Devil's Hollow (2023)

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Devil's Hollow (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

[shovelling]

[crickets]

- [Bobby] I don't know

where to start, really.

Hell, you don't even know me.

So I don't expect you to

forgive me for all the things

I've done.

- Bobby Hawkins.

- Birdy.

How about it, man?

- Look at you, you

look good, man.

- Last I heard you were

working over at the

County Clerk's office

- No, man,

I got on over at the plant.

Going on six years now.

- sh*t.

- Worked my way

up to Team Leader.

- Good for you, man.

Come on, you got

what, 9, 10 kids now?

- Three, two girls and a boy.

Best things that

ever happened to me.

- I'm happy for you, brother.

- Been doing good.

Going out to First Baptist.

Alyssa goes out there.

You should come visit some time.

You ever talk to her?

- Alyssa? She don't

want to talk to me.

- You might be surprised.

What's your plan then?

- Just... don't go back.

- That's a good plan.

- Let me ask you

something, Birdy.

After all that went down, did

you ever hear from Cofield?

- You?

I never could figure

it out neither.

We was like brothers.

I always figured I'd

hear from him some day.

A letter or something.

- He was the only one

of us that got away.

Sometimes I feel like he's in

some sort of parallel universe

sleeping like a baby

on stacks of cash

while we're stuck in this one.

- Parallel universe, huh?

Man, you was in there too long.

Harry's done good for himself.

Owns a bunch of

restaurants, couple of bars,

even ran for city commission.

- Harry, huh.

- sh**t. You, me,

Cofield, Harry.

We was something back

in the day, wasn't we?

The four horsemen.

- Four stooges, more like it.

- Ain't that the truth.

It's good to see you, brother.

- Hmm.

- Battery is low, recharge now.

(phone ringing)

- Hey buddy.

- Buddy? What is that, a joke?

- Come on, man.

- What you think that is? A

toy, something to play with?

- I just wanted some company.

- Company?

- It gets lonely out here, man.

- Would you prefer LaGrange?

Look, don't drag my

black ass out here again.

- I'm sorry.

- I got things to do.

- I know.

- I'm busy.

- I know.

- You could have called.

- You wouldn't have come.

- How's Mrs. Whitaker?

- Hell if I know.

Hell, man, what did you do?

- It's what I didn't do.

I didn't listen.

I didn't come home

every night at 6:30.

I didn't leave the

toilet seat down.

I didn't brush my teeth.

How's it going looking for work?

- Where am I

supposed to go, huh?

Mine's shut down,

factory's full up.

Hell, that's how I got in

this mess in the first place.

- Well, you gotta put

some feelers out there.

You know that was the deal.

- Well, I got plenty to

keep me busy around here.

Look at this place.

- Well, I might be able

to help you out with that.

I got a hand, he's

a hard worker.

You, you talk to Kelly?

- What would I say?

- She's still working down

there at the Hideaway.

- Hell, that place

ain't b*rned down yet?

- She still looks the same too.

- I'm done with all that mess.

- Yeah, you are.

- Whole 'nother life.

- Here's to a new one.

- Let's do it.

- Mr. Hawkins?

- Como estas?

- Bien, bien.

- Whitaker send you?

He says you need help.

- All right, fellas.

Your wife picking you up?

- She takes the

truck on Fridays.

- Where to?

- Cleans houses in town.

- So you just got

the one vehicle?

- We make it work.

- Well, I got an

old beater out back.

You get her running,

she's yours.

Been sitting there 20 years.

- You're joking.

- It ain't like I'm doing you

a favor. It's a piece of sh*t.

- Gracias.

- What can I get you?

You want a drink?

- I wanna see her.

- For what?

- What do you think?

She's my girl.

- She ain't been

yours for a long time.

- Hell does that mean?

I'm her daddy.

- She's got a daddy,

and it ain't you.

- You seeing somebody?

- That's none of your business.

- Well, Lissy is my business.

Where is she?

- Hell, Bobby.

That girl ain't lived

with me in years.

- Well, if she ain't living

with you, where is she?

- Harry took her in.

- Harry.

- sh*t, Bobby, he's my brother.

