows and everyone knows she knows they know, yet no 
	one says a word. She sits at the counter.

			    MRS. DELANEY
		Just coffee, please.

	Francesca hears the gossip continue in hushed tones:

			    GLADYS
		See. Money don't buy happiness. I 
		must say, she's taking it well.

			    ELEANOR
		I'd kill him. Him and that Redfield 
		woman. Together. First one then the 
		other. And then I'd laugh.

			    GLADYS
		I'd laugh first then I'd kill them. 
		Make sure they heard me laughing.

	Eleanor nods. Not being able to stand it, Francesca rises. 
	She must pass them on the way to the counter, in order to 
	pay. Eleanor immediately stops her.

			    ELEANOR
		Francesca! So, everybody got off okay 
		last night?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes, thanks.

			    GLADYS
		What you going to do all alone for 
		four days -- a woman of leisure?

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh, you know there's always something 
		to be done. Have a good day. Henry.

	Henry nods back. As she exits, they whisper.

			    ELEANOR
		She's changed.

			    GLADYS
		Oh, yes.

			    ELEANOR
		She used to be so friendly.

			    HENRY
		Maybe she's going through "the 
		changes."

	Eleanor hits him in the chest.

			    ELEANOR
		What do you know about "the changes"?

			    HENRY
		Well, I didn't know they was a secret 
		club.

			    ELEANOR
		Don't talk about what you don't know. 
		Besides, she's too young for "the 
		changes."

			    GLADYS
		My niece had "the changes" when she 
		was thirty-one.

			    ELEANOR
		No. What a tragedy. What happened?

			    GLADYS
			(wisely)
		She changed.

	At the counter, Francesca pays up. She looks to Mrs. Delaney 
	and tries to smile, but Mrs. Delaney works hard at not making 
	eye contact with anyone. Suddenly, she rises telling the 
	waitress:

			    MRS. DELANEY
		Excuse me for a moment, I left 
		something in the car.

	She exits quickly. Francesca pays up as the waitress adds:

			    WAITRESS
		Poor woman.

	EXT. COFFEE SHOP/DINER - MORNING

	Francesca exits and heads for her truck. As she crosses from 
	one corner to another, she notices down the side street --

	Mrs. Delaney sitting alone in her own car, sobbing. Unable to 
	bear the humiliation, she stole herself away to cry.

	Francesca wants to help but feels useless. She quickly heads 
	for her truck.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	Francesca sits on the front porch with some iced tea, trying 
	to cool herself off. It is a scorcher. She is barefoot, her 
	blouse hanging out of her jeans, her hair fastened up by a 
	tortoise shell comb.

	Camera begins a slow move into close-up, as she sips her tea 
	and lets her mind wander. WE INTERCUT HER FANTASIES WITH HER 
	ON THE PORCH:

	FANTASY: Back in town, Francesca slides into Mrs. Delaney's 
	car. She embraces the woman who cries into her arms.

	-- Francesca on the porch.

	FANTASY: Mrs. Delaney's car is surrounded by townpeople
	 staring into it. Francesca hugs Mrs. Delaney closer to her in 
	 defiance.

	-- Francesca on the porch.

	FANTASY: Mrs. Delaney's car drives up to a train station. She 
	and Francesca exit with suitcases. They are surrounded by 
	news reporters as they make their way to the train.

			    REPORTER
		Mrs. Johnson! Mrs. Johnson! Is it 
		true Cary Grant has proposed to you?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. And I've accepted.

			    REPORTER
		What about his engagement to Dyan 
		Cannon?

			    FRANCESCA
		I said to him Cary you're being 
		ridiculous. You're more than half her 
		age. He said no one had ever been 
		that honest with him and he falls in 
		love with me.

			    REPORTER
		What about your husband?

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm very sad but Richard said that 
		since it's Cary Grant, he completely 
		understands. I'm also taking Mrs. 
		Delaney away from this town. She'll 
		be living with Cary and I in Beverly 
		Hills.

	She boards the train with Mrs. Delaney.

	END OF FANTASIES.

	Tired of her fantasies, Francesca looks up to the sun to 
	clear her mind. It is blinding. When she looks back out onto 
	the road, her vision is momentarily blurred. Until, slowly, 
	out of the blue, she sees:

	A TRUCK driving toward her house, kicking up dust, like some 
	phantom appearing through the etheric plane. Francesca isn't 
	even sure it's real. She sips cool drink & blinks to 
	regain her vision. The truck slows down and turns into her 
	driveway. Francesca watches with suspicious curiosity as:

	The truck stops and ROBERT KINCAID steps out. Flashing his 
	blue eyes in her direction, he smiles and says:

			    ROBERT
		Sorry to bother you, but I've got a 
		feeling I'm lost.

	Francesca remains guarded.

			    FRANCESCA
		Are you supposed to be in Iowa?

			    ROBERT
			(laughs)
		Yeah.

			    FRANCESCA:
		Well, you're not that lost.

	He laughs. She puts down her tea and crosses to him.

			    ROBERT
		I'm looking for a covered bridge out 
		this way... uh... wait a minute --

	He looks through a small notepad for the name. Francesca 
	finds herself scanning his body.

			    FRANCESCA
		Roseman Bridge?

			    ROBERT
		That's it.

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, you're pretty close. It's only 
		about two miles from here.

			    ROBERT
		Oh, terrific. Which way?

	Pause as Robert awaits directions and Francesca scans a sudden 
	impulse.

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, I can take you if you want.

	Robert is pleased, but a bit surprised as is Francesca who 
	anxiously recants:

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Or I can tell you. I can take you or 
		tell you. It's up to you. I don't 
		care. Either way.

	Robert smiles finding her sudden nervousness charming.

			    ROBERT
		Well --

	Suddenly, from the opposite direction of the road, A CHEVY 
	barrels by. The driver, FLOYD, toots his horn.

			    FLOYD
		Howdy, Francesca.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hey, Floyd.

	He drives off. Francesca knows they've been seen. Slightly 
	annoyed by Iowain neighborliness, she turns to Robert and 
	with some defiance says:

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		It'd be better if I show you, I think.

			    ROBERT
		If I'm not taking you away from 
		anything.

			    FRANCESCA
		No. I was just going to have some 
		iced tea then split the atom, but 
		that can wait.
			(he smiles)
		I just have to get my shoes.

	Robert watches her as she turns and heads back to the house. 
	He watches her lift her blouse and tuck it into her jeans, 
	revealing her shapely hips and buttocks. He turns back to the 
	truck and notices the mailbox -- MR & MRS. RICHARD JOHNSON. He 
	nods as if he knew all along and begins to make room on the 
	front seat for Francesca.

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE

	Francesca is slipping on her boots when she suddenly stops. 
	"What am I doing?", she asks herself silently.

	EXT. JOHNSON DRIVEWAY

	Francesca approaches the truck. On the door, she reads: 
	KINCAID PHOTOGRAPHY, BELLINGHAM, WASHINGTON.

	Robert is clearing away paper cups, banana peels, paper bags, 
	photography equipment. In the back, Francesca notices a 
	cooler and a guitar case.

			    ROBERT
		I wasn't expect company. Let me 
		get this out of the way.

	He hauls a case of film from the front to the back. Francesca 
	notices his tanned, muscular arm move in one graceful sweep.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Okay. All set.

	Francesca smiles. They both get into the truck.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Now, where are we going?

			    FRANCESCA
		Out, then right.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. MADISON COUNTY ROAD - DAY

	As the truck drives, we see no one else in sight.

	INT. KINCAID'S TRUCK

	They drive in silence. Francesca is enjoying the breeze against 
	her face.

			    ROBERT
		Pretty country.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hmm-mmm.

	She looks out at the vast expanse. It depresses her.

			    ROBERT
		There's a wonderful smell about 
		Iowa -- very particular to this part 
		of the country. Do you know what I 
		mean?

			    FRANCESCA
		No.

			    ROBERT
		I can't describe it. I think it's 
		from the loam in the soil. This very 
		rich, earthy kind of... alive... 
		No. No, that's not right. Can you 
		smell it?

			    FRANCESCA
			(shakes her head)
		Maybe it's because I live here.

			    ROBERT
		That must be it. It's a great smell.

	Francesca wants to know more about him.

			    FRANCESCA
		Are you from Washington originally?

			    ROBERT
		Uh-huh. Lived there till I was twenty 
		or so and then moved to Chicago when 
		I got married.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh. When did you move back?

			    ROBERT
		After the divorce.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh.

			    ROBERT
		How long you been married?

			    FRANCESCA
		Uh... uh...
			(can't remember)
		Umm... long time.

			    ROBERT
		You don't look like a native, if you 
		don't mind my saying so.

			    FRANCESCA
		No, I don't mind. I'm not from here. 
		I was born in Italy.

			    ROBERT
		Well, from Italy to Iowa -- that's a 
		story!
			(Francesca smiles)
		Whereabouts in Italy?

			    FRANCESCA
		Small town on the Eastern side no 
		one's ever heard of called Bari.

			    ROBERT
		Oh yeah, Bari. I've been there.

			    FRANCESCA
			(surprised)
		No, really?

			    ROBERT
		Oh, yeah. Actually, I had an 
		assignment in Greece and I had to go 
		through Bari to get the boat at 
		Brindisi. But it looked so pretty I 
		got off and stayed for a few days. 
		Breathtaking country.

	Francesca is overcome by the idea of such freedom.

			    FRANCESCA
		You just... got off the train because 
		it looked pretty?

			    ROBERT
		Yeah. Excuse me a sec.

	He reaches over with one arm, brushing slightly against her 
	thigh. He opens the glove compartment and pulls out a pack of 
	Camels and a Zippo lighter.

			    ROBERT
		Like one?

	Francesca, who doesn't usually smoke, accepts.

			    FRANCESCA
		Sure.

	She takes a cigarette out of the pack. Robert drops the pack 
	and, with the same hand, flicks open the Zippo and ignites it. 
	Francesca leans over. The road is bumpy and a breeze blows 
	through both windows.

	She cups her hands around his to shelter the flame. She feels 
	his skin for a brief moment.

	She sits back and enjoys the ride and her cigarette as Robert 
	lights up. Silence. They drive.

			    ROBERT
		So, how long you've been living here?

			    FRANCESCA
		Long.
			(changes subject)
		You just got off the train and stayed 
		without knowing anyone there?

			    ROBERT
			(laughs)
		Yeah.

	EXT. ROSEMAN BRIDGE - DAY

	The truck stops. They exit. Robert takes out some equipment.

			    ROBERT
		This won't take long. I'm shooting 
		tomorrow morning. I just need to do 
		some prep work.

			    FRANCESCA
		I don't mind waiting.

	He smiles and takes his equipment to the bridge. Francesca 
	slowly follows. She watches his body move. Catching herself, 
	she stops.

	Robert sets up a tripod in the small ravine beneath the 
	bridge, pointing a view finder up as he plans his shots. 
	Francesca walks through the bridge, noticing lovers names 
	scrawled on the inside: CATHY & BUDDY 4 EVER... ROSIE AND 
	HANK TILL THE END OF TIME. Through a crack in one of the 
	wooden planks, Francesca watches like a voyeur as Robert 
	works. She sees him take out a handkerchief and wipe the sweat 
	off his neck, then inside his shirt and around his chest. 
	Without knowing where Francesca is, Robert speaks aloud:

			    ROBERT
		Is it always this hot?

	Francesca moves quickly away from the plank, like a Peeping 
	Tom who's been caught.

			    FRANCESCA
		This time of year.

			    ROBERT
		Would you do me a favor and go to the 
		truck? Inside that leather bag with 
		the pockets is a package of lens 
		cleaners. Would you grab me one?

	Francesca obliges, grateful for something to occupy her.

	Inside the truck, she scans for the leather bag. She sees it 
	next to a duffel bag. The bag' zipper is opened. She 
	glimpses inside as Robert's personal things -- clothes, socks, 
	underwear, shaving kit. Life magazines from July and August, 
	one depicting the death of Aldai Stevenson; the other a cover 
	photo of the Watts riots. She grabs the leather bag and 
	opens it.

	At the bridge, Francesca looks for Robert in the raving but 
	he is gone. She looks through the bridge to the other end 
	and sees only the tripod. No Robert. She walks through the 
	bridge and out the other end. She finds Robert bent over, 
	picking flowers.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh there you are.

			    ROBERT
		Oh! You caught me.

	He rises with a bouquet of wildflowers for her.

			    ROBERT
		Thanks for your help.

	Francesca smiles, not knowing how to take this.

			    ROBERT
		Men sill give women flowers, don't 
		they? I mean, as a sign of 
		appreciation? I'm not that out of 
		date, am I?

			    FRANCESCA
		No, not at all --
			(suddenly)
		except those are poisonous.

			    ROBERT
		WHAT!

	He flings the flowers down. He wipes his hands furiously.

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm sorry. I was kidding.

	Robert looks at her with a shocked smirk, secretly liking her 
	strange behavior.

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm sorry. I don't know what -- I'm 
		sorry. Really. They're lovely.

	She begins picking up the flowers.

			    ROBERT
			(smiling)
		Are you by nature a sadistic person?

			    FRANCESCA
		No, I'm not.
			(trying not to laugh)
		I don't know why I said that. I've 
		been in a very... strange mood all 
		day. I've never done anything like 
		that before. It's... I'm just...
			(looking for excuse)
		Well, you know, the whole world is 
		just going nuts.

	Robert looks at her like she's nuts. Francesca tries to dig 
	herself out of her hole. Robert enjoys offering no help.

