Counterpart (2018) s02e08 Episode Script

In from the Cold

1 RICKY: She was sentimental, your other.
Used to talk about a place only she would know.
From childhood.
I miss my mom and dad.
I wish I could tell you they're coming back, Clare.
You're old enough now to understand death.
LAMBERT: Well, how fortunate for you that both her parents died of the flu.
POPE: You really think it was the flu that got them? Well, Mira takes care to ensure things work out.
- CLARE: What is this? - SPENCER: Our last steps.
By now, Mira should have Management gathering together.
- So we've got to be ready.
- I quit my job today.
What you've done is put enormous targets on our backs.
Yeah.
Also, Howard Silk's on his way, so we run.
- What is this place? - CLARE: Indigo.
We both married Emily.
And now your other is living with her.
In your life.
EMILY SILK: I'm just getting this feeling that I don't really like who I was before.
I need to start piecing this together.
Put your gun away and come in.
- No, I'm not going back.
- YORKE: Put 'em down.
EMILY PRIME: Howard, Jesus.
I could never make it in your house You could never make it in mine Even if we were both well-meant and Highborn in another time Just like a circle 'round the sun Just like a circle 'round the sun Where my song has just begun Just like a circle 'round the sun [rustling nearby.]
You aren't easy to track down.
I just want to talk.
About what? You're still a contractor, aren't you? I want to contract you.
You have people of your own.
I don't want any of mine caught doing this.
No.
You haven't even heard the price.
That's not who I am anymore.
What, and that is? Curiosity about the other.
How tedious.
Why fix what isn't broken? Who's the target? A name from your old list.
Emily Silk.
No, thanks.
She's starting to remember things these days.
Making things complicated.
Emily Silk has to die tonight.
Kill her and you'll never hear from us again.
[liquid splashing.]
[door opens.]
- [door closes.]
- [grunting.]
I've got your head.
[grunting.]
[groaning.]
EMILY PRIME: Help is on the way.
- [panting, groaning.]
- [door opening.]
- HOWARD: Mm, who's that? - Oh, my God.
Dad.
- Did you bring everything? - What happened? What? EMILY PRIME: I told you on the phone, he's been shot.
[shuddering breaths.]
Anna, look at me.
You are a doctor.
You're a bloody good one.
Now I need you to forget for a moment that this is your father, and I need you to save his life.
Mm-hmm.
[Howard grunting.]
- [groaning.]
- EMILY PRIME: Howard.
Howard.
[shuddering breaths.]
ANNA: Eyelids are pale.
He's showing signs of hypovolemic shock.
EMILY PRIME: Is there anything you can do? Yeah, let me have him.
[grunts.]
[Howard screams.]
No exit wound.
Okay, I'll give you something for the pain.
[Howard moaning.]
Dad, open your mouth.
Who's Dad why do you keep calling me that? ANNA: I need you to stay on your back, don't m-move.
I need to see if anything's gotten into the cavity.
[groaning, grunting.]
- Stay with me.
- EMILY PRIME: Howard.
[distorted.]
Howard, please.
Dad, stay with me.
Dad, Dad, stay with me.
- [Howard grunting, groaning.]
- Dad Dad, can you hear me? [gulps.]
While we seek mirth and beauty And music bright and gay There are frail forms fainting at the door Though their voices are silent Their pleading looks will say Oh, hard times come again no more My mother used to sing that song to me.
You used to sing it to me.
The organs weren't punctured.
M-Multiple shallow wounds.
Probably a ricochet.
- Dad? It's almost over.
- Huh? Ooh, what? This is a hemostatic agent.
It's going to stop the bleeding.
[Howard groans.]
[moans.]
- [Howard gasping.]
- ANNA: It's coming.
[Howard moaning.]
ANNA: Yeah.
How do you feel? Never better Well done.
[panting.]
[crickets chirping.]
MIRA: It's time to shed the skin of your past.
[footsteps approaching.]
[Baby Spencer fussing.]
My father used to talk about going back to Bethesda and visiting his childhood home.
How surreal it was.
I never understood wanting that.
New people come in, they change things.
You either like it better or you like it worse.
This wasn't your home.
No, but it's close.
That's where they tested us.
"Clare, what did you name your teddy? What happened when you dropped it in the mud? Where did your mum take you on summer holiday?" It was like a fantasy life.
Are you okay? [sighs.]
Yeah.
Of course I am.
Come on.
I think I know a good place for us to rest.
Where I'm from, there were bunks in here.
That was Amelia's Petra's.
Mine.
I slept in here until I was 15.