I was dead broke.

I couldn't afford to raise her.

She's better off.

- What the hell

is wrong with you?

- You gonna come in here

now like a concerned father

and judge me?

Get the f*ck outta here Bobby.

- Give me her number.

- I ain't giving you sh*t.

- This guy bothering you?

- He's just leaving.

- Not till I get that number.

- It's time for you

to move on, hoss.

- Take it easy, big boy.

- Bobby, here, just go.

- Thought you'd b*at me back?

- Had some business.

- I hope it was worth it.

- Look, I ain't going nowhere.

Hell, I'm right here, I'm

just looking for my daughter.

- Well, I could'a

helped you with that.

- Right, you didn't even tell

me she was living with Harry.

- I didn't want you to go

out and do something stupid.

Getting mixed up with

Harry Casper again

is something you don't need.

You thought he was into

bad sh*t back in the day,

you should see the

sh*t he's doing now.

- I ain't getting

mixed up with nobody.

I'm just trying to see Alyssa.

- It's been 10 years, why

you care all of a sudden?

- f*ck you, Whitaker.

- See, you packing

up the reasons why I

should take you in.

- You ain't going to take me in.

- And why not?

- As I recall, you helped me

polish off a bottle of Beam

the other night.

Getting sh*t-faced

with your parolee...

...ain't gonna look too

good to your supervisor.

- You assh*le.

- Let me go.

- All right. Just this once.

This sh*t happens again,

blackmail ain't gonna help you.

I can't protect you after this.

- Let me get you a drink.

- You assh*le.

- Look at you.

Ain't changed a lick.

Maybe a little uglier.

Ain't you going to invite me in?

- Hoo-wee, it's

been a long time.

So how long you been out and

you ain't come to see me?

- Been busy.

- Hmm, that's what I hear.

Kelly says you was

down at the Hideaway,

asking about Lissy.

- How's she doing?

- Just let me worry about her.

Pere... Perelandra?

You getting all egghead on me?

Hey, you remember the

time that we stacked

all those beer cans

up on your daddy's TV

and then we took

turns swinging at it?

- Yeah, except you missed.

Busted the sh*t outta

your daddy's Magnavox.

- He b*at the tar outta me.

How can I help you, Harry?

- Oh, I'm glad

you asked me that.

You got something

that belongs to me.

- Money's long gone.

Cofield took every penny.

- Oh did he now?

- I was there.

I watched him cross

over into Jellico.

That's the last I seen him.

- Well, now I know that's

what you told the press

and the cops.

But, see, I never

believed that story.

Because, see, you was the

greediest one of the whole bunch

and there ain't no way in

hell you would've let Cofield

light out with all that cash.

- I was scared, man.

I figured that if

he had the money,

the cops would go

after him and not me.

I come home and there's a

sh*t load of cherry-toppers

in my driveway.

- So he sold you out, huh?

- Maybe.

- That is about 10 pounds of

horse sh*t in a 5 pound bag.

I think you know

exactly what happened.

And it had nothing

to do with Cofield

riding off into

the sunset, did it?

- That was 13 years ago.

That sh*t's over and done with.

- You're a changed

man. You and Birdy.

Done found Jesus.

You done got washed in

the blood of the Lamb.

See, the problem is,

the blood doesn't wash

away what you owe.

- I ain't in debt to you.

- Au contraire.

See, we made a pact.

We was all gonna split

that money up four ways.

Now, in my mind, when a

man makes pact, it stands

and it don't matter no

nevermind how many years pass.

- From what I hear, you

own half the county.

What do you need more money for?

Look, I wish I could

help you, Harry.

- I'm gonna get my money.

Maybe not today.

Maybe not tomorrow.

But I'm gonna get what's mine.

Whoa, you should have

seen your face right then.

- I'd like to see Alyssa.

- Oh, I bet you would.

- Look, I appreciate you

helping her out and everything.

- Helping her out?

You make it, I don't know,

sound like I just, I don't know,

bought her some school

books or sh*t like that.

I raised that girl.

- And I appreciate all

you done. All the same...

- You have a good

day, Bobby boy.

- How's it coming?

- Levantando a los muertos.

