03x01 - Time After Time

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Wire". Aired: June 2002 to March 2008*
Watch/Buy Amazon  Merchandise


A narcotics detective and homicide officer target drug traffickers.
Post Reply

03x01 - Time After Time

Post by bunniefuu »

I don't know, man. I mean, I'm kind of sad.

Them Towers be home to me.

You gonna cry over a housing project now?

Man, they should have blew the m*therf*ckers up a long time ago.

Man, it ain't all been bad.

I mean, I done seen some sh*t happen up in them Towers that still make me smile.

A few moments from now, the Franklin Terrace Towers behind me, which, sadly, came to represent some of this city's most entrenched problems, will be gone.

Y'all talking about steel and concrete, steel and f*cking concrete.

Man, I'm talking about people, memories and sh*t.

That ain't the same. They gonna tear this building down.

They gonna build new sh*t.

But people?

They don't give a f*ck about people.

You are very soon going to see low and moderately priced houses built in their place.

Yeah!

My cousin used to live in 221.

I used to be up in there all the time.

Man, who you be telling? I caught my first p*ssy up in there.

The girl, Chantay.

Man, why didn't you say?

They probably wouldn't be tearing this tower down now.

They could put a big-ass sign in the front.

"Here's where Malik Carr first got his d*ck wet."

We could be taking pictures. Tourists be taking pictures and sh*t.

-Souvenirs of your d*ck. -He ain't funny. He just jealous.

What? Jealous of that?

You crazy? Chantay?

Man, the mention of that bitch make my d*ck burn.

Yo, ain't no bad p*ssy, fool.

Yeah, that's what they keep telling your ass down at the clinic.

Keep that sh*t up.

You ever see this m*therf*cker walking down to the clinic burnt?

Poot be like this. He looks like a backwards-ass cowboy standing like this and walking like this.

-d*ck looking like a fried chicken wing. -Now, mistakes have been made, and we will learn from those mistakes.

Reform is not just a watchword with my administration, uh-uh.

-No, it's a philosophy. -WOMAN: Yeah!

sh*t, no matter how many times you get burnt, man, you just keep on doing the same.

n*gg*r do not learn.

Now, what do you say? Mm?

-Are you ready for a new Baltimore? -[CHEERING]

sh*t gonna be off the hook, yo.

Man, my whole life been around them Towers.

I mean, I feel... sh*t, I feel like I don't got no home no more.

Housing just moved your mama up to Poplar Grove, didn't it?

You ain't homeless, n*gg*r, you got a home.

You just damn near out of work is all.

What you mean?

I mean, look. All over the city, even out in the county, you had people, coke or dope, 24/7.

Where was it they go?

Man, look, you live in the projects, you ain't sh*t.

But you sling product there?

You got the game by the ass, man.

Now these downtown suit-wearing-ass b*tches snatched the best territory in the city from y'all.

You wanna cry over some sh*t, cry over that.

All right, everyone. Count with me.

Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one!

[KLAXON]

CROWD: Ooh!

WOMAN: Hallelujah! About time.

-WOMAN: Yeah! -[ALARM]

BODIE: Oh, sh*t.

[COUGHING]

When you walk through the garden You gotta watch your back Well, I beg your pardon Walk the straight and narrow track Walk the straight and narrow track If you walk with Jesus He's gonna save your soul You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole He got fire and the fury Fire and fury At his command Well, you don't have to worry Hold on to Jesus' hands Oh, we'll be safe from Satan When the thunder rolls Oh You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole

You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole

Way down Way down in the hole

[SIGHS]

f*ck! I just stepped in dog sh*t.

You hope.

f*ck.

[50 CENT: IN DA CLUB]

I want them to love me like they love 'Pac...

SYDNOR: Cheese? Can you see him?

When the plan is to put the rap game in a choke hold I'm fully focused, man, my money on my mind Got a meal out the deal and I'm still on the grind...

-MAN: Yo, where he at? -MAN 2: Who you mean?

Cheese, man. I'm looking for Cheese, man.

MAN 2: n*gg*r, you ain't supposed to be dropping names and sh*t.

Ain't you got no sense?

1 ST MAN: I ain't said sh*t about sh*t, man. I'm just looking to get together with the man.

-To see him about nothing at all. -So he be where he be, fool.

1 ST MAN: Is he at the place that we was at?

I'm looking to saddle up and put another bat on this m*therf*cker.

