Gilmore Girls s04e18 Episode Script

Tick, Tick, Tick, Boom!

All right, Davey, here comes the airplane.
What were kids told to get their|mouths open before there were planes? - "Here comes the choo-choo"?|- Before trains? - Here comes the spoon.
|- That's so on the nose.
One more bite, honey.
Come on, now.
Here comes the airplane again.
|It's flying through the air.
It's beginning its descent.
|It's commencing its approach.
- It's lowering the landing gear.
|- It's signaled the ground crew.
They're flipping their flashlights.
|Shove that in the kid's mouth.
Look, it's Bilbo Baloneypuss|just in from the Shire.
- Just hurry up and order.
|- What's the rush? I don't like babies.
I suddenly felt violently protective.
|It's gone.
- It's the noise they make.
|- This baby has not made a peep.
He will and at the worst possible moment.
Like when you're defusing a bomb|or something? That would be awkward.
You've got one minute to order,|then six minutes to eat.
Come on down to Luke's,|where the motto is "Eat it, then beat it.
" One minute.
Hello, all.
- Taylor.
|- Top of the morning to you.
- Top of the-|- Yeah, on top there, you got the - Definitely it's a-|- Beautiful top.
It's Top of the morning right back at you.
|You were just on a cruise, weren't you? Yes, and it was heaven.
|The Caribbean.
Ever been? - I'm sorry.
What did you say?|- Ever been to the Caribbean? - God, I'm sorry.
I missed it again.
|- Never mind.
Luke, I have an issue|I need to discuss with you.
Good.
Something to write about|in my diary.
There is a distinct odor|outside our establishments.
I have to assume|it's coming from the diner.
- There's no odor from here.
|- It wasn't there when I left for my trip.
- Where else could it be from?|- I don't know.
Have you checked underneath|that thing on your head? - I'm combing it differently.
|- The comb didn't loosen the glue? You know, I smelled something, too,|but it was across the square.
Me, too, over by the hairstand.
|Newsstand.
I smelled it by Gypsy's.
Horrible.
So the whole town smells?|How can that be possible? It is an old town, 200 years.
- So it's decaying from age?|- Or we've got skunks again.
- I think you're right, Taylor.
|- Ten years ago we got infested.
They crawled under houses, met their fate.
|The town smelled for weeks.
That must be it, Taylor.
Good work.
Thank you, Kirk.
I'm going to have|to mobilize the community.
The flower show is coming up.
|We have to deal with this quickly.
Let me go door-to-door and make sure every townsman|looks under his house, Taylor.
I'll even knock some heads together,|get medieval on their ass.
That's a nice offer, Kirk but the block captains|will see it gets done.
I better start making my calls.
- Your minute's up.
Order.
|- We're not ready.
Then it's coming out of your eating time.
Get violently protective,|so Luke will back off.
- I don't know if I can summon it like that.
|- Try.
Luke.
In five minutes, you're all gone.
I let you down.
The "argh" was good,|and then you kind of petered out.
- I need to practice more.
|- You'll get it there.
Read.
- Try it against that wall there.
|- We've already tried it there.
It's no problem.
No problem for you,|but this is giving me cuticle damage.
Do you know how long|cuticle damage takes to heal? Thank God, no.
- No, it doesn't work there, either.
|- What an enormous shock.
Anywhere else you want to try it? Maybe at the Lincoln Memorial|on his giant lap? - How about over there?|- Yeah, there.
- I'm sending you my manicure bill.
|- Yes, mine, too.
Don't be snotty.
Seems a little out of place|no matter where you put it.
Yeah, unfortunately.
If you'd ordered through me,|I would've guaranteed it.
You didn't order it from me.
We ordered it before we hired you.
|We should've waited.
It's always best to do it|through your contractor.
I don't think it fits here.
Oh, my God, I'm getting a blister.
- How about by the front desk?|- We could give it a shot.
That's it.
I'm jumping off the "Amistad.
" It's heavy, my back hurts,|I'm not moving it again.
No problem.
I can do it.
It's not me.
It really is heavy.
- You mean here?|- They already tried it there.
I think it's a lost cause.
We've got the Dennis Kucinich|of bookcases.
I wish you'd gone through me.
I could give it to Rory.
|She could use it at Yale.
- Hi, everybody.
|- Hi.
- Hi, Michel.
|- Hi, Lindsay.
Are you okay?|You're standing kind of funny.
It's nothing funny.
|It is how you stand in these pants.
- Keys, please.
|- You got it.
Annette and Frankie|really found each other.
They float together.
They just sort of float.
It's off-the-charts adorable.
Yep.
The Deans of the world|always get the Lindsays.
The pretty little things|just like the bookcase lifters.
