Homicide: Life on the Street s05e05 Episode Script

M.E., Myself and I

Way down South where I make my stop They do a dance down there called the Georgia Slop They all hang out at Peg Leg Lee's And they don't give a hoot about no police Clocked you going at 85, ma'am.
Ma'am? Now, do I really look like a "ma'am" to you? No, ma'am.
Licence and registration, please.
The address isn't right.
I moved to town a week ago.
Note the date of birth.
Registration please.
I came here for a job.
I'll be working very closely with the Police Department.
Let me guess.
Highway Safety? No.
I'm the new Chief Medical Examiner.
Ah.
Let me be the first to welcome you to Baltimore.
Well, now I know why they call this place Charm City.
You think I'm charming, wait till you meet the guys in Homicide.
Ma'am.
Move like a chicken when he's scratching in the sand - Nice little pop stand you got here.
- You can get set up in "The Box".
I have access to your entire staff if necessary? If necessary.
You see that guy? He's FBI.
Oh, that's the grand inquisitor that they got on your case.
The man looks intense.
The FBI hasn't been the same since Hoover died.
They haven't found the right man to fill his bra.
He'll be talking to you, trying to come up with stuff for the bribery investigation.
Don't worry about it.
Munch and I got your back, don't we, Munchkin? I've never been interrogated by the Feds.
I'm liable to tell 'em that Kellerman kidnapped the Lindbergh baby.
- Thanks.
Thanks a lot.
- Yeah, have a good life.
What, you have a lovers' spat? I should've listened to you, cos I shouldn't have let him stay at my place.
Now I see why he got evicted.
- Did he foul up the bathroom? - No, it's worse.
This morning, he tried to get intellectually stimulating.
Ever talk about Nietzsche over a Pop-tart? - Kay? - Yes, sir.
There is FBI agent, Thomas Pandolfi, in the Box.
He's going to be interviewing people about Kellerman.
Right here in the Squad Room? Why not IAD? I didn't want them to disrupt us, so they can do their interviews here.
Now, get in there.
You're up first.
- Be helpful and courteous as possible.
- You're kiddin', right? Lieutenant.
Did he say anything that you could share with me? - No.
- He didn't or you can't share it? Mike, I don't like these FBI people snooping around either.
So just ignore him, do your job and relax.
Right.
Bayliss, Homicide.
You wanna settle up your bar tab now, Mikey, just in case you have to leave town suddenly? I'm goin' to Middlebranch Park.
Anyone coming? Sometimes there's a guy that sells hot pretzels.
- I'll drive, you buy.
- OK.
- You want me to stick around? - No, that's fine.
I've got Munch for moral support.
- You have a very impressive record.
- Well, thank you.
My lieutenant told me to be courteous, but I think this interview's about Kellerman? It is.
Mostly.
Detective Kellerman is suspected by the US Attorney of taking bribes when he was on the Arson Unit.
I just have a few questions about his work habits.
I'd like you to answer them as honestly as you can.
Tell me, do you two socialise? We might've had a drink at The Waterfront, a bar we all go to.
- Have you ever dated? - Er I'm his co-worker, his supervisor.
You dated er Assistant State's Attorney Edward Danvers, right? If you know I went out with Ed Danvers, you probably also know I never dated Kellerman.
How is Detective Kellerman's closure rate? It's er pretty good.
I don't have the numbers with me, but I can get them.
- What about his work habits? - He comes into work on time.
He doesn't put in OT unless he needs to.
Er what do you wanna know? - Do his socks match? - Do they? Look, you're just doin' your job, I understand, but You see me as the enemy.
I'm just trying to get at the truth.
- Isn't that always your goal, Sergeant? - Yes.
Do you have any reason to believe Detective Kellerman might've thrown a murder case for a payoff? No, I do not.
You see how easy that was? - What, I can go? - Anytime you like.
Fine.
If you need me, I'll be out there, working.
- Sergeant Howard? - Hmm? I love your hair.
- Hey, Sergeant.
How'd that go? - Oh, fine I think.
Hey, Frank.
