THE GREEN MILE Screenplay by Frank Darabont from the novel by Stephen King First Draft 11/4/97 We each owe a death, there are no exceptions... A SONG BEGINS, distant as a faded memory on an old Victrola: Once I built a railroad, made it run... Made it race against time...Once I built a railroad, now it's done...Brother, can you spare a dime... Opening credit sequence plays against footage of the Great Depression, images haunting and sepia-toned, defining an era. The bread lines...the soup kitchens...the dust bowl refugees heading west with their possessions on their backs and no hope in their eyes...the strutting gangster royalty flaunting their bootleg riches...an entire generation of lost youth riding the rials...the U.S. army troops raining truncheon blows on the half-starved and forgotten veterans of World War One as "Hooverville" is set afire in the very shadow of the nation's capitol... All these faces, all these lives, in a world not really so very long ago... EXT. FIELD - DAY(SLOW MOTION) ...where cattails sway in the sepia-toned heat. A small scrap of fabric is snagged in the nettles, fluttering languidly... COLOR BLEEDS SLOWLY IN as mosquitoes swarm and dragonflies skitter, showing the fabric scrap to be pale yellow... Suddenly, a MAN WITH A SHOTGUN comes crashing through the cattails, wiping through frame and exiting... ...then ANOTHER MAN...and ANOTHER...armed with rifles, plowing through the brush, exiting frame... ...and now comes KLAUS DETTERICK, a farmer one step above shirt-tail poor, a double-barrel shotgun in the crook of his arm. He pauses, horrified, seeing the scrap of cloth. He pulls it loose, turns back, screaming something in anguish... ...and still more men come crashing into view, flooding by us with dreamlike, slow-motion grace. ONE MAN is leading a team of DOGS, trying to untangle the leads. DEPUTY ROB McGEE is shouting for everybody to stay together... ...and under it all, we hear a sibilant, frightening whisper: WHISPERING VOICE (V.O.) You love your sister? You make any noise, know what happens? And off that horrible voice, we CUT TO: INT. GEORGIA PINES NURSING HOME - MORNING(PRESENT DAY) A CLOCK RADIO spews the morning weather report, abruptly pulling us into the present with a prediction of rain. PAUL EDGECOMB, late 70's/early 80's, wakes to another day... INT. PAUL'S ROOM - MORNING Paul stands at his bathroom mirror, meticulously buttoning his shirt. He picks up a hairbrush, starts tidying his hair... INT. CORRIDOR - MORNING THE OLD AND INFIRM haunt these corridors like ghosts. A WOMAN inches along on a walker. A MAN shuffles by with a rolling I.V. stand. The floor is a limey, institutional green. Paul comes into view, spry for his age, murmurs an occasional greeting. INT. BREAKFAST ROOM - MORNING DOZENS OF RETIREES are having breakfast, sipping weak coffee or tea. Some chat and gossip, other are content to keep their own company, some just stare slackly into space. Paul enters, sees ELAINE CONNELLY sitting with a few other ladies, sipping tea. She's 80, refined and elegant, his best friend here. She gives him a good-morning smile. He gives her a rakish wink in return, which makes her smiles all the more. Paul reaches past the people at the counter and sneaks two pieces of cold leftover toast off a serving plate. He tosses Elaine another look--catch ya later--and exits. INT. HALLWAY PAST KITCHEN - MORNING Paul slips to the back door unnoticed. Identical red plastic rain ponchos line the wall on pegs. He helps himself to one and eases outside, making good his escape. EXT. NURSING HOME - ESTABLISHING - MORNING Nestled in a valley of wooded hills, a drizzly mist rolling over the treetops. Paul appears f.g., coming up the ridge in his borrowed poncho. He looks back at the valley below, inhales deeply-- this is a man who loves his walks. He pulls a piece of toast from his pocket and starts to nibble as he presses up on the ridge... Low angle: nursing home and ridge beyond ...and we see Paul from a distance, just a speck trudging up toward the treeline. A PICKUP TRUCK rumbles into frame and parks, a bumper sticker looming large: "I Have Seen God and His Name Is Newt Gingrich". BRAD DOLAN gets out, an orderly in his late 20's/early 30's, arriving for work in jeans and cheesy plaid shirt. He gazes up toward the ridge, scowling and muttering softly: BRAD Old fuck. He slams the door and heads for the nursing home... EXT. WOODS - MORNING ...as CAMERA BOOMS DOWN through the trees to find Paul wandering a wooded path, munching a tidbit of toast, looking for all the world like Red Riding Hood in his plastic poncho. It's silent here, like a church. The only sounds we hear are the twittering of the birds and the hammering of the woodpecker. A RUSTLING SOUND makes Paul freeze. He turns, becomes transfixed. Softly: PAUL Oh, my... Reverse angle reveals a magnificent BUCK, not twenty feet away, misty breath punching the cold morning air. They watch each other for an endless moment, both standing stock still... ...and then the animal bounds away, vanishing into the foliage. Paul lets out a breath, shakes his head in wonder. He takes another bite of toast, moves on... ...and WE PAN WITH HIM to reveal a pair of old wooden storage shacks along the path up ahead. INT. SHACK - MORNING Dark in here, cobwebby and decrepit. We see Paul approaching outside the grimy window. He steps up to the glass and shades his eyes, peering curiously in as we DISSOLVE TO: EXT. NURSING HOME - DAY Paul approaches the back door, returning from his walk. He reaches for the knob...and a figure in white lunges from behind the dumpster to grab his wrist. He whirls, gasping in fright--it's Brad Dolan, wearing his orderly's uniform. BRAD Out for a little stroll, Paulie? PAUL Let go... Paul tries to pull away, but Dolan's got him tight. BRAD What's with this poncho you got on, huh? This isn't yours. PAUL I got it off the wall there. There's a whole row of them. BRAD But not for you, Paulie, that's the thing. Those are for the staff. PAUL I just borrowed it. Don't see what harm it does. BRAD It's not about harm, it's about rules. You probably don't think an old fart like you has to mind rules anymore, but that's just not true. Brad's eyes keep shifting--he obviously doesn't mind abusing the elderly as long as he doesn't get caught doing it. PAUL I'm sorry if I broke the rules. BRAD You got no business up in those woods anyway, especially in the rain. What if you fall and bust a hip, huh? Who you think's gonna have to hoss your sorry old bacon back down here? Me, that's who. PAUL You're hurting me! BRAD What do you do up there, anyway? You're too old to go jerk off, so what do you do? PAUL Nothing. I just walk, that's all, I like to walk! Brad lashes out and grabs Paul's other hand, which he's been holding tightly clenched shut. BRAD Come on. Open up. Let Poppa see. Paul uncurls his fingers, revealing the crushed remnants of a bit of toast, his palm slick with a greasy oleo smear. ELAINE (O.S.) Paul? They turn. Elaine stands just inside the screen door with a cup of tea. Brad's eyes become calculated, wondering how much she's seen. Elaine keeps her tone level, betraying nothing: ELAINE I saw you coming back, thought you'd like some tea. (beat) Are you coming in? PAUL Mr. Dolan and I were...chatting. About the weather. I think we're through now. Brad lets Paul loose, leans close: BRAD Paulie? You tell anyone I squeezed your po' ol' hand, I'll tell 'em you're having senile delusions. Who you think they'll believe? Brad walks off. Paul turns, watches him go. The screen door opens and Elaine steps out, her face pale. Paul gives her a strained, though grateful, smile as we CUT TO: INT. TV ROOM - DAY Jerry Springer's on the tube, whipping his studio audience into a frenzy. PAN OFF TO REVEAL DOZENS OF OLD FOLKS watching on couches and folding chairs. An old black fellow named PETE is grousing to a GROUP OF ELDERLY LADIES... PETE Why we always watch this crap? ELDERLY LADY #1 It's interesting. PETE Interesting? Bunch'a inbred trailer trash, all they ever talk about is fucking... ...and WE CONTINUE PANNING to Paul and Elaine sitting near the back, talking quietly as Paul rubs his bruised hand: ELAINE We should report him. PAUL That might just provoke him all the more, make things worse for everybody. ELAINE It's not everybody he has it in for, Paul. It's you. (off his look) What did you do to provoke him in the first place? Nothing. He's just an abusive bully, and should be made to stop. PAUL Ellie, please... Pete is at the TV, switching channels while: ELDERLY LADIES ...no, the Movie Classic channel is further down...past the Home Shopping...keep going... He finds the Movie Classic channel, which is playing an old black and white musical--"Top Hat," with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. A delighted reaction: ELDERLY LADY #2 Oh! This is wonderful... Paul idly shifts his gaze to the TV...and his expression goes slack with recognition and dismay. Elaine sees the look in his eyes. He glances away...even briefly considers walking out...but in the end, he can't help himself. The past just caught up with him with a freight-train wallop, and, for one, he decides to ride the rails... He looks back at the TV. On screen, Fred and Ginger have begun their famous "Cheek to Cheek" number, with Astaire singing in that sublime, easy-go-lucky way of his: FRED ASTAIRE Heaven, I'm in heaven...and my heart beat so that I can hardly speak... SLOW