			    FRANCESCA
		What with those riots in Los Angeles 
		and people burning draft cards and 
		... Adlai Stevenson dying last month.

	She rises with the flowers. Robert gives her a friendly pat 
	on the arm.

			    ROBERT
		Shouldn't let things get to you so 
		much.

	He continues with his work. Francesca expresses relief and 
	embarrassment behind his back.

	INT. TRUCK - LATER

	Driving back, Francesca sits with her feet up on the 
	dashboard. Robert drives while he fiddles with the radio. All 
	he can find are country stations.

			    FRANCESCA
		Looking for something in particular? 
		There's not much of a selection.

			    ROBERT
		I found this Chicago station before. 
		Wait a minute...
			(he tunes it in)
		Here it is.

	We hear a BLUES SINGER with a sax arrangement.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh, that's nice.

			    ROBERT
		Want another cigarette?

			    FRANCESCA
		Sure.

	Francesca's having a great time.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	Robert's truck drives down the road and into the driveway.

			    ROBERT
		Well, thank you for all your help, 
		Mrs. Johnson.

			    FRANCESCA
		Francesca.

			    ROBERT
		Francesca. Robert.

	Francesca nods, as if to say hello and goodbye in the same 
	moment. She gets out of the car, closes the door, then asks:

			    FRANCESCA
		Would you like some iced tea?

	INT. KITCHEN - DAY

	Robert fiddles with the kitchen radio, tuning in to the 
	Chicago station. Francesca is making iced tea. Robert sits 
	back down at the kitchen table.

			    FRANCESCA
		Lemon?

			    ROBERT
		Sure.

	With her back to him, Robert never takes his eyes off her. 
	She turns and crosses to him, with the tea.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Thanks.

	Francesca smiles and sips her own. She watches him gulp down 
	the tea so fast, some of it dribbles down the side of his 
	face and neck. Francesca finds it sexy. He empties it.

			    FRANCESCA
		Would you like another one?

	Robert nods and he pulls out his cigarettes.

			    ROBERT
		Mind if I smoke?

			    FRANCESCA
			(at the sink)
		Not at all.

	Robert lights up as he watches her fix another iced tea. He 
	watches her slip off one boot, then the other -- never missing 
	a beat of her preparation. He can't help eyeing her body. 
	When she returns, she also has the flowers he picked for her 
	arranged in a Casper the Friendly Ghost jelly glass. She 
	places them on the table and sits.

			    ROBERT
		Sure you want to keep those in the 
		house?

			    FRANCESCA
		I'm so sorry about that. It was 
		rude. I think I just got nervous 
		for some reason.

			    ROBERT
		I thought it was funny.

	She likes that.

			    FRANCESCA
		Where are you staying while you're 
		here?

			    ROBERT
		A little place with cabins. The 
		something-Motor Inn. I haven't 
		checked in yet.

			    FRANCESCA
		And how long are you here for?

			    ROBERT
		As long as it takes, I might stay a 
		week. No more I don't think. Where's 
		your family?

			    FRANCESCA
		My husband took the kids to the 
		Illinos State Fair. My daughter's 
		entering a prize steer.

			    ROBERT
		Oh. How old?

			    FRANCESCA
		About a year and a half.

			    ROBERT
		No, your kids.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh. Michael's 17 and Carolyn's 16.

			    ROBERT
		Must be nice having kids.

	Francesca looks at him and FANTASIZES SAYING:

	FANTASY:

			    FRANCESCA
		Not any more. It's awful. They're 
		awful. I can't stand them.

	END OF FANTASY:

	But in reality, Francesca chooses instead to say:

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		They're not kids anymore. Things 
		change.

			    ROBERT
		Everything does. One of the laws of 
		nature. People are always so afraid 
		of change. But if you look at it like 
		it's something you can count on 
		happening, it's actually a comfort. 
		Not many things you can count on for 
		sure.

			    FRANCESCA
		I guess. Except I'm one of the people 
		it frightens.

			    ROBERT
		I doubt that.

			    FRANCESCA
		Why?

			    ROBERT
		Italy to Iowa? I'd call that a change.

			    FRANCESCA
			(explaining)
		Richard was in the army. I met him 
		while I was living in Naples. I 
		didn't know where Iowa was. I only 
		cared that it was America. And of 
		course, being with Richard.

			    ROBERT
		What's he like?

	As Francesca thinks of an answer, she looks over to the 
	entranceway between the kitchen and the front hall and sees:

	FANTASY:

	Richard standing there in his underwear, reaching over his shoulder.

			    RICHARD
		Franny, could you clean out my boil 
		again?

	END OF FANTASY:

	Francesca answers Robert, half of her still in fantasy --

			    FRANCESCA
		He's very... clean.

			    ROBERT
		Clean?

			    FRANCESCA
			(catching herself)
		No. I mean yes, he's clean but he's 
		also other things. He's a very hard 
		worker. Very honest. Very caring. 
		Gentle. Good father.

			    ROBERT
		And clean.

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. Very clean.

	They drink. Francesca thinks she sounds like an idiot.

			    ROBERT
		So you must like Oiwa, I guess.

	Francesca looks at him. She wants to tell the truth, but 
	holds back.

			    FRANCESCA
		It's... uh... uh...

	She stops. Robert smiles.

			    ROBERT
		Go ahead. I won't tell anyone.

	Surprised, Francesca looks at him oddly -- as if he already 
	knows and is giving her permission.

			    FRANCESCA
		It's...
			(tries again)
		I...
			(finally)
		I hate it!

	She covers her mouth, like a reflex -- worried someone heard. 
	Robert just smiles and nods.

	Francesca is so taken by his understanding and acceptance, 
	she lets the flood gates open, speaking faster than her mind 
	can keep up --

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
			(without a pause)
		I hate it! I hate it! I HATE IT! I 
		hate the corn and the dust and the 
		town and the cows and that SMELL that 
		you love! I hate the people. 
		Everybody knows everybody's business, 
		I mean it's nice now and then, 
		they're always there to help out, but 
		that's just it, it's like they're 
		waiting for something awful to happen 
		to help out and when nothing awful is 
		happening, then they just sit around 
		and talk about what is happening 
		which is none of their business. I 
		want to kill them sometimes for how 
		cruel they can be --

	Camera begins slowly moving out to a wider angle...

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		-- everybody's talking about poor Mrs. 
		Delaney whose husband is having an 
		affair with that Redfield woman and 
		"isn't it a shame," and "isn't it 
		awful," and the truth is THEY'RE 
		LOVING IT! Poor woman can't even be 
		cheated on without the grocery man 
		knowing about it -- no one respects 
		anyone's privacy. You're not even 
		safe in your own home! They think 
		they can just walk right into your 
		house because they BAKED you 
		something. It's like they have a 
		secret password and YOU CAN'T KEEP 
		THEM OUT! I live in fear of that door 
		opening and having a peach cobbler 
		shoved at me...
			(CONTINUES MOS IF 
			 NEEDED)

	Throughout this rapid fire monologue, camera has moved to a 
	wide angle as Robert just sits and listens, letting her get 
	it all off her chest. She continues as we:

							DISSOLVE TO:

	INT. LIVING ROOM

	Francesca is lying on the couch as Robert places a cold cloth 
	on her head. Her "confession" took a lot out offer.

			    ROBERT
		Feeling better?

			    FRANCESCA
		Much.

			    ROBERT
		Is the dizziness gone?

			    FRANCESCA
		I think so.

	She sits up. She feels exposed. But also, relieved.

			    ROBERT
		I better go. You sure you're all 
		right?
			(she nods)
		It's been a pleasure. Sincerely.

			    FRANCESCA
		I feel so embarrassed.

			    ROBERT
		Why? You uncorked a bottle. From what 
		I can tell, I got here just in time. 
		Any later and you'd have made the 
		front page, running down Main Street 
		naked, smoking Camels out of your 
		butt.

			    FRANCESCA
			(laughs)
		But I... We don't even know each 
		other.

			    ROBERT
			(sincerely)
		You have no reason to feel ashamed. 
		You haven't said anything you don't 
		have a right to. And if anybody tells 
		you different -- you just send them to 
		me.

	She smiles. He turns to exit.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Better get my stuff.

	Francesca surprises herself. She doesn't want him to go.

			    FRANCESCA
		Would you like to stay for dinner?
			(he turns)
		There aren't many choices in town and
		... anyway, you'd have to eat alone. 
		So would I.

			    ROBERT
		That's very nice of you. I don't get 
		many dinner invitations on the job. 
		It would be a welcome change. Thanks.

							CUT TO:

	INT. BEDROOM - LATER

	Francesca rushes in and starts to disrobe, getting ready to 
	shower and change for dinner. She glances out the window and 
	sees:

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE

	Robert is at the water pump. His shirt is off and he is 
	washing himself. (WE INTERCUT THE TWO.)

	Francesca finds herself staring, a bit open mouthed. He has 
	a muscular, firm body. She watches how the water cascades 
	over his body. How he seems so unashamed, so "in his skin," 
	moving with such strength and grace.

	Robert pauses and looks out over the open pasture. The cold 
	water feels good. Since the pump is the back of the house, 
	hidden from the road, no one can see him. He decides to take 
	off his pants and cool himself further.

	Francesca begins watching this in shock until she has to 
	literally pull herself away from the window with such a force 
	that she rams herself into a chest of drawers, knocking over 
	an array of perfume bottles and a mirror. She deftly catches 
	a falling bottle and freezes. Taking a breath, she pulls 
	herself together.

			    FRANCESCA
		This is ridiculous. Stupid!

	She replaces the bottle and heads for the bathroom quite 
	composed, then, without warning, makes an immediate 180 
	degree turn and heads back to the window to sneak a peek.

	Seeing him, she gasps.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Oh my God.

	Watching him, she is possessed by some very frightening 
	feelings and runs from the window, into the bathroom, closing 
	the door behind her.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - EARLY EVENING

	Francesca is gathering some vegetables for dinner, from her 
	garden. Robert is at his truck, in his pants, changing into 
	a fresh shirt.

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	Francesca is cutting up vegetables. Robert enters with some 
	of his gear.

			    ROBERT
		I'm just going to put some of this 
		film in your fridge. Heat isn't too 
		forgiving out there.

	He does. On the radio, TONY BENNETT sings "WRAP YOUR TROUBLES 
	IN DREAMS." Robert approaches Francesca.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Can I help?

			    FRANCESCA
			(surprised)
		Help cook?

			    ROBERT
		Sure. Men cook. We don't all eat 
		bananas with our feet, ya know.

			    FRANCESCA
			(laughs)
		Okay.

	They stand side by side. Francesca hands him a stack of 
	carrots and a knife.

	MONTAGE:

	Tony Bennett's up-tempo tone plays over a series of images of 
	Francesca and Robert talk and prepare dinner.

	-- Four hands side by side, cutting and chopping. 
	Occasionally, a hand brushes against another as it reaches 
	for something.

	-- Robert's hand gently touching Francesca's waist as he 
	reaches around her for an onion.

	-- Robert lighting Francesca a cigarette.

	-- Robert brings in his cooker through the screen door. HE 
	MAKES SURE IT DOESN'T SLAM. FRANCESCA MAKES A NOTE OF THIS.

	-- Robert opens the cooler and removes two cold beers, tossing 
	one to Francesca.

	-- Francesca opening a new tablecloth and spreading it out on 
	the table.

	-- Francesca handing Robert plates from the shelf, their 
	fingers only barely touching.

	END OF MONTAGE

	INT. KITCHEN - EVENING

	Robert and Francesca are in the middle of dinner. But instead 
	of the usual silence that surrounds Johnson family eating, 
	Francesca is mesmerized by Robert as he manages to eat and 
	tell a story. The scene begins with a LAUGH FROM FRANCESCA.

			    ROBERT
			(laughs)
		... No, wait, it gets better.

	He stands up and acts it out for her.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		You have to get the full picture 
		here. I have three cameras around my 
		neck, a tripod in one hand and my 
		pants down around my ankles. I 
		thought this was a private bush. I 
		look up and this gorilla, this female 
		gorilla, is staring at me with what 
		can best be described as the most 
		lascivious expression I've ever seen 
		on a female with so much body hair.
			(Francesca laughs)
		I freeze. 'Cause that's what they tell 
		you to do. In this position. She comes 
		towards me and... and she...
			(he stops awkwardly)

			    FRANCESCA
		What?

			    ROBERT
		She starts sniffing me.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh my God...
			(laughs)
		You're blushing.

			    ROBERT
		It's still a very sensitive memory 
		for me.

			    FRANCESCA
		Then what happened?

			    ROBERT
		We got engaged.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh you!

	She throws a napkin at him.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		None of this is true!

			    ROBERT
		No, it is. Except for the engagement 
		part. She wouldn't have me, although 
		I still get a Valentine every year.

	Francesca is laughing so hard she can't breath. Robert loves 
	making her laugh.

			    FRANCESCA
		You ought to write these stories 
		down.

			    ROBERT
		Nah. I've tried. My writing's too 
		technical, I think. Problem of being 
		a journalist too long is you stop 
		giving yourself permission to invent. 
		I better just stick to making pictures.

			    FRANCESCA
		"Making pictures." I like that. You 
		really love what you do, don't you?

			    ROBERT
			(nods, smiles shyly)
		I'm kind of obsessed by it, actually.

			    FRANCESCA
		Why, do you think?

			    ROBERT
		I don't know if obsessions have 
		reasons. I think that's why they're 
		obsessions.

			    FRANCESCA
		You sound like an artist.