You takin' a break? - I'm searching futilely.
- "Baltimore Magazine", my favourite.
I can already tell you where the best calamari is.
It's at Victor's.
L-I'm I got an a-anniversary coming up tomorrow and, you know, Mary, she's been terrific through this whole thing.
L-I need to find someplace special for her, you know er All a woman ever really wants is romance.
You could take her out to a fancy hash house, buy her gems that sparkle, but the moment she's really waiting for is back home, flickering candlelight, satin sheets.
- Trust me.
- Trust me, he says.
- You don't trust me? - You've been married three times.
Exactly.
The point being, all told, I've had seven anniversaries.
Well, eight if you count the time I slept with Gwen after we divorced.
Guys think they've got the sexual appetites, but let me tell you, the older a woman gets, the more ravenous she becomes.
Want to make your wife happy tomorrow? Stay in bed.
- What you got for us? - Looks like a working woman.
- Expired licence reads Steffi Hammett.
- A professional, huh? Yeah, she worked on her back, died on her stomach.
A Joe who sells hot pretzels found her.
Pretzels? I need to talk to him.
Her underwear are gone.
We're searching for 'em now.
- Where's the ME? - Supposedly on their way.
Hey, you wanna canvas the area and see if anyone saw anything? Thanks.
Bayliss, I'll be damned if I'm gonna stand around here waitin' for an ME.
- I suggest we start on her.
- Yeah.
Oh There you go.
What, there are no street signs in this city? - Juliana Cox from the ME's Office.
- Hi.
I'm Lewis, this is Bayliss.
- That's young Jimmy Olsen.
- Brodie.
Somethin' happen to Scheiner or Dyer? No.
I'm the new Chief Medical Examiner.
Chief? Since when do you make house calls? Dead body, ME, that's kinda how it works, right? The old Chief never showed up unless the person was famous or important maybe.
Yeah, well, new Chief, new rules.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Why is her face damp? Lewis just rolled her over.
Just rolled her over? As in moved her? I didn't exactly drain her blood.
Word of warning, Detective.
Ever touch anything dead before an ME is on the scene, I'll drain your blood, is that understood? Well Word of warning, Bayliss.
I'm gonna talk to the pretzel man.
All right.
Go.
There are abrasions on her neck contusions on her arms and legs.
No obvious sign of trauma, but it looks like a strangulation.
OK.
Hey! We found him sleepin' in the woods over there.
When we woke him, he took off.
These were in his pocket.
Missing underwear.
What's your name? Bob.
B-B-Bob Thompson.
Er l-I see you found Steffi.
S-S-She was a real nice girl.
- Do you know this woman? - Whoa-whoa! Listen, you take care of the dead, we'll talk to the suspects, OK? - Yeah, fair enough.
- OK.
How do you know her first name? She she told me just before I killed her.
- You killed her? - Yeah.
I I strangled her to death.
- What have you got? - Dead prostitute, Middlebranch Park.
- Er l-I killed her.
- What do you want from me, applause? Excuse me, gentlemen? I'd like Detective Lewis next.
Where am I supposed to interview my suspect? - Down the hall in 2-11.
- That's the boiler room? Yeah.
Take him down there.
Boiler room.
Kellerman, where d'you think you're going? - Me? I'm I'm just thinking.
- The Observation Room is off limits.
Yeah, I know.
L-I wouldn't go anywhere near the Observation Room.
Good.
Spend time with Kellerman? Some.
- Been invited to this new boat of his? - Yeah.
Ah, Ocean Sports Fisherman, mint condition.
That's an expensive piece of property.
Any idea how he makes the payments on a policeman's salary? I guess he took out a mortgage like Most mooks don't buy a mansion.
It's not a yacht we're talkin' here.
It's a fishin' boat.
He lives on board.
He takes people rockfishing and around the Inner Harbour.
Pretty free with his money? Buy lots of clothes? I wouldn't exactly call Kellerman a fashion victim.
- Big drinker? - Beer now and again, a Jim Beam shot.
- What about drugs? He do any? - No.
- Not around you, anyway.
