Lodge 49 (2018) s02e06 Episode Script

Circles

1 I need to crack the code on the diary.
- - Larry's mom.
Looks like she knows things.
I think she was just along for the ride.
Smith is the mastermind.
We just need to find people below us, and we'll all make money.
CHAMP: Liz, there's no one below us.
I'm doing great.
Seems like your leg is getting worse.
DUD: You and Connie are supposed to be together.
It's Fate.
Fate keeps taking me places I don't want to go.
We're coming in, Blaise! Where the hell did he go? He did it.
The Magnum Opus.
He's through to the other side! JACKIE: "History is a nightmare from which I'm trying to wake.
" I read that in a survey class at City College, and I always wondered if it was actually possible.
Larry Mom, what are you doing? JACKIE: The more I read Harwood Fritz Merrill JACKIE AND BLAISE: the more I believe it is.
They're gonna call me if you ditch school, so no monkey business.
Yeah, I'm goin'.
Geez.
And wash that bowl when you're finished.
I'm late for work.
I love you, Larry.
[GUNFIRE ON TV.]
JACKIE: It's me and Larry against the world.
[CHUCKLES.]
[EXHALING SHARPLY.]
[GROANING.]
[HISSES, EXHALES DEEPLY.]
[SNIFFLING.]
Ugh.
Oh.
Oh, yeah.
LIZ: Dud, I'm leaving! If you wanna catch a ride, let's go.
Okay.
Um Yeah, I'm almost ready.
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
- [TIRES SQUEAL.]
- Okay, thanks.
Oh, hey, tell Champ that I'm really sorry I can't come to his, like, housewarming party thing tonight or whatever.
Come by later.
His new place is right around the corner.
I c can't.
I just got so much going on at the Lodge right now.
We're doing Mystic Chords of Memory tonight.
Right.
It's like this, uh like an open mic night thing.
[GROANING.]
Anyway, and Blaise Blaise is still missing.
- We can't find him.
- Ah, yeah, I almost forgot.
The case of the missing apothecary.
[EXHALES HEAVILY.]
Yeah, yeah.
Really hopin' for a breakthrough tonight.
- Okay.
- So All right.
Ow.
Um, hey, you sure that you don't wanna come in? No, I'm good.
There's nothing in there for me.
- Oh, my God.
Are you okay? - Ow.
Yeah.
I'm fine.
Just, hey, say hi to everybody for me, okay? - Have fun tonight.
- Okay.
Oh, Jackie.
JACKIE: Like many tragedies, I suppose, this one begins with an insecure man Wallace Smith, owner of the second-largest dry cleaner's in Bixby Knolls, and Sovereign Protector of Lodge 49.
He was the first man I'd been with since Larry's father died.
He was married, so he so we used the Murphy bed in the Sentinel Suite.
[GLASS SHATTERS.]
Did you hear that? [KNOCKS ON WALL.]
WALLACE: It came from behind this wall.
[KNOCKS ON WALL.]
I think there's something on the other side.
[KNOCKS ON WALL.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS, TELEPHONES RINGING.]
You're late again.
Have you tried doing it all alone, Beverly? Larry's a handful.
Just letting you know, the new boss? He's coming from Florida, where they launch things.
He might not be so lenient.
I'm doing my best.
At Orbis, I was just another face in the typing pool, employee number 4326, but at the Lodge, I was someone important a keeper of secrets.
This room must've been here - since the beginning - [SIGHS.]
and we're the only ones who know the way in.
It's beautiful.
I feel like this place has been waiting for For me.
I know.
There are no accidents, Jackie.
Our job now is to figure out why I have been shown this room.
This is my path.
JACKIE: When you've been erased from enough stories, you stop noticing.
Maybe they'll make a bust of me like this I was just happy to have something truly different in my life.
Those were happy months, getting lost in the old books, learning alchemical codes and ciphers.
- [SNORING.]
- It would all make sense to me, like ripples settling in a puddle, - and everything is clear for a moment.
- [METAL TINKING.]
But it would ripple away just as quick.
My favorite book was a short biography of Harwood Fritz Merrill by William Parker.
It described the four chapters of Merrill's life boyhood, war, his lost decade of wandering, and his building of the first lodge in London.
Hermeticism, quintessence these were hard.