PUSH IN on Paul, watching. He'd like to take his eyes off the screen, but the movie has him in a grip tighter than Brad Dolan's. Elaine is watching him with puzzled concern: ELAINE Paul? What is it? No response. All he can hear is that music, all he can see are those dancers. The figures on TV are gliding with ghostlike grace in their silvery, phosphor-dot world of long ago... Paul abruptly bursts into tears. The room goes quiet, everything comes to a standstill. All eyes turn, some concerned, others merely curious. Paul just sits sobbing into his hands, shoulders heaving. ELAINE Paul...my God... ORDERLY (rushing over) What is it? What's wrong? PAUL It's okay...I'll be okay... Another orderly appears--Brad Dolan. He puts his hand on Paul's shoulder and leans close, feigning concern. BRAD S'matter, Paulie? Why the boo-hoo- hoo? Something nasty happen? Elaine shoves his hand away, eyes flashing with anger. ELAINE Mr. Edgecomb will be perfectly fine without your help, thank you. Brad back off with a "hey, suit yourself" gesture. Elaine helps Paul to his feet and leads him out. CUT TO: INT. SUN ROOM - DAY Paul is staring out the windows, pensive and drained. It's raining now, pattering the glass and the lawn beyond. Elaine waits across from him, wishing he would speak. Softly: PAUL I guess sometimes the past just catches up with you, whether you want it to or not. It's silly. ELAINE Was it the film? (off his look) It was, wasn't it? PAUL I haven't spoken of these things in a long time, Ellie. Over sixty years. She reaches out, gently takes his hand. ELAINE Paul. I'm your friend. PAUL Yes. Yes you are. Paul wonders if he's even up to talking about it after all this time...and decides that perhaps he is: PAUL I ever tell you I was a prison guard during the depression? ELAINE You've mentioned it. PAUL Did I mention I was in charge of death row? That I supervised all the executions? This does come as a surprise. She shakes her head. PAUL They usually call death row the Last Mile, but we called ours the Green Mile, because the floor was the color of faded limes. We had the electric chair then. Old Sparky, we called it. (beat) I've lived a lot of years, Ellie, but 1935 takes the prize. That was the year I had the worst urinary infection of my life. That was also the year of John Coffey, and the two dead girls... FADE TO BLACK In blackness, a title card appears: "The Two Dead Girls" CUT TO: EXT. GEORGIA COUNTRYSIDE - DAY (1935) HUNDREDS OF PRISONERS work the fields, pickaxes rising and falling in waves, a prison song being sung in cadence with the work. GUARDS patrol on horseback, rifles aimed at the sky. A late 20's Ford PRISON TRUCK comes chugging into view along the road, kicking up a long trail of dust in the heat. It seems to be riding unusually low on its rear suspension. EXT. COLD MOUNTAIN PENITENTIARY - ESTABLISHING - DAY A Depression-era prison in the south. The prison truck sways down the rutted dirt road toward the main gate... INT. E BLOCK TOILET - DAY ...while Paul Edgecomb, early 40's, stands in a cramped toilet in his guard's uniform, trying to piss. His face is pained, his forehead beaded with sweat. INT. E BLOCK (THE GREEN MILE) - DAY BRUTUS HOWELL(nicknamed "Brutal" for his intimidating size, but he's actually rather thoughtful by nature) stands at the entry door of the cellblock, peering out through a viewing slot. He sees the prison truck arrive at the main gate. He turns and nods to fellow guard DEAN STANTON sitting at the duty desk, then cross the Green Mile--a wide corridor of faded green linoleum running some sixty paces top to bottom, with four large cells to a side. Brutal steps to the bathroom, listen a moment, knocks softly. BRUTAL Paul? Prisoner. PAUL (O.S.) Christ. Gimme a minute. Brutal waits patiently, a bit embarrassed. He finally hears a THIN TRICKLE, accompanied by a stifled groan of pain. BRUTAL You all right in there? PAUL (O.S.) For a man pissing razor blades. The door opens, revealing Paul's pale and sweaty face. BRUTAL You should'a took the day off, gone to see the doctor. PAUL With a new arrival? You know better. Besides, it's not as bad as it was. I think it's clearing up. They hear the truck HONKING as it rumbles up outside. Paul gives them a nod to resume their positions. Paul walks down the Mile, passing the cells where two inmates reside--the first is ARLEN BITTERBUCK, a Washita Cherokee; the second is EDUARD DELACROIX("DEL"), a skinny Cajun. DEL New boy coming in, boss? PAUL Never you mind, Del, you just keep your nose quietly on your business. Paul arrives at the end of the Mile, takes up a position at an empty cell. (Down at this end, past the cells, is E Block's version of the "hole" -- a padded room where violent inmates are sent to cool off. It isn't used very often...in fact, at the moment, it's doubling as storage space.) Brutal peers out the viewing slot as the truck stops outside. BRUTAL Damn, they're riding on the axle. What'd they do, bust the springs? GUARDS PERCY WETMORE AND HARRY TERWILLIGER OF E BLOCK emerge from the back of the truck and step down, turn back... Tighter angle on back of truck We get our first glimpse of the new inmate as a pair of GIGANTIC BLACK FEET step down into the yard...and the rear of the truck bounces back up on its springs where it belongs. Brutal sees what's coming, eyes widening slightly. BRUTAL Paul? You might wanna reconsider getting in the cell with this guy? PAUL Why's that? BRUTAL He's enormous. PAUL Can't be bigger than you. Brutal tosses him a look--just wait. He swings the door open in a hot flood of daylight, giving us our first good look at: John coffey is a huge black man, nearly 7 feet tall and 300 pounds, his massive head shiny and bald, his skin a tapestry of old scars, his prison overalls (the biggest size they had) ending at mid-calf. He looks dull and confused, as if wondering where he is and how he got there. Percy and Harry lead him toward E Block in shackles. Percy's got his hickory baton out of it custom-made holster, hollering: PERCY Dead man walking! Dead man walking here! Inside the cellblock Paul can't see them approach from where he stands, but he can certainly hear Percy: PAUL Jeezus, pleeze-us, what the hell's he yelling about? Up by the door, Brutal just rolls his eyes. Percy is the first one through the door, still hollering... PERCY Dead man walking! ...then Coffey enters, ducking low to get through, his shadow blotting out Brutal and Dean as his massive frame fills the door. Everything hangs suspended for a moment, a look of "hold shit" written on everybody's faces. Percy keeps yanking on the big man's cuffs, leading him along with a cry of: PERCY Dead man walking! Dead man-- PAUL Percy, that's enough. Percy falls reproachfully silent. Paul doesn't dignify it, just motions for them to come on. The procession comes down the Mile, with Brutal and Dean bringing up rear. BRUTAL You sure you wanna be in there with him? PAUL (looks to Coffey) Am I gonna have trouble with you, big boy? Coffey shakes his head slowly. Paul takes the clipboard transfer papers from Harry, turns and enters the cell. Coffey just stands outside the cell and waits, as if he doesn't understand the concept. Paul motions him to come on in. Coffey starts to comply, but Percy raps him smartly with the tip of his hickory baton to get him moving faster. Coffey flinches, enters the cell. Paul stares angrily at Percy, who stands slapping his hickory baton against the palm of his hand like a man with a toy he's itching to use. PAUL Percy. They're moving house over in the infirmary. Why don't you go see if they could use some help? PERCY They got all the men they need. PAUL Why don't you just go make sure? (off his look) I don't care where you go, Percy, as long as it's not here at this very moment. Percy flushes red, the baton hovering near his palm. He looks like he's about to say something, but thinks better of it and stalks angrily up the Mile instead... ...and sees Del at his bars, smiling. Infuriated, Percy swings his baton and smashes Del's fingers with a LOUD CRACK. Del jerks back, howling in pain: DEL OWW, GOD, HE BUS' MY FINGERS! PERCY Wiped that grin off your shitpoke face, didn't I PAUL Goddamn it, Percy! Get the hell off my block! Percy throws Paul a look of disdain--your block, huh? He swaggers out. Del's on his knees, weeping from the pain: DEL Oww, damn, boss, he done bus' my fingers for true... PAUL We'll get it looked at, Del, now keep yourself quiet like I said! Del falls silent, moaning over his hand. Paul turns to Coffey, who looks unsettled by all the commotion. PAUL If I let Harry take those chains off you, you gonna be nice? Coffey nods. Harry enters to remove Coffey's shackles. PAUL Your name is John Coffey. COFFEY (deep and quiet) Yes, sir, boss, like the drink, only not spelt the same. PAUL So you can spell, can you? Coffey shakes his head. Harry steps out. PAUL My name is Paul Edgecomb. If I'm not here, you can ask for Mr. Terwilliger, Mr. Howell, or Mr. Stanton...those gentlemen there. (beat) This isn't like the rest of the prison. It's a quiet place, we like to keep it that way. Coffey considers this carefully, puzzled. COFFEY It weren't me making all the noise, boss. PAUL (eyes narrowing) You having a joke on me, John Coffey? COFFEY No, sir. Paul sees he isn't joking, continues: PAUL Your time here can be easy or hard, depends on you. If you behave, you get to walk in the exercise yard every day. We might