Yeah? What was that like? Nice, I suppose.
Kind of like boarding school.
Yeah.
Mine was a bit like this, to be honest.
- Shh, shh, shh.
Hey.
- [Baby Spencer fussing.]
We didn't fully understand what we were meant to do back then.
Wait, Clare.
Does Indigo own this house on both sides? We use this one for sleepers when they first cross.
S-So why would you bring us here of all places? Because it's the only place we'll be safe.
Safe? Everyone's been placed; they won't be back.
[Quayle sighs.]
All right.
Well I suppose we're just a normal family now.
Hiding out in the creepy old house you sort of grew up in.
[laughs softly.]
Yeah.
Cool.
[dogs barking in distance.]
Good night, fellas.
EMILY SILK: Long line at the market? Yeah.
What did you get? I got the steak and, uh, vegetables Hey.
- Are you okay? - Yeah.
Uh, yeah.
Uh, these guards.
Reminds me of the hospital.
Men standing sentry everywhere you in a coma, and, and I was just helpless.
We're safe in here.
No, no, we're not safe, Emily, because the people who wanted you dead are going to react.
Well, this isn't exactly your area of expertise, is it? Right.
But we have to try to figure out what these people are gonna do next.
But there's nothing you can do about it! Look, I know a lot has happened since the accident.
You've had the chance to know more, do more.
You want to be part of my life.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, I always wanted to be part of your life.
- Not like this.
Not in this way.
- I-I I didn't know about all of this.
Well, you see, I I think you did.
I knew there were things I wasn't supposed to know.
Yeah, what things? [sighs.]
Uh, it was n-not long after we were married.
There were there were nights when you were making excuses about-about going out, doing errands.
And uh, I was suspicious.
That's a very long time to be suspicious.
Yeah.
My dad, when I was a kid, he used to make excuses like that.
Walking the dog was kind of a go-to.
He'd put Rocky on the leash and go around the corner to the off-track betting place.
And, um I learned that there's a way people tend to speak and-and behave when they lie.
So, one night, when you said you were going out to run errands, I followed you.
I thought it was an affair.
But all I saw you doing was making chalk marks on road signs.
That was almost three decades ago.
Why on earth didn't you say something? I honestly have no idea.
Do you ever wonder what might have happened if you did? Yeah.
Yeah, I've been thinking about that a lot lately.
You could've been part of my life.
Yeah, or we might have ended up hating each other.
Let's let's make it better now.
Let's let's work together.
L-Let's turn this place over.
Please.
Help me try and work out what these people are gonna do next.
[leaves rustling.]
- I guess you have - [alarm chirps.]
Some questions.
Yeah.
Just a few.
It's for the best that you know as little as possible.
You don't work for the U.
N.
, do you? And neither does Dad.
Well, technically speaking, our agency does actually work for the U.
N.
You're a spy.
Yes, I am.
Oh, my God.
- Anna - No, I knew it.
I did.
I fucking knew it.
I'm really sorry you had to find out like this.
No, Mum, are you kidding? I'm I'm relieved.
Do you know I used to make up these stories? That you were superheroes, which meant Dad was trying to save the world and [chuckles.]
Mum did.
But there was that that one person who she couldn't reach in time, and that's what she replayed in her head when she used.
Look, I know it sounds stupid.
I was eight.
But it turns out I was right.
We're not superheroes.
Okay? Maybe you are for putting up with us all this time.
I'm just glad I know the truth.
You must remember it's the kind of truth that, if you tell anyone, lives are at risk.
It's gonna be our little secret, okay? [creaking.]
MIRA: Listen up, everyone.
We have a new addition to our family today.
It's a very brave little girl, just like every one of you.
I'm sure you all remember your first day here, so I expect you to extend her [echoing.]
the same kindness you were shown.
Take a seat, Clare.
Over there.
YOUNG CLARE: I ran two kilometers in 11 minutes, but then I ate too many pretzels, so I threw up.
STUDENTS: On the other side of the door, I can be a different me.
As smart and as brave Clare, come with me, please.
Spencer, please read the first sentence of number one.
Oh, there you are.
She's, uh, fast asleep.
- Thanks.
- [creaking.]
God, you really can hear every creak in this place, can't you? [chuckles.]
- What was this room on your side? - We had classes here.
- Yeah, what kind of classes? - Handwriting.
Group memorization techniques.
I taught, too.
History of both worlds.
Yeah? Dare I ask what you said about us? Just facts.
Yeah, whose facts? You think I'm incapable of critical thought? - I wasn't some naive kid.
- Yeah, no, obviously not.
