01x05 - The Pager

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Wire". Aired: June 2002 to March 2008*
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A narcotics detective and homicide officer target drug traffickers.
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01x05 - The Pager

Post by bunniefuu »

'We gonna play the brand-new big, bad game.

Call us now...' Hello?

Hello?

Who was that?

- They hung up without saying.

- They hung up without saying?

What you care?

You never use the damn phone in here no how.

Na-na-na And we say, na-na na na-nah...

Politicians got lipstick on the collar...

What's up, baby?

I need you to get them phone lines up out that house.

Out of the apartment?

Why?

What Chansay gonna say about not having a line in her own place?

All right.

Got you.

- What's up, baby, you got a problem?

Good.

- I'm just sayin'.

It seem we goin' past careful with all of this, man.

Like we buggin' out or something.

You know, like we paranoid and sh*t.

No, not this phone.

We used this phone yesterday.

What you blowing out your mouth for?

Ain't nobody out to get me?

I got no enemies?

No, man.

We all right.

If you walk through the garden You better watch your back Well, I beg your pardon Walk the straight and narrow track
If you walk with Jesus He'll save your soul You gotta keep the devil Down in the hole All the angels sing About Jesus' mighty sword And they shield you with their wings Keep you close to the Lord Don't pay heed to temptation For his hands are so cold You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole Way down in the hole Way down in the hole Way down in the hole Way down in the hole This gonna be so easy.

Eastside chumps, ain't nothing like Avon's people.

Watch.

Y'all gonna see.

All right.

Y'all gonna be here, right?

Hold up.

Hold up.

Yo, Boo!

I'm gonna slide up through here.

Bailey, you gonna cover the alley.

Yo!

Yo, Maurice short, man.

- How short?

- Three.

Tell him to grow a couple of inches.

Where you gonna be at?

That be the trap right there.

You figure they roll through the alley?

Rats run to holes in times of danger.

And you him, ain't you?

- Who?

- Danger.

No, man.

I'm just a n*gg*r with a plan, that all.

- And a shotgun.

- For sure.

Sorry I'm late.

Got myself lost down the other hallway.

- That leads to the loading dock.

- Yeah, and deep storage.

So this is where they put you?

Quite a message they're sending.

- And that message is...

- Out of sight, out of mind.

Spoken like a true troglodyte.

Whole lot of dead trees behind this nonsense.

The foundation of your case.

You lay it in right, you can build on it.

You lay it in wrong, everything on top falls.

- We ready?

- Mmm-hmm.

Do you swear and affirm that the affidavit is true to the best of your knowledge?

I do.

Then by the power vested in me, I now declare you man and wife.

- Did he swear already?

- The state's attorney?

Yeah.

I see it.

Second copy is sealed for the court and the police get the others.

How's this work?

Same frequency as the one carried by D'Angelo Barksdale.

He gets a page, we get a page.

- So, we up now?

- It's official.

You're up.

Then let the game begin.

Celebrities always seem smaller when you meet them in person.

Yo!

Yo!

Hey, yo!

Check it out, here he come.

- Somethin' ain't right, yo.

- Watch out, man, he got that boom.

- He's packing.

- Here he come.

Yo, come on, Omar's coming, man!

sh*t!

Mm.

Yeah.

The cheese stands alone.

- How you know?

- 'Cause if you could, I'd have been had.

Yo, he saying you can't catch the bug just by getting your d*ck sucked.

Dumb-ass.

You gotta be in some p*ssy to get it, all right?

Man, wear a coat if you want, don't nobody like suckin' on a rubber.

How would you know?

Who you trying to f*ck anyway?

Arletta Mouzone.

Treenee's cousin.

Damn, man.

In that case use a big-ass condom, all right?

You need a trash bag.

f*ck that.

I wouldn't run up in that bitch with D'Angelo's d*ck.

It's triflin'.

Easy to see why n*gg*r*s come around here stealing our sh*t!

Yo, you know what, n*gg*r?

What?

Forget it.

142 isn't a working telephone exchange.

Six intercepts so far, and five aren't working numbers?

Something wrong with the recorder?

We're getting what you'd expect, seven digits of a number and a two-digit add-on to identify the caller, like here, 13.

McNulty, line one.

- Yeah.

- 'Did you just get a 142 exchange?' Yeah.

