Chicago Fire (2012–…): Season 10, Episode 15 - The Missing Piece - full transcript
Following an injury in the aftermath of an industrial fire, Severide and Seager work together to investigate an anonymous tip. Kidd searches for the right person to fill the open spot on Truck 81.
.
- I have been doing this
long enough
to recognize raw talent.
Mason, you ever think about
applying with the CFD?
- CFD won't hire felons.
- I got you an interview
with the St. Paul
Fire Department.
- I wanna keep
being you and me.
- Mm, that's why we have
plane tickets and Facetime.
- How you doing
with this Casey situation?
- Things might be different,
but we're still us.
- There is a lieutenant spot
open on Truck 72.
I told Boden I want it.
- You are not leaving 81
to go over to 72, because I am.
I'm just glad I can
keep your seat warm for you.
- First shift
as permanent lieutenant.
How does that feel?
- Three minutes under my belt,
and no major mistakes.
I'm feeling good.
- Well, you have
a major decision to make
about that empty slot on Truck.
- I do, so I have floaters
coming in the next two shifts,
both of them
highly recommended.
So today is Kim Rossi,
she's a couple years out
of the academy,
and Chief Walker says
she checks all the boxes.
- Sounds good.
- Yes, but I would love any
input that you have about it.
- Well,
you don't want to rush it,
because you need
to find the right fit.
But you also want to find
someone as quickly as possible
so that your team
can start to gel.
That's all I was going to say.
- Oh. No big deal.
I just thought you would add
some wise words of advice
on making the choice.
- It is your decision to make,
and I trust that you will make
the right one.
- All right. Thank you.
I got this.
- Great to meet you guys.
- Heard Chief Walker
said good things.
- Aw, that's nice.
- No pressure.
- It's an awesome place, 51.
- I'm hyped to be here.
- Truck 81,
Squad 3, Ambulance 61.
Person trapped,
Western and 16th.
- Here we go, 81!
- Yeah, let's do this!
- What's OFI doing here?
- Severide!
- Van Meter, what happened?
- Stairwell collapse.
You gotta hurry.
- All right, stay out here.
I'm going in.
I'll give the order
on the radio.
- Copy that.
- We were doing
an investigation
on some fire-damaged stairs
when they just gave way.
The whole thing
started coming down.
I was able to jump clear,
but Seager wasn't so lucky.
- Seager?
Where is she? She all right?
- This way, come on.
- She's down there.
♪
.
- Seager? Can you hear me?
Talk to me, Seager.
- I'm here.
- Okay.
Hey, just sit tight,
we're coming to get you.
- Want us
to drop a ladder for you?
- No, no, we have to keep
our weight off that mess,
it's too unstable.
Can you set up
an overhead anchor point?
- Yeah, I'm on it.
- Squad, give me
a harness bag and rope.
- 81, I need a 20-foot ladder
and some webbing.
both: Copy that, Lieutenant.
- Sorry.
- I got this.
- Uh, I'll grab the webbing.
Why don't you help Mouch
with the ladder?
- I got it.
- Thanks.
- Hey, Captain Van Meter,
can I get a look at you?
- No, no I'm fine.
Seager's the one
you need to worry about.
- Right, but until
she's out of there...
- Ladder's here, boss.
- Okay.
- All right.
Just drop it right here.
And then Gallo,
secure the webbing.
- Copy.
- Here we go.
We're gonna
plant it right here.
- Hey.
- Yep.
Keep going.
- Set.
- All right, Gallo,
put the carabiner
about halfway up.
- Ready?
- Yep.
- Okay.
♪
- Line.
- Got it.
- On line.
- Lower the main.
- All right, Tony.
Talk to me, Seager.
- Over here.
- Down.
- Slack on the main.
- All right, I'm good.
Seager, hang in there.
I gotcha.
All right, I'm off line.
- Copy.
♪
I got her!
All right, try not to move.
Where are you pinned?
- Legs, mostly.
- Legs, okay.
Hang on, hang on.
Can you move your toes?
Okay.
- Okay, nice and slow,
try and--
try and pull yourself out.
Can you stand?
- Yeah.
- Let's get
the hell out of here.
- All right.
Sit down, easy.
- Yeah.
All right, take us up!
- Raise the main!
♪
Okay, slack.
- You scared
the hell out of me.
Are you okay?
- Yeah.
- You're bleeding.
- Am I?
- Yeah, come on.
Let the medic
have a look at you.
All right.
Hey, thanks, Severide.
You're not too bad
at this hero stuff.
- That was pretty scary.
- Yeah, no kidding.
Could've been real bad.
- Yeah.
Well, I guess we should
cordon off this area,
you know,
so nobody else falls in.
- My guys
will take care of that.
- Did Squad just volunteer
for cleanup duty?
- You trying
to get me to reconsider?
- No, no.
No backsies,
you said what you said.
All right, Truck 81,
pack it up, let's head home.
Nice work, guys.
- Thanks, Lieutenant.
I'm just bummed
I didn't get the chance
to really, you know...
- Get up and in it?
I know, me too.
- Yeah, I actually hung out
with Evan again last night.
- "Evan."
Still weird to hear the boss
called by his first name.
- Yeah, you think that's weird?
I referred to him as "Chief"
in bed once.
I just--I blurted it out.
- Oof.
- Yeah.
But I have to admit,
there is something fun
about having
to keep it on the D-L.
It adds a certain
je ne sais quoi.
Hey, how're things with Casey?
- We have a Facetime
in a few hours, actually.
- Aww.
- Hey, you guys,
can I make lunch?
- That's a fast yes.
- Awesome, love to cook.
- Ooh.
I like her so far.
- Yeah,
she seems like good people.
- Nah, something about her
really annoys me,
but I can't quite
put my finger on it.
- You all realize...
She's a Gallo, right?
- What?
- What're you talking about?
- It's true.
Most firefighters fit into one
of about four categories,
and Rossi is a Gallo.
The "Cool Young Buck."
Or in this case, Doe.
- No. No way.
I'm my own type.
- You know what
you guys gotta try?
My beer. I'm a home brewer.
- I think the man's point
has been made.
- Whoa.
- Come on, Mouch.
Everyone can't fit
into one of your "types".
- Don't be offended,
I'm a classic
"Mustachioed Old Timer."
- I don't know.
- Hey, Lieutenant.
- Hey.
- I know you're trying out
a few different possibilities,
but I got the perfect
firefighter for you.
