Quantum Leap s04e04 Episode Script

Justice - May 11, 1965

Theorizing that one could time travel within his own lifetime, Dr.
Sam Beckett stepped into the Quantum Leap accelerator and vanished.
He awoke to find himself trapped in the past, facing mirror images that were not his own and driven by an unknown force to change history for the better.
His only guide on this journey is Al, an observer from his own time, who appears in the form of a hologram that only Sam can see and hear.
And so, Dr.
Beckett finds himself leaping from life to life, striving to put right what once went wrong and hoping each time that his next leap will be the leap home.
And now by the powers vested in me, as the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, I dub thee, fellow Klansman.
Oh, boy.
Well, you made her.
Yeah, I guess I did, huh? Sort of knocks the wind right out of you, don't it? Yeah.
You know, it felt exactly the same to me when I got initiated.
Except now, brother, you in for the really tough part.
What's that? Eatin' cold chicken after stayin' up all night.
Here you go, Clyde.
This is the first Klan meetin' your brother Bo's missed in 13 years.
Yeah, he's gonna miss a hell of a lot more of'em too.
That reaper chewed his foot up pretty bad.
Doc Weaver's not even sure he can save it.
How's he gonna make harvest? Charlie and me'll bring in the back 20, and we'll have to let the rest go to seed.
Well, damnation.
We could all clear that field in a day.
Hey, y'all, listen up.
Brother Bo can't bring in his crop, so what do you say we go over and give him a hand? Yeah! Is he gonna fix us lunch? That's real kind of you guys, but when the hell you got time to do that? We'll make time, particularly if a brother's in need.
Ain't that right, Brother Clyde? That sounds awful nice.
Yeah, say Sunday.
Sunday after services.
How about Sunday instead of services? Hey, the way I figure, helpin' a neighbor's every bit as good as goin' to church.
- Grady, you a genius.
- Just a bunch of good old boys.
Al? Yeah.
Careful.
We got company.
Well, now, I sure am proud of you.
Clyde- That's you.
Proud? Yep.
You know, I've always thought of you as a son.
I mean, it wasn't just 'cause of losin' Andrew.
But now, we-we're close and-and we're family now- not just 'cause you married Lilly- because we got the same fight, and now we're on the same team.
I'm awful proud, son.
Go ahead.
Shake his hand, Sam.
At least until you know why you're here.
Let's hear it for Brother Clyde, the newest member of the Knighthood of the Sword! Yeah! What am I here for? We don't know.
Clyde! Ha! I can't do this, Al.
I can't do it.
Take it easy.
Hey, Clyde- Sam.
Hey, slow down a little bit, will ya? You're makin'mejumpy.
What am I doin' here in- in whenever it is? It's 1965.
May 11, to be exact.
And we don't know why you're here.
What are you doin' here? Well, I came to check on you when I heard this guy Clyde in the waiting room reciting the oath of the Klan.
This stands for everything my parents told me to fight against, Al.
I can't change these people.
Well, maybe you're not here to change them.
Look, we're gonna find out what you're here to do, then you're gonna do it, and then you'll be history, okay? So take it easy.
Just take it easy.
I'm gonna go find out what it is you're here to do.
I'll be back as quick as I can, all right? Now, don't lose it.
In all my leaps, I don't think I had ever felt more confused by the people I had leapt into.
There was part of me that liked Gene and Tom and Grady.
They were farmers, just like my parents were.
Simple people that cared about their families and about each other.
And yet somehow, somewhere along the line, time had passed them by, forgetting to tell them it was okay to let go of the hatred and the anger.
Hi! Don't I get one of those? Oh, I'm sorry, Daddy.
I'm just so happy I could bust.
I love you.
I'm sorry we kept your husband out so late, but we had one hell of a celebration.
You're all just in time for breakfast.
Ada just made a fresh pot of coffee, and I made Mama's strawberry shortcake.
Mmm-mmm! This old man's got to get to bed, honey.
I'll take a pass.
Okay.
I'll see you later and see you tomorrow night for supper.
Clyde? Yeah? Here's your robe, son.
What's that for? 'Cause I love you.
'Cause you're a wonderful daddy and a terrific husband and 'cause you love me enough to join Daddy's huntin' club.
Huntin' club? I know you didn't want to.
I know you did it for me and Cody.
I love you for that.
Y'all keep on spooning like that out here, and you won't want these treats.
Ah, come on now.
Dig in.
Looks great.
Lord, Mr.