That's a category,|jocks, nerds, bookcase lifters? I was born with this bad back.
|It was heretical.
Congenital.
I hate that bookcase.
|I wish you had never ordered it.
I wish you had never thought of it.
I can't even be in the same room with it,|mocking me for how alone I am.
- It's mocking you?|- It's three pieces of wood.
Well, I hate it! If you'd ordered through me, he wouldn't|be experiencing this psychological trauma.
I mean, they were extremely common|until just recently.
Historically recently.
Not recently like "metrosexual|is a word now" recently, but recently.
- Are we still talking about anvils?|- Yes, where did all the anvils go? You're talking about those|big, heavy, metal things? That blacksmiths hammered horseshoes|and stuff on.
Everyone had them.
They were featured prominently in every|movie Western, so where did they all go? I don't know that they were that common.
Wile E.
Coyote used them.
|That's how common they were.
- Who?|- The cartoon.
He was always trying to drop|an anvil on the Road Runner's head or shoot it at him out of a giant slingshot|or fire it at him out of a cannon.
Inevitably, the cannon tilted up,|shot it in the air it fell down, and made an anvil-shaped|impression on Wile E.
Coyote's head.
- This is a cartoon?|- No, this happened to me the other day.
I was walking down the street,|and this giant anvil Yes, it's a cartoon.
I know she sounds nuts,|but it's a very common cartoon.
But that doesn't prove|that anvils were so common.
It does.
It proves that anvils|were so ubiquitous at one point - Was that the word?|- Depends on where you're going.
That they knew that children would know|what they were and delight in them.
That's how common they were,|children watching cartoons.
That was the word.
- I've forgotten your point.
|- Where are all the anvils? Is there some secret anvil storage facility|the government is keeping from us? Or they fell into disuse|with the advent of other technologies and so they melted them down|and they're gone.
But they're not supposed to melt.
They were made to withstand the red-hot|hammer of the town blacksmith.
This is easily the most|pointless conversation we've ever had.
I don't hear anyone chiming in|with rational theories.
Please change the subject,|I beg of you.
Anyone? The girls don't know|the big news about Jason and me.
- You're pregnant?|- We're acquiring another company.
- I was close.
|- Already? You just started yours.
The insurance business is changing|so rapidly, you have to adapt to keep up.
It's a dog-eat-dog world, Grandpa.
Don't get the wrong idea.
|It's not a big company.
- It's smaller than ours, but powerful.
|- Wait, the company is smaller than yours? Your company is two guys, you and Jason.
This company is a one-man operation,|Bob Sutton.
So, you're acquiring Bob? We're acquiring his company,|and his company is him.
Did he have to give himself|two weeks' notice? No.
Is there gonna be|a sad going-away party where he brings in his own cake|and blows out his candles? We are all celebrating with a dinner|tomorrow, us and the wives.
- You're not big on the Bob?|- Bob's fine.
We've known him for years.
It's that dolt he's married to.
|Classic trophy wife.
- She is quite young.
|- How young? Her car looks just like Barbie's.
Regardless, I hope|you will be kind to her at dinner.
I'll have to bring my|English-to-dumbbell dictionary.
Focus on Bob.
|Bob's as sharp as they come.
He's very brilliant, I'll give you that.
- Bob's brilliant?|- He's a Rhodes scholar.
Ask him where the anvils went.
Or not.
And 47 cents comes to $5.
|Thank you, Mrs.
Cassini.
Thank you.
|I don't know what it is about you, Taylor but you look so healthy,|so invigorated, so youthful.
Thank you, Mrs.
Cassini.
|Must be the vacation.
Or the fake hair.
Come again, Mrs.
Cassini.
Tracy, change out the scoop water.
|It's an unsightly color.
And tell Franklin when he gets here Tell him that he keeps forgetting|to punch out when - Kirk, something wrong?|- Well, I Don't touch the candy.
I'm sorry, I didn't want to touch the candy.
Kirk, I just had a spat with my sourball|distributor and I'm not in the mood.
Now, what's the trouble? - It's eggs.
|- What? What's eggs? In the square, the smell.
It's not skunks, it's eggs.
|Easter eggs from the Easter egg hunt.
- But Easter was over a week ago.
|- And I did it just like you told me.
I personally hid 300 eggs|around the town square and the kids had a blast|hunting them down.
Except the Banyan boys,|they're bad seeds.
Going to hell, both of them.
But the kids only found 241 of them.
Are you telling me that there are|59 rotting eggs hidden in the square? I thought they would naturally decompose|and just disappear.
Eggs smell when they decompose.
I just found that out.
I find your hair very believable.
Nice shot.
Beautiful.
You're being extremely charitable.
Richard, if I get that far in four shots it would be a miracle|on the order of loaves and fishes.