- Who?
- You remember Mason,
he was a young guy
we helped out last year?
He's a good man. Real skills--
- Yes, Mason. He's great.
But he has a criminal record,
which is why he couldn't
join the CFD.
- Yeah, his buddy stole a car
for a joyride
when they were teenagers
and Mason got caught up in it.
But he went to a formal review,
and he got the, you know,
record expunged.
- Yeah, but we got him
a job in St. Paul.
- We did,
and he's doing great there,
but Chicago is his home.
And you know, just in case,
he took some time off,
did the CFD test,
he went through the academy.
Stella, I know that
Mason would fit in here.
- I really appreciate
you going to bat for him,
and I like the guy,
but to be honest, Herrmann,
I need to hire someone
who checks
all the boxes,
and Mason just doesn't.
His expertise is wildfires.
I'm sorry, Herrmann, but...
- Yeah.
- Say hey for me
the next time you talk to him.
- Yeah.
- So this is why you
volunteered us
for all this grunt work?
So that you could uh--
- Play "Fire Cop?"
- What? No.
No I was just gonna say,
you know,
finish Seager's investigation.
- I'm just having a quick look.
♪
Good.
- Off line.
- Copy.
You think it was arson?
- If you wanted
to burn the building down,
this would be
the right place to start it.
Fire must've
started further down.
I don't think I can get to it.
♪
The hell is this?
Stringer's cut halfway through.
- Say what?
- This collapse
was intentional.
.
- I know you've done a bunch
of shifts at other houses.
- Plenty.
Bring my "A" game to each one.
- Anything in particular
you're looking for
in a permanent home?
- Honestly?
- Mm-hmm.
- Just the chance
to kick a lot of ass.
I like to get in there
and show my stuff.
Make an impression,
rise above the crowd.
- Okay.
Well, that is good to know.
Thanks for talking
with me, Rossi.
- You bet.
Hey.
Is everything okay?
- She just got
off a call with Casey.
- I just um,
I really, really miss him.
♪
- What's going on?
- That collapse
wasn't caused by the fire,
at least not completely.
Somebody weakened
the stringers first.
Cut them halfway through.
- Oh, that's messed up.
Did you tell OFI?
- Yeah.
Seager's coming here
straight from Med.
- All right, well,
until she gets here,
can I pick your brain
about some leadership stuff?
- Yeah.
How's Rossi working out?
- That's it.
She's good enough, you know,
she handled herself
on the call, but...
- She's not your missing piece?
- Exactly, you know?
I need to get this right.
So do you have any tips
on how to assemble a good crew?
- Keep pushing,
I think I got it.
♪
- I might not be the best guy
to give advice on that front.
- Mm-hmm.
- Come on. Just a little more.
- And there she is.
- Hey, Severide, Kidd.
- How you feeling?
- A little bruised
and battered,
but, you know,
mostly just angry.
So these stairs,
you're sure about what you saw?
- Yes, hundred percent.
Come on,
let's go fill in Boden.
- Lieutenant.
- Third shift
Engine Lieutenant Cahill
was the incident commander
at that factory fire.
Sounded like a routine call.
"Light smoke showing
when we arrived,
"discovered the fire at
the bottom of the stairwell.
Put it out
with a single attack line."
- That's it?
- All it says here
is that he thought
the fire was electrical
in nature.
Damn lucky that
the stairs held their weight.
- Do you guys know
who owns the property?
- He's a mid-size
commercial developer,
and this building seems like
it's a real money pit for him.
Vacant since 2010,
on the market since 2019
without a nibble.
Oh, and the insurance policy
is set to run out
at the end of the month.
- A fire sure could solve
a lot of problems for him
right about now.
- Arson for profit
is bad enough,
but when you
sabotage the structure
to maximize the damage,
you all but guarantee
that someone's
gonna get badly hurt.
And if that's not evil,
I don't know what is.
- You gonna talk to this guy?
- Yeah.
You want to come with?
- Damn right I do.
♪
- Hello?
Hello?
- No, it's fine.
I can be there, like, 3:30.
Does that work?
- Hey, let me call you
right back.
Can I help you?
- Vincent Murphy?
- Vince. Hi.
- I'm Lieutenant Seager
with the Office
of Fire Investigation.
- Oh, right,
I heard one of your people
got hurt at my property
this morning.
Ah, well, I'm sure glad
it wasn't serious.
Did you figure out
how the fire started at least?
- Well, Mr. Murphy,
as you probably know,
one of the things
we look for is
the possibility
of an arson-for-profit scheme.
- Wait, you think I tried
to burn down my own building?
- There are more
than a few red flags.
- No, no, no.
I need this building.
I got plans for this place!
No, I'm gonna do
a massive rehab,
turn it into loft apartments.
Here.
Drawings are on file with the
Department of Buildings.
Look, I got
the financing all lined up.
I've invested 80 grand
in this project.
If that building
had burned down,
stick a fork in me, I'm done.
- So what are your feelings
on Rossi?
- She's a good enough
firefighter,
maybe not so much
of a team player.
There's just more
to consider than I realized,
you know, the way that
everyone fits together,
what the new person
will add to the mix.
I'm just not sure
she's the right fit.
- Totally.
I wasn't going to say anything,
but she was just...
a lot, you know?
- Mm-hmm.
You do not have an easy task.
- I know.
But the guy that DC Hill
recommended
is coming in next shift,
and she says that he is
a really solid firefighter.
- That sounds promising.
- Yeah.
- Where's Severide?
- Uh, he and Seager
are following up
on the factory fire,
looking for cause.
- Does it bother you,
at all, him and Seager
spending all
this time together?
Not that it should.
- I mean, not really.
- Okay.
- A slight twinge of jealousy,
maybe.
- Mm-hmm.
It's funny, with Evan--
"Chief Hawkins"--
he has all these women
he works closely with,
but it, um,
it doesn't really bother me.
I'm not really
a jealous kind of person.
What?
- Nothing, it's just--
do you not remember
how you reacted to Cara
at Blue Moon when she
flirted with Gallo?
- Hey! Look who I found.
- Hey, there.
- Mason.
Hey, didn't know
you were in town.
- Just for a few days.
Heard the news
about your promotion.
Way to go.
- Thank you.
- I invited Mason in.
I figured that he could do
a ride-along
on Truck, you know, next shift,
just to observe
Chicago-style firefighting.
- No pressure, though,
for real.