Clyde,you eat your shortcake just like my boy Nathaniel.
- They never do grow up, do they? - No, they don't.
You know, my mom used to make the best- Clyde, your mama couldn't boil water.
Coffee.
She used to make the best coffee that would go great with this.
Oh, coffee.
Or would you rather have a large glass of cool milk with Miss Lilly's shortcake? He said he wanted coffee, Ada.
Look, I'll go- I'll go get it.
No.
No, you sit down.
You let Ada fetch it.
Come on.
Here you go.
Mmm! Cody.
! How many times has your father told you not to point that at anyone? Come here, son.
Come on.
Give me the gun.
It's all right.
Listen, I want you to sit down.
I wanna talk to you.
When you get a little bit older, I'll teach you how to shoot a gun, all right? But you said you'd teach me how to shoot today.
Well, yeah, of course I did.
But I'm sure that I also must have said that a gun is a weapon, not a toy, all right? But, Dad- But, Daddy- Look, when you're older, I'll teach you.
All right? But Grandpa says I should learn to shoot for protection.
He says there's niggers in the woods.
Cody, I want you to apologize right now.
What? I want him to tell Ada he's sorry.
- Ada doesn't mind.
- I mind.
- Clyde, what in tarnation's gotten into you? - Apologize.
I- Apologize! I'm sorry, Ada.
Excuse me.
Finished? Uh, no.
- I'm sorry about that, Ada.
- It ain't his fault.
I know the boy doesn't mean it.
He just pick it up from his grandpa.
I spent the rest ofbreakfast trying to explain to Lilly that thinking all blacks were bad was just as closed-minded as thinking all whites were good.
Her response made me realize just how blind bigotry could be.
All I could do was hope Al could tell me what I was here for, so I could get it done and leap to someplace I understood.
Hey, Clyde, you beat me here this mornin'.
That's a first.
Especially considerin' you was up all night last night.
Yeah.
Excuse me.
- Ain't you boys here a little early? - It says right there the registration office opens at 10:00.
Office opens when we get here.
Well, Mr.
Thompson would like to register to vote.
Oh, uh, yeah, okay.
I'll get some papers out, and we can get started.
No, no, we don't need to do that.
We can handle this right here.
First, I got a couple of questions for the boy.
Mr.
Thompson is 58 years old, and he's been an employee of this county for over 30 years.
- I'd appreciate it if you'd address him- - " I'd appreciate it"? You watch your mouth.
Now, who was the 19th president of the United States? - Rutherford B.
Hayes.
- What's the Eighth Amendment? Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment be inflicted.
Read this.
"We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranq-q-q- tranquillity"- You call that readin'? Sounded like readin' to me.
Well, I clocked him at 12 words per minute.
- Law says you gotta read at least 30 words per minute.
- What law? Look, he answered your questions, and he read what you asked him to, so- You wait here a minute.
What the hell is wrong with you? What do you mean? I thought this was all over when you joined us last night, or have you forgot about that oath you took? Look, the man has a right to vote.
He's a nigger.
This isn't why you're here, Sam.
What? I said, he's a nigger, and if we don't stop them, they're gonna have us all out of our jobs.
- Then why am I here? - It's Nathaniel- - Same reason I'm here.
- Ada's son, the young man standing behind me.
They hang him, Sam.
Oh, boy.
White folks have gotta stick together, or the niggers'll take over.
Hell, they're outbreedin' us now.
Gene says in 30 years we'll be a minority.
Agree with him, Sam.
No.
Yes! I'm startin' to wonder whether givin' you this job was such a good idea.
If you wanna save Nathaniel, you gotta get this jerk to think you're on his side.
I can't.
You can't what? Sam, it's like being behind enemy lines.
If you want to spy on the enemy, you gotta act and talk like the enemy- You can't what? to get the info to save the good guys, even if you have to do something hateful.
I can't let those niggers register.
- Hey, what's a man have to do to get a cup of coffee around here? - Hey, Otis.
Hi, Tom.
We were tryin' to register to vote.
- You were bein' uppity with me.
- If questioning your testing methods is getting uppity, then maybe we should have a look at the registration laws, assuming you can read them.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Now,just hold your horses.
Now, Tom, there oughta be somethin' we could do.
I'd love to, Sheriff.
But he has to pass the literacy test.
Ain't that right, Clyde? Enemy lines, Sam.
The law is the law.
Andjust what does that law say, Clyde? It says that, uh, you- you boys have to go home and study a little bit harder, then you can come back and-and-and try again.
