Rookie Blue s05e06 Episode Script

Two Truths and a Lie

- Hey.
- Hey.
- Have you had anything to eat? - Thank you.
No, thanks.
I'll get something in a minute.
- Man, I hate this.
I was really hoping that he'd be on a beach somewhere.
Eight hours ago, we found the body of Brian Gowdy in the trunk of his car, beaten to death.
Gowdy went missing after taking an unknown subject for a test-drive of Gowdy's black XJ8.
The day before Gowdy was killed, Dr.
Milo Howard reported a suspicious man who showed up to test-drive Dr.
Howard's black XJ8.
- All right, both these vehicles were listed on the car sales website rideswapper.
com.
And text messages confirm that it's the same buyer.
Okay? We might be looking at a serial predator who was hunting his victims online.
- Dr.
Howard, our eyewitness, describes the male suspect as Caucasian, mid-30s, dark hair, tall, about 195.
They met at a gas station on Lakeshore.
The suspect showed up in a gray sedan.
The next day, Brian Gowdy, our victim, met the suspect at the same gas station.
Now, we don't have a visual on the killer, but we do have some security footage showing a gray cruise sedan pulling into the lot.
Partial plate Alpha, India, Bravo, November.
- All right, now, Peck and Collins, you're gonna be on the sedan.
And Epstein and Price, you'll be with our victim, okay? Find out everything that you can.
McNally? - All right, this is footage of the deceased that was pulled from an ATM at a gas station.
Right now this is the last-known sighting of Brian Gowdy alive.
- Excuse me, staff? - Yeah? - Just let me I'm sorry about your brother, Mr.
Gowdy.
- Mm.
- You were close? - Yeah, we were very close, and you know, twins often grow apart as they get older, but we we didn't.
We were We were best friends.
- Did you know your brother was planning to move to Costa Rica? - I knew he had been there a couple of times, but - Mr.
Gowdy, do you have any idea who might have done this? - Uh, no.
It Look, Brian was the kindest man in the world.
I have no idea who'd want to do this to him.
- Dex, you need to pick Leo up at 4:00, or I need to call Stella.
So, can you call me back, let me know you got this message? Thanks.
Dex didn't even show up to mediation this morning.
- You're kidding.
- No.
- Well, that's good for you, isn't it? - Yeah.
You should have seen the guy scribbling on his judging pad.
That didn't sound good, did it? - Look, you didn't want to fight this battle, but you still need to win it.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome.
- Hey, Chris, what do you got? - No other divisions have reported any other suspicious test-drives, bodies in cars, or any other criminal activity related to online auto sites.
- So, unless the suspect's just ramping up, it's not a serial predator.
- Yeah, well, why was Gowdy a target? - I don't know.
Single, no psycho ex-girlfriends, well loved by his staff and students.
- I'll keep looking.
- I'm telling you, there's nothing to find on this guy.
- Aw, come on, everybody's hiding something.
Parking tickets, prescriptions, husbands.
I was being hilarious.
- You're still mad about Wes.
- Sorry I mentioned the guy.
- Mentioned him because you're obviously still upset about it.
- If I didn't mention him, then I'd be suppressing it, and that's not healthy.
Fine, I won't mention him.
- You find anything yet? - Out of all the squeaky-clean guys we investigated, this guy is the squeakiest.
- Well, we think he's targeted, so he's got to be hiding something.
I don't know, tap into your duplicitous side.
How do people hide things? - I know you're suppressing right now.
On a partial plate.
Whoa! A hundred and fifty license plates beginning with A-I-B-N.
- I'm gonna make you an online dating profile.
- 14 of those plates belong to gray sedans, and I don't believe in online dating.
- Oh, it's real.
And I think I'm the best person for the job because I know you so intimately.
- Great.
- I'm gonna say that you sleep with your eyes half-closed like a decaying corpse.
- Because I do.
- And that you've never lost a sock a day in your life.