He need to deal with me today or I'll take it to someone who can handle it.

All right.

"Saddle up and put another bat on the m*therf*cker"?

Settle up and put another bet.

But what was that last part?

Man said, "He need to deal with me today", "or I'll take it to someone who can handle it." -Girl, you do have an ear.

[BEEPING]

...and I ain't changed You should love it, way more than you hate it Oh, you mad, I thought that you'd be happy I made...

MAN: He's looking to get with him.

-MAN 2: All right. -Same thing as before?

-Same thing I told him. -All right.

...pumping in the club it's on I wink my eye at ya bitch If she smiles she gone If the roof on fire, let that m*therf*cker burn If you're talking about money, homie, I ain't concerned I'm-a tell you what Banks told me cos go 'head switch the style up If n*gg*r*s hate them let them hate Then watch the money pile up...

What are you seeing?

Call comes in to Cheese's number two.

He whispers in the man's ear and off they go.

-Yeah. Nothing to the call here. -I figured that.

These guys come correct.

The phones only go so far.

Above that, it's all done as a face-to-face meet.

Three months and we've yet to hear his voice.

And Herc takes the alley to cut that off from Calhoun.

Me and Truck go up the wrong way on Stricker Street?

You got a badge, remember?

We're doing the same one block over, so they can't come to ground there neither.

When we jump out on these cocksuckers there'll be a designated runner.

Who's gonna sky up, just so we chase his ass.

But f*ck him. We let him go and jack every other m*therf*cker who stays.

Let's mount up.

Carv.

What's up?

[STEREO: THEME FROM SHAFT]

He's a complicated man.

And the only one that understands him is his woman.

Seek therapy.

-Woo woo! -Narcos! Narcos!

Let's see your hands! See your hands, up against the wall!

Put your hands up.

-You ain't gotta push me. -Hands up.

Let me see you got your hands up.

-Anything on you? -Here he goes.

Later, son. Step light.

Yo, was that the stash? f*ck!

Let's go, let's go! Cut him off on Stricker.

OFFICER: I've got Calhoun. Where you at?

[MUSIC BLASTS]

Lost him. Rear of Stricker, 800 block.

Clear on Riggs.

He just went across Stricker in an alley headed for Gilmor.

f*ck.

We got rabbit in the alleys near Gilmor. How about some backup?

Roger that.

Dozerman, what's your 20? Hey, Doze, where you at, man?

-Did he cross Stricker? -Definitely.

Everybody to Lambeth.

[THEME FROM SHAFT]

Who is the man that would risk his neck for his brother man?

He went to ground in this block, man.

Hey, listen to me, you little f*cking piece of sh*t!

I'm gonna tell you one thing only about the Western boys you are playing with!

We do not lose!

And we do not forget!

And we do not give up!

Ever!

So I'm only gonna say this one time, if you march your ass out here right now and put the bracelets on, we will not kick the living sh*t out of you!

But if you make us go into them weeds for you, or if you make us come back here tomorrow night, catch you on a corner, I swear to f*cking Christ, we will b*at you longer and harder than you b*at your own d*ck!

Cos you do not get to win, shitbird.

We do!

BODIE: With these Towers down, we need to take the rest of them low-rises and all them Fayette Street corners.

Take them?

Take them how, Mr. Bodie?

-Say "f*ck it" and take them. -n*gg*r, you ain't got the floor.

Chair don't recognize your ass.

-Take them how? -I don't know.

Just let them Fayette n*gg*r*s know, you know, we serious, right?

You know, get or get got.

Yeah, like you did on McCulloh Street last year?

Snatch the real estate, load up, and just wait for some sh*t to happen, right?

No, man, we done worrying about territory, man, what corner we got, what project.

Game ain't about that no more.

It's about product. Yeah.

We got the best g*dd*mn product, so we gonna sell no matter where we are, right?

Product, m*therf*ckers. Product.

Chair recognize Slim Charles.

Chair, our people got to stand somewhere, don't they?

I mean, all the product in the world don't mean nothing if you constantly get your ass whipped for standing on another fool's corner.

All right.

We had six of the Towers on the Terrace, right?

All running 24/7.

But three of those we gave to Prop Joe to upgrade the package that we was putting out there, right?

Now, how much you think we lost in the deal?

All right, the answer is, we made more.

Half the real estate, twice the product.