If it's a bad time,
please just say no.
- Of course you can ride.
- Appreciate that.
- Yeah.
- I'll be so low key
you'll barely see me.
- Hey, hey!
- Oh, you better
go say some hellos.
- Will do.
Thanks again, Lieutenant.
- Mm-hmm.
Nice try.
- Like I said, Mason's just
here for a ride-along--
I thought it'd be good
for the kid.
- Okay, Seager watch your step.
I already pulled you out
of this mess once.
♪
Any idea what
you're looking for?
- One of our guys, Markowca?
- Yeah?
- Did the
initial investigation.
He thought it was
an electrical fire that started
in a junction box.
- Well, Markowca's
a pretty sharp guy.
Why did you
and Van Meter have to come
back here
and double-check his work?
- Because afterwards, a call
came in on the tip hotline.
Somebody
suggesting there was more
to this fire
than meets the eye.
- I found the junction box.
Huh.
- What, what's wrong?
- Can you angle that light
a little more?
- Yeah.
♪
Hey.
Whoa, hey!
- Hey, what's happening?
Severide?
♪
- Fire Department, stop!
- Whoa!
- Hey!
- Damn it. You okay?
- Who was that?
- I don't know.
He was right in there with us,
who knows how long.
- What the hell
is going on here?
♪
.
- You can clearly see
the exposed copper wiring
is covered in fine,
aerosol-type beads.
A strong indicator
of electrical overcurrent.
It would have easily ignited
the surrounding
wooden structure.
- So you're saying
Markowca was right?
The fire was accidental.
- Sure seems like it.
- Then explain the stairs.
- I can't.
Even if you could fake
the electrical origin,
why give yourself away
by sawing through the stairs?
- To ensure total destruction.
That is the goal
of a profit-motivated arsonist.
But you don't think
the owner is behind this.
- What's your
finely calibrated gut
telling you on this one,
Severide?
- Well,
the one thing I can't get past,
why didn't the weight of
the responding engine company
bring the stairs down?
Or Markowca, when he did
his initial investigation?
- You know how collapses work.
A step one inch
to the left or the right
could make all the difference.
- Or...
If this really was
an accidental fire, what if
somebody came back and weakened
the stairs after the fact,
and then called in a fake tip
to the arson hotline?
- You mean...
They were targeting
fire investigators?
- I saw this thing
in a science magazine
that is freaking me out,
explaining why water
is less dense when it's frozen.
Now they're talking about
this extra "liquid, liquid"
phase transition
with a sixth molecule.
That's crazy, right?
- I guess.
- I hope you know,
you don't have
to bury your
feelings about Casey.
I know. I just...
I can't stop thinking about
when Amelia and Scott
were here last time.
Scott said that every moment
with a person you love
is precious.
And don't just
let the time slip by.
I need to take
some real time off.
Not just a week
or even a month.
I have to go to Portland
and be with Casey.
- Okay.
- Last but not least,
that's Mouch.
- Howdy.
- Good to meet you.
- Likewise.
- Sykes was over at 130
until it shut down.
- Big mistake,
shutting down that house,
but what can you do?
Glad to be here.
If it's all right,
I'd like to go
get my bunk
in order, Lieutenant.
- Sure, yeah.
- So what type is he?
- Uh, "The Eagle Scout."
Common traits:
solid firefighter,
hard worker, straight arrow.
But don't expect
belly laughs from this guy.
- Come on.
- Sounds on the money again.
- Even I could've
come up with that.
- No, no.
I'm not buying it.
- Mm, you don't know.
- Uh, thanks for letting me
ride, Lieutenant.
I hope Herrmann
didn't strong-arm you.
- You think he
can push me around?
No, guess not.
He's kept in touch
since I left for Minnesota,
You know, such a stand-up guy,
you know?
When he suggested
the ride-along,
you know, I had to come.
I knew I'd learn a ton
from you guys.
- We really are happy
to have you here.
- We pulled the file
of every known arsonist
who could conceivably
have a beef with OFI.
Basically any suspect
from the last decade
who isn't dead or in prison.
- All people
you put behind bars?
- Or tried to,
even if the prosecutors
couldn't make the case.
- This is the call
that came in on the hotline.
- Um, hi.
You guys had that
fire yesterday
over on Western,
that abandoned building?
Look, I don't want
any trouble, but--
you oughta take
a close look at that one.
Real close.
- So we're looking for a male,
anywhere from puberty
to, what, 70?
- Maybe we could
match a voice to the face?
- Don't you have
a caller ID on that hotline?
- Call came in
from a blocked number.
It's one of the reasons
why we took it so seriously.
Thought it might be someone
with intimate knowledge
of Murphy's business.
Yeah, I don't know if
that one belongs in the pile.
He's pretty small fish.
- Marc Greene?
- Just a punk kid from Pilsen.
Van Meter included him because
he recently was paroled,
six months ago?
- He torched a Honda Civic?
- Belonging to the guy
who stole his girlfriend.
It was a dumb, impulsive move
by a jilted 19-year-old.
He served 18 months
for a class 2 felony.
I don't see him graduating
to attempted murder.
- I'm pretty sure
that's the guy I saw
lurking around
the factory last night.
♪
- Marc Greene?
My name is
Lieutenant Wendy Seager
with the Office
of Fire Investigation.
- Who is it, Marc?
What do you want?
- We'd like to talk to Marc,
ask him a few questions.
- About what?
- Can we come in?
- He's been
keeping his nose clean,
staying out of trouble.
Whatever you're here about,
he didn't do it.
- Then it won't take long.
- Someone tried to get
fire investigators
hurt or killed by luring them
into a dangerous location
with an anonymous phone call.
- Well, it wasn't Marc.
- There's an easy way
to prove it.
- This is a transcript
of the phone call.
Would you mind letting me
record you while you read it?
- No way.
Not without a lawyer present.
- I couldn't have made
that call anyway.
- Why's that?
- It says the call
came in at 6:23 PM on Monday.
I got a welding class then,
out at Universal Tech.
- See? What'd I tell you?
He doesn't have time
to get in trouble.
He's too busy trying to make
himself employable again
after you
people ruined his life.
Now, why don't you
leave him alone?
♪
- Welding class?
- I'm sure of it now.
He's the one I chased out
of that factory.
- Okay.
We have some work to do.
.
- Ready?
all: Ready!
- Go!
All right, all right.
There we go,
there we go, there we go.
Okay, Mason.