even play some music on the radio from time to time. Questions? Coffey doesn't miss a beat, as if he's been waiting to ask: COFFEY Do you leave a light on after bedtime? Paul blinks. It's the last thing he expected. Coffey smiles uneasily, as if they might think him foolish for asking. COFFEY Because I get a little scared in the dark sometimes. If it's a strange place. Paul looks to his men. The guards are trading glances. PAUL It's pretty bright in here all night long. We keep half the lights burning in the corridor. COFFEY Cor'der. Coffey looks confused. Paul points to the lights lining the ceiling of the Green Mile in wire mesh cages. PAUL Right out there. Coffey nods, relieved. Then he surprises everybody by offering Paul his hand, as if to show proper manners. Paul hesitates, oddly touched, then surprised his men even more by accepting. Coffey's hand swallows his. Coffey shakes gently, lets go. Paul steps from the cell. Brutal slides the door shut, locks it. Coffey stands a moment as if unsure what to do, then sinks onto the cot with his hands clasped between his knees. He looks up at Paul, his voice soft as a whisper: COFFEY Couldn't help it, boss. I tried to take it back, but it was too late. Paul turns, leads his men up the Mile... PAUL'S INNER OFFICE ...and they enter a few moments later. Paul is furious, but keeping a lid on his temper: PAUL Dean, run Delacroix up to the infirmary and see if his fingers are broken. BRUTAL Course they're broken, I heard the damn bones crack. Goddamn Percy. HARRY You hear what he was yelling when we brought the big dummy in? PAUL How could I miss it, Harry? The whole prison heard. This makes Brutal snort, breaking the tension--the others can't help smiling. BRUTAL You'll probably have to answer for sending him off the Mile. He's gonna cause you trouble over this, you mark me. PAUL I'll chew that food when I have to. Right now I wanna hear about the new inmate...aside from how big he is, okay? BRUTAL (smiles) Monstrous big. Damn. PAUL Seems meek enough. Looks like they sent us an imbecile to execute. HARRY Imbecile or not, he deserves to fry for what he done. Here... Harry tosses a pair of manila envelopes bound with rubber bands on the desk before Paul--Coffey's file. HARRY ...make your blood curdle. CUT TO: EXT. E BLOCK PRISON YARD - DAY A small are reserved for inmates of the Mile, fenced-off from the main prison yard. Arlen Bitterbuck walks the perimeter under the watchful eyes of guard BILL DODGE. We find Paul sitting by himself on the bleachers with Coffey's file on his knees, thoughtfully unwrapping his brown- bagged sandwich. PUSH SLOWLY IN as he begins to read... EXT. DETTERICK FARM - DAWN (FLASHBACK) ...and we see Klaus Detterick walk from his house to the barn with a milking pail, a solitary figure against a brightening horizon. He disappears into the barn... ...and we hold for a long moment, the house silent b.g.,chickens clucking and scratching in the front yard... ...until a WOMAN'S SCREAM shatters the silence. Klaus reappears, dropping the pail, running toward the house... PAUL ON BLEACHERS ...as Paul turns the page, keeps reading... INT. DETTERICK HOUSE - DAWN (FLASHBACK) ...and Klaus bursts in to find his wife MARJORIE absolutely frantic with terror: KLAUS WHAT? GOD SAKES, WHAT? MARJORIE THE GIRLS! THE GIRLS ARE GONE! She drags him through the house to a screened-off porch area where their 12 year old son HOWIE is pointing and shouting-- HOWIE Papa! Papa, look! The blood! --and Klaus freezes there, stunned to see blood spattered on the floor and the screen door hanging off its hinges... KLAUS Oh my God. PAUL ON BLEACHERS ...as Paul absently takes another bite of his sandwich, not really tasting it, keeps reading... INT. DETTERICK HOUSE - DAWN (FLASHBACK) ...plunging us back into the screaming chaos: Klaus grabbing up shotgun shells, Howie loading the .22 rifle he got for Christmas, Marjorie sobbing incoherently... KLAUS GODDAMN IT, WOMAN, GET ON THE PHONE NOW! YOU TELL 'EM WE HEADED WEST! MIND WHAT I'M SAYING! WEST, Y'HEAR? ...and she goes stumbling through the house, grabbing for the phone as her men disappear toward the porch b.g.: MARJORIE Central! Central, are you on the line? Oh, God, please, somebody took my little girls... OUTSIDE THE HOUSE Klaus and his son race from the house, following spatters of blood across the yard... PAUL ON THE BLEACHERS ...as Paul lets out a long breath, turns the page... EXT. COUNTRY ROAD/FIELD - DAY (FLASHBACK) ---and we see CARS AND TRUCKS pulling up, MEN jumping out with rifles, pouring down the incline toward the field where Klaus is hollering and waving his arms. Deputy McGee comes sliding down from the road, taking charge at the top of his lungs-- McGEE I WANT ALL THE WEAPONS UNLOADED, Y'HEAR? TAKE OUT YOUR SHELLS, I WON'T HAVE A MAN SHOT BY ACCIDENT TODAY! BOBO, WHERE THEM DOGS? --and the dogs come bounding out of the back of a truck, howling down the incline to lead the chase... VARIOUS ANGLES ...which takes us through the cattails and bulrushes...to the spot where Klaus finds the little scrap of pale yellow fabric, turns and screams... KLAUS Oh, Lord, this belongs to my Katie... ...and they keep going, stopping abruptly as they find: A blood-drenched area of tramped grass. A little girl's bloody nightgown hangs in the low branches of a tree. Some of these strong men look like they might throw up or faint at the sight of it. Their blood freezes in their veins as an INHUMAN HOWLING commences up ahead. It's like nothing they've ever heard before, raising the hackles of men and dogs alike. PAUL ON BLEACHERS ...as Paul quietly turns another page, shaking his head... PAUL Jesus. EXT. FIELD - DAY (FLASHBACK) The men reload their weapons. Everybody's terrified. McGee starts off, the other following his lead toward-- THE RIVER --where they emerge from the treeline, drawing ever closer to the source of that INHUMAN HOWLING... ...and they stop, gazing in horror: John Coffey sits on the riverbank in bloody overalls, his huge feet splayed out before him. He's making that inhuman howling sound, face twisted in monstrous grief, pausing occasionally to take in a great hitching breath of air. Curled in his massive arms are the naked bodies of Detterick's 9 year-old twin girls, their once-blonde hair now matted to their heads with blood. A tableau. The men staring. John Coffey howling. A train puffing smoke across the landscape. Klaus Detterick breaks the moment, lunging down the riverbank in a headlong rush. The others try to grab him, but he shrugs them off and throws himself on Coffey with a scream of inarticulate rage, kicking and punching, fists flying. Coffey barely seems to notice. The others catch up with Klaus, drag him off. He falls to his knees on the riverbank, sobbing into his hands. Howie runs to him, throws himself into his father's arm. They hug each other tightly, overwhelmed with grief. A semblance of quiet descends, except for Coffey's heartbroken wailing. A ring of rifle toting men forms around him, though he hardly seems aware of it. McGee steps forward, uncertain: McGEE Mister. Coffey goes quiet at once, eyes still streaming tears. McGEE Mister? Can you hear me? (Coffey nods) You have a name? COFFEY John Coffey. Like the drink, only not spelt the same. McGee hunkers carefully down, watching for any sudden moves. McGEE What happened here, John Coffey? You want to tell me that? COFFEY I couldn't help it. I tried to take it back, but it was too late. McGEE (pause) Boy, you are under arrest for murder. McGee spits in Coffey's face... PAUL ON BLEACHERS ...as Paul looks up with a slight start, jarred from his reading to find WARDEN HAL MOORES standing before him. HAL I interrupt? PAUL I'm just about done. Paul stows the file as Hal settles onto the bleachers. PAUL How's that pretty gal of yours? HAL Melinda's not so well, Paul. Not so well at all. Got laid up with another headache yesterday. Worst one yet. She's also developed this weakness in her right hand. PAUL Doctor still think it's migraines? Hal gives a slight shake of his head. HAL I'll be taking her up to Indianola next day or so for some tests. Had X-rays and the like. She is scared to death. Truth to tell, so am I. PAUL If it's something they can see with an X-ray, maybe it's something they can fix. HAL Maybe. He pulls a letter, hands it to Paul. HAL This just came in. D.O.E. on Bitterbuck. Paul glances toward Bitterbuck, scans the letter, nods. PAUL You didn't come all the way down here just to hand me a D.O.E. HAL No. I had an angry call from the state capital about twenty minutes ago. Is it true you ordered Percy Wetmore off the block. PAUL It is. HAL I'm sure you had reason, but like it or not, the wife of the governor of this state has only one nephew, and his name happens to be Percy Wetmore. I need to tell you how this lays out? PAUL Little Percy called his aunt and squealed like a schoolroom sissy. (Hal nods) He also mention he assaulted a prisoner this morning out of sheer petulance? Broke three fingers on Eduard Delacroix's left hand. HAL I didn't hear that part. I'm sure she didn't either. PAUL The man is mean, careless, and stupid. Bad combination in a place like this. Sooner or later, he's gonna get somebody hurt. Or worse. HAL You and Brutus Howell will make sure that doesn't happen. PAUL Easy enough to say. We can't watch him every minute, Hal. HAL Stick with it. May not be much longer. I have it on good authority that Percy has an application