But a man recovering from a catastrophe, who searches and finds a home, I could hold that in my arms.
jolly good fellow For he's a jolly good fellow For he's a jolly good fellooooow Which nobody can deny - Whoa! - Which nobody can deny [LAUGHTER.]
WALLACE: Those jackasses are payin' for drinks with their bum coins again.
Everyone around town takes them.
This new Orbis clique, I'm sick of 'em.
They have no respect for the hierarchy around here.
[SCOFFS.]
I should ban their money from the Lodge.
You won't get invited to their party if you do that.
[SCOFFING.]
Please.
That's the last thing I want.
JACKIE: Wally, of course, wanted that more than anything.
- So, Wally, dry cleaning - Hmm.
there's some real heavy-duty science behind that.
[SCOFFS.]
Yes, indeed.
And I've mastered the chemical process.
Wow buddy tell us about it.
Gladly.
Um, the thing you have to remember about petroleum solvent - is when you're wor - [LAUGHTER.]
You know, there are secrets in the Order of the Lynx that make everything you're doing at Orbis seem primitive.
The scrolls that Harwood Fritz Merrill found in the desert are said to unlock great power.
[LAUGHTER.]
WERNER: She's right.
The Sumerians knew about chemical valances, splitting the atom, and here we are, trying to keep a metal ball from falling back down to Earth.
["SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW" PLAYS.]
So, anybody could just sign up and just do whatever they want? Yeah, man, you can tell stories, you can sing a song, you can juggle, whatever.
Or you could talk for two hours about how you got arrested in Seattle for trying to sneak onto Prince's tour bus! That's not true.
Prince didn't play in Seattle on the Purple Rain Tour.
I got arrested in Tacoma.
I had a life before I became an educator.
- Oh.
Lot's of dudes tell war stories.
- Oh.
You know, the funny ones, not the ones you dream about.
Larry had a bunch from Vietnam.
I've got my Gulf War standards, and, Ernie, man, that dude kills with his Navy shit.
[CHUCKLES.]
Did Ernie Did Ernie sign up? No.
Uh, not a lot of people signed up.
Don Fab and the Longshoremen are gonna do a special acoustic set.
- Should be pretty good.
- Oh, that's good.
Otherwise, as emcee, I'm-a have to riff.
Free jazz of the mind.
It's gonna be a long, brutal night for everybody.
Here's some lemon bars, just like my estranged stepmother used to make.
Wow.
I am so happy for you, man.
Homeownership is the American dream, and you made it happen.
JEREMY: Man, and I been lookin' forward to this chance to cut loose for the night.
Mmm! Mm.
Fair warning, guys.
I might get a little crazy tonight.
Sarah gave me permission to do whatever I want.
- Mm.
- Long as I'm back by 10:30.
- To an evening of gargantuan horror.
- Oh.
[CHUCKLES.]
Hey, it's Liz! [LAUGHS.]
Hey, guys.
[ECHOING.]
You want me to pick you up in the golf cart? [ECHOING.]
What?! [GRUNTS.]
Want me to pick you up in the golf cart? [DISTANTLY.]
No, it's okay.
I can walk from here.
Okay, let's just say, for the sake of argument, that Blaise didn't complete the Magnum Opus and he didn't cross into an invisible world, okay? So where did he go? Where's he been for the last few days? How did he get outta here? Here's a crazy idea there's another way in and out of this room.
No, no.
I've pulled out every book in this room, and none open up to a secret passage.
None.
I don't know, there's probably another false wall or crawl space or somethin'.
Jesus, Ernie! Even the boring explanation is awesome, and you can't even get excited about it.
- I mean [STRAINING.]
oh, my God.
- ERNIE: Whoa, whoa.
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
I'm good.
I'm good.
I'm fine.
I'm fine.
- I'm just a little sore.
- Oh.
Oh! Your wound, man! - It smells horrible.
- Yeah, I know.
- That's not good, Dud.
- [EXHALES DEEPLY.]
When's the last time a doctor looked at your leg.
Ernie, my hospital bills are out of control, okay? That's why I need to find Blaise, because he's the only one who can help me.
He's also the guy who shot your wife with a nail gun.
My ex-wife, okay? Or she will be soon.
I got some paperwork.
But the point is, is that [CHUCKLES.]
it wasn't Blaise's fault, okay? Scott, you know, he wouldn't give him his spa I don't blame Scott.
