Coroner (2019–…): Season 4, Episode 11 - Blast to the Past - full transcript

In part one of the season finale, Jenny and Donovan set out to find out where Peggy is and who is responsible for the explosion at Peggy's shop.

Mommy doesn't want
to see you right now.

A few weeks ago, when
I had that panic attack,

I had this memory of
you being taken away

in an ambulance.

And I wanted to know if
it actually happened.

Could we just build
something new?

Instead of dredging up the past?

I, uh, was cleaning out
some of Grandpa's stuff

- and I, I found these.
- I was just seeing

if I had enough saved
to get my own place.

Grandpa and I had this
shared bank account



where we were saving
money for you.

I'm confused, what you're
saying is that my Dad

was scammed for $10K

and Peggy put it back?

I found your pills.

Where are you? I went
to the flower shop.

Been out chasing
suppliers all day.

But I'm here at the shop, now.

You know what? Don't
move. I'll be right there.

Jenny?

Jenny?

Jenny?

Hey.

Come on outta there.



So, I-I have to go away
for a little while.

But when I come back...

I'm gonna keep my promise.

I'm gonna keep my promise.

I'm gonna keep my promise.

Go ahead, open it.

Open it. Open it.
Open it. Open it.

Everything's gonna be
okay, - Jenny... Jen.

You'll see.

- It's gonna.
- Be okay Jenny... Jen.

You'll see.

Peggy!

Jenny?

Jenny.

I'm gonna need a
rush on the tox screen

and dental records.
We're on it Dr. Cooper.

Hey, hey, Jenny, you-you
can't go in there.

There's no way I'm taking
my eyes off the body.

- Hey, hey, you can't!
- Donovan, no, hey!

Dennis! Dennis! Open the
door. I need to do my job.

You can't be in here.
You can't, I'm sorry.

Dennis, open the door.
Hey, Cooper.

Dr. Thompson, I am more than
capable of doing this autopsy.

Right, listen. You know I'm
not good at feelings so...

I'm just going to
state the obvious,

you can't autopsy
your mother's body.

- Yes, I know that.
- Okay, if you go in there,

- you'll taint my investigation.
- No, I won't, Donovan.

That is not Peggy in there.

All right, Jenny? Jenny, I
know you just lost your Dad.

Donovan, I am not delusional.

That is not her!

It's not her.

Okay. Okay.

If that's not her in there,

then there's no need to panic
and there's no need to rush.

- So, first things first...
- Stop.

- We'll make sure you're okay.
- Hey,

I'll let you know as
soon as I find anything.

Are you nauseous?
- No.

Do you have a headache?

No, Eli, I don't
have a concussion.

Well, that's exactly what someone
with a concussion would say.

Huh, lift your shirt.

Lift.

This better not
end up in your book.

You think I would
do that to you?

Well, you like a juicy story.

Let me see that hand.

No, they already looked
at it on the scene.Yeah.

I need to clean it up.

I need you to hurry 'cause
I need to get in there.

- Ow!
- All right.

One way to speed this up
is you letting me know

if your mother had
any bone fractures.

You know, dental work,

anything we can use to prove
that's not her in there.

Oh.

Well, I...

Okay.

I uh...

Peggy took off from my Dad
and I when I was a kid,

so, I um...

I have no idea.

Does she have any
family you could ask?

Hey, Potato, it's Aunt Vick.

Um.

Your Dad's gone to
get some cereal.

The kind you like.

I-I really think you should
eat something today, okay?

Oh, Potato, your Mom's
not missing, she's...

I need you to know

that none of this
is your fault, okay?

Okay?

Hmm.

I know your Mom said she'd
take you to this but...

I'd like to go.

I'll let you ride the
rollercoaster all day?

Let you put as much
cotton candy in that belly

as it can fit.

Peggy had a
sister, Victoria,

who came into town
for my Dad's funeral.

Said she was sticking
around for business.

I can see if she's still here.

There's lots you can
do to help, Jenny.

Just not in there.

Yeah. I'll be in my office.

You let me know if
you find anything.

Anything!

I don't care if
it looks like nothing,

just bag it all, okay, please?

Hey.

You get any sleep?

Not really.

Jenny needs answers, so

we're gonna get 'em for her.

Yeah, well, Fire Inspector's
still poring through this mess,

but he did find one thing.

A tear in the gas line.

Were the edges clean or frayed?