			    ROBERT
		No. I wouldn't say that. National 
		Geographic isn't exactly the hub of 
		artistic inspiration. They like their 
		wild life in focus and without any 
		personal comment. I don't mind 
		really. I'm not artist. I'd faced that 
		a long time ago. It's the course of 
		being well-adjusted. I'm too normal.

			    FRANCESCA
			(supportively)
		I don't think you're normal.

	He looks at her in surprise. She catches herself again.

			    FRANCESCA
		I didn't mean that the way it sounded.

			    ROBERT
		Well, let's just call it a compliment 
		and move on.
			(changes subject)
		Did you love teaching?

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Sometimes. When there was a particular 
		student who made a difference. I know 
		they're all supposed to, but it's not 
		true. You tend to single out one or 
		two you think you can contribute 
		something to.

			    ROBERT
		And did you?

			    FRANCESCA
		I'd like to think so. I know one of 
		them went on to Medical school.

			    ROBERT
		Why did you stop?

			    FRANCESCA
		My children. And Richard didn't like 
		my working.

			    ROBERT
		Do you miss it?

			    FRANCESCA
		I don't know. I've never thought 
		about it... what was the most 
		exciting place you've ever been to? 
		Unless you're tired of talking about 
		it.

			    ROBERT
		You're asking a man if he's too tired 
		to talk about himself? You don't get 
		out much, do you?

	Francesca smiles, a little embarrassed.

			    ROBERT
		I'm sorry. That was...

			    FRANCESCA
			(overlapping)
		No. It's all right. I just meant, it 
		might be a little dull for you, 
		telling all this to some housewife 
		in the middle of nowhere.

			    ROBERT
		This is your home. It's not nowhere. 
		And it's not dull.

	Francesca smiles again, this time relieved.

			    ROBERT
		Let's see -- my favorite place...

	Francesca settles in to listen, never taking her eyes off of him.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Well, it's the obvious choice, but I 
		think I'd have to say Africa. It's 
		another world. Not just the people 
		and the cultures but the land, the 
		colors you see at dawns and dusks -- 
		and the life there. It charges every 
		molecule of air.

	Francesca is fascinated, being drawn into his imagery.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		It's tangible -- the moment to moment 
		of life and death, the co-habitation 
		of man and beast, of beast and beast, 
		who'll survive, who won't -- and 
		there's no judgement about it. No 
		right or wrong or imposed morality. 
		It's just life. It's a voyeurs 
		paradise really because those animals 
		don't want anybody in their business. 
		You can watch but at a distance.
			(excited)
		I remember one time I was on a truck 
		headed for the Niger.

	Lights begin to dim as Francesca is so taken in by his story, 
	she begins to actually see what he is describing.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		We were driving north. The truck was 
		old so I guess the sound of the motor 
		muffled this kind of rumbling in the 
		distance -- until finally, it was upon 
		us like, like a hundred thunder claps 
		all at once...

	CU on FRANCESCA as WE BLEND THE SOUNDS OF AFRICA and --

							CUT TO:

	EXT. AFRICA - DAY

	Robert and a driver are in a truck driving north. Robert 
	turns to look out the window and sees:

	A HERD OF GIRAFFES AND GAZELLES AND WATERBUCKS AND ZEBRA are 
	running in the grasslands to the right of the truck. Robert 
	excitedly instructs the driver:

			    ROBERT
		Get us closer!!

	The driver veers off towards the stampede as Robert opens his 
	door and makes his way to the flatbed part of the truck with 
	his camera. The truck takes its position within this 
	breathtaking force of wildlife, as giraffes, zebras and 
	gazelles surround it -- all going in the same direction.

	Robert stands in the truck, shooting as fast as he can. The 
	truck races to keep up with the animals. Robert is so pumped 
	he can hardly catch his breath. Suddenly, the force and 
	beauty of these creatures causes him to lower his camera. He 
	is unable to film it because it overwhelms him. He just 
	stands there in awe and lets out a primal scream. The animals 
	gradually veer off to where the truck can no longer follow. 
	Robert watches them disappear into the distance.

							CUT BACK TO:

	INT. JOHNSON KITCHEN - NIGHT

	Francesca has seen all of this in her mind. Robert smiles at 
	her, sensing how in tune with the story she was.

			    FRANCESCA
		My God. How I'd love to see that.

			    ROBERT
		They have safaris for tourists now. 
		Maybe you can convince your husband.

	Francesca smiles. There is an awkward pause between them.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		It's a beautiful night. Would you 
		like to go for a walk?

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, it's kind of buggy out there.

			    ROBERT
			(rises)
		Have no fear. This Shoshone Medicine 
		Woman taught me how to make bug 
		repellent tea out of tree root.

			    FRANCESCA
		You drink bug repellent?

			    ROBERT
		No, you rub it on you. I have some in 
		the truck. Don't go away.

	She shakes her head. He runs out the screen door, not letting 
	it slam. Francesca looks like a teenager with first date 
	excitement.

	EXT. PASTURE - NIGHT

	Francesca and Robert walk through the pasture. She sniffs her 
	arm.

			    FRANCESCA
		Smells like dirt.

			    ROBERT
		You get used to it.

			    FRANCESCA
		When?

			    ROBERT
			(laughs)
		You want to go back in?

			    FRANCESCA
		No. I'm all right. It's working.

	Silence. They walk. It is a beautiful night.

			    ROBERT
		You've got it all right here, you 
		know. It's just as beautiful as any 
		other place I've seen. God, it 
		knocks me out.

			    FRANCESCA
		What?

			    ROBERT
			(indicating the night)
		This "... Of what I call God and 
		fools can Nature." Who wrote that?

			    FRANCESCA
		Umm, I don't know. I can look it up.

			    ROBERT
		I'd appreciate it. I like knowing who 
		I'm stealing from. If you can't 
		create art I think the least you can 
		do is recognize it around you, don't 
		you think? There is...
			(genuinely affected)
		... so much beauty.

	She watches him with great appreciation. He smiles at her. 
	Instead of looking away, their eyes remained locked for a 
	moment. There is clearly an attraction. They simultaneously 
	look away and continue walking.

	Francesca's heart is beating a mile a minute yet she can't 
	deny she is enjoying herself. Walking side by side in 
	silence, Francesca turns back occasionally to look at her 
	house as they get further away from it. Suddenly, the more 
	distant the house becomes, the more frightened she starts to 
	feel. Something inside her knows she's going too far with 
	this man -- too far from home. Although a part of her wants 
	it, she is surprised to find a larger part of her finds 
	too unknown. She stops.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		What's wrong?

	Francesca looks confused for a moment, not knowing what she 
	wants. She can't move. She searches for a way out.

			    FRANCESCA
		Would you like some coffee? Or maybe, 
		some brandy?

	Somehow Robert can sense her uneasiness. He obliges.

			    ROBERT
		How about both?

	INT. KITCHEN - NIGHT

	Francesca moves about the kitchen preparing coffee -- dropping 
	the coffee pot basket, spilling the grounds. She acts tense. 
	Robert sits at the table opening the brandy bottle Francesca 
	almost opened the night before, aware of her mood.

	Francesca gets the coffee going then sets the table with cups 
	and saucers.

			    ROBERT
		You sure you won't let me help you 
		with those dishes?

			    FRANCESCA
			(coldly)
		No. I'll do them later.

			    ROBERT
		Francesca?

			    FRANCESCA
		What?

			    ROBERT
		Are you all right?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes.

			    ROBERT
		Francesca?

			    FRANCESCA
		What?

			    ROBERT
		We're not doing anything wrong, do 
		you.

	Francesca freezes. He has read her mind again.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
			(smiles)
		Nothing you can't tell your children 
		about.

	Once again, he relieves her of fear and anxiety. He hands her 
	a glass of brandy...

							CUT TO:

	1995

	INT. KITCHEN - DAY

	Carolyn and Michael have come to the end of a notebook.

			    MICHAEL
		He's getting her drunk. That's what 
		happened. Jesus, maybe he forced 
		himself. That's why she couldn't tell 
		us.

			    CAROLYN
		Oh, he did not. He's such a nice guy.

			    MICHAEL
		Nice? He's trying to sleep with 
		somebody's wife.

			    CAROLYN
		I don't think so. Not yet anyway. And 
		besides, something like that doesn't 
		make you a bad person. He reminds me 
		of Steve in a way. Steve's weak, 
		immoral and a liar but he's still a 
		real nice guy. He just shouldn't be 
		married.
			(laughs)
		At least not to me. You getting 
		hungry? I'm hungry.

	Michael nods, then speaks with sincere compassion.

			    MICHAEL
		I had no idea it's gotten that bad, 
		sis.

			    CAROLYN
		Oh, don't feel sorry for me. Please. 
		No one's forcing me to stay.

			    MICHAEL
		Then why do you?

			    CAROLYN
		And do what? Live alone? Go back to 
		school? Find someone else? Start a 
		magazine for confused woman? ... What 
		if I can't do any of those things?

	Michael can't answer her. Carolyn looks through the cabinets.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		There's not much here to make.

			    MICHAEL
		Let's go into town and get a bite. 
		We'll take the books with us.

	Carolyn nods. Michael looks for the next notebook, checking 
	the dates.

	INT. CAR - EARLY EVENING

	Michael drives as Carolyn opens the next notebook and reads:

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"We sat sipping brandy. I thought if 
		anybody walked through the door now 
		there'd be no explaining it. But I 
		didn't care. And I loved that I 
		didn't care. I almost wanted it to 
		happen. Then there'd be no turning 
		back. I wanted to be like him. I 
		lived this life of his. We talked 
		about his wife and I was jealous -- 
		not of her -- but of his leaving. His 
		fearlessness. He knew what he wanted. 
		How did he do that.

							CUT BACK TO:

	1965

	INT. LIVING ROOM - NIGHT

	Francesca sips her brandy. Robert sits in the easy chair.

			    FRANCESCA
		Do you mind if I... ask you why you 
		got divorced?

			    ROBERT
		Not at all. I wasn't around much... 
		So why did I get married? Well, I 
		thought it was a good idea at the 
		time. Have a home base. Roots. You 
		can get lost moving around so much.

			    FRANCESCA
		So what happened?

			    ROBERT
		I never got lost. For some reason, 
		I'm more at home everywhere than at 
		one place. So I decided I'll think of 
		myself as some kind of world citizen. 
		I belong everywhere and nowhere. I'm 
		kin to everyone, and no one in 
		particular. See, once you get into 
		the habit of not needing anyone, it's 
		kind of hard to break.

			    FRANCESCA
		You must get lonely at times.

			    ROBERT
		Never touch the stuff. I've got 
		friends all over the world. Good 
		friends I can see when I want, if I 
		want.

			    FRANCESCA
		Woman friends, too?

			    ROBERT
		I'm a loner, I'm not a monk.

	Francesca averts her eyes, before continuing her investigation.

			    FRANCESCA
		You really don't need anyone?

			    ROBERT
		No, I think I need everyone! I love 
		people. I want to meet them all! 
		I just think there are too many out 
		there saying "This is mine." or 
		"She's mine." Too many lines have 
		been drawn. World's breaking apart 
		because of man's weakness for some 
		testosterone conquests over territory 
		and power and people. He wants 
		control over what deep down he knows 
		he has no control over whatsoever and 
		it scares him silly.

			    FRANCESCA
		Why doesn't it scare you?

			    ROBERT
		I embrace Mystery. I don't know 
		what's coming. And I don't mind.

			    FRANCESCA
		Do you ever regret it? The divorce,
		I mean.
		
			    ROBERT
		No.
		
			    FRANCESCA
		Do you ever regret not having a 
		family?

			    ROBERT
		Not everybody's supposed to have a 
		family.

			    FRANCESCA
		But -- how can you just live for what 
		you want? What about other people?

			    ROBERT
		I told you, I love other people.

			    FRANCESCA
		But no one in particular.

			    ROBERT
		No. But I love them just the same.

			    FRANCESCA
		But it's not the same.

			    ROBERT
		That's not what you're saying. I know 
		it's not the same. What you're saying 
		is, it's not as good. Or it's not as 
		normal or proper.

			    FRANCESCA
		No, I'm just saying --

			    ROBERT
			(interrupting)
		I'm a little sick of this American 
		Family Ethic everyone seems to be 
		hypnotized by in this country. I 
		guess you think I'm just some poor 
		displaced soul doomed to roam the 
		earth without a self-cleaning oven 
		and home movie.

			    FRANCESCA
			(irritated)
		Just because someone chooses to 
		settle down and have a family doesn't 
		necessarily mean they're hypnotized. 
		Just because I've never seen a 
		gazelle stampede doesn't mean I'm 
		asleep in the world.

			    ROBERT
		Do you want to leave your husband?

	Francesca is completely stunned and thrown off guard.

			    FRANCESCA
		No. Of course not.
			(rising, upset)

	Beat. Awkward silence. Suddenly there is tension between them.

			    ROBERT
		My mistake. I apologize.

			    FRANCESCA
		What made you ask such a question?

			    ROBERT
		I thought that's what we were 
		doing -- asking questions.

			    FRANCESCA
			(defensive)
		I thought we were just having a 
		conversation. You seem to be reading 
		all this meaning into it. Meanings I 
		must be too simple to, uh... 
		interpret or something.

			    ROBERT
		I already apologized.

	Silence. Robert remains seated. Francesca remains at the sink.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		It's getting late.
			(rises)
		Thank you for dinner.

	Pause. Francesca feels badly.

			    FRANCESCA
		Listen, I'm sorry I --

			    ROBERT
		No, no. Forgive me. I made a mistake. 
		It was an inappropriate thing to ask.