My daughter, she

ain't picking up.

- She probably don't

know it's you calling.

Don't have you saved

on her contacts.

How old is she?

- Seventeen.

- That's it then. Ninas don't

talk anymore, they text.

- Text?

- Si, text.

- Sweet pea? ...the hell?

I gotta teach you everything?

- I reckon.

- Sweet pea... You know

what my wife would've done

if she seen that sh*t?

- I thought she left you.

- She came back.

- Well, that's good, right?

- And she checks my phone

at least 12 times a day.

So don't be sending me

no more texts, okay.

- So what do I do?

- You gotta pull up the

names on your contact list.

Since you're an assh*le,

you ain't got no contacts.

But I'm going to add a

Alyssa under one condition.

You got to promise me

that you'll just keep this

between you and

Alyssa, understand?

No Harry --

- What do I want with Harry?

- Nothing.

No how you doing?

No long time no see, nothing.

You have to promise that

you're gonna keep this

between you and your daughter.

- Of course.

- All right, she's in there now.

So when you ready

to send a message,

all you gotta do is type the

message and then click send.

- Phones can do all

kinds of things, huh?

- Oh sh*t, you can watch TV,

watch movies, play video games.

You can check the

weather in Beijing.

- Why would I want to do that?

- Well, I'm just

saying you can do it.

You can take pictures,

record voices, just like --

- No sh*t, I ain't stupid.

No sh*t, I ain't stupid.

I really sound like that?

- It's worse in person.

- I am stupid.

- All right, it's ready to send.

- I think it worked.

- You did it.

- I did it.

That's the hardest

thing I ever did.

- There's hope for you yet.

- I'll try to give you details,

but you know, I was

kind of out of it.

- Hmm.

- It was a blur, but he

got to wailing on me.

So I grabbed my blade

and I stuck him.

- Did he leave

anything else behind?

- Nothing I seen.

- Well, what do you think he

was after? dr*gs? Electronics?

- Have you seen my TV?

And no, I ain't got no dr*gs.

- All right, well he

was after something.

Think you might have known him?

Maybe one of those men

you got working for you.

- No, it wasn't them.

I didn't see their face,

but I know who sent them.

Harry Casper.

- Well, what makes you say that?

- Cause he paid me

a visit yesterday.

Made some threats.

- Such as?

- Just that he wanted money

and he was gonna get

it one way or another.

- Money... The

First Federal money?

- He thinks I still got

it, but that was ages ago.

Ricky Cofield took

it back in the day.

- Then why would Harry Casper

come out here looking for it?

- I don't know.

- You get a good

look at the truck?

- Dodge Ram, I think.

- Ram... License plate?

- Truck was blue, I saw that.

Hey, are you kin to d*ck Gray?

- My uncle.

- I thought you favored him.

Old d*ck hauled me off to county

more times than I care to admit.

How's he doing?

- He passed.

I'll tell you what I'm gonna do.

I'm gonna do the best I

can with the information

you've given me and the

evidence that we collected.

- So, that's it?

What am I supposed to do?

Just hang out like

a lump on a log?

Wait for them to come back?

- Maybe they won't.

- Oh they will, sure as sh*t.

Harry don't quit when

he wants something.

- That's assuming that

Harry is behind --

- I have no doubt.

- Then I suggest

you get yourself

a good home security system.

- That's it?

- Unless you wanna give me

the whole story, Mr. Hawkins,

there ain't a lot

more that I can do.

- The whole story, I

told you everything.

- Okay, well I can't

figure why you'd insist

that Harry Casper is

hellbent on harassing you

if there ain't more to it all.

- I am the victim here.

- I'll write it up.

- You do that.

- Have a good one.

- sh*t.

- Well?

- Well, he thinks

Casper's involved.

- What do you think?

- I don't know yet.

- What's to know?

There is power, power

Wonder working power

In the blood of the Lamb

There is power, power

Wonder working power

In the precious

blood of the Lamb

- Folks say to me, "Pastor,

what I do in private

is my own business.

Long as I don't hurt nobody."

But now the scripture says

there is nothing hidden

that will not be revealed.

And there is no

secret that's kept,

that will not come to light.

