03x21 - The Art of Reckoning

Episode transcripts for the TV show "Numb3rs". Aired: January 2005 to March 2010.*
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An FBI agent recruits his brother, a mathematics genius, to help solve crimes.
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03x21 - The Art of Reckoning

Post by bunniefuu »

Charlie, come on!

(sonic boom)

There he is. (sighs)

Larry just reentered the Earth's atmosphere.

Welcome home.

NEWSCASTER: And the shuttle looks great as it approaches, coming in just as expected...

MILLIE: Come on, come on.

Weather's forcing them to land at Edwards Air Force Base.

Road trip.

Let's drive to the desert and pick him up.

CHARLIE: Yeah, you know, we can rent a convertible and stop off in Vegas and play some poker.

Oh, yeah, right, now that you're a poker champ, too.

Oh.

Hey, listen, I hate to break it to you, but I believe NASA requires a couple of days of debriefing.

AMITA: Well, that's okay, well get him on the phone.

Yeah, I mean, it's not every day that your friend flies in on a rocket at 17,000 miles an hour.

One small step for Dr. Fleinhardt, one giant leap for CalSci.

Oh, look, there he is! Hey!

That's him!

(glasses clink)

NEWSCASTER: Two mission specialists, Fleinhardt and...

What's he got in his hand?

Is that macramГ©?

...Sullivan, Bradley and Garcia-Romero...

(buzzer sounds, man shouting)

Who you going to see?

Pony Fuñez.

You escorting him to San Quentin for the execution?

No. MAN: AUSA Brickle.

Pony finally decide to rat?

It's funny how death will make a man want to clear his conscience.

Doesn't sound like Pony.

MAN: Ray, go ahead and open two.

Pony Fuñez has never cooperated until now.

Yeah, well, how do you know he is cooperating?

How do you know he's not?

This guy was a hit man for all the mobs, Italian, Mexican, Russian, Armenian -- he's got hard-core information on all of them.

Yeah, or he's just playing us.

I mean, the guy's got six days to live, right?

BRICKLE: Exactly. Nothing to lose.

He might as well come clean.

Yeah, well, that's what we might do, but I'm saying a guy like this wants something, and I'm not cutting some hired g*n any slack.

This way.

DON: Where's he at?

SHU prisoners are not allowed human contact.

You'll interview him like this.

BRICKLE: Can he hear us? Yeah, I can hear you.

DON: What, but he can't see us?

No.

PONY: Hardly seems fair, right?

DON: Yeah, go figure.

Mr. Fuñez, I'm AUSA Brickle of the Department of Justice.

With me is Special Agent Don Eppes of the FBI.

I understand you're interested in cooperating with us on several unsolved murders. Is that right?

Check it out, man, I ain't no rat.

First of all, let's get that straight.

Uh, I'm only going to talk to you all about what I myself have done.

BRICKLE: Okay. How many?

Well, I'll give you all five bodies so those families can get some peace.

So they can bury their dead properly.

Yeah, how do we know you're not just taking credit so you can get someone else off?

Details no one else knows.

I also have a... photographic memory of my work.

Okay, fine. Let's, uh, let's go ahead and get started.

Just slow down, not so fast, friend.

You got to give me something.

I want a visit with my daughter.

I ain't never seen my daughter before.

I want to talk to her in person.

O-Okay.

I'm gonna have to see about that, but I don't think it'll be a problem.

Not in here.

Not in no damn cage.

I'm talking about outside of a prison.

DON: No way. Ain't gonna happen.

I'll give you five dead.

That's a fair trade.

Okay, okay, you know what, Mr. Fuñez, give me one second I'll be right back. Don.

Don, hey, hey, hey.

Hey, hey.

What?

Five bodies, that's... that is a lot of unsolved m*rder.

Come on, the guy's a con, he's lying through his teeth.

Well, yeah, he's a con that's going to be dead on Tuesday, you know, this is it. This is our... this is our last sh*t on this one.

Yeah, and what if he's just using his own kid to try to break out of here or something?

What if he has to give us a body to prove good faith?

You think he'd go for that?

So, what you're saying just to clear one case?

Yeah, take it one step at a time, see where it goes.

(phone rings) I don't know.

All right, let me take a sh*t at this.

All right. Eppes.

CHARLIE: Hey, what's up, man? It's me.

So, Larry's back, we saw him land this morning.

Ah, cool. Excellent.

