Fiction by Marc Erdrich
SOUL MATES A Play in One Act
SCENE 1. A dining room table. Four place mats. An ashtray. A cup and saucer. A
glass of milk and a box of cookies. Mother and son are seated opposite. She is in her
70s, frail and pale, but with the strength of a survivor. Her hand shakes as,
alternately, she drinks tea and smokes a cigarette. He is in his 30s, uncomfortable in
the role of comforter.
SON: (to audience) When my father died I took the cinerary urn containing his ashes
from the hall closet and put it in the glove compartment of the family car, a 1974
gold-colored Plymouth Valiant with a black vinyl roof. I did this without my
mother's knowledge. My father had loved his car almost as much as his other great
love, the New York Mets. I knew he would be happier in the car, where we could
listen to a game once in a while, instead of being stuffed away in the back of a closet
with all those memories - so close to - her. (Pause) On the drive home from the
funeral parlor she - my mother, that is - sat with the urn on her lap. At one point I
turned to look at her and she was fondling the urn with her fingers and crying.
When we got home she put the urn back in the box it came in and shoved it to the
back of the closet. (Turning to MOTHER) You're not going to keep his ashes in the
closet are you?
MOTHER: (Exhaling smoke) That's where I want them. Why aren't you drinking
your milk?
SON: That's no place for them. Why don't you let me put them somewhere else?
MOTHER: No.
SON: But why not?
MOTHER: Because I don't want you to. Isn't that enough reason? I want them in the
closet. (She begins to weep.) Why are you so stubborn?
SON: That's no place for them.