And our profit went up eight or nine per cent.

Your territory ain't gonna mean sh*t if your product is weak.

Go ahead and ask them m*therf*ckers trying to sell them Ford Tempos, and you got n*gg*r*s riding around in Japanese and German cars in America.

Territory ain't sh*t.

Especially when you consider it's the fight for the territory that be bringing the bodies, and the bodies that bring the police.

-Yeah, but how we gonna stand... -Yo.

Chair ain't recognize your ass, man.

-How we gonna stand on some... -Come on, man.

How we gonna stand on some corner that's not ours?

Well, we got the best product.

So the chances are, we'll be able to bring in the competition by offering to re-up with us from our package.

Feel me?

Everybody making money, sharing the real estate.

Slim Charles.

What if they don't cop our re-up, though?

I'm gonna worry about that when it happen.

Until then, Mr. Charles, we gonna handle this sh*t like businessmen.

Sell the sh*t, make the profit, and later for that gangster bullshit.

Yeah.

Do the chair know we gonna look like punk-ass b*tches out there?

m*therf*cker, I will punk your ass for saying such sh*t!

-String! -What?

-Poot did have the floor. -Shut the f*ck up, man.

This n*gg*r too ignorant to have the f*cking floor.

Y'all n*gg*r*s need to start looking at the world in a new f*cking light.

Start thinking about this sh*t like some grown f*cking men, not some n*gg*r*s off the f*cking corner, you heard me?

Adjourn your asses.

Y'all look like sh*t.

Well, we been stuck in that vacant since before dawn.

-How should we look? -Proud to know you, Detective.

-[KNOCK ON DOOR] -Mm.

[LAUGHS]

-Nice look on you. -Dress for success.

Oh, I watched that m*therf*cker Cheese take re-ups, move weight all day, and not once did he go near a f*cking telephone.

Closest it comes is a call to a hanger-on's cellphone ten feet away.

Which brings me to what I was just discussing with the lieutenant.

We've been up on these cellphones for nearly six months.

The only drug talk we have is from street-level small fry.

So, the feeling is that two weeks from now we don't go to the court for another extension.

We charge what we have, try to roll someone up at Cheese or one of Joe's other lieutenants.

Who are you kidding? We don't have a case worth making yet.

And at this rate, we never will.

-Oh, for Christ's sake. -As a plan on paper, it was a good one.

We came out of the port investigation with good phone numbers for Prop Joe's people.

I guarantee if we can push this thing above the street, we'll see Prop Joe himself.

We start seeing Joe, we'll see Stringer.

I can't ask for more time on a wire that's going nowhere.

Either we figure a way to punch through the wall or we let it go.

-Baker? -Yes, sir.

-So you must be Castor. -Yes, sir.

-Officer Aaron Castor. -You any kin to Lloyd Castor?

-Yes, sir, that's my uncle. -Good police.

Do you know where you are?

-You too. Where are you? -The Western, Major.

Right this very second, you getting your hind parts kicked, and you screaming for help.

Your backup's looking all over the place cos he don't know where the f*ck you are.

And that means I gotta explain to your next of kin how you went and got yourselves k*lled on my watch.

Sir, we're at 1034 North Mount, first floor rear.

Good.

Now, which way is north?

Point.

That's east.

Now, if you're in foot pursuit it might help your backup to know what direction you're running.

Even numbers tell you north and west.

Odds, south and east.

Compasses.

Until you learn that much, you carry one.

[SIGHS]

Welcome to the Western.

Gentlemen, scuff yourself up a little.

And learn the stare.

Hey, Carv, where you at?

I'm at a desk outside the roll call room on the first floor of 1034 North Mount.

My feet are facing west and my d*ck is pointing south-southwest.

Bunny Colvin's been giving that speech as long as you guys been sucking air.

WOMAN: Officer Raybold, pick up 7A. Officer Raybold, line 7A.

Where you at, shitbird?

You're in handcuffs, in my house, looking stupid, ain't you?

[COLVIN SIGHS]

Fleeing and eluding?

Do we have a drug charge here?

Loitering in a designated drug-free zone.

Let me rephrase. Do we have dr*gs?

He raised up when we hit his corner and grabbed this bag.

-We pursued and recovered the bag. -But no dr*gs.

-And they whooped my ass. -Western District way.

So, what did we learn?

Using half my district K-9 and the copter to bring a 14-year-old to bay.

