FBI (2018–…): Season 5, Episode 6 - Double Bind - full transcript

As the team works to rescue a kidnapped 5 year old, Scola suspects the boy's mother isn't being forthcoming about why her son was targeted.

Cheers.

Can we get another
round of martinis

when you get a second?
- No, no more for me.

- Oh, come on.

It took me six months
to get you here.

Stay for one more.

- You're right.
It's been too long.

It's just work's been
crazy, and Luke's

starting school this year.
- Already?

I swear, the last
time I saw him,

he was still a baby.



- Oh, he is a full
little person now.

I had to put the camera
back in his room.

He's been getting up in
the middle of the night

and getting out all
his books or toys.

- Oh.

- Of course, the
one night I go out,

he is out like a light.

- He is getting so big.

- I know.

- Who is that?

- I... uh...

I... I don't know.

Quick, give me your phone.

- Hello?



- Carmen, there's a
man in Luke's room.

- What?
- There's a man.

I can see him on the camera.

Can you see him?

- Carmen.

- Hey.
- Hey.

- You with me tonight?
- I guess so.

- You doing OK?

OA said that you
went to the doctor.

You weren't feeling well?
- I'm fine.

- The intruder broke
in around 10:10 p.m.,

broke that glass, and came
through that back door.

- OK, are there any
external cameras out there?

- No, the house has
an alarm system,

but the kid's mother,
Liza Peters, she was out,

So it hadn't been activated yet.

- OK.

- The abductor comes
through the kitchen

and goes up these
stairs, kills the nanny,

and takes five-year-old
Luke Peters from his bed.

- OK, what do we know
about the victim?

- Not much. Carmen
Hernandez, 34.

Lived in Queens,
worked full-time

as the family's nanny.

Crazy thing is Mom knew
the guy was in the house

before she did, saw it
on the baby monitor.

- This thing recording?
- No.

Apparently, it just has
a live feed, no playback.

- OK, where's the mom?

- I couldn't see much. The
man was across the room.

- OK, do you remember
how tall he was

or what color hair he had?

- He was wearing a
black tracksuit jacket.

I'm sorry. That's
all I could see.

- That's OK.

- Just you and Luke living here?

What about his father?
He in the picture?

- When he can be.
We're not together.

He lives in London.

- So you two have a
cordial relationship?

- Yes, we're good friends.

- So there is no
chance that he...?

- No.

We had our differences, but,
no, John's a good person.

He'd never do
anything like this.

- Can you think of
anybody that might?

- Anyone who'd shoot my
nanny and kidnap my son?

No.

I can't believe this
is really happening.

- I know. I'm...
I'm really sorry.

- OK, so the first
thing we're gonna need

is a sample of Luke's DNA,

so if you have a
toothbrush, a comb...

- Yeah, sure.

- And we're also going to need
to monitor your phone lines.

Is that OK?

- Yeah, of course,
whatever you need.

I just want my son back.

- All right, morning, folks.

On the docket today,

we've got a regular
horror story,

every parent's worst nightmare.

Five-year-old Luke Peters
was taken from his house

a little after 10:00
p.m. last night,

which means he's been
missing for eight hours.

We have no footage,
no witnesses,

except the mother, who
got a glimpse of the perp

on the nanny cam.

Not a lot of detail
'cause he was in the dark,

which is precisely where we are,

so let's get to work and
start shedding some light

on this, yeah?
Thank you very much.

Kelly, light me up.
- Ballistics report.

Bullets that killed
the nanny, Carmen,

were from a 9-millimeter,
but there's no match

in the system.
- Right, OK.

So we need agents
going door-to-door

in the Peters' neighborhood.

Ethan, you want to
take care of that?

Make sure you dig into

the local sex offender
registry, yeah?

- So what do we know
about the family?

- Luke lives with the mother,
Liza Peters, in Ditmas Park.

She's a partner at
a consulting firm

in Midtown, JBD Management.