- Agent Pandolfi I work a lot of drug murders in my line of work, talk to a lot of dope fiends.
I could spot a dope sweat from half a block away.
Mikey's clean.
- You consider yourself his friend? - We're partners.
- You know how that works.
- That isn't what I asked you.
- Yeah, we're friends.
- So maybe you'd protect him.
Now, let's cut the crap, all right? Cos if that was even remotely true, why in hell would I be in here with you? Last February, you and Detective Kellerman were responsible for transporting a murderer, a Miss er Rose Halligan.
- Oh, God! - Yeah.
From Hazleton, Pennsylvania to Baltimore.
While in your custody, she escaped and killed somebody else.
You were reprimanded by Giardello, but allowed to remain in Homicide.
What's that got to do with this? He was aware of the circumstances.
As I would be if I had all the facts! I'm not asking you to interpret Kellerman's actions, but to answer honestly.
So you can decide his guilt or innocence? So a jury can decide! What are you afraid of? - Not you.
- Glad to hear that.
So if Kellerman is without sin, you'd be able to tell me anything? - Nobody's without sin.
- Agreed.
I'm just trying to determine whether Kellerman's are mortal or just venial.
All right.
What do you want to know? - Hey, Scheiner.
- Bayliss.
- I'm lookin' for Cox.
You seen her? - She'll be back.
So what's your take on her? Cox? She's a pain in the ass, but she's easy on the eyes.
- Hmm.
I'm sure she'd be flattered.
- I'm sure she wouldn't.
- Wouldn't what? - Oh, I'm going to lunch.
He's a real charmer.
There's one in every morgue.
What can I do for you? This Thompson, I couldn't get him to shut up.
Gives me all the grisly details of Steffi Hammett's murder, then he confessed to the murder of yet another prostitute.
He says he dumped her in Middlebranch about two months ago.
Busy fellow.
What seems to be the problem? This other prostitute isn't on "The Board".
No record of her body.
No open case.
I can't figure out who he means.
- Two months ago, huh? - Well, I don't know.
He could be lying.
And so you want me to? To dig through your records, see if you can find another woman? - Oh, you actually want my help? - Yeah.
Because earlier I got the impression you didn't want my help.
Oh, no, no.
You got the wrong impression, Doctor.
I think that you'll find that we of the Homicide Unit constantly look to the wonderful staff of the Medical Examiner's Office for their er knowledge and expertise.
- Hmm.
I'll call you if I find anything.
- We do.
- Frank? - Dr MacDonald.
Er is everything all right? Er l-l-I called your office.
They said y-y-you were still at home.
Y-you got a minute? I'm late, if you don't mind walking me to the car.
No, no.
Tomorrow's my er my wedding anniversary, m-mine and Mary's, 10 years.
There's somethin' somethin' I wanna er do for her, sort of er s-s-sort of as a er as a surprise.
- Well, how can I help? - Um, I want to er I wanna I wanna s-stop, stop takin' my blood pressure medication, so s-s-so that so we can have sex.
Impotence is a common side effect of all blood pressure medication.
L-l-I know.
If-if-if-if I were to s-stop takin' my-my medication You can't go on and off the Losartan.
I'm sorry.
Y-y-you know h-h-how how hard it is f-f-for me to talk about this, t-t-to come down here? Huh? T-t-to be told that y-you can't make love to the to the to the woman that you that you love m-maybe for the r-rest of your? You have you have any-any-any idea, how this how this makes me feel? It takes 24 hours for the Losartan to leave the blood stream.
If, by chance, you happen to forget your medication tonight, well, maybe you and your wife can celebrate tomorrow.
But if you want to see your eleventh anniversary, I'd hop on that pill the next morning.
Th-th-thank you thank you very much.
I appreciate that.
- Hey.
What happened with Pandolfi? - Ah, piece of cake.
He got nothin'.
Whatever he tried to make somethin' out of, I shot down.
- Like what? - Oh, like the VCR you sold Munch.
Wait you told him about the VCR? He brought it up, I explained.