To a sort of creepy degree because you are a sock tracker.
God, women are just gonna eat this up.
- Hey, you're single now.
I can make you a profile.
Talk about how you floss your teeth with your hair.
- Not anymore.
- Oh, I could put on that video you arguing with the parking guy with your mouth still frozen from the dentist.
- Nick, you don't have a video of that.
- I will always have a video of that.
- Got anything? - Uh, yes.
We have eight gray cruise sedans with plates starting with A-I-B-N.
- Witness says the suspect is Caucasian, - Yeah, but, Traci, that could be any body.
It could be Nick.
- I have an alibi.
No.
No.
Hey, there's one Sean Harrison.
Lives at 59 Dalmay Street.
- Okay.
Let's see if he'll come in for a chat.
- All right.
- Okay.
Sean Harrison? - Yeah.
Something going on? - Can you let us in? It's cold outside.
- Mr.
Harrison, we believe a gray sedan registered in your name may have been used in the commission of a crime.
- Crime? - Are you here by yourself? - Yeah, unless Kelly? Kelly?! I guess she's still at work.
- Would you mind joining us down at the station? - Are you arresting me? - No, no.
We just want to ask you a few questions.
- Can I at least get dressed? - Yeah, of course, as long as you don't mind if Officer Collins escorts you.
I don't do the boys anymore.
Mr.
Harrison, do you ever buy gas at a station on Lakeshore? - No.
- That's odd, because your car was seen there three days ago.
- Seen by who? - A guy selling an XJ8.
Officer McNally, you want to tell Sean what happened after that? - The next day, another person, Brian Gowdy, arranged to meet the same person at the same gas station to test-drive his XJ8.
- I don't know what to tell you.
It wasn't me.
- Brian Gowdy you know him? - Never heard of him.
- What do you do for a living, Mr.
Harrison? - I'm a contractor.
- Uh, we'll be right back.
Dr.
Howard, thanks for coming in.
- That's not him.
- Are you sure? He matches your description, and the car you saw is registered to him.
- Well, I'm sorry, Detective, but that's not the man that I took on a test-drive.
- Okay.
Sean's wife is here, McNally.
Dr.
Howard, thanks very much.
- All right, let's get the rest of your statement.
Kelly Harrison? - What's going on with Sean? - I'm Detective Swarek.
This is Officer McNally.
Um, we just have a couple of questions.
- Okay.
- Does anyone else have access to your husband's car? Anybody that fits your husband's description? - Larry.
- Larry? Who's Larry? - He didn't tell you about Larry? Mnh-mnh.
- No, he didn't tell us about Larry.
- They're blood brothers or something 'cause they grew up in the same group home.
Far as I can tell, it means they watch football together and Larry stays in our basement whenever he's out of prison.
- He staying in your basement right now, and he just got out of prison? - Yeah.
Millburn Penitentiary.
Sean promised he'd changed.
- So, if I was getting run down for a crime I didn't know anything about and I had this guy, Larry Chisholm McNally, would you read out that sheet, please? - 1998, misdemeanor assault, four years.
- And so on and so forth, right? - Pretty much.
- If I had that guy living in my basement, I think I'd mention him.
Would you mention him? - I would definitely mention him.
- I just wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt, at least until I talk to him.
The guy's like my brother.
- Hey, we just want to talk to him.
- I don't know where he is.
He had a parole appointment this morning.
- Was he with you the afternoons in question? Sean? - No, he wasn't.
He said he had to do something.
I didn't ask what.
- Where would Larry be now? We're gonna need a list of family, friends, associates, anybody.
There's no one.
Trust me, if there were, he wouldn't have been staying with us.
Just ask Kelly.
- What about prison? He's got friends on the inside? He had a fight a while ago with another inmate.
So, yeah, he had people watching his back.
Our eyewitness has positively identified Larry Chisholm as the man he took for a test-drive the day before Brian Gowdy was killed.