in at Briar Ridge. PAUL The mental hospital? HAL (nods) Administration job. Better pay. PAUL Then why's he still here? He could get that application pushed through...hell, with his connections, he could have any state job he wants. Hal has no answer. Paul look off toward Bitterbuck. PAUL Tell you what I think. I think he just wants to see one cook up close. Hal follows Paul's gaze, takes his meaning. HAL Well, he'll get his chance then, won't he? Maybe then he'll be satisfied and move on. In the meantime, you'll keep the peace. PAUL Of course. HAL Thank you, Paul. Hal rises, slapping yard dust off his trousers. PAUL You give Melinda my love, okay? I bet that X-ray turns out to be nothing at all. Hal walks off looking like he's got the weight of the world on his shoulders. Paul looks at the letter again... TIGHT ON LETTER ...which is head: Date Of Execution." DISSOLVE TO: INT. PAUL'S HOUSE - NIGHT Paul is at the kitchen table in the wee hours of the morning, drinking buttermilk and listening to SOFT MUSIC on the radio. JANICE EDGECOMB appears, shuffling sleepily downstairs. JAN Paul? PAUL Hey, you. Music too loud? JAN No. There's just this big empty spot in the bed where my husband usually sleeps. PAUL He said to tell you he's having a little trouble with that tonight. She comes into the kitchen, strokes his hair. There's an easy familiarity and a deep love between these two. JAN Worried about Melinda and Hal? Is that what's got you up? PAUL Yeah, that. Things. JAN Things. She sits on his lap and gives him a crooked smile--you're not getting off that easily. PAUL Got a new inmate today. Big, simple-minded fella. JAN Do I want to hear what he did? PAUL No. One sleepless member of this family's enough. (softly) The things that happen in this world. It's a wonder God allows it. She gives him a tiny kiss above his left eyebrow, in that special spot that makes him prickle. JAN Why don't you come to bed? I've got something to help you sleep, and you can have all you want. PAUL Don't I wish. I've still got something wrong with my waterworks, I don't want to pass it on. JAN You see Doc Sadler yet? PAUL No, because he'll want me to take sulfa tablets and I'll spend the rest of the week puking in every corner of my office. It'll run its course all by itself, thank you very much for your concern. She kisses that spot above his eyebrow again. He smiles. JAN Poor old guy... DISSOLVE TO: IN TIGHT ANGLES: Copper plugs are cleaned, switches are oiled, circuits are tested... INT. EXECUTION CHAMBER - NIGHT ...as maintenance is performed on Old Sparky by JACK VAN HAY and a small crew. Paul is carefully sanding a connector plug. Dean is waxing Old Sparky's wooden arms to a gleam. Paul and Dean pause, thinking they hear a LAUGH drifting in from E Block...and then Brutal calls softly to them: BRUTAL (O.S.) Paul? Dean? INT. E BLOCK - NIGHT Paul and Dean enter to find Brutal trying not to wake the cons in their cells by laughing too loudly. They follows his gaze down the Mile, see nothing, turn to him like he's crazy. BRUTAL I guess the legislature loosened those purse-strings enough to hire on a new guard. (off their looks) Look again. He's right there. Paul and Dean look again and this time they see it: A tiny brown mouse is coming up the Mile. It trots a short distance, peers right and left as if checking the snoring inmates in their cells, then makes another forward spurt. PAUL He's doing a cell check. This gets them all trying not to laugh. The mouse draws ever closer. Dean starts to look worried. DEAN It ain't normal for a mouse to come up on people that way. Maybe it's rabid. BRUTAL Oh, my Christ. The big mouse expert. The Mouse Man. You see it foaming at the mouth, Mouse Man? DEAN (dubious) I don't see its mouth at all. That does it--Paul and Brutal burst out laughing. The mouse stops before them and peers up, curling its tail primly around its paws as if to wait. The guards fall silent, fascinated. Bitterbuck stirs in his cell, sits up to watch. Brutal tears off a piece of his half-eaten corned beef sandwich, holds it delicately out with two fingers. The mouse rises up, appraising the morsel with shiny black eyes. DEAN Aw, Brutal, no! We'll be hip-deep in mice around here... BRUTAL (to Paul) I just wanna see what he'll do. In the interests of science, like. Paul shrugs. Brutal drops the scrap. The mouse grabs it and eats, sitting up like a dog doing a trick. The mouse turns and scurries back down the Mile, vanishing under the restraint room door at the far end. Dean throws Paul an "I told you so" look. DEAN He's in the damn restraint room. You know he's gonna be chewing the padding out of walls and making himself a nice little nest. Brutal give Paul a sheepish look--well? Paul sighs. PAUL All right. Let's get the damn mouse. They stride grimly down the Mile to the restraint room door, men on a mission. Coffey's awake now, peering from his cot. COFFEY Saw me a mouse go by. PAUL It was a dream. Go back to sleep. COFFEY Weren't no dream. It was a mouse all right. PAUL Can't put anything over on you. Paul unlocks the door, revealing a padded room filled with storage: cleaning supplies, buckets of paint, mops and ladders, you name it. Brutal shrugs off his jacket. Paul grabs a mop from a steel bucket, hands it to Dean. PAUL Dean, watch the door. He tries to get past you, whack him. DEAN Brutal or the mouse? BRUTAL Har har, Mouse Man. Brutal and Paul start doing the heavy lifting, muscling an unused filing cabinet out the door... DISSOLVE: ...and they finally relay the last few heavy buckets of paint onto the Mile. Paul and Brutal catch their breath, scanning the empty restraint room. Their eyes go glaringly to Dean. PAUL You let him get past you. DEAN No I didn't, I was here all the time! BRUTAL Then where the hell is he? They move slowly into the room, peering into every nook and cranny, utterly mystified. Brutal shakes his head. BRUTAL Three grown men. Outsmarted by a mouse. DEAN Well, bright side is, all this commotion probably scared him off for good. PAUL Yeah, that's right. That's the last we'll see of him... FADE TO BLACK IN BLACKNESS, A TITLE CARD APPEARS: "The Mouse on the Mile" CUT TO: INT. E BLOCK - DAY A low, static shot. Green floor stretching before us. Harry and Bill Dodge are at the desk b.g., doing paperwork and filing chores. Percy is idling nearby, whistling softly and combing his hair... ...and into this quiet shot, deep in foreground, creeps the mouse. He starts walking the Mile as before... ...right toward Percy. COFFEY stares through his bars as the mouse goes by... PERCY keeps combing his hair, unaware... DEL sits quietly picking his nose in his cell. The mouse appears outside the bars, cruising inexorably up the Mile. Del turns slowly, watches the mouse go by... PERCY still grooming himself, still unaware... THE MOUSE keeps coming closer. ANGLE UP to Bitterbuck peering through his bars, watching him go by... PERCY keeps working that comb--and freezes at the sound of a TINY SQUEAK. His head swivels slowly... ...and there's the mouse. Staring at him. That moment of eye contact reveals an enmity older than time itself. If mice have a natural enemy, Percy is it. PAUL You little son of a bitch. Harry and Bill glance up from their work. HARRY Well, I'll be damned. There he is, big as Billy-be-frigged. I thought Brutal was pulling my leg. BILL That's a goddamn mouse. HARRY Yeah. Brute said he was in here last night begging for food, came right up to the desk. BILL My ass. Give him some room, Percy, see what he does. Percy takes a few careful steps back, eyes never leaving the mouse. (Percy's hand starts easing toward the handle of his baton.) The mouse comes up to the desk as before. HARRY Brave little bastard, gotta give him that. Harry breaks off a small piece of cracker and drops it. The mouse picks it up, starts to eat. (Percy's hand inches ever closer to his baton). BILL Here, lemme try. Bill drops a piece of cracker. The mouse ignores it completely, keeping its beady little eyes on Harry. (Percy's hand starts easing his baton from its holster.) BILL Maybe he's full. HARRY (grins) Maybe he knows you're just a floater. Gotta be an E Block regular to feed the E Block mouse, don'cha know... Harry drops another piece--and sure enough, the mouse starts to eat. Harry's smile fades. He and Bill trade a look. HARRY I was just kidding ab-- Percy lets rip a BELLOWING WAR CRY ("Yaaaahhh!") and launches his baton like a spear, scaring the crap out of everyone. The mouse ducks (yes, actually ducks) and the baton sail over his head close enough to ruffle its fur, bouncing off the floor. Apparently remembering a pressing engagement elsewhere, the mouse takes off in a flash toward the restraint room. Percy roars with frustration and takes off after it, trying to squash it with his heavy work shoes, leaping and stomping with great big galloping strides, missing the mouse by inches... ...and thus is the Green Mile traversed, with Percy stomping and hollering like a spastic flamenco dancer, the convicts yelling at their bars, the mouse zigging and zagging like Jim Thorpe heading for the endzone... The mouse wins, zipping to safety under the restraint room door. Percy pounds his fist against the door in frustration: PERCY FUCK! He fumbles with his keys, unlocks the door, yelling all the while: PERCY I'M GONNA RIP YOUR DISEASED HEAD OFF, YOU LITTLE PIECE OF SHIT! OUTSIDE E BLOCK Paul and Brutal are arriving for work--they