Quantum Leap s05e10 Episode Script

Trilogy Part III (The Last Door) - July 28, 1978

Do you think a little girl like Abagail could be capable of murder? It was you who killed her, Abagail! I didn't kill her! I'm coming! Sam, look out! You two rabbits ought to be ashamed! The weddin'is tomorrow.
! You get him out of here.
You hear me, Abigail Fuller? Don Takins's boy's disappeared.
It looks like you're gonna have a witch hunt on your hands.
Sam, look out! No! No! She should die! No! Just know that for this brief moment in time, we belong to each other.
Please know that.
I love you.
"Baton Rouge Gazette.
July 28, 1978.
" Louisiana.
It wasn't over.
My memory was fading, but in my soul I knew it wasn't over.
I was still in the South, and somehow Abagail had summoned me back.
But for what? And as who? Bo, the child has legal rights.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Larry Stanton? Hello, sweet cheeks.
Come on over here, you hot-blooded, Southern rebel, and melt me down.
Tonight, Lawrence Stanton III, I am Jane Fonda in Butterfeld 8.
Oh, boy.
I got a bad feelin' about this.
After 28 years of marriage, I know every feelin' you got.
I'm your husband? Well, of course you're my husband.
Unless you wanna be that wicked Blackbeard again.
Why am I here? Oh, no, you don't! Don't you start that.
Start what? That-That craziness about hearing voices.
I don't wanna hear another word.
I heard voices? I said, not another word.
But what do you mean- That's it.
That is it.
You have gone and done it.
You have ruined everything.
I am no longer in the mood.
So you can hang up your holsters until next Saturday night.
- Aren't you gonna stop me? - Stop you? I'm callin' my mother! - Oh, boy! - Sam, you're not gonna believe this yo-yo in the waiting room.
Larry Stanton? Lawrence Stanton III, actually.
You have a lucrative law practice in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and your counterpart in the waiting room thinks he's dead.
What? He thinks I'm St.
Peter and I'm gonna send him to hell for overcharging his hours.
Reminds me of my last two divorce lawyers.
Do you remember Larry Stanton? Yeah.
I mean, there were- I remember, uh, there was a hanging and a lot people, and he was hurt.
I think he tried to save her.
Who? Her? No, no, no.
Not her, not her.
That's Mrs.
Larry Stanton.
She wants to "melt me down.
" Oh.
Well, no wonder old Larry I would rather go to hell than come back here.
He's gonna be in big trouble if he comes back here talking about heaven and angels, because Mrs.
Larry already thinks that he's nuts.
Mrs.
Larry- Her name is Sherilyn Stanton.
She's 51 years old, and she's going through her second husband.
She killed the first one at the tender age of 17.
And Ziggy says that she's gonna bury the second one as well.
Murder? No.
Heart attacks.
Mr.
Stanton the first was 77.
Now, according to Ziggy, there's a 41- 41.
12- No, no, no.
If you think I'm here to save their marriage, Al, you can forget about that.
Well, actually, Ziggy hasn't the slightest idea why you're here.
So I'd suggest you go open the door and see what drifts in.
Larry, will you please answer the damn door! I am far too upset to be entertaining guests.
Don't look at me.
I don't make up these assignments.
Hello.
It's been a long time, Counselor.
A very long time.
Would you like to, uh, come in? No, it's- Be all right out here.
You don't remember me.
It's Marie.
It's Marie from Pottersville.
Marie? Your brain is Swiss-cheesed, Sam.
Marie from Pottersville.
Marie Billings.
Marie- Marie Billings.
This is the woman that used to work for Clayton Fuller.
Abagail? Yeah.
I knew you didn't get my telegram.
Is Abagail all right? Well, I've been working for that family for almost 30 years.
Practically raised that child myself after her daddy died.
She didn't have no one else after Henry died.
Neither did I.
What's happened to Abagail? They found those bones, and then there was that horrible murder.
They're accusing Abagail of murder.
That happened over 25 years ago.
And the trial starts tomorrow.
But nobody would take it, Mr.
Stanton.
Nobody.
She said maybe you? You were there for that horrible night, and she said only Will and you believed in her.
My husband doesn't take charity cases anymore.
Besides, he is retired.
No wonder Larry would rather stay dead.
This is very important, Mrs.
Stanton.
You remember Marie Billings from Pottersville.
I said, my husband is retired.
He has a very bad heart.
Sam, Larry never took Abagail's case.
But if you would just hear me out- I have told you a million times.