- And what about the father?
- John Bryant, 43.

He works for a private
equity firm in London.

- So he lives in London, and
the wife lives in New York?

- That is because
they're divorced

but on good terms.

He seems happily remarried
to a woman named Andrea.

- Yeah, he's actually
on his way to New York.

He should be here in
about seven hours or so.

- All right, so let's
assume Luke's abduction

is not connected to the father.
What do we know about Liza?

Does she have any skeletons
in the closet, any enemies?

- Doesn't appear that way.

We've been through her
phone records, financials.

No red flags popping anywhere.

I mean, if it's a
pure money grab,

there are much better
targets out there.

- Plus, we haven't seen
anything in the way

of a ransom demand...
Not yet, anyway.

- So why take this little
boy? What's the endgame?

- Thanks.

ERT just pulled
three clean prints

from the back door
of Liza's house.

- Let there be light.

- Thanks. Hey, Liza?

Hi, do you mind if we
ask you a few questions?

- Yeah, I was just...

- So we found three fingerprints

from the abductor's entrance...
Yours, Carmen's, and this guy,

Thomas Mitchum.

- I take it you know who he is.

- Yeah, that's
Carmen's ex-boyfriend.

He's a drug addict and a thief.

He stole my watch
three months ago,

which I tried to overlook
because of Carmen.

- OK, are him and
Carmen still in touch?

- I don't think so.

- So there would be
no legitimate reason

for him to be here last night?
- No.

I made it clear to Carmen

I never wanted to see him again,

and I sure as hell didn't
want him near my son.

Oh, my God. Thomas took Luke

- It's OK. It's OK.

- Any idea where Thomas
Mitchum might be staying?

- Yes, I dropped
Carmen off there once.

He was living at
his aunt's house.

It was right near the
cemetery in Maspeth.

- In position.

- Copy that, stand by.

- We're gonna enter as
quietly as possible.

We have no way of confirming
that Mitchum is working alone,

and we do not want to alert
anyone to our presence.

We make a sound, it could
get this kid killed.

- I've got eyes on Mitchum.

He's moving around the
front of the house.

Southeast corner.

- All right, Mitchum is
headed to the back room.

I think he heard you.

Mitchum is headed your way.

- Mitchum, don't
move! Hands up.

We got Mitchum in
the living room.

- Hey!

Hey.
- Luke?

- Freeze! I said drop it.

Hands up. On your feet now.

Back up towards me.

- Luke? Hey, buddy?

Luke?
- Back up.

- Luke? Hey, buddy?

It's okay. You can come out.

- Glock 19, 9-millimeter.

- I can explain.
- Anyone else in the house?

- No. What the hell
is this?- Come on.

- Luke?

Hey! He's not here.

The kid's not here.
Mitchum, where is he?

Where the hell is Luke Peters?

- I don't know where Luke
is. I didn't take him.

Seriously, what would
I do with a kid?

- We know that you
were there last night.

Is that Carmen?
- Yes.

- What happened?
- Why don't you tell us?

- What do you mean?

- We found your
prints at the scene.

Then today, we find
you with a gun, so...

- No, I didn't kill
Carmen. I loved her.

- I have three domestic
violence reports

that say otherwise.
- That was a long time ago.

Look, I'm not perfect,
but I didn't kill her.

- So what happened? Why
were you there last night?

- We was just hanging out,
like Carmen and I always do.

We...
- Like you always do?

- I wait till she puts Luke
to bed, then I go over,

then I leave before
Liza gets back.

- I thought you and Carmen
weren't dating anymore.

- Says who?
- Liza.

- Well, she's wrong.

Carmen probably just
didn't want her to know.

- So how late were
you there last night?

- I don't know. A
little after 10:00.

- OK, did you notice anyone
else in the neighborhood

when you left?
- No.

There was a car.

It was parked out at the curb
about a block from the house.