Yeah, I haven't gotten him on the phone yet, but I'm thinking of throwing him a welcome home dinner when he shows.

You want to come by? Uh, I don't know, buddy, I got a problem here.

What's the problem?

Well, we just got this death row guy who's trying to talk me into getting him off site, but I don't know. I think we're being set up.

Well, to do that... wouldn't he have to collude with someone on the outside?

Yeah, well, I mean these guys are faster than the post office getting info in and out.

Yeah, but you know, the prison is designed with obstacles to his communication.

Look, I can perform a Vulnerability Analysis on the prison systems...

Wait, I gotta call you back.

He's giving us Benny Wong.

The guy who ran the Chinese g*ng?

(indistinct radio transmission)

COLBY: Got human bone fragments.

b*llet hole in the cranium.

Lemme see that.

Don, we found the body right where Fuñez said.

One sh*t to the skull.

COLBY: Look at that.

Looks like Wong's jacket.

Right here, another b*llet hole in the chest.

I tapped Benny once in the head, once in the chest.

He had on a... black and red leather coat.

Tough guy, Benny, Very, very bad taste in clothing, though.

Uh...

I got four more for you all, but I got one that I know you're really gonna like.

'Cause it's a big one.

What's this big one, Mr. Fuñez?

You remember that Congressman's kid that went missing?

Randal Amato's son?

Yeah.

I know where that boy is.

BRICKLE: Are you, are you telling me he's alive?

I'm telling you... it's your move, Eppes.

BRICKLE: It was ten years ago, Mafia, they tried to buy off freshman Congressman Randal Amato -- he refused, they attempted to persuade him by taking his five-year-old son.

Yeah, yeah, I remember that.

They could never prove m*rder, could never find the boy's body.

Now, I, I would love to hang this on Phil Berelli where it belongs.

The guy's a sh*t caller.

Why, how's he get his hands dirty with this?

Ten years ago he was an up and corner, and he bragged on a wiretap about teaching Amato a lesson.

Yeah, and how does Pony factor in?

That's what I need to find out.

I don't know, I got to tell you, I got a bad feeling about this guy.

LARRY (on answering machine): Greetings, gravity-bound h*m* sapiens.

I am orbiting your lovely blue planet until the middle of Earth Year 2007.

You may leave a message here or simply call out to the heavens.

I will be listening.

(beep)

Hey, Larry, uh, so it's me again.

I saw you set foot on terra firma, buddy.

So, if NASA's holding you hostage, just give me a shout, I'll come break you out -- whatever you need.

Just call me, okay?

Call me, all right?

Hey. DON: Hey.

I want you to meet Al Brickle.

He's AUSA. This is my brother, Charlie.

Oh, yeah and it's, it's Alvin.

Good to meet you, your reputation proceeds you.

Oh, well...

So... So, I, I, uh...

I analyzed the Secure Housing Unit at the prison.

It's a hyper-secure system, but...

BRICKLE: Prisoners have nothing to do except sit around and think about how to break it, right?

Right. Nice suit there, Brickle.

Nice face.

It's like two opposing armies, where one army tries to get a spy past enemy lines.

Now, calculating the ratio of points of vulnerability versus resources required to defend those points determines probabilities of penetration.

Now, my model indicates that in this SHU there are fewer than two percent of prisoners that can sustain illicit communications.

Now, that's three times less than at your average high-security prison.

98%, that's pretty good.

Maybe Pony's on the up and up.

However, there is one variable that doesn't fit into my model.

Guards. And lawyers.

That's the human factor.

Guards are squeaky clean, though, and the prison oversight on the SHU guards is much harsher than normal.

What's the deal with Pony's lawyer?

No, he's been representing himself for the last two years.

Which is why he's riding the express train to execution.

CHARLIE: Well, that means with over 90% assurance that he is not communicating with the outside world.

COLBY: So we transport him here to meet his daughter... or not?

I don't care what he did; he's my only father.

You'd better care what he did.

Let's just take it easy.

They're gonna k*ll him!

Do you know how many people he k*lled?

Lucy!

Damn it. (door slamming)

I understand you don't want your daughter to see him.

It's all she thinks about.

The execution's on the news every day -- lethal injection or not, doctors present or not, will the governor stop it or not?

He's requested a f*ring squad like Gary Gilmore.

We don't do that in California, ma'am.

Agent Sinclair, the sooner my ex-husband is gone, the better.

I'm sorry, I didn't mean that, I'm not like that.