Clean. Like someone made
a nice, little slice

with a very sharp knife.

Someone blew this
place up on purpose.

Hmm.

Yeah, well, can you
tell me if she's checked out?

I'm her niece.

Of course, I've tried
calling her directly.

I have, I have left
several messages,

but please, can I just leave
a message for her here?

Victoria Lang.

It's uh, it's spelled
exactly like it sounds.

Great, thank you.

Screw it. I'm the Coroner.

Ross! Ross!

Hey. What're you...

Hey.

Oh, Honey.

Honey, no.

Why didn't you call
me? Alphonse called me.

Why didn't you call me?

Ross, come here.

I don't understand.

Alphonse, you said it
was my Grandmother,

and uh, now Mom, you're
just saying it's not?

- It's not.
- Okay,

but it's not because it's not

or it's not, because
you don't want it to be?

Honey, I know in my gut that
that is not her down there. Okay?

I only know what they're
saying downstairs.

I'm gonna prove it.

I'm gonna prove
that that's not her.

I'm gonna be right back.

Hey, how
are you holding up?

I don't even know
how to answer that.

What'd you find?

God, I'm sorry to say, Jenny,

but the explosion
wasn't an accident.

Wh.

What do you mean?

Someone cut the gas
line and created a leak

and blew the place up.

Usually these things
are insurance jobs.

Okay, but why would sh...

I don't...

Uh, before my Dad died, he
was scammed out of $10,000

and Peggy put the money back in.

Okay, any idea where
she got the money from?

No, I mean, I
don't, I don't think

she would do anything
to put anyone in danger.

Well, maybe she wasn't
thinking clearly.

Like, how did she seem the
last time you talked to her?

I mean, she was
unwell. All right?

Okay, she was hypomanic, even,
which is why I need you to use

all the resources of your
department to track her down.

- Jenny!
- Well, I-I

her phone is off, or it is dead,

- or it blew up in the explosion.
- Jenny.

I don't know, but I have
been calling her, Donovan,

and... look, you have tricks.

Right? You have tricks.
That's what you do.

- You find people.
- Jenny!

The victim's body matched
your mother's size.

Her car was idling
in the parking lot

and you told me she called you

20 minutes before the explosion
from inside the flower shop.

I know!

Donovan, I know. But...

Look, I-I know you're
going through a rough time,

and you just lost your Dad.

- But Jenny, you need to...
- Can you please?

Can you please just
do whatever you do

when someone is missing?

All right.

I need you to call the station

and fill out a missing person's
report with the desk sergeant.

Sure.

Sure, if that's what it takes.

We got the evidence
box. We gotta go.

All right, I gotta get back.

I'll talk to you soon.

Okay. Ross, do you have a,

a recent photo of Peggy?

I need to send it to the
missing person's unit.

Uh, yeah. Yeah, sure.

Great. Do you know if she
has any dental work done?

It's the best way
to identify a person

- in a situation like this.
- Um, yeah,

Grandma spent like 20 minutes
every night brushing and flossing,

I don't think she had
any dental work done.

I didn't notice any caps,
crowns, or fillings.

She was always singing
when I was around.

Okay, what about broken bones?

What...

She-she didn't mention
anything to me.

Did she mention anything to you?

I don't think she.Look,

can you think
harder, please?

We are! We are trying.

Okay, just because
you didn't have

a good relationship with her,

doesn't mean you have to
punish the rest of us.

Whew.

- Um, yeah.
- I'm sorry, I didn't...

It's fine.

You know, I did. I

I did... try to have a
relationship with Peggy.

Ross, I can't explain
it, but I know...

I know...

I know that she's alive, okay?

I just have to focus on, on

what I can control.
A body, a clue.

Something that just proves

something that proves
to me, that she's alive.

- Mom?
- Something that...

- Mom?
- Proves that she's alive.

Mom? Mom?

Mom, are you having
a panic attack?

Mom, I need...

Okay, do you still
take your pills?

Can I get, what do I do?

- Oh, Honey.
- Aunt Vick?

- I told 'em to bag it all.
- Yeah, I can see that.

Hey Mac, uh...

I uh... I kinda need to talk
to you about something, man.

Yeah.

Fire Inspector
flagged this for us.

Yep. Great. What is it?

- Oh!
- Whoa!

Reeks like gasoline.

Put that all together,
what have you got?