Yeah, and I'm in the sand.
I don't think any of us|are gonna make Tiger shake in his spikes.
I'd go with a driver or three-wood.
Whatever is gonna make me|look less like Dorf.
You know, my wife's very excited|about the merger, Richard.
Do give Trish our best.
Emily and I were just talking about her.
|Terrific girl.
At least he held onto the club this time.
Now, it's hard to know|whether he should yell "fore" or "duck.
" Why can't businessmen do deals|over air hockey? I am great at air hockey.
- Looky here.
|- Your father? One of the many hazards|on this golf course.
I thought that was you.
Groundskeeper must be unhappy|that you're here today.
Divots, I do produce a lot of divots.
|Good one.
- Richard, nice to see you.
|- Same here, Floyd.
And, Bob, didn't know you were a duffer.
More like spoiling a good walk.
You want to play through? Actually, I was heading back|to the clubhouse and you caught my eye.
- How's Emily?|- She's fine.
- Good health?|- Very good.
And Carol? Fine.
You know, she really misses Emily.
|Misses her company.
And vice versa, I'm sure.
You couldn't drag those two apart|at a function.
- They were like conjoined twins.
|- I know she'd love to see Emily again.
I'm sure the feeling is mutual.
Then, perhaps we should|get those two together.
We could arrange that.
- I can tell Carol to give her a call?|- Any time.
You know, if it's a meal,|we men could tag along, if they'd let us.
That's a big "if," but that could happen.
Maybe Jason could tag along, too.
That would be a nice little gathering.
I'm out of town next week,|but this Friday's free.
Friday would be perfect.
- I hope it happens.
|- I hope so, too.
- Glad to run into you.
|- Same here.
Bob, Jason.
He wants to have dinner.
- Was it Carol's idea or Floyd's?|- It's hard to say.
- This is very good, Richard.
|- It was public.
The whole club saw.
But did he say that Carol had wanted it|or that he had wanted it? - What did you hear?|- I was out of earshot.
Rapprochement with Floyd Stiles.
|Never in my wildest dreams.
And it came from him.
|Who saw this coming? He brought up Carol before|or after he brought up the dinner? I didn't have a tape recorder.
I'll offer to host it here.
|I've got the perfect menu.
Friday, right? - So it's Lorelai and Rory, too.
|- Friday was his suggestion.
- I wasn't in a position to counter.
|- That's fine.
- He saw us with Bob, too.
|- Still he made the offer.
Acquiring Bob was a great idea.
There'll be seven.
That's|an unbalanced table, but that's okay.
This is wonderful.
- Floyd wants peace.
|- So it seems.
- Dean.
|- Surprise.
- What are you doing here?|- I come bearing gifts.
- A bookcase?|- Yeah, the one from the Inn.
Do you see what's going on out there? Almost there.
Thanks for the help.
Should I give him a hand? If he doesn't work for his inebriation,|he won't appreciate it.
There's a party Friday night.
|It must be for that.
Yeah? You going? I have two papers due,|so I'll be in Stars Hollow avoiding the fray.
I'll just have a brewski there.
- So, which way's your room?|- That way.
- So, where did this come from?|- Your mom had it made for the Dragonfly but it didn't fit,|so she thought you could use it here.
- She didn't tell you?|- Nope.
- Small.
|- Yes.
- There's no place to put this.
|- Yes, again.
- What was your mom thinking?|- That I have books and that's probably the extent of it.
Right.
So, I guess I'll take it back.
- I'm sorry you had to make the trip.
|- No, it's okay.
It's kind of nice seeing where you live.
- So, are you on your way back to school?|- No, I'm just off from work.
I'm actually gonna take|a little break from that.
- From what, school?|- Yeah, just for a semester or two.
A semester or two?|But I thought it was going so well.
It was.
It's just that Lindsay and I|really need some extra money right now and this job with Tom has been perfect.
- Extra money for what?|- What do you mean? For life, things.
What kind of things? Lindsay's got her heart set on having|a townhouse by the end of the year.
We're cramped where we are,|so I think it's a good idea.
- You do?|- Yeah.
- I don't.
|- What? I think it's a horrible idea.
It's just temporary.
- Maybe.
|- Rory- A lot of people who drop out|say that it's just temporary.
It usually doesn't work out that way.
- I'm gonna go back.
|- I hope so.
- Have some faith, will you?|- I just think this is a mistake.
Rory, I'm married, remember?|I have responsibilities.
- You'll lose your momentum.
|- I need the money.
- Can't the townhouse wait?|- Lighten up.
I just think this is a really bad idea.
Graduating from college|doesn't guarantee you a job anymore.
It's not like it was with our parents.
- You're not going back?|- You're twisting my words.