It's just watching my daughter go through this...

I can't even imagine, Mrs. Fuñez.

Moreno.

I went back to my maiden name when I divorced him.

Ms. Moreno, has he been in touch with you or Lucy, at all?

Through the mail... uh, telephone, maybe some old friends?

No.

He doesn't know where we are.

Can you give this to him? No, Lucy, please.

Can you?

I really think that's up to your mom.

Give him the photo, but I won't allow her to be in the same room with him.

DAVID: Understood.

(buzzer sounds, handcuffs jangling)

(men shouting)

You won't regret this. Yeah.

Well, we'll see about that.

PRISONER: Good luck, Pony. Nice knowing ya.

All right.

PRISONER 2: You getting the f*ring squad?

Hell, nah, the needle.

Hey, shut up, all right?

PRISONER 3: Why you leaving with the Feds, Fuñez?

Decided to rat, you wimp?!

No, I ain't no rat, pinhead bastard.

He told you to shut up.

I ain't no rat.

(siren blares)

(garbled radio transmission)

PONY: Oh, man.

Years.

I've spent years in that hole, man.

Pony, shut your mouth or I'm gonna put a bag over your head, you hear me?

♪♪

AGENT (over radio): All teams, stand by... prisoner has just arrived...

Okay, okay, all right, boys. Hey...

This is a nice day.

(indistinct radio transmission)

Hey, hey, hey! Where's my son?

DAVID: This is Randal Amato. Listen. I understand.

I want to know where my son is!

DON: Sir, as soon as I know something, you'll be the first person I tell, all right?

Director's Office okayed it.

Fuñez's ex-wife won't let him see the kid.

Well, this just keeps getting better and better, doesn't it?

The kid gave this for her dad, though.

All right, well, just make sure he's all right.

LARRY (on answering machine): Greetings, gravity-bound h*m* sapiens.

I am orbiting your lovely blue planet until the middle of Earth Year 2007.

You may leave a message here or...

Hey. DON: Hey.

Colby, you want to deal with this?

So, what's up?

So, I may not be able to read this guy's mind, but I can offer you the best strategy in a confrontation like this.

All right, what is it?

Tit for tat.

Say what? Tit for tat -- it's the most winning strategy in game theory for the Prisoner's Dilemma.

It dominates in every tournament against far more complex methods.

Let's say, you're in a race climbing a mountain against another climber.

You can't scale the rock face alone, but you do want to be the first person to get to the top.

Your first move should be cooperative, then you mimic all your opponent's actions.

So, if he aggresses, you aggress; if he cooperates, so do you.

So, if he att*cks, and, and then cooperates, you're still supposed to cooperate?

Yeah, it's, totally counterintuitive, but forgiveness is necessary for the optimal result.

What do you mean forgiveness?

I mean people don't often forgive betrayal, but in Tit for Tat, if your opponent cooperates again, so do you.

That way, he learns that he gets more if he works with you.

Yeah, but, Charlie, the guy's a sociopath; I can't trust him.

Well, that's, that's the beauty of it.

You don't have to trust this guy.

Just mirror his actions.

He gave me a body, I brought him here.

So based on what you're saying, it's his turn?

That's right, so let's see if he aggresses or if he cooperates.

All right, I'll see what happens.

How're you doing? Everything all right?

DON: Where's the congressman's son?

I gave you Benny Wong on good faith.

Yeah, I took you out of the SHU, so it's your turn.

So I lay you out another body, do I get to see my kid?

Oh, that depends how good your information is.

I can give you Jimmy Morales.

No, I want the kid.

I don't trust you, man.

The bottom line, I don't trust you, 'cause you ain't gave me nothing.

Give me your word.

All right, look, Pony, here's the way it is.

You cooperate with me, I promise you, I will cooperate with you.

Okay.

You got to know I ain't want to do that to that kid.

You know, Berelli just didn't have the nerves to do it.

He was scaring the kid.

I could just see it was going to be a big mess.

Yeah, so?

PONY: I walked the kid down the hillside.

I was talking to him about the Man in the Moon and when he looked up, I snapped his neck.

Yeah... he never felt a thing.

Where's this hillside?

My wife and I have imagined the worst for ten years.

Nothing is worse than not knowing.

Hey, guys.

This is not a child's body.

Oh, God.

(sizzling, coughing)

Oh! Charlie!

Oh, sh**t!

I'm sorry, are they ruined? I don't know.

