Homicide: Life on the Street s06e08 Episode Script

All is Bright

You're upset.
I'm not.
- Embarrassed? - Stu, I'm fine with it, really.
I don't understand why would anyone call me your wife.
- She thought we were married maybe.
- Us? We eat at Jimmy's three times a week, always the two of us.
I'm a man and you're a woman, she's our waitress.
So? - So she made a natural assumption.
- She should mind her own business.
I don't know what's bothering you.
I would think you'd be flattered.
Oh, I'm too old to be your husband, is that it? I'm too fat? I'm a slob? I spill gravy on my pants, is that why you'd never marry me? Give it a rest.
Cos I never said I'd never marry you.
Y-y-you mean you would? I mean would you? - Sure.
- Really? Yes, Stu, I would marry you.
I would love you and I would live with you until death or divorce do us part, all right? - All right.
- OK, I'm gonna go in.
The victim's name is Phillip Longley.
Date of birth 4/7/67.
He left this on top of the dryer.
Still a couple of twenties inside.
- Rules out robbery.
- His neck is broken.
Hey! I give the diagnosis around here if you don't mind.
- Go ahead.
- His neck is broken.
Got your murder weapon there.
Someone hits him over the head with a gallon of liquid detergent and he hits the machine on the way down.
I'll have that processed for prints.
- Who found the body? - Cordelia Evans.
She owns this place and she stepped outside for some air.
- Want me to talk to Miss Evans? - I'll go, honey.
- What was that all about? - Don't ask.
Why is a Jewish boy like me kneeling in front of the altar of Donner & Blitzen? Christmas isn't even a Christian holiday any more, it's all about retail.
Boy you are so cynical, Munch.
We're putting the spit-shine on our bar here to get money from the Christmas crowd celebrating the birth of our saviour.
Hopefully visiting us in our humble inn and knocking back a few brewskies.
Your saviour, not mine.
John, it's the spirit of things, it's the gesture that counts.
- Gesture! - Yeah, Billie Lou's right.
All of us working for the common good, sharing our burdens, sharing our joy.
If we don't get some crowd in here tomorrow night, some drinkers drowning out their Christmas blues, we won't have any floors to scrub.
Yeah, listen, I'm out of here guys.
- What do you mean? - Christmas shopping.
To beat the rush.
Seen those bathrooms? I've seen mangers that are cleaner.
Well, if Bayliss is gonna bail, I might as well get out of here, too.
Me, too, I gotta get a present for my mother.
What is this, John Munch's one-man rag-mount band? Finish mopping up this floor, do the bathroom.
I'll do the kitchen when I get back.
Sure, OK.
Have a merry time, buying your pretty little presents.
Let the Yid stay behind, clean the toilets.
Munch, you gonna make some poor orphan a nice Jewish mother some day.
Chosen people! Ha! OK, boyo.
If I knew that you scrubbed floors, I wouldn't have filed for divorce so fast.
- I'll be damned.
- Is that any way to greet your ex-wife? First my partners leave me to wallow in ammonia, then you appear out of thin air.
I went by the police station, they told me where to find you.
Boy, you own a bar now.
That doesn't seem like you.
- Excuse me? - I never did know what to make of you.
Well, a husband sure wasn't the answer.
Gwen, what the hell are you doing here? My mom died.
I took the train up from New York this morning.
I'm sorry.
- Really? - Of course not.
Your mum loathed me and I loathed her back.
- She didn't loathe you.
- She despised me! - No.
- She disliked me.
OK, maybe loathe is the word.
We've reached the innermost circle of the semantic hell.
What in God's name do you want from me, Gwen? Your help.
The only way I can see myself being of use to you is if your mother - What? - Foul play, a suspicious death.
- Some cruelty, maybe violence.
- Sorry to disappoint.
She died in her sleep, heart attack.
You win some, you lose some.
- You knew the victim, Miss Evans? - He's in here every couple of weeks.