And you're just gonna work|in construction? What, are you gonna get|all elitist on me now? We're friends,|so I get to tell you what I think.
- Fine.
|- You should go to school.
Great.
Now you've told me three times.
|I get it.
You don't need to tell me again, okay? - You want me to take this now?|- Yes.
No.
- Whatever you want.
|- I'll take it now.
Fine.
Attention, please.
Everybody, if I may.
Let's have some attention, people! We all know why we're here.
There are 59 rotting Easter eggs|hidden throughout the square and we've got to find them.
I know what you're all thinking.
|What about the map? The careful, detailed map|of where the eggs are hidden made each year to avoid catastrophes|such as this? Well, a map was not made this year,|good townsfolk.
One was not made.
Now, this work is going to be|exhausting and, yes, disgusting but as my way of thanking you help yourself to lunch at Doose's Market where everything|in our prepared-foods section will be discounted 5%,|20% for our day-old sushi.
With the flower show due in three days,|we have a clock on this, people but when I look out|at this fine group of volunteers my heart races with pride.
I see America and I am proud.
- Now, are there any questions?|- What's with the toupee? - It's not a toupee.
|- And I'm blond and leggy.
Are there any legitimate questions|from anyone? - Yes, Joe?|- I'm Jewish.
Well, that's swell.
- Is it okay for a Jew to hunt Easter eggs?|- That's between you and your rabbi.
Jackson, a question? - Toupee guy says what?|- What? - What are you laughing about?|- Jackson said, "Toupee guy says what?" inspiring your understandable|response of, "What?" thus soliciting their childish laughter.
|It's infantile and a total clam.
Please report every found egg to me,|and I will keep the running total.
Now, good luck, and let the hunt begin.
We won't let you down, Taylor because not only are we gonna|find 20 eggs within the hour but we're going on to find 25 and then 30 and then 35 and then 40 and then 45 and then 50 until we find all 59|and take back the square! - Hurt your throat?|- Very badly.
- Found one.
|- Fifty-eight to go.
Good job, Joe.
Okay, dinner is ready when the cow moos.
Okay.
- How about here?|- Not there.
- Why not?|- It's dark.
Yeah, that's the point.
It's a dark corner.
|The plant livens it up.
- Plants need light.
|- They do? It's the "photo" part of photosynthesize.
- Don't some plants just synthesize?|- They really need the photo part.
None of the plants I ever had needed light.
- Any of them live?|- No.
- Insight.
|- Poor thing doesn't stand a chance.
- So, you ready for Friday?|- Dinner with my parents? - You haven't seen them in a while.
|- I've seen Mom occasionally.
Floyd and I really haven't spoken|since the schism not that Harry Chapin isn't dying|to rise from the grave and write a song about us.
- I'm a little nervous.
|- Yeah, I get that.
And he's gonna call me Digger.
|He loves calling me Digger.
And he has hated every girl|I have ever dated.
- Really?|- Yeah, Mom, too.
It's some sort of reverse oedipal thing.
|And not just the ones I pick.
They set me up with a girl they loved.
|When they found out I liked her they turned on her viciously.
|She moved to Alaska.
- Why are you telling me this?|- A heads-up.
All it's gonna do is make me nervous,|and it has.
They don't know I'm going out with you.
- They'll find out eventually.
|- Impress them now when they don't know.
Preempt their gathering hatred.
Unless they end up|hating me retroactively.
- I have seen that, too.
|- Tony Robbins has nothing on you.
Sorry.
- How about here?|- On the chair? Yeah, it's not a very comfortable chair.
- How about I just get a new chair?|- That'll work.
In a warped way, you being nervous|has made me less nervous.
So there's a bright side.
- Not that that was my intent.
|- Good to know.
Dinner.
There was a death-to-disco movement|in the late '70s, very intense.
- We had Donna Summer on the run.
|- "We"? You weren't born yet.
- I'm a kindred spirit.
|- Gotcha.
So where's the passion now? Where is it? There's no disco to kill anymore.
|They wiped it out.
But there are other things|that need wiping out.
Phony rappers, most techno,|alt country, Christian rock anything fusion, classic alternative radio where all they do is play the same|Nirvana song over and over again.
- The Rubens, the Clays, the Clarksons.
|- It's gonna be a bloodbath.
What are they doing? - You smell that smell?|- Yeah.
Taylor left Kirk in charge|of the Easter egg hunt and they didn't exactly find them all.
- They lose the egg map?|- They didn't make an egg map.
- They didn't make an egg map?|- I was just as shocked.
They always make an egg map.
Let's have the hourly report, Joe.
- We found three more, Taylor.
|- I said, "Joe.
" - We found three more, Taylor.
|- That is not good.
More than half are still missing and every minute,|we have people deserting the cause.
