CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000–2015): Season 15, Episode 3 - Bad Blood - full transcript

CDC may be dealing with a potential deadly virus outbreak in Las Vegas, and Sara and Greg may have been exposed to the virus while investigating a crime scene.

It will come to pass!

It's just a matter of time.

You can only lie to yourself for so long.

We pretend that we're not afraid.

But when it happens and that day comes...

nothing will stop the world from bleeding.

Nothing!

I spoke with responding officers.

Landlord came by here to pick up the rent,

saw him, and turned right around.

Tenant's name is Jack Smith. He lived alone.



Sounds like a throwaway name.

Let me guess: Paid all cash, no ID on file.

Lifestyles of the broke and anonymous.

This place is covered in blood.

There's blood on the floor.

There's more on the wall.

It's all over the place.

- Blood void.
- Got a spent shell over here.

Nine-mil casing.

GSW to his neck.

Looks like he bled out pretty quickly.

Yeah? Then how did blood
get all over the room?

Expirated blood on the wall here.

Possible fight before the kill shot?



Well, if we're lucky,
maybe some of this blood

belongs to his assailant.

This whole bookshelf is about
world-ending plagues,

biological disasters.

The wall is just plastered with paranoia.

- Uh... Greg?
- Yeah?

This man was sick.

What do you mean?

I mean don't touch anything.

I'm, uh, uh... I'm gonna call the CDC.

His eye.

Have you ever seen anything like that before?

Yeah, in biology textbooks.

Viral epidemics.

Exactly.

The pathogen could be in all this blood.

It could be airborne.

Try not to panic.

I'm just trying not to breathe.

This is CSI Sara Sidle from
the Las Vegas Crime Lab.

I'm at a crime scene with what appears

to be a possible hemorrhagic fever.

One decedent.

Two others may have been exposed.

# CSI Las Vegas 15x03 #
Bad Blood
Original Air Date on October 12, 2014

# Who... are you? #

# Who, who, who, who? #

# Who... are you? #

# Who, who, who, who? #

# I really wanna know #

# Who... are you? #

# Oh-oh-oh #
# Who... #

# Come on, tell me who are you, you, you #

# Are you! #

Let's go! Get the windows sealed!

Secure the perimeter!

No entry without Level 4 coverage!

Keep it moving! Clock is ticking!

Hey.

Russell. I'm so sorry.

I should've been the first one in there.

I-I got stuck at that suicide over on...

- Relax. You were just doing
your job. - Coroner's Office?

- Yeah. - He'll get you suited up
for entry to remove

- the infected decedent.
- Of course.

Supervisor Russell?

- Yes.
- Dr. Emmett,

CDC Emergency Response Specialist.

Any idea what we're dealing with here?

Undetermined but the symptoms
suggest a virus.

We're treating the house
as a hot zone, extracting

- the potentially exposed
subjects. - Those "subjects"

are my CSIs. I just spoke to 'em
on the phone.

They're a little concerned
about what's happening next.

They'll be suited up and transported

to hospital quarantine. They mention

having removed anything
from inside the house?

No. No, no, no. All their gear,
their collected evidence,

- is still inside.
- Good. It'll stay there.

Once the subjects are out,
we'll nuke the place.

Wait, wait, I'm sorry.

What do you mean, "nuke"?

Blast it with UV light and formaldehyde fog,

killing any living organism in there.

There's our artillery now.

Whoa, whoa, whoa. Wait a sec.

The dead man in there
was-was killed by a gunshot.

I heard. Not his day at the tables.

What I'm saying is there was

at least one other person... the shooter...

inside that room, and he might be infected.

So frying all the biologicals in there

might stop us from tracking the guy down.

A valid point.

But no match for the holy gospel of protocol.

I'll keep you updated.

You okay in there?

We had to leave the evidence behind.

Scene's getting
completely stepped on in there.

We uploaded our photos to the cloud.

It might be all we can salvage.

I'm not concerned about that right now.

Folks, we need to keep moving!

If they've been infected,

we may not know for days.