We don't have to work with this kind of nigger trash anymore.
Ouch.
! Marie, I'd like to apologize for what my wife just said.
Will you excuse me for a moment? I'd like you to go inside and make Marie and me some lemonade.
And take your time.
But, Lawrence- Get inside.
I don't want to cause any trouble.
Marie, I'm sorry.
From the look of it, Miss Racist-in-a-Moo-Moo could use a dose of trouble.
Just sit down.
I'm so sorry.
Sam, maybe you're here to see that Larry takes Abagail's case.
You remember that little Aider girl? Well, she disappeared two years before you moved to town.
Folks thought that she was taken by a pack of wild dogs.
Violet Aider's bones were discovered sealed in the town well.
And everybody thought that Abagail- Abagail didn't kill them.
I can't believe this is really happening.
You and I both know that.
After they got the bones out, Ms.
Leta put together a case with some lawyer- Denton Waters.
Ziggy says he's never lost a case.
For something that happened No, no, no.
That was just it.
The lawyer told Ms.
Leta that he couldn't try Abagail for Violet's murder.
Abagail is convicted of murder, Sam.
But she was eight years old.
Ms.
Leta was found with her throat cut open on Abagail's kitchen floor.
Abagail is executed for the murder of Leta Aider.
Now don't go have a heart attack on me, Mr.
Stanton.
Abagail needs your real bad.
I'll go, uh, pack my things, Marie.
Now, we have to call Sheriff Loman and tell him that Right.
You'll be up there this afternoon.
All right.
I'll do that.
You just sit down here, relax, and I'll be out in a few minutes.
Okay? Abagail said you would come.
You're still in love with Abagail, aren't you? I'm taking the case, Al.
Does history change? Not unless you do something to change it.
Abagail Fuller dies in the electric chair June 30, 1984.
Little Violet Aider had waited And finally, they had.
Leta had come after Abagail with a vengeance, desperately trying to mount a case that would send her to the electric chair.
But now Leta was dead, and I knew that fate had brought me back into Abagail's life to prove her innocence once and for all.
All right.
Let me see those files.
I'll be out of your way.
You got it.
There he is.
Hey, Stanton.
How come I'm so young, and you got so old? - Good to see you again, Bo.
- Good to see you.
- This is Denton Waters.
He's the special prosecutor for the State.
- Mr.
Waters.
Mr.
Stanton.
I understand you used to live around these parts.
Yeah.
Moved away in '66 right after that incident with the Takins boy gettin'lost.
- What incident was that? - Oh, couple townsfolks decided to take the law in their own hands.
- They were gonna string up Abagail.
- Is that so? As I recall, Leta Aider was one of the main instigators.
Larry packed up his bags and his wife and kids and left damn near the next day.
Mr.
Stanton said he had no intentions of letting his family grow up in a town that was so backwards, it was capable of lynchin' one of its own.
Um, I always admired you for that.
Mrs.
Kinman? "Kinman"? There's a name I haven't heard in a long time.
It's still Fuller.
Yeah, Will and Abagail never quite made it to the altar.
If you don't mind, I would prefer to discuss my past with Mr.
Stanton myself.
I thought he'd rather hear it from me than get an earful from the Potter parish.
I don't think that Miss Fuller's marital status has any relevance to this trial, does it? Neither does my bein' here.
I'm sure you two have a great deal to discuss before tomorrow.
- Yeah, starting with a continuance.
- I'm afraid we've had two already.
A third is out of the question.
L- I'm sorry.
Have you, uh- Mr.
Waters and I have already met.
Well, I'll need to see the rest of those files.
Oh, and make sure that Mr.
Stanton has copies.
We wouldn't want him to declare a mistrial for lack of disclosure.
Stanton, why don't you go ahead and use my office? Take as much time as you want to.
Jim Bob's gonna be outside, and the file's on the desk.
I'm very glad you came, Mr.
Stanton.
I never should have left.
There aren't any hotels in town, so I told Marie you'd be staying at the house.
Yes, thank you.
She, uh- She told me- Would you mind taking these home for me? They're just a bunch of bills.
But right now, they seem kind of unimportant.
Sorry about what happened with you and Will.
Oh.
Would you mind tellin' me? There's not much to tell, but, uh- It was just one moment, we were very much in love and getting married.
And the next, he moved out west to write a book.
I hear he's doing real well.
What else do you wanna know, Mr.
Stanton? How I'm gonna stretch 15 hours into three weeks to get ready for your trial.
- Should I be afraid, Mr.