- 'That's f*cked up.' - All right, later.

He's got the same numbers on the readout of the cloned pagers.

So it's not the recorder.

They're using a code to cover their calls?

Uh-huh.

- That's pretty damn sophisticated.

- What is?

They've coded numbers in their pager messages.

How do you know?

Every time the Barksdale kid's pager goes off, this machine gives a message and time.

McNulty has a cloned pager but we use this in court.

Same with those pen registers.

Every time a pay phone in the low-rise court is used, we get the telephone number, the time and the duration of the call.

- Incoming calls, too.

- Spy sh*t.

Very cool.

You say they're using some kind of code?

They got to be.

These numbers don't make no f*ckin' sense.

- You rang?

- Omar's ride.

Bubbles spotted it.

Different tags, no stolen report, these come back right for the van but Bubs makes it by the cargo rack.

Good scope.

You wanna take him?

Can't hurt to try.

We pop Omar, get a g*n, he might let us work him.

Anything coming through on the pager?

Eight hits so far, most of them in some kind of code.

These ain't Baltimore exchanges, that's for sure.

Three weeks to get Daniels to agree, a week to write the affidavit and then this bullshit.

How complex a code can it be if these knuckleheads are using it?

Then again, what does it say about us if we can't break it?

You wanna run Bubs back downtown, I'll sit here and wait for you.

All right.

- What'd I miss, girlfriend?

- Not a g*dd*mn thing.

Boring, ain't we?

How y'all do what you do every day and not wanna get high?

That's what I be asking.

It's been a little hectic down here, right, cuz?

String, man, I can't lie.

Them stick-up boys, they caught us dead up.

And the Narcos, sh*t, I don't know what the f*ck that was.

Five-0.

Comin' up!

- Five-0 comin' up, y'all.

- Time out.

- What is that?

- What?

Get your crew to understand it's the stick-up crews and creepers that give us trouble.

When they start thinking like that, you're not gonna have any more surprises.

'Cause you know, your uncle and me, we think you got a snitch up in the shop.

- What?

- Someone who tips off the stick-up crew.

And you gotta be on that, right?

You gotta be on that.

I'm gonna tell you what you do.

What day is it today, Friday?

What happen on Friday?

- Payday.

- Not this Friday.

Why not?

You gonna call 'em like you gonna pay 'em and then you cr*ck 'em.

You tell 'em you're not happy with what they f*ckin' pass as work down here.

When you're not happy, they ain't gettin' paid.

Feel me?

But you don't pay a n*gg*r, he ain't gonna work for you.

You think a n*gg*r's gonna get a job?

These n*gg*r*s gonna be like, "f*ck it, let me quit this game here and go to college"?

They gonna buck a little, but they not gonna walk.

- And in the end, you gonna get respect.

- Yeah.

And when that money run out, they'll come up to you and roll on you and ask you for an advance and sh*t, when they flat-ass broke.

Them the n*gg*r*s that you strike off your list.

But that n*gg*r that stay eatin', the n*gg*r that steady rollin', ain't askin' you for sh*t, that's the n*gg*r I want to hear about.

Understand?

Yeah, man.

sh*t, you know how to play a n*gg*r into a corner, String.

- Take care of this right here.

- You my favorite girl.

sh*t, let me handle this, man.

Hey, Poot.

- Come here, man.

- What's happening?

What the f*ck is that?

What the f*ck is that?!

You know the f*ckin' rules.

- What the f*ck are you doing?

- Copying.

A telephone.

This f*cking detail...

It's after three.

So where are the boys at?

Maybe they only come out at night.

I used to have a guy like Omar working for me.

Guy named Reuben Terry.

- Is he good?

- Saw the street like we wish we could.

Ain't nothing like a good CI.

School's out.

Can I use your cellphone?

I got that.

I did.

Mm-hm.

- I know.

- 'I don't know about this.' What do you mean, you don't know?

For Christ's sakes, I'm their father.

You think I'd let 'em sleep on the floor?

Yes, I got them.

Sheets, pillows, comforters, pillowcases.

I f*ckin' got them.

'What color are they?' What the f*ck do you care what color?

Hello?

- Lost her.

- I bet.

You know something?

My ex-wife, the way she acts sometimes, the way she deals with sh*t...