- And in the absence of a connection between the victim and our suspect, our working theory is that Larry was doing a favor for someone on the inside.
- Okay, that means we're working BOLO, border control, airports, Customs - Hey.
So, Larry showed up for his parole appointment this morning.
Apparently he was a wreck.
Also, I have the tech report for Larry's cell.
We've got a text message to Dr.
Milo Howard, a text exchange with Brian Gowdy, but listen to this.
Three calls to an illegal cell phone in Millburn Pen a day after Brian Gowdy was killed.
- So, if he was repaying a debt, then he he maybe called someone inside to let them know it was done.
- Okay, thanks very much.
That was the warden at Millburn.
He gave us a list of inmates Larry knew.
- Okay, Nash, you gonna go and do that? - Actually, it's fine.
I'll take it.
Nash, you got this? - Yeah, I got it.
Okay, Larry Chisholm could not have gotten far.
Go and get him and bring him in.
- Hey.
- Hey.
What are you What are you doing here? - I got trail mix and two coffees.
We're good to go.
- Uh, don't you think they're gonna need you for interviews here? - Pff, forget it.
Coming with you.
- I'm gonna drive.
- Fine.
Road trip.
Yay! - Yay! - Who did the warden give us? - Uh, Larry's laundry partner, some guy he fought with, his sponsor, and his supervisor at the call center.
- Sponsor's a good one.
Yeah? People usually tell their sponsors everything, right? - Yeah, you know, that's in confidence.
I think if anybody's gonna tell us what Larry was up to, it's gonna be the guy he fought with.
- Yeah, I guess.
Is everything all right? - Yeah, everything's great.
- My goldfish has more enemies than Brian Gowdy.
- I'm pretty sure that's evidence.
Yeah, great.
Thank you.
I'll be at this number.
They're gonna call us back within the hour with a full vehicle-history report.
- Oh, within the hour.
Oh, take your time, guys.
No rush.
We're just looking for a killer.
- Are you mad about something? - No! I just wanna be out on the street looking for this guy, doing something instead of riding this desk again.
You know what? Yes, I am mad.
Do you wanna know why? I'm mad at the psycho who shot me.
I'm also mad at Wes for deciding to leave this blood clot in my neck.
Are you mad at me? - No, I am not mad at you.
Besides the fact that you didn't fight Wes at all at the hospital.
- People don't fight that well when they're caught off guard.
That's why ambushes work.
- Well, you asked me if I was mad, and I'm feeling mad, which is why I said yes.
- It's one thing to stand me up, but he didn't even pick up Leo.
- What, he didn't call you? - No.
Oh, it's him.
Dex What? What? I'll see what I can do.
Okay.
Okay.
Uh, apparently Dex was in a bar fight last night, and, uh, the hospital's saying someone needs to go and pick him up.
- All right, is he okay? - I don't know, but am I supposed to leave here now? I don't know.
- Do you want me to Do you want me to get him, Trace? - Yes.
No! What? - What? - That would be weird.
- It's not weird.
He's your son's father.
You're right in the middle of this homicide investigation.
It's fine.
No big deal.
- How about we play 20 questions? - Bubble gum or the moon? - How did you know that? I didn't even ask you anything yet.
- You always do bubble gum or the moon.
- I know.
Those are good ones.
Mm.
I spy - Yeah, not safe while driving.
Yeah.
- Lame.
Well, do you want me to drive for a bit? - Oh, no, no.
I'm good.
Thanks.
- No? You're good.
Yeah.
- Hey, Dex.
I'm here to give you a ride home.
- Where's Trace? - Making a living.
Come on.
Hop in.
- No, thanks.
Hospital said I had to be released to family, not my ex's latest fling.
- Well, bar fighters can't be choosers.
- It wasn't a bar fight, okay? Some guy wanted my wallet.
I didn't want to give it to him.
- You got mugged? - Yeah, I got mugged at a bar.