- But you-you were just - What? You were indoctrinated, Clare.
Truth doesn't need to be indoctrinated.
You Sorry, you really still believe, at this point, that everything I-I don't expect you to understand.
- I put my whole life into this.
- Okay.
So what about our life? Our life wouldn't exist without this.
It was created by it, by By? Her.
Mira.
Who's that? She was the closest I had to a real parent.
What, she belongs to Indigo? Created it.
This was all her plan.
What plan? [stammers.]
Clare, it's okay.
You can you can tell me.
Sh-She just wanted a better world, where power doesn't rest in the hands of Management, an invisible elite.
She saw the way diplomacy was going, and she knew we'd destroy each other in the end.
Okay, so she got the doors closed.
Then what? Return the balance to what it was before the flu.
How? I don't know.
- Clare - I don't know! You don't know or you don't want to know? You don't want to know! You want to believe your world's so innocent, that this is just all happening to you.
Mira had evidence that your world created the flu.
A memo written by an agent of your world.
I've seen it.
She showed all of us.
What, so, what, that-that justifies abducting children? Murdering innocent people? It's all for the greater good.
Hey, what-what about Spencer? Don't do that.
This is all for her.
No, it's not.
You said "a better world.
" That's one world.
She's half me.
Born in my world.
- She's got no part in that.
- They would never hurt her.
Clare, they don't care about individuals.
Milla was terrified when she died.
And yet she still chose to do it.
For the greater good.
The greater good.
What the fuck does that mean, "greater good"? Is that what Mira fed you in here all these years? See, the problem is-is, Clare, is that you're not naive.
So how can you believe this shit? Are you are you-you just brainwashed? They turned you into a fanatic.
Don't you see that? J You have Clare, don't walk away from this.
You think it's so fucking simple.
You'll never understand.
This dressing will only hold you over for a few days.
You need to get it checked out again for infection.
I assume you have someplace to go.
Otherwise I'd have to take you to a hospital, which I gather you don't want.
She knows what we do.
Oh.
I'm curious what exactly happened today.
We were attacked.
By who? Foreign agents.
Do you two carry guns? [gun thumps onto table.]
I have mixed feelings about that.
[sighs.]
Nothing in there.
Look what I found in a hidden panel behind the bookcase.
My, my, my.
It's like I have the muscle memory of someone I used to be.
Well, you're still that person, Emily.
No.
I don't want to be her.
I'd like to ask her some awkward questions, but I don't want to be her.
- [thuds.]
- Ow! [scoffs.]
God, I keep doing that.
You okay? This apartment's been driving me crazy for some reason.
How so? I remember it differently.
I remember things being in a different place.
Uh [exhales.]
The sofa was here.
And did we have a piano? We did.
We did have a piano.
It was there.
So [grunts.]
300 milligrams of this every three to six hours.
As needed.
That should help with the pain.
And then and this one's for the bacterial infection.
Two drops every six hours.
No strenuous movements, okay? I promise.
Call me tomorrow.
What is it? This keychain, uh What? What's wrong? When I drove up, I thought this place looked familiar.
Wh-What, Emily? What do you remember? ANNA: It's a big white manor, right? Horses.
Oh, Mum, you've taken me here before.
You were in rehab at the time, but you'd snuck out.
That's why you said it had to be our little secret.
EMILY PRIME: Sorry, I have no recollection of that.
We we even made up names.
Do you do you remember? W You were Belinda, and I was Mariah.
Like Mariah Carey or Oh, it was just you and me.
It was the best weekend.
Why don't you remember this? I was what, eight? And there was a church by the water.
You snuck me back in to Uncle Eric's.
Do you know, I never told anyone.
I thought I dreamt everything, because, well, you never brought it up.
But it was real, wasn't it? I-I sh I shouldn't have ever have brought that here.
I shouldn't have brought it home.
You know who Anna is? Have you met her? On the other side.
The other world.
Over there.
When? Many times.
I've been going over there for years.
You've been going over there to see this Anna? Howard, I can't talk about this.
I can't.
You-you you need to, Emily.
We're-we're doing this together.
That's what you said.
[shuddering breaths.]
She was our daughter.
Over there.
[crying.]
She was just a little girl.
And her mother wasn't around My other So I took her to the place my mother used to take me.
To ride the horses.
She's our baby, too, Howard.
They even gave her the same name.
Why would you do that? Well, wouldn't you? If y-you knew she was alive? Wouldn't you want to know her? [Baby Spencer fussing.]
QUAYLE: Well, that's okay, bubba.
It'll be okay.
Don't listen to any of that stuff.