You would think a less...enlightened man than myself, cruder man than myself, a man less sensitized to the qualities and charms and value of women, not me, but a man like that, he just might call her a c**t.

You just called the mother of your children a c**t.

No, I did not.

- Yes, you f*ckin' did.

- No, I did not.

Let's just leave this, OK?

I got some stuff to do.

Five-0, gotta go.

Man, get out the way!

sh*t.

Not much fighting this time.

Getting tired, assh*le?

Still dragging from Kima's whupping.

f*cked you up like a cop should.

That's one thing about Kima, she put a hurtin' on you like a man.

Get your monkey ass up.

You're gonna want your business card back, right?

Come on.

From Bantry Bay to the Derry Quay And from Galway to Dublin Town Well, I never seen my brown colleen That I met in the County Down That I met in the County Down...

That I met in the County Down First, I go in, play nice.

- Then you come in, play bad.

- I ain't playin'.

Bracelet too tight?

You rackin' up all kinds of points, ain't you?

First, you put a cop in the hospital, damn near k*ll his ass with that punch.

Now, you on the wing from Boy's Village.

Man, I'm 16, all right?

What the f*ck they gonna do to me?

That's the least of your worries, my friend.

I got a partner outside who can't wait to get in here and f*ck you up.

Cop you banged was Herc's uncle.

Herc wants off the leash on this one.

And I suppose you at the other end of that leash?

See, I don't want to play it that way.

I know about comin' up hard and all.

Why, you...you came up hard?

Flag House projects.

Eastside.

Yeah, Flag House?

You know, you remind me of me.

I'm thinking we should work something out.

What do I get?

What you want?

I...I want...

for you to suck my d*ck.

- I'll b*at your f*ckin' ass.

- Take it easy.

- You're the good cop!

- Dumb m*therf*cker!

- What?

What?

- Ow!

- Hello, may I help you?

- We'd like a table.

And you have reservations?

I thought, you know, we could just walk in...

Let me see what I got.

That's two?

Ah.

Follow me, please.

Your coat, ma'am?

- Can we get that one, over there?

- It's Friday night.

Those are for reservations.

Let me get your chair for you, ma'am.

- It's OK, man, all right.

- Here you are.

Here you are, sir.

Your waiter will be with you shortly.

You shoulda pushed him, D.

Oh, bastards.

Sarge, nobody answers at Juvenile Intake and we been calling.

Clearly, they're not as dedicated as you two detectives.

What time does the duty consultant get here?

You missed the 8:00.

You got another one around midnight.

- Midnight?

- You think if we left you the paperwork, you could put him in the box until Intake gets here?

Hemorrhoid.

For the crumbs.

Yeah, right.

- You like your dinner?

- Yeah.

- That shrimp was right.

- Yeah, it was good, right?

Mm-hm.

Think they know?

Do they know what?

You know.

What I'm about.

What you mean, D?

Come on.

You know.

It's like...

We get all dressed up, right?

Come all the way across town.

Fancy place like this.

Then we go down to the harbor, walk around a bit, act like we belong down here.

So?

Your money good, right?

D, we ain't the only black people in here.

It ain't what I'm talking about.

It's about where we...

Come on, you know.

I'm just saying, you know, I feel like some sh*t just stays with you.

You know what I'm saying, like, hard as you try, you still can't go nowhere.

- Can I interest you in dessert?

- Yes, thank you.

- Can I have some chocolate cake?

- I'll bring the cart.

Boy, don't nobody give a damn about you or your story.

You got money, you get to be whatever you say you are.

That's the way it is.

Oh.

Sir, I'm sorry.

These are the samples.

And for you, sir?

Very good.

Don't be a bitch.

Admit it.

Go ahead.

- Admit you're wrong.

Be a man.

- I gotta confess.

This sub beats chink-ass Bob's by a mile.

You might be all that when it comes to thumpin' on n*gg*r*s but you can't do sh*t with that stick.

- You'd do better.

- I play.

Says he plays.

- He might.

- I'm even better with two hands.

I checked it out, man.

Stinkum true on this one.

Except for that n*gg*r, Scar, from New York.

- Edmondson gully is wide open.

- What about Tee-Tee's crew?

They dried up when they took that federal charge.

Most of 'em are gettin' high.

I'll tell you what.