pause, hearing PERCY'S YELLS drifting from the windows. The regular CONS in the yard are drifting curiously to the fence, wondering if a riot's brewing. Paul and Brutal take off running-- INSIDE E BLOCK --and rush in to find: HARRY Percy met your mouse. Harry points. Percy's down at the far end, rummaging wildly in the restraint room, tossing shit out onto the Mile. PERCY It's in here somewhere! I'm gonna squish the little son of a bitch! He starts muscling the filing cabinet out the door, kicking buckets out of his way. Brutal calls out to him: BRUTAL Percy, we already tried that-- PERCY What? Whad'ja say? BRUTAL I said-- Paul stops Brutal with a look--don't you dare stop him. BRUTAL --uh, knock yourself out. Hope you nail the bastard. Paul crosses his arms and smiles, leans back against the desk to wait... DISSOLVE: ...and Percy hauls the last of the stuff out, exhausted. He steps back in and looks around, unable to believe there's no mouse cowering in the corner. Paul and the men approach, keeping straight faces, navigating the crap in the corridor. BRUTAL Gosh. Ain't in there, huh? Don't that beat the mousie band? Percy keeps scanning the restraint room. The others all look to Paul, waiting for him to speak--you're the boss. PAUL Percy. You want to think about what you were doing just now. PERCY (turns, glaring) I know what I was doing. Trying to get the mouse. You blind? HARRY You also scared the living crap out of me and Bill. And them. He cocks a thumb at the inmates in their cells. PERCY So what? They aren't in cradle- school, case you didn't notice... (directed at Paul) ...although you treat them that way half the time. BRUTAL We don't scare 'em any more than we have to, Percy. They're under enough strain as it is. PAUL Men under strain can snap. Hurt themselves. Hurt others. That's why our job is talking, not yelling. You'll do better to think of this place like an intensive care ward in a hospital-- PERCY I think of it as a bucket of piss to drown rats in. That's all. (scans their faces) Anybody doesn't like it can kiss my ass. How's that sit? Brutal steps forward, wanting to slug the little bastard. Percy shies back, but keeps his bravado up: PERCY Try it. You'll be on the bread lines before the week is out. PAUL We all know who your connections are, Percy... (steps close) ...but you ever threaten a man on this block again, we're all gonna have a go. Job be damned. PERCY Big talk. You done? PAUL Get all this shit back in the restraint room. You're cluttering up my Mile. They turn and walk away, leaving Percy as we DISSOLVE TO: INT. E BLOCK - NIGHT A SLOW TRACKING SHOT OF THE GREEN FLOOR takes us past a tiny scrap of break...and then another...and then past a mousetrap primed with a scrap of bacon... ...and we keep following a long trail of bread scraps and mousetraps until we come to Percy, alone on the Mile, carefully laying the last mousetrap down... ...and he scoots back against the desk to wait, crouched and holding his breath, eyes riveted to the restraint room door for any sign of his furry nemesis... ...and CAMERA BOOMS SLOWLY DOWN off his face, dipping down to floor level... ...where the mouse is revealed under the desk, peering in the same direction as Percy, wondering what the hell's so interesting down there. It hops further out to see... ANGLE OF PERCY FROM FLOOR LEVEL ...and the mouse enters frame, hopping out a few more steps, mouse and man staring in the same direction. A long beat. Percy turns, looks down at the mouse. The mouse turns, looks up at Percy... ...and all hell breaks loose again. They race the Mile as before, Percy hollering and stomping all the way, mousetraps snapping and flying up into frame as they go charging wildly past the cells. The mouse wins again. Percy pauses, furious...and sees Coffey staring at him from his cell. COFFEY Saw me a mouse go by. Percy loses it, kicking and punching the restraint room door in a screaming rage as we FADE TO: INT. E BLOCK - DAY Paul appears at Bitterbuck's bars with a group of guards. PAUL Arlen? Your daughter and her family are here. Bitterbuck steps from his cell. Bill Dodge escorts him off the block. The moment they're gone: PAUL Let's move. I want at least two rehearsals before he gets back. INT. VISITOR'S ROOM - DAY Bitterbuck is led in. His DAUGHTER rises...an awkward hesitation...and she touches his face, kisses him. He takes her hands, kisses them, tries not to cry. The rest of the family is there: SON-IN-LAW, GRANDCHILDREN, COUSINS. They form around him, murmuring hellos, shaking hands... INT. E BLOCK - DAY ...while TOOT-TOOT takes Bitterbuck's place in the cell. He's a wiry and toothless old trusty, crazy as a tick. He sits: TOOT Sittin' down, sittin' down, rehearsing now! Everybody settle! He glances to Paul--okay, hit it. PAUL Arlen Bitterbuck, step forward. Toot springs to his feet and steps from the cell. TOOT I'm steppin' forward, I'm steppin' forward, I'm steppin' forward... Toot turns, shows the top of his head to Dean. PAUL Is his head properly shaved? DEAN No, it's dandruffy and it smells. PAUL I'll take that for a yes. All right, Arlen, let's go. Toot starts up the corridor, ringed by guards. TOOT I'm walkin' the Mile, I'm walkin' the Mile, I'm walkin' the Mile... PAUL'S INNER OFFICE Toot throws himself to his knees as soon as they enter: TOOT I'm prayin', I'm prayin', I'm prayin'. The Lord is my shepherd, so on an' so forth... PAUL Toot, you have to wait till I tell you to pray. (Toot waits) Okay, pray. TOOT Still prayin', still prayin'... HARRY Paul, we're not gonna have some Cherokee medicine man in here whoopin' and hollerin' and shaking his dick, are we? PAUL Well, actually-- TOOT Still prayin', prayin', gettin' right with Jesus... HARRY Do it quietly, you old gink! Harry slaps Toot upside the head to shut him up. PAUL As I was saying, I don't believe they actually shake their dicks, Harry. Be that as it may, Mr. Bitterbuck is a Christian, so we got Reverend Schuster coming in. DEAN Oh, he's good. Fast, too. Doesn't get 'em worked up. PAUL On your feet, Toot. You've prayed enough for one day. TOOT Gettin' to my feet, walkin' again, walkin' on the Green Mile... EXECUTION CHAMBER They enter. Brutal is waiting for them, gun drawn. Percy peers out from behind the partition wall from the switch room. PERCY What do I do? PAUL Watch and learn. Paul motions Percy behind the wall. Percy sighs, takes his spot next to Jack Van Hay, peers through the wire mesh as Toot plops into Old Sparky, wriggling his skinny ass to get comfy. TOOT Sittin' down, sittin' down, takin' a seat in Old Sparky's lap... Paul and Dean kneel to apply the ankle clamps. Brutal steps in from the side, pressing down on the condemned man's left arm to keep him in place until the ankle clamps are secure. Harry moves in from the other side, securing the right arm clamp. TOOT Gettin' clamped, gettin' clamped, gettin'--ow, shit, watch the skin! Paul signals "ankles secure." Brutal holsters his pistol, applies the final clamp to the left arm. BRUTAL Roll on one. BEHIND THE PARTITION Van Hay mimes turning the generator knob up, whispering: VAN HAY "Roll on one" means I turn the generator up full. You'll see the lights go brighter in half the prison... RESUME MAIN CHAMBER as Brutal steps before the "condemned" and pronounces: BRUTAL Arlen Bitterbuck, you have been condemned to die by a jury of your peers, sentence imposed by a judge in good standing in this state. Do you have anything to say before the sentence is carried out? TOOT (gleefully) Yeah! I want a fried chicken dinner with gravy on the taters, I want to shit in your hat, and I got to have Mae West sit on my face, because I am one horny motherfucker! Brutal tries to hold on, but it's impossible--he cracks up. Everybody falls apart, howling helplessly with laughter. Even Jack Van Hay is guffawing behind his partition. Only Paul is reining it in--he's a little too pissed to go with it. He waits until the laughing fit starts to pass, then: PAUL Shut up, Brutal. That goes for everybody. I want quiet in here. (turns) Toot, another remark like that, I'll have Van Hay roll on two for real. BRUTAL (beat, gently) It was pretty funny. PAUL That's why I don't like it. Tomorrow night we're doing this for real. I don't want somebody remembering a stupid joke like that and getting going again. (off their looks) Ever try not laughing in church once something funny gets stuck in your head. Same goddamn thing. BRUTAL Sorry, Paul. You're right. Let's keep going. Harry... Harry takes a black mask and snugs it down over Toot's head, leaving only the crown of his head exposed. Brutal takes a large sponge, dips it in a steel bucket, mimes soaking it... BEHIND THE PARTITION PERCY What's with the sponge? VAN HAY You soak it in brine, get it good and wet. Conducts the electricity directly to the brain, fast like a bullet. You don't ever want to throw the switch on a man without that. RESUME MAIN CHAMBER as the sponge is placed atop Toot's head. Harry now lowers the steel cap and Brutal secures the straps. BRUTAL Arlen Bitterbuck, electricity shall now be passed through your body until you are dead, in accordance with the state law. God have mercy on your soul. (to Van Hay) Roll on two. BEHIND THE PARTITION Van Hay mimes flipping the switch, looks to Percy: VAN HAY And that's that. RESUME MAIN CHAMBER Toot can't resist--he starts bucking and flailing: TOOT Now I'm fryin'! Fryin'! Geeaaah! Fryin' like a done tom turkey! Paul