What did you explain? Mikey, if the worst thing they got on you is you takin' home that damn VCR, you ain't got no worries.
He didn't even care.
What makes you think he doesn't care? He told me so.
- And you believed him? - Yeah.
He just played you for a sucker, cos you fell for tricks that the most brain-dead smokehound wouldn't go for.
You were supposed to be watching my back.
Some partner! You're nervous, Mikey, so I'm gonna let that pass.
Hey! Dr Cox, what are you doin' here? - Lookin' for you.
- Why didn't you call before you came? I need to call you before I drop by Homicide? Hey.
Hey.
Last time we had a Chief ME visit around here was We never had a Chief ME visit around here.
- You got something for me, Doc? - Yeah, I do, as a matter of fact.
Another prostitute was brought in, two months ago.
Amy Introcaso.
Exactly the same circumstances.
The case was handled by a Detective Willard Higby.
Higby.
He got the ME to pend cause of death till the toxicology report came back.
A month later it did and showed signs of cocaine and heroin in the body.
- She OD'd? - No, levels weren't that high.
A-ha, but the ME signed off on it as an OD? That's what the file says.
This is very good coffee.
- I have got to talk to Higby.
- I wouldn't mind a word with him myself.
Well, his shift starts in five minutes.
You want to stick around? - Hey.
- Hey.
- Got big plans tonight? - Nah, no.
Barbara's cookin'.
- Sounds good.
- Not really.
I don't know if I ever mentioned this before, but in 1992 I won 4th prize at the Maryland State Fair chilli cook-off.
- 4th prize, huh? - Mm-hm.
You're a man of many talents, Brodie.
Want me to come over tonight and cook? No.
It's beer chilli with white meat chicken, three kinds of beans, chunks of tomatoes.
Well, come on.
Before Barbara reheats her tofu meatloaf.
Tofu? Tofu? Hey, Higby.
Just the guy we're lookin' for.
- We, meaning you and? - Juliana Cox.
The new body snatcher.
What you doin' in Homicide? Did you hear about the prostitute that we found in Middlebranch Park? No, Tom Brokaw didn't mention it.
It seems that this guy killed another hooker about two months ago, whose name was Amy Introcaso.
He dumped her in the park, too.
You had the case, but you called it an overdose.
And? And I got the toxicology report, and the levels were too low for an overdose.
What do you want from me? How'd you get an M E to sign off on this? - You knew it was a homicide.
- Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.
I had six open cases at the time, people whose families cared that they were dead.
Nobody showed up to identify her.
And who cares anyway? She was only a hooker.
So I guess you would've done the same for me, right? Cos I used to be a hooker.
Wait.
Hey, Doc? You were you were a hooker? No, Bayliss.
Here.
No, I could not stand that hypocritical worm taking a high moral tone.
Where I come from, every single death matters, regardless of job description.
And where are you from, Doctor? Good night, Detective.
Good night.
Munch.
You're three sheets to the wind.
Actually, I'm only two and a half sheets to the wind, so just pour it in there.
All right.
I'm only doing this cos you walk home, you pathetic mess.
Ah, you're a saint.
- Hey, Mike.
It's your Pops.
- Well, tell him I'm not here.
- I already told him you were here.
- Fine.
Tell him I left! Mr Kellerman, Mike's left for the airport.
- You haven't told your family? - No.
Well, you should really talk to your family, because they come in handy Look, I'm just hopin' this whole thing's gonna blow over before they find out.
So, she says to me, if you feel Oh, jeez! Well, well, well, look who we got here.
Munch, you know Bob Connelly? Bob and me used to work together at Arson, and now we're being investigated for bribery.
- What's goin' on? - I don't want any trouble.
Oh, there's no trouble.
Come on.
Munch, pour this man a beer, and put it on my tab.
Listen to me, you and me, Goodman and Pires, we gotta stick together.
- Like we did in Arson together, right? - Right, right, right.
The FBI, have they been sniffin' around, pryin' into your personal life? - Yeah.
- Oh It's fun, isn't it? Here, have a beer.