Viral incubation period

could be up to two weeks, you know,

so they'll be tested,

observed, and... I don't know,
we just wait, I guess.

This is rough, D.B.
State's sending resources.

Area hospitals are on alert.

I mean, soon the story's gonna hit the news,

and then everything gets cranked up.

I've got Morgan and Nick going
over the crime scene photos.

On top of all this,
we have a-a murder to solve.

Yeah, right. Gunshot in the throat

almost feels quaint, doesn't it?

- Supervisor Russell?
- Yes.

Dr. Heather Lanning, from RyneLab Biomedical.

My counterpart at the CDC
informed you I'd be here?

- Yeah. This is...
- Sheriff Ecklie. Hi.

Hi. I understand
the situation's overwhelming.

I'm here to help.

RyneLab is a private research facility

right here in Nevada,

the only Biosafety Level 4 site
in the region,

equipped to handle the deadliest organisms.

CDC brought us in to assist on this case.

So your lab's gonna tell us

what kind of bug
we're dealing with here, right?

Because two of my team
may have been infected.

I understand.

If I can start with a look

at the damage inflicted...

Okay, I got this. Why don't you

- check in with your team?
- Right.

Right this way, please.

Surgical scissors would be safer.

You risk puncturing your suit with that blade

and infecting yourself.

This is Dr. Lanning from RyneLab.

Helping with the case.

I appreciate your concern,
but, believe me, I've never cut

more carefully in my life.

So what do we have, Doc?

Well, starting with the gunshot wound,

it's a through-and-through.

There's no sooting or stippling.

The entry wound is irregular.

It suggests a ricochet before impact.

I found no ID or
possessions in his pockets,

and there was no print match
through Mobile AFIS.

So we're still not even sure of his name.

A true patient zero.

No way to build a profile...

who or what he may have had contact with.

The lungs are soft, hemorrhagic,

and the spleen is mushy.

Consistent with a filovirus infection.

Like Marburg or Ebola.

No. No, I disagree, Jules.

I don't think you should fly back.

I mean, if this thing
turns into a real outbreak,

I think you're better off in Seattle.

Well, how long till we have
an update on Sara and Greg?

They're still being tested,

so they couldn't take any calls.

I wish there was something
I could do to help.

I know.

You could tell me

you've found something
on our Gig Harbor twins.

I am still trying to put together Winthrop

and Briscoe's backgrounds.

You know, both men have lived
without leaving much of a trail.

But I'm going through
hospital records right now

and searching for identical twins

born to unwed Seattle mothers.

Ages that would obviously be right for them.

You know, I just need a birth date.

It would really help me with foster searches.

All right. Well, it's a start.
Enough to keep fishing,

- don't you think?
- Mm-hmm.

Will you call me if you hear anything?

Of course I will.

Hey.

So, I talked to the CDC rep.

I told him that we need to be in
that house as soon as possible.

I know all that DNA evidence
is gonna be destroyed.

All we have right now are
the photos that they uploaded.

Overalls, uh, shots of blood spatter.

I don't know what we're gonna get from these.

Just like any other case,

we need to find out who this victim is first.

Maybe some small detail
will tell us where he's been,

who he's been hanging out with...

- Who else might have been
infected. - Yeah, exactly.

So I'm just scanning these,
looking for an ID badge,

- a piece of mail...
- Yeah.

Wait. What about that book?

Seconds to Apocalypse.

Yeah, it's got a library tag on the spine.

- That might just work.
- He might have

a-an account at the library.

- It could help us with the ID.
- Yeah. It's worth a shot.

Yeah, there's Russell.

He's in Layout. He's got some news. Let's go.

Yeah.

Sara.

Greg.

I'm here to tell you that RyneLab

has identified the pathogen.

It's called the lbare virus.

A blood-borne filovirus,

not unlike Ebola in viral structure.

It replicates at a staggering rate,

decimating the host's cells
and causing massive hemorrhage.

Are there treatments?

Antivirals?

Nothing effective.

So you know everything about the virus

except what to do about it.