Stanton? - Only if you're guilty.
Well, I didn't kill Leta Aider.
Do you believe me? Yes, I do.
Now, you wanna tell me what happened? Well, it was a little after 3:00 on Tuesday.
I'd just been to the market to get a few things, and, uh- I came straight home and I went to the kitchen to put the groceries away.
And then I saw Leta.
Were there any signs of a struggle? The whole place was a mess.
- So you phoned the police? - No.
No, no, I didn't.
L- I was just standin' there lookin' at Leta in all that blood.
And then, uh, Bo Loman showed up and said that he'd gotten a call from someone that said they heard a woman screamin'.
Your first attorney wanted you to plead self-defense.
I didn't kill her.
Denton Waters was approached prior to the death of Leta Aider to come up with a case against you for the murder of Violet and for the murder of her father, Bart Aider.
I know.
They're supposed to exhume Bart's body tomorrow.
Abagail, didn't you know that no matter how much evidence they got together to bring you to trial that they couldn't because the crimes were committed when you were a minor? I remember that day Violet disappeared so clear.
And yet, sometimes I feel- Well, everyone else was so sure.
Maybe I remembered what I wanted.
Maybe- I wanted to hold her.
Tell her, "You're not crazy.
You didn't kill anyone.
" But I wanted more.
With Abagail, I always wanted more.
You all right? Yes, I am.
Strange.
It was just for a moment, you- In your eyes- I, uh, don't believe that you killed Violet.
Otherwise, I wouldn't be here.
Who discovered, uh, Violet's remains? Restoration crew.
They were tearing down the old well, and one of the workmen dropped his watch or something.
Went down to get it, and found the skeleton.
Funny, the games fate plays.
I imagine that was enough to get Leta Aider started again.
Oh, she never stopped.
Not really.
I mean, all she needed was Violet's locket, and the case would be complete.
Abagail, I need you to remember everything about the day that Violet disappeared and about Bart and about Leta.
- Why? - Because I need to know everything about your past- good or bad.
Why don't we start with Violet? Well, I can't really say that we were friends, Violet and I.
I guess we were rivals.
She, uh- She used to tease me all the time.
Then that day- that day, she was tauntin' me about a little gold locket that I'd been saving up for, but I couldn't afford.
Just to spite me, she bought it.
She kept pushin' it in my face, saying that my family was poor and that we were crazy.
So I hit her.
She laughed harder, so I hit her harder.
Her nose started to bleed on her sweater, and she started crying.
And I just kept hittin'her and hittin'her and hittin'her.
It was like I couldn't stop.
When I finally did stop, she ran off, said she was gonna tell her mother.
I did not like Violet, but I didn't kill her.
I'm not a killer.
I didn't kill her.
Abagail and I talked for another three hours.
She told me about Violet and Bart and how she had been there when they died,: About her mother and her grandmother.
Each story brought back more memories of Abagail.
Somehow, in my Swiss cheese brain, every moment I had spent leaping into Abagail's life was as clear as if it had happened yesterday.
Gonna save her? Are you gonna save my mommy? - Abagail? - Abagail's my mother.
Your mother? But she said that Will- Mary Beth said you can't help her.
Mary Beth said that thejudge was gonna take her tojail, and they were gonna- Come here.
Nobody's gonna hurt your mother.
But Mary Beth said that they were gonna- Look.
I don't care what Mary Beth said.
I'm not about to let anybody hurt your mother.
You mean that? With all my heart.
You know, I came from very far away to help your mother.
And I don't think I would have been brought here if I couldn't do the job.
So why don't you dry those pretty eyes, and, um, let's not worry about any of this a bit, okay? What's your name? Sam.
Larry Stanton.
What's yours? SammyJo.
Samantha Josephine Fuller.
I'm very, very glad you're here, Mr.
Sam Larry Stanton.
Very glad.
Uh, Sam, Ziggy says you're not herejust to save Abagail.
You're here to save SammyJo.
There's a 91.
9% chance that SammyJo Fuller is your daughter.
According to Ziggy, she has an I.
Q.
Of 194.
So she got her brains from her father.
But the tragedy in all of this is that she's so traumatized by the death of her mother that she drops out.
She's living alone in Mobile right now.
She's writing computer manuals for some rinky-dink little company.
- No.
- "No" what? No way am I gonna get busted for keeping a 10-year-old kid up so late.
I'm not 10.
I'm 11.
And you're not keeping me up.
I'm waitin' for Marie to wake up so we can go.