Guys were just sitting in it.

- What kind of car?

- I don't know, um,
it was a black sedan,

but I remember that their
left tail light was out.

I thought about going
and telling them,

but it was already so late.

- How are we doing, Elise?
- Still looking.

There's no cameras near
where the car was parked.

- Ballistics from Mitchum's gun

weren't a match for the
bullets that killed Carmen.

It looks like we're
back to square one.

- Hey, I got video
of the black sedan.

- Yeah.

This is at 9:58 p.m.,

12 minutes before
Liza's 911 call.

- Yeah, can we run those plates?

- They're bogus, come back
to a Toyota Highlander.

- OK. So what?

Rewind it.

All right, so it looks like
there's four, maybe five guys.

Can you see if you can get
a shot of the driver or no?

OK, black hat, track suit.

It's got to be the guy
Liza saw on the nanny cam.

- I want IDs on
everybody in that car.

- OK, I'll try, but most
of them are in the shadow.

- Can you track them
back any further,

try to get a better angle?
- Yeah, we're looking.

We're looking.

- All right, come on, come
on, come on, let's go.

What are we seeing?

- I got 'em.
- Yeah?

- They stopped at a food
cart half a mile back.

Still not a great
look into the vehicle,

but I think I can
get the driver.

- Yeah, hey, better an egg
today than a hen tomorrow.

Come on. Let's see, come on.

Boom.
- OK.

- OK, eyes up, people.

- Akhmad Petrov, 43-year-old
Chechen national.

He's on Interpol's
most wanted list,

runs some group called

the Chechen
Revolutionary Regiment.

- Yeah, that's a fancy name

for a terrorist organization.
These guys are legit.

They're responsible for
several high-profile bombings

and political assassinations
throughout Eastern Europe.

- So what the hell do a
bunch of Chechen terrorists

want with a five-year-old kid

named Luke from Brooklyn?

- Chechen terrorists?
That's who took Luke?

- Yeah.

- That doesn't make any sense.
I mean, he's just a little boy.

Why the hell would they...

- We were hoping
you could tell us.

- I...
- OK.

This is Akhmad Petrov.

He's the man from the video.

And these are some of
his known associates.

Here. Can you
look through this?

Take your time and let us know
if you recognize any of them.

- No.

No, this has to be
a mistake, right?

I mean, it doesn't
make any sense.

- No. No, it doesn't.

These men are
professional terrorists.

They wouldn't expose themself

if they didn't think
it was worth the risk.

- So what are you saying?

- I'm saying it just
doesn't exactly feel random.

You've never had any contact
with any of those men?

- No.

- What about your
professional life?

You ever worked
for any companies

based in Eastern Europe?

- Maybe, but nothing
that interesting.

I mean, certainly
nothing that would cause

a terror group to kidnap my son.

- Can you elaborate on that,
"nothing that interesting?"

- Am I under investigation here?

- No, OK? Not at all.

- Then what is this?

I don't know who these men
are or why they took my son.

That's why I called you.

You should be out
there looking for him

instead of accusing
me of... What exactly?

- OK, we're just... We're
just trying to understand

how they're
connected. That's all.

Um, if you think of
anything, please call us.

What the hell was that?
- Oh, come on.

She recognized the
men in the photos.

You saw that. That's
why she got defensive.

- No, she's in shock, OK?

We just told her that her son
is being held by terrorists.

Can you imagine what that
must feel like for a parent?

- That must be
awful. I get it.

But there's something
off with her.

I can feel it.

What?
- There's nothing off, OK?

She's a mother,
and she's scared.

I'm surprised you can't
really relate to that.

- Of course I can relate to
it, but that's not my job

to relate to a
mother going through

a horrible situation. I'm
trying to find her son.

It's Jubal.

NYPD helicopter just spotted
Petrov's car heading west

on the Long Island Expressway.

- Whoa, whoa, whoa.
There's his car.