			    FRANCESCA
			(shrugs it off, then:)
		... I feel like something's been 
		spoiled now.

	Robert smiles and crosses to her. He takes her hand into both 
	his hands.

			    ROBERT
		It's been a perfect evening. Just the 
		way it is. Thank you.

	Francesca smiles. The possibility of a kiss hangs in the air 
	between them until Robert turns to get his film out of the 
	fridge. As he exits through the screen door, he stops.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		One thing though -- don't kid yourself, 
		Francesca. You're anything but a 
		simple woman.

	He smiles and exits, catching the screen door before it 
	slams.

	Francesca doesn't move for a moment, then crosses to the door 
	as if to run after him when she is stopped by the PHONE 
	RINGING. She picks up.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hello?

			    RICHARD (on phone)
		Franny?

			    FRANCESCA
		Richard, hi.

			    RICHARD (on phone)
		How are you?

			    FRANCESCA
		Fine. Everyone settled in okay?

			    RICHARD (on phone)
		Just fine. We're all in one room. 
		Michael's on the couch and 
		Carolyn's...
			(continues...)

	She hears Robert's truck door open and close. She hears the 
	motor being turned on. She half-listens to Richard.

			    FRANCESCA
		Uh-uh... good... Hmmm...

	She hears the truck driving away as Richard continues:

			    RICHARD (on phone)
		We got our position in the Fair. Not 
		bad although I would have liked to be 
		third which is not too early and not 
		too late. But I told Carolyn not to 
		worry...
			(continues, if needed)

							CUT TO:

	INT. FRANCESCA BEDROOM - NIGHT

	Francesca exits her bathroom, in her bathrobe, shutting the 
	light. She is brushing her hair and thinking of Robert. She 
	sits on the edge of the bed. She sees her reflection in a 
	mirror on the closet door.

	She stands and takes her robe off. She steps forward to look 
	at her body -- running her hands gently around her curves, her 
	neck, down the side of her thighs, her face, her breasts.

	She shuts off the lights and gets into bed under the covers. 
	She closes her eyes and tentatively begins to explore her 
	body. It is awkward for her but we can see her trying to let 
	herself go. Until she opens her eyes in frustration. It's no 
	good. She can't do it. She feels ashamed. The shame turns 
	into anger.

	INT. LIVING ROOM - NIGHT

	Francesca sits at a writing table with two large books opened 
	before her containing literary quotations. She searches for 
	the line Robert mentioned in the pasture.

	A note sits before her as well. On it reads: "Robert. Again, 
	I'm sorry for last night. Would you like supper again tonight 
	after you're finished. I'd like it very much if I were one of 
	those good friends you have in the world. Anytime is fine -- 
	Francesca... P.S. By the way, "Of what I call God and Fools 
	call Nature" was..." She writes the name BROWNING.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. ROSEMAN BRIDGE - NIGHT

	Francesca is tacking a note for Robert to the bridge. She 
	considers taking it down a moment later, but decides not to. 
	She gets back into her truck and drives away.

	WIDE ANGLE OF BRIDGES - DAWN

							DISSOLVE TO:

	The view of the bridge goes in and out of focus until we 
	realize we are seeing it through Robert's camera lens.

	Once the focus it sets, Robert notices something is tacked 
	onto the bridge. He crosses to it hurriedly -- time for the 
	perfect shot is running out -- pulls it down, thumbtack and 
	all, and shoves it into his pocket, unread. He returns to 
	his camera to take his shots.

							CUT TO:

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM - MORNING

	Francesca is making her bed when she hears a truck driving 
	down the road. She looks out the window to see:

	Robert's truck. However, it passes right by her house.

	Francesca's spirit sinks. She feels silly, ashamed and 
	rejected. She sits on the bed.

	FANTASY:

	Inside the truck, Robert drives by the house and chuckles to 
	himself at the foolishness of some boring, frustrated 
	housewife. Francesca's note has been crumbled and stuffed 
	into a dirty ashtray.

	END OF FANTASY:

	Francesca enters her bathroom, slamming the door behind her.

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER THAT MORNING

	Francesca sits at the kitchen table in her bathrobe with a 
	cup of coffee -- a comic portrait of shame and self-pity. Her 
	hair is a mess, she hasn't showered or dressed and she stares 
	into space while listening to the bluesy Chicago radio 
	station.

	The sink is full of dirty dishes she refuses to clean. Beside 
	it is an ashtray of butts from the night before. She carries 
	it over to the table and begins fingering for a butt to 
	smoke in desperation. She lights up and stares into space.

	FANTASY:

	Robert is in Africa talking to TWO ZULU TRIBE MEMBERS. THE 
	DIALOGUE IS SUBTITLED IN SWAHILI:

			    ROBERT
			(laughs)
		... and then she tacks this note on 
		the bridge asking me to have dinner 
		with her again!

	One Zulu turns to the tower and remarks.

			    ZULU
		How pathetic.

	END OF FANTASY:

	Francesca put out her cigarette and suddenly gets an idea. 
	She goes to the phone, reads a number off of a slip of paper 
	and dials.

			    FRANCESCA (on phone)
		Hello? Is Richard Johnson staying 
		there?... No, I don't want to leave 
		a message. Maybe you can help me -- 
		I'm his wife and I live in Winterset 
		Iowa -- I wanted to surprise them by 
		driving up tonight. What would be the 
		fastest route, the Interstate?... Huh-
		huh... Hold it, let me get a pen.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. PAY PHONE, GAS STATION - LATE MORNING

	Francesca's note is opened in Robert's hand. Her phone number 
	is written after the "P.S." He stands in the pay phone 
	getting a busy signal from Francesca's line. He hangs up.

							CUT TO:

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	Francesca, dressed and packed, prepares to leave. She checks 
	her purse to make sure she's got everything. She grabs her 
	bag and exits.

	A few beats later, the phone rings. But she doesn't return. 
	It rings again. We hear Francesca's truck door open and 
	close. It rings again. We think Francesca is on her way, 
	until:

	We suddenly hear her burst into the house and see her leap 
	for the phone.

			    FRANCESCA
			Hello?

	INTERCUT --

	INT. SLOW BEND SALOON/RESTAURANT - DAY

	Robert is at another pay phone.

			    ROBERT
			Francesca?

			    FRANCESCA
			(out of breath)
		Yes! Hi.

			    ROBERT
		Am I interrupting anything?

			    FRANCESCA
		No. I was just... No.

			    ROBERT
		I'm sorry I didn't call sooner, but I 
		just read your note. I stuffed it 
		into my pocket. The light was fading 
		and I had to get my shot.

			    FRANCESCA
			(relieved)
		The light was fading. Huh-huh.

			    ROBERT
		I would love to come for dinner.

			    FRANCESCA
			(smiles)
		Wonderful. Uh...

			    ROBERT
		Listen, I have to shoot Cedar Bridge 
		until a little after sunset. I want 
		a few night shots. Would you like to 
		come with me? If you're interested...

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh, sure. Great.

			    ROBERT
		I'll pick you up.

			    FRANCESCA
		No. I'll drive myself. I have a few 
		errands. I'll meet you there.

			    ROBERT
		Okay. See you later.

			    FRANCESCA
		Yeah. See you later.

	Francesca is thrilled. Her mind races with a list of things 
	she must do before tonight. She opens a cabinet, removes a 
	coffee can and empties it of her house money. She quickly 
	counts it, then shoves it into her purse.

	EXT. ON THE ROAD - DAY

	Francesca drives past a sign marking Des Moines as the next 
	town.

	INT. SLOW BEND SALOON/ RESTAURANT - DAY

	The second of two eating establishments in Winterset. A 
	lunch time crowd fills the place. Robert is seated at the 
	counter. He can sense their eyes on him, wondering who this 
	stranger is and what's he doing here. He knows the whispered 
	conversation is about him.

	A MIDDLE-AGED COUPLE talk at table.

			    WIFE
		Thelma told me he checked into the 
		Motor Inn and the bill goes to 
		National Geographic Magazine.

			    HUSBAND
		National Geographic? What the hell's 
		he doing here? We ain't got no naked 
		pygmies to take pictures of.

			    WIFE
		He's taking pictures of the bridges.

			    HUSBAND
		Ain't no pygmies there either.

	Robert wants to finish his lunch as quickly as possible. At 
	that moment, someone enters the restaurant and all the 
	conversation stops. He overhears one waitress turn to the 
	other and whisper --

			    WAITRESS
		God. It's Lucy Redfield.

	Both the Waitress and Robert (though more subtly) turn to see:

	THE REDFIELD WOMAN. But instead of being the harlot we might 
	think, she's actually a rather plain, demure looking woman -- 
	not nearly as fancy or pretty as Mrs. Delaney herself.

	As she crosses the counter, Robert immediately picks up on 
	the vibes in the room. He notices all the patrons stare then 
	turns away to whisper. The waitress behind the counter ignores 
	her. A customer eating at the counter places a bag on an 
	empty stool beside her, so the Redfield woman can't sit down 
	near her.

	Robert and the Redfield woman's eyes meet. She is clearly 
	uncomfortable. She turns, about to leave, when Robert clears 
	his cameras off of a stool next to him and offers:

			    ROBERT
		Got room right here if you like.

	She is surprised at his courtesy. Others are astounded. Some 
	disgusted. She accepts his offer and sits beside him.

			    REDFIELD WOMAN
		Thank you.

			    ROBERT
		Hot out there today.

	She nods and smiles. The waitress tosses a menu at her and 
	slams down a glass of water, then moves on down the counter. 
	The Redfield woman tries to act casual, glancing through the 
	menu. Robert subtly scans the room as all eyes are on them, 
	then turn away.

	Robert returns his glace back to the Redfield woman who is 
	now only pretending to read the menu. She is so embarrassed. 
	She wants to leave but can't move.

			    WAITRESS
		Well, are you ordering anything!?

	Her harsh tone startles the Redfield woman as well as Robert. 
	Gathering her dignity, she responds.

			    REDFIELD WOMAN
		No. Thank you. I've changed my mind.

	She politely nods to Robert, gathers her things and exits. 
	Robert looks to the waitress, as a SECOND WAITRESS enters.

			    SECOND WAITRESS
		I'd've thrown that water right in her 
		face.

			    WAITRESS
		Poor Mrs. Delaney.

	The waitress walks O.S. leaving the second waitress facing 
	Robert, who looks at her curiously. The second waitress looks 
	back as if to say, "What business is it of yours?" and exits.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. DES MOINES - DAY

	A metropolis compared to Winterset.

	Francesca exits a liquor store with a bottle of wine in a 
	paper bag. She also carries a bag of groceries as she heads 
	down the street to her parked truck. She passes a DRESS SHOP 
	and stops.

							CUT BACK TO:

	EXT. WINTERSET - DAY

	Robert enters a general store. He buys a six pack of beer 
	for his cooler and approaches the counter for the Cashier.

			    CASHIER
		That all?

	Robert nods. He decides to have some fun and test the waters a 
	little bit.

			    ROBERT
		Isn't it awful about poor Mrs. 
		Delaney?

	With this, the damn bursts -

			    CASHIER
		Tragic is more like it. The pain that 
		woman has been subjected to by that 
		no-good husband. I never liked him. 
		Known him for years. People say he's 
		quiet. Well, it's the quiet ones that 
		can sneak up behind you and stab you 
		in the back. I heard yesterday, that 
		she confronted him. Gave him the 
		ultimatum and you know what he did?--
			(CONTINUES AS NEEDED)

	Robert stands astounded, listening to this diatribe of gossip.

							CUT BACK TO:

	INT. DES MOINES DRESS SHOP - DAY

	Francesca sits in her slip, alone in a dressing room, with 
	several dresses strewn about. The panic of indecision has set 
	in. She looks at herself in the mirror and begins to doubt 
	that seeing Robert is a good idea. Or perhaps she's imagining 
	something that isn't there. And what about Richard?

	MEMORY:

	A few years back. Francesca is dressed up for some formal 
	affairs. She heads down the stairs. Richard is waiting in the 
	hall, in a suit and tie. He looks at her admiringly.

			    FRANCESCA
		Ready. You have the keys?

	But Richard doesn't answer. He's just staring at her. 
	Francesca stops. Richard looks at her like a little boy.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		What's the matter?

	Richard is obviously impressed by how she looks, but he can't 
	say anything. He just smiles shyly and shakes his head to say 
	nothing is wrong and opens the door for her.

	END OF MEMORY:

	Francesca feels guilty when a SALESWOMAN enters with a pretty 
	summer dress.

			    SALESWOMAN
		How about this one?

	Francesca examines it. She likes it. But the guilt...

			    FRANCESCA
		I don't know. I haven't bought a 
		dress for myself in so long.
			(saleswoman nods)
		I mean, I'm just buying a dress. It's 
		not a special occasion or anything. 
		I'm just shopping. Just shopping for 
		a new dress, that's all.

			    SALESWOMAN
			(completely 
			 understands)
		That might work. And if he's still 
		mad, just tell him you could have 
		done better but you married him out 
		of pity. That's always works for me.

							CUT TO:

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - LATE AFTERNOON

	Francesca enters with her new dress, groceries and wine as 
	the PHONE RINGS. She puts everything down to answer.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hello?

	Intercut ROBERT at a pay phone.

			    ROBERT
		It's Robert.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh, hi. Look, I'm running a little 
		late, but I'll still...

			    ROBERT
			(w/difficulty)
		Listen, don't take this the wrong way 
		but, I'm wondering if this is such a 
		good idea.