You holler at the boy Scar.

Let him know it's time for him to take a stroll.

If he give you any beef at all, we'll put Wee-Bey and Bird on it.

Then once we got him out, we'll send in the smokers to run out all the little poop-butt locals and sh*t.

If some cats got game, we put 'em on our team.

Who do you want to run it?

- Send Stinkum up here.

- All right.

He saw the sh*t.

So, he gets a sh*t.

OK.

Not bad.

Can't let the duty officer see that.

You wanna give it a rest, man?

You down 60.

That might be your salary but I clock that in minutes.

- Rack 'em and break 'em.

- You waiting for Juvenile Intake?

He's in the squad room.

If I had more time, I'd run you.

Mm-hm.

Give you a tip, Preston.

You gonna run a hustle, you best stay with what you know.

Man, f*ck you and your tired-ass advice, all right?

But...that sandwich was good.

You gonna move our little thing down to Edmondson Avenue.

Take the gully.

What about, er, Scar?

Who?

Listen, I'm giving you points on the package, so you make a go of it, you hear me?

You working for yourself too, so you gonna put out the strong product and get the locals behind it.

It's as simple as that.

You get your team together, you feel me?

Go and wait for me downstairs.

I'll be down in a minute, man.

- We gonna make this money run in a few.

- Smile or something, n*gg*r.

- Made that n*gg*r's night.

- He deserved it, though.

It's Wee-Bey.

We got one.

- You think it's Omar?

- Nah.

- It's one of the young 'uns, I think.

- One down, two to go, right?

m*therf*ckers.

Trying to rob me, baby.

One, two, three.

- A winner.

- Ah.

A match?

Which case?

The one you brought me.

Casing in that girl sh*t up in Northeast.

- Kresson?

- Right, yeah.

She matches up with two other cases from last year.

- Which ones?

- Toreen, er...

Boyle.

- Ligget.

It's in the report.

- It's Toreen Boyd, Roland Leggett.

Yeah, them.

Casings from all three killings go to a .45, probably Colt Classic.

- That fucker Landsman.

How's he do it?

- You like Landsman for these three?

I don't know.

As sergeants go, Jay's a sociopath, but I'd go with an actual gangster.

Jimmy, you sitting down?

'I said it was hot, but if you got these barbecue gloves...' You got a Johnny Weeks up in here?

- Who?

- Johnny Weeks.

- Over in the game room.

- Obliged.

- Any smokes?

- I'm out.

You gotta give the medication a chance to work in your system, man.

'Isn't that great?' Brought you something.

Some chicken pieces and some fries.

I bought a shake, but I dropped it on the bus.

It comes in a bag, goes out in a bag.

How long you have that for?

- I f*cked up, man.

- Yeah, I saw.

There was nothing I could do, you know?

It's like first I got b*at, right, then I get this.

What are these for?

They say I got the bug.

The bug?

- They checked me when I was in hospital.

- Are they sure?

Where you been at?

Here and there, I'm at it.

I'd have come past sooner, but I been on a mission.

- A mission?

- Them hoppers that b*at you down, they got problems now.

- Them and the people they sling for, even.

- What?

I put the police on their ass.

Police?

What, you get locked up or something?

I'm not working for them.

I'm working with them.

They don't give me the badge soon enough, I keep doing like I do.

Why?

What do you mean why?

How can you ask me why?

Why the f*ck are you in here, with all these falling-down m*therf*ckers?

Why you passing sh*t through a bag?

Why do they b*at you down?

Why I couldn't do nothing about it?

It's all part of the game, right?

I mean, you taught me that.

What you up to in here, man?

- Doing the meetings.

- NA?

Yeah.

Twice a day.

That's good, man.

It's good, you give the body comfort, you know.

Yeah.

- No, you needed a change.

- Guess so.

I'll be out at the end of the month.

They got meetings everywhere.

You ain't gotta worry about that.

Bubs.

Who's got the best package now?

- Get the f*ck out of here, man.

- I'm coming home, right?

sh*t is weak all over, you know?

Got some boys up in Baker and Calhoun, though.

They had a smoker out the other day though.

- Yeah?

- Knocked a couple of n*gg*r*s out.

Ain't you a trip?

b*at down, bagged up, still ready to rip and run, huh?

I'm a Viking, homes.