- How does this virus
end up here? - CDC is baffled.

The only prior outbreaks

were in rural South American villages.

Vegas is a global city.

People come here from places
all over the world.

Right. And head back to those places,

if you want to play a nightmare scenario.

All it takes is one infected carrier.

Sneezes in line at the airport,

infecting half a dozen more.

By the time the wheels are up,

the pathogen's on planes to four continents.

That's just getting started.

Ibare has a rapid incubation
period: within 48 hours.

If you experience a fever, muscle soreness...

The fatality rate.

80%.

80%?

Yes.

Thank you, Doctor. Appreciate that.

There's nothing we can do
about Greg or Sara right now

except just... just wait.

So let's-let's focus on the case.

Somebody else walked out of that bloody room.

- Yeah, the killer.
- Who could be anywhere

in the city now just spreading the infection.

Quicker we determine who that is

- and where they are...
- Better chance we have

at stopping this outbreak.

All right.

Don't let your mind go there.

That did not happen. We were careful.

- We always are, working with blood.
- I know.

We had a scare like this before.

Yeah, the dead jock with
the killer mold in his wall.

A quick shared shower
in the middle of the street,

and we were fine, right?

This might not be that easy.

We're gonna be fine.

Hello, Nick.

Hey! How are my two favorite people doing?

Happy for the distraction.

Yeah, I heard they hooked
you guys up with some computers.

- Is that right?
- Yeah.

How's the case going?

Well, we just caught a break
on the victim's ID.

Got it off of a library book

from the photos you guys uploaded.

Registered to a guy named Jack Weaver.

And, listen, this is not
this guy's first encounter

with a microscopic killer,
if you know what I mean.

"Hunting Viruses.

"Dr. Jack Weaver travels the world,

stalking the planet's deadliest organisms".

Yeah, now, that article
is from about eight years ago.

That's right around the time
his trail starts to fade.

There's no employment records,
no Internet presence, nothing.

So, what happened to him?

I'm not sure about that,

but I do know somebody that has the answer.

Should have told us already.

That is Heather Lanning.

Uh, she's an old coworker of Weaver's.

They used to do some research
together over at RyneLab.

And, listen, she was in autopsy,
she saw the body

and never mentioned once
that she knew the guy.

As counsel for RyneLab, I want to be clear

that Ms. Lanning is here in the spirit

of cooperation to aid in the investigation.

Where was that spirit when you neglected

to identify Jack Weaver's body?

I didn't realize...

Ma'am, you worked with him for years.

No, RyneLab employs over 500 individuals,

along with countless affiliated...

That face is... a ghost of the man I knew.

So you knew him. Thank you.

Why don't you tell me about him.

Jack was brilliant.

Made breakthroughs in viral research

that we're still wrapping our heads around.

But the fieldwork...

RyneLab's global outreach sends

researchers around the world
to sites of epidemics...

Weeks spent slogging, neck-deep, in disease.

Watching mothers fight for a last embrace

of their dying child.

Those trips took a toll on Jack.

Even when we were back safe in the lab,

he wasn't the same.

Eventually, he had to be let go.

It was a tragedy. Which...

...apparently continued.

A virus hunter becomes the virus-hunted,

years after the job is left behind.

So how did his old prey catch up with him?

Lbare's never been discovered in the U.S.

Weaver's passport records

don't show any recent international travel.

The only specimens of the virus
within a thousand miles

were the ones in RyneLab's freezers.

All of which have been
inventoried and accounted for.

None went missing.

Wait a minute. You're saying
that this company keeps

a stockpile of this virus here in Nevada?

That's exactly what I'm saying.

With the Defense Department's blessing,

of course, and generous funding.

Why? Military can't use
biological weapons like that.

Exactly. Which is why the program goes

under the heading "Bio-Defense".

See, this company cultivates
and studies these organisms

to prepare for the awful possibility

that one day they may wind up on U.S. Soil.

Hey.

Police records popped
something on Jack Weaver.

Field investigation card from last week.