Good hustle, Sykes.
Come on.
Nice.
Come on, guys.
All right, Gallo.
Oho!
Attaboy, Sykes.
Come on, nice!
Come on, all right!
62 seconds.
Okay, I was looking
for under 60,
but we'll get there.
- Mouch distracted me,
y'know tripping in his boots.
- That's what we
mustachioed old timers do
to throw the young bucks off.
Worked too,
I saw you fumble the coat.
- Don't let Mouch's
old-timer talk fool you,
I saw him pull the rescue
of a lifetime.
- Solid performance
on the drill, guys.
- Truck 81,
smoke investigation,
4197 Hardy Street.
- Well look at me,
with my crew ready
right at the bells!
Am I the best lieutenant
in the CFD or what?
- I'll second that.
♪
- What happened?
- We smelled smoke
on the fourth floor,
but we have no idea
where it's coming from.
- Okay, we'll check it out.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
- Got a lockbox, Lieutenant.
I'll grab the keys.
- Great.
All right,
77's caught up by a train.
Grab a few extinguishers,
we're going up to four.
- On it.
- All right.
- Ah, the smoke alarm symphony.
- Smoke must be traveling
through the ventilation system.
It's gonna be hard
to track down the source,
so check each unit carefully.
Mouch, Gallo,
take the east end.
- Copy.
- Sykes,
we'll take the west end.
- I'm on your hip, Lieutenant.
- All right.
Fire department!
Open it up.
- Fire department!
- All right, I'll have a look.
You take the next one.
Mason, you're with Sykes.
- Fire department!
- I'm all good.
You find anything?
- Just a whole slew of cats.
The bad kind.
- 403 is clear!
Fire department!
- Smoke alarm is quiet.
- 411 is clear!
- Hey, Sykes?
I know I'm just
a fly on the wall here,
but that unit?
There is no smoke alarm.
Somebody removed it.
- Open it back up.
♪
- Mouch, Gallo, we found it.
Fire's out.
- Copy that.
- Truck 81 to Main,
it was a pot of meat.
You can hold up on 77.
- Copy, 81. 77 cancelled.
- Open up some windows,
would you?
- Copy that, Lieutenant.
- No, I think
that's all we need for now.
Thank you.
That was Marc Greene's
welding instructor
from the trade school.
Marc was definitely in class
on Monday, 5:00 to 7:00.
Never left the room.
- All right, so maybe
you were right about Marc.
Just a punk kid,
not a cold-blooded killer.
- But you saw him there
last night.
- I'm pretty sure, yeah.
- Van Meter testified
against Marc.
The whole trial hinged
on our forensic evidence.
We put him away.
He's six months out
of prison and still struggling
to find a job,
living with his parents...
- His dad did say
OFI ruined his life.
- Um, hi.
You guys
had that fire yesterday
over on Western,
that abandoned building?
Look, I don't want
any trouble, but...
you oughta take a close look
at that one.
Real close.
- Marc didn't make
that phone call.
- His dad did.
They're in it together.
.
- Sorry to bother you
again, ma'am.
- No.
We already settled this.
He couldn't have made
that phone call.
- Yeah, we know.
But what's your alibi?
- What're you saying?
- We're saying you're the one
who made the anonymous call.
To help Marc get
his revenge against OFI.
- You got it all figured out.
- Not all of it.
We can't understand
why Marc went back
to that factory last night.
- No, I didn't
go to any factory.
- No?
What happened there?
- This? I burnt myself.
On an arc welder.
- You sure you didn't cut
yourself on some barbed wire?
We gonna find DNA
on that fence?
- Marc didn't do anything.
I want you people
outta my house, now.
- So what were you doing there?
Trying to see why
your plan didn't work,
trying to finish
what you started?
- No, I--I just--
- This is Seager with OFI.
I need a 10-2-100
at 1213 Southeast--
- Wait, wait--wait!
He had nothing to do with it.
♪
It was all me.
Why did you go there, Marc?
- I had to find out
what was going on with you.
You were out till 3:00
in the morning,
Mom doesn't know where you are.
I looked at his search history.
He's been following
some firefighting blog
that tracks
all the fires in Chicago.
Then he started checking out
one of the locations,
this old factory
down on Western.
I went to go see what you were
up to, but I was too late.
- It's not fair
what they did to you, Marc.
You people railroaded him!
- Hey, hey! Calm down.
Take a seat.
♪
- Well,
you know we support you,
even though we'll
miss the hell outta you.
- Hundred percent.
- I just, I need to spend
some actual time
with Matt, reconnect.
When I hung up that Facetime
the other day,
I just got hit
with this wave of all
the things
that I miss about him.
That warmth, you know?
The way he could be so strong
but also so kind, and...
He has that gift
of making everyone
feel like
everything's gonna be okay.
- Yeah.
Casey is a one in a million.
- Thanks, you guys,
for always having my back.
Really gonna miss you.
♪
- It's just...
such a stupid mistake,
missing that smoke.
- Could've happened
to any one of us,
man, I'm telling you.
- Yeah, but I'm--
I'm not "any one of us."
I don't cut corners, I follow
procedures to the letter...
- You're still human.
Listen.
Man, I could see what
a good firefighter you are,
so you gotta just put this
in the rear view and move on.
You get me?
- Yeah.
Thank you.
- Ah, Lieutenant.
Wanted to make sure I saw you
before I got outta here.
Thanks for the opportunity.
It was an amazing shift.
- Mason,
you are the missing piece.
What's been missing at 51
is what Casey brought us.
And I mean, no one will ever
be able to replace him,
but it wasn't just his talent
and his skills that made him
so important to 51.
It was his generosity.
His kindness.
His heart.
And that is what you have.
So, um...
I know you're happy
in St. Paul, but...
- This is where I should be?
- Yeah.
Can't argue
with the lieutenant.
♪
- Hey.
- Hey.
- I figured you'd be stuck
at PD a while.
- It didn't take long
to get Dennis Greene booked.
But I ran into Marc,
his son, on the way out.
Feel for the kid.
I know what it's like
trying to get out
from under your dad's
dark cloud.
- It's a tough situation.
- So I hear Mason is gonna be
sticking around a while.
- Yes, yes.
I, uh, I pulled
a boss lady move
and hired him on the spot.
And then I called DC Hill
and begged and pleaded for her
to speed up his transfer
into the CFD.
- Hold on.