-What did we learn? -That you can't raise up and run from a drug corner in Sector One without my boot finding your ass.

Right?

I got it, I got it, I got it. Got it.

Cast iron. 20 at least.

-It'd be better if it was copper. -Yeah, be better if it was gold.

But you gotta take life as it goes along, you know?

Oh, sh*t, oh, sh*t.

-What's wrong with you? -Sorry.

-You're past sorry. -Come on, man, chill.

-We don't need this, man. -You think you f*cked up now?

[WHISTLES]

-What's up? -Look what they did to my ride.

Well, do it or don't. But I got someplace to be.

-Thank you for your kindness. -Y'all got to pay something, anything.

-There be a principle here. -If we had a dime, you'd have a dime.

We're a little insufficient. We're on our way to the metal man.

We'll come back and pay for everything.

I promise you.

Hey, hey.

After the junk man, we gotta roll past Kmart.

Definitely.

TOMMY: One last question, Commissioner.

Looking back over the past months, if I read the felony breakdowns correctly, you've seen an up-tick in sh**t and serious assaults in the Eastern District.

Can we assume you're already addressing this?

Let me throw that over to Bill.

As deputy for operations, I'm sure he's got a handle on our response.

I do indeed. [CLEARS THROAT]

In answer to your question, Councilman, I can assure you that we've put additional tactical teams on a seven to three shift in every Eastern sector.

Additionally, we've put the district flex squad on a seven to three shift, being as those are the hours when we're seeing a spike in aggravated assaults.

Thank you, Deputy.

Anything else for these, er, esteemed constables?

No?

OK, then, I guess I'll see you all tomorrow night for the quarterly budget review.

COUNCILMAN: Erv... hey.

If you don't mind, I'd like to get with you about a couple things.

Can we get lunch?

Glad to, Mr. Chairman.

-How about Werner's in a half-hour? -Half-hour, good.

-You see Watkins in the back? -Yeah.

Who was that skirt with him?

MCNULTY: That's him there in the orange?

FREAMON: That's Drac.

-[CAMERA SHUTTER] -Our last best hope.

Talkingest m*therf*cker I ever heard on a wiretap.

-Here, listen. -MAN: No, no, no, the other thing.

The good... The other thing, my n*gg*r.

MAN 2: You talking him?

MAN: No, her. I mean her!

Cocaine, n*gg*r, you feel me? g*dd*mn, you ignorant...

-You ever hear that on a wire? -He doesn't report to anyone that matters.

Right now, Drac's re-ups are with Lavell Mann.

-He's got corners over on Preston and Bond. -He was pretty close to selling us weight.

No sh*t. Sydnor's been working toward him for a couple of months now.

Lavell's a soldier. He's not gonna roll up on Prop Joe.

That's true.

But if we take him with a hand-to-hand, they gotta promote someone to replace him.

Yeah, why Drac?

-One thing about our boy? -That's Prop Joe's nephew.

On his mama's side.

20 and two.

Y'all know you ain't got pants?

And there's Dominic standing in line.

When he meets the President, who's looking the other way, Dominic reaches around Carter, -grabs his belt, yanks it up... -Secret Service must've sh*t.

He says, "Hey, Mr. President, remember me?"

And Carter actually remembers.

"Sure, Dominic DiPietro from Baltimore, on the campaign trail."

And Dominic puts his finger in Jimmy Carter's face and says, "Where's that money you promised me"

"to fix up my streets?"

-Unbelievable. -That's nothing.

After losing to Reagan, Carter comes here to speak at a dinner and Dominic is ushered up to him.

Carter asks about his health and Dominic says, "You son of a bitch,"

"I'm still waiting on that money for my streets."

-Come on! -No sh*t.

Carter's just grinning through those big teeth.

Some guy grabs Dominic's arm, and off he goes.

Guy says, "Christ, Dominic, you just called the President of the United States an SOB."

He shrugs, he says, "f*ck him. I don't need him. He lost."

No, that's good. That is good.

And that is from whence I come.

Proud son of the fighting First District.

But the truth is...

I don't wanna be just another muldoon like Dominic DiPietro, warming the backbench.

Not with the way things are right now in the city.

We're losing 10,000, 12,000 residents a year.

And when you ask them why they're moving to the county, know what they say?

-Schools. -And crime.

Schools and crime.