Where are you going? Yeah, you know, I think it's kinda creepy, uh- Just to Marie's.
You know, for a kid to stay in a place where dead people were.
I'm staying with her till Mommy comes home.
Lordy.
We all gonna turn into pumpkins.
I gotta get you home, child.
I see you met our SammyJo.
Smartest little girl in the whole parish.
I put up some chicken and rice for you, Mr.
Stanton, in the kitchen.
You want me to warm it? You better get her home, huh? SammyJo, why don't you run in the kitchen and pull that plate out- No! I can't go in there! Please don't make me go in there.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I didn't know what I was thinkin' about, baby.
Your Marie is just gettin' old and forgetful.
Now, I'll get you outta here and in a nice, warm bed.
She's probably right.
If you, you know, put on some nice pajamas and get in a big, warm bed, you'll have a good night's sleep.
Will I see you tomorrow, Mr.
Stanton? Now, SammyJo, I don't want you anywhere near that courthouse.
I'll be here every day after 5:00.
And I can come see you? I'd be sad if you don't.
Good night.
Come on, honey.
I have a daughter, Al.
Now there were two people I had to save- Abagail and our daughter, SammyJo.
And even from her grave, Leta held the key.
Mr.
Stanton, would you care to address thejury? Uh, yes.
Well, firstly- firstly, there's no proof that Abagail killed either Violet or her father.
First of all, I would like to clear up some of the clutter that Mr.
Waters has thrown in your way about this trial.
We are here for one reason and one reason only- to determine the guilt or innocence of Abagail Fuller with regards to the murder of Leta Aider.
Now, since Mr.
Waters brought this up, I feel I must remind you all that it has never been proven that Abagail Fuller committed murder.
It has never been proven that Abagail Fuller took the lives of Violet or her father.
Now, that fact haunted Leta Aider.
It haunted her because she desperately needed someone to blame for the loss of her family.
Now, I do not know why Leta's family was taken from her, but I do know that my client, Abagail Fuller, was not responsible.
Well, she had no motive to kill Leta.
And-And because she is innocent- And even if she did, she wouldn't be responsible because she just was a minor.
Since she did not kill Violet or Bart, she would have no reason to murder Leta- no motive to murder Leta Aider.
Now, Mr.
Waters omitted the fact that by statute, the state of Louisiana cannot convict a minor of a felony.
That's if she committed a felony, which she did not.
Why would this woman jeopardize her life and the life ofher daughter? The answer is she would not.
Yeah.
They're barking up the wrong oak.
There is a murderer and a killer- a killer who came into Abagail's kitchen and, for whatever reason, took the life of Leta Aider.
A crime was committed, but not by this woman.
Now, you, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, have a very difficult task ahead of you here.
You have to throw out the rumors and the gossip and the lies that have followed Abagail Fuller for the past 25 years and listen only to the facts.
And using that knowledge, and that knowledge only, you must determine the guilt or innocence of Abagail Fuller.
You must determine her fate and the future of her daughter and everyone else who loves her.
Sam, are you okay? I will do my best to present the facts as I know them, as will Mr.
Waters.
And it will be up to you to determine- Sam? The truth.
Thank you.
Are you all right? Sam, I don't like the way you look here.
Are you all right? What's goin' on? I'm all right.
I just need a moment.
Sam, there's a problem in the waiting room.
Tell them you need a break.
Your Honor, if I could just have a moment, please? The court will take a 20-minute recess before we bring in the prosecution's first witness.
I had found Stanton's nitro pills in his briefcase and taken them.
They had made the pain in my chest subside enough to make it through the first day of witnesses.
I listened as Denton presented a variety of experts and a ton of evidence- the knife that killed Leta with Abagail's fingerprints on it, as well as Leta's,: Bo and his recount of finding Abagail standing over Leta's body, adding his memories of Violet and Bart.
And now, I had to face the one other person whose future depended on me.
SammyJo? SammyJo, you all right? Brigadoon.
What? I was just rememberin'.
See, when I read a book, the pages, they stay like pictures in my mind.
Whenever I want to, I can just go back and remember it all over again.
You've got a photographic memory.
Sometimes.
I've got a photographic memory.
You do? Mm-hmm.
Brigadoon.
Brigadoon.
That was one of my favorite stories too.
Mine too.
My grandmama said she likes it when the old reverend asked God for a miracle.
And he makes Brigadoon disappear for a hundred years.
What's your favorite part? I like when Tommy calls the whole village back through time because he loves Fiona so much that he can't live without her.