Officer responded to a street
where Weaver was drunk

and prophesizing

- about a plague.
- Plague!

The virus breeds!

Cop just told him to move on.

And a week later his prophecy
came true, at least for him.

Well, let's not forget, now, he was shot.

I can't help but believe that this shooting

and the infection are related in some way.

- What are you thinking?
- Weaver was broke and bitter,

but he still knew a lot
about deadly pathogens.

May have even had access
to one through his connections.

Maybe making him the perfect
wingman for a bioterrorist.

- Exactly.
- Yeah,

but the only terror so far

happened to Weaver himself.

So something goes awry with the plan.

Second thoughts.

Sloppy execution.

Weaver ends up infected.

Coconspirator shoots him to silence him.

And that same person
makes off with the viral ammo.

I saw something in the photos.

I wasn't sure what it was. I think I do now.

Here.

The void in the blood.

It's rectangular.

It's got round corners.

Could very easily be a briefcase.

The kind you might use to
transport a deadly pathogen.

Conrad, we need to get in that house ASAP.

No.

CDC is saying it's not safe yet.

Yeah, but it's safer than leaving a killer

and a deadly virus on the street.

Well, you put it that way...

I'll get you in there.

The UV light and formaldehyde

nuked all biologicals, so there's no DNA.

And no virus.

Everything's just how they left it.

Well, lead would still survive.

Gunshot was a through-and-through, right?

Yeah. So there should still be a bullet here.

Okay. Let's go to work.

Body was right here.

Robbins' report said that

the bullet was ricocheted
into the vic, right?

- Right.
- Well, there's a...

there's a bullet skip mark here on the floor.

Impacted at a low angle.

For Weaver to get shot in the neck means...

he must have been laying down.

Yeah.

Which means the bullet
would have to stay low.

Oh... Morgan.

I think I've got something.

I just found the bullet.

Greg marked the case right here by the door.

Killer would have needed

some distance to account for
the low-angle bullet skip, so...

Shooter stands here.

Fires at Weaver, who's prone,
sick on the ground.

Takes off with the briefcase.

And whatever lurks inside of it.

That works.

Clock is ticking, Sara.

It's your move.

What if it is starting?

An epidemic.

What if yesterday was the last normal day?

What happened to the optimist
who used to share this fishbowl?

I'm just thinking.

You know, how quickly
everything could change.

You have a headache or a fever.

You think it's just a day off of work.

- Instead...
- You're booking a trip

to Costa Rica.

'Cause when we're cleared from here,

something good's gonna happen.

Motivation for a vacation.

Is that really what it takes?

Something like this?

To do the things you've been putting off.

Take reminders where we can get them.

Hmm. Booking your own tropical vacation?

Not exactly.

Greg?

Hi, Grandma.

- How have you been?
- Good.

So nice of you
to check in on me. How are you?

I, uh...

It's been an interesting day.

Looks sunny there.

It's been nice all morning.

- The garden looks great.
- Yeah?

Well, that's actually why I was calling.

Thinking about coming up there
to see you and check it out.

Oh, Greg, I would love that.

Me, too.

Heard you found a match on
the bullet that killed Weaver.

Yep. A recovered round
from a gas station holdup

six months ago.

Case wasn't solved, but we did
have a very strong suspect.

Northtown nuisance Shawn Steubens.

Priors for weapons violations, robbery.

Doesn't look like a bioterrorist.

Agreed.

Let's get him to prove us wrong.

Shawn Steubens.

LVPD. Open up.

Shawn!

It's very important that we talk to you!

This guy's infected.

Tell me that's the cure.

It's for your pain.

And then what?

You want to tell me what happened?

Shawn, what's happening to you

may be happening to other people.

It may be happening to...

...two friends of mine

that I care about very much.

Shawn...

I'm begging you, man.

Help us out here.

Driving around the other night, late,

saw someone go into that house,

wearing a big rubber suit like
the guys who brought me here.

A hazmat suit?

Going in Jack Weaver's house?

Yeah.