- Alyssa...

- I know you?

- I'm Bobby... your dad.

- Look what we got here.

- Harry.

- Get in the car.

Go.

Something I can do for you?

- Next time you want

to send a message,

you might wanna

bring it yourself

instead of sending your boys.

- That's the Bobby I remember.

- Take care of yourself now.

- Bobby! You made it.

You coming to church now?

- Probably not.

- Everything all right?

- Birdy, come on.

I don't wanna end

up like Terry Malloy

In a cab carrying

on bout how

- Turn that sh*t back on.

- I got a headache.

- Something you wanna say to me?

- Was that really my dad?

- You got nothing to

do with Bobby Hawkins.

You understand me?

- Ow!

- Do you understand?

- Okay.

- Well, well, well,

look-ee who we got here.

Can I get you anything?

We got any sippy cups?

- Heard you paid your old

buddy Bobby Hawkins a visit.

- Not against the law, is it?

- No. He said you

made him some threats.

Funny thing is he was

assaulted outside his home

later that night.

Any connection there?

- You tell us,

you're the police.

- What happened here?

- Fell outta my tree stand.

- What were you doing

in your tree stand?

- I was trying to

bag an eight pointer.

What do you think?

- It ain't deer season.

- Well... I was...

- Trevor, shut up.

- Hawkins said he saw a

vehicle leaving the scene,

a blue pickup, kind of

like that one out front.

Does that seem odd to you?

- A blue pickup in

Franklin County?

No, it doesn't.

- Girl, you gonna do

anything or just harass us?

- Funny you should ask...

One of the intruders left

some blood on Hawkins' lawn.

Lab has it now.

Same lab that has your

sample from the r*pe charge

back in '16.

So I find a match

between that sample

and the one from Hawkins' lawn.

Then, yeah, I'm

gonna do something.

I don't know what grievance

you still have with

Bobby Hawkins,

but you keep poking him

and you're bound to

stir up a sh*t storm.

It's not gonna be

good for anybody.

Hawkins is just trying

to start over up there.

You leave him alone.

- Let me get this straight,

are you suggesting we throw

him a housewarming party?

- I told you, Harry.

Don't make me tell you again.

- Baby.

- Momma.

- You want something to eat?

- I'm good.

- Help me out here.

- This a new one?

- I've done this one before.

For some reason, it just

never gets any easier.

- Ask you a question?

- Yeah, fire away.

- My dad... what's he like?

- What's he like?

Well, he was up at

LaGrange for about 10 years

and never lifted a

finger to contact you.

What's that tell you?

- I remember, though,

when I was just little,

he used to play the harmonica

to help me fall asleep.

Remember that?

- Yeah.

Well.

- I think I wanna talk to him.

- Suit yourself.

You're gonna be disappointed.

- Right.

Well... I'll leave you to it.

- Well, hey, you just got here.

Stay and help me.

- I got some things to do.

- What do you got to do?

Hey... You got anything?

- I ain't got nothing.

- Bullshit. I know

Harry hooks you up.

Come on, baby... just

a little something?

- Sorry, momma.

- Hell, my dad's been

locked up a bunch of times.

- At least you know him.

- I guess.

- Is he cool?

- I don't know.

He's all right.

At least your dad's trying.

I mean, he called you.

- So, what, you'd call him back?

- All right.

One for you, one for me.

All right.

So...

You look so big.

- I ain't a baby no more.

- Thanks for coming.

- So you really

can't go nowhere?

- Ah... grocery and church.

- That's about all.

Rat in a cage.

- Sweet pea... Why'd

you call me that?

- Your momma never told you?

- She never talked

much about you.

- Well, when you were

born, we wrapped you up

and you looked just like

a little pea in a pod.

So...

How's Harry treating you?

- All right.

To tell you the truth, I ain't

really sure why I'm here.

- Hey, you like books?

- Sure.

- I read a lot in LaGrange,

as you might imagine.

You like science fiction?

That Harry Potter sh*t?

- I like fantasy.

- Oh, sh*t, I got that.

There's this space

trilogy. You'd love it.

There's this kid who goes to

Mars and finds out that Earth

has been cast out

of the solar system.