rolls his eyes at Brutal. Brutal shifts his gaze past him and nods--look behind you. BRUTAL One of the witnesses showed up a day early. Paul turns. Sitting on the door sill, watching them with beady eyes, is the mouse. Paul turns back, addresses the room: PAUL All right, let's go again and do it right this time! Get that idiot out of the chair... HIGH WIDE ANGLE OF EXECUTION CHAMBER Brutal and Harry start undoing Toot's clamps. Everybody relaxes, drifting from their positions... DISSOLVE TO: SAME ANGLE AS ABOVE - NEXT NIGHT ...and the room is now quietly filling up with WITNESSES trickling in. People speak in whispers, if at all. INT. BITTERBUCK'S CELL - NIGHT Bitterbuck, the top of his head now shaved, is speaking quietly as Paul listens: BITTERBUCK You think if a man sincerely repents on what he done wrong, he might get to go back to the time that was happiest for him and live there forever? Could that be what heaven is like? Paul doesn't think so--but that's not what Bitterbuck needs to hear, so the lie comes easy: PAUL I just about believe that very thing. Pause. Bitterbuck smiles. BITTERBUCK Had me a young wife when I was eighteen. Spent our first summer in the mountains. Made love every night. She'd just lie there after, bare-breasted in the firelight, and we'd talk sometimes till the sun come up. (beat) That was my best time. Brutal appears at the door, checks his pocketwatch, nods to Paul. Bitterbuck takes a deep breath, getting himself ready. PAUL It'll be fine. You'll do fine. INT. EXECUTION CHAMBER - NIGHT THE SPONGE is pulled sopping wet from the bucket of brine, dripping a trail of water across the floor. Brutal places it atop Bitterbuck's head. Water courses down the sides of the condemned man's mask and neck, pooling on the floor. The cap is lowered, the straps secured. All we hear now is the sound of Bitterbuck's BREATHING growing louder and faster under the mask...until, softly: BRUTAL Roll on two. WHAM! The switch is thrown. Bitterbuck surges forward against the straps, riding the powerful current. Some witnesses turn away. Paul and Brutal maintain grim eye contact with each other, waiting. Behind the partition, Percy watches through the mesh with gleaming eyes, wishing he could see better. Van Hay kills the current. Bitterbuck goes limp. A DOCTOR steps forward, checks for a heartbeat, shakes his head. BRUTAL Again. The switch is thrown a second time. Bitterbuck surges forward again, riding the current all the way... CUT TO: INT. E BLOCK ACCESS TUNNEL - NIGHT Bitterbuck's dead face stares up at us from a gurney. A hand reaches down, gives his cheek a squeeze. TILT UP to: PERCY Adios, Chief. Drop us a card from hell, let us know if it's hot enough. Brutal knocks Percy's hand away, shoves him aside. BRUTAL He's paid what he's owed. He's square with the house again, so keep your goddamn hands off him. He draws the sheet over Bitterbuck's face, wheels the gurney down the tunnel. Percy throws a look to Paul. PERCY What's up his ass? PAUL You, Percy. Always you. Paul brushes past him, but: PERCY You gotta hate the new boy? That the way it is around here? PAUL (turns back) Why not just move on? Go to Briar Ridge. (off his look) Yeah, I know about it. Sounds like a good job. PERCY I might take it, too. Soon as you put me out front. Paul cocks his head--excuse me? PERCY You heard me. I want Brutal's spot for the next execution. PAUL (beat) What's with you? Seeing a man die isn't enough? You gotta be close enough to smell his nuts cook? PERCY I wanna be out front, is all. Just one time. Then you'll be rid of me. PAUL If I say no? PERCY I might just stick around for good, make me a career of this. Paul just shakes his head in wonder and walks away. FADE TO: INT. COFFEY'S CELL - DAY Coffey's lying on his bunk, weeping quiet tears. He stirs at the sound of GIGGLING. He sits up, peers curiously through the bars. Softly: COFFEY Del? AT THE GUARD STATION Paul glances up from writing in the daily log. Silence now. He goes back to writing--and the GIGGLING comes again. PAUL Delacroix? That you? No answer. Just more giggling. Paul rises, walks down the Mile to Delacroix's cell--and stops, staring in through the bars. PAUL'S INNER OFFICE Brutal and Dean are having lunch. Paul pokes his head in. PAUL You are not gonna believe this. RESUME E BLOCK The men follow Paul onto the Mile. By now, Del is CACKLING WILDLY in his cell. Brutal shoots Paul a look--has he gone insane? Paul gestures "see for yourself." They arrive at the bars...and find the mouse sitting on Del's shoulder. Del looks up, giggling like a kid at Christmas. DEL Look! I done tame me dat mouse! PAUL We see that. DEL Watch dis! Watch what he do! He stretches out his left arm. The mouse crawls over the top of his head, scampers along his arm to the wrist, turns around and scampers back. The guards just stand there, staring. DEL Ain't he sumpthin now? Ain't Mr. Jingles smart? PAUL Mr. Jingles? DEL Dat his name. He whisper it in my ear. Cap'n, can I have a box for my mouse so he can sleep in here wi' me? PAUL I notice your English gets better when you want something. DEL Wanna see what else he can do? Watch, watch, watch... He puts the mouse on the floor, grabs a small wooden spool. The mouse sees it, poises like a man getting ready for a race. DEL We play fetch, Mr. Jingles? We play fetch? He tosses the spool across the floor, bounces it against the wall. The mouse goes after it like a dog after a stick--and proceeds to push it back to the bunk, rolling it with its front paws all the way to Delacroix's feet. By now, the guard's jaws are hanging open. Paul's got a funny little chill running up his spine. DEL He fetch it ever' time. Smart as hell, ain't he? We do da trick again, watch, watch, watch... Again he throws the spool. Again the mouse goes after it, starts rolling it back. Del howls with laughter, claps his hands like a kid. Brutal murmurs to the others: BRUTAL Who's training who here? COFFEY That's some smart mouse, Del. Like he's a circus mouse or something. DEL A circus mouse! Dat jus' what he is, too! A circus mouse! I get outta here, he make me rich, see if he don't! He picks up the spool again, makes a drumroll sound, tosses it. The mouse does its thing, rolling the spool back... ...as Percy enters the scene. Del catches sight of him and scoops up his mouse, drawing fearfully back on his bunk. He tries to hide Mr. Jingles in his hands--but the mouse wriggles from his grasp and scampers up on top of his head, where he regards Percy with mistrustful, beady mouse eyes. PERCY Well, well. Looks like you found yourself a new friend, Eddie. Del tries to offer some defiance--but all he can manage is: DEL Don' hurt him, 'kay? 'kay? Percy shrugs as if to say "no skin off me", looks to Paul. PERCY That the one I chased? PAUL (level) Yes, that's the one. Only Del says his name is Mr. Jingles. PERCY Is that so? Paul trades a look with the others, everybody wondering just what the hell's going through Percy's mind. PAUL Del was just asking for a box. He thinks the mouse will sleep in it, I guess. That he might keep it for a pet. What do you think? PERCY I think it'll shit up his nose some night and run away, but I guess that's Del's lookout. (beat) We oughtta find a cigar box. Get some cotton batting from he dispensary to line it with. That should do real nice. Percy walks away, leaving them dumbstruck. Paul turns to the others. Of all the things they've seen in the last few minutes, Percy being nice is the most amazing of all. PAUL Man said get a cigar box. CUT TO: INT. PRISON ADMINISTRATION BUILDING - DAY Paul comes up the stairs to the warden's office... INT. WARDEN MOORES' OFFICE - DAY ...and enters to find Hal staring out the window. PAUL Hal? You wanted to see me? HAL Yeah. Paul. Close the door. Hal's speech is halting, his thoughts disjointed and slow: HAL Uh. So you know. You got a new prisoner coming in tomorrow. William Wharton. Young kid. Wild as hell, judging from this... He picks up the report, trying to focus his thoughts: HAL ...been rambling all over the state last few years, causing all kinds of trouble. Finally hit big time. Killed three people in a holdup, including a pregnant woman. Got "Billy the Kid" tattooed on his left arm...bad news all around... He trails off, no longer able to focus on the words. Paul is shocked to see tears spill silently down his cheeks. PAUL Hal? HAL It's a tumor, Paul. A brain tumor. Paul doesn't know what to say. Hal looks at him. HAL They got X-ray pictures of it. It's the size of a lemon, they said, and way down deep inside where they can't operate. They say she'll be dead by Christmas. I haven't told her. I can't think how. For the life of me, Paul, I can't think how to tell my wife she's going to die. Hal Moores, one of the toughest and steadiest men you'd ever meets, starts to cry. He dissolves into great big gasping sobs, losing all control. CUT TO: INT. PAUL'S BEDROOM - NIGHT Paul lies awake, watching Jan sleep. He looks troubled--not to mention feverish. It occurs to him how badly he has to pee. He sits up, clutching at a queasy stab of pain in his groin... LIVING ROOM STAIRS ...and comes hurrying down the steps, clutching himself... EXT. HOUSE - NIGHT ...and he's moving even faster as he exits the kitchen, racing for the outhouse. He realizes he's not going to make it, stops to piss near the woodpile at the corner of the house... ...and as he does, he's hit with the most stunning pain of his