'Tala' makes her way over the park, helpfully catching the eye of a young actor she had hired, as cover. She tunes out his somewhat blatant attempts to hit on her, and instead listens in on Hugo and William talking by the other end of the statue...
-----
Meanwhile...
The play has begun. The one Lady Alanis chose could be considered...controversial.
Just the first act, the Crimson Queen throws her essentially innocent Husband, the Black King, off a balcony and declares herself the new Ruler, bakes her cousin into a pie (which she then eats) and beheads her sister with a mace. Despite this, she's not depicted as the villian of her piece-all her actions, unorthadox as they seem, could in theory be justified, considering the subtext of corruption presented in her Kingdom. An interesting ideal!
The second act introduces the crowd to the main cast at the Queens inaugural party. Most of them are very well written, almost as if the playwright based them upon real people instead of fictional ones...there's the Green Lady, who is shown in a sympathetic light to have a young son, and the White Rider, who doesn't speak yet portrays an aura of menace all the same...The Orange Courtier and the Grey Merchant...The Blue Knight and the Purple Assassin...and of course, the Yellow Jester who serves valued comedic timing-sometimes even breaking the fourth wall, making puppeteer gestures overhead the other characters as they speak.
The third act is a masterful and frankly confusing build up of dramatic tension, as all the characters plot to annihilate each other. Thankfully, it's also mercifully short.
The finale! Lets sum it up quickly-The White Rider stabs the grey merchant, who is in turn stabbed by the Orange Courtier, who is shot with an arrow from the Blue Knight who is then himself stabbed by the Purple assassin, whom the Crimson Queen then beheads with a mace-the Green Lady strikes at the Queen next, but misses and seems to be next to lose her head, but Lo and behold, the Orange Courtier is not dead! He stabs the Queen from behind!
As the Orange Courtier lies dying, he reveals he always loved the Green Lady-and that he poisoned the dates at the party, which every character, major and minor, over the course of the entire play has been seen eating-even the son of the Green Lady... Most of the crowd cannot help but gasp at the revelation.
The play ends in full silence, as all the collected bodies lie in heaps in the floor and lights are slowly dimmed over a minute.