Riverdale (2017) s07e01 Episode Script

Chapter One Hundred and Eighteen: Don't Worry, Darling

1
[COIN CLINKING]
One, two, three o'clock ♪
Four o'clock, rock ♪
Five, six, seven o'clock ♪
Eight o'clock, rock ♪
Nine, ten, eleven o'clock ♪
Twelve o'clock, rock ♪
We're gonna rock
around the clock tonight ♪
Put your glad rags on ♪
And join me, hon ♪
We'll have some fun ♪
When the clock strikes one ♪
We're gonna rock ♪
Around the clock tonight ♪
We're gonna rock, rock, rock ♪
Till broad daylight ♪
We're gonna rock, gonna rock ♪
Around the clock tonight ♪
When the clock strikes two ♪
Three and four ♪
[JUGHEAD] The year is 1955.
Number one on the Billboard
charts is "Rock Around The Clock,"
an earworm if I've ever heard one.
Now, some random fun facts.
In 1955, a hamburger
with a side of fries
set you back 30 cents.
A comic book, a dime.
A pulp novel, a quarter.
[TYPEWRITER KEYS CLACKING]
It's been two days since Bailey's
Comet almost decimated us,
and we were somehow
zapped back to the 1950s.
I'm not sure how that happened exactly.
I'm not sure if we're
merely in the past,
or in the past of an alternate universe.
But things are different
here in Riverdale.
For starters, I live in an
abandoned train car with Hot Dog,
which actually tracks.
And at Riverdale High,
we're all juniors again.
Betty and Kevin aren't merely friends,
they're dating.
Cheryl's twin brother is
alive, but he's not Jason.
He's Julian.
No sign of a Reggie yet.
But Archie exists, and he's still
pretty much a teen Charles Atlas.
None of them remember our lives
from before we became teenagers again,
and I haven't tried to remind them yet.
I've been waiting to
reconnect with the one person
who might be able to shed
light on our predicament,
because she was both chronokinetic
and the town's guardian angel,
my girlfriend, Tabitha Tate.
Bus from Mississippi's pulling in.
Wonder if it was as bad down there
as they're saying on the radio.
[JUGHEAD] I already knew
what Pop would soon find out.
It was much, much worse.
Tabitha, Toni and some of Riverdale
High's other students of color
were in Mississippi for the trial
of the two men who murdered
Black teenager Emmett Till,
for supposedly whistling
at a white woman.
The jury deliberated
for all of 67 minutes
and then acquitted the killers.
It was one of the single most shameful
and appalling events of this or any era.
Uh, Tabitha?
Uh, they announced the
verdict on on the radio.
It made me sick in my stomach.
- If you need anything
- That's what we're trying to figure out now,
what our next move should be
but I appreciate the offer.
It's Jughead, right?
Uh, yeah. Yes.
I'll let you know.
[JUGHEAD] It's overwhelming.
Heartbreaking.
Whichever genius said that the '50s
were the greatest decade of all time
should seriously have
their head examined.
[MARY] Archie? Can I
speak to you for a minute?
- What's wrong, Mom?
- [SIGHS]
They printed more pictures
from James Dean's car accident.
Oh, I can't even show them to you.
You shouldn't look at that stuff, Mom,
- it upsets you.
- No, what upsets me
- is the idea of you on the road being reckless.
- Oh.
And that's why I
I'm going to need your keys, Archie.
You're not going to drive
that hot rod anymore.
Mom. Whoa! Now, Mom, I'm a safe driver.
It's not a hot rod.
It's barely a cut above a jalopy
It's got fire painted on its doors.
- Mom.
- Keys. Now.
["THAT'S ALRIGHT MAMA" PLAYING]
Well, that's all right, Mama ♪
That's all right for you ♪
That's all right, mama ♪
Just anyway you do ♪
That's all right ♪
That's all right ♪
[HONKING]
That's all right now, Mama ♪
Anyway you do ♪
Well, Mama she done told me ♪
Papa done told me too ♪
Son, that gal you're foolin' with ♪
She ain't no good for you ♪
But that's all right ♪
That's all right ♪
[SCHOOL BELL RINGING]
[TONI] What do you think, Betty?
Toni, your writing is remarkable.
This is the most important
piece of reporting
that I've read in my two years
as editor-in-chief at the Blue and Gold.
But we've tried covering
Emmett Till before.
Both times Principal Featherhead
has vetoed the stories.