Good.
But you only got two more chances till, uh, next election.
Clyde, why don't you, uh - Why don't you show these fine gentlemen to their car? It's a long ways, and I wouldn't want 'em to get lost.
I'll thank you, no.
We can find it ourselves.
No, wait a second.
No, you let me get you down there to your car, 'cause it is a long way, and I'll just lead you down there, guys.
It's right this way.
Come on.
Come on.
Right down here, huh? Here we go.
Right over here.
Let me get the door here for you.
There you are.
Your chariot awaits you.
Look - I thought you were the one white man I could count on but now you're callin' us niggers and boys! I don't understand you! I'm sorry.
You set us up! You made us look like fools! I set you up? Oh, come on.
I can't believe you're gonna deny it now.
Who else told us to come down here? I don't know if you did or you didn't.
Maybe I did, but- Maybe? And maybe you wrote me all those letters in college about all men being equal, and it's time for a change, huh? Maybe you forgot about that too! Listen to me.
Everything I said up there I did not mean, all right? What if I called you a rednecked, white-butted stump, dumb cracker? That still stings, doesn't it, even if I didn't mean it? I feel like I'm gonna throw up, Al.
Yeah, I can understand it.
I mean, the guy I'm here to save probably, and I completely tick him off.
This is not working! You just gotta hang in there.
No, I don't have to just hang in there! I- I-I can- I can do something else.
I can solve this another way.
You can't do somethin' else.
Ziggy doesn't even know why he was hung.
You're just gonna have to act like you're in the Klan and see this thing through.
Ziggy doesn't even know why he was killed.
Well, there's no data on that kind of stuff.
Nobody prints it in the newspapers.
Nobody puts it on the county records.
It just happens, and it gets buried.
But I'll bet it had somethin' to do with voter registration.
I gotta talk to Nathaniel.
He's not gonna listen to you now.
No, he's not gonna listen to me, because you told me I had to act like I was on the side of that jerk Tom! Well, that's because if you didn't do that, you wouldn't find out how or when Nathaniel gets hanged.
- Now,just chill out! - Chill out? I'm the one in the K.
K.
K.
, not you.
You're not- I know you're gonna hate it, but go on up into that courthouse and find out what's on those worms' minds.
Worms, yeah.
Worms.
I never could stand worms, even if I was usin' them for bait.
Hey, Clyde,you all right? Uh, yeah.
Yeah, I'm okay.
I, uh, was just, uh- just yellin' at some- some nigger kids to stay away from your car.
Well, I appreciate that.
I spent the afternoon finding fault with every black applicant that came in and felt smaller and smaller with each one I sent away.
* But the real horror of the day was when I ended up alone with Tom - * and found myself sitting through one sick black joke after another.
I hated it.
* Boy, well, they almost got that one.
I think the good Lord loves the off-key ones the most, 'cause he sure helps them to sing the loudest.
Ain't that the truth.
If I don't hurry up and get this done, I'm gonna be late for choir practice myself.
Here, you want some help, Ada? You like stringin' beans, Mr.
Clyde? No.
No, not really, but, uh, I don't imagine you care for it much yourself, huh? Amen to that.
Ada? Mmm? I want to talk to you about what happened this morning.
Didn't nothin' happen this mornin'.
Yes, it did.
I'm talkin' about what Cody said.
I'm sorry about that.
It was wrong and- It's not about wrong or right, Mr.
Clyde.
It's just the way things is.
Well, I don't believe that.
I know you don't, Mr.
Clyde.
You never did.
But yours is just one voice speakin' in a hurricane.
Yeah, well, sometimes one voice is all you need.
That's what my Nathaniel says.
* Your Nathaniel's a very bright young man.
Mmm.
And he's gonna make a difference someday.
But right now, he's gotta be very careful.
You can't make spirits like Nathaniel's be careful, Mr.
Clyde.
The Lord gives them the fire to want to change things.
Do you know he talked me into goin' down to register tomorrow? That is, if I can pass the test.
Ada, I'll help you pass the test.
Okay? But you've gotta help me stop Nathaniel.
From what? Helpin' colored folks learn? No.
No, from tryin' to take on the whole town when things don't happen as fast as he wants them to.
I can't change him, Mr.
Clyde.
Once that boy makes up his mind, there ain't no talkin' about it, not from you and not from me.
Boo! Goodness! I'm a ghost, I'm a ghost, I'm a ghost, I'm a ghost, I'm a ghost! Cody, Cody, Cody, take this off.