That suit, that part of town, I...

figured they had a meth cook going on inside.

Then what'd you do, Shawn?

Grabbed my nine-mil.

Went in to rip the place off.

Saw what was really inside.

Briefcase looked important.

So I grabbed it.

I figured maybe it was stuffed with cash.

Then that suit was coming at me.

I panicked.

Shooting that guy was an accident. I swear.

You didn't get a good look

at who was in that hazmat suit, did you?

No face, no eyes.

And the briefcase, what happened to that?

It's at my house.

Spent a little while trying to bust it open.

Kind of lost interest

in the briefcase when, you know,
my eyes started bleeding.

Well, I'm... I'm gonna leave you to it.

Amateur video from the scene
shows CDC vehicles

and personnel at
the North Las Vegas residence.

Officials have not released
details of what drew

this emergency response,
but sources report that...

The story's still under wraps.

At least nobody's panicking.

...reported that two veteran
Crime Scene Investigators...

Did she just call us "veteran"?

'Cause now I might panic.

I can turn this off if it's bugging you.

No. No, no, it's fine.

...at this time. Desert Palm
and other local hospitals

declined to comment when asked
if they had recently...

Sara? Are you...

Sara! Sara!

We need a doctor!

Sara!

Somebody!

Somebody please help!

Sara! Sara!

Sara!

Hey, Russell.

Hi.

They said that you have a...

100.4... fever.

But her viral antibody tests
are still negative,

so it could just be a common bug
or the stress of all this or...

I'm so sorry.

They wouldn't let me come any sooner.

We know.

Russell...

I need you to do something for me.

Yeah, of course. Anything.

If we're gonna die,

we need to go out fighting, okay?

So... put us to work.

Neither one of you have my permission to die.

You got that?

All right. Uh...

Morgan recovered the stolen briefcase.

The only thing in it
was Jack Weaver's computer.

She'll upload his hard drive.

She'll get it to you guys.

Yeah, we'll start digging.

So, you found anything interesting yet?

Well, Jack Weaver was obsessed
with the lbare virus

long before he was infected with it.

His Web histories, cached articles,

all dwell on that particular pathogen.

Especially one outbreak of it in 2006.

The disease tore through a village

in Bolivia called Campiza.

We know why this was Jack's focus?

He did witness the carnage firsthand.

He and Heather Lanning
were sent to the village

to study the outbreak
and help with the infected.

Yeah, but Weaver did fieldwork
at a lot of those outbreaks,

which is why he burned out,
according to Lanning.

Wh-What makes that one different?

Yeah, we're not sure yet though.
Speaking of Lanning,

Weaver had been e-mailing
with her right up to a week ago.

She told me that she hadn't
spoken to him for years.

Weaver was sending her rambling messages

saying that they had to talk about Bolivia.

Lanning shut him down.

"Jack... You're a troubled man.

You need help. You need to move on".

That was five days before we found him dead.

Okay, now, Lanning said

she didn't recognize Weaver's body,

and I let that slide.

But obviously she's hiding something.

Mr. Russell?

- Yeah.
- My name is Rudy Adela.

- We met earlier.
- Yeah, you're the attorney

- for RyneLab, right?
- I was informed

by our research tech at RyneLab
of a missing agent.

A vial of the lbare virus.

You got something there?

I, uh, asked Dr. Lanning about it.

Rudy, the loss cannot be reported.

We can't just ignore it.

You don't say a word to anyone.

- How much was in that vial?
- It's ten cc's.

20 million virion particles.

And each one a potential death sentence.

Your company lost a potential
weapon of mass destruction,

and then you covered it up,
at the very least.

What are you accusing me of?

I'm here without an attorney.

Doesn't that tell you something about my...

Tells me something about your
attorney's conscience, actually.

Now, contrary to what you told us,

you were in contact with Jack Weaver.

These are the e-mails. He wanted
to talk to you about Bolivia.

I told you he wasn't stable.

He needed help.

Ms. Lanning, we're working with the CDC now,

under a federal order.