Betty, I heard Mamie Till give the
most incredible, inspiring speech
after the verdict was delivered.
And I got a chance to interview people
that knew Emmett personally,
his friends, his neighbors.
And I made them a promise
I would help tell his story.
I agree wholeheartedly.
I'll make an appointment
for us with Featherhead.
[MAN ON FILM] This is a squirrel mill.
A mill is a hot rod or souped-up
jalopy which was once just a car.
Well, it should happen to all
Mrs. Thornton, I'm sorry
to interrupt your class,
but I did want to personally introduce
a new student to our
Riverdale High family.
She's just moved here
from sunny Los Angeles.
[JUGHEAD] Damn.
Even in 1955, Veronica Lodge knew
how to make an entrance.
Enchanté, I'm sure.
Thank you, Principal Featherhead.
Now, before you ask,
yes, I am that Veronica Lodge,
the daughter of Hiram
and Hermione Lodge,
the married stars of
America's number-one
rated television program, Oh Mija!
For the foreseeable future,
I will be staying with
my auntie and uncle
at the Pembrooke in downtown Riverdale.
Why? Well,
you may have heard about MGM's
upcoming film adaptation of Our Town.
Though I can't confirm
that the lead role
of innocent ingenue Emily Webb
has already been cast
with a certain raven-haired
starlet, namely moi,
I did feel it was an opportune time
to take a sabbatical from Hollywood
and get a feel for small-town life.
But please, I beg of you
treat me as one of your own,
not as a scion of Tinseltown royalty.
Thank you.
Mind if I join you?
- Actually
- Yeah, sure.
I believe I caught on your names
in Mrs. Thornton's class.
Archie. Betty.
Kevin. Julian.
Hmm.
Remind me, what's yours again?
- Cheryl.
- That's right, Cheryl.
So, what are we dishing about?
- Clue me in.
- James Dean's untimely passing, of course.
I am the president of his fan
club here at Riverdale High.
Your parents' show is hilarious.
We tune in every week.
You and everyone else,
if Mr. Nielsen is to be believed.
Where in Los Angeles did you live?
Bel Air.
In a ghastly old mansion
Vincent Price used to own.
Is that close to where James Dean lived?
Wait, you didn't know
James Dean, did you?
[CHERYL] Kevin, don't be so provincial.
James Dean was a movie star.
He was friends with Elizabeth
Taylor and Rock Hudson.
Actually, Jimmy and
I were quite friendly.
We went skinny-dipping in the
pool at the Chateau Marmaduke.
[SPLUTTERING]
- You went skinny-dipping?
- With James Dean?
Once or was it a regular thing?
I suppose next you'll be
saying you and Jimmy dated.
No, but he did enjoy playing
both sides of the net.
Girls and boys.
Wait. Hang on! Are you
suggesting that James Dean was
What? I mean, he seemed like
such a regular guy.
Like a cowboy, almost.
How dare you besmirch
his memory like that?
Don't you be so provincial.
I don't know why I'm so
surprised to hear such filthy lies
coming out of the
mouth of some wild child
who grew up surrounded by perverts
going to sex parties and orgies!
Now, if you'll excuse me,
I have lost my appetite.
What about Sal Mineo?
[SCHOOL BELL RINGING]
Remember, the astronomy club
is meeting after school today.
We will be bringing
something ideas to fundraise
so we can purchase new telescope
before Bailey's Comet arrives.
B-Bailey's Comet is coming again?
Guys!
When?
Oh, not for two years, Mr. Jones.
But it's an extremely
expensive telescope,
and this will be the only opportunity
we'll have to see the
comet in our lifetime.
We mustn't miss it.
Hey, Veronica, can I walk you home?
[SCOFFS] Walk?
Do I look like the kind
of girl who walks home?
Ready, Ronnie?
Thanks for the offer, Archie,
but as you can see, I've
already secured an escort home.
Um, excuse me.
And how do you expect me
to get home, dear brother?
You got two feet, don't you?
Use them or lose them.
I'm sorry.
Miss Topaz, Miss Cooper,
but I gave your article
to Dr. Werthers for review,
and we both agree,
it's not suitable for publication.
Toni's reporting is, it's
thorough, insightful, balanced.
Be that as it may, as
a child psychologist,
it's my expert opinion that the
details of the Emmett Till case
are far too violent and disturbing
for young, impressionable minds.