And there goes our tax base right across the line, and the mayor's acting like a 10% bump in the m*rder rate is business as usual.

-Check, please. -You know what?

If you were smart, you'd come to me when the mayor shorts you on hiring, on equipment, on overtime, on cars.

You get the sh*t end of the stick, you come to me.

Not publicly. I know you can't cross the mayor publicly, but back-door, come to me, and I can use that subcommittee to give you what you need.

Thanks.

Kind offer.

Erv, I can help you.

-And we can turn this damn city around... -But long ago, when I was just starting out in the department, I had the good fortune to be taught a little something about chain of command.

And right now, in my capacity as acting commissioner,

I report to Mayor Royce.

I got your coffee. Leave a tip if you want.

CUTTY: So what do you need to see me for?

-You getting out tomorrow, right? -Yeah.

Probably try and reach out.

-What you gonna do first? -Huh?

Tomorrow. What you gonna do?

I don't know.

I know what be first. You don't know?

I know what be first.

I'm going home.

MAN: Time out!

[PRISONERS FALL SILENT]

Back in!

Watch the hole. Watch the hole.

Short-timer.

You only got the one day left, huh?

-You done the one, just gotta do that other. -All right.

-Like they say. -You only do two day.

-There's the day you go in... -The day you come out.

I don't know. I did 14 years.

Well, yeah, you know. You did you a little stretch, true.

But you still a soldier, right?

You know them Towers done came down now, huh?

The Terrace, the Murphy Homes. All that sh*t gone, man.

A lot of things is different now since you been up in here.

-Lot of changes. -Yeah, no doubt.

But, I mean, you know, sh*t. Some things, they stay the same, man.

I mean, the game's the game.

And the thing is, since the Towers is gone, I'm gonna need to take my thing up to some new places.

You feel me?

You know I'm gonna be home soon enough, right?

Yeah, first parole hearing, I'm out.

For real. sh*t is fixed right.

I come home... Huh.

sh*t!

There's gonna be a little hell to be paid. You know what I mean?

A good soldier ain't gonna lack for work.

Take that number, man.

When you out, you call.

We'll hook you up, no problem.

You know, it's like a coming-home gift.

All right?

Call it.

Dude, er...

The joint might have broke him.

Boss, you talking about a homie who walked up and sh*t Elijah Davis.

Broad daylight, at Pennsie and Gold.

Then picked up the phone, dialed 911, told the police, "I just sh*t a n*gg*r, come get him."

That dude ain't breaking.

Nah.

Look, we had the 20, but we had to go buy some pants.

If you take this short money, we get back at you tomorrow.

We get you on the comeback.

Yo, he want two for 16.

[BUBBLES] Trying to get two, man. I'm trying to get two.

From this young m*therf*cker.

[COUGHS] No.

We a little short now, but tomorrow, I'll be back here with the four.

Joey said no.

MAN: Spider bags and red tops!

f*cking guy, man.

[PHONE RINGS]

At these prices, I can't afford more phone surveillance.

I'm aware of that.

And right now, the plan is to go for a hand-to-hand on one lieutenant

-a couple rungs down from Proposition Joe. -And then roll the lieutenant up?

We don't think he'll have much roll to him.

Joe's people are pretty schooled.

The hope is that they promote this mid-level dealer who's a fool to replace him. Drac.

We're on his cellphone.

If he gets promoted, maybe he talks to Joe or Joe's top people.

We get that far, maybe we start to see Stringer Bell.

Hm.

What makes you think they'll promote the wrong man?

We do it all the time.

[LAUGHS]

Look, speaking of promotions, I sent yours over to the Hall, as promised.

-And? -And the mayor's holding it up.

My understanding is he wants to know what your wife is doing.

My wife?

Yeah. There's a rumor that she's gonna take a run at a council seat.

Maybe try to knock off Eunetta Perkins.

-That's my wife's business. -Yes, it is.

But the mayor counts Eunetta as an ally.

Our deal was for a permanent unit and the next vacancy for major.

You got your unit. And I sent your name over to the Hall.

I kept my word.

But the mayor, he may wanna know who his friends are before he makes a new commander.

Where'd she say she was gonna be at?

Near the dugout, first base side.

She'll turn up.

When is she supposed to bring them over to you?

Middle of the fourth.

Dad, can I have a hot dog?

Yeah, as soon as the guy comes around.

Speaking of which, where's the beer man?