- I see him.

- We've got eyes on
the suspect's vehicle

on 43rd Avenue turning
south on 9th Street.

- Copy that. We're on our way.

- Ah, damn it. We're burned.

- Be advised. The
suspect is fleeing.

We're in pursuit.
- Copy that.

- We were right behind him.
He couldn't have gotten far.

Tiff, I think I got something.

- Hey!
- Whoa, oh...

Shots fired.

FBI! Don't move!

Let's go.

Suspect is headed
down 9th Street,

stolen motorbike, black jacket.
- Copy that.

- It's not Petrov.

- All right, thank you.

Thank you. Hey.

Anything?

- I found some brown
hairs in the back seat.

Let's get the lab to run
it against Luke's DNA.

Maybe we'll get a match.

Were we able to
identify our suspect?

- Anzor Taramov,
Chechen national

and suspected member of the CRR.

- I got a bodega receipt.

Two days ago. West 14th
Street and 7th Ave.

- Hey, receipt OA found
was from the purchase

of two burner phones.

Storage just sent
the serial numbers.

- Can we get a location on them?

- Ian's working on it.

- Hairs in the Impala are
a match to Luke Peters,

so our victim was
definitely in that car.

- All right, it means we're
fishing in the right pond.

Talk to me, Ian.

- Location services
have been shut off.

- What about the
carrier services...

Call logs, text messages?

- There's not a lot of activity.

The messaging is going
through an encrypted app.

The only calls that they've
made have been to each other.

- So we have no way
of tracking them.

- Well, let's do it
the old-fashioned way.

Let's call them and
see where they ping.

- I'm on it.

First phone is shut off.
Trying second number now.

- Hello?

I know you're there. No
need to be concerned.

I'll be there on time, but you
need to deliver proof of life.

I need to know
that my son is OK.

You hear me? Do you hear me?

- That was definitely
the boy's mother.

- She's asking about her son.

- Which means this case
makes even less sense

than it did five minutes ago.

- All right, so we now
have evidence Liza Peters

is in direct contact
with her son's abductors,

which means that
she's been lying to us

from the jump, but
we're gonna talk to her

and see what's going on.

I assume she's still
in her house, right?

- Well, she just
shut off her burner,

but yeah, that call we just
made pinged to her house.

- Yeah.
- OK.

I just spoke to
the agents on site.

She's not there.

- Well, they didn't
just let her leave.

- Do we know her location?

- Well, she said she
was gonna take a nap

and climbed out the window,

and they were holding
on to her personal cell

in case a ransom call came in.

They didn't know she
was a flight risk.

- OK, we need to put
out a BOLO right away.

In the meantime, let's
get a search warrant.

- ERT already
searched her house.

- Yeah, they did
a forensic sweep

after the abduction,

but they weren't
focused on Liza.

- Encryption is tight.

The thing is harder to
get into than Fort Knox.

- Keep trying, OK?

We know that she used
it earlier today.

Any luck?
- No, nothing.

Just a bunch of boring documents

and paperwork like old
pediatrician records

and bank statements,
loan statements.

- OK, and yet this boring woman

lied to the FBI and climbs
out of her window to meet up

with the Chechen terrorists.
It just doesn't make any sense.

- Well, of course it does.
She wants to save her son.

- Yeah, I get that,
but why lie to us?

And why sneak out?
- Oh.

Whew, sorry. I'm...

- Hey, hey, are you OK?
- Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm fine.

I'm just... I'm so dizzy.

Yeah, I just... I just
need some space, OK?

Please just...

OK, OK.

What is that?

- What?
- Do you see that?

It's a safe.

- Oh, sweet. OK, thanks.

- Yeah.
- OK.

- Let's see what we got.
- Yeah.

OK. Cash, credit cards.

What, passports?
- Mm-hmm.

- Six of them?

All belonging to Liza.

- Or Maria or Diana or Larissa.