The smoke got in my eyes. Are you all right?

Maybe we can save them. (groaning)

No. It looks like the Petrified Forest.

Yeah. God, I put them on and then I got preoccupied with a problem in the garage.

Where is Larry? So much for the celebration.

Yeah, have you heard from him?

I guess he's still being debriefed by NASA.

I don't know why he can't call. DON: Hey.

ALAN: Hi. Whoa, what's up?

Charlie was trying to barbecue, so, uh... we're going to have to order in now.

Thai food? I'll get the menus.

CHARLIE: Don't even bother. Grab the gas.

Thanks. Barbecue ribs.

Not anymore.

Hey, are you sure about all this Tit for Tat stuff?

Teams have spent years trying to defeat it.

Even by cheating, yet it still remains the best way to achieve optimal results for both parties.

You know, some theorists believe it gives insight to how groups of animals, how groups of humans, have come to live in largely cooperative societies.

How about this? The guy lied to us about where the kid was.

Right, so we find another body in its place.

Now how do you factor that in, aggression or cooperation?

Well, if he lied, that's aggression, you need to aggress on him.

Yeah, all right, well, that I can do. Okay.

Is that all you came by for?

No, where's Larry? He's not here yet.

All right, well, I'm gonna have to come back or I'll call you later, okay?

Okay. Okay, so we got three Chi..

Where's he going?

(faint rustling)

(gasps) You lied!

I'm sending you straight to San Quentin and they're going to fill your veins with potassium chloride.

You hear me? I did not lie...

Forget seeing your daughter!

I did not lie! Uh-huh.

I don't know what happened. Maybe somebody moved the body.

Who? Berelli.

He's the only one knew where the kid was.

We found a guy with gold teeth, not a five-year-old.

Well, you've got to dig deeper, man.

Give me your wrists. You've got to -- look, man.

Berelli could've stacked the body on top of the kid.

Uh-huh. Ow!

It's a good dumping ground. Dig deeper.

You make yourself comfortable.

(growling)

(angry grunt)

Sinclair.

Did you ID him?

Yeah, we have a DNA match.

Yeah, who is it? Take a look.

That's, that's Lorenzo Marcellus.

Yeah, Marcellus, he was the West Coast boss before Berelli, right?

That's how Berelli made his bones, by k*lling Marcellus and taking his territory.

How is Pony connected?

Pony would do a hit for the Girl Scouts as long as they had enough cookie money to pay him.

Berelli probably hired Pony to grab the Amato kid.

All right, but what about Marcellus?

Berelli did that one himself; at least that's what he said on tape.

I've got a wall of RICO files just on him.

I cannot believe...

I'm going to finally get this guy.

This is huge.

Yeah? Huge.

Morning.

Hey, anything?

Nope. Here, I got you.

All right, thanks.

We dug all night. Didn't find any other body.

No evidence of reburying.

I just don't think the Amato kid was ever there.

Well, you know the guy you found was Lorenzo Marcellus.

I just don't get why he lies about the kid, though.

Is it possible that he's still alive?

Maybe he was hired to k*ll him and couldn't go through with it?

Sent him away?

Yeah, if this were a movie.

I don't know, Fuñez was a contract man, strictly professional, hired to hit the bad guys.

Maybe he just couldn't do the kid.

Yeah, I don't know.

I have a court order for Fuñez to take a polygraph.

Psst. Charles.

Hey!

Larry! Hey! Hey!

Careful, listen, I've lost considerable bone density in space, so be careful.

Hey, why didn't you call? Amita and I were going to come get you.

No, no, I had a most pleasant bus ride from Edwards.

You took the bus? Yeah, well, one can be silent aboard the bus.

One can order food, get directions, make friends...

I'll tell you, you know, language is in many ways superfluous.

So how was it? How are you?

And how was... how was your LISA work?

Were you able to collect data on gravitational pulls?

I-I can understand if you can't tell me, I won't press.

But Larry, man, you were in outer space!

Looking out the porthole, seeing...

I've always wondered what... what a sh**ting star looks like from out there. Is it bigger?

Can you see the burn from the back?

What is the-the difference in perspective on heavenly bodies and phenomena?

Is it negligible, or is there that sense of, uh, of, of...

Of awe.

"Of awe," right, yeah.

What is this?

Oh, this is an Aztec quipu...

"Quipu"?

Quipu, that's correct. Okay.