Mr Longley liked to do his washing early morning when the machines are free.
- What time did Mr Longley come? - About 6:30.
- Just me and him.
- Mm-hm.
Did you see what happened? No.
Sir.
Like I said, the place was empty.
Mr Longley needed quarters for the dryer.
I go in the back to make change and when I come out he's dead on the floor.
I say, did you know you got gravy stains on your pants? - Yeah, I know.
- Well, those are murder to get out.
Excuse me, Miss, I'm looking for eight lords a-leaping.
- Hey, Bayliss.
- How you doing? - Good.
- You Christmas shopping, too? Well, I'm trying to.
I figure if I get a gift today I might just make it.
Yeah, good plan.
Except my mother is impossible and we have exactly opposite tastes.
She always accuses me of buying stuff for myself and trying to give it to her.
- What do you think about this? - That's beautiful.
Yeah, I think so, too.
I actually love it.
You do? Well, that means she'll hate it, huh? - You do catch on quick! - Yeah, I do.
Well, mother might just have to settle for a gift certificate this year.
- Right.
- See you later.
- Oh, you're leaving, are you? - Yeah, I was gonna go.
OK, good.
Hey, Julianna If you're not busy tomorrow night, stop by the bar.
Yeah, I mean, we're going to have a Yuletide gathering with mirth, joy, trimming the tree, you know, silly stuff.
- Eggnog? - On tap.
- I'll be there.
- You'll be there? - Yeah.
- I'll be there.
All right, OK.
"I'll be there"? Dumb I've got an address on Longley's parents.
Richard and Margaret, - What's that, Irvington? - Catonsville.
Wanna head out? - After we stop by the ME's.
- Cox finished the preliminaries? She called and said she found something, so let's go, honey.
- Did you hear? She called him honey.
- Mm-hm.
- You never call me that.
- In my dreams I do Falsone.
Yeah, I should have caught this at the scene.
I saw the broken neck, I guess I just got lazy.
- Whoa! - What is that, some kind of disease? - A chemical reaction.
- To what? Sodium hypochlorite.
Otherwise known as household bleach.
You see it sometimes in children who swallow all sorts of poison.
Is there anything else in his system? Drugs, alcohol, fabric softener? The lab's running extra tests.
As soon as we hear anything I'll let you know.
All right.
Mr and Mrs Longley? Hello? Mr and Mrs Longley? I'm Detective Gharty, this is my partner, Detective Ballard.
I'm really sorry, sir.
Just last week my neighbour was held up at gunpoint as he got out of his car.
Richard, please.
Round the corner, Mrs Finney, stabbed in the back for $10.
Your son wasn't robbed, Mr Longley.
We found $40 in cash in his wallet.
He may have been the victim of a random crime, but we have to consider other possibilities.
- Did Phillip mention trouble at work? - No.
- Problems with money? - He never had enough.
- Girlfriends? - He always had too many.
How do we get in touch with some of those girlfriends? I'll look for his address book.
You want A through N or O through Z? - Let's go back and get another car.
- You got it.
Phil and I had an open relationship.
You know what I mean? It was cool.
My students loved Phil.
He used to come by and do magic tricks, pull eggs out of their ears.
- How long were you two together? - Three years almost.
Phil only got angry when he was hungry.
- Did he ever hit you? - He threatened to.
But hand him a sandwich, he'd settle down.
When we first got together, he wrote me poems.
- That must have been nice.
- He couldn't rhyme to save his life.
Phillip was wild.
- He was shy.
- I'd say vain.
- Modest.
- Tough.
- Sensitive.
- Shallow.
- Deep.
- An absolute genius.
A complete idiot.
Pick an adjective we got it covered.
Longley's personality was as varied as his choice in partners.
He had quite a selection, marine biologist, 3rd grade teacher, topless dancer.
- Any suspects among them? - Unfortunately no.
Whatever these women thought of him, none had a reason to kill him.
And the detergent bottle? Any fingerprints? - Prints, yes, but no hit.