	Francesca's heart sinks.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh.

			    ROBERT
		I uh... I had lunch in town today. 
		Happened to cross paths with "that 
		Redfield woman." I apologize. I 
		thought you were half-joking about 
		that.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh. I guess you got the whole story.

			    ROBERT
		The cashier at the general store was 
		very dangerous.

			    FRANCESCA
		I think he's running for town crier 
		next year.

			    ROBERT
		I now know more about their affair 
		than I remember about my marriage.
			(seriously)
		Francesca, the last thing I want to 
		do is put you in any kind of 
		situation that would... even though 
		we know it's just -- I mean, it's 
		nothing like that, but if anybody saw 
		us or...
			(can't finish)

			    FRANCESCA
			(disappointed)
		I understand.
			(touched)
		That's very kind of you.

	Silence. Both want to meet. Both experience the idea of not 
	seeing each other even again in this brief moment. Someone 
	has to say something to save it -- but who will it be?

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Robert?

			    ROBERT
		Yeah?

			    FRANCESCA
		I want you to come.

	Robert is relieved.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		I'll meet you at the bridge just like 
		we planned all right. Don't worry about 
		the rest of it... I'm not.

			    ROBERT
		All right. See you there.

	Francesca smiles and hangs up. In that moment, Francesca 
	realizes consciously what she is doing and what she wants.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. CEDAR BRIDGE - DUSK

	Robert is already there, working. He checks his watch, 
	anxious for Francesca to arrive, when he hears a truck 
	driving up. He looks to see Francesca stop and get out. By 
	their expressions we can tell how glad they are to see each 
	other.

			    FRANCESCA
		Sorry I'm late. Richard called.

			    ROBERT
		Oh, how is he?

			    FRANCESCA
		Fine. They're all having a good time. 
		How many more shots do you have?

			    ROBERT
		Couple. Want to help?

	She nods. He extends his hand. She pauses, then takes it. He 
	leads her to the bridge. Walking away from camera, they say:

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		I should stop off at the motel to 
		clean up before dinner.

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, I have plumbing at my house.

							CUT TO:

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM - EARLY MORNING

	Francesca enters. Robert is in the bathroom, in the shower, 
	with the bathroom door slightly ajar. His clothes are laid on 
	the bed with his bag beside them. A fresh shirt is folded. 
	Francesca takes his dirty shirt and decides to clean it. As 
	she exits, her eye can't help roaming toward the bathroom 
	door. For a moment, she pauses to listen to the sound of the 
	water as it hits his body.

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	Francesca is busy preparing dinner. Robert enters, cleaned 
	and dressed.

			    ROBERT
		Can I help?

			    FRANCESCA
		Actually, no. I've got everything 
		under control. I'd like to clean up 
		myself a bit. I'm going to take a 
		bath. Dinner'll be ready in about a 
		half hour.

			    ROBERT
		How about if I set the table?

			    FRANCESCA
		Sure.

			    ROBERT
		Would you like a beer for your bath?

			    FRANCESCA
			(surprised)
		Yes, that'd be nice.

	Robert gets her one.

	INT. BATHROOM - LATER

	Francesca lounges in a tub with a beer poured into a wine 
	glass. She finds it very elegant. She takes a deep breath, 
	thinking "What's going to happen tonight?"

	INT. KITCHEN - LATER

	Robert is at the radio when Francesca enters in her new 
	dress. She looks beautiful. And it's all over Robert's face.

			    FRANCESCA
		What's wrong?

	Unlike her husband, Robert has an answer.

			    ROBERT
		Absolutely nothing. You're just sort 
		of a knockout in that dress.

	She smiles and crosses to the stove.

			    FRANCESCA
		Table looks beautiful.

	He can't take his eyes off of her. On the radio we hear DIHAH 
	WASHINGTON begin to sing "IF IT'S THE LAST THING I DO" -- a 
	beautiful, blusey lovesong. Francesca pulls out a pan of hot 
	rolls as THE PHONE RINGS. Francesca moves toward it with a 
	roll, which she tosses to Robert. He burns his fingers and he 
	smiles at her joke. The song plays throughout.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Hello? Hi, Madge?

	Francesca and Robert do not take their eyes off of each other 
	throughout the call. Robert takes a bit of the roll.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Huh-huh. Nothing, just making 
		myself some dinner... No what?... 
		Oh... I heard about him. Yeah, I hear 
		he's some kind of photographer.
			(Robert smiles)
		No, I didn't... Huh-huh... Hippie? 
		I don't know, is that what hippies 
		look like?...

	Robert steps closer to her, purposely reaching across her 
	body for a napkin.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Oh he is, huh? Well, don't tell Floyd, 
		he'll be out with a shotgun...

	She notices a crumb on Robert's mouth and wipes it off. 
	Robert takes her hand and holds it, lowering it to his side.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		Well, listen, I have a pot boiling. 
		I've got to go... No, they don't get 
		home until Friday morning... Well, 
		maybe I'll give you a call. Okay. Bye.

	She hangs up. The two are now almost face to face. Robert 
	raises her hand up and slips his free one around her waist. 
	They begin to dance to the song. The kitchen lights have not 
	been turned on since the sun went down. The sky, a dark 
	orange and magenta, illuminates the room through the window. 
	They never take their eyes off of each other. Suddenly, 
	Robert stops.

			    ROBERT
		You're shaking. Are you cold?

	Francesca shakes her head. They dance a bit more, but 
	Francesca is shaking which makes it difficult. They both 
	stop. Robert places his huge hands on either side of her 
	face, gently stroking her hair away from her cheek. He 
	whispers.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		If you want me to stop, tell me how.

	He brushes his cheek and face softly against hers. Francesca 
	rubs hers against him. She can barely breathe.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Francesca, I won't be sorry. I won't 
		apologize for this.

			    FRANCESCA
		Nobody's asking you to.

	They kiss. Hands gently explore. Their bodies touch. Their 
	lips never spend more than seconds away from each other. 
	Robert gently slide his hands down her breasts and torso, 
	exploring every inch of her. Francesca grips his massive 
	back, sliding up to his neck and hair. Robert lifts her leg 
	and presses it against his hip, kissing her neck and 
	shoulders. Francesca starts to lose herself, clutching his 
	head at her breast then pulling him up to her mouth once 
	again.

							CUT TO:

	1995

	INT. SLOW BEND CAFE - PRESENT DAY - EVENING

	The same saloon/restaurant of twenty-five years ago has been 
	turned into a modern cafe yet the original charm is still 
	there.

	Carolyn and Michael sit in a booth, with half-eaten dinners 
	before them. Carolyn has been reading the book to Michael 
	when she looks across from her to find -- Michael looking like 
	a little boy who is fighting not to cry.

			    CAROLYN
		What's the matter?

	Michael shakes his head. He can't or won't explain. He's too 
	upset. His eyes tear up. Carolyn feels badly for him.

			    MICHAEL
		I'm going to get some air.

	He exits. Carolyn smiles sympathetically. Somehow this last 
	passage of their mothers doesn't affect her in the same way. 
	She returns to the book but first asks a passing waitress, 
	with great urgency.

			    CAROLYN
		Can I smoke here?

	The waitress nods. Carolyn needs a cigarette for the rest of 
	this. She opens her bag to get her pack. Inside her bag she 
	notices a BUSINESS CARD. She picks it up to read IRA NEWMAN, 
	attorney. Divorce. Pre-Nuptials. Marital Litigation. She 
	pauses for a moment. Then, tossing the card back inside, she 
	lights her cigarette and takes a drag. We follow the curls of 
	smoke up as we:

							DISSOLVE TO:

	1965

	INT. JOHNSON LIVING ROOM

	Camera moves down curls of smoke, to reveal:

	Robert and Francesca in each others arms, under a blanket on 
	the living room floor on a bed of couch pillows, smoking a 
	cigarette after lovemaking. Francesca seems miles away -- 
	feelings of regret and guilt creeping in.

			    ROBERT
		Are you comfortable?
			(she nods)
		Do you... want to move to the 
		bedroom?

			    FRANCESCA
		No. I can't. Not yet.

	She can't bring herself to go into her husband bed.

			    ROBERT
		You want to eat something?

			    FRANCESCA
		Are you hungry?

			    ROBERT
		No.

	Silence. Robert shifts his body to face her.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Honey. Are you all right?

	She looks at him and starts to cry, shaking her head. The room 
	is filled with memories of her family. She nestles in his arms. 
	He folds her. She closes her eyes.

			    FRANCESCA
		Take me somewhere.

			    ROBERT
		What?

			    FRANCESCA
		Right now. Tell me someplace you've 
		been -- someplace on the other side 
		of the world. Anywhere but here.

			    ROBERT
			(thinks, then:)
		How about Italy?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes.

			    ROBERT
		How about Bari?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. Tell me about the day you got 
		off the train.

			    ROBERT
		Have you ever been to that station?

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes.

			    ROBERT
		You know that little place nearby 
		with the striped awning that sells 
		sandwiches and little pizzas...

	The two transport themselves together to another place, where 
	there is no familiar memories surrounding them to interfere.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. JOHNSON PORCH - NIGHT

	The two sit in bathrobes on the porch looking out over the 
	pasture. They have plates of dinner on their laps. They eat 
	voraciously.

			    ROBERT
		Do you have anymore of the stew?

	Chewing, Francesca nods and leans over, picks a pot off the 
	porch and ladles some more onto his plate. Too much falls out 
	and it spills onto the robe.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh, I'm sorry.

			    ROBERT
		It's okay. It's not that hot anymore. 
		Thanks God.

	Francesca hands him a dish rag. Robert wipes off the food 
	revealing his bare leg. She reaches over and touches it. He 
	looks at her and smiles. She leans over and kisses him 
	passionately until, suddenly, she pulls away. She looks 
	upset. She rises and moves away to look out to the pasture. 
	Robert can sense what is wrong.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		You think too much, you know that?

			    FRANCESCA
		I just feel like I'm getting a little
		... out of control that's all. It's 
		kind of frightening.

			    ROBERT
		Why?

			    FRANCESCA
		Why!? Because, I'm having thoughts I 
		hardly know what to do with. I... 
		can't seem to... stop them.

			    ROBERT
		Nobody's asking you to.

			    FRANCESCA
			(excited)
		And arraccinos and zeppolis. Yes! I 
		know it!

			    ROBERT
		I sat outside and had coffee.

			    FRANCESCA
		Where? Near the doorway or the near the 
		front of the church?

			    ROBERT
		Near the church.

			    FRANCESCA
			(closes her eyes)
		I sat there once. It was hot. Like 
		today. I'd been shopping. I had all 
		these bags around my feet I kept 
		having to move every time the waiter 
		came by...

							DISSOLVE TO:

	EXT. SANDWICH CAFE - BARI - DAY

	Francesca sits at the outdoor cafe in Bari with shopping bags 
	around her feet. She re-arranges them as the waiter passes 
	by, mumbling something vulgar under his breath. When she 
	looks up -- Robert is standing there. She smiles. He offers 
	her hand. She takes it and rises. They leave the cafe.

	MONTAGE:

	Francesca and Robert together against the breathtaking 
	backdrop of the Italian countryside.

	EXT. BARI COUNTRYSIDE - DAY

	On a lakefront, Robert and Francesca make love.

	WE INTERCUT WITH:

	INT. JOHNSON LIVING ROOM - EVENING

	FRANCESCA AND ROBERT MAKING LOVE ONCE AGAIN.

	Francesca looks at him and understands he is giving her full 
	permission to explore whatever she wants. Hesitantly, she 
	crosses to him and takes his plate away. She stands before 
	him, leaning him back into his chair. She slowly, 
	tentatively, opens her robe. She strokes his hair, then 
	caresses his head and gently guides it between her legs.

	1994

	INT. SLOW BEND RESTAURANT - NIGHT

	C.U. on an ashtray filled with cigarette butts as Carolyn 
	anxiously lights another. These last entries have over 
	stimulated her. She calls to the waitress abruptly.

			    CAROLYN
		Can I get another cup of coffee, 
		please?

	When she looks up, she sees Michael has returned. He sits.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		Where did you go?

			    MICHAEL
		Bar across the street.

			    CAROLYN
		Have you called Betty?
			(she shakes his head)
		Maybe you should.

			    MICHAEL
		I found out who Lucy Delaney is.
			(she looks interested)
		Remember the Delaneys from Hillcrest 
		Road?

			    CAROLYN
		Yeah. But I thought she died.

			    MICHAEL
		He remarried. Apparently they were 
		having an affair for years. 
		Apparently the first Mrs. Delaney was 
		a bit of a stiff.

			    CAROLYN
		You mean -- she didn't like sex?

			    MICHAEL
			(nods, then simply:)
		I bet mom could've helped her.

			    CAROLYN
		Boy. All these years I've resented 
		not living the wild life in some 
		place like Paris and all the time I 
		could've moved back to Iowa... Are 
		you drunk?

			    MICHAEL
		Not yet. You want to go?

			    CAROLYN
		I think I better. Between the book 
		and the coffee, I'm this close to 
		raping the busboy.

	EXT. IOWA LAKEFRONT - NIGHT

	Michael and Carolyn have parked in a secluded area near a 
	lake. Some place where the moonlight and the scenery create 
	a beautiful backdrop. They sit on the ground, leaving the 
	headlights and the radio on. They are getting drunk sharing 
	a bottle of whiskey.

			    MICHAEL
		I used to love this place. I used to 
		take Kathy Reynolds down here.

			    CAROLYN
		You never dated Kathy Reynolds!

