INT. MOUNTAINTOP CHAPEL โ MEDJUGORJE โ SUNSET
Golden light streams through stained-glass windows as NELLY and JOE kneel side by side. The sound of distant bells mixes with cicadas. Nelly wears a simple linen shawl. Joe is in a borrowed cassock, worn over his jeans. They gaze at a modest statue of the Virgin Mary as the sky turns lavender.
NELLY (whispering)
If I could… I’d leave everything, Joe. Hollywood. Music. Fame. All of it.
I’d become a nun here. And you… youโd be my priest.
JOE (half-smiling)
They donโt usually let priests and nuns marry, Nelly.
NELLY (earnest, eyes wide)
Thatโs why the Vatican wonโt recognize Medjugorje, donโt you see?
Too many miracles. Too much love.
The priests and nuns hereโsome of them do marry. Secretly. Sacredly.
Like Christ never wanted us to be alone. Like Eden before the fall.
JOE
You really think Rome fears love?
NELLY
They fear what they canโt control.
But Christendom is dying, Joe. Not from sin.
From emptiness. From not enough children.
JOE (quietly)
From loneliness.
NELLY
Exactly.
I want seven more, Joe.
Not with chemicals or doctors. Not with stress and calendars.
The Hunza way.
Pakistani mountain mothersโฆ they drink glacier water, eat apricots, climb cliffs barefoot at 50, and still have babies.
Because they believe.
JOE
Seven?
NELLY
One for every sorrow of Our Lady.
I want our children to run barefoot through vineyards, praying the rosary, laughing in Croatian.
I want to raise saints, not stars.
JOE (looking at her deeply)
What if weโre excommunicated?
NELLY
Then let Rome keep its gold and crimson.
Weโll take the incense, the silence, and the sunrise.
Let them keep their walls.
Weโll build a chapel with our hands, raise our children in the open air,
and love like heaven is watching.
They sit in silence. The sun dips behind the hills. A breeze stirs the chapelโs candles.
JOE
Maybe Medjugorje is the last outpost of Eden.
NELLY (smiling softly)
Then letโs not miss our chance to go back.
The chapel bells ring again. A calling. A choice. The light fades gently to dusk.







Scene: Joe Canuck and Nelly Discuss Psalm 127 and the Future of Families
Location: A seaside cafรฉ in Tangier, the sun setting over the Atlantic. Joe Canuck sips mint tea while scribbling blueprints for his gravity-fed desalination towers on a napkin. Nelly watches children playing soccer in the sand.
Joe Canuck (JCJ):
โYou know, Nellyโฆ even the Muslim birth rate is down to 2.9 children per family. Used to be over 6. The depopulation agendaโฆ itโs touched everyone. Even Islam.โ
Nelly:
โThatโs wild, Joe. I thought Muslims were the last holdout. Still valuing children like blessings.โ
Joe:
โThey are. But the cities, the economy, the screensโthey get in everywhere. What weโre living through, itโs Psalm 127 in reverse: โChildren are a heritage from the Lord, like arrows in the hands of a warrior.โ And now the quiverโs nearly empty.โ
Nelly (softly):
โWhatโs your plan?โ
Joe (grinning):
โIf I can pull off the desalination gridโgravity-fed, sustainable, pure water for the desertsโwe can green the Earth again. Food security, homesteads, dignity. Big families wonโt be a burden anymore. Psalm 127 will be rebornโฆ by 2027.โ
Nelly:
โYouโre serious.โ
Joe (nods):
โWater is life. Desalinate the ocean, feed the soil, and the wombs of every faith will open again. Not for empire. For Eden.โ
Nelly (with quiet awe):
โYouโre not just building machinesโฆ youโre building the future.โ
Joe (smiling):
โAnd every child born into that future will be an arrow in Godโs quiver. Watch. 2027. Psalm 127 fulfilled.โ
They both look out to sea, as the waves crash gently against the shoreโlike a heartbeat waiting to accelerate.