- And the bleach? There's no doubt it's linked to the death, but as of now it remains a mystery.
I got another one for you, the lab results from your laundromat murder.
Phillip Longley was HIV positive.
- Hey, Mike.
- Julianna.
- Is that the Mahoney file? - Yeah.
Falsone left it on his desk like some exhibit.
I'm gonna whack that guy one day.
OK, I haven't spoken to you since we talked last.
- How did it go for Lewis and Stivers? - How did what go? - Georgia Rae, the videotape? - I haven't told them yet.
- Why not? - I just haven't found the right time.
I figured I'd wait until after Christmas.
And then what, you wait till after New Year's or Valentine's Day? There won't be a right time.
- Talk to them and get it over with.
- Fine.
Russell Baker, Anne Tyler, Gore Vidal, Peter Maas.
For the love of God, this is not a funeral, it's an edition of "Who's Who In America".
My mother wrote some heavy literary criticism for a while there.
- New York publications mostly.
- Oh So I take it that you'll want our largest repose room for the wake? Mm-hm.
- The inlaid mahogany.
- Mm-hm.
- The deluxe floral package? - You bet.
Oh, wow - I can make some adjustments here - Come with me.
Excuse me You wanna cut corners when half the celebs on the East Coast will be here paying their respects? - Family discount - Some other discount but not me.
- Bernie! - No.
- When you had no connections - John.
When you asked your brother the cop to pass on business cards, to make a few quiet suggestions to the relatives of those recently and violently departed, who was there for you, hmm? - You're too kind, Bernie.
- Yeah, a real Mensch.
- What time is Mrs Longley coming? - 4:30.
I'm thinking that you should talk alone, sort of a woman-woman thing.
- It might be easier.
- You're not getting out of this.
Who would've guessed the guy had AIDS.
He didn't have AIDS, he was HIV positive.
- Same thing.
- No, it isn't.
- Detective Gharty? - Mrs Longley.
I'm sorry I'm late.
Did you find out more about Phil? Er did we find out more about Phil? We did, er Why don't we find some place less crowded? Stu! - My son was not a homosexual.
- But he was HIV positive.
- Yes.
- Now how come you didn't tell us? In front of my husband? I kept this from him while Phil was alive.
I'm not going to tell him now he's gone.
Richard couldn't handle it.
- How did you handle it? - The best I could.
For six years, I've spent my savings on his medications.
- First the AZT then this drug cocktail.
- You knew Phil was infected? You knew he had a lot of girlfriends? This didn't concern you? He swore he used protection, that he was always careful.
And I believe that he was.
Except of course with Rita.
- Who's Rita? - Rita Hale.
Isn't she the one who told you Phil was sick? No, we found out Phil was sick from his autopsy and testing his blood.
There's the H.
There is no Hale in your son's address book.
- Rita Hale? - Yeah? I'm Detective Ballard, this is Detective Gharty from Homicide.
- Care to come downtown with us? - You want to talk about Phil Longley? That's correct.
Give me a minute, I gotta freshen up.
Just a sec.
OK, will you follow me? - What's up, Ballard? - Hey, Lewis.
Hi.
- Who's that lady? - Her name's Rita Hale.
- What's wrong with her? - She has AIDS.
- She got AIDS? - Yep.
- You gonna go with her? - Yep.
So Phillip Longley? - You think I killed him, don't you? - You gotta admit you have a motive.
I do.
No, thank you.
See Ballard and Gharty's suspect in the Longley murder? Yeah, she's got nice eyes.
Falsone, you never seen anybody with AIDS? Never.
What's with you? You sat gawking when she went by.
Not me.
I gotta get going to the courthouse.
Lopez trial.
You ain't gotta be there till 4:00.
It's almost 3:30.
Hey, Falsone, you can't catch nothing by breathing the same air.
That's what they say.
Like they thought Thalidomide couldn't cause birth defects.
- Like they thought the world was flat.