Uh... light bulb. That
reeks of gasoline?

Someone made a lightbulb bomb.

Okay, let's say hypothetically

- I don't know what that is.
- You fill a lightbulb with gas

then you screw it back in.
When the light gets switched on

the spark ignites the
gas inside the bulb.

Which, combined with
the gas vapours leaking

- outta the cut gas line...
- Kaboom.

Yeah.

This wasn't a desperate woman
taking desperate measures.

This was a professional job.

You get panic attacks, huh?

Not often.

Your Mom got those, too.

I always thought it
was a side effect

of being an agent of chaos.

- You get my messages?
- Yep.

You're looking for a way

- to identify your Mom's body?
- No, I'm tryin' to

prove that it's
not her down there.

- Hmm.
- As I said,

broken bones, dental records,

those are the things that help.

Do you remember the night the
ambulance took your Mom away?

Um... pieces of it.

You and your Mom got
into an argument.

She was trying to force
you to remember the truth

about what happened with Katie.

She was wild with grief.

Your father stepped
in to protect you.

And she hit him.

He called 911.

The hospital convinced your dad

to have her committed
for her own safety,

and for yours.

I remember visiting
her afterwards.

She had a

she had a cast on her arm.

She broke her wrist.

It's not her.

It's not Peggy.

My mother broke her wrist
when I was nine. Right?

But the decedent

doesn't have any
healed fracture lines

on her right wrist.

If this decedent isn't
your mother, who is it?

Dr. Cooper?

I got a call from the lab.

The victim is Maria Fiori,
25. Lives in Toronto.

Identified by the family dentist

via two crowns on the
bottom right pre-molars.

Okay, I'm gonna call
Donovan and let him know.

No, no, no.
- You go find your mother.

- We'll deal with the detectives.
- Right, thanks.

Donovan?

Cassidy.

Thanks for meeting me.

Been trying to get
in touch with you.

Here I am, just calling
'cause I need a favour.

I only have a few minutes.

I need someone to look
after Lexi while I'm away.

And she's technically
half your dog.

Yeah, I'm... I'm on, I'm working
a really big case right now.

It's not a romantic weekend

with Harry Styles, or anything.

I'm struggling.

Because of Surmount?

I embraced their philosophies

and now, I can't
trust my own thinking.

Hey-hey-hey. Hey listen.

You learned some good
things in Surmount.

I saw you develop skills
that you'll have forever.

Yeah, but they were bad people.

Yes, they were.

But there's good and bad
in every organization.

You take the good
you've learned and

leave the rest behind.

There's a rehab centre

that can help me deprogram.

I can check in tomorrow.

I'll take good care of Lexi.

Great.

- You can pick her up tomorrow?
- Yeah.

Okay, she needs eyedrops
every two hours,

or she'll go blind.

I'll show you how to
do it when you come by.

Yeah.

Maybe you can bring me to
the centre, if you have time.

- I'd love to.
- Thank you.

Every two hours?

Okay.

All right, um...

I'm gonna take her bedroom.

The rest of you guys spread out.

We're looking for anything
that's gonna give us a clue

as to where Peggy went. Vick,
Okay.

Um, can you check the basement?

I'm gonna look around
the kitchen. Okay.

Uh-huh.

Ahem.

Heh, if this were
normal circumstances,

I'd give you a tour.
Just so you know.

Uh-huh.

It's strange.

Not seeing the family
for so long and then

- all of this.
- Yeah, well,

I for one,am glad you decided
to stick around.

Gives me a chance
to get to know you.

So you know, I never
held it against your Mom

that she didn't wanna
see me after Peggy left.

Yeah. No, I'm sure you just uh

- reminded her of Grandma.
- Yeah.

Jenny did what she needed
to do to get through it.

You know, you could always
come see me in Calgary.

- Bring your boyfriend.
- Yeah?

- That would be okay?
- Yeah, yeah.

We've got gay folks in
Calgary, too, you know.

Oh, well then, I
won't bring Alphonse.

Aunt Vick!

Duty calls.

Hey, maybe we uh,
come back later?

They deserve to know.

Waiting isn't gonna
make it any easier.

Yeah, well, it might
make it easier on me.

Carmella! Ange!

Oh, my gosh, you made those?

Beautiful! Just inside. Go.

Come, come, come, come.
Hey, welcome, welcome.

You guys are here
for the party, yeah?

