~* ~
THE EMPEROR
So many dead because of what you have created, Dennis. And more now Good reasons for me, Dennis Hamilton, to kill you, the imposter. ..
More? More dead?
The servant – Kipp…
(He attacks, backing DENNIS toward the stage right wings.) Kronstein – your fellow player…
(He attacks again.)
And your dancing master – the one who liked men…
~* ~
Patty Munro gasped as Kronstein closed with Frederick, grasping his sword arm, throwing them both off balance so that they toppled together out of sight behind one of the side flats that, Patty remembered, were called legs, from when she was in the Damn Yankees stage crew.
'Oh God,' she whispered to her husband. 'Now I'll never be able to tell them apart…”
~* ~
(DENNIS and THE EMPEROR struggle offstage, unseen by all, then move toward the stage again. When they reappear, the attitudes and expressions of both are identical – weary, wary, and determined. They circle each other slowly.)
Now they don't know who we are. You could be me. I could be you. And I will be, because I have all your memories too. It will be all mine now, as soon as I kill you. All mine – your life, your Ann…
(DENNIS attacks, driving THE EMPEROR back. THE EMPEROR parries, and evades him.)
THE EMPEROR
Still some emotion left. All the better. The savage attacker. The maniac. And me, Dennis Hamilton, killing him out of self-defense.
(THE EMPEROR advances.)
~* ~
'What the hell is going on down there?' John Steinberg roared, pushing open the door of the control booth.
'I don't know, John,' Curt said softly. 'I've just about given up all hope. The ship is sinking, and it's up to those two on the stage to bail it out. I don't know who's going to quit first – them or Dex.'
'Have they stuck to any of the original moves?'
'Not a one. I don't know what the hell Drummond thinks he's doing – you see that bit where he took Dennis offstage? Even I don't know who's who anymore.'
'Who's who…” Steinberg went pale. 'My dear God.'
'What?' said Curt, then realized the possibilities himself, far worse than two actors going up on their lines and moves.
Steinberg took a cased pair of opera glasses from his jacket pocket, snapped them open, and peered down at the stage. After a moment he handed them to Curt. 'That's not Wallace Drummond,' Steinberg said dully. 'It's Dennis. Both of them are Dennis.'
Curt lowered the glasses. 'What shall I do, John? Lower the curtain?'
Steinberg shook his head. It was the first time that Curt had seen him totally at a loss. 'No, I… I don't know… If it's real, it could distract Dennis… We should contact security, have them stop it… I'll… I'll go downstairs, get help.' He left the booth as if in a daze, and Curt watched the duel continue, listened to the music rage on.
~* ~
In the loge, Dan Munro watched too, watched as the two men fought, saw one of them lunge at the other, saw a sleeve rip and blood flow, too real to be artifice, and slowly began to understand.
'It's him,' he said to himself, even though others heard. 'One of them is him.'
He stood up then, pushed his way past the legs and knees of the others in the row. But he had a long way to go, up the loge stairs, down a ramp, through the mezzanine lobby, down the curving staircase, through the inner lobby, and all the way to the stage.
By the time he would arrive there, it would all be over.
THE EMPEROR
Does it hurt, Dennis? The cut? I feel your pain, your anger. I adore them. They feed me. But don't feel too much, Dennis. Let me take you slowly…
(THE EMPEROR lowers his guard. It is a subtly disdainful move, but enough of a breach for DENNIS to thrust his saber, wounding THE EMPEROR in his left arm.)
THE EMPEROR
“If you prick us, do we not bleed?' See how human I have become? And we are identical again! Triumph, tragedy, I take them all in, Dennis. You have done your worst. It is time to die. And to let me be born. Farewell, my father.
(THE EMPEROR lifts his saber.)
From the moment the Emperor and Dennis raised their weapons against one another, scarcely two minutes had passed. They were minutes filled with horror for Ann Deems. From the start she had known that it was the Emperor rather than Wallace Drummond on the stage with Dennis. There was no other explanation. Still, she only watched, knowing that Dennis had to meet his nemesis on his own, had to claim his own soul with whatever means were available – with a sword, if it came to that.
But then they had disappeared from sight, and when, a moment later, they had returned to the stage, they were so alike that she could not tell them apart. Blood flowed then, on both sides, and she heard Terri gasp beside her.
'What's happening?' her daughter said. 'What are they doing?'
'It's the other,' Ann said, not taking her eyes from the pair, watching them more carefully than she had watched anything in her life. She was not even distracted by the scream of terror that came from backstage when Dan Marks finally returned to the dressing room he shared with Wallace Drummond.
She only watched, and thought. 'I can help him now,' she said. 'I know how.' And she ran onto the stage.
(THE EMPEROR lowers his saber as ANN runs to him, and stands in front of him, as if protecting him from DENNIS.)
DENNIS
(In warning) Ann!
ANN