- Well, do you have a description of the guy? I could help you file a report if you want.
- You know what? It happened so fast, I didn't really get a good look at their faces.
- Oh, so was it a guy or was it guys? - You know what? I'm not gonna talk about this with you.
- Dex you missed mediation 'cause you got into a bar fight, and then you didn't pick up your kid.
- Look, just because I got attacked doesn't mean that Traci's not working insane hours.
Leaving my kid with a sitter? When he could be with me? - You talking custody now? - No, I'm talking about what's best for Leo.
- Yeah, okay.
You want a ride or what? - No, thanks, I'll call my brother.
- Next time, why don't you call your brother first? - All right, Larry was last seen at his parole meeting two blocks from here.
So, let's start with some of the dive bars in the area.
That's terrible.
It's for your profile.
- I'm good.
You lookin' for the suspect? 'Cause I'm driving.
- Oh, uh you really think Larry's younging it up with some stripper? - No, I think that Larry's on the run, but I don't get why he didn't run after he killed the guy.
- Because he's smart.
He went to his parole appointment this morning, so no one's gonna report him missing for two weeks.
- Okay.
So, assuming that Larry's not brain dead, he knows he'd have to show ID to buy a plane ticket.
- And he's not gonna get very far in a stolen car.
Bus station.
- So, my dad and I used to play this game every time we were on a road trip called Two Truths and a Lie.
Actually, it was one of the only times that we really opened up to each other.
- Oh, yeah? - Mm-hmm.
It's a good game.
You wanna go first? - The truth is I really don't want to play Two Truths and a Lie.
- Nice try.
And also, you're not supposed to tell me what's true.
You're supposed to say two truths and one lie, and then I have to guess.
- Okay.
I'm a cop, I'm a man, I'm a chicken.
- First of all, don't tell me that in the order of the title, okay? It's a dead giveaway.
Second, try to maybe come up with things that, uh, I can't tell just by looking at you.
- Oh, you mean secrets.
- Or maybe things that have been bugging you lately.
Like in the last couple hours or You know, things you mightjust want to get off your chest.
You are a chicken.
It's three truths.
- Yeah, this is Larry's crowd, all right.
- We're thinking maybe he owed somebody in here a favor or something he had to make good on once he got out.
- These guys, they'd sell out their mothers for a split rollie and a haircut.
- Do you know anything about a recent altercation with an inmate? - Yeah, I pulled 'em apart myself.
But if you really want to find out what it's over, you can ask the unworthy opponent himself.
Remy Lagrande.
- See, Larry promised me his radio when he got out.
I mean, he promised.
So long as I stayed away from the mashed potato vodka that Jimmy makes in the back of his john.
So, what happened? - I drank the vodka, he wouldn't give me the radio, so I punched him in the face.
It wasn't personal.
- Did Larry owe anyone any favors? Protection, debts paid, debts owed? - I don't know.
Damien maybe? But Larry's a God lover now.
He keeps his side of the street clean.
Doesn't get into yours, you know.
- Did you call you recently? - No.
- You got a cell phone? - Cell phone's not legal in here, man.
- Come on, we're not the cell phone police.
We're investigating a murder.
- Larry's dead? Because he did say I could have his radio.
I mean, he'd want me to have it.
He was a real stand-up guy.
- Thank you very much for your time.
- What about the radio? Guys? - Hey, Trace, still no word from Swarek and McNally up at Millburn.
What do you got happening here? - Not much so far.
There's still no connection between the victim and the suspect.
- Just got off the phone with Motor Vehicles.
Guess who was the previous owner of Brian Gowdy's XJ8? - The twin brother, Jim Gowdy.
We're thinking that maybe he was the intended victim.
- Jim works in mortgages, foreclosures.
He probably has a lot more enemies than Brian ever did.
- Okay, if that's what's happening, he's a sitting duck out there.
Larry Chisholm is still AWOL.