Listen, I do not wanna get
all worked up just for you
to get a call from OFI and have
to run out and investigate.
- Not a chance.
I'm exactly where I want to be.
♪
♪
- I have been doing this
long enough
to recognize raw talent.
Mason, you ever think about
applying with the CFD?
- CFD won't hire felons.
- I got you an interview
with the St. Paul
Fire Department.
- I wanna keep
being you and me.
- Mm, that's why we have
plane tickets and Facetime.
- How you doing
with this Casey situation?
- Things might be different,
but we're still us.
- There is a lieutenant spot
open on Truck 72.
I told Boden I want it.
- You are not leaving 81
to go over to 72, because I am.
I'm just glad I can
keep your seat warm for you.
- First shift
as permanent lieutenant.
How does that feel?
- Three minutes under my belt,
and no major mistakes.
I'm feeling good.
- Well, you have
a major decision to make
about that empty slot on Truck.
- I do, so I have floaters
coming in the next two shifts,
both of them
highly recommended.
So today is Kim Rossi,
she's a couple years out
of the academy,
and Chief Walker says
she checks all the boxes.
- Sounds good.
- Yes, but I would love any
input that you have about it.
- Well,
you don't want to rush it,
because you need
to find the right fit.
But you also want to find
someone as quickly as possible
so that your team
can start to gel.
That's all I was going to say.
- Oh. No big deal.
I just thought you would add
some wise words of advice
on making the choice.
- It is your decision to make,
and I trust that you will make
the right one.
- All right. Thank you.
I got this.
- Great to meet you guys.
- Heard Chief Walker
said good things.
- Aw, that's nice.
- No pressure.
- It's an awesome place, 51.
- I'm hyped to be here.
- Truck 81,
Squad 3, Ambulance 61.
Person trapped,
Western and 16th.
- Here we go, 81!
- Yeah, let's do this!
- What's OFI doing here?
- Severide!
- Van Meter, what happened?
- Stairwell collapse.
You gotta hurry.
- All right, stay out here.
I'm going in.
I'll give the order
on the radio.
- Copy that.
- We were doing
an investigation
on some fire-damaged stairs
when they just gave way.
The whole thing
started coming down.
I was able to jump clear,
but Seager wasn't so lucky.
- Seager?
Where is she? She all right?
- This way, come on.
- She's down there.
♪
.
- Seager? Can you hear me?
Talk to me, Seager.
- I'm here.
- Okay.
Hey, just sit tight,
we're coming to get you.
- Want us
to drop a ladder for you?
- No, no, we have to keep
our weight off that mess,
it's too unstable.
Can you set up
an overhead anchor point?
- Yeah, I'm on it.
- Squad, give me
a harness bag and rope.
- 81, I need a 20-foot ladder
and some webbing.
both: Copy that, Lieutenant.
- Sorry.
- I got this.
- Uh, I'll grab the webbing.
Why don't you help Mouch
with the ladder?
- I got it.
- Thanks.
- Hey, Captain Van Meter,
can I get a look at you?
- No, no I'm fine.
Seager's the one
you need to worry about.
- Right, but until
she's out of there...
- Ladder's here, boss.
- Okay.
- All right.
Just drop it right here.
And then Gallo,
secure the webbing.
- Copy.
- Here we go.
We're gonna
plant it right here.
- Hey.
- Yep.
Keep going.
- Set.
- All right, Gallo,
put the carabiner
about halfway up.
- Ready?
- Yep.
- Okay.
♪
- Line.
- Got it.
- On line.
- Lower the main.
- All right, Tony.
Talk to me, Seager.
- Over here.
- Down.
- Slack on the main.
- All right, I'm good.
Seager, hang in there.
I gotcha.
All right, I'm off line.
- Copy.
♪
I got her!
All right, try not to move.
Where are you pinned?
- Legs, mostly.
- Legs, okay.
Hang on, hang on.
Can you move your toes?
Okay.
- Okay, nice and slow,
try and--
try and pull yourself out.
Can you stand?
- Yeah.
- Let's get
the hell out of here.
- All right.
Sit down, easy.
- Yeah.
All right, take us up!
- Raise the main!
♪
Okay, slack.
- You scared
the hell out of me.
Are you okay?
- Yeah.
- You're bleeding.
- Am I?
- Yeah, come on.
Let the medic
have a look at you.
All right.
Hey, thanks, Severide.
You're not too bad
at this hero stuff.
- That was pretty scary.
- Yeah, no kidding.
Could've been real bad.
- Yeah.
Well, I guess we should
cordon off this area,
you know,
so nobody else falls in.
- My guys
will take care of that.
- Did Squad just volunteer
for cleanup duty?
- You trying
to get me to reconsider?
- No, no.
No backsies,
you said what you said.
All right, Truck 81,
pack it up, let's head home.
Nice work, guys.
- Thanks, Lieutenant.
I'm just bummed
I didn't get the chance
to really, you know...
- Get up and in it?
I know, me too.
- Yeah, I actually hung out
with Evan again last night.
- "Evan."
Still weird to hear the boss
called by his first name.
- Yeah, you think that's weird?
I referred to him as "Chief"
in bed once.
I just--I blurted it out.
- Oof.
- Yeah.
But I have to admit,
there is something fun
about having
to keep it on the D-L.
It adds a certain
je ne sais quoi.
Hey, how're things with Casey?
- We have a Facetime
in a few hours, actually.
- Aww.
- Hey, you guys,
can I make lunch?
- That's a fast yes.
- Awesome, love to cook.
- Ooh.
I like her so far.
- Yeah,
she seems like good people.
- Nah, something about her
really annoys me,
but I can't quite
put my finger on it.
- You all realize...
She's a Gallo, right?
- What?
- What're you talking about?
- It's true.
Most firefighters fit into one
of about four categories,
and Rossi is a Gallo.
The "Cool Young Buck."
Or in this case, Doe.
- No. No way.
I'm my own type.
- You know what
you guys gotta try?
My beer. I'm a home brewer.
- I think the man's point
has been made.
- Whoa.
- Come on, Mouch.
Everyone can't fit
into one of your "types".
- Don't be offended,
I'm a classic
"Mustachioed Old Timer."
- I don't know.
- Hey, Lieutenant.
- Hey.
- I know you're trying out
a few different possibilities,
but I got the perfect
firefighter for you.
- Who?
- You remember Mason,
he was a young guy
we helped out last year?
He's a good man. Real skills--
- Yes, Mason. He's great.