This guy, Ransom, he fights an

evil force to restore Earth.

Let me see... listen to this.

"The smells in the

forest were beyond all

that he had ever conceived.

To say that they

made him feel hungry

and thirsty would be misleading.

They created a new kind

of hunger and thirst,

a longing that seemed to

flow over from the body

into the soul..."

What's the matter?

- I gotta go.

- I'd like to see you

again. I mean, if you want.

Well, at least take

the book, it's good.

- Hell is this?

- A book.

- Oh, no sh*t.

Where'd you get it?

Went and seen him, didn't you?

Now what did I tell

you about that?

- I just --

- Oh I just, I just what?

Let me ask you something.

Who do you think it was that

kept a roof over your head,

ever since you was yay high?

See, I know what

is best for you.

And he's got nothing

to say in the matter.

Now what part of that

does your little pea brain

not understand?

- I just wanted to meet him.

- What for?

- I got a right.

- You what?

- I got a right to

see him if I want.

- Oh, you got a right...

You got a right to do

exactly what I say.

- Screw you, Harry.

- Now listen, everything

you got, everything you are

is because of me, and

don't ever forget it.

- How you doing, Mr. Hawkins?

- I'm doing.

- Your daughter around?

- Why?

- Apparently, she

ran off last night.

- Well, she hadn't

come around here.

You check with her mother?

- Yeah, she ain't

been by there neither.

But I wouldn't worry.

- You wouldn't, huh?

- No, you know how kids are.

She probably got pissed at Harry

and ran off to a

friend's for a few days.

But she comes by, you

let me know, okay?

- sh*t.

- Give it a couple

days, she'll show up.

- Hell, it's my fault,

I let Harry raise her.

I got no right to be concerned.

- Sure you do, she's your kid.

I need your help, Birdy.

You're right.

Alyssa is my blood, I don't

care if I'm stuck out here.

I ain't gonna let him hurt her.

- What do you need me to do?

- I need you to go to Harry

and tell him he don't

run things no more.

- Bobby, I don't want to

get caught up in no w*r.

- Just give him the message.

You owe me that.

- Have a seat, Birdy.

So, you come here

to save my soul?

- Ain't nothing like that.

- That's good cause you'd

be wasting your time.

But now you gotta tell me

why you're here wasting mine.

- Bobby Hawkins sent me.

- You're Bobby's pigeon now.

- He'd have come

himself if he could.

- You got balls, Birdy,

I'll tell you that, you do.

But, you know, coming

here on Bobby's behalf,

I can't tell whether that's

really brave or really stupid.

- Bobby's just worried about

his little girl is all.

- Sounds like an accusation.

- Nothing like that.

- Well then, tell me

what it is like, Birdy.

- Bobby just don't think

she's safe here is all.

- Well, that's none

of Bobby's business.

Sure as hell ain't

none of yours.

- sh**t, Harry.

Back in the day, he took

the fall for all of us.

If it hadn't been for Bobby,

you and me both would've done

a lot more time than we did.

We all robbed that place.

But you and me did

three piddly years.

Knowing that he was in

there that whole time,

I don't know about you,

but that k*lled me.

- So, what, you think

we owe him something?

Let me ask you something, Birdy.

You say Bobby's so concerned

about his little girl.

Just exactly what does

he intend to do about it?

- He just says to tell you

that he ain't afraid to

tussle if it comes to that.

Listen, I ain't trying

to stir nothing up.

It's what he said.

- Come in my house uninvited.

Call me an unfit guardian.

Pass along a thr*at.

And you ain't trying

to stir nothing up?

- You ain't my enemy, Harry.

- Birdy, Birdy...

I really thought you were

smarter than this, I really did.

I mean, you went and

got yourself on the

straight and narrow

but you haven't got the sense

God gave a three-legged

co*n dog who's lost his nose

and ought to be put down.

- Please don't

sh**t the messenger.

- Don't worry, Birdy...

I ain't gonna sh**t you.

- To think we used

to be friends.

- Stooges.

- What?

- Stooges.

- Boys, show him what we

do to uninvited guests.

- Morning. What are

you girls doing?