- It is flat.
I got a kid, trying to get him back, I'm not taking any chances.
Well, hold on, what do you mean? Trying to get your kid back? I'm suing for custody.
I want more time with Daniel.
The odds are bad enough me being a cop and single.
Oh! You're suing? Talking about lawyers and court cases and the whole judicial bit.
Yeah.
- You talked this over with your ex-wife? - No.
Hey, try and work it out with her first.
You love the kid, she loves the kid, maybe she'll cut you some slack.
You don't know Janine.
- Hey, Falsone? - Yeah? - Clean off your desk this time? - What? I'm walking by, I see Luther's face.
You gonna leave that stuff lying around? A little holiday reading.
- Just put it away when you're done.
- I'm not done.
I'm far from done.
It's bad enough, I don't need the whole squad room looking on.
Is there something in there you don't want them to see? Clean up your mess.
It's not my mess, it's your mess and Stivers' and Meldrick's.
Hey, you gonna take 'em down with you? When I first met Phil Longley, I was practically a virgin.
One year out of Towson State, I'd slept with three guys, maybe four.
I was working as a waitress over at Café Jardin, taking night classes in communications, thinking about moving out West.
Phillip Longley was like a dream come true.
How's that? He was the only other person I knew who put maple syrup on his scrambled eggs.
When I saw that, I fell hard.
We talked marriage, children.
Then there was a blood drive at school.
I gave blood.
About a week later, I get a call from the nurse.
You tested positive.
So I confront Phil.
What do you know, he's positive, too.
Son of a bitch knew before we ever met and never bothered to tell me.
So I ask him to leave, he leaves, that's it.
That's it? Take a good look at me, you can figure out the rest.
My life is over, Detective.
I get sicker and sicker, soon I die.
- Oh, you don't know that.
- Oh, yes, I do.
Doctors say I've got five months maybe.
But they have drugs now.
And people are getting better.
Yeah, you're telling me.
- What do you know? - I read the paper.
Me, too.
"Extra extra drug cocktail cures AIDS.
" "AIDS no longer an epidemic.
" "AIDS can't kill you.
" As far as my life's concerned, they're wrong.
I took their cocktail, Detective.
I swallowed 41 pills a day for over three months.
Did my T cells go up? They went down.
Did my viral load go down? It went up.
Their cocktail works for two thirds of the people who need it, for the rest of us it doesn't do jack.
You know how it feels to pick up "Time Magazine" and read they think medicine can beat this disease? You know how it feels to see Phillip Longley walking down the street looking healthier than ever, beautiful girl on his arm? You're telling me this girl could lift a 64oz bottle and whack a man so hard she knocks him down? She must weigh all of what, 90 lbs? When you're angry, you find the strength.
- We don't know she killed him.
- She admitted it.
- When? - Just then.
He gives her AIDS, she gets sick, he doesn't.
- Push her a bit, she'll finish the story.
- I'm not pushing her.
- We both know she's guilty.
- I don't.
I think she's too weak to have done it.
Admit it, you don't want to go after her because she's sick.
And you want to go after her for exactly the same reason? - What? - Oh, come on! You don't want anything to do with her, you want to lock up her so that she can't breathe on you.
- That's not fair.
- You know what's not fair? What Longley did to her.
Look, all I am saying is, let's forget about the disease for a second.
Let's treat Rita Hale like any other suspect.
Well, we're all set.
Shall we go for some lunch? You know it's gonna be a hell of a night for me.
It's not lost on me how mom was, I know she could be difficult at times.
- I think I brought out the best in her.
- Well, maybe you did.
You got to admit what an extraordinary woman she must have been, to reach the end of her life with so many friends, and so many experiences, so much influence.
She did a number on me and, no offence, I think she did on you, too.
I know she could be difficult on you, but she wasn't like that with all the guys I dated, she actually liked some of them.
Briscoe.
Excuse me? Lenny Briscoe, NYPD, ruddy complexion, greyish hair, shoots a mean eight ball.