Who is this woman?

- Liza Peters has six passports,

from four separate countries,
all under different names.

And based on early analysis,
they're not forgeries.

They're genuine,
government-issued documents.

The first question
is, which one is real?

- Well, it seems
like Liza Peters

is her real identity.

We've got a birth
certificate, yearbook photos

dating back 30 years.

- So how did the
others come into play?

Where'd she get them?

- Don't know, but
the Russian passport

under the name Maria
Laskin could explain

her connection to Petrov.

She logged 13 trips from
New York to Chechnya

under that identity.

- And we don't have any idea
of what she was doing there?

- No, customs marked
the trip as personal.

- All the other passports show
similar patterns of travel,

all marked personal as well.

Over the past 10 years,
she's spent months at a time

in Moscow, Bucharest, Warsaw.

- Yeah, those are all
intelligence hubs.

She's a spy, no doubt.
- Yeah.

Tony, Ann, how we
doing? We need answers.

Does Liza Peters work
for one of your agencies?

- If she's a covert
agent, I don't have access

to that information.
- She's with us.

- Yeah?
- She's CIA.

High-level covert operative,
top secret and SEI clearances.

She's been with the
agency since 2004.

- We're gonna need to speak
with your supervisor ASAP.

- I'll set it up.

- How you feeling?

- I'm fine.

- Yeah, but you almost
passed out back at the house.

It looked like you
were in some real pain.

- I'm just feeling off.
- Yeah.

No, I noticed. So what's up?

What did the doctor say?

- I don't really want
to talk about it.

- Nina, you're making
me nervous here.

Look, if there's
something going on...

- I'm pregnant.

- You...

You sure?

- Yeah, I'm sure. Uh,
found out last night.

- That's why you
went to the doctor?

- Yeah, I thought I had the flu.

I just didn't
consider that I was...

- Am I...?

- Yeah.

- And do you... Do you
know if you're gonna...

- I don't know. I don't know.

- Can we talk about this?

- Not right now, OK?

Liza's supervisor is here, so...

- Liza Peters was
our best case officer

in Eastern Europe.

Was quick on her
feet, tough as nails.

We were sorry to lose her

in the field when
her son was born.

- She's not active anymore?

- No, she works primarily
in a supervisory role now.

- But she was
working in Chechnya?

- For two years.

She was working
a terrorist group

called the CRR, gathering intel.

Why?

- Well, we think that
members of the CRR,

including Akhmad Petrov,

are responsible for the
abduction of Liza's son.

- What, you think that
Petrov abducted Luke?

- Yeah.

- Do you have any idea
why he would target her?

- No.

As far as I know, Liza
never met Petrov personally.

Unless he's looking
for Milena Kerimova.

- Who's that?

- A Chechen activist,
propagandist.

She's been rallying against
Petrov and the CRR for years.

- And what does she
have to do with Liza?

- Liza recruited her
to work for the CIA,

but about six months
ago, things got hot.

Her life was in danger,

so we smuggled her
out of Chechnya

and got her set up
here in New York.

- So if Petrov wants
to kill Kerimova,

Liza is the one that
knows where she is.

Is that what you're saying?

- Liza is in charge
of the safe house

where Kerimova is secured.
- Which is where exactly?

- Long Island.

- OK, I assume you have
agents with Kerimova?

I think you should call them,
tell them what's going on.

- Are you suggesting that
Liza would compromise

her own asset's safety?

- To save her son, yeah.

- Can I help you?

- He's one of ours.

- Milena Kerimova,
we need to see her.

- What the hell is going on?

Why are your phones off?

- Liza said there was
a security breach,

told us to shut
down communication

until the transfer was complete.

- What? What transfer?

- Milena Kerimova.
- Are you saying she's gone?

- Liza wanted to move her
to a more secure location.

- When was this?
- About 15 minutes ago.

- Yeah, we got a
bit of a situation.