- Just walking.

- Why don't you get in the car?

- We ain't done nothing.

- Oh, you're not in trouble.

I promise. There's some

people worried about you.

Come on.

Mr. Hawkins.

- What's going on?

- We, uh... we pulled

Lawrence Birdwhistle's car

out of Benson

Creek this morning.

- Where is he?

- He was inside, he

was b*at to death.

His wife said y'all

spoke the other day.

What'd you talk about?

- You think I had

something to do with it?

- No one is saying that.

- Birdy was my friend.

If you want to know

what happened to him,

why don't you ask Harry Casper?

- I intend to.

- And why aren't y'all out

there looking for my daughter?

- Alyssa's home, I picked

her up this morning.

She's over at Harry's now.

- Hell, then she's in more

trouble than she ever was.

- Harry Casper is

her legal guardian,

there is nothing we

can do about that.

- There's nothing you can

do about anything, is there?

What good are them badges

if y'all are all

working for Harry?

- Well, what good is this badge

if you won't tell

me what you know

that'll help me bring him in?

- I told you... I

ain't hiding nothing.

- Sorry to hear

about your friend.

- Who knows what

he's gonna do next?

I gotta get Alyssa out of there.

- And how you gonna do that?

The second you leave,

every black and white

in the county is

gonna be on your ass.

What good you gonna

do her back in prison?

- I gotta do something.

- Bobby, let the cops

take care of this.

- The cops.

- They're your best

friends right now.

- Some friends.

- Let them do their job.

- They did their job,

and Birdy's dead.

I ain't gonna sit around

and wait for the same thing

to happen to Alyssa.

- You ain't got

a lot of options.

- I thought you were on my side.

- I ain't on nobody's side.

My job is to keep you

out of prison, that's it.

These days, you ain't

making that very easy.

- Alyssa?

It's your... Bobby Hawkins.

Listen, can you come out here?

I'd like to talk to you.

Yeah.

- What do you want?

- Listen, I know Harry's

got a hold on you.

Believe it or not,

he had the same hold

on me back in the day.

- Nobody's got no hold on me.

- Then get out of there.

- And go where?

- Here. Come stay with

me. You'll be safe.

- I don't even know you.

- For the longest time,

I sat up there in

that rock thinking

I wasn't worthy or something

to be your daddy, you know?

Like you were better

off without me.

Figured you felt the same,

so I stopped writing.

- You never wrote me.

- I wrote you two

years straight.

- I never got no letters.

- You may want to ask

your mom about that.

All I'm asking is that

you give me a chance.

- You had your chance.

Harry's right, he's the only

one ever gave a sh*t about me.

- Harry only cares about Harry.

- Cares more than you ever did.

Ever since you come around,

everything's gone to sh*t.

And I don't want no part of it.

- What do you want?

- I just want things

to go back to normal.

- Back to him

smacking you around?

- You don't get it, do you?

I'm glad you got that

thing on your ankle.

I don't ever wanna

see you again.

I don't want you to call me.

You was never my dad and

you're never gonna be.

- What's on your mind, sugar?

- I know you're

working for Harry.

They got you keeping

an eye on me.

It's all right.

You're just doing

what you gotta do.

- Bobby...

- You know what's f*cked up?

I had a plan.

Soon as I got out, I was

gonna get what was mine

and get the hell outta

here and never look back.

Then I saw Alyssa and

all this sh*t went down.

I thought I never wanted to

see her again, but I was wrong.

I just didn't know it.

You got kids?

- Two. Boy and a girl.

- So you know.

- Everything I do is for them.

- They ever have bad dreams?

- About every other night.

- I have this dream sometimes.

I'm underground, buried

but I'm still alive.

And these snakes

break through the dirt

and they wrap around me.

The crazy thing is, I

don't try to fight it.

- What do you mean?

- I deserve it.

I belong there with the snakes.

- You done your time.

What are you still paying for?

- What are you still doing here?

- Oh, what you,

you want me to go?

- I mean here in Devil's Hollow.

If you could get outta

here, go anywhere,

what would you do?

- Pack up my kids.

Go down to Clearwater.

- Do it.

- I can't.

