Php can't perform tasks after closing a request because the request (and the responce sent to browser) are really closed when the php process finish.
Also, php is good for short actions, not long running program like daemons because php lack of a good garbage collector (so it'll eat up all availlable memory before crashing).
What you are looking for is called a queue. When you need to perform some resource (or time) intensive tasks, you put a task into a queue. Then later a worker process will take one item from the queue then perform the task.
This enable you to limit ressource usage by limiting the number of workers to avoid peaks and service failures.
Take a look at resque (for a self hosted solution) or iron.io (for a cloud, setup free solution)
If you are on a shared host (so, no queue and no cron are available) then I recommend you to look at iron.io push queue. That sort of queue will call your server (via HTTP) to send task to it while the queue isn't empty. This way, all the polling/checking queue is done on the iron.io side and you only have to setup a regular page that will perform your task.
Also, if you want the script B to wait for the script A to finish, you'll have to create some sort of locking system. But I'll try to avoid that if I were you because that can cause a deadlock (one thread waiting another, but the other will never finish thus blocking the waiting thread forever)