Oh, there they are.

-Look. -Damn. They got great seats.

Oh, hell.

-What? -Who's that on her left? The suit.

-Just a friend? -No, he's in the cake.

Who comes to an Orioles game in a suit, spends half the time on a cellphone?

Downtown lawyer.

Something wealthy like that.

-JOHNNY: Wish we had more of it. -Long way to go for half a sh*t.

It'll be better tomorrow, Bubs.

Well...

What kind of dope fiend be talking about tomorrow?

Tomorrow ain't sh*t.

Today, Johnny. Today.

I hunted down all that metal. Lugged it around like a dog.

I nearly get k*lled over a scratch of metal, so that I gotta beg for my life.

Lost my trousers, man, my f*cking trousers.

And then I'm begging again for half a sh*t?

I swear to God, man, I'm not even high.

[g*nshots]

[TIRES SCREECHING]

-We just missed a foul, Pa. -Yeah?

Our seats are great. We're practically on the field.

Yeah, my friend, Dennis, he gets company seats every now and then.

-Where are you sitting? -Mezzanine. Come on.

-Oh! -No, you guys go.

Your dad hasn't seen you all week.

Don't take their jackets off, cos Sean's just getting over a cold, OK?

Jimmy, right? Dennis Kerpelman.

Great kids.

Anyway, nice meeting you.

-Do you want anything from the stand? -No, thank you.

[CHEERING FROM THE PITCH]

Uh, don't stay till the last inning, cos it's a school night.

Bye.

You got spatter going in two different directions, just off the curb.

-Yeah. -MAN: sh**ting on the West Side.

Another one? Christ, where?

North and Pulaski, Cole's up.

Cole's working a cutting off Belvedere.

See if Crutchfield's back from the Westport scene.

If not, call Bunk at home.

-Bunk's off day. -Hey, f*ck his off day.

I love this town.


Perlozzo's pretty quick to yank a pitcher, ain't he?

I'm thinking of becoming a woman.

-[MOBILE RINGS] -MAN: Red-hot peanuts!

Office. Yeah?

I'm at the ball game.

-[CROWD CHANTING] -The ball game.

Yeah, what about Cole? Call him.

Oh, sh*t.

All right.

Can you believe this? They caught five tonight.

They're telling me to come in on my day off.

Five, huh?

City's jumping bad, man.

OK, listen.

-I gotta go to work, all right? -All right.

[CROWD CHEERS]

Mr. Jimmy's gonna...

Ooh!

-He's gonna take you home. -[CROWD BOOS]

You're on your own, partner.

ANNOUNCER: Number 32... Luis Matos.

[BELLS CHIMING]

Hey, Ma.

-And Erdman Avenue? -No ballistic information.

Are you sure?

Take your time, Major.

Can you believe that cocksucker Carcetti? Thinking I'm gonna talk out of school.

Any day now, Marvin.

What can a white councilman give me that a black mayor can't?

No, you played it right.

It was a .38 recorded on Erdman Avenue, sir.

So what you are, in effect, saying, Major, is rather than looking at this cluster of robberies you had along Monument Street, you chose to investigate each using separate personnel.

No, sir, three of those cases were commercial robberies, so we sent those downtown to CID.

-My people had responsibility... -God damn it, Marvin!

Did you just invoke the word "responsibility" to explain why you didn't get on top of this sh*t?

Did you just do that?

I don't think you know what the word means.

When I look at the 24s and plainly see that some .38-caliber assh*le is raping your entire district all the way from Greenmount to f*cking Edison Highway.

It's policing like that that makes it possible for us to get hit with five f*cking homicides in a single f*cking night, people!

-Poor f*cking Marvin. -Better him than us, right?

Based on your testimony, the buy itself will be enough to charge, but get him saying something on tape, it's even better.

Are you sure this guy wants to sell you weight?

We don't wanna force this.

-I been stroking this guy for two months. -That's not what he asked you.

This guy is ripe and ready, Kima.

It ain't no thing.

They're about ready.

You living out of the office, Cedric?

All right, Drac is depending on you people.

Mount up.

And find your way home.

Look a little light to be an ounce, don't you think?

No, man. Ain't nothing light, it's just settled, is all.

If it does what it should, I'm gonna come back to you for three, maybe four a week.

Yeah, that could work.

-We good, then? -We good.

-That's it. -Take him down.