People, your students,
need to understand
the gravity of what happens
so it doesn't happen again
here.
These sorts of things
don't happen in Riverdale.
And may I remind you that we were
one of the first high schools
in the country to integrate.
- Isn't that enough?
- Hardly.
We don't have any Black teachers.
We don't study or learn
about Black authors.
Change doesn't happen
overnight, Miss Topaz.
Your article's very well-written.
Surely you can find some
satisfaction in that.
Mom, Dad, you haven't said anything.
Did you read the article
my friend Toni wrote?
Yes, we did, honey.
And?
And it was very well-written.
- Extremely well-written.
- Mm-hmm.
So you'll read it on the air, Dad?
Jeez, hon, we only get 15
minutes of airtime a night.
Do we really need to spend
one minute on a story that
well, has nothing to do with us?
Dad, everyone watches
your nightly broadcast.
Imagine the impact it would have
if you, the face of RIVW,
talked about Emmett Till.
[CHUCKLES NERVOUSLY] Elizabeth,
it's not that simple, honey.
I mean, you know very
well that we have to run
every single one of our stories
past our sponsors for approval.
And I'm sorry, this is
just not in their bailiwick.
Your sponsors, you're talking about
The Blossoms, Blossom Maple Syrup.
But if we lose their support,
RIVW won't be able to
expand its programming.
Hmm. You won't be able to give
yourself a raise, you mean.
Betty. Darling, why is
this so important to you?
Because what happened to Emmett
Till was a complete injustice.
A crime emblematic of everything
that's wrong with this country.
And nobody except my friend Toni
and her friends seem to care about it.
[ARCHIE] You know, this
might sound crazy, Jug.
The first time that I saw her,
I felt like I was hit by
a thunderbolt or something.
Shazam!
But how is a guy like
me going to get anywhere
with a girl like Veronica Lodge
if I'm riding a damn bicycle?
[ARCHIE GRUNTS]
That's why I'm sneaking
this baby out tonight.
[JUGHEAD] I admit, while Archie
poured his heart out to me,
I was racking my brains.
If Bailey's Comet was what
sent us all to the past,
Bailey's Comet might be able
to send us back to the future.
But I needed help.
But with my friends unaware
of their former lives,
how can I make them remember?
It would take some kind of tangible
proof to jolt them awake, but what?
Jug, have you seen my dad's hammer?
I need to smack this dent out.
Your dad's hammer?
Did everyone bring an item?
Putting in a guitar pick and
a hammer from my dad's toolbox.
[JUGHEAD] It was a long shot.
But could that time capsule we buried
graduation weekend,
possibly have survived
whatever cosmic event
sent us back to 1955?
The items in that capsule
might trigger their memories.
Do you have a shovel
that I could borrow?
[GRUNTS]
[CLANGS]
[GRUNTING]
[GASPING]
Thank God!
[VERONICA] Well, well, well.
Color me curious.
The all-American boy is
secretly a hot-rodder.
I was hoping I could maybe
give you a ride home today.
Consider it a date.
[JUGHEAD] Archie. Veronica.
I'm holding an emergency
meeting in the music room. Hurry!
Who is that person again?
[BETTY] What is all this junk, Jughead?
These headlines are like Dr. Seuss.
Just take a moment. Look
at what you're holding.
Do you remember anything? Do
you Do you feel anything?
I mean, I like the jacket, but I've
never seen this before in my life.
I've been to a lot of movie sets,
so I know a good prop when I
see one, and these are okay.
- They're not props.
- Hedwig and the Angry Inch.
I don't get it. An "inch" of what?
When did you even get a chance
to bury my dad's hammer in a cooler?
I didn't. You did.
We all buried something
of emotional significance
in that time capsule 67 years ago.
- But in the future.
- The future?
Yeah. Yes.
This is gonna sound nuts, okay?
Just hear me out.
Thanks to a cataclysmic event,
all of us, we were all
sent back in time
to maybe an alternate parallel universe.
And we need to get back to our future.
Our present. I I was
hoping that by showing
you guys these objects, it
would help jog your memory.
Okay. What's your
object? What did you bury?
It was a yarn beanie.
But for whatever reason, it
wasn't in the time capsule.
Oh.
All right. I'll play along.
Yeah. Okay.
In the future, who's more famous?
Me or Elizabeth Taylor?
Never mind her. She just got here.
Bird's-eye view. What's the future like?
Um
Where do I start? Uh
Okay.