Do you believe in miracles, Mr.
Stanton? Miracles? Someone, if they really loved somebody, could go back in time and be part of their lives? Well, if that's a miracle, then yes, I believe in miracles.
I wanna go back in time someday.
You do? I wanna meet my daddy.
I wanna tell him- Tell him what? It doesn't matter.
Sure it does.
It- It matters.
Just that I love him.
But he knows.
My grandmama Fuller says so, and she knows everything.
Laura? What's the matter? SammyJo Fuller, I love you, and I want you to know that everything's gonna be okay.
Where are you goin'? I'm gonna go tell your grandmama that it's okay to remember.
Sam.
Al.
Wait a minute.
You gotta take it easy for a while.
What are you talking about? I'm talking about - Do you remember today in court when you were upset? Yeah.
Well, Stanton had a mild seizure in the waiting room at the same time.
You seem to have a mental and physical connection with him on this leap.
I don't know why.
Okay, but I feel fine right now.
If you wanna have a massive coronary, that's okay.
But Ziggy says if not, you gotta take it easy and keep Stanton's medicine next to you.
My advice is maybe you shouldjust take it easy for a while.
The only way I can find out the truth is to talk to Laura.
Okay? I gotta talk to her.
Hello, Laura.
You don't know me.
My name is Larry Stanton, and I'm here to help your daughter.
Abagail? Yes.
Is Abagail in trouble? Yes, she is.
Well, that's why she hasn't been to see me in a long time.
She's in very bad trouble, and she needs for you to remember something from the past.
No.
I don't have to remember.
It's just a bad dream.
When I wake up, it'll all be gone away.
That's what Mama used to say.
Uh, Sam, no.
She's not firing on all six cylinders.
She's all I've got.
I know, but if she testifies, Denton Waters will have her declared non compos mentis.
All I need her to remember is what happened the night Violet disappeared.
That's it, Al.
I know.
But if they think she's crazy, then they'll disqualify her testimony.
I remember you.
You were here a very long time ago.
You were gonna marry my Abagail.
But you didn't.
You went away.
Well, you broke her heart, you know.
I think you've mistaken me for someone else.
No.
I've been waiting for you for a very long time.
Very long time.
Clayton said that you'd come.
And then, I'd have to tell about Violet.
- Bingo! - Clayton- He knew that.
She wanted that locket so much.
So very, very much.
Clayton wouldn't let her have it, but I kept it.
I kept it and all of its secrets.
Oh, God.
Laura came to court that morning with the support ofher doctor, who said her confinement had been self-inflicted for years.
She said Clayton had forbidden her to tell her story.
But today, after 25 years, she told.
I was trying to buy candles fore the storm, but the general store was closed.
Everybody had gone home to lash their windows and cellars.
Then I saw Violet walking across the town square.
She was upset.
She was angry and crying, and there was blood on her face and on her little white sweater.
I ran to her to see if she was all right.
But before I could say much, she started screaming at me about Abagail.
She said Abagail was mean and crazy and that she had hit her.
I tried to calm her- calm her down, but she said she was gonna go tell her mama.
Violet was glad that Abagail had hit her because now everybody would know that Abagail was crazy and they would lock her away forever.
I pleaded with her, but she ran away.
I ran after her and I-I grabbed her.
I was trying to talk to her.
She was in a rage, and she tore herself from my hands.
She fell away from me, and she fell through the old planks that covered the well.
I reached out for her, but I only caught the little gold locket that was around her neck.
It broke.
The chain snapped.
Violet was gone.
She's gone.
You expect the court to believe that Violet's death was an accident? And that Bart Aider had a heart attack.
- Mr.
Waters? - I object.
Counsel is trying to take a woman who's been institutionalized for 20 years and get her to take the responsibility for all of'em.
And Leta- Did you kill Leta Aider too? Mr.
Waters, you will have a chance to cross-examine the witness.
Laura, did you kill Leta Aider? No.
Order in this court.
! One more such eruption, and I will have this courtroom cleared.
Mr.
Stanton, just where is this line of questioning leading? I wanna prove to the court that Abagail Fuller was innocent of the history that this town has branded her with for the past 25 years, Your Honor.
And- Now, I would like to show the court why she didn't kill Leta Aider.
Sam, uh- Yeah, take one of your pills.
Counselor, are you all right? - I'm gonna put her on the stand.
- What for? Your Honor, I would like to call Abagail Fuller to the stand.
But Mr.
Waters hasn't had a chance to cross-examine this witness.