[SHORT BLAST ON SIREN]

-Somebody snitching! -Shut the f*ck up!

Let's go, Lavell.

It's Cutty.

Was told I could call for help.

What about the Oxbow? The Oxbow on Laurens, at Fulton.

All right.

Damn.

DRAC: They caught Lavell with a whole ounce. Might not be no bail for that much weight.

They might take it federal, run wild on they ass.

And Joey gotta give Lavell's corner to someone, right?

Might be my turn.

-Our boy won't shut up. -Caroline, you say that like it's a bad thing.

Let's just hope we're listening to a candidate for elevation.

[CHUCKLES]

[PIGEONS COOING]

I heard about you, man. I hear your name used to ring out.

You got something for me?

You see where shorty's sitting at right there?

You'll find a little help.

And when you ready, we got some real work for you, all right?

Jesus!

[CONVERSATION IN BACKGROUND]

Hey. How you doing?

OK.

-We were just talking about you. -Really?

You know Denise, from the sorority.

-Charles, of course. -Always a pleasure, Lieutenant.

-Good to see you. -I don't think you've met Delegate Watkins.

-How do you do? -Nice to meet you.

We were saying you fill out a lieutenant's uniform nicely.

-Makes an impression on the campaign lit. -That matters?

Well, Marla's a new face taking on a long-time incumbent.

-Everything matters, I'm afraid. -Well, anything I can do to help.

I'll get out of the way and leave you all to it.

Marla, I have to tell you that your photo with Cedric works really well on the mailer.

I sure hope he knows what he's in for because it's gonna be a long race for the both of you.

-And that is not going to go easy. -WATKINS: Speaking of which, we've got to...

[CAMERA SHUTTERS]

Jesus. Who called the media?

DRAC: No, you'd think the man might respect my sh*t enough to let me step up.

-But it ain't even go like that. -MAN 2: Why not?

DRAC: He gonna give Lavell's corner to that off-brand n*gg*r, Cheese.

Joe's my uncle.

I mean, I'm kin to the fat m*therf*cker.

That idiot works for us, he'd be a deputy commissioner by now.

FREAMON: Ain't no luck at all to this case.

How, in all good conscience, can I, as chairman of this subcommittee, authorize any more overtime when it's clear from the data in front of me that that money is not gonna go to line officers, or working detectives, but is being used to pay for drivers and clerical and...

So that two colonels and three majors can attend a community policing seminar in Miami.

Mr. Chairman...

What does South Beach have to teach this department about making Baltimore safer?

I have no idea and you have no idea, and it is an embarrassment.

[DOOR OPENS]

MARLA: Cedric, they're gone.

[SIGHS]

I wanna thank you for this.

No problem.

It's not easy, I know.

But they seem to think it matters that I present myself as...

I'm fine with it.

All those years you were all about my career...

Well, it's the least I can do, right?

Good night.

[DOOR CLOSES]

MAYOR: We're not holding anything up in his district.

Repaving, foot patrols, streetlights.

He's getting his share.

Unless it's not about his district... it's about him.

Maybe he's got big eyes for something.

For what?

Not me, not my chair, not in this town.

No. If that guy came off any whiter, he'd be see-through.

But if that's it, come on with it. In fact, please, Jesus.

Or maybe John the Baptist. Soften you up for someone else.

-If he's gonna bang us on crime... -Bang me on crime.

Look, is there any way for you to talk to this guy?

Keep him from crawling up my ass?

He's old First District.

Not a lot of favors we can call in over that side of town.

-We've got to show him something, right? -Four to five per cent drop in felonies.

And murders.

Get the murders down to under 250 for the year.

All due respect, Mr. Mayor, we're at 232 now.

What can you realistically do?

Our best-case scenario, if we bump overtime, is...

275, maybe.

-275, Christ. -That's a promise, right?

275... and this assh*le Carcetti has no issue.

Gentlemen, the word from on high is that felony rates district by district will decline by five per cent before the end of the year.

We are dealing in certainties.

You will reduce the UCR felonies by five per cent or more, or...

I've always wanted to say this... let no man come back alive.

In addition, we will hold this year's murders to 275 or less.

Christ.

Feeling a little fazed, Colonel Foerster?

A little dyspeptic?

Dys-who? No, sir. I'm good to go.

Here's a fun fact for you.

If Baltimore had New York's population, we'd be clocking 4,000 murders a year at this rate.