"I'm a Viking, homes." Hey!

McNulty!

There's something here that needs kissing.

Speak again, oh, toothless one.

I guess you know now why I wear the stripes in the family.

Good call, Jay.

If Keeley hadn't f*cked the scene up, you'd have had that casing months ago.

Let Keeley be Keeley.

We all can't be princes of the city, now, can we?

Speaking of which.

Sit down.

May I ask you a question essential to your career?

- What?

- Who do you serve?

I am asking you to identify for the record your commanding officer.

- Major Rawls.

- Excellent.

And with that thought in mind, I advise you to go immediately into the Major's office, carrying the break I gave you in the Kresson case and kiss his ring.

Because I have talked you right out of the shithouse.

Here's the deal.

You wrap up this thing with Narcotics in two weeks.

You put yourself back in rotation when we go to night work.

You do that and you're back in the fold.

- Thanks, Jay.

- No problem.

- sh*t ain't right.

- You work, you get paid.

- That's what I'm saying.

- I'm gonna say something to him.

- You should.

- Truth.

- What's up, D?

- What's up, shorty?

530.

The count is right, man.

OK, re-ups on the way down.

Go tell Sterling to be ready for it.

All right.

Yo, D, man.

You know, me and Poot, we been steady working it, you know?

Nothing sloppy, no troubles, right?

No.

And we was wondering if, maybe you could let a little something go until payday, 'cause you know, right now, we some broke-ass n*gg*r*s, man.

Right now, whoever did our girl also did Boyd and Le-ggett a month earlier.

"Leggett." Those two are definitely straight-up drug executions.

No mention of D in either file.

- But I did get a fresh number on Tywanda.

- Who?

The girl who called in on Kresson.

- She put D in for that.

- Have you seen this?

Jaybird.

And the bear said, "You didn't really come here to hunt now, did you?"

- You see Saturday's 24s?

- Sunday morning.

Did you see Worden's on the Westside?

John Bailey in a Kevlar vest, lit up by three separate sh**t.

Carey Street.

You made the connection.

You didn't think Bailey might tie in with Barksdale?

Worden's on the other shift.

I'm trying to work my murders.

Jesus Christ.

Tony, Line three.

- What took you so long?

- We get a few murders here in Baltimore.

We get backed up.


- You weren't followed here?

- Why would we be followed?

Diedre was playing with scary people.

Who might that be?

You called this in after the m*rder and you told the detective you talked to her the night she was k*lled.

She called.

It was late.

She didn't talk long.

She said she had to go.

D was at the door.

That was the last time you spoke?

- Yeah, she was k*lled that night.

- D was her boyfriend?

No, D was his nephew or something.

- D would be D'Angelo Barksdale.

- And the boyfriend, Avon Barksdale?

- You know Avon?

- How do you know him?

You running the street with the players?

I used to be...but not after this thing with Diedre.

I mean, damn.

We used to go to Odell's for ladies' nights and one time he was there with all his people in one of the big booths, ordering drinks, acting like he was king of everything.

And Diedre ate that sh*t up.

- And you?

- I ain't gonna lie.

I did the club thing for a while, but...

Some of those places, everybody there's on some kind of game.

But Diedre went with Avon?

She was with Avon for like a year and something happened.

She started getting possessive.

That didn't sit with Avon, 'cause he has other girls, too.

She was bitching on him one minute, crying the next, threatening to do all kinds of things.

- She threatened Avon Barksdale?

- The girl was off the hook.

One time, she threatened to write a letter on him.

- A letter.

- A letter to the state's attorney.

Supposed to be some sort of kin to her.

She said that if he dumped her, she was gonna tell about the dr*gs.

- Did she write this letter?

- I don't know.

I tried talking about the way she was acting, but she wouldn't let it go.

She had it out with him in his club in front of all the people.

Avon has a club?

Orlando's, titty bar.

- Does he own it?

- That's what Diedre said.

She said he owned a whole mess of stuff.

- Tell me something, man.

- What's that?

How can you run this place and not just OD on p*ssy?

sh*t.

You try dealing with all these b*tches and their problems for a few days.

Get so you'd rather be running a damn laundromat out this fucker.

Heard you're doing OK in the Pit.

- Yeah, well...

- What, you ain't getting it like that?