We don't use regular phones anymore.
We use something called smartphones,
which we can carry
around everywhere with us.
And, ironically, we don't
even call people on them.
We just send texts,
which are like messages
and listen to music on Spotify
and, oh, the Internet.
The Internet is like, um,
having an entire encyclopedia
at your fingertips.
Well, maybe tell us about us.
What were we like in the future?
Okay. Archie joins the
Army and fought in a war.
Betty, you were in the FBI
and you were hunting
down serial killers,
which I guess is a term
that doesn't exist yet.
Veronica, you owned a casino.
But before that, a speakeasy,
which Toni bought and
turned into a biker bar.
Kevin, you directed, uh, some musicals,
and were in an organ-harvesting cult.
Huh! Oh!
Okay. What about me?
Uh, you were possessed by your
ancestor and and became a witch.
Oh.
If that's what we were
doing in the future,
why would we want to go
back? We sound miserable.
Yeah, and how would that even happen?
Okay, I I have an idea.
Now, it's a crazy
one, but it might work.
So, short of waiting for
Bailey's Comet to return,
the other way that we could break
through the space-time barrier
is by getting Archie and Betty
to make out on top of Archie's bed,
and then we blow up a
bomb underneath them.
[BETTY SCOFFS]
All right, Jug. That's enough, man.
- Let's go for a walk.
- You're not going to beat me up, are you?
Because you're really
violent in the future.
What? No, we're gonna talk.
-Come on.
-[JUGHEAD] Just Just look at that.
- You don't understand!
- No, Jug, you don't understand.
We are not from the future.
Jughead, it's 1955.
And things are hard enough to figure out
without your crazy stories
about time traveling
and other universes.
And setting off bombs?
I mean, for Pete's sake,
Jughead. If you're not careful,
people might start thinking you belong
in the loony bin with the other nutjobs.
You think I'm crazy?
No, I, uh
I just, I think you have an
overactive imagination, is all.
And look, you should keep writing
your comic books and your stories
instead of trying to convince us
that we're trapped in some kind of
science-fiction picture show.
Jug, life's good.
It's not perfect, but but what is?
Well, just trust me on this
one, will you, bud, please?
Yeah.
- Yeah, no
- Yeah?
Attaboy.
I feel like all I'm doing lately
is apologizing to you, Toni.
But my parents say
they wouldn't be able
to get your story past The Blossoms,
and they sponsor the nightly news, so
Well, I'm not surprised.
When Emmett was murdered,
nobody wanted to talk about it
and nobody wanted to hear about it.
It took Mrs. Till publishing
her son's funeral pictures
for people to finally wake up.
I don't think I know about that.
Before Emmett was buried,
his mother asked for an open casket
so people could see
what was done to her son.
How he'd been beaten,
tortured and disfigured.
Toni, do you have
copies of those pictures?
At home.
From when they were in a newsletter.
Are you sure you want to see them?
[FRENCH SONG PLAYING FAINTLY]
[SIGHS]
Why on God's earth are you two
in such sullen, sulking moods?
It's not like you're poor.
Julian's mad because that
fake stuck-up Veronica Lodge
- ditched him for a date with Archie Andrews.
- [JULIAN] Mm.
Cheryl's mad because suddenly
she's not the most beautiful,
most interesting girl at
Riverdale High anymore.
- As if she ever was.
- [SCOFFS]
Anyway, these inane movie
magazines came in the mail for you.
Perhaps they'll cheer you up.
[FOOTSTEPS RECEDING]
[CHERYL CHUCKLES]
[CHUCKLES SOFTLY]
Well, I saw my baby walking ♪
With another man today ♪
- They're good, right?
- Delicious.
Honestly, I think these
onion rings might be
better than the ones at the Brown Derby.
Wow. What's the Brown Derby?
It's a chain of restaurants that
Gloria Swanson's husband
started in Los Angeles.
Who's Gloria Swanson?
You know what? Let's skip it.
Enough Hollywood talk.
I want to hear about you.
Tell me everything there is
to know about Archie Andrews.
The hot-rodder next door.
What do you do for fun?
Well, I work on my car.
I like sports.
Um I come here to Pop's.
And I hang out at Sweetwater River.
Yeah.
To skinny dip, I hope.
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
Mostly to fish.
My dad and I used to go there together.
You used to?
Yeah, he's not around anymore.
He served in the Korean War
and he didn't make it back.
- Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't mean
- No, it's okay.
It's okay. You didn't know.
[CHUCKLES SOFTLY]
Anyway, it's just me and my mom now.
And she works part-time
at the dress shop downtown.
Oh. Well, I will have
to pay her a visit.
I'll make sure she gives you a discount.
What about girls?
I mean, as handsome as you are,
I assume you're beating
them off with a stick.
Uh
Well, I'm probably digging myself
into a hole here, but, uh
You know, I've never had a
serious girlfriend before.
Really?
Why's that?
I don't know. Maybe I just
haven't met the right girl yet.
Until now.
[DOOR OPENS, BELL CHIMES]
J'accuse!
Excuse me?
Cheryl, what is your problem?
She is my problem, Archie.
Veronica Lodge is nothing
but a liar and a fraud.
And I'm going to make sure
the entire world knows it.
You're not starring in Our Town.
Natalie Wood is. It says so right there.
You've been lying to us
ever since you got here.
Which makes me wonder, why
are you actually in Riverdale?
Was it really your choice or
did your parents banish
you because they were fed up
with their lying liar of
a spoiled brat daughter?
[ALL GASPING]
Hey, it's It's okay.
- That's just It's sort of what Cheryl's like.
- [SOBS]
But don't worry, no
one takes her seriously.
In this case, she's right, though.
I haven't been entirely
honest with you guys.
The truth is, my parents did banish me.
Why would they do that?
Because I am a problem,
and when problems
interfere with their lives,
they make them go away.
In a way, it feels like they've been
making me go away since I was born.
Ignoring me and sidelining me
since they started
that damn show of theirs.
[SIGHS] So I began acting out
like some spoiled little rich
girl to get their attention.
And the straw that finally
broke the camel's back
and made my parents ship
me across the country was
the accident.
With James Dean? You were in the car?
No, I was part of a convoy of some
other good-time girls. [CHUCKLES]
We were going to cheer Jimmy
on at a race in Salinas.
Anyway, to keep my
name out of the papers,
my parents spirited me away
and put me on a private
plane to Riverdale.
- To live with your aunt and uncle.
- [CHUCKLES]
They don't exist, Archie.
This is my parent's place.
I can't believe they would do that.
I mean, exile you to live alone.
Like a fairy tale princess, I guess.
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
The show is their real
baby, Archie. Not me.
[DOOR CREAKING]
Archie.
Mom.
[PANTS]
- What are you doing up?
- Waiting for you.
I went into the garage
to get a screwdriver,
and I saw that you'd taken your car out.
- Mom, I can explain.
- You're grounded, Archie.
Because I took my car out
without your permission?
[SCOFFS] Why is that all of
a sudden a criminal offense?
The pictures of James Dean's car crash.
[MARY BREATHING HEAVILY]
I can't lose you
like I lost your father.
[MARY BREATHING HEAVILY]
And I can't get a call
in the middle of the night
telling me that you wrapped your
car around some telephone pole.
Come on, Mom. You won't.
- [SIGHS]
- You won't.
And I promise I won't speed.
I won't go drag racing.
In fact, I'll ask
Betty to un-soup my car
so that it doesn't go
faster than than
- Twenty-five miles an hour.
- Fifteen.
Twenty.
- Deal.
- Deal.
- Twenty. Sounds great.
- Yeah. Okay.
[ARCHIE CHUCKLES, KISSES]
[UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING ON TV]
[MAN ON TV] Oh Mija! Starring
Hiram Lodge, Hermione Lodge
and Tillie Temple as Little Ronnie.
Bitch.
[PHONE RINGING]
Hello?
[HERMIONE] Veronica?
Veronica, can you hear me?
Mom?
Yes. Yes, I can. How are you?
- Where are you?
- Listen, darling, I only have a minute.
But, um, what's this I'm hearing
about a boy at the apartment?
You know we didn't send you to Riverdale
to get into more trouble, Veronica.
Mom, please. It was nothing.
He's just a friend from school.
Good, good. That's music to my ears.
Mom, have you decided
on Thanksgiving yet?
- I can fly back.
- Oh, honey, I'm sorry. I have to go.
Your Uncle Orson just arrived.
But please, mija, fly right,
no boys, and we'll
see about the holidays.
Talk soon. Kisses. [KISSES]
[LINE DISCONNECTS]
[CROWD LAUGHING ON TV]
[SIGHS]
[SOFT PIANO MUSIC PLAYING]
[BETTY] Thank you for letting
me borrow the newsletter, Toni.