life. He buckles to his knees--it's only his flailing hand against the woodpile that prevents him from going face- first into his own piss. He crams his other hand to his mouth in an enormous effort not to scream and wake his wife. He manages to ride it out until his bladder empties. He falls onto his side, rolls over on the grass, and stares up at the sky with both hands pressed to his groin. PAUL ...oh God...oh God... FADE TO BLACK IN BLACKNESS, A TITLE CARD APPEARS: "Coffey's Hands" CUT TO: INT. PAUL'S KITCHEN - MORNING Paul looks feverish and clammy as he buttons up his uniform jacket. Jan is packing his lunch, throwing him looks, knowing how sick he is. PAUL I'm going. JAN What? PAUL To the doctor. I'm going. (off her look) Today. Just as soon as we get the new inmate squares away. JAN That bad? PAUL Oh yeah. She hands him his brown-bagged lunch, kisses his face. CUT TO: INT. BRIAR RIDGE MENTAL HOSPITAL - MORNING We see a tattoo: "Billy the Kid." TILT UP to WILLIAM WHARTON staring out the window, wearing a hospital gown, his face utterly blank. He looks heavily medicated. Harry, Dean, and Percy enter. Billy doesn't react, just keeps staring out. Harry waves his fingers in Billy's face. HARRY Boy's doped to the gills. Dean, hand me them clothes... Dean relays some folded prison clothes to Harry. HARRY William Wharton! Hey! I'm talking to you! Put these clothes on! Billy turns with a vacant look, takes the clothes. He fumbles with the shirt, drops the pants. Harry and Dean sigh. They strip Billy's hospital gown off and proceed to put the shirt on him, guiding his limp arms through the sleeves. PERCY Hellraiser, huh? Looks more like a limp noodle to me. Hey! Hey, you! Billy looks up, meets Percy's eyes. PERCY You been declared competent! Know what that means? Mean's you're gonna ride the lightning, son! Percy does a quick impression of a man jittering and jerking in the electric chair. PERCY Bzzzzzzzzt-zap! Just like that! How's it feel to know you're gonna die with your knees bent? DEAN C'mon, Percy, give us a hand. Laughing, Percy picks up the pants. They proceed to help Billy into them one leg at a time... CUT TO: INT. E BLOCK TOILET - DAY Paul is trying to piss. Except for a few drops hitting the bowl, excruciating pain seems to be the only result. He gives up, grabs a towel, wipes the sweat from his feverish face... INT. E BLOCK - DAY ...and steps gingerly from the toilet. Del's watching. DEL Don' look so good, boss. Look like you runnin' you a fever. Paul shoots him a baleful look--no kidding. Another voice calls softly from further down the Mile: COFFEY (O.S.) Boss Edgecomb? Needs ta see you down here, boss. PAUL Got things to tend to just now, John Coffey. You be still in your cell now, y'hear? Coffey falls silent. Paul goes to the entrance door and peers through the viewing slot, anxious to have this over with... EXT. COLD MOUNTAIN PENITENTIARY - DAY The prison truck appears, swaying along the rutted road... IN THE TRUCK ...while Billy Wharton stares at nothing, drool dripping from his slack mouth in long strings. INT. E BLOCK - DAY Paul watches the truck pull in. He draws away from the slot, proceeds toward the empty cell which used to be Bitterbuck's... ANGLE ON TRUCK The rear doors are swung open. Harry emerges. Dean and Percy are guiding Billy by the arm, helping him down... INSIDE E BLOCK Paul waits at the empty cell. ANGLE PANS TIGHT to Coffey at his bars, eyes widening in a blossoming of some nameless fear or dread. Something bad's coming. A whisper: COFFEY Careful. OUTSIDE E BLOCK Billy is brought to the door. Dean pulls his keys, starts to unlock it. We PUSH IN on Billy's face, where the tiniest trace of a smile is starting to grow... INSIDE E BLOCK ...and Coffey's unease grows with it. he presses his face to the bars, his whispering becoming more urgent: COFFEY Careful. Careful. Paul hears him, glances back with a puzzled look. Coffey's gaze is directed at the door, which is being unlocked... THE DOOR ...and opened. In that moment, the slack look on Billy's face gives way to a wild grin. A CRAZED SCREECH leaps from his throat, a cross between a rebel yell and a dog being tortured, freezing everybody's blood in their veins-- BILLY Yeeeeeeehaaaawwwwwwrooooo! --and he drops his wrist-chain down over Dean's head, jerks it tight, begins to strangle him. Dean lurches forward, Billy riding/propelling him through the door onto the Mile. Percy stands frozen in the doorway, stunned. Harry shoves him aside and jumps on Billy from behind, trying to get him off Dean. Dean is choking, turning purple. Paul rushes from the cell to join the fray. Billy whirls, delivering a stunning kick to Paul's groin. Paul's bladder pain goes nuclear--he falls back in agony, clutching himself and sucking air through his teeth, unable even to scream. Billy rams an elbow into Harry's face, knocks him sprawling on the desk, screaming and laughing and howling all the while: BILLY WHOOOEE, BOYS! AIN'T THIS A PARTY, NOW? IS IT, OR WHAT? Paul forces himself to his feet, pulls his revolver, draws down on Billy... PAUL LET HIM GO! ...but Billy jerks Dean around, using him as a shield... BILLY G'WAN, SHOOT! SEE WHO YA HIT! Dean is choking, dying. Paul is shifting his aim, trying for a clear shot, not getting one. Percy's still just inside the doorway, pressed against the wall with fear... PAUL HIT HIM, PERCY! GODDAMN IT, HIT HIM! BILLY C'MON, PERCY, HIT ME! HIT ME, YOU LIMP NOODLE, HIT ME! YEEHAWWW! ...and suddenly a hand comes in, grabs the hickory stick out of Percy's grasp, raises it high-- --it's Brutal coming through the door. He swings the baton and lands an awesome blow to Billy's head--THUMP! The force of it spins Billy off his feet and slams him flat on his back. Dean crawls away, gulping ragged breaths of air. Amazingly, Billy's still conscious--he looks up at Brutal and laughs: BILLY Big fucker. Snuck up on me. No fair. Still laughing, he makes another grab at Dean. Brutal whacks him again, turning his lights out for good. Brutal drops to Dean's side, helping him hack air back into his lungs: BRUTAL Breathe...breathe...that's it... Everybody's reining in their adrenaline. Paul glares at Harry. HARRY We thought he was doped. (to Percy) Didn't we? Didn't we all of us think he was doped? Percy nods, still numb. Paul is furious: PAUL You didn't ask? I guess that's not a mistake you'll be need to make again anytime soon, is it? Harry shakes his head miserably. Paul grabs Billy by the feet. PAUL Grab his arms! You too, Percy! (off Percy's hesitation) Percy, goddamn it, get your feet out of cement and help us out here! Percy finally unfreezes. The three of them hoist Billy up in a dead-lift, get him in his cell, toss him on the cot. They step out, slam the door, lock it. Paul looks to Harry and Brutal. PAUL Get Dean looked at right away, make sure he's all right. Percy, you go make a report to the warden for me. Start off by saying the situation is under control-- it's not a story, he won't appreciate you drawing out the suspense. BRUTAL What about you? You look about ready to collapse. PAUL I've got the Mile till you all get back. Go on now. They all exit. As soon as he's alone, Paul gives in to the pain, holding his crotch and sinking to his knees with a moan. It's so bad he actually lays down on the Mile, face pressed against the cool linoleum, wishing he were dead. A stretch of silence...and then: COFFEY (O.S.) Boss? Needs ta see ya down here. PAUL This is not a good time, John Coffey. Not a good time at all. COFFEY (O.S.) But I needs ta see ya, boss. I needs ta talk t'ya. Paul sighs. Things couldn't get much worse than this. He rises with a supreme effort, walks painfully down the Mile... COFFEY'S CELL ...and finds Coffey waiting at his bars. COFFEY Closer. PAUL I'm alone here right now, John. Figure this is close enough. COFFEY Boss, please. I got to whisper in your ear. Paul blinks. Maybe it's the fever clouding his brain, or maybe...hell, is this what being hypnotized is like? He tries to shake the sensation off, comes a little closer. DEL Boss? You know you not s'pose to do dat. PAUL Mind your business, Del. What do you want, John Coffey? COFFEY Just to help. His hand shoots out, grabs Paul by the collar, jerks him close. Paul makes a panic-grab for his revolver... ...but Coffey lays his free hand atop Paul's, eases his grip from the gun--no need for that. Coffey's hand then drifts slowly down, easing to Paul's crotch... PAUL (stunned, frozen) What are you...doing? ...and something goes WHUMP through Paul's body. He arches back with his mouth agape and arms outstretched as a rush of energy seems to pass from Paul through Coffey's hand... ...and then it's over. Paul comes back to the real world, weak against the bars, realizes Del is hollering in his cell: DEL HELP! JOHN COFFEY'S KILLING BOSS EDGECOMB! HELP! PAUL Del, Chrissake, settle down, I'm fine... It dawns on him that he really is fine. Fever's gone. So is the pain in his groin. John Coffey, though, seems to be having trouble. He sits down on his bunk, bends forward, gagging like a man with a chicken bone caught in his throat. PAUL John? John, what's wrong? Paul fumbles his keys to the lock, unsure if he should open the door, watching the big man's contortions grow stronger like a cat trying to cough up a hairball... ...and then comes an unpleasant, gagging/retching sound as Coffey's lips draw back from his teeth in a kind of godawful sneer...and he exhales a cloud