Take it off right now.
Take this off.
Ada- What are you doin' with this? I was just playin'.
Well, this isn't somethin' that you play with, son.
But Bill's daddy has one, and he lets him wear it.
I don't care what Bill's daddy does.
But you're in the huntin' club with him.
It's not a huntin' club, son.
Then what kind of club is it? You know, for a little kid, you ask a lot of big questions.
I'll tell you what.
Let me go inside and get changed, all right? Okay.
Hang on here now, so your mom doesn't tan my hide gettin' anything dirty.
Thank you very much.
Then we'll go outside, I'll teach you how to shoot this gun the right way, and maybe we'll talk about the huntin' club a little bit, okay? Okay.
All right now.
Watch those cans up there.
You watchin' 'em? Here we go.
We're probably too far away for this short of a barrel, you know? Let's move up here.
Look, son, you know what it means to be in the Klan? It means we're gonna stop the coloreds from taking over.
Taking over what? I don't know.
- You like Ada, don't you? - Yeah, she's nice.
Would you ever hurt her? No.
Why would I want to hurt Ada? Maybe because her skin's a different color.
Some people are afraid of things that are different.
It's notjust skin color.
It could be religion or- But then why didn't God just make everybody the same? - Then it wouldn't matter.
- Yeah, see, now, that's exactly the point, Cody.
It doesn't matter unless we make it matter.
But Grandpa says it matters.
His papa told him, and his papa before him told him, and nobody thought to say " stop.
" See, it's up to you and me to say, "Stop.
This is wrong.
" Now, what do you say? Let's see if you can hit that can.
All right? Tuck your shoulder in there.
All right.
Aim it up real good.
I'm gonna put the safety off.
Got it aimed.
Now just squeeze that trigger.
I hit it! Daddy, I hit it! Yes, you did.
Yes, you did.
This must be a kid's gun, I guess, huh? Cody, why don't you come on in now? Give me a kiss.
Give me a kiss.
Wash up for supper.
I thought this was over.
Every generation has to learn it anew.
Please, Clyde, I don't want you fillin' his head with things that ain't true.
- But it is true, and you know it.
- Clyde.
! Oh, Clyde.
! Come get your robe! We got some work to do.
- What's goin' on, Daddy? - This is when they grab Nathaniel.
- What are you talkin' about? - I'm talkin' about club business.
That's what I'm talkin' about.
Now, let's go.
Nathaniel leads a march right through the center of town tonight, and Grand Dragon-breath there and his boys are gonna be waitin' for him with guns and bats.
- This is where they hang him.
- If this is about Nathaniel, maybe I could go talk to him.
We don't have no time to talk.
You don't have any choice, Sam.
It's the only way to save Nathaniel.
Terror, like the night, knows no boundaries.
By the time we had our robes on, it was dark.
And instead ofbeing taken to a confrontation with Nathaniel, I found myself running towards some new conflict- one that I feared could only end in disaster.
Surprise! What's goin' on? You remember little old snipe hunts, don't ya, Clyde? Oh.
- Looks like a practical joke, Sam.
What a bunch of simps.
- Yeah, well, uh, I thought we were gonna be, you know, d-doin' somethin'.
Oh, Brother Clyde, we got to give ourselves some excuse to get away from the womenfolk.
That's right.
And Klan business is the best excuse I know.
Except we got a good one anyway- your one-day anniversary as a Klansman.
Come on.
Let's hear it! Drinks on me! Come on, guys! Excuse me, boys.
Clear the way, boys.
I got another surprise for you, Clyde.
Huh? Oh, no, thanks.
I'm really not hungry.
Well, now, Dot made this special just for you.
Don't go makin' me a liar, 'cause I know she's gonna be askin' me how much you liked it.
Yeah, okay.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Excuse me.
Ziggy says that Nathaniel still disappears tonight.
It's okay.
It's okay? It's not " okay" okay, but this'll give me an opportunity to find out what happens.
That way I'll have an edge.
Oh, so you can head 'em off at the pass.
Exactly.
Gentlemen, brothers.
Brother Tom has just given me some very disparaging news.
Nathaniel Simpson and some of his nigger friends are gonna demonstrate tonight, violently, in town because of unfair voter registration.
- Are we gonna stand for this, gentlemen? - No! Are we gonna let these people defile our great, white city? - No! - Gentlemen, let's exercise our duty as Klansmen.
Let's go to town! Yeah! I need to borrow your car.
You can ride with me.