But he has a criminal record,
which is why he couldn't
join the CFD.
- Yeah, his buddy stole a car
for a joyride
when they were teenagers
and Mason got caught up in it.
But he went to a formal review,
and he got the, you know,
record expunged.
- Yeah, but we got him
a job in St. Paul.
- We did,
and he's doing great there,
but Chicago is his home.
And you know, just in case,
he took some time off,
did the CFD test,
he went through the academy.
Stella, I know that
Mason would fit in here.
- I really appreciate
you going to bat for him,
and I like the guy,
but to be honest, Herrmann,
I need to hire someone
who checks
all the boxes,
and Mason just doesn't.
His expertise is wildfires.
I'm sorry, Herrmann, but...
- Yeah.
- Say hey for me
the next time you talk to him.
- Yeah.
- So this is why you
volunteered us
for all this grunt work?
So that you could uh--
- Play "Fire Cop?"
- What? No.
No I was just gonna say,
you know,
finish Seager's investigation.
- I'm just having a quick look.
♪
Good.
- Off line.
- Copy.
You think it was arson?
- If you wanted
to burn the building down,
this would be
the right place to start it.
Fire must've
started further down.
I don't think I can get to it.
♪
The hell is this?
Stringer's cut halfway through.
- Say what?
- This collapse
was intentional.
.
- I know you've done a bunch
of shifts at other houses.
- Plenty.
Bring my "A" game to each one.
- Anything in particular
you're looking for
in a permanent home?
- Honestly?
- Mm-hmm.
- Just the chance
to kick a lot of ass.
I like to get in there
and show my stuff.
Make an impression,
rise above the crowd.
- Okay.
Well, that is good to know.
Thanks for talking
with me, Rossi.
- You bet.
Hey.
Is everything okay?
- She just got
off a call with Casey.
- I just um,
I really, really miss him.
♪
- What's going on?
- That collapse
wasn't caused by the fire,
at least not completely.
Somebody weakened
the stringers first.
Cut them halfway through.
- Oh, that's messed up.
Did you tell OFI?
- Yeah.
Seager's coming here
straight from Med.
- All right, well,
until she gets here,
can I pick your brain
about some leadership stuff?
- Yeah.
How's Rossi working out?
- That's it.
She's good enough, you know,
she handled herself
on the call, but...
- She's not your missing piece?
- Exactly, you know?
I need to get this right.
So do you have any tips
on how to assemble a good crew?
- Keep pushing,
I think I got it.
♪
- I might not be the best guy
to give advice on that front.
- Mm-hmm.
- Come on. Just a little more.
- And there she is.
- Hey, Severide, Kidd.
- How you feeling?
- A little bruised
and battered,
but, you know,
mostly just angry.
So these stairs,
you're sure about what you saw?
- Yes, hundred percent.
Come on,
let's go fill in Boden.
- Lieutenant.
- Third shift
Engine Lieutenant Cahill
was the incident commander
at that factory fire.
Sounded like a routine call.
"Light smoke showing
when we arrived,
"discovered the fire at
the bottom of the stairwell.
Put it out
with a single attack line."
- That's it?
- All it says here
is that he thought
the fire was electrical
in nature.
Damn lucky that
the stairs held their weight.
- Do you guys know
who owns the property?
- He's a mid-size
commercial developer,
and this building seems like
it's a real money pit for him.
Vacant since 2010,
on the market since 2019
without a nibble.
Oh, and the insurance policy
is set to run out
at the end of the month.
- A fire sure could solve
a lot of problems for him
right about now.
- Arson for profit
is bad enough,
but when you
sabotage the structure
to maximize the damage,
you all but guarantee
that someone's
gonna get badly hurt.
And if that's not evil,
I don't know what is.
- You gonna talk to this guy?
- Yeah.
You want to come with?
- Damn right I do.
♪
- Hello?
Hello?
- No, it's fine.
I can be there, like, 3:30.
Does that work?
- Hey, let me call you
right back.
Can I help you?
- Vincent Murphy?
- Vince. Hi.
- I'm Lieutenant Seager
with the Office
of Fire Investigation.
- Oh, right,
I heard one of your people
got hurt at my property
this morning.
Ah, well, I'm sure glad
it wasn't serious.
Did you figure out
how the fire started at least?
- Well, Mr. Murphy,
as you probably know,
one of the things
we look for is
the possibility
of an arson-for-profit scheme.
- Wait, you think I tried
to burn down my own building?
- There are more
than a few red flags.
- No, no, no.
I need this building.
I got plans for this place!
No, I'm gonna do
a massive rehab,
turn it into loft apartments.
Here.
Drawings are on file with the
Department of Buildings.
Look, I got
the financing all lined up.
I've invested 80 grand
in this project.
If that building
had burned down,
stick a fork in me, I'm done.
- So what are your feelings
on Rossi?
- She's a good enough
firefighter,
maybe not so much
of a team player.
There's just more
to consider than I realized,
you know, the way that
everyone fits together,
what the new person
will add to the mix.
I'm just not sure
she's the right fit.
- Totally.
I wasn't going to say anything,
but she was just...
a lot, you know?
- Mm-hmm.
You do not have an easy task.
- I know.
But the guy that DC Hill
recommended
is coming in next shift,
and she says that he is
a really solid firefighter.
- That sounds promising.
- Yeah.
- Where's Severide?
- Uh, he and Seager
are following up
on the factory fire,
looking for cause.
- Does it bother you,
at all, him and Seager
spending all
this time together?
Not that it should.
- I mean, not really.
- Okay.
- A slight twinge of jealousy,
maybe.
- Mm-hmm.
It's funny, with Evan--
"Chief Hawkins"--
he has all these women
he works closely with,
but it, um,
it doesn't really bother me.
I'm not really
a jealous kind of person.
What?
- Nothing, it's just--
do you not remember
how you reacted to Cara
at Blue Moon when she
flirted with Gallo?
- Hey! Look who I found.
- Hey, there.
- Mason.
Hey, didn't know
you were in town.
- Just for a few days.
Heard the news
about your promotion.
Way to go.
- Thank you.
- I invited Mason in.
I figured that he could do
a ride-along
on Truck, you know, next shift,
just to observe
Chicago-style firefighting.
- No pressure, though,
for real.
If it's a bad time,
please just say no.
- Of course you can ride.
- Appreciate that.
- Yeah.
- I'll be so low key
you'll barely see me.
