đ Scene 5 â Family Part 2 âItâs Your Faultâ
âItâs Your Faultâ
Based on the original script by the young creators of âYouâre Fried!â, now directly mirroring Scene 1.
Weâre back in the same living room. Same table. Same sofa. Same two parents.
But everything feels heavier now. Still. Thick with silence.
Their daughter sits in front of them â the same young woman we saw in Scene 4, just returned home from McDonaldâs. Fired. Burnt out. Quiet. Her shoulders low, uniform folded in her bag.
Across from her sits her brother, the one who had chosen the apprenticeship route. It didnât work out either. He dropped out three months ago, but no one really talks about it. He stares at his phone, avoiding eye contact.
Then the doorbell rings.
The visiting family from Scene 1 steps in â same smiles, same confident tone. Theyâve come with news.
âYou wonât believe it â our sonâs book just hit the best-seller list!â
âHeâs already been invited to three literary festivals. Itâs all going so fast!â
The parents beam. Not at their children â but at their guests.
After they leave, the silence returns. The mother breaks it first.
âYou see what happens when you work hard and make the right choices?â
The father turns to his daughter.
âYou had chances. You chose wrong.
First that apprenticeship nonsense, now this job at McDonaldâs?
You didnât even last a month.â
The daughter tries to speak.
âI tried. No one trained me properly. There werenât enough staffââ
âAlways an excuse.â
âWe didnât raise you to quit. Maybe we should have pushed you harder.â
The son flinches but says nothing.
The daughter lowers her gaze. The shame is familiar now. The room feels smaller. Heavier.
No one says the words out loud, but they donât have to.
This final scene shows how systemic failure gets written as personal failure â especially in the home. It reflects the full arc of the play: blocked futures, unrecognised effort, and families who were never told how rigged the system is.
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