He may not have to, Your Honor, if you let me bring her on the stand.
I don't wanna cross-examine her.
I want her testimony stricken from the record and declared non compos mentis.
! I know who killed Leta Aider, Your Honor.
- You do? - Objection! Please, Your Honor.
I won't be wasting the court's time.
- Let me put Abagail Fuller on the stand.
- Overruled.
Counselor, call your witness.
The defense calls Abagail Fuller.
Ms.
Fuller, you may step down.
Bailiff will show you where to sit.
Just tell the truth.
Do you-state your name- Sam, do you know what you're doing? Swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God? I do.
Miss Fuller, would you be kind enough to tell to the court the events that transpired the afternoon of May the 15th when you returned home? I came home at about 3:15.
I had just been to the grocery store.
My arms were full, so I entered the house and went straight back to the kitchen.
And what did you see in the kitchen? It was torn up.
There were broken dishes and food thrown on the walls like someone had a tantrum.
And what else did you see? Blood.
There was a large pool of blood.
Whose blood? Leta Aider's.
I didn't see her body at first.
Then I walked around the table, and she was there.
And where was the knife, Abagail? Do you remember where the knife was in relationship to the body? Right near Leta, I guess.
Um, a few inches away from the body.
And, uh, then what happened? I was afraid to move.
I wanted to cry out for help, but I couldn't.
So you didn't call the police, you didn't call the doctors, or- When I looked up, Bo was standing at the backdoor.
Bo was at the backdoor because somebody had called him? He said someone said they heard a woman screaming from my house and called it in.
- What are these? - Bills.
Sam, do you know where you're going with this? - Counsel is wasting the court's time.
- Please, Your Honor.
Mr.
Waters.
I'd like you to open your phone bill from May and see if you recognize any of the phone numbers that were dialed on the afternoon of the 15th.
Oakdell-65234.
That's the sheriff's office.
And what time was that call made? A full 22 minutes before you got home.
Objection.
! You have no proof that she wasn't there earlier.
I have a store full of people and the time it takes to get from there to her home.
Objection overruled.
On May 15, 1978, as Mr.
Waters told us yesterday, the day that he explained to Mrs.
Aider that based on Louisiana statutes for the protection of minors, she had no case against Abagail Fuller.
Even though they had found the bones of her daughter, Violet, at the bottom of a well, she had no case.
Can you imagine how she felt? After 25 years of waiting and hoping and praying for some shred of proof to turn up that could verify what she had believed all along, it finally turns up, and she is told that it doesn't matter.
I believe that at that point, Leta Aider became incensed.
And full of rage, she came to Abagail's house to confront her.
But Abagail was not there.
And her rage and her frustration grew.
She tore apart Abagail's kitchen looking for some measure of revenge to fill all the years of hatred that had consumed her.
And finally, feeling she had no other recourse and from some dark and horrible place in her mind, she picked up Abagail's kitchen knife, a knife that she knew would have Abagail's fingerprints on it, Just like Laura's mother.
And she slit her own throat.
Objection! This is unadulterated conjecture! Order in this court.
! - Bailiff, clear this courtroom! - This is conjecture.
! - This witness- - I want order, and I want it now! Abagail Fuller murdered Leta Aider! No! I remember! I remember! - Oh, SammyJo! - I saw her! I saw her in the kitchen.
! I saw her when she- I was hiding because I heard all the dishes breakin'.
And then I came down the stairs because it got quiet.
I saw her through the crack in the door.
She was walking back and forth.
And then she stopped, and she picked up the kitchen knife.
I object.
! This is preposterous.
! I saw her! I saw her do it! Sam, you changed history.
That was just great.
You okay? Yeah.
They gonna be all right, Al? Yeah.
Well, Ziggy says that since SammyJo is carrying your genes and now that you cleared Abagail, the curse is broken.
Um, Abagail gets married in two years to a wonderful guy, and they move to Chicago.
And she's happy, Sam.
She's really happy.
How do you know all this? SammyJo told me.
SammyJo? SammyJo is working with us on Project Quantum Leap, Sam.
What? Yes.
As a matter of fact, she has a theory on how to bring you back home.
Does she know I'm her father? No.
And Ziggy says that after this leap, you won't know either.
I'll know, Al.
I'll always know.
You, uh- You take care of yourself, okay? I won't forget you.
You heard me! Hands up! Everyone, stay calm.
We'll get this over with and be on our way.
Keep me covered while I shut the blinds.
Don't fall apart on me now, little brother.
Oh, boy.

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