of what look like tiny black insects. They swirl furiously in front of his face, turn white...and disappear. Paul just stares, stunned. Softly: PAUL What did you do, big boy? What did you do to me? COFFEY I helped it. Didn't I help it? PAUL Yes, but...how? Coffey shrugs--it's something that just is. COFFEY Just took it back, is all. Awful tired now, boss. Dog tired. He rolls onto his bunk, faces the wall. Paul just stares at him, stunned. He turns and walks up the Mile, his stiffness and pain now gone. Del watches him go by, also stunned: DEL What dat man do to you? He throw some gris-gris on you? (off Paul's look) You look diff'int! Even walk diff'int. Like y'all better! PAUL You're imagining thing. Lie down, Del. Get you some rest. Paul continues up the Mile... E BLOCK TOILET ...and steps back into the toilet. Not trusting this situation for even a moment, Paul opens his fly, takes a deep breath to prepare himself for the pain, starts to pee... ...and we hear a healthy stream of water hitting the bowl. The look on Paul's face says it all--blessed relief. CUT TO: INT. PAUL'S HOUSE - DUSK Paul comes home from work, still looking numb about the whole thing. He drifts to the kitchen door. Jan's at the counter, slicing vegetables for dinner. She glances at him. JAN Hi, honey. How are you feeling? PAUL Um...not too bad. She turns back. Paul's eyes drift down to admire her ass. JAN What did the doctor say? No response. He's too busy staring. She turns again--he glances hastily up. PAUL Oh, you know doctors. Gobble-de- gook mostly. She turns back, keeps working. He crosses the room, eyeing her ass all the way...and surprised her by pressing up against her from behind, running his hands along her hips. JAN Paul? What are you doing? He starts laying kisses on the back of her neck, giving her pleasant shivers, murmuring: PAUL What's it feel like? JAN I know what it feels like...it feels great...but...Paul... He's getting her breathless. She turns into his arms and they get into some passionate kissing. It's not too long before they're frantically peeling each other's clothes off... INT. BEDROOM - NIGHT ...and we find them having a wild tumble in the sheets, both moaning and groaning, sweating and panting. She pushes him flat on the bed, pauses to catch her breath... JAN Those must've been some pills. ...and they keep going, rutting like crazed weasels... EXT. HOUSE - NIGHT ...as their moans go drifting into the night... FADE TO: SAME ANGLE AS ABOVE - DAWN ...and they're still moaning up there as the sun creeps up. INT. BEDROOM - MORNING Jan falls back, exhausted after the latest go-round. She catches her breath, looks over at Paul, and finally: JAN Paul? Not that I'm complaining. But we haven't gone four times in one night since we were nineteen. (off his look) You wanna tell me just what the hell's going on? PAUL Well...thing is...I never actually got to the doctor yesterday... She gives him a look--oh? CUT TO: INT. LIVING ROOM - MORNING Paul is on the phone: PAUL Brutal? Listen...I'm thinking of taking the morning off sick. You cover the fort for me? (beat) That's swell. Thanks. Yeah, I'm sure I'll feel better. Okay. He hangs up, turns to Jan. JAN You sure you ought to do this? PAUL I'm not sure what I'm sure of. CUT TO: EXT. ROAD TO TEFTON - DAY Paul's model T comes putt-putting up the road past a sign: "Trapingus County Welcomes You." EXT. HOUSE IN TEFTON - BACK PORCH - DAY BURT HAMMERSMITH, public defender for Trapingus County, sits with a cold soda and a magazine, watching his TWO CHILDREN playing on a swing at the far end of the backyard. The screen door opens and CYNTHIA HAMMERSMITH ushers Paul out. CYNTHIA I offer you a cold drink? PAUL Yes, ma'am, a cold drink would be fine. Thank you. She goes back inside. Burt rises. PAUL Mr. Hammersmith. Your office said I'd find you at home today. I hope I'm not troubling you. BURT That depends, Mr.--? PAUL Paul Edgecomb. I'm the E Block superintendant at Cold Mountain. BURT The Green Mile. I've heard of it. Lost a few clients your way. PAUL That's why I'm here. I'd like to ask you about one of them. Burt settles back down, motions "please sit". BURT Which client? Now you got my curiosity aroused. PAUL John Coffey. BURT Ah, Coffey. He causing you problems? PAUL No, can't say he is. He doesn't like the dark. He cries on occasion. Other than that... BURT Cries, does he? Well, he's got a lot to cry about, I'd say. You know what he did. PAUL (nods) I read the court transcripts. Cynthia reappears, hands Paul a cold root beer. PAUL Thank you, Missus. CYNTHIA My pleasure. Kids! Lunch is about ready! Y'all come on up! She goes back inside, but the kids aren't quite able to tear themselves away from their play. BURT What exactly are you trying to find out? Satisfy my curiosity, I'll see if I can satisfy yours. PAUL I've wondered if he ever did anything like that before. BURT Why? Has he said anything? PAUL No. But a man who does a thing like that has often developed a taste for it over time. Occurred to me it might be easy enough to follow his backtrail and find out. A man his size, and colored to boot, can't be that hard to trace. BURT You'd think so, but you'd be wrong. Believe me, we tried. It's like he dropped out of the sky. PAUL How do you explain that? BURT We're in a Depression. A third of the country's out of work. People are drifting by the thousands, looking for work, looking for that greener grass. Even a giant like Coffey wouldn't get noticed everywhere he goes... not until he kills a couple of little girls. PAUL He's...strange, I admit. But there doesn't seem to be any real violence in him. I know violent men, Mr. Hammersmith. I deal with 'em day in and day out. Burt smiles, realizing: BURT You didn't come up here to ask me whether he might have killed before. You came up here to see if I think he did it at all. That's it, isn't it? PAUL Do you? BURT One seldom sees a less ambiguous case. He was found with the victims in his arms. Blurted out a confession right then and there. PAUL Yet you defended him. BURT Everyone is entitled to a defense. Cynthia hollers from an open window: CYNTHIA Kids! Lunch! BURT Y'all listen to your Momma, now! The kids start this way. Burt turns back to Paul. BURT Tell you something. You listen close, too, because it might be something you need to know. PAUL I'm listening. BURT We had us a dog. No particular breed, but gentle. Ready to lick your hand or fetch a stick. Just a sweet mongrel, you know the kind. (Paul nods) In many way, a good mongrel dog is like you negro. You get to know it, and often you get to love it. It is of no particular use, but you keep it around because you think it loves you. If you're lucky, Mr. Edgecomb, you never have to find out any different. My wife and I were not so lucky. Caleb. Come here for a second. The little boy comes to him, staring at his feet. Burt tires to raise the boy's chin. The boy resists for a moment... BURT Please, son. ...and then his face comes around. He's horribly scarred on that side, the eye missing. BURT He has the one eye. I suppose he's lucky not to be blind. We get down on our knees and thank God for that much at least. Right Caleb? (the boy nods shyly) Okay, go on in now. The boy races inside after his sister. Paul follows Burt's gaze off toward the rear of the property, where an unoccupied doghouse stands weathered and sad in the weeds. BURT That dog attacked my boy for no reason. Just got it into his mind one day. Same with John Coffey. He was sorry afterwards, of that I have no doubt...but those little girls stayed raped and murdered nonetheless. Maybe he's never done it before--my dog never bit before, but I didn't concern myself with that. I went out there with my rifle and grabbed his collar and blew his brains out. PAUL I'm sorry for your trouble. Burt acknowledges the condolence with a gracious nod. BURT I'm as enlightened as the next man, Mr. Edgecomb. I would not bring back slavery for all the tea in China. I believe we have to be humane and generous in our efforts to solve the race problem. But we have to remember that the negro will bite if he gets the chance, just like a mongrel dog will bite if it crosses its mind to do so. (beat) Is Coffey guilty? Yes, he is. Don't you doubt it, and don't you turn your back on him. You might get away with it once or even a hundred times...but in the end... He raises his hand, making biting motions with his fingers. BURT You understand? Paul says nothing. Burt gazes out again. Softly: BURT I'm gonna have to tear that old doghouse down one of these days. CUT TO: INT. PAUL'S MODEL T - DAY Paul drives back to Cold Mountain, his heart conflicted... INT. E BLOCK - DAY ...and he walks onto the Mile with a bundle wrapped in a dish towel. Brutal glances up from the desk, sniffing the air. PAUL No, it's not for you. Paul continues down the Mile. Whatever he's carrying, the smell of it brings Del to his bars. Even Mr.Jingles comes skittering out of his cigar box, sniffing. DEL Oh. Oh my. Paul arrives at Coffey's cell. Coffey's on his bunk facing the wall. His head comes around, drawn by the aroma. He sits up, wipes the tears leaking from his eyes, looks at Paul. COFFEY I'm smelling me some cornbread. Paul speaks softly so the others can't hear: PAUL It's from my missus. She wanted to thank you. Coffey nods thoughtfully, absorbing this notion. Then: COFFEY Thank me for what? PAUL You know. For helping me. COFFEY Helping you with what? Paul motions