- Well, let's get Jim Gowdy in here right away.
- Larry worked under me at the call center.
I was sorry to see him go.
- You were happy with Larry's work? - Most guys in here phone it in, literally.
"Hi, you want your carpet cleaned?" "No, thank you.
" "Oh, okay.
Bye.
" Entitled.
Think the world owes them something.
- Larry wasn't like that? - Larry loved praise with the hope of a beaten puppy.
- Did Larry owe anybody any favors, debts he'd have to repay once he got out? - No, that wasn't Larry.
Trust me, I know what goes on around here.
- Would you be surprised if Larry reoffended? - Yes.
And no.
Yes because he was so damn excited to get outta here and make a life for himself.
- That right? - He asked me to write a recommendation letter.
- And no because - He never got back to me to tell me where to mail the letter.
So, I wondered.
That's all.
- So you think my brother was killed because someone thought he was me? - We're not sure, we're just looking at all the possibilities.
When did you give Brian the car? - Um, four months ago.
He was volunteering, bringing food to shelters.
The guy doesn't even have a car.
He was doing it on the bus.
So thought it would help.
- So, he was working with homeless people, getting them off the street - And I foreclose on people's houses and put them out on the street.
- Did you foreclose on the homes of any inmates at Milburn Penitentiary? - Probably, yeah.
- Trace.
BOLO just came through.
We got a guy fitting the suspect's description just bought a ticket at a bus station in Port Credit.
All squads, we got a report of a man fitting Larry Chisholm's description at the bus station in Port Credit.
He's waiting for the bus bound for Niagara Falls departing in 40 minutes.
Over.
- 1519.
We're in the immediate area.
on the suspect.
Copy, 1519, and proceed with caution.
Hey, Larry Chisholm! If I told you I was an Olympic decathlete, would you skip the whole chase, just get in the car? - It's like that.
I want you to turn around.
Turn around! Hands behind your back.
- Well, this is going nowhere.
- We should talk to his sponsor.
- Yeah, okay, you know what? Let's split up.
I'll talk to the sponsor.
You call Traci, find out where they're at.
- All right.
- And I'll let them know where we're at, which is essentially nowhere.
- Detective, you've got a call.
- Okay.
- First door on the right.
Well, so, how's it all going? - Oh, you know, prisoners love cops.
Who you got left? - I have no idea.
I don't have the list.
- Well, let's check mine here.
There we go, looks like we've got, uh, the guy who did laundry detail with Larry, Derek Mooney, and his sponsor, Jay Swarek.
Oh, Swarek, he's a real talkative man.
- Can I see that? - Sure.
- Hey.
We got Larry Chisholm.
They're bringing him into the station now.
Looks like we can roll outta here.
- Thank you.
- My pleasure.
- I know why you want to get outta here.
- Yeah, rush-hour traffic.
- Stop.
Who is Larry's sponsor? - Uh You don't want to meet him.
- I'm not afraid to meet him.
- He has nothing to do with my life anymore.
- But he's your father.
- So? Your dad's a drinker.
You don't tell me those stories.
- What stories? - Little McNally coming home from school.
"My dad says he's not gonna drink anymore.
He promised me he wouldn't pass out on the couch anymore.
" Cut to you trying to get his shoes off while he's on the couch swearing at you - I told you everything about my life! Everything! - Yeah, why do we have to talk about all that stuff? - 'Cause I want to know you! This happens every time! Everything's going great, and then life happens and you shut down! - Yeah, and then you go under cover for six months.
- Oh, my God.
You broke up with me, Sam, okay? We weren't even together.
- Jerry died! And you left.
- Sam, I am not going in for another round of this.
I won't do it.
- So, Brian Gowdy, huh? We still can't figure out how you even knew him.
You didn't volunteer at his charities, and he didn't do time with you.
- I don't know Brian Gowdy.
- That's not what your BFF Sean Harrison said.