- Mr. Fiori?
- Yeah.

I'm Detective Donovan McAvoy.

This is Detective Malik Abed.

Whoa. I'm sorry.

Were we being too loud?
I'm sorry. We're Italian.

We got a little bit of
trouble with volume control.

Do you have a daughter
named Maria Fiori?

Yeah.

Who went to Merrymake
Flower Shop last night

- to pick up an order of flowers?
- Yeah, the flowers

are for my granddaughter's
First Communion.

Sir, I'm sorry to say

your daughter's dead.

Get outta here.

Get away... from my house.

This is a day of celebration

for my family.

How dare you... come here,

and you say something

like this? No!!

No!!

No!!

No!!

Have you any idea what
Peggy's password might be?

I've, I've tried
everything I can think of.

You're barkin' up the
wrong tree on that one.

Okay.

Damn it!

Okay.

It's like a time
capsule in here.

- Hey.
- Hey.

I think I know where she'd go.

Grandpa's grave. He was the
love of her life, right?

That's a great idea, Ross.

Can you and Alphonse
go check it out?

- We'll keep diggin'?
- Okay.

Okay.

Find something?

Uh, doctors'
numbers, hair salon.

But first...

I'm gonna need a drink.

Agh!

Ross, let's just call an Uber.

I just...

I just fixed this
with my Grandpa.

I'm not gonna call an Uber.

Come on, we're wasting time.

We're not. It's okay.

It's okay, let it out.

You're safe.

I...

I was just thinking about it.

I was thinking
about moving, okay,

and look at

look at everything
that's gone wrong.

Ross,

you know this isn't
your fault, right?

You don't get it.

I was the glue, okay.

If.

If I would've been there,

Grandpa wouldn't
have been scammed.

If that wouldn't have happened,

Grandma wouldn't have had
to make up the extra money

in the flower shop. You
know, if would've been...

If I would've actually
been paying attention,

I might've been
able to save him.

But no, I was, you know, I
was caught up in my own stuff,

and I was just busy,
and I was being selfish,

but not actually thinking
about anything...

Ross! Ross! Ross! Ross!

They wanted you to be happy.

Right? To go out
there, and to thrive.

Which is what you
were trying to do.

You don't know what
they wanted, Alphonse.

Okay, maybe not,

but what I know is that your
grandparents adored you.

And they were proud of the
man that you've become.

I know that Gordon's gone.

And I'm sorry.

But what you had with
him was beautiful.

People like us,

we're not always lucky enough
to have a family who see them,

and who know them,

and who love them for
exactly who they are.

Love takes courage.

Gordon, he loved Peggy
with his whole heart.

So, instead of dwelling
on what you didn't do,

let's go out there and
find the love of his life.

And make sure she's okay.

I love you.

If that's okay.

It's great.

We should probably call an Uber.

Yeah. Let's do that.

When Maria moved out,

I didn't need the room
for anything else, so...

I left it like it is.

Thought maybe someday,
when she had kids,

they could sleep here.

What can you tell
us about Maria?

Anything that can help us

figure out how this
happened to her.

She's uh, beautiful.

And smart.

And stubborn.

She looks exactly
like her mother.

She died.

Uh, five years ago,
from breast cancer.

When she died, I thought that
that would kill me, but...

I can see now that that

that's a blessing.

She wouldn't have survived this.

You've had a lot of loss
in your life, Mr. Fiori.

I'm sorry.

I try to uh,

trust that God has a plan.

But... this is uh...

Did Maria usually shop
at Merrymake Flowers?

Or was this her first time?

She never mentioned it,
but I don't know, uh...

I don't pay attention
to that sorta thing.That's...

I dunno.

- It's okay if you don't know.
- Oh, no!

We had a little argument
about the flowers.

And what was wrong
with the flowers?

She spent $800 on them!

She loves her niece and wanted
to make her feel special

on the day of her
First Communion but

she was trying to save money.

I didn't understand that.

What was she saving money for?

Maria had a medical
condition, um

where she couldn't
have kids without help.

And she's

she's always wanted to be a mom.

As soon as she found out,

she started saving
money for treatment.

Where was she getting
the money from?

She worked. She was a
secretary at school,

at St. Angelo's,
full time, and then,

she worked evenings and
weekends as a bartender.

- Where was that?
- Rigoletta.

On College Street.

Did your daughter
have a partner?