You and Lenny in the old hokey-pokey.
He told me about the whole thing.
No big deal, I know you have a soft spot for the thin blue line.
- Stop the car.
- We're both grown-ups.
- Stop the car! - It's just a joke.
- John, I said stop the car.
- It's a joke, I'm just kidding.
Gwen, come on, lighten up! Gwen! Oh, man.
Gwen! Gwen! - How old are you, Detective Ballard? - 29.
Same as me.
- Are you married? - No.
- Boyfriend? - Oh, I had a fiancé in Seattle.
- But we split up.
- That's too bad.
Dating again sucks, doesn't it? I wouldn't know, I'm still new to Baltimore, getting settled, getting used to the new job.
- And you don't go out at all? - Little bit.
Have you slept with anyone? Once or twice.
Let me give you a big, big hint.
Always wear a rubber.
Listen to me, I sound like a public service announcement.
I think they ought to let me do one of those.
They got all them sitcom stars with their fresh TV faces, "Wanna be cool, wear a condom.
" I think they ought to put my mug up there instead.
I'm guaranteed to scare the bejesus out of any kid watching.
He'll run right out and blow his allowance on a whole case full of condoms quicker than you can say Kaposi's sarcoma.
Phil Longley didn't have these.
- You saw him, he looked OK? - Picture of health.
- That made you mad, didn't it? - Yeah.
Pissed you off.
- Do those hurt? - The spots? - Yeah, they look like they hurt.
- Nah.
They're like big freckles or birthmarks really, I can't feel them at all.
That's good.
They are ugly.
I tried to get rid of them once.
I met this lady at the clinic, she was real sick but she didn't have spots.
She told me that with a toothbrush and baking soda they'd fade away.
Tell us about yesterday morning, Rita.
- You followed Phil to the laundromat.
- What? Where were you yesterday morning? I was at the downtown athletic club, swimming laps and lifting weights.
I was where I always am, Detective, in bed at home.
- I told you, I don't get out much.
- I know, I know.
- We're trying to figure what happened.
- Phil Longley got killed.
- You had reason to kill him.
- Will you admit that much? It's not much to admit.
Sure I had reason.
- And a jury will know that.
- What jury? Put you on the stand, they see what Longley did to you - You won't have to explain.
- Explain what? It's OK.
You tell us what happened and I promise you it's gonna be OK.
Don't tell me it's going to be OK, Detective.
Nothing's OK.
I'm still going to die.
That's what you thought when you went after Longley.
It's OK if I do this, it's OK if they catch me, I'll be dead soon.
You hated him.
You couldn't stand to see him being healthy, knowing he was gonna live another 10, 20 years.
That's not fair, right? So you gather up the last bit of strength that you have and you followed him to the laundromat.
Is that how it happened? Is it, Rita? Poor people people with no money, no insurance, would don't read "Time Magazine" get told a healthy dose of bleach would clean out the virus.
So they go down to their basements and down half a bottle and end up in the emergency room sick as dogs.
You poured bleach down Phillip Longley's throat? You hit him on the head with the bottle of detergent.
Phillip Longley murdered me.
I murdered Phillip Longley Wouldn't you have done the same? We can't charge her.
Why not? - Did you get a look at this woman? - I did.
You know how sick she is.
We charge her with murder and she'll die before the trial so Refresh my memory, do we not have an infirmary at the State Penitentiary? I believe so, yes.
Are there not one or two inmates who actually have AIDS? This case is different.
Rita Hale is different.
From what you told me, Rita Hale admits to following her ex-boyfriend into a laundromat with the full intent of ending his life.
That's premeditated murder.
Maybe Hale went to the laundry to confront Longley about giving her HIV.
They fight, they argue, he gets upset, he goes after her, she swings the detergent to protect herself, and he hits his head on the way down to the floor, that is self-defence.
Except that she poured bleach down his throat.
Which, according to ME, wouldn't have killed him.