No, no, see, I gotta- I gotta go home and get my gun.
Good.
Good.
I'll meet you at the courthouse.
All right.
That's good thinking, Sam.
I'll meet you at the church.
Come on, boys.
Martin Luther King says injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
And so I'm askin'you now: Don't forget our sacrifices on Bloody Sunday.
Let us follow the brave footsteps of those who marched from Selma to Montgomery.
Yeah! Hey, Clyde.
What are you doin'here, Clyde? - You can't march.
- We are entitled to express our opinions in a public forum.
That right is guaranteed by the First Amendment.
This is not about the First Amendment.
That's right.
This is about angry, frightened men who want to make an example out of you.
- Get him out of here.
- What's he talkin'about? - They're waiting for you at the courthouse.
- How do you know that? - 'Cause he's in the Klan.
That's how.
- That's right.
I am.
We're not afraid of you! Well,you should be.
We outnumber you three-to-one.
We got guns, and God knows what else.
We're gonna tell the townspeople that we're not afraid of them- that we won't stand for injustice.
This isn't working, Sam.
He still gets hanged.
I'm askin' you to trust me.
- I did, remember? - I was wrong.
You come back tomorrow, I'll make all that right.
Oh, like you did this morning? No, thank you.
You're just tryin' to set us up again like you did at the courthouse! Yeah.
! No, I'm not trying to set you up.
I just don't want to see anybody get killed.
It'll be a peaceful march.
No, it won't.
- The Klan's not gonna let it be.
- Well, maybe we got a few surprises for them! - Let's go! - No, if you're gonna go, you gotta go through me.
You can't take us all on, Mr.
Clyde.
No, stop.
! Everybody, stop.
! Maybe it's time we hung one of them! Yeah! No.
No.
Let him go.
All right.
The march is off.
What? Listen.
Now, if he's tellin' the truth, then we won't accomplish what we set out for.
That's it, Sam.
That's it.
You changed history.
The attack doesn't happen.
Thank God.
- What'd you say? - I said, thank God.
Now- Now nobody's gonna get hurt.
Well, Mr.
Clyde, we might not march tonight, but we will march.
- I know that.
- And we will win.
I know that too.
Great job, Sam.
Hey.
Hey.
- Back so soon? - What? - How was your party? - Oh, uh, it was fine.
How'd you know about it? It wasn't exactly the biggest secret in the whole wide world.
It's just that we womenfolk like to let our big, strong men think that it was.
Cody's asleep.
Yeah, yeah.
Listen, Lilly, uh, how do you feel about Ada? Please, Clyde, I don't want to argue about the Klan right now.
I really think we need to talk about this.
Why are you so concerned about the coloreds anyway? Why aren't you more concerned about us? The coloreds, they got that N.
A.
A.
C.
P.
Us whites are out here all by ourselves.
The Klan is the only thing we got fightin' for us.
What are you so afraid of? I don't want coloreds sittin' in my restaurants.
I don't want 'em livin' next door and destroyin' the neighborhood, marryin' whites, takin' our jobs.
Listen to me, Lilly.
They're people.
They're just like you and me.
And all they want is to be treated like we are.
Now, they shouldn't have to die to get that.
Mighty strange you didn't show up at the courthouse.
Neither did your march-happy coon friends.
I guess that means you told 'em.
Tell them that's not true, Clyde.
Tell them.
Tell them it's not true.
I couldn't stand by and let innocent people be murdered.
You defied the Holy Order of the Brotherhood.
Daddy, he was just worried that somebody was gonna get hurt.
That's all.
He's a spy for the niggers or the feds.
Will you say somethin'? Tell them it's not true! The only reason he joined us, Lilly, was to take us down.
I had to try and stop one night of violence.
Well,you did it, so now we gotta do somethin'drastic.
We gotta do somethin' so that your colored friends will understand that this is a white man's world.
Daddy, what are you gonna do? They've decided to blow up the church.
I'm gonna do what Brother Tom said- There were 15 little kids in there and two adults, including Ada- all killed.
* * * You know, you're worse than a nigger.
You're a white nigger.
And the penalty for that is death.
So the truth is, you don't care who you kill- black or white.
- Hey, boy! - Grady! Son, I- I just don't understand you.
You know how I've always liked you and respected you.
Maybe sometimes I didn't show it.
My daughter and my grandson, they love you a great deal.
Damn it, I just tried to show you what I was doin' to protect my part of the world and my family! That's all I did.
If you love your family, don't do this to them.