Well, if she did,

wasn't anything serious.
She would

she woulda wanted
him to meet me.

She's a

she's a, she's a special girl.

- So sorry for your loss.
- Mm-hmm.

Hey, um

there's a lot of
food downstairs, so,

you make a plate.

Both of you.

Thank you, Mr. Fiori.

I think she's unwell,

so if she does contact
you, if you could call me,

I would uh, I'd
really appreciate it.

All right, thank you.

Okay.

You looking for her

or are you just rummaging
through her stuff?

You got your
methods, I got mine.

Check this out.

It's a letter from
my Dad to her.

"I know his family
has money and power,

but I have a heart.

And all of it belongs to you."

Uh, little snippets
of when Peggy left

have been coming back to me.

New grief shakes
old grief loose.

You uh, you were there
for me when Peggy left.

I'm sorry I pushed you away.

Today I realized I don't
know anything about her.

She was a firecracker.

Exciting and bold.

But hold on too tight,

or for too long,

and she'd blow your
finger clean off.

Is that why she left,
'cause we held on too tight?

I don't know why she left.

But I do know she did
everything in her power

to dig herself out of
the hole she was in.

Meds, therapy.

And then, she got desperate.

Desperate, how?

She went to New Jersey
and did ECT therapy.

She did electroconvulsive
therapy?

Nothing else was working.

There was a three-month
waiting list here.

You know, she borrowed
a small fortune and

went to a private clinic.

Where did she get
the money from?

Well, back then,

there was only one person
we knew in the neighbourhood

who could get $40K
liquid in an afternoon.

- Hey.
- Hey.

I ran a search on
other insurance jobs

that match the MO of
Peggy's flower shop.

Lightbulb bomb, remote switch,

gas lines that
were tampered with.

Eight hits going back 10
years, just in Ontario.

But only one matched exactly.

Restaurant on St. Clair West.

2009, a restaurant
that was deep in debt,

owned by a Toronto businessman
named Lorenzo Scalfi.

It's a miracle no
one was killed.

- Scalfi?
- Yeah. You know him?

I did two years in
organized crime enforcement.

Okay, is there any chance
that Scalfi could be involved?

That depends.

You think Peggy Cooper
borrowed money from the Mob?

Hmm.

There was an Italian guy
in the neighbourhood,

who was sweet on your Mom.

His family was connected.

So, she asked him.

Connected, like
connected, connected?

Let's just say they
had a lot of money,

and nobody ever knew
where it came from.

So, you're saying that

Peggy dated a Mobster?

Maybe that's what he was.

But to us, he was just a guy

who came from a family who knew,

because of where they came from

and what their last name was

that they were never gonna get
ahead playing by the rules.

So, they made their own.

Right. Um... do you know
if he's still around?

Are they still in contact?

So, let's say Peggy
borrowed money from Scalfi,

she couldn't pay it back

so he blew up the flower
shop for the insurance money?

And killed an innocent
bystander in the process.

Yeah, but if you're loaded,

why go through the
hassle for 10 grand?

That, I don't know.

Time's up! We can try
the password again!

Coming!

Okay.

All right, so it's gotta be
written down somewhere...

Bingo. I'm in.

- What was it?
- Your birthday.

Okay.

Her text messages are syncing.

From some unknown number.

I have to show Donovan this.

They go back a month.

"You're a good woman, Peggy.
You deserve the world.

I can give that
to you, just ask."

Yeah. "I need $10,000

and I don't know
where else to go."

And right away, Scalfi
agrees, no questions asked.

Then after that,
there's nothing for like

a couple of weeks.

I'm assuming that she
was distracted with

you know, what
happened to my Dad.

But then, two days ago.

"Answer me. Don't make
me regret helping you."

And then yesterday.

"You leave me no choice."

Whoa. Full house.

Are you guys good?

Can't speak for
everyone Detective,

- but I've been better.
- Who are you?

Uh, that's my Aunt Vick.

Oh. Hi. Pleased to meet you.

Uh, Mac, can we uh...

Um yeah. Excuse me.

Hey.

Traffic pulled CCTV footage
from cameras near the flower shop.

The footage shows a black
Town Car driving down the road

toward the flower shop,
and then, speeding away

right after the kaboom.

All right, that car
connected to Maria?

Well, she got to the
flower shop somehow

and she wasn't gonna take a
bus with $800 worth of flowers.