Let's see.
You Oh.
Ah, the rash.
[clicks tongue.]
Oh, baby, baby.
Do we have any cream? - [fussing.]
- What's this? What is this? POPE [recorded.]
: Yes, well, Mira takes care to ensure things work out, doesn't she? LAMBERT: I'm not sure I follow.
POPE: Do you really think it was the flu that got them? Hundreds of millions were dying back then.
Do you think anyone thought to perform an autopsy? Acute arsenic poisoning.
The symptoms were similar enough, and with so many bodies, no one was looking for a cause.
MIRA: You are a soldier.
[distorted, echoing.]
Clare - what can I do for you? - Do you know where Spencer is? MIRA: He has been called up.
CLARE: She's marrying him? MIRA: Clare, I don't think you realize what a gift you've been handed.
You are going to be the one who changes everything.
[door closes, running steps.]
Hello? Peter? SPENCER [in distance.]
: You're it! YOUNG CLARE: Shh! Spencer! [echoing laughter in distance.]
[faint, distorted voices in distance.]
[distorted whispering.]
Is somebody there? [wind howling in distance.]
[whispers.]
What are you doing here? Good hiding place.
No one will find this spot.
Did you grow up here? Yeah.
Yeah, I did.
Not me.
I lived with my parents.
Why did you kill me? Because you had everything I wish I had.
No one loved me.
What about him? Peter's just afraid of being alone.
Aren't you? I am.
It's lonely where I am now.
QUAYLE: Clare.
Have you listened to it? [sighs.]
This was the woman you said was like - a mother to you? - I should check on Spencer.
Spencer's fine.
Stop.
Clare, look at me.
When I first found out about you I came apart.
I'd been living a lie for years.
And I was blind to it.
But I'm not coming apart.
Clare it's okay.
[crying.]
What am I gonna do now? Everything I've ever known is what they taught me.
And now it's just gone.
What's the point? Of anything? Look, this is the life we have.
This is the hand we've been dealt.
Hey, without you, there is no Spencer.
And I wouldn't change her for the world.
You don't know all that I've done.
You wouldn't like it.
And yet, I still Maybe I am a fanatic.
Brainwashed, like you said.
I've made up a million reasons why that recording can't be true.
It was given to me on purpose, it's a test - Could it be a test? - [softly.]
No.
- God, I feel like such a failure.
- They put that in you.
They took a little girl, and they molded her head until what they wanted was in there.
- I could have resisted.
- You were a child.
[grunts softly.]
[sniffles.]
CLARE: I almost drowned once.
Before all this.
Before the flu.
It was a riptide.
I hadn't seen the black flag.
The water was so warm.
There was this man on the shore.
He was screaming, "Swim sideways.
" That's what you do in a riptide.
But the wa I got pulled further out.
I was tired.
I let go.
Let the water take me under.
It was so violent on the surface.
Underneath, it was calm.
Dark and soundless.
And then I got yanked up.
To the violence.
[crying.]
: Let me go under, Peter.
I don't want to be here anymore.
I'm not gonna do that.
[whispers.]
Well, then you're brainwashed, too.
- Yeah, maybe I am.
- Yeah.
What's wrong with me? Why do I still love her after everything that she's done? There's nothing wrong with you.
You love her and you hate her at the same time.
[sobs.]
Peter.
Hmm? I think I may know what they're about to do.
They were divorced decades ago.
I think their marriage only lasted about nine years.
What did you think of her? She was a mystery to me.
Her unpredictability, the substance abuse.
Their child had been very sick.
I guess that complicated things.
It would certainly have made it very hard for me.
And what about him? My other.
[exhales.]
I don't know.
I don't - You don't remember? - I never met him.
I heard things.
He was very different from you, apparently.
Different how? He was quite high up in Strategy, and and he was recruited for some special force I can't remember what it was called.
Uh He was a violent man.
I did have glimpses of him.
There was no kindness in his face.
Kindness? Not like you.
So strange you're the same man and yet You preferred me, the way I was? Think I did, yeah.
No.
No? No.
I think this is better.
I prefer you as you are now.
I think this is [sighs.]
I used to run all the time, and this was something that I ran to, to get out of my skin.
She had her substance abuse, and I had this whole other world.
But I don't need it anymore.
We know each other.
We see each other.
And I don't feel I have to protect you.
[chuckles softly.]
I can do what I ought to have done a long time ago.
No, Emily.
You don't have to do that.
No, but I ought to.
Even though it hurts.
Is this your writing? It's just one of those stupid exercises.
No.
No, no, no.
Emily.