			    MICHAEL
		Not officially. Her and Steve Kendall 
		were pinned at birth. But I was crazy 
		about her. And for about three months, 
		I managed to catch her during her 
		"exploring" stage.

			    CAROLYN
		I never knew that.

			    MICHAEL
			(sadly)
		Nobody did.

			    CAROLYN
		Was this during Betty?

			    MICHAEL
		Everything was during Betty. God we 
		were so young. Why did we think we 
		had to do it all so fast? I've never 
		cheated on Betty. Not once we were 
		married, I mean.

			    CAROLYN
		Did we want to?

			    MICHAEL
		Only about a thousand times. What do 
		I do now? "What's good enough for mom 
		is good enough for me?"

			    CAROLYN
			(pissed off)
		What gets me is I'm 46 years old. 
		I've been in this crummy fucking 
		marriage -

			    MICHAEL
		Carolyn!

			    CAROLYN
			(ignores him)
		-- for over twenty years because 
		that's what I was taught -- you stick 
		with it! Normal people don't get 
		divorced. I can't remember the last 
		time my husband made love to me so 
		intensely that he transported me to 
		Europe, for Christ's sake -- quite 
		frankly, I don't think he ever did! 
		And now I find out in between bake 
		sales, my mother was Anais Nin!

			    MICHAEL
		What about me! I feel really weird. 
		Like she cheated on me, not dad. 
		Isn't that sick? I don't mean I 
		wanted to sleep with her or anything 
		but -- ya know -- being the only son. 
		You're sort of made to feel like 
		you're the prince of the kingdom, ya 
		know? And in the back of your mind, 
		you kind of think your mother doesn't 
		need sex anymore because she has you.

			    CAROLYN
		You're right -- that is sick.

	They drink.

			    MICHAEL
		If she was so unhappy, why didn't she 
		leave?

	They look to each other without an answer. Then simultaneously 
	they reach for the notebooks.

			    MICHAEL (cont'd)
		Can I read it now? I think I'm ready.

	Carolyn offers him the book then lays back in a relaxed 
	position in order to listen. Michael flips to an ear marked 
	page.

			    MICHAEL (cont'd)
		What paragraph were you up to?

			    CAROLYN
			(casually)
		She just made him perform oral sex on 
		the porch.

	Michael freezes. He loses his nerve. Carolyn helps.

			    CAROLYN (cont'd)
		Go ahead, Michael. You've got to do 
		this. Just think, "Today I am a man."

	Michael nods and takes another swig. He reads:

			    MICHAEL
		"I'd never had a man make love to me 
		that way before."
			(stops)
		Oh Jesus.
			(continues)
		"I couldn't believe the feelings 
		bursting inside of me. As if I had 
		opened some forbidden Pandora's box."

	Camera begins to move to wide angle as Francesca takes over.

			    FRANCESCA
		"It seems, thinking about it now, 
		that in those few days I lived a 
		completely different life as a 
		completely different woman. What was 
		recognizable as me before Robert was 
		gone. We decided to spend Wednesday 
		away from Winterset. Away from 
		Madison County. Away from pastures 
		and bridges and people too familiar 
		and reminders too painful. We let the 
		day take us where it wanted..."

	1965

	INT. DES MOINES MOVIE THEATER - DAY

	VIVIEN LEIGH is walking down a ships stairs in the 1965 film 
	"SHIP OF FOOLS." She is alone on screen. She walks, slightly 
	intoxicated. Suddenly, Charleston music plays out of nowhere 
	and she begins to dance, by herself, without any self-
	consciousness.

	In the movie theatre, Robert sits with his arm around 
	Francesca like teenage lovers. Her head is nestled in his 
	chest as she eats from a bag of popcorn. Robert barely keeps 
	his eyes on the screen, staring at Francesca and stroking her 
	hair.

	EXT. DOWNTOWN DES MOINES STREET - DAY

	Francesca and Robert walk hand-in-hand, window shopping and 
	taking in the sights. For Francesca, it is as if she is 
	seeing everything for the first time.

	INT. BOOK STORE - DAY

	Robert introduces Francesca to the photography section, 
	showing her a book of one of his favorite photographers, 
	Walker Evans. Francesca admires one photograph in particular 
	-- a mother and child during the depression.

			    FRANCESCA
		On that one is beautiful. Look at 
		their expressions. As if the camera 
		weren't on them at all. As if they 
		had no strength left to hide what 
		they were feeling.

			    ROBERT
		He's a genius. They're not 
		photographs -- they're stories, entire 
		histories captured in moments.

			    FRANCESCA
		I bet you could do a book.

			    ROBERT
		No. I couldn't.

			    FRANCESCA
		Why do you say that?

			    ROBERT
		Because I already tried once.

	Francesca is surprised. She senses his disappointment.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		It's no big deal. I know how to work 
		a camera, how to make it "make 
		pictures" -- but I don't know how to 
		make it make art.
			(laughs)
		At least that's what six publishers 
		said. To take what we see of this 
		world and give it back with a bit of 
		ourselves in it. It's a mystery to me.

			    FRANCESCA
			(smiles, supportive)
		But you don't mind.

			    ROBERT
			(smiles)
		No, I don't mind.

	She brushes his hair away from his face affectionately. As he 
	looks at another book, she notices their reflection in a 
	mirror. She puts her arm through his. They look like a couple 
	to her -- two people who belong together.

	INT. FANCY RESTAURANT - DAY

	Francesca and Robert have an elegant lunch.

			    FRANCESCA
		What were you like when you were 
		younger?

			    ROBERT
			(smiles)
		Trouble. Why?

			    FRANCESCA
			(laughs)
		I just wondered. Why were you trouble?

			    ROBERT
		I had a temper.

			    FRANCESCA
		What were your parents like?

	Pause. Robert doesn't reply. She looks at him curiously.

			    ROBERT
		I can't do this, honey.

			    FRANCESCA
		What?

			    ROBERT
		Try and live a lifetime before 
		Friday. Cram it all in.
			(shakes his head)

	This is the first time either has mentioned their time clock. 
	Francesca nods, understandingly.

	Across the room, Francesca notices A MOTHER having dessert 
	with her FIVE-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER, a pretty little girl in a 
	fancy yellow dress. The mother rises and exits to the ladies 
	room while the little girl continues eating a large sundae.

	Francesca smiles. As the girl licks a spoon of fudge, she 
	sees Francesca looking at her and smiles back. Robert watches 
	the silent exchange as he eats. Francesca makes a funny face 
	at her. The little girl giggles as she spoons more ice-cream. 
	Unfortunately, she spoons too much and the ice-cream falls on 
	her pretty dress. She tries to take it off her, but she slips 
	through her fingers and stains her even more. She looks at 
	Francesca as if she's about to cry. Francesca smiles.

			    FRANCESCA
		Excuse me a minute.

	Robert watches her cross to the little girl and kneel beside 
	her. He sees her consoling the little girl while taking a 
	napkin and dabbing it in the water glass.

	She helps the girl carefully wipe away the mess, all the 
	while calming her. The mother re-enters the scene and shakes 
	her head at her daughter. The daughter is afraid of being 
	reproached but the mother is smiling. She and Francesca begin 
	talking. She thanks Francesca. Robert sees the two mothers 
	exchanging a moment of common experience and brief 
	friendship. The mother and daughter take their leave as 
	Francesca says goodbye and returns to the table. Robert looks 
	at her lovingly. Francesca returns to her meal, but suddenly 
	she is no longer hungry. Robert senses something is upsetting 
	her.

			    ROBERT
		You're somewhere else, where?

			    FRANCESCA
		Just that it's been a perfect day and 
		that I'd like to skip my fancy 
		dessert and go home after this.

			    ROBERT
		Uh-huh. And?

			    FRANCESCA
			(beat)
		You're right, you know. We don't have 
		much time.

	Uncomfortable silence hangs between them. A waiter passes by.

			    ROBERT
		Check, please.

	OS, as the MOTHER YELLS:

			    MOTHER
		REBECCA! REBECCA!

	Both Robert and Francesca look to the voice.

	EXT. RESTAURANT - DAY

	The mother stands on the street frantically calling for her 
	daughter.

			    MOTHER
		REBECCA!

	The Maitre'd, Francesca and Robert exit the restaurant.

			    MOTHER
		Oh my God...!

			    FRANCESCA
		What happened?

			    MOTHER
		I was paying the check. She ran 
		outside. I told her to wait for me 
		right here! Oh God, where is she? 
		Rebecca!

	The sidewalk is filled with people. Francesca looks to 
	Robert. He recognizes the concern in her expression. Going 
	home will have to wait.

			    ROBERT
		I'll check down here. Someone call 
		the police.

	The Maitre'd goes back inside. Francesca comforts the mother.

			    FRANCESCA
		Think for a second. Is there 
		someplace she said she wanted to go?

			    MOTHER
		I don't remember!

	EXT. STREET

	Robert searches through the street, poking in and out of 
	storefronts, looking across the street.

	EXT. RESTAURANT

	Francesca and the mother search in the opposite direction.

	EXT. STREET

	Through the crowd of people, Robert looks across the four 
	lane Main Street to a LARGE CITY PARK. He crosses to it.

	INT. RESTAURANT - AN HOUR LATER

	Francesca sits with the mother as TWO POLICEMEN take down a 
	description. The mother is crying. A waiter brings over some 
	water for her. The Maitre'd stands by.

			    MOTHER
		She was right outside. I turned my 
		head for a second.

			    POLICEMAN
		When was this?

			    FRANCESCA
		About an hour ago.

			    MOTHER
		They're not going to find her!

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes, they are.

	At that moment, the mother looks up and cries.

			    MOTHER
		REBECCA!

	She jumps out of her seat as all turn to see:

	Robert holding the little girl in his arms, entering the 
	restaurant. He carefully hands her over to the mother. The 
	two wrap their arms around each other. Francesca looks to 
	Robert, loving him even more now.

			    FRANCESCA
		Where was she?

			    ROBERT
		Across the street. She went into the 
		park and got turned around and didn't 
		know her way out.

			    MOTHER
		You crossed the street by yourself?!

			    REBECCA
			(crying)
		It was a green light.

	The mother is too relieved to be mad. Robert sits down.

			    MOTHER
		Thank you so much!

			    ROBERT
			(frazzled)
		I need a drink.

	Everyone laughs out of relief. Francesca wraps her arm around 
	his shoulder and kisses his forehead. He kisses her back.

	INT. TRUCK - DUSK

	Robert drives as Francesca sits inside his arm. Neither speaks.

	INT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DUSK

	Francesca calmly leads Robert up to her bedroom.

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM

	Naked, Francesca guides Robert into bed beneath the covers. 
	They begin to make love -- softly, lovingly -- like a couple 
	that are beyond the erotic, discovery stage; a couple that 
	have been together and in love for years.

	LATER -

	Francesca puts her arm around him as he nestles his head to 
	her breast. Francesca strokes his hair as Robert closes his 
	eyes.

			    ROBERT
		I don't know why I'm so tired all of 
		a sudden.

			    FRANCESCA
		Long day. Go to sleep.

			    ROBERT
		Am I too heavy for you?

			    FRANCESCA
		No.

	Robert settles into her. But Francesca is wide awake. 
	Something is on her mind -- "Tomorrow? What happens after 
	tomorrow?"

	INT. KITCHEN - MORNING

	Francesca is serving Robert breakfast, then sits down beside 
	him. Silence. We can sense some tension between them -- this 
	being their last day together.

	Francesca seems ingeniously friendly. Robert is suspicious.

			    FRANCESCA
		Sleep all right?

			    ROBERT
		Yes, thanks.

			    FRANCESCA
		Good. More coffee?
			(he nods, she pours)
		Robert, I hope you don't mind my 
		asking, but I feel like I should.

			    ROBERT
		What?

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, these... women friends of 
		yours... all over the world. How 
		does it work? Do you see some of them 
		again? Do you forget others? Do you 
		write them now and then? How do you 
		manage it?

	Her facetiousness startles Robert.

			    ROBERT
		I... What do you want?

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, I just want to know the 
		procedure. I don't want to upset your 
		routine. Do you want any jam?

			    ROBERT
			(insulted)
		Routine! I don't have a routine. And 
		if you think that's what this is -

			    FRANCESCA
		Well, what is this?

			    ROBERT
			(upset)
		Well, why is that up to me? You're 
		the one who's married. You told me 
		you have no intention of leaving your 
		husband.

			    FRANCESCA
		To do what? Be with someone who needs 
		everyone and no one in particular? I 
		mean, what would be the point. Would 
		you pass the butter?

			    ROBERT
		I was honest with you. I told you who 
		I was.

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. Absolutely. You have this habit 
		of not needing and that it's hard to 
		break. I understand.
			(beat)
		Of course, in that case, why sleep -- 
		you don't need rest or for that 
		matter eat, you don't need food.

	She takes his plate away from him, rises and throws it into 
	the sink.

			    ROBERT
		What are you doing?

			    FRANCESCA
			(sarcastic)
		Gee, I don't know. I guess I'm not 
		cut out to be a World Citizen who 
		experiences everything and nothing 
		at the same time.

			    ROBERT
		How do you know what I experience?

			    FRANCESCA
			(angry)
		I know you! What can this possibly 
		mean to anyone who doesn't "need" 
		meaning -
			(mocking)
		"Who goes with the Mystery" -- who 
		pretends he isn't scared to death.

			    ROBERT
		Stop it!