- Take your kids,

and get outta here.

- You just going to

up and skedaddle, huh?

- I'm tired of all this.

- Well, at least have one

last drink with your boy.

- I really gotta go.

- Sit.

What in that pretty

little head of yours

makes you think it's

going to be that easy?

You owe me.

- I done paid you

everything I owe.

We're square.

- We're square when I say so.

- I'm serious, Trevor.

- Oh, I know you are.

- Don't!

- Now, where'd you get this?

- Hawkins gave it to her.

- Oh hell yeah.

- Hello? Alyssa?

Hello? sh*t.

- Help!

- Alyssa!

- Hey, Bobby boy.

I know you got my money.

You wanna see Lissy again,

you're gonna bring me that cash.

- Alyssa!

- I'll k*ll this

little bitch, Bobby.

You know I will, just

like I done Birdy.

- You touch her, I will rip

your f*cking throat out!

- Oh, I'd like to see that.

Thirty minutes. Old Crow Quarry.

Show up a second late,

well, you know what happens

when you disappoint.

- Alyssa! sh*t!

- Bobby.

- Hey, buddy.

- Sheriff's got the whole

damn county looking for you.

You're not getting away.

- I ain't trying to.

- Well, then stop. Whatever's

going on, we'll figure it out.

- Harry's got Alyssa.

He's gonna k*ll her

if I don't get there.

- Where? I'll come to you.

Where you going, Bobby?

- Here it is.

- Hell yeah, it is.

Been waiting a

long time for that.

- Hand her over.

- Hey, girl, come

on out of the car.

You always were a

dumb son of a bitch.

She duped you. She lied to you.

It's the only way I could

get you to come out here.

Oh, Bobby, I knew

you had this money.

Cofield, he never ran

off to Jellico, did he?

- We were fighting

over the cash.

Before I knew it, he drew on me

so I sh*t him first.

- Ha! Damn, son.

- And you k*lled Birdy.

- Well, I ain't gonna lie

about it, it was unfortunate.

But had to be done

though, I guess.

- He was a good man.

He didn't deserve to

be b*at like a dog.

- Bobby, in this world nobody

gets what they really deserve.

- So, it's just the two of us --

- Bobby, you really are

a dumb son of a bitch.

Say hello to Birdy

and Cofield for me.

- Stop!

- Oh, now you're gonna sh**t me?

- Drop it.

- Or what?

You're not gonna sh**t anybody.

Adios, Bobby.

- Put it down.

- Bobby, you hold on, you

hold on now, you hold on.

- Probation 45, sh*ts fired!

I have two suspects down.

I need backup and

medical services now.

- You was right.

These things can

do it all nowadays.

We were fighting over the cash.

Before I knew it, he drew on me

so I sh*t him first.

- Ha! Damn, son.

- And you k*lled Birdy.

- I ain't gonna lie about

it, it was unfortunate.

But had to be done

though, I guess.

- He was a good man.

He didn't deserve to

be b*at like a dog.

- Bobby, in this world nobody

gets what they really deserve.

- [Bobby] I don't know

where to start really.

Hell, you don't even know me.

So I don't expect

you to forgive me

for all the things I've done.

Just know that everything

I do from here on out,

it's for you.

Sometimes I'm

into the picture

And sometimes

I'm into the sign

Sometimes I'm into

the faces flashing by

In the windowshield frame

And license plates

don't mean nothing

County lines, little more

And the only time that

I know I'm flying high

That's when I'm

inside the door

And I'm walking to find

that good peace of mind

I'm walking to roll away

And I hope that some

time I leave it behind

Like I hope I might

see you some day

And sometimes I talk

to the strangers

And sometimes I

talk to myself

Sometimes I find an old

friend I thought at first

Was somebody else

And everyone gets

to have something

If it's only some

pretty thought

Something that only

belongs to them

Something that just

can't be bought

And I'm walking to find

that good peace of mind

I'm walking to roll away

And I hope that some

time I leave it behind

Like I hope I might

see you some day

And I'm walking to find

that good peace of mind

I'm walking to roll away

And I hope that some

time I leave it behind

Like I hope I might

see you some day
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