Blaise is headed down the same path as Wallace Smith.
This alchemy stuff, it drives people crazy.
- [SCOFFS.]
No.
- You walk through some doors and there's no going back.
Dud I'm scared you're goin' through that door.
That's why I told El Confidente to go to Mexico without you.
You told El Confidente to knock me out?! No - I didn't know he was gonna hit you.
- Forget it.
I'll go find Blaise on my own.
[SCOFFING.]
And he's not crazy.
He just cares about the Lodge.
[SNAPPING FINGERS.]
And who was that blowhard in the fancy suit?! My new boss at Orbis.
- He's Head of Propulsion.
- Ah, to hell with him.
- [INDISTINCT MONOLOGUE.]
- JACKIE: The boys had gotten under Wally's skin.
We were feeling the sharp smallness of our world.
I'd felt it before, but now, for the first time, I knew a way out.
They couldn't calculate their way out of a paper bag! We'll get the scrolls.
What are you talking about? The scrolls.
Under Lodge 1 in London.
We can bring them back here to Long Beach.
JACKIE: Of course, Wally said, "That's impossible," but I'd come to know his soft spots.
Soon enough, it was all his idea.
[KNOCK ON DOOR.]
- [DISTANT CHATTER.]
- Found these.
Less of a mildew smell.
[CHUCKLING.]
And the kitchen's sending up your supper.
The least we can do for you after your journey.
Thank you, Oliver.
The door is always open for you in Long Beach.
[INDISTINCT SHOUTING IN DISTANCE.]
Oh, uh, I'm afraid there's a bit of a riot planned for downstairs this evening.
We're having a song and story review.
Come down if you're in the mood.
Oh, I think we'll be getting some rest.
[DISTANT LAUGHTER.]
Our timing couldn't be better.
They'll all be soused.
[GIGGLES.]
Now, I just have to find my way down to the basement, and then Merrill's crypt will obviously be somewhere down there.
Are you okay? You eat when you're nervous, Wally.
I eat because I'm hungry.
Now, it may be possible that I have to force my way into the south elevator shaft and then climb down by hand to see how deep it goes.
[CHUCKLES.]
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
Or take the elevator.
Oh, were it that simple.
You're just gonna have to trust me, Jackie.
I feel very confident about this.
Very confident.
[CHEWING LOUDLY.]
More than that.
I must say, I feel alive! [CHUCKLES.]
[INHALES DEEPLY.]
[GAGGING.]
[INHALES SHARPLY.]
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
[THUDS.]
[SIGHS.]
[RAIN PATTERING.]
- [THUNDER CRASHES.]
- JACKIE: I had often wondered how anyone knew when they were on their path.
That night, - I knew I was on my path - [THUNDER CRASHES.]
because something that should've scared me didn't.
[THUNDER CRASHES.]
- [HEAVENLY CHOIR SINGS.]
- [BLUEPRINTS THUD.]
[SINGING CONTINUES.]
[ORBISCOPE WINDING.]
- [THUNDER CRASHES.]
- Here I was, looking right into the life of a man who had been destroyed by war.
He had seen the worst of men, but insisted they were better.
They had to be.
What universe would entrust its secrets to a dark heart? If Merrill could see behind his story to a place where catastrophe was as necessary as joy, where the impossible turned just beyond the edges of our sight, then so could I.
[ORBISCOPE WINDING.]
- [THUNDER CRASHES.]
- I was spinning [GASPS.]
JACKIE: and I wanted those secrets.
[DOOR OPENS.]
- Jesus.
- Hey.
I just had a little dig around in the closet.
We have so much cool stuff in storage.
These are Orbis guys.
See the little pins on their shirt? Parabolas.
Maybe the whole Parabola group legend was a real thing? [SQUEALS.]
Oh.
Wow.
Orbits.
I haven't seen these in a long time.
What is it? In the '60s, Orbis tried to make their own currency, go full company town.
It went bust.
My dad and the rest of the janitorial staff - got screwed.
- [CHUCKLES.]
The past never goes away, I guess.
[COIN THUDS.]
Is that where you are? The past? 'Cause you're not here.
You're lookin' past me, past the Lodge, into somethin' else.
I don't see the guy I used to know, the guy who wanted his picture on the wall.
Hubris.
I don't see the woman I used to know since you came back from London.