All right, come on! All right, that's it! Break it up! Come on! Come on! You want more? Hey! Hey, Bobby! You want nuts with that, huh? - You want nuts? - Mike, come on! Back off, OK? - Everything OK? - Does it smell like meat burning? - No.
- Then I guess everything's OK.
- Hey, hey! - All right, baby Get outta here.
It'll be ready soon.
Little man's got it goin' on in the kitchen.
Me and you can get goin' on right here.
Oh? Game's on the line.
Hoop's good.
- Well, here's to us then.
- Yeah.
You don't mind havin' Brodie stay over? - Not at all.
- Ah, you're the best, babe.
Give me some sugar.
Oh, come on, baby.
Let tonight be our night, huh? Come here.
Mmm Ahem! Mr and Mrs Lewis, your dinner is served.
Come and get it.
Better be good, Brodie.
Better be good, better be good.
- Mom? - Hi, Juliana.
Hey.
How is he? You know.
The doctor come by? What'd he say? Same thing he's been saying since it started, "Josiah belongs in the hospital.
" I said to the doctor, "Get him in a hospital? "I can't even get him to lie down in bed.
" - Dinner? - No, thanks.
Maybe a bit later, OK? - Sweetheart.
- Hi.
Hiya, Pop.
You should be in bed.
No, no, no.
You are not gonna get any better behaving like this, you know? I'm not going to die.
I will not.
Lord, thank you for the blessings you bestow upon us daily.
We'd like to thank you for the love you bring into our hearts and for this delicious meal we're about to eat.
You're welcome.
Amen! - Amen.
Sorry.
- Amen is right.
I'm starvin'.
- Mmm.
- Mmm.
Mmm, Brodie.
Hey, this is good.
- Hmm.
Do you like it? - This really is excellent.
I haven't eaten this good in weeks.
- That's Teddy Pendergrass.
- Yeah, that's Teddy, all right.
- You like him? - Who doesn't? Barbara.
I like Teddy Pendergrass.
I don't like the painting.
All right, Brodie.
You're an artist, you're the filmmaker.
- What's your unbiased opinion? - Well No offence, JH.
His opinion isn't important.
This is my home.
The painting's ugly.
You didn't say it was ugly when it was in my home, hangin' over my bed.
Cos that was your bachelor's pad.
Nothing looked good together, so it fit.
In here, it's dated and completely out of place.
You know, sometimes retro just means bad taste, you know? My Jimmie "Dy-no-mite" Walker poster, my collection of blaxploitation films, my set of original Playboy coasters all out in the trash.
Teddy Pendergrass is the reason why I lost my virginity.
This is the last link I have with my past.
But velvet has an incredible depth to it that you can't get with canvas.
Yeah.
If you and me have a future, the painting goes.
So it's that simple, huh? Huh? Either the painting goes or you go? Do you really need time to make that decision, Meldrick? Hey I hope you and Teddy are very happy together.
Thanks a lot, Brodie.
- Good morning.
- Good morning, Doctor Rivlin.
- Whoa, look at that suit.
- It's Italian.
My one weakness.
Hey.
Could you help clear something up for me? - Why'd you sign off on this case? - Introcaso I don't remember it.
Really? It's about two months ago, a prostitute found in Middlebranch Park.
Her toxicology numbers were low, but you marked it down as an overdose? Once in a while, someone needs a favour.
If I can, I'm happy to oblige.
Now, Higby is a good man.
We all play for the same team, right? I don't know, do we? I'm taking the stairs.
Are you going to make a big to-do out of this? I don't know.
Am I? Look, I make a nice piece of change as a court-acknowledged expert.
I testified for the defence in the McCallan murders in New York.
And for the prosecution in last year's tourist killings in Miami.
You overturn my ruling, I lose credibility.
- My career would be in trouble.
- That's so funny you should say that.
- Yeah? - Yeah.
Because your career is in trouble.
A matter of fact, it's over.
You're fired, Rivlin.
- Hey, Ed.
How you doin'? - Hi, Kay, Tim.
Fine, thanks.
You? I can't complain.
It's early yet.