See, back in the glory days of Tenochtitlan, these knots represented a code for commerce, and the buying and selling of jaguars and parrots and yuca. Yuca.

Yes, ultimately it served a higher purpose in concealing secrets from the colonizing Spaniards, but... each braid, each knot -- each one of these tells a story.

Well, where'd you get it?

NASA's so nosy.

This was all in the pursuit of privacy.

You made that? Eh...

Wow! What does it signify?

Ah, now Charles, would you read my diary?

Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.

Well, look, Amita is dying to see you.

Millie wants to throw, like, a school-wide party for you.

And I should tell you that Megan...

No, no, no, no, no, no, no.

You know, I really just wanted to say hello to you, invite you to dinner.

I'm in really no frame of mind for more complex social interaction, not at the moment.

Yeah, okay. Sure, hey, cool.

Cool, where you staying?

Oh, I have a place at the beach.

Nice, hey, man...

Ah, man, I missed you.

I really... I really missed you, man.

AMATO: Why is this taking so long?

DON: Well, Congressman, you've got to understand there's a process involved and basically...

He just described the location of another body.

All right, why don't you send a team over, check it out.

Did he mention my son?

No, they're just getting to that now, sir.

Can I see you for a second?

Yeah, sure, excuse me.

PONY: I walked the boy down the hill.

Uh, I was talking to him about the Man in the Moon.

He looked up, I snapped his neck.

You son of a bitch!

Hey! He was only five!

Congressman... He was only five!

PONY: Tell him -- look, man...

The boy didn't feel no pain. I calmed him down.

It was going to happen with or without me.

Sir, you can't do this. All right, sir?

Let's focus back here, Mr. Fuñez. Sit down, please.

The boy's body was not found where you said.

Were you lying about that?

No.

(beeping)

You gonna eat or you gonna play?

(siren wails)

(tires screech)

FBI, gentlemen.

Philip Berelli, you're under arrest for the m*rder of Lorenzo Marcellus.

Again?

Don't pull that chain unless you want the whole dog.

BERELLI: I'll be out in three hours.

BRICKLE: Not this time, Berelli.

I have Lorenzo, gold-capped teeth and all.

What did he have to do with the, uh, Amato child's disappearance?

You know, we have a lot to talk about, Phil.

BERELLI: Rat bastard Fuñez.

Couldn't keep his mouth shut for four more days.

Guess he figured you can't hurt him if he's going to be dead by the middle of next week.

A lot can happen in a week.

Hey.

Good morning.

Have you been out here all night?

The sun rose every 90 minutes on the Space Station, Charles.

I find nights to be exquisitely consoling back here on Earth.

You were going to wake me before you were ready to go, right?

I'm just...

I'm not ready for this, Charles...

I'm not.

Not for any of it.

Larry...

Larry, this is crazy.

This is... This is nuts.

You're staying at our house.

Look, after months of living in a metal capsule, the thought of confined spaces is simply intolerable to me.

God, I... I don't know what's going on.

I feel like I'm in some dream with the ghost Larry, and I just want to wake up and talk to the real guy.

Well, perceptive, as always, Charles.

Well, what... what's the matter, man?

You can talk to me. Come on.

Well, I suppose it's all there in the quipu, isn't it?

There.

That's my first telescope.

I was three years old.

President of the rocket club -- fifth grade.

Docent at the planetarium -- junior high.

Then way over here, four months and 12 days on the Space Station.

I entered my dream.

I experienced transcendence, Charles, okay?

I... My being became bigger than my body, it became bigger than my history.

You see?

And I am loathe to become small again.

Are we all so bad down here?

The beauty and fragility of life on Earth, it takes my breath away.

So what's your problem?

That I will habituate and lose the vision.

(cell phone ringing)

They need me at the FBI.

Come on.

Hey, spaceman, welcome back to Earth.

Look at you, buddy.

Come here, give us some love. Hey...

He just wants to keep a low profile.

He was with me when you called, so... sounded urgent.

Yeah, I'm sorry. Absolutely. Yeah.

Um, come on.

I got Don following an Equivalent Retaliation protocol.

Oh, yeah, Tit for Tat, huh?

Yeah. Yeah.

Its inventor, Anatol Rappaport, just passed away.

I read his obit online in space.

That's the guy.

And he passed his poly.

Polygraph is a blunt instrument.

Right. Exactly. So...

Hey. How are you?

Can I see you for one second? DON: Yeah, I'll be right there.

What's up? Yeah, Fuñez.