- Did you get a plate?
- Did I get a plate.

Come on. You're
damn right I did.

All right, let's wait
'til we know what we have,

- before we tell Jenny anything.
- Mm-hmm.

Okay, I think we should
go back to the house

and make a few more calls.

Um, I-I'm sorta tired.

Oh, um,

okay, why don't you
head back to the hotel.

I'll call you when we find her.

Ugh, I can't do this anymore.

She left me too, Potato.

I mean, yeah, I know,
I was grown up, but

it hurt just the same.

Right. Okay.

Well, thank you for
coming and helping.

I appreciate it
after all this time.

Yeah.

Maybe someday we'll
get to Ontario Place.

Ride that big,
old rollercoaster.

Take care, Jenny.

The Town Car that
dropped Maria Fiori off

was registered to a
fleet owned by Scalfi.

Oh, you'd think a guy smart
enough to crime his way

into this life, woulda
been smart enough

- to have her just take an Uber.
- Hmm.

Can I help you?

Uh, Toronto PD here
to see Lorenzo Scalfi.

You wanna talk to him here
or bring him downtown?

Depends. You wanna talk to him,

or do you wanna
talk to his lawyer?

Uh, that's right.
It's a good point.

Pull!

Pull!

Put the
gun down, Scalfi!

- Okay.
- Put it down.

Okay. No problem.

Can't a man shoot for
sport in his own backyard?

No, you're breaking
like five by-laws.

Okay, no problem. No problem.

Mo, you take care of
this for me, please?

All right.

Yeah.

I'd ask you guys if
you uh, wanted a drink,

but then, you'd stay longer.

We'd like to ask you about
an employee of yours.

Maria Fiori?

You know her, don't you?

Well, I mean the um,

the name sounds
familiar, but um...

I have a lot of employees.

I, I own over 20
different businesses, so.

Maria died yesterday.

Well, that's a shame.

Was she sick or something?

You know Peggy Cooper?

Peggy?

That last name never suited her.

Well, you lent her
some money last month.

A very large sum of money.

I loan a lot of people money.

Yeah, well, we have
the receipts, though.

- Well, I doubt that's true.
- Not literal receipts,

just something we young
people call text messages

and screen grabs.

You're not being
very forthcoming.

Maybe you'd be chattier
down at the station.

Oh, I doubt that. All
those polyester uniforms.

They give me "agita".

Okay.

You have yourself a
nice day, Mr. Scalfi.And um,

no more shooting
in your backyard?

Sure.

By the way, if you
run into Peggy,

tell her I said "Ti
amo". So beautiful.

I should've married that
girl when I had a chance.

We would've made beautiful kids.

Hmm.

- We're just gonna leave?
- Keep him guessing.

Okay, so she
wasn't at the cemetery,

or any of the other places
in the address book.

I did get Ross and Alphonse
to drop off my business cards

just in case, you know, she
showed up after they left.

Ah, you might've missed your
calling as a police detective.

So, it's confirmed.

Peggy borrowed Mob money

and it got an
innocent woman killed.

Well, that's the
short version, yeah.

But there's no evidence that
Scalfi hurt your Mother.

In fact, it seems like he
was still pining for her.

Right.

Well, I learned more
about my Mother in one day

than I had the entire time
she was living with me.

At least you knew it
wasn't her down there.

Yeah.

I mean, deep down, I was
scared to death that it was.

I mean, all I could think was,

you know, all these
years when I was younger,

I was looking for her,

and then, she comes back
and I'm so angry that

you know, I get this second
chance and I miss it.

Okay. Every cop on patrol
has a photo of your mom.

Someone's gonna spot her.

Yeah.

Uh...

Jenny Cooper.

Yeah, I called about my mother.

Okay, uh, where exactly?

Yeah, okay thank you.

All right, so a cyclist uh,

saw a woman that
looked like Peggy,

wandering around the
Lakeshore waterfront trail.

They called CMHS because they
didn't know what else to do.

All right, any idea why
she'd be down there?

Uh, I mean, what's
down there? Um...

Medieval Times, the CNE.

Maybe she's training
with the Raptors.

I know where she is.

All right, you want
me to come with?

Uh.

No, you know what? I need
to do this on my own.

But thank you.

I'll uh, I'll send
you our location.

Mom?

Peggy?

Mom!

Mom!

Mom!