- Hey, how are the wedding plans goin'? - Oh, pretty good, I guess.
Meryl suggests two options, I pick one, and she goes with the other.
The coming joys of marriage.
Whatever happened to the honeymoon? - Ah, jeez.
- What? There's Glenn Nellis from the Public Defender's Office.
He and Meryl had a thing goin' before we got engaged.
- Hi, Ed.
- Glenn.
You know Sergeant Howard and Detective Bayliss.
Yeah.
Hey, Bayliss? I'm defending Bob Thompson on those two dead whores.
- I'm going to talk to him now.
- It's fairly open and shut.
Both women were strangled, and Thompson signed a confession.
Well, that's gonna make this all the more fun.
Later on.
OK, Glenn.
God, I hate that guy.
Hello! Hello, hello! - Hello, hello! - Aren't we chipper this morning? - Anniversaries bring out the best in you.
- Uh-huh.
- Figured out how you'll celebrate? - Yup.
- Gonna tell me? - Nope.
- But you do have plans? - I got big plans.
- What's wrong with him? - Ah, he's engulfed by demons.
Lieutenant, please, sit down.
You didn't get enough information yesterday? - I didn't get any information yesterday.
- Pity.
So what can you tell me about Detective Kellerman's personal life? Absolutely nothing.
- Nothing? - Nothing you don't already know.
He's from Baltimore, he's divorced, he lives on a boat.
Can you think of any reason Kellerman has need of large sums of money? - Yes, it's a very good reason.
- Which is? I know how much he makes, barely enough to make a living.
I'm sure he'd like to make more money, but wouldn't we all? Detective Kellerman taken any exotic trips lately? Ha-ha! Exotic trips? Ha! No.
Not unless you count the mall in Towson.
You're a funny man, Al.
May I call you Al? No, you may not.
- Is Kellerman a good cop? - Yes, if I'm any judge of character.
Well, I guess that's the ultimate question.
Are you? You had a Detective Crosetti, committed suicide, and according to your own report, you were unaware of his depression.
- What's your point? - You're an intelligent man, figure it out.
You're saying I don't know my own men! Though I don't want to believe it, Kellerman might be guilty.
- Isn't that what you're saying? - Lieutenant Before I joined the Bureau, I worked in Homicide Squad in Omaha, Nebraska.
Why is it that guys in Homicide, more than any other unit, have so many skeletons in their closet? Lieutenant, how'd that go? It went.
- Is that good or bad? - Did you make the coffee yet? What? I'm just tryin' to picture you in a Foreign Legion uniform.
- Did you hear something? - About you? No.
Then what are you lookin' at.
Mikey, you're walkin' around here lookin' like a guilty man.
- You don't look so innocent yourself.
- What do you mean? How come you're in the same clothes as yesterday? - Ask Brodie.
- We need to talk.
- What's up? - The Bob Thompson case.
Someone tipped off Nellis about the overdose ruling on Introcaso.
He can walk in front of a jury and imply Hammett was also an overdose.
Is there a toxicology screen on her yet? Yeah.
We'll have a verbal confirmation in a few days.
- Get them to rush it.
- Well, why? Thompson confessed.
He just rescinded.
Nellis says Thompson's homeless, confused, needed proper medication, the usual Bill of Rights shuffle.
If the screen's positive on Hammett, then Thompson's back out on the street.
We found her panties in his pocket.
You need more evidence? YOU need more evidence.
I need a clone.
If I were a Homicide detective, I know what I'd be doin' now.
What's that, Frank? I'd be heading over to Potter's Field with a good shovel.
It's time for this er Int-lntrocaso to rise from the dead.
- That's just what I was gonna - We were on our way.
Nice day for a resurrection.
- You didn't have to come here yourself.
- I know.
I've got a thing for cemeteries.
- Really? - Oh, sure.
History, mortality.
The futility of what we worry about all day.
It puts it all in perspective, kind of cheers me up.
- Ah.
- I feel a chuckle comin' on myself.
Styrofoam.
Might as well've wrapped her in tin foil.