I think maybe, since we've come back into each other's lives, we've just been tryin' to relive the past.
And now Maybe someday we'll see each other with new eyes.
But until then I think you're right.
[MUTTERING.]
[SIGHS.]
[HISSES.]
[CLUNKS.]
Oh.
[LAUGHING.]
Blaise! Blaise, I'm coming! [GRUNTS.]
I'm comin' for ya, buddy! - [DOOR CLOSES.]
- How bad is he? Aw, I knew it.
I knew it.
I told you not to go hard before the show.
God damn it, Don Fab.
I'm sorry, man.
It's rock 'n' roll.
You know what this night meant to me, playing my song.
[SCOFFS.]
You guys have always taken me for granted, huh? The drumming, the steady beat in the back, the guy you could always count on Mr.
Reliable.
The one time I ask you to be there for me, you [BREATHING HEAVILY.]
Sc-Sc-Screw it.
I'm out.
I'm out.
I'm out of the Longshoremen.
I don't need you guys.
You know what? I'm playin' my song tonight, solo! [VOICE BREAKING.]
And it's gonna be amazing, and Connie's gonna [BREATHING HEAVILY.]
As Sovereign Protector, it is within my rights to inform you that Don Fab and the Longshoremen are hereby banned from playing the Lodge.
[DOOR OPENS.]
Okay, just so we're clear, these have drugs inside them.
[DISTANT MUSIC PLAYING.]
So, Liz, how do you like being the sheriff of Higher Steaks? Oh, yeah.
Yeah, do you wake up every night, like, just terrified and then and then pace around in your kitchen, eatin' pretzels till dawn, or ? No, no, it's fine.
I'm just kind of going through the motions, and it seems to be working.
So I'm not sure if that's good.
[CHUCKLES.]
[CHUCKLES.]
I've had a weird few weeks.
I'm just feeling a little, um l-lost at the moment.
When you're lost, you know, the thing to do is get more lost.
That's how you reach the right destination.
JEREMY: Mm-hmm, whatever you're doing, it's working.
Omni HQ's gonna be happy.
Maybe Janet'll give you another chance.
Ugh, screw her.
And screw Omni.
Wait, wait.
Hold on.
That's the problem, Liz.
Janet stole your story.
It's like she stole your soul.
[LAUGHS.]
[HORN HONKS.]
Champ, just an FYI, Harvey the Halo and his Irregulars are doing maneuvers in J-Wing.
They miiight come this way.
What? That's a clear violation of the treaty.
Um, guys, uh, just for safety, why don't we cut outta here for a little while? I'll give you the Orbis tour.
Come on.
- Okay.
- Okay? - [INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
- JACKIE: Back in Long Beach, Wally warned me that no one could ever know what we had done.
He couldn't help himself.
There were some close calls in London, but I kept my cool.
For some men, these acts of daring just come naturally.
The scrolls are in a safe place.
Now it's just a question of deciphering the language, which appears rudimentary.
JACKIE: I didn't care.
London had changed me.
- [CHATTER CONTINUES.]
- I saw now with different eyes.
[LAUGHTER.]
And I've learned when you see differently, you're seen differently.
Miss Loomis.
I know you from the Lodge.
You're the new division leader, Mr.
Goss.
Everyone knows who you are.
Yes, but at the 49, I'm just a lowly postulant.
You're a Luminous Knight.
So, what do you say we call it a wash.
I'm Werner.
I wasn't looking for another lover.
I was looking for an equal.
So, you like rockets.
Maybe I hate gravity.
[LAUGHS.]
You ever been to a launch? I imagine it's how the caveman felt when he first learned to light his own fire.
You see in a moment just how much better your future's gonna be.
You're an optimist.
An optimist hopes for certain outcomes.
- I engineer them.
- [CHUCKLES.]
You're very humble.
Well, we put a prototype satellite into orbit last week.
Hermes will map the entire world for us someday.
- The entire world? - Mm-hmm.
You know some of us like to get lost.
[CHUCKLES.]
You boys love to take all the mystery away.
You needn't worry.
If you'd like to get lost, I'm your man.
This may sound presumptuous, but I know you, Jackie.
You like a system of authority.
Not so much for the boundaries, more for the nostalgia hearth and home, mom and dad.
Now, maybe it's my Kraut heritage, but I like some order, too.
So here's what I propose.
Sex is a no-go.