There is no excuse I will accept. I don't care how you do it.

Just f*cking do it.

Er, Deputy... as familiar as we all are with the urban crime environment, I think we all understand there are certain processes by which you can reduce the number of overall felonies.

You can reclassify an agg as*ault, or you can unfound a robbery, but, er, how do you make a body disappear?

There isn't one of you in this room who isn't here by appointment.

If you want to continue wearing those oak clusters, you will shut up and step up.

Any of you who can't bring in the numbers we need, will be replaced by someone who can.

That is all.

Jesus, Bunny.

What got into you?

Another six months to my 30.

I'm out the door on a major's pension.

The hell they could do to me.

Spider bags, red tops.

-Any other bright ideas? -How about a bug?

A bug?

Yeah, bug one or two of the big corners where these mopes hang.

Watching those corners over on Ashland yesterday, I'm seeing dumpsters, weeds, maybe a utility pole.

You hide a bug in the right corner, you make this case.

We don't have the manpower. Not to mention the money.

And for what? We're still a long way from a quality target.

I say we come down off the wire, charge what we can, and move on.

We come down early two years ago, we left a real bastard on the street.

We're gonna let that same son of a bitch b*at me again?

How many times do you let Stringer Bell go around the board?

Collect another f*cking 200... Million.

-There's other fish in the barrel, McNulty. -Stringer's the target.

There isn't a better fucker out there. You know it, Lieutenant.

Don't you let him go soft on this.

It's you against the world, is it?

What the f*ck did I do?

Red tops, spider bags!

You up?

Step the f*ck off, m*therf*cker.

You got a need, you talk to one of the young 'uns.

I ain't in the market. I'm selling.

You look like the right person to be talking to, chief.

You seem like you steady running this sh*t here.

What, are you some kind of police or something?

I'm a long m*therf*cking way from the police.

I just finished a 14-year bit in Jessup.

Got a package as a coming-home present.

-G-pack. -Well, why not sell that sh*t your own self?

I just came home. I ain't trying to get my ass violated.

Even split.

-sh*t. It's all profit to you. -Risk mine, too.

What make you think I ain't on paper or some sh*t?

60-40.

Cool. Give your sh*t to my boy.

He good with it. Then come past tonight.

All right.

MELLO: And one last item for you gents.

It seems that Foxtrot was hovering over the station house a few days ago and caught a lovely view of about 700 or 800 discarded beer cans on the garage roof.

Seriously, no off-duty drinking on the station lot.

And if you do find yourself holding a beer can, don't throw it on the roof, take it home with you.

Come on, guys, the memo came down from our beloved deputy of operations.

[MUTTERING]

All right, get out of here.

Don't get captured.

At ease.

-Anything from day shift? -Nothing that'll make the papers.

I'm gonna ride the district until the deputy major gets in.

If you need me, hit the radio.

Distribution?

Possession.

-And some loitering. -Loitering?

And behaving like assholes in the presence of sworn officers, boss.

-MAN: Hey. -MAN 2: Hey, what's up?

What's going on?

MAN 2: Yeah, what's up, dawg?

[INDISTINCT CHATTER]

[CHATTER ON POLICE RADIO]

[DISTANT SIRENS]

[MUSIC WITH PUMPING b*at]

BOY: Five-0 creeping.

-[DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES] -It's midnight relief coming in.

What the hell is all this?

You don't look at what you did before, you do the same sh*t all over.

I'm out of here.

[CONVERSATION CONTINUES ON PHONE IN BACKGROUND]

Spiders with a red top! One and one!

Where he at?

Spider bags! Got those spider bags!

The f*ck you looking at?

Huh?

-What, do you want a go? -Just my split.

Some bad luck there.

The police came through, snatched up a ground stash or two.

sh*t happened to be yours.

f*ck, right?

-You got a number? -A number?

Back in the day, when a player tried to say he lost a package to the police, he had to give up a number for the report.

Well, we ain't back in the day.

I'm getting f*cking tired of your ass.

Yeah, walk it off, m*therf*cker.

f*cking old-school-ass bitch.

Got them spider bags. Two'll get you three.

-What? -You up?

Spider bags, two gets three.

[TURNS UP POLICE RADIO]

You up or you not?

[LAUGHTER]

What you doing, boy?

Man! Dumb rookie.

Don't you know five-0?
Post Reply