Agitated, he wants to see his daughter.

Nuh-uh, not until he gives us that boy, no way.

Right, right. Listen, I was thinking maybe I could take another run at the ex-wife.

Yeah? If we have the girl, we have more leverage.

All right, well, take David; he's been there before.

All right, all right.

DON: I thought you wanted to see your kid.

You're damn right.

I gave you everything you asked for.

No, you faked out a polygraph test, that's all you did.

You gave me your word.

Now, what more do you want from me?

DON: I want the truth. PONY: I told you the truth!

Yeah, well, the body wasn't there!

You lied to me! I'm tired of this!

(knocking)

Guy's a liar, a con!

He should have his head cracked!

You're awfully emotional.

Yeah, you bet.

Look, you're in a death spiral, all right?

That's what we call a Grim Trigger Strategy.

Mm-hmm.

All right, he lied, you're never gonna forgive him, that's it, that's game over.

Yeah, fine, good, game over.

Can I tell you the best way to get out of a negative spiral?

Tit for two Tats.

Are you kidding me? No.

You cooperate twice in a row, despite his defection, you give him something he wants.

You're at a dead end, man.

You might as well test the theory.

Yeah, all right.

Turn it over.

Thank you.

Where's that boy, Pony?

I told you all I know.

DAVID: Brickle, this woman does not want her daughter in the same room with Fuñez. Okay?

She's made that abundantly clear.

If it means he confesses more m*rder, she may be persuaded.

I just want to talk to her.

What name's she using now?

Renee Moreno.

What are you looking at?

Got a red SUV, he's been following us for a few miles now.

You're kidding. No.

You're not kidding.

It could be Berelli's men, hoping we'll lead them to the ex-wife's house.

We have agents guarding them.

Yeah, I'll call up ahead.

Hey, it's David Sinclair...

(crash)

(tires screeching)

Are you serious?

Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!

No, no, no, no, no.

Hey! Hey!

Hold on!

(yells)

(tires screeching, crash)

They're trying to k*ll us.

You okay? Yeah, go, go, go.

It's not working! Let's go! We got to get out of here!

They got a g*n!

Go, go, go, go! They got a g*n!

Get down! Stay down! My phone!

(yells)

We got to do something, 'cause the Congressman's about to call a press conference, and the Governor's office is saying turn up something concrete or else hand over Fuñez for execution.

All right, just give me a minute, would you?

Look, I mean, I'm out of time.

It's so odd -- he wants his daughter back, he seems to cooperate, he's not trying to escape.

DON: Screw it.

You know, I'm sick of trying to get in this freak's head anyway.

Psychology is a step or two behind neuroscience these days.

Meaning? fMRI.

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Yeah, it's a brain scan.


LARRY: Deception requires more energy -- i.e. more blood to the brain -- than truth telling, which is a simpler task.

You can tell if he's lying?

CHARLIE: The fMRI can detect even partial truths.

Well, can we get one? Oh, that could be challenging.

The magnet weighs over two tons.

I'm not sure your elevators could handle that.

One at CalSci's kept in the basement.

(knock at door)

I need to talk to you.

All right.

Set it up.

DAVID: Run!

Move!

This way! Go!

Move!

Hey, all due respect, sir, you are making this more volatile than it has to be.

My wife is tortured night and day with thoughts of my son's death.

I understand.

I will do anything to give her peace.

I don't care if I make a fool of myself, I don't care if I make the situation more volatile.

Sir, this is our last chance to find out what happened to your son!

Now, I can only move this prisoner with FBI personnel.

If you insist on coming, I'm gonna have to call it off!

Now, I will call you as soon as I know anything, all right?

You'll have to excuse me for one second.

Hey.

We're ready to transport Fuñez.

You know where David is?

He's with Brickle, talking to the ex-wife.

Get down!

You have your cell phone on you?

It's in my briefcase.

It's not here, it's back in my briefcase.

You've been sh*t in the arm; you're bleeding.

(groans)

That feel any better? Yeah, it's fine.

You know how to use a g*n?

Point and click?

More or less. You don't waste any sh*ts.

We don't have a lot of a*mo, okay?

Take it.

This thing have a safety?

No. Great.

All right, come on, move.

That way. Go, go!

Quiet.

Stay down.

DAVID: These guys are crazy. They're coming after us now?

I've got all of Berelli's RICO files.

He kills me, his case gets postponed...

Shh! for months while another AUSA gets up to speed.