Not because we wouldn't enjoy it, but because it's the obvious next step, and neither of us are obvious.
Let's skip the lifeless prose and get to the poetry.
Yes, I wanna put my lips on yours, but that's all we're gonna do.
Let's light the fuse without a blastoff and use that rocket fuel to get somewhere two people rarely get to the truth.
I accept your terms.
JACKIE: It wasn't easy, but we stuck to our deal.
For a while, at least.
- Hey - Hey! Ha.
Uh, y-you you caught me.
[CHUCKLING.]
I was, uh, just leavin' ya a special invitation for tonight's performance.
- That's nice.
- [CLEARS THROAT.]
I'm lookin' forward to seeing you guys.
Don Fab unplugged.
[CHUCKLING.]
Uh, well, actually, it's, uh [INHALES DEEPLY.]
just gonna be me and my guitar.
That's great! Finally, you're doin' your own thing.
I knew you had it in ya.
Well, it's the first song I've ever written.
It's about you.
[QUIETLY.]
Scott, we need Okay, okay, Connie, just, please.
Um just come to the show.
Okay? JEREMY: Champ, what's happening to me? I'm paralyzed by the fear inside my brain.
- [BREATHING HEAVILY.]
- Whoa, relax.
It's a gentle ride.
Although, maybe all the toxic stuff in the ground here - is makin' ya hallucinate.
- [WHIMPERS.]
[FOOTSTEPS RECEDING.]
So, who owns this place now? No one seems to know.
My mom worked here for a little while.
- So did my uncle.
- Yeah? In medieval France, they built cathedrals entire economies based on stone and glass.
Everyone was connected to it.
Here at Orbis, they built weapons, and everyone in Long Beach was connected to them.
WOMAN: Just checking with our courier for the delivery.
You see, anything at all can be currency.
All value resides in faith.
So why do we need anything? Why can't currency just be an idea we all have faith in? [CHUCKLES.]
You can't pay for a sandwich with an idea.
- You still need a thing.
- [CHUCKLES.]
Well, why can't the idea be the thing? JACKIE: I was someone else entirely with Werner.
I slowly came to recognize the stranger as myself.
Sometimes at lunch, Werner would make us a special cocktail, something to provide "lift-off.
" Antarctica.
How long were you there? Not long.
We were just doing some tests.
- Wind velocity.
Boring stuff.
- [CHUCKLES.]
Mm.
There's supposed to be a Lynx lodge in Antarctica, or [CHUCKLES.]
maybe that's just another myth, like Merrill coming to California.
Mm.
Or finding the scrolls in Egypt.
You know, Wallace has been saying some pretty crazy things around the Lodge.
Do you believe him? Of course not.
I mean, can you imagine - if he had the scrolls? - [CHUCKLES.]
It'd be like giving a gun to a child.
We do give guns to children.
Then we send them to kill other people's children.
- No one's killing children.
- [SIGHS.]
Uh [SIGHS.]
Oh, there it is.
I think we're in the countdown.
[SIGHS.]
My mother said her hands hurt whenever she saw weakness.
[LAUGHS.]
Why are you fighting gravity? You should make a rocket and point it at the ground.
- [LASERS ZAPPING.]
- If you think about it, sex is just a door that we go through to get to the future.
- [SIGHS.]
- [CHUCKLES.]
We're stuck in a circle, but the magic is just there, just beyond.
Merrill knew.
I want my Larry to have a good life, but I can feel the world wants something else.
[SNIFFLES.]
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
[BIRDS CHIRPING IN DISTANCE.]
If the scrolls are real, what would you do with them? "No man shall practice alchemy who hath not the purest heart.
" I think Thomas Norton said that.
Yeah, I've been doing my reading.
I'm a postulant eager to learn.
Something tells me you know more about alchemy than you let on.
Jackie what if I told you there were people who think like you do? There is a group of us here at Orbis who aren't constrained by the line between science and alchemy.
So you guys have been playing dumb.
You tease Wallace, but you believe in the same things.
Wallace is a useful idiot, bless him.
Listen, we have funding from above, off the books.
We're working close with Ludibrium Associates, following the path laid down by Jung and Pauli.
Long Beach is at the center of something big.
It's been waiting here for us all along.
We're going deep, literally.
We call ourselves the Parabola Group.
I'm the night swimmer, not Janet.