And you think Assistant State Attorney Ed Danvers is going to buy that? Forget it.
Charge Rita Hale with first-degree murder and let her spend her last Christmas in jail, I don't care.
- Have you ever been to Italy? - No.
In Italy, a person with AIDS can't be sent to prison.
- What that's like an actual law? - Yes, it was a law.
A man in Milan had full blown AIDS.
He robbed 11 banks in one summer.
Each time they caught him, each time they let him go.
You know the Italians are expert at live and let live.
So you're saying we should let Hale go? What I'm saying is this isn't Italy.
When in Rome do as the Romans do, when in Baltimore do as I tell you to.
We're charging her with Longley's murder.
Merry Christmas, Lieutenant.
Buon Natale, Detective.
I can't believe she's dead! - How you doing, Gwen? - You're late.
God, that's Peter Maas.
He wrote that book about Sam "The Bull" Gravano.
- He's one of my heroes.
- I must've made 200 phone calls.
I mean, I just don't understand, because she has all these friends, and she's got all these business associates and the charity work and now she's laid out in an empty room.
It's not empty there's there's you and me and that woman crying in there and not to mention - Excuse me, sir? Are you? - Yes, I am.
Peter Maas.
Gwen, check it out, Mr Peter Maas himself, the man.
I made over 200 calls.
- You must've come a long way.
- I came down from New York.
- How did you know Mrs Talbot? - She reviewed a couple of my books.
So you came to pay respects to a literary colleague who explicated your work to the wider world, that's beautiful.
To tell you the truth, I came here to have the last laugh on a petty, vindictive, parasitic old hack.
Excuse me? Mrs Talbot was the queen of book chat, a purveyor of everything that's superficial, meretricious and banal.
Her own prose was bloated and hackneyed.
She wouldn't know good writing if were tattooed on her forehead.
And yet, you came to the funeral.
Yes, I did, and now that I'm satisfied that she's really deceased, it's time for a small celebration.
- Now, if you'll excuse me.
- Yeah, certainly.
There's a sweet old lady in there crying her eyes out.
- Yeah, that's Mrs Brumbaum.
- Mrs Brumbaum and she's grieving.
She's working.
Bernie gave her - She's a shiel? - Part of the deluxe floral package.
For an extra 20 bucks I'm told that she will throw herself on the coffin.
I gotta talk to you.
- Have to be now? - Yes.
- Have to be here? - Yes.
So make it quick.
Georgia Ray Mahoney says she has a tape of Luther's shooting.
- What? - A videotape.
Don't play around with me.
- She may be playing us, I don't know.
- What do you mean, you don't know? She either got a videotape or she ain't.
There ain't no middle ground.
I talked to the manager of Luther's building.
There were eight cameras.
Even if she has a tape, we don't know what's on it.
What do you mean? "Kellerman ices dealer.
" News at 11:00.
He had the gun in his hand.
He had it in his hand, on my head, on the floor, down his pants.
We're gonna know soon enough exactly where the hell that gun was.
- I gotta go tell Stivers.
- What, no! No? Huh? You ain't the only one the camera caught, huh? Me and Stivers are in this, too.
If this gets out, it's our asses on the line also.
Come on.
There you are.
I should've backed you up in there.
Yeah you should've.
- I do like Rita Hale.
- Stu, it's OK.
I understand why she did what she did.
I just don't think that she should get away with it.
Yeah, you and G, both.
Hey.
I'm more worried about Alisa Hart than I am Rita Hale.
- Alisa Hart? - Yeah.
And Elizabeth Ling, Tory Olson, Stephanie Redman.
How many of Longley's girlfriends knew he was HIV positive? - Supposedly, he was careful.
- Like he was with Rita? You think we should tell them? Yeah, I think that we have to.