I had no idea.
[TONI] The pictures make it
so much more real, don't they?
Can you imagine the strength and courage
it took Mrs. Till to
let them be published?
I truly can't.
But it did help me decide that
I'm going to publish your article
in the next edition
of The Blue and Gold.
Consequences be damned.
I may have a different idea.
Nobody wanted to see these pictures
and Featherhead and The Blossoms
don't want anybody to
read my article, fine.
But what about a poem about Emmett Till
read during the morning announcements?
- But Cheryl does the morning announcements.
- Exactly.
Look, I don't know her well,
but she's going to make up
for her parents' cowardice.
You want to help me with an ambush?
Hey, Jughead.
Tabitha. Hi.
You remember that
offer you made me before
to help out in any way that you can?
Oh, yeah. Yes, uh, of course.
Well, the NAACP asked Emmett Till's
mother to travel around the country
to speak about what happened to her son,
and my folks are joining
the tour to pitch in.
I've decided that I
want to go with them.
After I help Toni with
a little something.
Wow. That's incredible.
- They're going to let you drop out of school?
- No.
But I got special
permission from Featherhead.
I'll have my books with me,
but I would love to
have a friend help me
stay on top of everything.
Okay. Yeah, I'll do it.
[CHUCKLES] Thank you.
I so appreciate it.
- I'll be in touch, okay?
- Awesome.
I mean, um, swell.
Hey, Cheryl.
Can we talk to you for a second?
What can I do for you
Toni, is it? And Betty.
Your family controls our
RIVW, which means they control
what Riverdale watches,
and Principal Featherhead
decides what I can and cannot
publish in the Blue and Gold.
The powers that be
have silenced my article
on Emmett Till's murder
trial, but you can fix this.
During the morning announcements.
As junior class president,
I can't read an article
that Principal Featherhead
has already rejected.
Not an article. Something else.
He'd pull the plug. He's done it before.
We'll take care of Featherhead.
All you have to do is let us borrow
your soapbox for a few minutes.
What would I be reading?
Good morning, Miss Bell.
Are you ready for the
morning announcements?
Apparently, one of your
classmates, Tabatha Tate,
has passed out on the football field.
Principal Featherhead
is tending to her now.
I'm to bring both him and
her some smelling salts.
Ugh, you don't say.
You know how to use a
microphone, don't you?
- Indeed, I do.
- [SIGHS IN RELIEF]
- Don't worry, Miss Bell. All will be well.
- [SIGHS]
Toodles.
[MICROPHONE FEEDBACK]
[CHERYL OVER PA] Good
morning, Riverdaleans.
In lieu of our usual morning
announcements, I, Cheryl Blossom,
will be turning over my microphone
to one of our classmates, Toni Topaz.
Please give her your
undivided attention.
[MICROPHONE FEEDBACK]
Some of you may have heard what's
happening in Mississippi right now.
How a 14-year-old boy, Emmett Till,
was murdered for maybe
whistling at a white woman
and how his killers were just acquitted.
I wrote an article about the trial,
and nobody wants you to read it
because it is "too upsetting."
So, instead, I'm going
to read you a poem
that the great American writer
Langston Hughes wrote about Emmett Till.
It's titled Mississippi-1955.
And I hope you hear his
words and reflect on them
and talk to each other about them.
"Oh, what sorrow! oh, what pity!
Oh, what pain!
That tears and blood
Should mix like rain
And terror come again To Mississippi.
Come again?
Where has terror been?
On vacation? Up North?
In some other section Of the nation,
Lying low, unpublicized?
Masked-with only Jaundiced eyes
Showing through the mask?
Oh, what sorrow, Pity, pain,
That tears and blood
Should mix like rain
In Mississippi!
And terror, fetid hot,
Yet clammy cold remain."
[STUDENTS MURMURING]
[JUGHEAD] I don't think any of
the students at Riverdale High
had ever heard a poem like that.
Hopefully, it was
worth whatever blowback
the girls were certain to get.
The lies, the
insubordination, the trickery.
I did feel sick.
Then I felt better.
Surely you aren't saying
that we can't read poems
during the morning announcements.
A poem written by one of
our greatest living authors.
All poems read during morning
announcements must be approved by me.
This is the first I've
heard of any such rule,
but I assure you, moving forward,
all poems will be
submitted for your approval.