Meanwhile, his lawyers get him out, and he skips the country.

So if I give you up, I can go home?

Just kidding. Let's go.

Come on.

This all seems familiar.

Larry, you've only been gone four and a half months.

Larry?

Hi!

He's lost some bone strength. Hi.

Just six percent.

Oh.

It's...

(chuckles)

It's so wonderful to see you.

Thank you.

I set up the fMRI with Quartz.

Cool. Oh, I...

Good thing it's a Saturday, or we couldn't pull this caper off, huh?

Hey, uh, just...

I cleared the whole building -- faculty, students -- for two hours, all right?

That should give us enough time to explore this convicted felon's neurons and get him out, no? Mm-hmm.

Yeah. Great.

Listen, would you mind if we... Go this way...

Larry? Larry's here?

Larry!

Welcome back.

Millie. Oh, so good to see you. Oh!

Bones! Bones!

Bones?

Just some demineralization of the skeleton, due to microgravity.

Aw...

How are you, Mildred? I'm good.

And look at you; you look great. We are so proud of you.

We are going to throw you the party of your life, Mister.

Actually, I think I'd prefer everyone just kind of pretend I'm not here, which is not altogether untrue.

MILLIE: No, no, no, no, no.

It's on us. We're so proud of you.

(whispers) Down, down.

Quiet.

(loud clank)

DAVID (whispers): Hey, be quiet!

(screaming) Move!

Down, down!

No, this way!

Go!

Down!

Stay calm, Brickle, all right?

I will get you out of here. All right.

Are you ready? Ready for what?

Wh-What's the plan?

Gonna run and sh**t.

That's all you have to do.

All right, let's go. Wait.

Hold on a second.

What?

All right, let's go. Go!

David's still not answering up on his radio.

30 minutes.

Find him.

Ready.

Look, Pony, I want you to describe to me where you were.

On a hill off Highway 126, near Castaic.

(beep)

Truthful. Hmm.

PONY: Walking down the hill.

Could see the moon out.

It looked pretty good.

(trilling) Truthful.

What day did the boy go missing?

January 13, uh, '97.

DON: Then what happened?

I talked to the boy about the Man in the Moon.

(trilling)

When he looked up, I broke his neck.

(beeps) Truthful.

PONY: But, you know, he never felt it.

Never felt a thing. He...

He-he wasn't scared.

January 13, 1997... was a new moon, meaning there was no moon.

Rain all throughout L.A. County.

His brain activity shows no signs of deception.

That's only possible if there's some sort of...

Confabulation.

He's constructed a memory that he believes is real.

He's fooling the machines because he's fooling himself.

May I?

Yeah. Just, uh, hit this button.

Mr. Fuñez, it was raining the night Randy Amato was k*lled.

And there was no moon.

PONY: What-what...? What are you saying?

(trilling)

(beeping)

(grunts)

(g*nf*re)

(g*nsh*t)

(g*nshots)

(g*nsh*t)

(grunts)

(g*nshots)

I'm out. Point and sh**t!

Point and sh**t!

(g*nshots and groaning)

Hey, get up. Listen!

I need to get you out of here. Let's go.

We have to get to a phone.

There's no phone, there's no help.

We need another plan.

(panting)

It wasn't raining.

How-how... How can that be?

Only one body was found on that hill.

Yeah.

Lorenzo Marcellus was k*lled in the summer of '94.

And on a dry, moonlit night, no doubt.

He's constructing his memory based on partial truths.

Pony, did you k*ll Lorenzo Marcellus on that hill?

No.

(beep) That was Berelli.

Me and Berelli set up Marcellus.

Berelli had Marcellus thinking they were there to k*ll me.

Berelli said, uh, "Look up at the moon."

I looked up, Marcellus looked up.

Then Berelli sh*t him.

Never saw it coming.

(beeping)

Where's the boy, Pony?

DON: It was raining. There was no moon.

Uh...

Look, no.

Hey, uh, I got to get out of here.

You got to get me out of this thing. I gotta...

Calm down! No! I got to get out of this thing.

Right now, I don't like being in here.

You gotta get me out of here right now I'm gonna break this, break this damn thing!

Get me out of here! Let me out...

All right, all right, all right. Relax!

I'm going to break it.

Just calm down. You remember what happened, don't you?

(gasps) Huh?

(panting)

The kid was so scared.

That kid was so scared, he was freaking out, and, uh...

I mean, he peed his pants, and I couldn't do it, man.