- What's this?|- There's a couple in the tree.
- You hid them in a tree?|- Right.
They're completely out of reach|of the children.
The others I hid|for the delight of the children.
These I hid for me.
Get them down.
This is not good.
We are losing men, and we are losing- - Hair.
|- Time.
Jinx.
I miss the Caribbean.
So, what are we looking for? We still have no fridge,|no stove, and no microwave so nothing perishable,|nothing that requires boiling water and nothing that needs to be cooked.
- I'm guessing the day-old sushi is out.
|- It was never in.
- Beef jerky?|- Definitely.
And protein bars.
- I'm sorry.
When did I win the lottery?|- Protein bars are a luxury? When you live with guys|that eat 10 of everything when one's the correct portion.
Gotta keep that proportion cost low.
- Pretzels.
|- Perfect.
- And, of course, the perennial Pop-Tart.
|- Load up on those.
- Did I tell you that Dean stopped by?|- Where, Yale? He was delivering a bookcase for my mom.
|You want a bookcase? It's free.
I'll take it.
|So, how's old Deanie-boy doing? - He dropped out of college.
|- What? You're kidding.
Says he needs money.
|How about marshmallows? Sure, throw in a Park Avenue mansion|while you're at it.
- Another luxury.
Got it.
|- So, he's just working full-time? It's such a waste.
Dean is so smart.
|He can do so much more.
- Melba toast.
|- Cheap, tasteless, and filling.
I'll grab a bunch.
I'll get a bag of marshmallows,|so the boys can have a treat.
I'm mad at Dean about this,|but I'm more mad at Lindsay.
- She's so selfish.
|- Women.
She's his wife.
She should be|encouraging him to go to school and think about his future.
But, no, she needs a townhouse|and a Rolls-Royce.
- They're buying a Rolls-Royce?|- No, but they are the townhouse and he didn't even seem that excited|about it.
It's just Lindsay.
I mean, why doesn't she get a job.
|What does she do all day? So, you think she heard? - Kirk?|- That's me.
- You want something?|- Why? You usually get something here.
|You're in the diner.
Yes.
- Kirk?|- That's me.
- You want some coffee?|- Yes, please.
Your eyes are spinning|in different directions.
I've been up|for one and a half days straight.
I haven't done that since|the "Petticoat Junction" marathon in '97.
Right.
Caught a little bit of that myself.
Luke, turkey sandwich on rye, please.
- Lettuce, tomato, cucumber.
|- Coming right up.
We're gonna do it, Taylor.
|We're gonna find those last 12 eggs.
Coleslaw, too.
Every last one of them.
And a pickle.
Make it two.
Joe and I can divide the square in two|and sweep it clean till the job's done.
I'm going to pay now and wait outside,|if you don't mind.
I guess not.
I'll take the east side, he'll take the west.
- That way we can-|- That's enough, Kirk.
Hey, watch it.
You're not satisfied that I'm suffering|for what you've done to this town.
You have to continue|to personally torture me? - We'll find the 12.
|- We won't find the 12.
You have brought disaster down upon us.
|Are you happy? No.
I left you in charge|because I thought I could trust you.
But you let me down.
- Now, I have to cancel the flower show.
|- No.
I'm making the call tomorrow.
|The flower show is history.
- But we're only missing 12.
|- We have to find every last egg.
Then, Joe and I- Joe just left for Cabala class.
|I have no men left.
You have me left.
I have no men left.
I've lost my appetite.
Hi, guys.
Wow, love the heaters.
It's not too cold, is it?|We thought to start the evening here.
It's nice.
No, I'm not seeing the olives|that Floyd likes.
They're in the back on the right.
|Is this cart in the best place? - Move it back?|- Move it back.
They keep moving everything|back and forth.
The cart, the heater, me.
|I used to be over there.
- They're perfectionists.
|- It's like watching an ant farm.
I should go grab that gin that Floyd likes.
|I've got some in the freezer.
- Maybe it was better in the other spot.
|- Patio looks great, Mom, really.
I guess.
Where's that awful light coming from? I think it's the moon.
You're thinking of having|the moon moved? I suppose it will move on its own|at some point.
- You look nice.
|- Thank you.
Why do you look so nice? I knew this was an important night|for you guys.
I thought I would dress up a little.
They're here.
Richard, they're here.
- You do look especially nice tonight.
|- What is with everyone? I'm not always in dirty sweats|fresh from slopping the pigs.
You don't have that|just-came-from-work look about you.
A girl can't dress up a little? Your mom's a little nervous.
Right.
You're meeting the parents.
|I actually had not put that together before.
- That's why you showered.
|- That's not why I showered.
Here we are.
- Your patio is beautiful, Emily.
|- Thank you, Carol.