			    FRANCESCA
		You have no idea what you've done to 
		me, do you? And after you leave, I'm 
		going to have to wonder for the rest 
		of my life what happened here. If 
		anything happened at all! And I'll 
		have to wonder if you find yourself 
		in some... housewife's kitchen in 
		Romania if you'll sit there and tell 
		her about your world of good friends 
		and secretly include me in that group.

			    ROBERT
		What do you want me to say?

			    FRANCESCA
			(nonchantly)
		I don't want you to say anything. I 
		don't need you to say anything.

	Robert rises, knocking his chair aside.

			    ROBERT
		STOP IT!

			    FRANCESCA
		Fine. More eggs or should we just 
		fuck on the linoleum one last time?

			    ROBERT
			(grabs her)
		I told you! I won't apologize for who 
		I am.

			    FRANCESCA
		No one's asking you to!

			    ROBERT
		I won't be made to feel like I've 
		done something wrong.

			    FRANCESCA
			(angry)
		You won't be made to feel! Period. 
		You've carved out this little part 
		for yourself in the world where you 
		get to be a voyeur, a hermit and a 
		lover whenever you feel like it and 
		the rest of us are just supposed to 
		feel so incredibly grateful for the 
		brief time you've touched our lives! 
		Well, go to hell! It isn't human not 
		to feel lonely -- it isn't human not 
		to afraid! You're a hypocrite and 
		you're a phony!

			    ROBERT
			(cries out)
		I DON'T WANT TO NEED YOU!

			    FRANCESCA
		WHY?

			    ROBERT
		BECAUSE I CAN'T HAVE YOU!

			    FRANCESCA
		WHAT DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH IT?

	He throws a cup at the wall. It breaks apart. Covering his 
	face, Robert turns away from her as he holds onto the sink. 
	Francesca reaches for him but he pulls away, embarrassed.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
			(softly)
		Don't you see, I've got to know the 
		truth, Robert. I've got to know the 
		truth or I'll go crazy. Either way. 
		Just tell me. But I can't act like 
		this is enough because it has to be. 
		I can't pretend I don't feel what I 
		feel because it's over tomorrow.

	Robert, keeping his face from her, tries to tell her:

			    ROBERT
		If I've done anything to make you 
		think that what's happened between us 
		is nothing new for me -- is some 
		routine -- then I do apologize.

			    FRANCESCA
		What makes it different, Robert?

	Robert turns to face her. He is so hopelessly in love he can 
	hardly find the words. His eyes fill up with tears.

			    ROBERT
		Because... if I even think about 
		tomorrow -- if I...
			(voice cracks)
		even think about leaving here without 
		you -- I'm not sure I can... that I -
			(he shakes his head)

	He can't even finish. He kneels down before her wrapping his 
	arms around her and burying his face into her body. Francesca 
	starts to cry -- out of happiness, out of pain -- holding onto 
	him as if for dear life.

			    FRANCESCA
		Oh God... what are we going to do?

	She kisses him -- over and over, not wanting to be even an 
	inch apart. As if any space between them might separate them 
	forever.

	Suddenly, OS, they hear a CAR DRIVE UP to the house. They 
	panic. Francesca runs to the window to see:

	MADGE, a girlfriend, has come for a visit. Madge is holding 
	a homemade dessert.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd)
		No. No. Where's your truck?

			    ROBERT
		Behind the barn. I better go.

	Francesca turns to him -- speechless -- not wanting him to go.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Don't worry. I meant upstairs.

	He exits. Francesca gathers herself and heads for the front 
	entrance, quickly cleaning up the plates.

	INT. FRONT HALL - DAY

	Francesca opens the door to Madge.

			    FRANCESCA
			Madge?

			    MADGE
		Hi. I made some brown betty. I sent 
		Floyd off to town with the boy. I said -
			(entering)
		"Floyd, I'm going to visit my 
		girlfriend and spend the afternoon 
		and that's all there is to it. He 
		said who's going to make lunch? I 
		said I'm taking a sick day. Eat at 
		the dinner." Isn't that hilarious?
			(MOVES INTO KITCHEN)
		He didn't dare raise an eyebrow -- I 
		don't even want to tell you how late 
		he was out last night with those good 
		for nothings from the Sandford ranch. 
		I am so sorry, honey, I let two days 
		pass before I came by, but with the 
		boy home the time just escapes me. 
		Have you heard from Richard? How's 
		the fair? God, it's hot.

	Following her into the kitchen, Francesca doesn't know which 
	question to answer first.

	EXT. PORCH - LATER THAT DAY

	Madge and Francesca sit facing the pasture beside a table 
	with coffee and brown betty. We parachute into the middle of 
	the scene.

			    MADGE
		... I said to her, "what's the point 
		of summer school if all he's going to 
		do are these art projects. The boy 
		needs so much work in math and his 
		spelling is a nightmare...
			(continues)

	Francesca isn't listening. Her mind wanders.

	FANTASY:

			    FRANCESCA
		Madge. Please. Something's happened. 
		I've met someone. I've fallen in love 
		in a way I've never thought could 
		happen my entire life. It's our last 
		day together. I feel like I'm going to 
		die when he leaves. Please. Help me.

			    MADGE
		Oh, honey. I'm so sorry. But you've 
		got to be grateful for even feeling 
		the little you've be given. Believe 
		me. Go to him. Don't let him leave 
		without these new precious hours 
		you've got left. And if you need 
		anyone to cry on, you know where I am.

	END OF FANTASY:

	Madge shoves a plate at her.

			    MADGE (cont'd)
		More brown betty?

	Francesca takes the plate. She can't think straight.

			    MADGE (cont'd)
		... Anyway, I'm glad that's over 
		with. Sara doing so well though. 
		Everyone thought I was crazy having 
		them so far apart, but...
			(CONTINUES...)

	FANTASY:

	Francesca stands behind Madge, as the latter chatters on MOS. 
	She calmly picks up the brown betty and, from behind, shoves 
	it into Madge's face and holds it there, trying to suffocate 
	her with it. Madge struggles.

	END OF FANTASY:

	Francesca's mind races as Madge continues.

			    MADGE
		... without one lesson. The 
		instructor couldn't believe it. So, 
		who knows -- she may have talent. 
		How's Carolyn doing? What are her 
		plans for next year?

	Francesca realizes this is her moment. She holds her head and 
	leans over, unsteadily.

			    MADGE (cont'd)
		Honey, what's wrong?

			    FRANCESCA
		I don't know. I woke up a little 
		dizzy. I didn't sleep well. I think 
		I need to lay down.

			    MADGE
		You want me to call the doctor?

			    FRANCESCA
		No, no. I just didn't sleep well. 
		I'm not used to sleeping alone. And 
		this heat. Would you mind?

			    MADGE
		No, of course not. I'll just clean up.

			    FRANCESCA
		No, leave it. I'll do it later. 
		Listen, maybe you and Floyd can come 
		for dinner on Saturday. I'm sure 
		Richard'll have so many stories to 
		tell you both about the fair and all.

			    MADGE
		Oh, that'll be nice.

							CUT TO:

	INT. BEDROOM - LATER THAT DAY

	Francesca enters to find Richard, laying on the bed fully 
	clothed. She sits beside him. He strokes her arm, then guides 
	her to lay down. Once she's in his arms, he speaks.

			    ROBERT
		Come with me.

	Francesca knew he was going to say this. Either answer she 
	gives frightens her.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hold me.

	She turns to him and they embrace. Robert, however, fears 
	only one response. On the soundtrack, we hear the song "DARN 
	THAT DREAM."

							CUT TO:

	INT. KITCHEN - EVENING

	The song continues over the next few images. Camera slowly 
	pans from the radio, upon which the song is playing, to a 
	beautifully set table and candles. It arrives on Robert 
	preparing dinner.

	INT. BEDROOM

	Camera pans the room from two OPENED SUITCASES, as Francesca 
	packs to leave. She moves about the room as if with blinders 
	on -- focused on her task, refusing to take in any sign or 
	memories that might hinder her. She is wearing a RED DRESS, 
	with BUTTONS down the front.

	INT. KITCHEN

	Robert stands at the sink rinsing out some utensils. Waiting 
	for the water to turn hot, he looks out through the window 
	above the sink. He sees a beautiful view of beautiful night. 
	He pauses as it strikes him that this is a view Francesca has 
	seen a million times -- that soon she would not see ever again.

	INT. SECOND FLOOR LANDING

	Camera follows her as she exits the bedroom with her 
	suitcases, then walks down the hall to the stairs, then down 
	the staircase to the front hall.

	She quietly sets the suitcases down, hearing the radio and 
	Robert in the kitchen. She pauses, then enters the living 
	room. One of the throw pillows has fallen off the couch. She 
	replaces it then takes a moment to look about the room. She 
	slowly sits down on the couch.

	We hear voices of the past, auditory memories conjured up by 
	each stick of furniture Francesca sees.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		Michael, get off the back of that 
		chair! What did I tell you!

	WE HEAR HIM FALL AND BEGIN TO CRY.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		All you all right, honey. Let me see...

	A sound of Christmas music... of toddlers running and 
	laughing... A birthday party for Carolyn...

			    CAROLYN (V.O.)
		Mama, look -- look at the dress Aunt 
		Patty sent!

			    RICHARD (V.O.)
		Franny, BONNAZA's on!

			    ROBERT
		Francesca?

	Francesca snaps out for it and turns to find Robert.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		I've got dinner.

	She smiles.

	INT. KITCHEN

	They eat by candlelight. Neither speaks. Neither is very 
	hungry.

			    ROBERT
		Would you like a beer?

	She smiles and shakes her head. Robert opens a bottle and 
	takes a sip.

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		You know what I'd like to do before 
		we leave? I'd like to take a picture 
		of you -- at Roseman bridge. Maybe 
		just as the sun's coming up.

			    FRANCESCA
		Yes. I'd like that.

	Pause. Robert smiles back and takes another sip. Then, 
	knowing full well what hangs heavy between them, he asks:

			    ROBERT
		Tell me why you're not coming with me?

	Francesca stops pretending to eat. She looks at him, having 
	forgotten how well he can read her.

			    FRANCESCA
		No matter how I keep turning it 
		around in my mind -- it doesn't seem 
		like the right thing.

			    ROBERT
		For who?

			    FRANCESCA
		For anyone. They'll never be able to 
		live through the talk. Richard will 
		never be able to. He doesn't deserve 
		that. He hasn't hurt anyone in his 
		life.

			    ROBERT
			(getting aggressive)
		Then he can move! People move!

			    FRANCESCA
		His family's lived for almost a 
		hundred years. Richard doesn't know 
		how to live anywhere else. And the 
		kids...

			    ROBERT
		The kids are grown! They don't need 
		you anymore. You told me that. They 
		hardly talk to you.

			    FRANCESCA
		No, they don't say much. But 
		Carolyn's 16. She's just about to 
		find out about all this for herself 
		-- she's going to fall in love, 
		she's going to try and figure out 
		how to build a life with someone. 
		If I leave what does that say to her?

			    ROBERT
		What about us? What about me?

			    FRANCESCA
		You've got to know deep down that the 
		minute we leave here. It'll all 
		change.

			    ROBERT
		Yeah. It could get better.

			    FRANCESCA
		No matter how much distance we put 
		between us and this house, I bring 
		with it with me. And I'll feel it 
		every minute we're together. And I'll 
		blame loving you for how much it 
		hurts. And then even these four days 
		won't be anything more than something 
		sordid and... a mistake.

			    ROBERT
			(desperately)
		Francesca, listen to me. You think 
		what's happened to us happens to just 
		anybody? What we feel for each other? 
		How much we feel? We're not even two 
		separate people anymore. Some people 
		search their whole lives for it and 
		wind up alone -- most people don't 
		even think it exists and you're going 
		to tell me that giving it up is the 
		right thing to do? That staying here 
		alone in a marriage, alone in a town 
		you hate, in a house you don't feel 
		apart of anymore -- you're telling me 
		that's the right thing to do!?

			    FRANCESCA
		We are the choices we've made, Robert.

			    ROBERT
			(rises)
		TO HELL WITH YOU!

	He turns his back on her.

			    FRANCESCA
		Robert. Please.
			(desperate to explain)
		You don't understand -- no one does. 
		When a woman makes the choice to 
		marry, to have children -- in one way 
		her life begins but in another way it 
		stops. You build a life of details. 
		You become a mother, a wife and you 
		stop and stay steady so that your 
		children can move. And when they 
		leave they take your life of details 
		with them. And then you're expected 
		move again only you don't remember 
		what moves you because no one has 
		asked in so long. Not even yourself. 
		You never in your life think that 
		love like this can happen to you.

			    ROBERT
		But now that you have it -

			    FRANCESCA
		I want to keep it forever. I want to 
		love you the way I do now the rest of 
		my life. Don't you understand -- we'll 
		lose it if we leave. I can't make an 
		entire life disappear to start a new 
		one. All I can do is try to hold onto 
		to both. Help me. Help me not lose 
		loving you.

	She embraces him. He wraps his arms around her. He whispers.

			    ROBERT
		Don't leave me. Don't leave me alone. 
		Please.

	This breaks her heart, knowing how hard it is for him to say 
	this. She holds him tighter, until -

			    ROBERT (cont'd)
		Listen. Maybe you feel this way, 
		maybe you don't. Maybe it's just 
		because you're in this house. Maybe 
		... maybe when they come back 
		tomorrow you'll feel differently. 
		Don't you think that's possible?

			    FRANCESCA
		I don't know. Please...

			    ROBERT
		I'm going to be here a few more days. 
		I'll be at the Inn. We have some 
		time. Let's not say any more now.

			    FRANCESCA
		No. Don't do this.