You know, I was born in the wrong place.
[BREATHING HEAVILY.]
And I want you guys to launch me [SHOUTING.]
to the other side of the world! - [LAUGHS.]
- Liz, Liz.
JEREMY: Hey, Liz, it's not funny.
I mean, don't you see what's gonna happen? We're we're gonna joke about launching you, and then we're accidentally gonna launch you for real, and then you're gonna die, - and you can't die Liz because w - Whoa.
- Hey, man.
- We We all need you.
- Okay.
Okay.
- [WHEEZING.]
[CHUCKLES.]
[GRUNTS.]
- Liz.
- No.
Thank you, okay? Thank you, Liz.
Just - [CRACK.]
- [GASPS.]
- MEN: Oh! Oh! - [SPLASH.]
- Liz, are you okay? - [GROANS.]
[ECHOING.]
Yeah.
I landed in water.
Gross water.
- We'll get you out, Liz.
- No, it's fine.
Uh, there's a tunnel down here.
I can get out that way.
I will meet you back at Champ's.
- [SPLASHING.]
- [GRUNTS.]
[FOOTSTEPS APPROACHING.]
Thanks for comin', Jackie.
I wanted to tell you about my progress.
Sit down.
Have you cracked the code? Yes in a manner of speaking.
I-It turns out it wasn't the code that needed cracking.
It was me - my own system of perception.
- [SIGHS.]
Don't walk away.
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
What, do you want proof? Well, look.
Here.
I made gold.
What do you think now? Hmm? I think you bought some gold dust and put it in there.
- How dare you.
- [GLASS THUDS.]
It doesn't even matter if you believe me or not.
I-I have been shown the way to escape this world [FADING.]
and I intend to follow it.
[BROADCAST'S "THE BOOK LOVERS" PLAYS.]
Lines and lines Of the spines Colored everyone Ohhh Down the aisles Along the titles Where you run your eyes Read a few lines Ahhh Read the sign above the door It's not for everyone [WIND GUSTING.]
Makes you feel individual Pages are one but that you ignore - - [APPLAUSE.]
Thanks, uh, Loretta, for that blow-by-blow account of your granddaughter's volleyball game.
It's gonna live in the memory for a long time.
Next up, uh, Gil with some kind of presentation.
So, uh, if you guys are interested in getting in on this, you know, uh, u-unique opportunity I'm sorry.
I-I-I know that this isn't what Mystic Chords is about, but I bought all this crap, and now I'm stuck with it.
I don't know what else to do.
There's, like no future out there.
There you go.
You are the first civilian I've ever brought down here.
Technically, it doesn't exist.
Not even your satellite could find it? What do you mean? Hermes.
It's mapping the world.
In a manner of speaking.
It's it's more of a spy bird, in truth.
And we've parked it dead overhead our communist friends in Southeast Asia.
Why? Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Peace through strength, Jack.
Can you imagine the peace we'd have with the full force of alchemical power in our arsenal? [LAUGHING.]
There will be so much peace, we'll get bored of it.
You have to trust me, Jackie.
JACKIE: "Trust me.
" I'd heard this before.
Did you do it? Did you decipher the scrolls? I'd rather not say.
Uh, there are a lot of high-level things in motion right now, including this lucrative little side project, an electronic currency that uses a common secure ledger, like an imaginary coin.
I got the idea after lunch the other day.
I was thinking to myself where were oh, you were there.
And from there, I drifted - into a dark, empty place.
- [WERNER SPEAKING DISTANTLY.]
I went back to Wallace.
His wife had left him, and he was preparing to make his own departure.
I agreed to go with him.
Will it hurt, our suicide cocktail? - Uh - [VIALS CLATTERING.]
The liminal state is always painful, but there is also ecstasy in the transmutation as we realign our quintessence and become im-immortal, like Harwood Fritz Merrill.
So you don't know.
[BREATHING SHAKILY.]
[VOICE BREAKING.]
Jesus, Jackie.
I'm sorry.
[CRYING.]
You were right.
[SNIFFLES.]
I'm sorry.
I don't know anything.
My whole life is nothing.
This is all for show.
[CRYING.]
I've been half a man.
[CRYING CONTINUES.]
Do something truly brave for once in your life.
[PENTANGLE'S "TRAVELLING SONG" PLAYS.]
[CRYING.]