- Hi, honey.
|- Hi, Mom.
Floyd, Carol, our daughter, Lorelai.
- How do you do?|- Our granddaughter, Rory.
- Hello.
|- Hi.
- We've met before, but a long time ago.
|- We remember you well.
- You didn't dress up for our benefit, I hope.
|- No.
This is nothing weird.
How about some beverages, everybody? - Extra dry martini still your drink, Floyd?|- Absolutely.
Same here, Dad.
And bourbon with a splash|of branch water, right, Carol? - Thank you, Richard.
|- Here, Emily.
- You've redone the patio.
It's gorgeous.
|- Don't you think? And those trees.
I love them.
|What are they? They're African.
Come see.
I'm trying to remember|when we saw you last.
- Probably at camp.
|- Right, the day we came to pick up Jason.
There was a talent show.
|You sang a duet with a pimply fellow.
Crater Face Cutler.
He's a litigator now.
Very bitter man.
The pimply fellow stank,|but you were wonderful.
Very charming.
It was from "Grease.
" - How Crater Face got his pimples?|- No, my song "Summer Lovin'.
" I had to sit on his lap.
|It was very uncomfortable.
Crater Face had very bony knees.
You did a dance with somebody,|if I remember correctly.
- Yes, he cha-cha'd.
|- Thank you for bringing that up.
And thank you|for never sending me to camp.
You were great.
I liked when|you and your partner knocked heads.
Clubfoot Cindy.
She married|Crater Face Cutler.
Beautiful children.
Here are the drinks, everybody.
- Rory, we left your soda inside.
|- I'll go get it.
I actually had a barbershop quartet|at Yale.
I was by far the weakest link.
That reminds me.
I have a story I've been dying to tell you|ever since I heard it about Herb Benson.
- What's the rogue up to now?|- Later.
I don't want to bore the others.
I can't wait.
Help me take the drinks|down to the ladies? Absolutely.
Excuse us.
All right, ladies.
Here's to you.
Here you are, darling.
Look at that.
Groucho, Chico, Harpo, and Zeppo|together again.
- Excuse me, Grandma.
|- Yes, sweetie? Elsa said to say|that dinner's in 15 minutes.
Did she ask you|to do some vacuuming, too? No.
She sends my granddaughter out|to do her job.
How many maids has Emily been through? We used to keep a running count.
I'm afraid Western mathematical|principles cannot accommodate this task.
My father is in a particularly|good mood tonight.
Very.
He's said two passive-aggressive|things to me since he got here which is astounding for him.
By the way, may I be the 14th person|to say how great you look? It's the shower.
|I gotta try that more often.
I think it'd be great.
|It's better than Daytona Beach.
This is our grandson's first step.
We were so lucky|to have the camera ready.
- That's darling.
|- He's gonna be big.
He's gonna start on the defensive line|for the Bulldogs in 2021.
Floyd has it all worked out.
I believe that's you|very lovingly holding your nephew who looks very happy in your arms.
I just told him I'd opened|a no-load mutual fund for him.
- Tracks the S&P.
|- You sentimental fool.
I have some terrific pictures of Rory.
|I should go get them.
- But, Grandma, I'm right here.
|- But you're so big now.
Slouch down in your chair for Grandma.
If it's okay, I actually thought|I might leave soon.
She's got a big paper due next week|and lots of reading.
Yes, Rory.
|We've made you stay too long already.
Yes, go.
Thank you for looking like|you weren't too bored all evening.
No, I wasn't, really.
It was fun.
Bye, Grandma.
You have to go, too? - No, we came separately.
|- Good.
- Bye, Grandpa.
|- Goodbye, Rory.
- Lovely girl.
|- She's a doll.
I think this is the perfect time for those who are so inclined|to enjoy a cigar.
All right, let's fire them up.
I meant the men,|but would you like a cigar? No, you guys go.
Circle the fire.
|Pound your chests.
We'll be waiting.
- Floyd, Jason.
|- Let's do it.
Let's let Elsa clean up|and maybe keep her job.
- The living room all right?|- We can bring the coffee? - I was going to pour brandy.
|- Even better.
Let's go.
This evening has been|so wonderful, Emily.
- The two of us together again.
|- Yes, it has.
All those horrible things|that happened with the business.
Now, let's not let business|come between us again.
All that ugliness is in the past now,|so we don't have to worry.
Yes.
Smooth.
- '63?|- '65.
- You can't get a '63 to save your life.
|- Still does the trick, though.
Goodport was caught up|in that ridiculous cigar boom - a few years ago, remember?|- Yes.
Amateurs.
Babes in diapers|talking big in those cigar clubs smoking Churchills down to the ring.
Tobacco farmers harvested their crop|green just to keep up with the demand.