My uncle got me working on salary.

Damn, boy.

You ain't the only one your uncle keeps close.

- What?

- Come on, man, you ain't making no ends?

I know you getting something on this.

No, man.

I'm just the front, clean name for the liquor board.

- I'm saying...

- f*ck!

Is there a problem?

That was for the drink before.

It ain't like I'm calling your uncle out or nothing but give a n*gg*r a chance.

- Plenty of pie for everybody.

- Believe.

You heard Stinkum gonna be getting a percentage.

- What?

- Open up fresh territory.

Take over the corners down near Edmondson and Brice.

So, my uncle gave that to Stink?

- Orlando!

- Figured you knew.

Orlando!

Can you help me down here?

- I already paid for that last drink.

- That was for the drink before.

- That was for this one.

- What's up?

Look, he ain't paid for that drink and I took $20 off the bar.

- Look she took 20, then 20 more.

- Hell I did.

Why you gonna do me like this?

I been with you for an hour buying drinks.

Look, man, this ain't right.

I just spent $120 in drinks, $40 in tips.

You gonna take all that and try to sneak into my pocket?

- sh*t, girl!

- You got to go, get him the f*ck outta here.

I ain't done so much as touch your kneecap.

Trying to treat her with respect, and this is the way you do me?

Wait.

OK, man, I'm goin', I'm out of here.

Why you do that?

- Did you take his money?

- No, I didn't take his money.

You buying me a drink?

Can I see you sometime?

Like, you know, not in here.

Um...

I don't usually see men that I meet in here.

Usually.

What kind of strip joint has a video camera looking out?

More to it than the girls, maybe.

So, he's got the club, he's got the warehouse, he's got the apartment by Druid Hill Lake, he's got the tow truck company, and that's just what she knew from what he bragged about to the dead girl.

- Major likes assets.

- The deputy, too, I imagine.

Nothing like property forfeitures to swell the departmental budget.

Check city assessments to see who owns the club.

Run the company name through the charter office.

Also, Homicide picked up one Saturday night.

Might be one of ours.

John Bailey, he's a stick-up artist I used to know from the Murphy homes.

He was wearing Kevlar.

39 casings on the scene, from three different g*ns.

Overkill for a burn bag but about right if he was running with Omar.

Look.

Our buddy.

Just once, I wish they'd use the right number.

Ain't like him to be late.

Bailey, you f*cking dope fiend.

I'm telling you.

Them f*cking people ain't to be relied on.

- Why you always talk like that, man?

- What?

"F" this and "f" that.

If I give it up, I lose half of what I mean to say.

Don't nobody wanna hear them dirty words, man.

Especially coming from such a beautiful mouth.

Wait for Bailey?

Early bird catches the worm, dog.

- I beeped you.

- I didn't get it.

- Let me see.

- You want to see my pager?

Yeah.

Sure, Prez, you want to see my pager?

- I beeped you too.

- You all right, Prez?

714-3432?

I got that.

That was you?

You try it?

I tried it.

Twice.

Non-working number.

It would've worked if you knew the code.

- sh*t.

- I'm as surprised as you.

I like word-search puzzles.

You know, where you gotta find the hidden words?

So I thought I could do the same thing with the numbers.

Take the number I sent you.

Now take the seven and jump it over the five.

You get three.

Jump the one over the five, you get nine.

With four you get six.

Three, that's seven, four is six.

A three again...

and two is eight.

Zero switches with the five.

So 714-3432 is...

396-7678.

Our number.

- And that's the code?

- Yeah.

And it works because it's all about where the buttons are on a phone.

If it was a code that involved math or algebra or whatever, these little yos in the projects wouldn't be able to follow along.

But with this, all you gotta do is jump the five button.

Ain't no math to it.

It's just how a phone looks when you look at it.

Prez, you little genius!

- Jesus.

- I could k*ll you, that's so good.

Your mother keep ragging at me to take him outta here and put him in a nursing home.

Yeah, bro.

She ain't never gonna let that go.

I keep telling her, man, we can't show this legit money yet, since he ain't got no insurance.

Soon, though, soon.

So, you ain't big on coming here, right?

No.

Tell you something.

You about to see your uncle, you understand me?

- This is family.

- I know.

Family is what counts, family is what it's about.

Family gonna always be there 'cause it's blood.