As we speak, we're tearing apart
your offices.

Every file, every hard drive.

And we just got this in
from your building surveillance.

That's you walking Jack Weaver
into the facility, after hours,

a week before he died.

I thought bringing him there, talking,

might remind him of all the good work he did.

No, that's not true.

Once again, these are the e-mails.

He demanded to meet you there.

And because you went along with it,

I'm guessing he had some sort of leverage.

He had my pity.

I was trying to help him.

Ms. Lanning, a man who's
obsessed with the lbare virus

visits the lab.

A vial of that virus goes missing.

And that same pathogen kills him within days.

You think he...

No.

I didn't let him anywhere near
the specimen storage.

So he was never out of
your sight, even for a moment?

Maybe for... two minutes.

- He went to use the men's room,
but... - Uh-huh, yeah.

That man had worked
in that building for years.

He knew how to access the specimens.

He could have gotten in and out
of there in two minutes.

And you know it.

Here's what I think.

I believe that you realized your mistake,

so you went to his home.

You wanted to keep track of Jack
and the missing vial.

- Kind of damage control.
- No, that's not...

By the time you got there,

Jack Weaver had already infected himself.

And what?

I just let him die?

That's what I think, yeah.

I think you realized
that if your mistake came out

that your labs would be shut down.

So you watched him crash and bleed out.

And then you were gonna dispose of his body,

but someone came along and ruined your plan.

So you panicked...

and you left behind the body and the blood

for my CSIs to walk into.

I'm done talking about it.

I want an attorney.

Good idea.

Russell spins a hell of a theory,

but we still don't know
why Weaver took the vial

or how he ended up infected.

I think infecting himself with that virus

was the whole point.

Conrad, he knew the dangers.
This was no accident.

What do you mean?

I'm saying that Weaver knew
something about RyneLab,

something major.

- What? - I don't know yet,
but he hints about it

in his e-mails.

I think exposing himself to this virus

was his way of exposing that whole company.

All right, so he got our attention.

What did he want us to know?

Morgan and I are going
over the files right now,

but my gut tells me '06 Bolivian outbreak

seems to have been his obsession.

Well, let's make it
our obsession and quickly.

RyneLab's got a lot of juice in D.C.

Our investigation
could get shut down any minute.

I'm on it.

Hey.

Reports all tell the same tale.

Lanning and Weaver arrived
at the Bolivian village

two days after the first
infections were reported,

identified the pathogen as lbare.

Yeah, they treated and contained
the sick in a field hospital.

20 infected, 17 dead.

Then the virus just ran its course.

Her field reports, her journals,
they're all consistent.

So what are we missing?

What is it?

It was collected
from Lanning's desk at RyneLab.

What is that?

It's from Bolivia
to Heather's home address here.

Postmarked around the end of the outbreak.

It's a letter from Heather to herself.

Why would somebody do something like that?

Because she couldn't tell anybody else.

Read it.

"Let the reports and lab records tally

"the dead and the lucky.

"But for my own sanity,
I need to put down what I saw.

"To remember that it happened.

So that it never happens again..."

It's not our call, Jack.

The directive from RyneLab was clear.

Yeah. Lie to them.

Tell these people their family members

aren't dying in there.

We don't have the manpower
to deal with a panic.

We need to maintain the quarantine.

What is happening in there?

You tell us nothing.

It's a fever.

It's just a fever.

They're gonna be fine.

Fever?

- Dicen que s?lo es fiebre.
- Bueno. - Bueno.

Then we will care for them at home.

No. You can't go in.

- We need to treat them here.
- !Vamos! !Vamos!

Stop!

Please! Don't touch them!

- Wait!
- "The official reports

"will simply show a spike
of 15 new infections,

"12 of them fatal.

"But Jack and I know the
truth about the numbers.

And we will have to live with it".

Well, it sounds like she figured out

how to live with it, but he didn't.

Well, suicide wasn't enough.

It's too easy.

No, he infected himself because he wanted

to empathize with these victims.

To feel the pain his lie caused.