- Hey, hey!
- Oh, you better
go say some hellos.
- Will do.
Thanks again, Lieutenant.
- Mm-hmm.
Nice try.
- Like I said, Mason's just
here for a ride-along--
I thought it'd be good
for the kid.
- Okay, Seager watch your step.
I already pulled you out
of this mess once.
♪
Any idea what
you're looking for?
- One of our guys, Markowca?
- Yeah?
- Did the
initial investigation.
He thought it was
an electrical fire that started
in a junction box.
- Well, Markowca's
a pretty sharp guy.
Why did you
and Van Meter have to come
back here
and double-check his work?
- Because afterwards, a call
came in on the tip hotline.
Somebody
suggesting there was more
to this fire
than meets the eye.
- I found the junction box.
Huh.
- What, what's wrong?
- Can you angle that light
a little more?
- Yeah.
♪
Hey.
Whoa, hey!
- Hey, what's happening?
Severide?
♪
- Fire Department, stop!
- Whoa!
- Hey!
- Damn it. You okay?
- Who was that?
- I don't know.
He was right in there with us,
who knows how long.
- What the hell
is going on here?
♪
.
- You can clearly see
the exposed copper wiring
is covered in fine,
aerosol-type beads.
A strong indicator
of electrical overcurrent.
It would have easily ignited
the surrounding
wooden structure.
- So you're saying
Markowca was right?
The fire was accidental.
- Sure seems like it.
- Then explain the stairs.
- I can't.
Even if you could fake
the electrical origin,
why give yourself away
by sawing through the stairs?
- To ensure total destruction.
That is the goal
of a profit-motivated arsonist.
But you don't think
the owner is behind this.
- What's your
finely calibrated gut
telling you on this one,
Severide?
- Well,
the one thing I can't get past,
why didn't the weight of
the responding engine company
bring the stairs down?
Or Markowca, when he did
his initial investigation?
- You know how collapses work.
A step one inch
to the left or the right
could make all the difference.
- Or...
If this really was
an accidental fire, what if
somebody came back and weakened
the stairs after the fact,
and then called in a fake tip
to the arson hotline?
- You mean...
They were targeting
fire investigators?
- I saw this thing
in a science magazine
that is freaking me out,
explaining why water
is less dense when it's frozen.
Now they're talking about
this extra "liquid, liquid"
phase transition
with a sixth molecule.
That's crazy, right?
- I guess.
- I hope you know,
you don't have
to bury your
feelings about Casey.
I know. I just...
I can't stop thinking about
when Amelia and Scott
were here last time.
Scott said that every moment
with a person you love
is precious.
And don't just
let the time slip by.
I need to take
some real time off.
Not just a week
or even a month.
I have to go to Portland
and be with Casey.
- Okay.
- Last but not least,
that's Mouch.
- Howdy.
- Good to meet you.
- Likewise.
- Sykes was over at 130
until it shut down.
- Big mistake,
shutting down that house,
but what can you do?
Glad to be here.
If it's all right,
I'd like to go
get my bunk
in order, Lieutenant.
- Sure, yeah.
- So what type is he?
- Uh, "The Eagle Scout."
Common traits:
solid firefighter,
hard worker, straight arrow.
But don't expect
belly laughs from this guy.
- Come on.
- Sounds on the money again.
- Even I could've
come up with that.
- No, no.
I'm not buying it.
- Mm, you don't know.
- Uh, thanks for letting me
ride, Lieutenant.
I hope Herrmann
didn't strong-arm you.
- You think he
can push me around?
No, guess not.
He's kept in touch
since I left for Minnesota,
You know, such a stand-up guy,
you know?
When he suggested
the ride-along,
you know, I had to come.
I knew I'd learn a ton
from you guys.
- We really are happy
to have you here.
- We pulled the file
of every known arsonist
who could conceivably
have a beef with OFI.
Basically any suspect
from the last decade
who isn't dead or in prison.
- All people
you put behind bars?
- Or tried to,
even if the prosecutors
couldn't make the case.
- This is the call
that came in on the hotline.
- Um, hi.
You guys had that
fire yesterday
over on Western,
that abandoned building?
Look, I don't want
any trouble, but--
you oughta take
a close look at that one.
Real close.
- So we're looking for a male,
anywhere from puberty
to, what, 70?
- Maybe we could
match a voice to the face?
- Don't you have
a caller ID on that hotline?
- Call came in
from a blocked number.
It's one of the reasons
why we took it so seriously.
Thought it might be someone
with intimate knowledge
of Murphy's business.
Yeah, I don't know if
that one belongs in the pile.
He's pretty small fish.
- Marc Greene?
- Just a punk kid from Pilsen.
Van Meter included him because
he recently was paroled,
six months ago?
- He torched a Honda Civic?
- Belonging to the guy
who stole his girlfriend.
It was a dumb, impulsive move
by a jilted 19-year-old.
He served 18 months
for a class 2 felony.
I don't see him graduating
to attempted murder.
- I'm pretty sure
that's the guy I saw
lurking around
the factory last night.
♪
- Marc Greene?
My name is
Lieutenant Wendy Seager
with the Office
of Fire Investigation.
- Who is it, Marc?
What do you want?
- We'd like to talk to Marc,
ask him a few questions.
- About what?
- Can we come in?
- He's been
keeping his nose clean,
staying out of trouble.
Whatever you're here about,
he didn't do it.
- Then it won't take long.
- Someone tried to get
fire investigators
hurt or killed by luring them
into a dangerous location
with an anonymous phone call.
- Well, it wasn't Marc.
- There's an easy way
to prove it.
- This is a transcript
of the phone call.
Would you mind letting me
record you while you read it?
- No way.
Not without a lawyer present.
- I couldn't have made
that call anyway.
- Why's that?
- It says the call
came in at 6:23 PM on Monday.
I got a welding class then,
out at Universal Tech.
- See? What'd I tell you?
He doesn't have time
to get in trouble.
He's too busy trying to make
himself employable again
after you
people ruined his life.
Now, why don't you
leave him alone?
♪
- Welding class?
- I'm sure of it now.
He's the one I chased out
of that factory.
- Okay.
We have some work to do.
.
- Ready?
all: Ready!
- Go!
All right, all right.
There we go,
there we go, there we go.
Okay, Mason.
Good hustle, Sykes.
Come on.
Nice.
Come on, guys.
All right, Gallo.
Oho!
