Hand of God Healing

Joe looks at the frozen strip of land like it’s already been looted.

JOE:
“I can’t build a garden in Canada, Nelly. Not a real one. And even if I did—what’s the point?”

Nelly turns to him.

NELLY:
“What do you mean?”

Joe lets out a dry laugh.

JOE:
“I mean it would get stolen. All of it. Bit by bit. Tomatoes gone overnight. Herbs ripped out by the roots. Someone hopping the fence at dawn telling themselves they deserve it more.”

He gestures to the neighborhood.

JOE (cont’d):
“You grow food here, you’re not a gardener—you’re a donor. Unofficial food bank with no locks.”

Nelly studies his face.

NELLY:
“That sounds like mistrust.”

JOE:
“That’s hunger.”

He exhales slowly.

JOE (cont’d):
“My family home in Croatia—completely different. You plant something, it’s still there in the morning. Neighbors respect it. They’ve got their own gardens. No one’s circling your tomatoes like vultures.”

He shakes his head.

JOE:
“Here? People are desperate. Canada’s slipping into a famine and everyone’s pretending it’s just a ‘cost-of-living issue.’ Ten million people going to food banks, Nelly. Of course it gets stolen. Hunger doesn’t ask permission.”

A pause.

NELLY:
“So you don’t even feel safe growing food.”

JOE:
“Safe? No. What I’d feel is watched.”

He looks around again.

JOE (cont’d):
“You fence it, you’re selfish. You don’t fence it, it’s gone. Either way, you’re the bad guy.”

He scoffs.

JOE:
“And while people are stealing tomatoes to survive, you’ve got Rockefeller stooges in white coats telling everyone health comes from a prescription.”

Nelly sighs.

NELLY:
“Doctors.”

JOE:
“Quacks. Too many of them. They treat symptoms and invoice despair.”

He softens, just a little.

JOE (cont’d):
“A garden is supposed to give you dignity. Here, it turns you into a target.”

Silence settles.

NELLY:
“And Croatia?”

Joe’s voice drops.

JOE:
“In Croatia, growing food meant security. Here, it just reminds you how fragile everything’s become.”

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Starving Nation

Scene: “The Garden of Empire”
Setting: A modest Roman-style courtyard behind Parliament Hill, reimagined in a near-future, famine-shadowed Canada. The air is cool and smells faintly of soil and rain. General Maximus, armor dulled by age and service, stands beside a small raised garden bed. Nelly Furtado—draped in a simple linen tunic—kneels in the dirt, planting seeds.


MAXIMUS:
Nelly Kim Furtado… Canada is not starving yet, but it is hungering.
Not for bread alone, but for truth—
for the taste of something real.
The food banks feed the stomach but not the spirit.
They hand out the farmer’s scraps, not the harvest of the soul.

NELLY:
You mean to say the food isn’t real?

MAXIMUS:
It fills the belly, yes, but it doesn’t nourish.
It’s shelf-stable, chemical-stiff,
the bottom of the farmer’s barrel dressed in charity.
A nation that cannot feed itself is a slave in waiting.

NELLY:
So what do we do, General?
We can’t fight hunger with swords.

MAXIMUS (smiling faintly):
No—
but we can fight it with seeds.
A kitchen garden is an act of rebellion.
You grow a tomato, you defy the empire of imports.
You teach the people to till again,
you remind them they are children of the earth, not of the supermarket.

NELLY:
And who will lead this new Canada, this green legion?

MAXIMUS:
We need courage. We need conscience.
We need another Kim Campbell
someone who won’t bow to the old oligarchs or hide behind smiles.
A leader who plants before she preaches.

NELLY (looking up, dirt on her hands):
Maybe it doesn’t have to be a politician.
Maybe the new Kim Campbell is anyone willing to get their hands dirty.

MAXIMUS:
Then Canada’s salvation begins here—
with you, Nelly Kim.

He hands her a small wooden box of seeds—labeled “Hope.” The wind shifts, carrying the scent of basil and mint as dawn breaks over the Ottawa River.

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Love Builds a Garden 2

Nelly leaned close to Joe, her voice soft but carrying a quiet fire.
“Love builds a garden,” she said. “That’s what the song from Gnomeo and Juliet was really about. That’s my biggest wish, Joe… to eat real food again. Food that isn’t poisoned by Monsanto, food that doesn’t taste like chemicals and betrayal.”

Joe watched her, and in her eyes he saw more than nostalgia—he saw hunger for truth, for soil, for roots.

“I’ll go anywhere with you,” Nelly whispered, her hand in his. “Even back to Europe… even if we end up like one of the Village People, living simply, planting seeds, singing in the square. I don’t care, Joe. As long as the food is real, and the love is real.”

Joe smiled. For him, it wasn’t just a dream. It was a mission. Together, they would plant the garden. Together, they would sing the old songs. And together, they would make Monsanto’s poisons irrelevant—because love had already chosen life.

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