Lucky she didn't end up at the State Anatomy Board, which is where we usually ship the unclaimed.
Damn, mmm.
Man, oh man! How are they gonna get her back in there once they're done with her? Be very careful, you guys.
Detective Kellerman, can I see you for a moment? - You want me to sit? - Uh, no.
- Do you want to ask some questions? - No.
- Then what? - I need you to take a drug test.
A drug test? Yeah, just go up to Medical.
They'll walk you through it.
I don't want to take a drug test.
It's humiliating.
You don't want to take a drug test because it's humiliating? My confidence in you grows by the moment.
The more you poke around, the worse I look.
If you probe every detail of someone's life, anyone's life, you're gonna come with stuff that looks dirty.
It doesn't make any sense.
Even you, Pandolfi.
Me, more than others, Detective.
I've been in my share of bar fights.
But as a law enforcement officer, you know as well as anyone, certain procedures have to be followed.
Do yourself a favour and go up to Medical.
- Kellerman? - Yeah.
Second door on your right.
Let me know when you're finished.
Hi, Mom Yeah.
Actually, are you and Dad gonna be home tonight? No, there's just something I wanna talk the two of you about.
Olivia's asleep.
Babysitter's gone.
- That was a fabulous restaurant.
- Mm-hm.
- Happy anniversary.
- Thank you.
You nervous? I don't I don't know I don't know w-what I am.
Frank, this doesn't matter.
It-it-it matter it matters to me.
It matters to me! You know, I didn't mean that.
It matters to me, too.
I know.
Mmm.
You unzip me? Yeah.
- Bayliss, the ME's Lab sent this.
- Oh, yeah.
I'm surprised Cox didn't come down here herself.
Autopsy report of the first prostitute, Amy Introcaso.
- Oh, yeah? - Yeah.
OK, Cox found a small fracture to the hyoid bone.
There was a haemorrhage to the tissue surrounding the back.
- Ah, occurred prior to death.
- Which means she was strangled.
Which means Thompson is a double murderer.
Higby! Your ass is mine.
Oh, screw you, Bayliss.
Hey? Workin' late? No, I'm just waiting for the funeral home to pick up.
Oh.
You don't have lackeys to do that for you? What do you need, Detective? What, can't show up down at the Morgue without an invitation? I wanted to thank you for your help on the Introcaso and Hammett murders.
- Just doin' my job.
- Yeah.
Not a lot of MEs would've gone the extra mile.
- They will from now on.
- Good.
You know, I want to ask you a question.
- Sure.
- Yeah.
Why does someone become an ME? You mean, like was I called by God or something? You know, it's bad enough, the job that I do, but you're down here, cuttin' up body parts, smellin' formaldehyde.
You know, how do you deal with that day in, day out? Er sometimes I drive too fast.
Sometimes I drink too much.
Sometimes I fall madly in love with the wrong men.
That sounds healthy.
- My dad always said live life to the full.
- So what brings you to Baltimore? How do you know I wasn't here all along? - Ah, because I checked you out.
- Oh.
Yeah.
I like to know the people that I'm workin' with.
- I guess you didn't check well enough.
- Oh? I was raised here, but I've been working up in Buffalo for the past few years.
Oh.
Yeah, I came back because my dad took sick, and I wanted to be with him, help my mom out.
- Is your dad alive? - No.
- How'd he die? - I er Does it matter? No, I guess not.
Gone is gone, whether it's cancer or, I don't know, a falling safe.
That's the truth.
We're here to pick up a body? Cox? Uh-huh.
Are you with the family? I'm his daughter.
Sign here.
It's this one.
Er could you wait a second, please? Oh OK, OK.
We'll be ready with the viewing the first thing tomorrow.
OK.
Juliana I'm really sorry.
Yeah, it's been quite a day, hasn't it? You know, if there's anything I can do Yeah.
No, I'm OK, Bayliss.
I'm OK.
Yeah, formaldehyde You never do get used to it.
No disappointment In heaven No weariness Sorrow or pain No hearts That are bleeding or broken What a joy that will be When my Saviour I see In that beautiful city of gold
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