- Sean told you what? - That he lent you his car the day Gowdy was killed.
They tried to get in touch with you, but you, uh you were really hard to get a hold of.
- He He didn't say that.
- He's in with a detective right now.
- Hey, this is 1519.
We're just pulling in with Larry now.
We'll bring him through booking in a minute.
Copy, 1519.
- Hey.
- Hey, easy, buddy, easy.
Hey! - Hey! Whoa! Whoa, whoa, whoa! - We're in the sally port.
Suspect has cut his throat.
We need medics now.
- Okay, 10-4.
Medics are on their way.
Okay, Larry.
- Open your eyes.
Open your eyes, Larry.
Okay, Larry, Larry, look at me! - What was that alarm about? Is something happening? - We found your friend, Larry Chisholm.
- Did he say what happened? - No.
Before we could bring him in for questioning, he tried to kill himself.
- I need to see him.
- Sean, you can't talk to him until we do.
And when we do, if he survives, we're charging him with first degree murder.
- Oh, my God.
- Look, we're gonna send you two home, but we'll call you, we'll fill you in on Larry's condition when we know anything.
Chris? - Yeah? - Can you, uh, fill out the paperwork on Mr.
Harrison? - Sure.
Right this way.
They're gonna be a few minutes.
Did you want to get some coffee? - That'd be great.
- Okay, this way.
- Assaulting a police officer.
- That was Christmas.
The neighbors called in another domestic.
I told the police my mother fell while she was decorating the Christmas tree.
Uh, it's Traci.
Larry Chisholm is in the hospital in critical condition.
He tried to kill himself.
- Oh.
- Does that really sound like the guy we've been hearing about today? He gets out, repays a prison debt by killing Gowdy, then tries to kill himself? Does that make sense? - Well, we don't actually know that he was repaying a debt.
So, we got a murder and a suicide attempt with no clear motive.
- There is someone we could talk to.
- You know what? McNally, it's time you met my old man.
- Believe it or not, the coffee in the lounge is better than the coffee in the squad room.
We have very low coffee standards around here.
Oh, Kelly, I'm sorry.
I thought they put that away already.
- That's the man that was beaten? - It is.
His name's Brian Gowdy.
He was a schoolteacher.
Do you recognize him? - No.
I don't think so.
- Paperwork's in order.
Your husband will be at the front desk in a few minutes.
Do you need a ride? - No, I drove.
- She seemed kind of spooked.
- I think she just realized what the man living in her basement is capable of.
- Thanks, Brian.
Heard you were here.
I didn't really think you'd have the stones to actually come and see me though.
But, then, I see you brought backup.
- This is Officer Andy McNally.
- Andy? God, I wish I'd known you were coming.
I would have thrown on something a little more welcoming.
- We have a few questions about Larry Chisholm.
- Who? - The man you were sponsoring in addiction recovery.
- It's nice to see you're dealing with your demons, Dad.
- Looks good on a parole application.
I'm up for early release.
- Oh.
- Hey, do they still make those, uh those hot turkey sandwiches with all that gravy down there in that little hole in the wall on Ossington? - I don't know, Pop.
- I used to take him there Sundays.
We had a little man time, him and me.
Always went there.
'Cause sometimes his mother could be a little How is your loony mother? - My mother's good.
She's somewhere warm.
- Oh.
And I didn't keep the house warm? - I don't think that's what I said.
Is that what I said? I worked.
Sometimes things would go a little wrong.
Andy here knows how that goes.
Anyway, who needs that mother of yours anyway? I got this sweet little thing who comes in here to see me.
Very sweet.
That'd be your conjugal stepmom.
You know what? You should ask Officer Andy over here if she'd like to come along one time, and she could meet your conjugal stepmom.
Wouldn't that be nice? - Don't try and tell me that you've never tried it on with, uh - Larry Chisholm.
What do you know about him? - You know, if I got a chance to work with that every day Excuse me, uh, Office Andy, I know you like to ask the questions.
