A boy, Robbie, and a girl, Pip, walk together in their university’s dining hall at lunch time, each holding a bowl of cereal. They slide into opposite sides of a booth.
Robbie: So how are you and the stalker boy?
Pip: He’s not a stalker boy.
Robbie: He sound’s like he’s close enough.
Pip: Yeah, he probably is. But you don’t really have to worry about him snatching me away anymore.
Robbie: Ooh, what did you do? Did you punch him and scare him away? No, did you tell him you want kids right away like I told you?
Pip: Okay, that was terrible advice. He probably would have agreed.
Robbie: Well what happened?
Pip: He got a girlfriend.
Robbie: When? He was just texting you two days ago!
Pip: Yesterday. He was asking me if I wanted to go out with him on Saturday, and then by the next day... I don’t know, but he found one somewhere.
Robbie: Did he tell you this? How do you know?
Pip: Lizzie told me.
Robbie: God, Lizzie.
Pip: I told her it’s the last time she tries to set me up with someone.
Robbie: Good!
Pip: (confused) Why are you so interested in him anyway? You’ve never met him, you don’t know what he’s like.
Robbie: Well I know what you tell me, and “probably” being a stalker is enough for me to not like him.
Pip: (stirring in her bowl) But you know I don’t like him either, I don’t want anything to do with him, he’s a creep.
Robbie: Yeah, and so he needs to stay away from you.
(The conversation breaks as the two silently take a few bites of cereal.)
Pip: God, I’m so replaceable.
Robbie: I thought you didn’t like him.
Pip: I don’t, but still... it sure didn’t take him long to move on. I’m just replaceable.
Robbie: That’s sad.
Pip: It’s true. It’s happened to me so many times this year.
Robbie: How many?
Pip: Three.
(They both stir around in their cereal)
Robbie: Maybe one of them didn’t mean to?
Pip: What are you talking about?
Robbie: One of the guys... who replaced you. Maybe one of them didn’t know what he was doing.
Pip: Doesn’t matter.
Robbie: But if he didn’t mean to...
Pip: It still hurts like hell. Even if he didn’t mean to. It still hurts to be with him.
Robbie: Well I’m glad at least you finally ditched stalker boy.
Pip: Thanks.
(The cereal bowls are empty by now, but they continue to look down and stir the remaining milk.)
Robbie: I dumped her last night.
Pip: (jerking her head up) What??
Robbie: She cheated on me.
Pip: (turns head to look out window) Wow...
Robbie: No “Are you okay?” or anything?
Pip: I’m sorry. Are you okay? Really. I know you... really liked her.
Robbie: I’ll be fine.
Pip: But you’re not.
Robbie: I really really like her. You don’t... you don’t know how much it hurts.
(She puts her spoon down and sees that he already has.)
Pip: (curtly) You’re right, I don’t know what it feels like to be cheated on. But I think everyone knows what it’s like to really really like someone and have them not think as much of you.
Robbie: (looking down) Yeah.
Pip: (nicer) And it does really hurt.
(They pick their spoons up again)
Robbie: What do you want him to do?
Pip: Who are you talking about?
Robbie: The one who replaced you. The one who didn’t mean it. What do you want him to do to fix it?
Pip: God, I don’t know... I guess... I just want him to know that I’m trying to get over him, but it hasn’t happened yet.
Robbie: Anything else?
Pip: And that sometimes I feel like trash to him, and that’s hard.
Robbie: Stop feeling like trash. You’re not trash to me.