			    ROBERT
		I CAN'T SAY GOODBYE YET! We'll leave 
		it for now. We're not saying goodbye. 
		We're not making any decision. Maybe 
		you'll change your mind. Maybe we'll 
		accidentally run into each other and 
		... and you'll change your mind.

			    FRANCESCA
		Robert, if that happens, you'll have 
		to decide. I won't be able to.

	She cries in his arms. He kisses her as if for the last time. 
	Then, quickly, separates himself and leaves the house.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE

	Robert walks briskly towards his truck not wanting to look 
	back. He gets in, starts it up and drives away.

	Francesca exits the house and watches the truck recede into 
	the distance. She stops when she reaches the front gate, 
	leaning against it. She murmurs to herself -

			    FRANCESCA
		Keep going. Please.

	The truck drives away. Then, suddenly, stops. Francesca's 
	heart quickens. She watches as the truck stands on the road 
	in the distance. As if Robert was deciding to turn around or 
	keep going. Francesca waits. Suddenly, the door to the truck 
	flies open and Robert exits. Francesca loses all restraint.

	She opens the gate but her dress is caught on it. Robert 
	stands by the truck. Francesca tears at the dress, ripping 
	off a button which falls to the ground. She runs down the 
	road. Seeing her, Robert runs towards her as well.

	They grab each other furiously. For these few moments, all 
	considerations are gone. As he kisses her, he murmurs:

			    ROBERT
		I forgot to take your picture.

	She laughs through her tears as they continue to kiss. Camera 
	pans up to the road beyond Robert's truck.

	WE SEE RICHARD'S TRUCK DRIVING TOWARDS THEM. For a moment it 
	seems as if they will be caught until we realize RICHARD'S 
	TRUCK IS BEING SUPERIMPOSED as the LIGHT GRADUALLY BRIGHTENS 
	TO REVEAL:

	MORNING.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE

	Richard, Michael and Carolyn drive down the road toward the 
	house. Robert's truck, and all traces of him, are gone.

	Francesca steps into the doorway in a house dress to welcome 
	her family home -- wondering how this will feel.

	JOHNSON KITCHEN - EVENING

	The Johnson family has dinner as Francesca narrates:

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		You all came home. And with you, my 
		life of details.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE

	Everyone is doing various daily chores.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		A day or two past and with each 
		thought of him, a task would present 
		itself like a life saver, pulling me 
		further and further away from those 
		four days.

	INT. LIVING ROOM - EVENING

	Francesca is reading. Richard watches TV.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		I was grateful. I felt safe.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. WINTERSET - MAIN STREET - DAY

	Richard and Francesca drive up to the general store to buy 
	groceries. Francesca heads for the store as Richard crosses 
	the street.

			    FRANCESCA
		Want anything special for dinner?

			    RICHARD
		Hmm. How about that brown sugar meat 
		loaf you make?

			    FRANCESCA
			(smiles)
		Okay.

	She enters the store.

	INT. GENERAL STORE - DAY

	Francesca makes small talk with the grocery lady as she buys 
	what she needs.

	EXT. MAIN STREET - DAY

	Francesca places a bag of groceries on the front seat of the 
	truck, then gets in herself to wait for Richard. She takes a 
	deep breath and removes a handkerchief from her bag to wipe 
	the sweat from her face. She freezes -

	Through the windshield, she sees ROBERT standing beside his 
	truck across the street, staring at her. Her heart stops. 
	For a moment, she isn't even sure he's real.

	The town moves about its business around them. But neither 
	notice or care. Whatever safety or forgetfulness she felt is 
	gone. Her feelings burst through. She sits there helpless 
	before him -- willing to go or stay depending on what he did.

	He begins walking towards her. She prepares herself. Her life 
	will change -- it has to. There's not turning back.

	But the closer Robert gets, the clearer he can see that she 
	is crying. And he stops.

	Without any words, he realizes what taking her with him would 
	mean. With just a glance, he sacrifices her. With their eyes 
	locked in the middle of Main Street -- in front of the whole 
	town -- they smile and say goodbye.

	Robert returns to his truck. He drives off down Main Street, 
	taking the first left.

	Moments later, Richard throws the feed bag into the back of 
	his truck and gets in. Francesca is wiping her eyes.

	He doesn't notice. He drives off in the same direction as 
	Robert.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		For a moment, I didn't know where I 
		was. And for a split second, the 
		thought crossed my mind that he 
		really didn't want me -- that it was 
		easy to walk away.

	As they pass the corner where Robert made his left turn, 
	Francesca turns to look and sees:

	ROBERT'S TRUCK IS PARKED just off the corner. As if he had to 
	drive away to get out of sight, but couldn't bring himself to 
	drive any further.

	The sight of him hiding there breaks Francesca's heart, she 
	turns away from her husband to hide the tears.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	WE REPLAY THE OPENING SCENE FROM THE MOVIE:

	Carolyn is in the yard picking vegetables. Her parents drive 
	up in their truck. She steps out with her bag of groceries 
	and walks briskly into the house. Richard follows more slowly 
	with his bag of feed, stopping at the gate to pick up the 
	button from Francesca's red dress.

	INT. KITCHEN

	Francesca enters and places her groceries on the counter. She 
	tries to compose herself. She sees the radio before her. She 
	turns it on. The Dinah Washington song "I'LL CLOSE MY EYES" 
	evokes every feeling of love and loss within her. She begins 
	to cry.

	She hears Richard enter the house. She stands out of sight, 
	holding her hand to her mouth to muffle her crying. She hears:

			    MICHAEL (O.S.)
		Dad! You bought the wrong feed!

			    RICHARD
		What!?

	She hears Richard exit the house.

	EXT. LUCY REDFIELD'S HOUSE - NIGHT

	A hand knocks on a door. Lucy Redfield opens it to find 
	Francesca standing there with a cake.

			    FRANCESCA
		Hi. I'm Francesca Johnson. I just 
		feel awful I haven't come to visit 
		sooner. I hope I'm not interrupting 
		anything. Is it too late?

	Lucy is shocked and moved at the same time.

			    LUCY
		No. Not at all.

			    FRANCESCA
		I was wondering if... maybe you'd 
		like some company.
			(almost manic)
		I baked a cake!

	Lucy looks at the cake. She's a little dazed by all this.

			    LUCY
		Uh... sure. Please. Come in. I'll 
		make coffee.

	Francesca enters. Lucy closes the door.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. IOWA LAKEFRONT - DAWN

	Michael continues reading beside Carolyn as the sun rises.

			    MICHAEL
		"We became inseparable, Lucy and I. 
		The funny thing is, I didn't tell her 
		about Robert until years later. But, 
		for some reason, being with her 
		somehow made me feel it was safe to 
		think about him. To continue loving 
		him. The town loved talking about the 
		two of us but we didn't care. And 
		neither did your father. Which I 
		thought was a lovely thing. I 
		received Robert's letter and my 
		photograph soon after. I always 
		wondered if your father found them. 
		I was never quite sure..."

	INT. KITCHEN - EVENING

	At dinner, Richard remembers the button he found.

			    RICHARD
		Oh, Franny, is this yours?

	Francesca sees the button. She speaks her original lines MOS 
	as HER NARRATION is hard:

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		I almost told him. In that moment I 
		felt as if I couldn't hold it back. 
		If he really loved me maybe he'd 
		understand.

	She returns to her meal. The family eats in silence.

			    FRANCESCA (cont'd; V.O.)
		But love won't obey our expectations. 
		Its mystery is pure and absolute. 
		What Robert and I had, could not 
		continue if we were together. What 
		Richard and I shared would vanish if 
		we were apart. But how I wanted to 
		share this. How would our lives have 
		changed if I had? Could anyone else 
		have seen the beauty of it?

	INT. JOHNSON KITCHEN - NIGHT

	Francesca moves about the kitchen with a frantic pace as she 
	puts the finishing touches on a cake. Placing the frosting 
	bowl in the sink, she hears someone upstairs exiting their 
	bedroom. She quickly gathers the cake and her bag and exits 
	through the screen door.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - NIGHT

	Fighting tears, she walks to the truck from around the house. 
	She gets in and starts it. She vaguely hears her daughter 
	from the front door.

			    CAROLYN
		Mom?

	But she doesn't acknowledge it and drives away.

	EXT. MOTOR INN - NIGHT

	Her truck approaches and then speeds past the Inn where 
	Robert is staying. We can see his truck in the parking lot.

	1979

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM - NIGHT

	And older Francesca cares for a sickly Richard. He lies in bed 
	beside an array of medicines and tonics. She wipes his 
	forehead with a cool cloth as he takes his pills.

			    FRANCESCA
		Better?

	He nods. She smiles. She shuts off the light and lays beside 
	him.

			    RICHARD
		Franny?

			    FRANCESCA
		Hmm?

			    RICHARD
		I just want to say... I know you had 
		your own dreams. I'm sorry I couldn't 
		give them to you. I love you so much.

	Francesca turns to him. She is so touched, tears fill her 
	eyes. She nestles close to him, wrapping her arms around him.

	1982

	EXT. DES MOINES

	Francesca eats at the same restaurant she shared with Robert.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		After your father died, I tried to 
		get in touch with Robert but found 
		out he had left the National 
		Geographic soon after the Madison 
		County. No one seemed to know where 
		he was. My only connections to him 
		were the places we'd been to that one 
		day. And so each week, I'd re-visit 
		them.

	EXT. JOHNSON HOUSE - DAY

	Francesca greets a UPS man with an envelope and a package.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		And then one day, I received the 
		letter from his attorney, with a 
		package.

	INT. JOHNSON LIVING ROOM

	Francesca reads the letter informing her of Robert's death. 
	She then unwraps the package to reveal a MEDALLION with her 
	name inscribed and A PHOTOGRAPHY BOOK; a published collection 
	of black and white photos by Robert Kincaid entitled "Four 
	Days." Beautiful, dramatic black and white representations of 
	love and passion, loneliness and pain, and union. On the 
	front page there reads an inscription "FOR F."

			    ROBERT (V.O.)
		"There is a pleasure in the pathless 
		woods... There is a rapture on the 
		lonely shore... There is society 
		where none intrudes... By the deep 
		sea and music in its roar... I love 
		not man the less, but Nature more... 
		From these our interviews, in which 
		I steal... From all I may be, or 
		have been before... To mingle with the 
		Universe and feel... What I can 
		ne'er express, yet cannot all conceal."

	The quote is Byron's. She smiles with pride as she cries.

							CUT TO:

	EXT. IOWA LAKEFRONT - EARLY MORNING

	Michael sits with his arm around Carolyn as they look out 
	over the lake. The notebooks are closed, but Francesca's 
	narrations continue over the next few scenes.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		There has not been a day since that 
		I have not thought of him. When he 
		said we were no longer two people, he 
		was right.

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM

	Carolyn, looking through her mom's closet, finds the summer 
	dress she bought in Des Moines to wear for Robert.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		We were bound together as tightly as 
		two people can be. If it hadn't been 
		for him, I don't think I would have 
		lasted on the farm all these years. 
		Remember that dress of mine you 
		wanted, Carolyn -- the one you said I 
		never wore. Well, I know I was silly. 
		But to me, it was as if you were 
		asking to wear my wedding dress to go 
		to the movies.

	Carolyn smiles as she holds the dress before her.

	INT. MOTEL - DAY

	A tired Michael finds his way through the motel to his room.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		After reading all this, I hope you 
		can now understand my burial request. 
		It was not the ravings of some mad 
		old lady. I gave my life to my 
		family. I wish to give Robert what is 
		left of me.

	INT. MOTEL ROOM

	Michael enters to find his two children watching TV and an 
	angry Betty folding clothes.

			    CHILDREN
		Hey, Dad!

	He looks at them lovingly, then at Betty who angrily motions 
	for him to follow her into the bedroom.

	She slams the door behind him and talks in a irate whisper.

			    BETTY
		You have been out all night long! Do 
		I have a right to ask where you've 
		been or is this a family secret?

	Michael just looks at her. He gently takes her hand.

			    MICHAEL
		No. No more secrets.

	He kisses her hand. Betty is floored.

			    MICHAEL (cont'd)
		Do I make you happy, Betty?
			(she is stunned)
		Because I want to. I want to more 
		than anything.

	He gently kisses her cheek then embraces her. Betty -- for the 
	first time in her life -- is utterly speechless.

	INT. JOHNSON BEDROOM

	Wearing her mother's dress, Carolyn sits on the bed holding 
	the phone, waiting for Steve to pick up. In her other hand, 
	she holds the divorce lawyers card.

			    CAROLYN
			(on the phone)
		Hi, Steve? It's me. Good. You?... 
		Listen, we have to talk... Well, 
		how about you?... Uh, no -- I've 
		decided I'm going to stay for a 
		while... I don't know how long... 
		No, I won't be coming back... 
		I'm not angry, Steve. I'm not angry 
		at all.
			(smiles)

							CUT TO:

	EXT. ROSEMAN BRIDGE - DAY

	Michael and his family stand beside Carolyn and a Priest.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"I gave Lucy his photography book. If 
		you're interested, take a look. If my 
		words still leave something unclear, 
		perhaps his pictures can illuminate. 
		After all, that's what an artist does 
		best... "

	Michael receives the urn from the priest. He and Carolyn walk 
	away from the group towards the bridge. They stop. Carolyn 
	removes the lip. Michael sets his mother's ashes free.

			    FRANCESCA (V.O.)
		"I love you both with all my heart. 
		Do what you have to, to be happy in 
		this life. There is so much beauty."


	THE END