I'd like to help you, doctor Yes, I really, really would But the din in my head It's too much and it's no good I'm standing in a windy tunnel Shouting through the roar And I'd like to give the information You're asking for But blood makes noise It's a ringing in my ear Blood makes noise And I can't really hear you In the thickening of fear I think that you might want to know The details and the facts But there's something in my blood Denies the memory of the acts So just forget it Doc, I think It's really cool that you're concerned But we'll have to try again After the silence has returned Cos blood makes noise It's a-ringing in my ear Blood makes noise And I can't really hear you In the thickening of fear I'd like to help you, doctor Yes, I really, really would But the din in my head It's too much and it's no good Blood makes noise It's a-ringing in my ear And I can't really hear you In the thickening of fear Yes, blood makes noise It's a-ringing in my ear And I can't really hear you In the thickening of fear Blood makes noise Blood makes noise - Hey, Cox.
- Hey, Laura.
I left one of my notebooks here.
Yeah, I was wondering whose that was.
- It's over by the sink there.
- Great.
So, slow night, huh? Is it ever? I tell you I never get spooked in here until it's quite this empty.
Well, I wouldn't think you'd be afraid of anything.
Me? What, are you crazy? Big scaredy cat.
Hate spiders, afraid of flying.
You ever worry about AIDS? Are you scared about getting infected? I'm careful, I take precautions.
Are you thinking about the Longley case? No, it's not about the case.
So, what it's about, our fine boys of Baltimore? Yeah.
So you've managed to find one with all his teeth, I see.
Hasn't been that easy.
So what, now you're scared? Well, I wasted three years of my life engaged to this guy who turned out to be a complete idiot.
Er and now that I'm out there, I'm cautious.
When it comes to men, I don't know if I trust my own judgement.
Well, I mean, if it's any help at all, I definitely don't trust mine.
So you get tested a lot, then? Oh, yeah, every twelve weeks.
Wow.
Merry Christmas, Frank.
Hey, Merry Christmas.
OK, I'm out of here.
It's still early, Pembleton.
Where's your Christmas spirit? I got plenty of Christmas spirit, I'm a regular Santa Claus.
- Yeah? - Yeah, I have two kids.
This holiday takes on epic proportions.
So I'm heading home direct.
- Merry Christmas, all.
- Merry Christmas, Frank! - My mom was oppressive.
- Not really.
Oh, yeah.
She was arrogant and self-centred, had to have her own way.
- She was very well read.
- Come on, you're defending her now? Well, she had you, that gets points in my book.
She hated you, she tried everything to break us up, and she played the same games with everybody in her life, which is why the final send-off features one slightly hostile ex-son-in-law, one vengeful author and a rented wailer.
She didn't even have a eulogy.
Can I get your attention, everyone, please? - Turn off the music! - I'd like to propose a toast - A round for everybody? - No, thank you, Billie Lou.
This evening a solemn ceremony was held to convey the mortal remains of Geneviève Talbot to a better place.
She was a strong women, possessed of many opinions.
She lived on her own terms.
She had a daughter, a beautiful daughter, who took as her husband a charming if somewhat peculiar young man.
Geneviève Talbot so loved her daughter and so feared for her happiness that she did everything she could to discourage this unlikely union for the man was hopelessly peculiar and quite perverse.
And the daughter, she was a rare gift and deserved much, much better.
- To mom.
- To mom! May she rest in peace.
Thank you.
Er, Julianna! - Hey! - Got you something.
Oh! - Merry Christmas.
- Thanks, Bayliss.
You look like a crazed leprechaun, I can't take you seriously.
- I'm glad I wore that all night.
- Yes, certainly.
- I can't believe this.
- It's just something Wait, don't You didn't see it? - No.
No.
- How much? - Almost, but Yeah.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome.
Hey, everybody, it's time to light the tree.
I'd like to help you, doctor Yes, I really, really would But the din in my head It's too much and it's no good I'm standing in a windy tunnel Shouting through the roar And I'd like to give the information You're asking for But blood makes noise It's a-ringing in my ear Blood makes noise And I can't really hear you In the thickening of fear
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