If I remember correctly,|you found a way to rectify the problem.
I couldn't get Hennessy's|to put my favorite cigars aside for me.
This, after 20 years|of giving them my business.
- Big mistake.
|- Love these kind of stories.
So I bypassed the bastards.
|I found their supplier.
I swooped in|and bought all of my favorites in bulk.
Hundreds of boxes, cash, on the barrel.
|So now Hennessy's couldn't get them.
Hundreds of boxes? I couldn't have smoked them|in three lifetimes.
So I kindly offered to sell Hennessy's|my excess supply.
They leapt at it like dogs for a bone.
And I made enough|to pay for the boxes that I kept.
You're creative.
|It's one of your many strengths.
I'd say it's his main strength.
Who ever said|an insurance man can't be creative? It's one of the fallacies about what we do.
People think it's dry, wooden,|a bunch of automatons shuffling papers.
On the contrary, it breathes daily.
It's life and death, what we do.
It's a new drama every day,|almost Shakespearean.
Richard III, Macbeth.
What day doesn't necessitate|courage, tenacity and sometimes, like your cigar story,|Richard, a little vengeance? - And that's all before lunch.
|- Our work is wonderful.
I've always felt that way.
Protective of what I do,|protective of what I have.
- I think my cigar is out.
|- That's why I'm suing you.
- Dad.
|- You're joking.
I'm not joking.
I'm suing your company.
My lawyers will be contacting you|Monday morning.
You're not serious.
You didn't think I'd let Digger walk away with some of my oldest clients|and not respond, did you? - Are you that naive?|- Dad, this is crazy.
You signed a non-compete clause|with me, Digger.
- And I didn't break that clause.
|- He didn't.
I studied Jason's contract,|and only certain clients were off-limits - and those remained off-limits.
|- Alexander Barnes was off-limits.
That was a social lunch,|and you can't prove otherwise.
- You have no case.
|- Maybe, maybe not.
By the time the courts|figure out the situation I'll have buried you in legal fees.
I know your financial situation, Richard.
|You can't survive a lengthy legal process.
So, this is just revenge, Floyd?|Are we stooping that low? You just described how strongly you felt|about a bunch of cigars.
How did you think I was going|to feel about my business? How did you know|I had lunch with Alex, Dad? You have a private investigator|tailing me? This whole business is so distasteful,|but what was I to do? I did what I had to do,|what Richard Gilmore would do.
I think I should go now.
Don't.
Dad, don't leave.
Call this off.
Sorry I didn't get to that anecdote,|Richard.
Maybe some other time.
Dad! Rory did come out.
She was a beautiful debutante,|the hit of the night.
She did so well,|we had her go back in and come out again.
Floyd, wait.
Dad, I will block the door if I have to.
I wouldn't suggest you do that, son.
- What is going on?|- I should get my purse.
Carol, no.
Excuse us, Emily.
|This is rude, but we have to go.
- Mom, stay.
|- It's too late, Jason.
What's going on? Richard? I apologize for how this ended.
We are not unprepared for a fight.
|We are capitalized.
Because you put your pension up|as collateral on all your loans.
- How did you-|- It's a small community, our community.
Endangering your pension, Richard,|it's reckless.
Which P.
I.
did you have on me?|Paluso, I assume? He's the best.
He gets everything.
It's how I found out|your daughter is dating my son.
That's not true.
Sorry we spoiled your secret, son.
We'll see ourselves out.
- Come on, Carol.
|- Dad, wait.
Richard, Emily, this isn't gonna happen.
|Period.
It will resolve quickly and in our favor.
|Excuse me.
Dad! Forgetting the insufferable way|that you presented this subject do you have any idea how far off you are? We need to talk.
- You brought your own car, didn't you?|- Yes.
You don't need to stay.
You can go.
I'm blocked in.
- Richard, you have every right to be angry.
|- You're damn right I do.
To be humiliated like this|in my own house? - It was unconscionable.
|- Why didn't you see this coming? You know him.
He doesn't show his hand.
He sweet-talked us on the golf course,|got invited to dinner.
The man is a sociopath.
Tell me if you've done anything illegal.
Nothing.
Richard, I swear to you, nothing.
- The lunch with Alex?|- Social.
We're friends.
Why should I believe you? I'm not stupid to do anything illegal or think that I could get|anything illegal by you.
I do push boundaries, Richard,|but I never cross them.
Ever.
How long have you been seeing|my daughter? Five months.
- For five months you've been lying to me.
|- Yes.
But it was a white lie.
|It was a timing issue.
It would have complicated|our relationship, yours and mine and we didn't know if it would last,|so we took a path.
It was the wrong path,|and I'm sorry about that, too.
- You've got a lot to be sorry about.
|- I do.
My damned father.