Attaboy, Sykes.
Come on, nice!
Come on, all right!
62 seconds.
Okay, I was looking
for under 60,
but we'll get there.
- Mouch distracted me,
y'know tripping in his boots.
- That's what we
mustachioed old timers do
to throw the young bucks off.
Worked too,
I saw you fumble the coat.
- Don't let Mouch's
old-timer talk fool you,
I saw him pull the rescue
of a lifetime.
- Solid performance
on the drill, guys.
- Truck 81,
smoke investigation,
4197 Hardy Street.
- Well look at me,
with my crew ready
right at the bells!
Am I the best lieutenant
in the CFD or what?
- I'll second that.
♪
- What happened?
- We smelled smoke
on the fourth floor,
but we have no idea
where it's coming from.
- Okay, we'll check it out.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
- Got a lockbox, Lieutenant.
I'll grab the keys.
- Great.
All right,
77's caught up by a train.
Grab a few extinguishers,
we're going up to four.
- On it.
- All right.
- Ah, the smoke alarm symphony.
- Smoke must be traveling
through the ventilation system.
It's gonna be hard
to track down the source,
so check each unit carefully.
Mouch, Gallo,
take the east end.
- Copy.
- Sykes,
we'll take the west end.
- I'm on your hip, Lieutenant.
- All right.
Fire department!
Open it up.
- Fire department!
- All right, I'll have a look.
You take the next one.
Mason, you're with Sykes.
- Fire department!
- I'm all good.
You find anything?
- Just a whole slew of cats.
The bad kind.
- 403 is clear!
Fire department!
- Smoke alarm is quiet.
- 411 is clear!
- Hey, Sykes?
I know I'm just
a fly on the wall here,
but that unit?
There is no smoke alarm.
Somebody removed it.
- Open it back up.
♪
- Mouch, Gallo, we found it.
Fire's out.
- Copy that.
- Truck 81 to Main,
it was a pot of meat.
You can hold up on 77.
- Copy, 81. 77 cancelled.
- Open up some windows,
would you?
- Copy that, Lieutenant.
- No, I think
that's all we need for now.
Thank you.
That was Marc Greene's
welding instructor
from the trade school.
Marc was definitely in class
on Monday, 5:00 to 7:00.
Never left the room.
- All right, so maybe
you were right about Marc.
Just a punk kid,
not a cold-blooded killer.
- But you saw him there
last night.
- I'm pretty sure, yeah.
- Van Meter testified
against Marc.
The whole trial hinged
on our forensic evidence.
We put him away.
He's six months out
of prison and still struggling
to find a job,
living with his parents...
- His dad did say
OFI ruined his life.
- Um, hi.
You guys
had that fire yesterday
over on Western,
that abandoned building?
Look, I don't want
any trouble, but...
you oughta take a close look
at that one.
Real close.
- Marc didn't make
that phone call.
- His dad did.
They're in it together.
.
- Sorry to bother you
again, ma'am.
- No.
We already settled this.
He couldn't have made
that phone call.
- Yeah, we know.
But what's your alibi?
- What're you saying?
- We're saying you're the one
who made the anonymous call.
To help Marc get
his revenge against OFI.
- You got it all figured out.
- Not all of it.
We can't understand
why Marc went back
to that factory last night.
- No, I didn't
go to any factory.
- No?
What happened there?
- This? I burnt myself.
On an arc welder.
- You sure you didn't cut
yourself on some barbed wire?
We gonna find DNA
on that fence?
- Marc didn't do anything.
I want you people
outta my house, now.
- So what were you doing there?
Trying to see why
your plan didn't work,
trying to finish
what you started?
- No, I--I just--
- This is Seager with OFI.
I need a 10-2-100
at 1213 Southeast--
- Wait, wait--wait!
He had nothing to do with it.
♪
It was all me.
Why did you go there, Marc?
- I had to find out
what was going on with you.
You were out till 3:00
in the morning,
Mom doesn't know where you are.
I looked at his search history.
He's been following
some firefighting blog
that tracks
all the fires in Chicago.
Then he started checking out
one of the locations,
this old factory
down on Western.
I went to go see what you were
up to, but I was too late.
- It's not fair
what they did to you, Marc.
You people railroaded him!
- Hey, hey! Calm down.
Take a seat.
♪
- Well,
you know we support you,
even though we'll
miss the hell outta you.
- Hundred percent.
- I just, I need to spend
some actual time
with Matt, reconnect.
When I hung up that Facetime
the other day,
I just got hit
with this wave of all
the things
that I miss about him.
That warmth, you know?
The way he could be so strong
but also so kind, and...
He has that gift
of making everyone
feel like
everything's gonna be okay.
- Yeah.
Casey is a one in a million.
- Thanks, you guys,
for always having my back.
Really gonna miss you.
♪
- It's just...
such a stupid mistake,
missing that smoke.
- Could've happened
to any one of us,
man, I'm telling you.
- Yeah, but I'm--
I'm not "any one of us."
I don't cut corners, I follow
procedures to the letter...
- You're still human.
Listen.
Man, I could see what
a good firefighter you are,
so you gotta just put this
in the rear view and move on.
You get me?
- Yeah.
Thank you.
- Ah, Lieutenant.
Wanted to make sure I saw you
before I got outta here.
Thanks for the opportunity.
It was an amazing shift.
- Mason,
you are the missing piece.
What's been missing at 51
is what Casey brought us.
And I mean, no one will ever
be able to replace him,
but it wasn't just his talent
and his skills that made him
so important to 51.
It was his generosity.
His kindness.
His heart.
And that is what you have.
So, um...
I know you're happy
in St. Paul, but...
- This is where I should be?
- Yeah.
Can't argue
with the lieutenant.
♪
- Hey.
- Hey.
- I figured you'd be stuck
at PD a while.
- It didn't take long
to get Dennis Greene booked.
But I ran into Marc,
his son, on the way out.
Feel for the kid.
I know what it's like
trying to get out
from under your dad's
dark cloud.
- It's a tough situation.
- So I hear Mason is gonna be
sticking around a while.
- Yes, yes.
I, uh, I pulled
a boss lady move
and hired him on the spot.
And then I called DC Hill
and begged and pleaded for her
to speed up his transfer
into the CFD.
- Hold on.
Listen, I do not wanna get
all worked up just for you
to get a call from OFI and have
to run out and investigate.
- Not a chance.
I'm exactly where I want to be.
♪
♪