- Sittin' behind the front wheel - [VIAL CLATTERS.]
JACKIE: I had every intention of joining Wally that night - Hey, baby, we're goin' home - but this world pulled me back.
Hey, baby, we're goin' home - I couldn't leave Larry.
- I don't mind the drizzling rain - Inside it's warm and dry - No one can survive alone.
Hey, baby, we're goin' home Hey, baby, we're goin' home I'm leaving my story with Wally.
It's more likely to be listened to if it rides through time on the corpse of a man than a woman.
- Oh faster, baby, let's go - I took the scrolls with me - Racing through the night - hoping to pass them on to someone who could lead the Lodge - to a new place.
- Hey, baby, we're going home Perhaps someday she'll arrive.
Hey, baby, we're going home And, baby, when we get there I'll do everythin' for you - Because, baby, we'll be back home - [DISTANT THUD.]
- Baby, we'll be back home - [THUDDING IN DISTANCE.]
Blaise! Dud! [CHUCKLES.]
What is this place? Uh, so we got, uh, Don Fab, eh? Anybody seen Don Fab? No? No.
Okay, uh, well, think we should probably call it a night.
SCOTT: Wait! Nobody move.
Wait.
Just wa wait.
Can you, um everybody, just if you could just sit down.
Just Just one more.
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
[QUIETLY.]
Thanks.
[CLEARS THROAT.]
[FEEDBACK WHINES.]
Thanks.
[CLEARS THROAT.]
Dud, can you believe this? This room, it's like the philosopher's egg.
You enter, elements mingle, and you come out changed.
That's awesome, man.
And the diary, it wasn't Wallace Smith.
It was Larry's mom, Jackie Loomis.
She was a brilliant woman.
And the scrolls are real! We need to bring 'em back to Long Beach.
It's the only way to heal the Lodge - and ourselves.
- Well, no shit, man.
I kinda been sayin' that for a while now, you know? [CHUCKLES.]
- Ow! - Hey.
[GROANING.]
It's all right.
I'm just Aw.
Oh, it's infected.
No, it's probably - [HISSES.]
Yeah.
- Ohh - Hey, be careful, be careful.
- [GROANS.]
Okay, yeah.
Ow! Ow! Ow! - [EXHALES SHARPLY.]
- Oh.
Yeah.
I feel somethin' hard.
[GROANS.]
It's comin' to the surface.
I need to get it out.
[BREATHING HEAVILY.]
Okay.
I don't believe in fate Or playin' the only song That life writes for you I'll never blame destiny Trade any days left for prophesy Why can't you See my choice is true? 'Cause I found who we are In a bed of desert stars That lit my way to you I believe in what I feel A heart that beats for something real Why can't you Feel it beat for you? [SIGHS.]
Or could the stars see only you? [SIGHS.]
Supposed to be a solo.
[GRUNTS.]
[GROANS LOUDLY.]
[SCREAMING.]
[BREATHING HEAVILY.]
[SHOUTING.]
It's a shark tooth! [BOTH LAUGH.]
[FLOOR CREAKS.]
[SCREAMS, GRUNTS.]
- [ALL GASP.]
- BLAISE: [GROANS.]
Ooh! Blaise, Blaise, help! Blaise, catch me! - Aah! - [SHOUTS INDISTINCTLY.]
[LAUGHING.]
What the hell is this?! What the hell are you doin' up there?! Oh, my God! Hey, guys.
[EMMA TRICCA'S "SUNDAY REVERIE" PLAYS.]
Liz, is that snow in your hair? When the morning comes out bright A giant before your eyes Where did you go? Do you ever think of me - I don't know.
- How we used to be And we'll take CRONKITE: Small search-and-kill missions have been increased.
Mobile units penetrate the Vietcong pockets to flush out the enemy.
There is the constant menace of an ambush as they move down roads and trails controlled by the guerrillas.
LARRY: [SCREAMING.]
Oh, God! No, please! No! No! No! [VOICE BREAKING.]
Help me, please! No, please! No, it's just a dream, Larry.
[SOBBING.]
You're home, my love.
[SOBBING CONTINUES.]
You're home.
[SHAKILY.]
Shh, shh, shh, shh.
I don't believe in fate Trade any days left for prophesy Why can't you See my choice is true? 'Cause I found who we are In a bed of desert stars That lit my way to you
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