I could not k*ll that kid, I couldn't do it.

Uh-huh.

Berelli laughed at me, and he sh*t him.

Where's the body?

I don't know. I don't know where the body...

I don't know. Yeah, you do, Pony.

Where's that body?!

It was muddy.

Mud was everywhere.

It-it was raining.

Berelli... sh*t the kid...

...and stuck him in a drainpipe.

He stuck him in a drainpipe.

BRICKLE: Okay, wait just...

No, you can't keep going.

Just stop, okay?

You're hurt. You're losing too much blood.

Stay still. Just stop moving for a second.

I got to stop the bleeding.

Make a run for it. Find a phone.

I'm going to get help.

I'm going to come back, okay?

And you're going to be fine.

Toss it! Toss it!

It's in your best interest.

You don't know how much I want to sh**t you right now.

Put it on the ground!

I was running out of things to say.

Grab his w*apon.

Go on. All right.

Hands on your head. Right now.

(laughs)

No one will ever, ever believe this.

(laughing)

(laughs)

(panting)

Hi.

I'm Don Eppes with the FBI.

Did they move him to San Quentin?

Uh, in a few hours.

Mom, please let me see him.

Listen, I, um...

I thought you should know that he did something today for someone else, and, you know, despite who he is and what he's done, it was really a decent thing.

And he-he did it for your daughter.

DAVID: Hey, Granger, man, next time I don't answer my phone, do me a favor.

Just call the cavalry.

Yeah? What if you're having sex, huh?

Yeah, point taken. Yeah.

Brickle, so, you're kind of the hero, huh? How's that feel?

Phew! I'm never leaving my office again.

That's for sure.

(laughter) Unless you're with me.

♪ Gravity ♪ I go in there?

You have about a half an hour.

You all right?

Mm-hmm.

DON: All right.

♪ And gravity ♪

Hi.

Hi.

♪ Oh, I'll never know ♪

♪ What makes this man ♪

♪ With all the love ♪ LUCY: Um...

I'm Lucy.

Pony.

Pretty.

Thank you.

♪ Whoa, whoa, gravity ♪ Sorry.

It's o... It's okay.

♪ And gravity ♪

♪ Wants to bring me down ♪

(exhales loudly)

♪ Oh, twice as much ♪

♪ Ain't twice as good ♪

♪ And can't sustain ♪

♪ Like one half could ♪

♪ It's wanting more ♪

♪ That's gonna send me to my knees... ♪

ALAN: So, why did Fuñez confess to k*lling the boy when he didn't do it?

He couldn't tolerate the thought of what really happened, so he created a false memory.

But wasn't that false memory worse?

LARRY: Well, but not for the boy.

You know, Pony comforted himself with the delusion that he was providing the child a better death.

Now, granted, that better death took place all in his own mind, but...

♪ Than his heart can stand ♪ ALAN: Hey, Larry, it's good to see you back.

Oh, thank you.

No, I'm delighted to see you both, truly I am, more than I can say, and I thank you for indulging my apprehension of walls and ceilings by dining al fresco like this.

Well, you're going to have to get over that, Larry.

You have to find a place to sleep, don't you?

Well, you know, I was rather hoping for a spot over near the koi pond tonight.

(laughs)

I think I have a better idea.

Oh, Charles, I'm moved.

Yeah, you know, get you a reading light.

Maybe a little computer table. How about that?

Well, you know, I should mention, starting tomorrow, I do have a place to stay. Really? Where?

Well, I have secured a small but rather spiritually spacious cell at a monastery in Altadena.

You're becoming a monk?

No, no, nothing so dramatic as that.

No. The monastery allows the public to go on retreats there, and I just thought I needed some time to...

Transition for reentry.

That's it. Well, you know something, Charles?

All my life, I have looked to the cosmological for meaning, and that outward focus -- it's given me quite a ride, but I just... now, I-I feel the need to... explore the universe of a single mind.

My own.

Well, Altadena's only, what, a... a ten-minute drive from CalSci.

Well, or a 20-minute walk.

Of course, no cars.

No 1931 Ford Roadster, but I would like to know what it's like to live without obsessions.

White food?

Oh, that would be difficult.

But, yes.

You know, I might well include greens.

♪ Just keep me where the light is... ♪

♪ Ooh... ♪

♪ Come on, keep me where the light is ♪

♪ Ooh... ♪

♪ Come on, keep me where... ♪
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