Man.

'Dr. Galls, please.' You never figured on this, did you?

Live the life, lead the life.

Ain't no big thing.

He used to talk that sh*t all the time and he believed it, you know what I'm saying?

What's up, baby?

Talk that sh*t now.

You know, you're right.

It's kind of hard to be in here right now.

He scare you, don't he?

- You know, I'm just saying.

- He scares me.

Yeah.

See, if he dead, I could carry it better.

Coming up the way we did, you kind of expect that.

Waiting on it.

See, the thing is, you only got to f*ck up once.

Be a little slow, be a little late.

Just once.

And how you ain't gonna never be slow, never be late?

You can't plan for no sh*t like this, man.

It's life.

Yeah.

It scares me.

They're still using it.

I was by on Saturday night and it was gone.

On your own time?

- You still getting your boys?

- Yeah, tonight for a sleep-over.

Omar's rolling.

What the hell?

Call for backup?

Not yet.

Let's see how it plays out.

An invitation.

- Feel a little lonesome for backup.

- Me, too.

- That's nice.

I'll check the rear.

- I'll watch the boys.

Afternoon, gentlemen.

Saying, if you were gonna use that you would've used it by now.

It's clean.

Got to keep it clean.

We having one of our little parlays like this, got to keep it clean, right?

Omar with no g*n on the street?

Must be a first.

Sometimes who you are is enough.

But being as y'all sitting on my ride so long, I thought I'd save y'all some time.

I ain't taking no charge.

You ain't putting me back in a cage.

We're not here to bury you.

We're pulling you up 'cause we got a problem in common.

- Problem?

- Barksdale.

- No, he ain't no problem.

- I don't know.

Avon's been chalking up a lot of bodies.

And you being you...

Put it that way, I guess he could be a little problem...

but I can't come out and help you.

You know what I mean?

Snitchin' just rubs me wrong.

Personally, I don't think the game is played like that.

We respect that.

If you do happen to take a charge though, I'm McNulty, that's Greggs.

You give us a call, we'll sort something out.

Fair enough.

You know, I used to work the homes, back when your brother was up there.

You get a chance, let him know they blew up John Bailey last night.

- Good man.

Lot of enemies.

- Mm-hm.

Are you trying to catch up with Bird?

Word is he dropped a workin' man.

Wait, hold up.

Come on, don't play me.

What working man?

What Bird?

Come on, now.

Ain't but one working man, is there?

And Bird?

I think your snitch can handle that.

sh*t, Bubbles know Bird.

- You working late?

- A little.

Got a minute?

Sure, have a seat.

No, this is better said standing up.

You know, I've been 13 years on the shelf.

I ain't bitched.

It was me that put me there.

But I'm here now, and I gotta say a piece.

We should've had a tap on the project pay phones by now.

A wire there will get us the dr*gs.

Keep pushing, we'll get a whiff of the money, too.

I know you're serious about climbing that career ladder and I know how slippery it gets the higher you go, but for me, I don't want to go to no dance unless I can rub some tit.

I appreciate your honesty.

Good night, Lieutenant.

What did you say to make D pay out?

I told him to give it up or I'm taking him out of the count.

- sh*t.

- Look.

I'll pump n*gg*r*s when I got to.

- That's him.

- That's who?

One of the ones that robbed us.

That light-skinned boy.

That's him?

All right, come on.

I'm the king of this sh*t.

- 'So, you want us to wait?' - Yeah.

- 'All right.

We on it, man.' - All right.

Hey, dog.

Hey, yo, hey, yo.

There goes Scar right there.

- Right there in the blue?

Number 80?

- Yeah, I'm on him.

All right, you got him?

Find a phone real quick.

It looks like my man D got himself an emergency.

What, he been stuck up again?

'What's up, what do you need?' My people are onto one of Omar's boys down at Greek's.

- 'All right, sit tight.

I'll take care of it.' - All right.

Ain't nobody coming.

Yeah.

D said wait.

D said wait.

Told you.

- Yo, he still in there?

- Yeah, he's playing the games.

All right.

You sharp, son.

What's your name?

- Wallace.

- Wallace, all right.

This n*gg*r's gonna point him out to us, all right?

- Yeah.

- 'Yo, it's done. Nice work, cuz.' All right.
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