We have to prove it.

We have to prove that he stole the virus

from RyneLab's facility.

Any luck?

One tiny partial print... won't be any help,

except to tell us that...

somebody opened this container
without wearing gloves.

Well, the swabs I took
didn't find any touch DNA.

No useable prints, no DNA.

There is something else to try.

Morgan, what's unique about this room?

Freezers full of exotic death.

Aside from those contained organisms,

there's no life in here,
but the room's kept spotless.

Every person who enters, per protocol,

is wrapped in rubber.

Except for one person who broke protocol.

You're thinking microbial forensics.

You're familiar with the process?

I-I've read a little bit about it, but...

This is the perfect chance to try it.

The only microbes living on that surface

would have been contributed
by that single ungloved person.

Every person has a unique mix
of organisms on their skin.

Some they're born with,
some they accumulate.

The combination is as singular
as a fingerprint or DNA.

Other scenes, there are far too many microbes

on every single surface

to ever distinguish between
contributors, but here...

There's only one contributor:
Whoever stole the virus.

I'll call Russell,

see if we can commandeer RyneLab's equipment,

do a microbial analysis.

So, I cultured the microbial
population from the swab.

I spread it over various agars,
each formulated to breed

particular organisms if they're present.

Each positive ID we get of a species

gets us one step closer
to a microbial profile.

And our suspect.

Yeah.

Hey, Nick. What's up?

I was going over the
Bolivia files with Russell,

you know, explaining everything.

- Yeah?
- We noticed something

in one of the photos of the village.

What?

Prepare to have your stomach drop.

Eight years ago...

half a world away...

but that's you.

I hadn't seen this photo.

But I remember everything.

Your family were among those

who were infected in the village, right?

Both my parents...

my sister...

all killed.

I was, um... the lucky one.

Can't be a coincidence

that you're working for RyneLab now.

Same organization that handled the outbreak

all those years ago.

The company looked out for us.

The kids left behind.

Oh, I heard that. I heard that they...

they sent you to school in La Paz, right?

They... paid for your college.

I wanted to work for them.

Help study monsters like lbare.

Turns out I didn't have a mind for science,

but a law degree got me in the door.

Rudy...

we know you found out
what happened in your village.

I mean, the real story.

We took your fingerprints
off of Heather Lanning's letter,

which you found hidden in her office.

I heard rumors back then

that RyneLab had caused the deaths, so...

I used my access to get answers.

And when you got your answers
and you found out that

Jack Weaver was responsible,
you wanted revenge.

I understand.

Okay. Rudy, my CSIs have
developed a microbial profile

of the hand that-that opened
the refrigeration unit

and stole the vial of lbare.

A zoo of different organisms
all living in harmony

on a... on a fingertip.

And that same unique combination of life

was found on this... your recorder.

You stole the vial, Rudy.

And you infected Jack Weaver.

My entire family.

They didn't deserve it.

He did.

I stayed there.

I watched him suffer.

Then I watched the company lie to you,

distance themselves,

cover up.

Just like they did all those years ago.

Which is why you recorded Dr. Lanning.

You wanted to bring down the whole company,

so they couldn't toy with any more viruses,

breed any more monsters.

I would be the last.

Sara?

- Are you...
- I'm fine.

Dr. Emmett said
that I could tell you the news.

No sign of infection

and tests are showing that the virus dies

within two hours of exposure to air.

Weaver's house wouldn't have
been infectious when we entered.

No. CDC's gonna keep an area watch,

but there haven't been any other infections.

We're clear.

We're free to go.

What are we waiting for?

I'm starving.

- Me, too.
- Breakfast?

Coffee.

- Yeah.
- Yeah.

Hey, Dave.

I spoke with your doctor.

You're both okay.

Uh, we were about to grab a bite to eat.

Want to join us?

I'd love to, but I'm actually here for work.

Shawn Steubens, the kid who got infected...

He didn't make it.

He wasn't so lucky.

It goes without saying,

but I'm just really glad you're both okay.

Goes without saying.

Yeah.