I'm not doing it to them.
You bomb the church, they'll put you away for that.
And if you kill me, who's gonna take care of your daughter, raise your grandson? I'm not gonna kill you.
You don't know me at all, do you? I don't know any man who'd dynamite a church.
I'm not just any man.
Sam, you gotta get outta here! Come on.
! Get up.
! That church is gonna blow in seven minutes.
! - I'm tryin', Al.
- Well, you gotta try harder.
We gotta find somethin' to untie you.
We gotta find somethin' to untie you.
Uh, here.
Come on over here and knock this sign off the wall and break the glass.
Maybe you can cut the ropes.
Hurry up.
! Seven minutes.
Come on! Knock it off the wall, Sam! Don't look at it! Come on! We haven't got any time! Al.
Al.
What? Go over to the church.
"Go over to the church"? What can I do? I'm a hologram! They're children, Al.
Little children.
That's right! That's right, that's right! They're kids! God bless the children! All right.
Uh, cut the rope! * Everybody stop singin', stop singin', stop singin'.
! You gotta be quiet.
! - For heaven sakes, children, what is the matter? - There's a ghost! It's not a ghost.
It's an angel.
No way.
Not with those clothes.
Who are you talking to, child? Listen.
I'm here to try and help you.
- It's the Lord.
- What? - No, I'm not the Lord.
- It's Abraham Lincoln.
No, it's not.
He has a beard.
That's some crazy white man.
Cody? Listen, I may be crazy, but you've gotta tell the big ones that you've gotta get out of the church! Get out! Get out! Children, children, children, come back here! Lord, save my soul.
Will somebody please tell me what is happening here? There's gonna be a big boom here! Get the kids out! Stay in the car! Daddy! Clyde.
! God! I tried to stop 'em! I swear I tried! Daddy.
! Al? Al! No, Clyde, don't.
! Sam, I got all the children out.
They're safe.
- Oh, thank God.
- Come on.
Come on, kids.
That's it, that's it.
Little ones with the big ones.
Come on.
- You bastards! - No, Nathaniel, no! Get him over there by the tree! Let's string him up! You hold him here.
You stay here.
Daddy! Daddy! - Please take care of the children.
- Get up here, boy.
You like this heat? Well, that's just a taste of where you're goin'.
Friends, I stand before you in the name of justice and of the holy white race.
This man has tried to destroy our way of life, Yeah.
and now he must pay the ultimate penalty.
I agree with the Grand Dragon.
What? What's he doin'? I agree with the Grand Dragon 100%.
What? I think we should hang this man.
Tie this off.
And while we're at it, I think you should hang me too.
- Sam, have you gone completely crazy? - Daddy! No, Daddy! You gotta stop this! Because I don't want to live in a world where fear and hate hide behind a call for justice.
Where men, women and children, born as free as you and me, are denied, among other things, the right to vote.
And if they try to do anything about it, you hang 'em or you blow 'em up in a church.
They're so proud of what they're doin', these dispensers ofjustice, that they have to hide behind masks to do it.
Cody.
Cody, you look at me, son.
This is not justice.
This is merely a desperate attempt to hang on to the past- a shameful past that can never and should never be restored.
So go ahead.
You hang us now.
But you cannot stop the future, because you cannot kill everyone who was here tonight, and they will never forget what they saw.
Hell, I say if he wants to hang, let's get it over with! Clyde, no.
! Grady, start her up.
! Put her in gear.
Ready! Take 'em down.
What? You heard me.
He betrayed us.
He deserves to die.
Take him down and Nathaniel too.
Listen, old man, if you ain't got what it takes, maybe there's another man here better to get the job done.
I lost one son.
I don't intend to lose another.
Oh, my God.
I'm okay, Mama.
Sam, that was unbelievable.
I don't believe it.
You did it! I'm so proud of you.
I love you so much.
I'm so glad you're here.
I am too.
Oh, Sam, uh, on August 3, Lyndon Johnson passes the Voting Rights Act, and Nathaniel becomes one of the first black mayors of Alabama.
Hey, Frank.
! I swept the floor and took out the trash.
Uh, can I go to Phil's for some candy? - Sure.
- Really? You haven't rinsed her yet! - Is that- Is that to0- - Frank, it's too hot.
Yeah.
Um- Where's Kyle? He went to, uh, Bill's to get some candy.
You mean Phil's? I'm sorry.
Phil's.
That's right.
Frank, are you crazy? Laura never lets him go out alone! Why not? Oh, boy.
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