I don't even know what it says.
- I - Emily, this is code.
EMILY PRIME: I never brought Anna here.
- Never.
- It was my wife? - She was over here? - Yeah.
I only found out about that a few days ago.
She just slipped into your life.
Well, it was easy enough, wasn't it? I was in and out of rehab.
You can imagine how attentive Howard was.
Couldn't even protect my own child.
What kind of person does that? Impersonates a mother.
Tells a child not to tell her family.
All for her own gratification.
I've spent so many years feeling guilty, thinking she must be the better person.
No, she is not.
But she's the one that I deserve.
You know, that night when she was hit by the car she told me she had to drop off some dry cleaning.
I knew she was lying.
I always knew.
But I didn't say anything.
Well, that makes sense.
Howard caught me marking chalk signals on street signs.
That was the beginning of the end.
I saw that.
I saw that, too.
But I didn't say anything.
I never said anything.
I was always so afraid.
[scoffs.]
It's like he said to me: How much denial does it take? [sighs.]
I am so tired of always being afraid.
This'll be over soon.
We just need to figure out Mira's next move.
No.
Yanek was right.
I need to do what I should have done at the very beginning.
I need to make a deal with Management.
What? Management just tried to kill us.
Because they don't trust us.
Because they know I've been protecting her, like always.
She's the one who can't be trusted.
I need to make a deal.
And I need to go back.
And I need to say things to her that I should have said long ago.
- EMILY SILK: What is that? - HOWARD PRIME: That is nothing.
EMILY SILK: Maybe it is all just gibberish.
No, trust me.
I was in Interface for about way too long.
I-I know code when I see it.
This is the classic structure of a two-part cipher.
Is there any other way of translating it? Yeah, many.
Uh, it could correspond to a book.
A book? Maybe maybe the library book? Maybe The Tin Drum? You wouldn't use that same book for two purposes.
So you learned that in Interface, as well, did you? No, uh, no, it's just a guess.
But it sounds right, doesn't it? [laughs.]
Yeah, very plausible.
So, a book.
Shall we try shall we try Rilke? That's one of your favorites.
Okay.
Explain it to me.
Well, there's always a key.
Sometimes you know it already.
Wait, wait, wait.
Ah.
Right.
Okay, so, each letter has a numerical value, and then you divide into groups of three.
Page, line, word.
- So page 43.
- Uh-huh.
EMILY SILK: Line four.
And the first letter of that word.
"N.
" "O.
" We may be onto something.
- EMILY SILK: Okay.
- PRIME: North.
- One, two, three, four.
- "U.
" Two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine.
Two, three.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think we're getting somewhere.
Do apostrophes count? Apostrophes don't count.
Three, four, five, six, seven.
PRIME: There's a space in there - that we're missing.
- Four, five.
This one's a digit.
Is that it? Yeah, it wants to be an address, I think, but it's-it's not, uh, it's not quite right.
Close.
Uh, "trombone dances in" Maybe "west"? West holiday? Of course.
Nordufer.
Nordufer 85.
- So we did it? - Yeah, we did.
[laughs.]
I love you so much.
I love you, too.
I haven't heard you say that since I woke up.
I wanted to be sure you remembered me.
You used to say it all the time.
I wasn't sure if it was because you meant it or it was just just out of habit.
I mean it.
I'd really like it if you didn't sleep in the little room tonight.
[dialing phone.]
Hi, Ian.
We're ready to turn ourselves in.
But I want a deal for Howard.
I saw them unloading some crates.
They were preparing for something, and they would've done it down here.
QUAYLE: What is this? Peter.
That's one of the crates.
Look at this.
They've been testing it for years.
Trying to get the symptoms right.
Testing what? A flu virus.
This is how she restores the balance.
She subjugates your world like your world subjugated ours.
So-where is this flu virus? I have no idea.
It could be anywhere.
We have to We have to tell the Office.
[door opens.]
[phone buzzing.]
[phone chimes.]
BALDWIN: It's me.
I want you to know Indigo is coming.
For her.
[men whispering in German.]
[both grunting.]
[choking.]
[Prime panting.]
Where's my husband? He's on the other side.
Get your things and get out.
Emily, please.
I swear to God I will shoot you where you stand.
Now get out.
[knocking on door.]
[knocking continues.]
Peter.
I'm so sorry for coming to your home like this, but there is something about to happen, and I need your help.
No, I've had enough of this.
Just I know it's hard to believe me.
- Impossible, actually.
- Let me say one thing.
Naya, this is my wife.
Shadow.
[Baby Spencer fusses.]

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