1st of Summer 511 The Quill's Rest Well, thought Zenobia, if melodrama was the fashion in the Theatre currently, then this should sell well. Otherwise... she looked down at her scrawled attempts at writing the last scene of her play. Not that she had finished some of the central scenes, but she had her plot worked out so she doubted it would be so terrible to write in this roundabout way. Almost as a way of recollecting her thoughts, Zenobia scribbled a quick description of the plot of the play into the front page of her notebook. 'The Sweetest Summer' concerns Enid, daughter of Paolino, the richest merchant in Zeltiva. She secretly marries Heron, the son of her father’s detested enemy. Enid is separated from her husband in a shipwreck after Heron is captured by Paolino along with the courtesan Attalia, Paolino's mistress. After a series of tragic events, Paolino is mistakenly imprisoned pending execution by his own orders leading Attalia to commit suicide, believing he is dead. On discovery of this, Paolino, full of regrets, escapes from his cell to find her and sees her alive long enough for her to die in his arms. At this point, another of Attalia's suitors arrives at the scene and jealously kills Paolino. Enid, thinking both her father and her husband are dead, withdraws from the world. The last scene shows Heron, who had been exiled to Alvadas, arriving back from his journey and reuniting with his wife. Act 3, Scene 4 Attalia, dying in the arms of her lover Paolino, admits that in spite of her past, she feels she would have been happy to pledge her life to him and never anyone else. Now it is too late, and Paolino realises that he had made a mistake in believing the words of gossipmongers over the heartfelt pleas of his sweetheart. He tries to convince Attalia that he can cure her and they will be together, but the poison is already having its effect on her. Zenobia quickly skimmed through what she had already written for this scene and picked up from where she had left off. Attalia: I could have been happy with you. Paolino: You will be happy with me. I love you Attalia. We will be together. Attalia: Oh, we should have been. Paolino: We still would be. Attalia: Even after all this time, the seasons that have past... me, dying in your arms and you, standing there talking nonsense, I feel as uplifted and free and as light and giddy as an adolescent. As the first day I met you. Paolino: Oh Attalia. I was blind. I wanted you for a mistress, but where would I have found a better wife? We can get married. Attalia: We were going to, darling. But now, it is best you forget about me. Paolino: How could I ever? There was never a woman as lovely as you. Zenobia took an inelegant swig of Kelp Tea, hoped nobody had seen it, and frowned. It was just too much of a cliché. Melodrama, she did not mind, but it was supposed to be a scene of love and redemption, so it had to be good. She looked around at the other faces within the room. How did they all manage to be so focused? With a sigh, she took her pen and crossed a large, thick line across the last few sentences she had written. |