Can I ask you a question? Has my son ever told you the story about how it is that I ended up in jail? No.
No? What, not interesting enough? - Larry Chisholm did he have any debts he had to pay off when he got out? - You know, all I wanted to hear all these years is just for you to admit it.
Just say it.
But no.
Isn't it sad that a man has to hide behind a badge just to stand up to his old man? You're probably afraid that they might steal your precious badge away from you, right? Just take it back? And I'm tellin' you right now, they would if they knew the story.
If someone were to tell them, they'd take your badge.
- That's it.
Time to go.
- Just hope that woman's not in too much danger.
- Sam? Just give me five minutes.
It's all right.
I've got it.
- So, just tell me, are you and Sammy a couple? Well, watch out.
It's alls I can say.
- You were Larry's sponsor.
He must have been like a son to you.
- Yeah.
Actually, yeah.
More of a son to me than Sam ever was.
- Larry called you after Brian Gowdy was killed, didn't he? - Of course.
Yeah.
He called me.
Telling me that his psychopathic buddy was starting to push him again.
- You mean Sean Harrison? - They grew up in a group home together.
And when they were kids, this guy really had Larry's back.
Now he owns his balls.
Larry has the brain of a spring lamb, okay, but he's a good guy.
- Well, did he say why Harrison was pushing him around? - Yeah.
Are you and Sammy a couple? - I care about Sam.
Very much.
- Okay.
Harrison was following his wife around.
He follows her to a motel, and he sees her go in there.
So, obviously she's getting boned on the side by some guy, so he waits outside, watches the guy come out, and doesn't recognize him.
Then he climbs into this car, this black car that's got a ride-swapper.
So, now he's making Larry test-drive every matching car on the site.
And then Larry says, you know, "All right, but what do you want to know for and everything," and he says, well, that he's not gonna hurt the guy, he's just gonna talk to him.
- So, Larry made all the calls and did all the test-drives.
He brought Brian Gowdy to Sean Harrison, didn't he? - Yeah, you got it.
- Okay, and Harrison beat Brian Gowdy to death.
- Larry had absolutely nothing to do with that.
You gotta trust me on that one, okay? All Larry wanted was just to get sober and wanted to get the hell outta here.
And then this Harrison guy starts ranting about how he's gonna do the wife maybe too.
So, Larry's gotta get just gotta get outta here.
- Why didn't he just call the police? - Oh, come on, don't be stupid.
He's gonna end up right back in here.
- Thank you.
- Hey, wait.
Just tell me this.
What did Sammy tell you about me? First I've heard of you.
- Detective, what do you need? - Sean Harrison killed Brian Gowdy.
Kelly was having an affair with him.
- Where's Kelly now? - With Sean.
Let's go.
Peck.
Peck.
Go around that side.
Over here.
Let's go.
- Sean Harrison! This is the police.
We are inside the house.
- Nick.
Kelly? - Yeah? Hi.
- Kelly, what happened? - Nothing.
You know, the usual.
Nothing.
It's not even our place, you know.
It's a rental.
- Kelly, I'm just gonna grab the knife.
- No, no, no, no, it's gross.
I need to clean it off.
- Brian Gowdy, you knew him? - Sean killed him.
I didn't know.
I didn't know until I saw the pictures.
For a second I thought maybe I'd missed part of the plan.
Brian's so smart, I thought maybe maybe I'd missed part of the plan.
- To disappear to Costa Rica? Okay.
You guys left about an hour ago.
What happened? - Sean made me get in the car.
He knew I knew.
He started punching me in the car.
I just curled up and closed my eyes.
It's so weird.
We got back here, and Sean was just going off on me, and all I could see was this knife.
It was like Brian put it there.
I know that's crazy, but Oh, my God.
Oh, my God! - So, suddenly you can't get enough of me? Okay, go ahead.
Get it off your chest.
Come on, let's go.