Cross my heart and hope to die.
I'm not sure what you ladies
think you've accomplished.
[JUGHEAD] But something
had been accomplished.
Given recent events, it might
be fruitful for us to discuss
the poem Langston Hughes
wrote about Emmett Till.
How did it make you feel?
Angry.
[INDISTINCT WHISPERING]
Upset.
Hopeless.
Was he really just 14 years old?
He was.
He was younger than
all of us in this room.
Taken out of his home in
the middle of the night,
beaten, tortured.
His body thrown into the river.
[STUDENT WHISPERING] That's just wrong.
Miss Topaz, Miss Tate, Mr. Walker,
I understand that you were
in Mississippi for the trial.
If you're comfortable
sharing your experience,
I believe it would be
valuable for the rest of us
to hear about what you saw.
Miss Topaz.
Would you like to start?
[JUGHEAD] Fitfully,
but also necessarily,
a conversation that might
not have happened for decades
began at Riverdale High that afternoon.
["BABY PLEASE" PLAYING] Please ♪
Don't leave me ♪
Don't leave me all ♪
Hey, doll face.
What do you say?
You want a ride to Pop's, Ronnie?
[SIGHS] Hmm.
I see two paths before me.
Light and dark, fast and slow,
shallow and earnest.
But today
I believe I'll walk home, fellas.
'Cause you know ♪
Know ♪
[JUGHEAD] Had it finally happened?
Had I lost my mind?
Maybe 1955 wasn't the dream.
Maybe Maybe the future,
maybe that was the dream,
- and I finally woke up.
- [BELL CHIMES]
Hi, stranger.
Mind if I join you?
Yeah.
I thought I thought you were leaving.
I'm not the Tabitha from 1955.
She's with her parents
heading to Memphis.
- I'm
- Riverdale's guardian angel.
The Tabitha who remembers and loves you.
Oh, my God!
You need to use your chronokinesis
- and get us the hell out of 1955.
- [SIGHS]
Archie is trying to get me committed
to The Sisters of Quiet Mercy.
God, it's so I'm so happy to see you.
I am happy to see you too.
But I can't take us home.
Not yet.
Why? Well, why not?
Our last-minute gambit
to stop Bailey's Comet
from destroying Riverdale didn't work.
So the comet hit?
And it triggered an
extinction level event.
Are Are we all dead?
Is that Is that what this is?
- The sweet hereafter?
- No, we are alive.
In the past, I had a plan B.
At the moment of impact, I used
what was left of my life-force
to send everyone back to the past
to a point far enough back that
might give us the necessary runway
to make it back to the
present, a present in which
Riverdale isn't destroyed.
by Bailey's Comet.
Is that even possible?
Hopefully.
But if it is, I have to do it alone.
By exploring and untangling
the various timelines
that became knotted and
entwined when the comet struck.
Well, what about the rest of us?
You all have to make a
go of it here in the '50s
by doing what you can to ensure,
to paraphrase one of my heroes,
that the moral arc of this
universe bends towards justice.
That way, when I finally do
untangle the various timelines,
we can make it back to a Riverdale that
isn't on the verge of
moral and societal collapse.
But fair warning.
Given the near infinite number
of timelines and universes,
it could take a while, so
you better get comfortable.
Oh.
I mean, how How can I?
I remember everything
about our old lives?
You asking questions,
creating ripples
[GRUNTS]
that's what drew me here.
Jughead.
You remembering is an anomaly,
a dangerous one that I'm here to fix
by making you forget.
Otherwise, your knowledge
could drive you insane,
or it could drive you to do something
that further corrupts this timeline.
Will I I'll forget everything?
Yes.
You'd be just like everyone
else, able to live in the present.
In the moment.
I don't I mean, I don't want
to forget about you or about us.
I know.
But you have to.
It's for the best.
[SIGHS]
[COIN CLINKING]
[NEEDLE DROPS]
[ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYING]
[JUGHEAD] In those first few seconds
after Angel Tabitha disappeared,
I could feel the effects
of her kiss taking hold.
But for the moment, I still remembered.
I needed to write down
everything, our stories,
our lives, before it was too late.
[PANTING]
But then, like mist
evaporating in the sun,
it was all gone.
I had only managed to
get down three words.
Bend. Towards. Justice.
Meaning what, exactly?
And that wasn't even the weirdest thing.
That would be the sudden,
inexplicable appearance
of something I've never seen before.
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