I should've seen this coming.
As well as I know him,|I keep underestimating him.
We both should have seen this coming.
I can make this go away.
- How?|- It's a bluff.
You know my father.
He hates giving money to lawyers,|and this is gonna cost him big.
That is true.
So we will counter sue.
|It's a wrongful lawsuit.
- We will make him pay.
|- Possibly.
And I will do anything|to win back your trust, Richard.
You have been so good to me.
Please.
|Let me try.
Okay.
You've got my trust.
Go get him.
Thank you, Richard.
Also, I'm gonna work on my golf game get it up to snuff, so I stop|embarrassing you around the greens.
Yeah, do that.
Thank you, Richard.
I have a gigantic bottle of vodka|at my place.
The largest bottle of vodka known to man.
- But what will you drink?|- Gin.
Let's go.
Eggs.
Gotta get the eggs.
- Whoa, buddy.
|- Eggs.
Flower show's tomorrow.
Flower show's tomorrow|and I can't find the last 12 eggs.
I let Taylor down.
He's like a father to me.
- I think he is my father.
|- He's not your father.
No, my father's my father,|which means Taylor's my tailor.
I wonder how much he charges|to hem pants.
- He's not your tailor.
|- I let him down.
I let Taylor down.
I let the whole town down.
He won't like me anymore.
- What's this?|- It's the last 12 eggs.
You picked some screwy places|to hide them.
- Don't do that again.
|- The last 12? Tell Taylor you found them.
Be the hero.
Thank you.
I love you, Luke Danes! - I'm stupid.
|- I love you.
I love Luke Danes! Love, love! - Come on.
|- What? Where? I want to talk to you.
Come on.
- I've been trying to call your cell.
|- I didn't have it on.
- I'm sorry, okay? I'm really sorry.
|- About what? - I was a jerk at your dorm.
I yelled.
|- You didn't yell.
- I got upset, and I shouldn't have.
|- No, I'm the jerk.
Hounding you about school like that.
|It all came out wrong.
- It's your life, it's your decision.
|- No, I shouldn't have sniped like that.
- I deserved it.
|- You were concerned.
I want the best for you,|and I think school is it.
I still think that, but it's not up to me.
|I just don't want you to settle.
I know you don't.
Sometimes it seems like|you're the only one who doesn't.
I think Lindsay may have overheard me|saying stuff at Doose's.
Yeah.
I feel even worse about that.
|I've got such a big mouth.
- No, it's okay.
|- She must have been really upset.
Kind of.
- I didn't mean to hurt her feelings.
|- She'll be okay.
She knows we talk, right?|That we're friends? She does now.
She doesn't want me|talking to you anymore.
Well, I guess that's understandable.
- I don't want that to happen.
|- I don't want that to happen, either.
Then it's not gonna happen.
Shouldn't you get home? - Yeah.
|- Me, too.
Is it true? Did you put your pension up as collateral? - Are we in trouble?|- It's going to work out, Emily.
It'll be okay.
You and Jason talked? It's going to be okay.
Three words.
Four words.
Two words.
|Okay, you suck at charades.
- We're playing charades?|- Yeah, weren't we? - You're drunk.
|- You're drunk.
- Don't drunk and drive.
|- I would not thunk it.
- That's a fun game to play.
|- What? The "changing words|into funny words" game.
I'm sleepy.
You know, your father|was terrific until the end.
Yeah, the end was kind of bad.
It's like falling 600 feet to your death.
It's fun the first 599 feet,|but it's just the last foot total sucko.
Yeah, it's a bummer.
That last foot.
But, you know, there is a bright side|to this evening.
- The moon?|- No, but the moon was very bright.
At least our relationship|is out in the open.
No more hiding.
Yeah, no more hiding.
I'll drink to that.
And I got Richard calm.
And I'll work my magic,|which is what I do.
Dad's head looked like|it was gonna go full-out piƱata.
It'll be okay.
He and I are going golfing in a couple days.
|That always puts him in a good mood.
Your plant is dead.
|How did it die so quickly? It may have been self-inflicted.
Poor thing.
Are you okay, though?|Am I being enough supportive? - Reverse those last two words.
|- No, I'm fine.
In a weird way,|my father trying to destroy me is the first time I've ever gotten|any real respect out of him.
Cool.
Clink.
Nice shot.
Beautiful.
Your charity is limitless.
You're just warming up.
|You've always been a closer.
Too true.
So, we're done with the broad strokes? - I believe so.
I'll drop the lawsuit.
|- We'll split the clients evenly.
You'll come back to the firm have your own company|under our umbrella.
- And Jason is out.
|- Jason's out.
You'll be returning a hero, Richard.
Music to my ears.
- Beautiful day today.
|- Beautiful.
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