- When I was a little kid, I remember I remember, uh waking up in the middle of the night.
Got to get a glass of water, and, uh I didn't know if I was in for a smack in the head or an hour-long hot-whiskey-breath lecture on the Civil War.
- You don't think I wanted to beat my old man up every day? Don't think I wanted to punch his teeth out? - I was so scared of you.
And then I was angry with you.
And And then for a long time, I was worried I'd be like you, you know? - Oh, yeah.
- Yeah.
But here we are and, uh - Yeah, here we are.
- Sitting here looking at you, and I see your, uh sad, angry old face, and I realize I'm free.
And I'm not gonna waste one more emotion on you.
- What is this, your "I forgive you" speech? It's pretty lame.
Just listen to me, okay? I do not forgive you.
- You don't have to.
'Cause I never felt guilty for one second.
- You deserved everything you got from me.
Do you hear me on that? - I forgive you, Pop.
- How sweet.
Just get the hell outta here.
- Kelly getting second degree, it just doesn't seem right.
- Well, her lawyer's just gonna argue self-defense.
- I'm okay with that.
- Me too.
- I'll leave you to it.
- Dex how are you doing? - Nice move.
Today, sending your boyfriend to get me.
- I don't want to fight with you.
- No, if you didn't want a fight, you would have come yourself.
- I was working.
I'm busy like I always am, which is your big problem with me.
Look, I work.
A lot.
But it doesn't mean I'm not a good mother.
- What does it mean, then? - When you didn't show up to mediation this morning, I was glad.
And then I found out you were in the hospital.
- I'm fine, okay? - Look, we're not together anymore, but no one else will ever love Leo like you and I do.
We've got the same favorite memories.
You know, all the firsts, all the funny things he says.
So, you better not let anything happen to you.
'Cause what if I forget? Who's gonna remind me? - You know I fought for you as hard as I could in the hospital, right? - I know.
- I mean, they wouldn't even let me in the room.
- Dov, it's not your fault.
Really I'm just mad at myself.
I mean, God, I get drunk off tequila, marry some guy 'cause I think it's hysterical, and then he's in charge of my major life-threatening surgeries.
And look, it is not your fault.
I am so sorry.
- Forgive and forget? - Forgive and forget.
Want to get drunk and make out? - Yes, but not on tequila.
- Okay.
- We used to watch "Millionaire" together when I was a kid.
He was in and out of prison all our lives, as you know, but, uh when he was out, we used to watch that game show.
You remember? - Mm-hmm.
I do.
- It was the one thing we had in common when I was growing up.
We, uh, both wanted to be millionaires.
I wanted it so I could get my mother and sister away from him.
I have no idea why he wanted to be a millionaire.
Did he tell you why he went to prison the last time? - No.
- No? The cops wanted him on a robbery/assault, but he had an alibi.
He said that he was at home with his boy watching "Millionaire.
" And they asked me about it, and, uh I told them he was lying.
And he got six months.
When he was inside, he got into a fight, killed the guy, - Was he telling the truth or were you? - He was.
- Mm.
- More than you wanted to hear? - No.
You are nothing like that man.
And if you ever doubt it, you just need to turn around and ask me.
- Oh, yeah? Are you gonna be there? - Just try and get rid of me.
Okay, wait, that sounded a little bit stalkery.
You do have some say.
- I love you, McNally.
- I love you, Sam Swarek.
So, uh, where to next? McNally is brilliant.
- Mm-hmm.
- McNally is beautiful.
McNally is always fun to be with.
- Hey.
Which one of those is a lie, hmm? - Well maybe I don't want to lie.
- Oh, yeah? - Yeah.
- Really? - Really.
Truth.
I told McNally the whole story today.
She's still here.
Truth.
In fact, she's right here trying to seduce me.
- Trying? Please, Detective.
- Truth.
McNally makes me feel alive.
- You are the worst at this game.
- Good.

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