Liza lied to her fellow
agents, told them

there was a security breach
and she had to relocate

the asset she was protecting.

So we need answers.
Where is she?

And more importantly,
where is she going?

Elise, how are we
doing on the video?

- Here we go.

This is from outside the
safe house 24 minutes ago.

- Can we go tighter?
- Here's Liza.

- Doesn't she seem kind of calm

for someone who's about
to hand over her asset

to a terrorist organization?

- Well, we don't know
if that's her plan.

Right now, we need to find
her. What car is she driving?

- 886LSMB. OK, I'm running it.

It's a rental, picked
up from a company

two blocks from Liza's
house at 2:54 p.m.,

paid for with a credit card
belonging to Nancy Lawson.

- Yeah, that's... I think that's
one of the aliases, right?

Yeah, let's get a BOLO
out on that car, thanks.

- What about the car's GPS?

Can the rental company track it?

- Yeah, I'm on with them now.

Yes, they think they can do it.
- Great.

Get their location
over to Scola and Nina.

- There's movement
in the front seat.

Liza Peters, out of the car now!

Where's Kerimova?

In the back seat.

She's fine.

I just gave her a mild sedative.

- You need to tell us
what the hell is going on.

- They gave me a choice,

deliver Kerimova
or watch my son die

a very painful death.

These people... these animals,
they mean what they say.

- OK, so what?

You were just gonna
deliver Kerimova

and let them execute her?

- What the hell would you do,
watch your son get murdered?

- OK, but what, you couldn't,
so that's why you're here?

- OK, all right.

So this is good, OK?

We just... we need a plan.

What is it that Petrov's
asking you to do?

- He wants Kerimova, told
me to meet him by 5:00

or he'll kill Luke.

- OK, where are you
supposed to meet him?

What's... what's
the exact location?

- Some old building by
the beach in Queens,

but the meeting's less than
an hour from now, so...

- No, that's OK. Actually,
that's enough time.

- Well, we can't just
show up, hit the location,

and hope that...
- I have a plan, OK?

Look at her, right?
We look enough alike.

I'll just go in her place.

- No, no, that is not a
plan. That is a death wish.

You don't even
speak the language.

- Look, all we need to do

is keep the ruse
alive for long enough

to get eyes on Luke, right?

I mean, you know these guys.

Do you think we can do it?
- It could work.

- OK, then I'll run
it up the flagpole.

- OK, hey, hey, hey.

You understand this
is crazy, right?

- It's our only play.
- No, Nina.

I read this guy's file, OK?

Petrov decapitated
his own brother.

You cannot go into a
meeting with a person

with less than an hour of prep.
- Well, it's our only move, OK?

So back off.

- OK, we're too far away.

I mean, if anything
goes sideways,

we can't even get to them.

- We get any closer,
they'll see us.

- OK, we have a black,
blue Dodge Durango,

license plate number 437HDVX.

- We're running it.

- It's cold plated. Looks
like an older model.

We can't track that.

- Can we get eyes on the inside?

How many guys we
dealing with here?

- I've got eyes
inside of the vehicle,

but I only see one guy, and
it doesn't look like Petrov.

- What about the little boy?

- No, I don't see him.

- It's not Petrov.

- Out of the car.

Get in.

Start the car.

- Where is my son?

- I'll take you to him.
Just do what I say.

- No, no, they changed
the plan, let's call it.

- If we arrest this guy now,

Petrov's gonna know that
something went wrong,

and he's gonna kill the
kid and cut his losses.

Our best bet is to follow them.

- If they even come back.

For all we know, he
could have them pull over

at the side of the road
and shoot them both.

Isobel.

- You know this guy
better than we do.

Are we walking into a trap here?

- I don't think so.

Petrov will want to deal
with Kerimova himself,

so I think they're safe...

Until they actually meet
up with him, anyway.

Then, it's a toss-up.

- All right, we're gonna let
Liza and Nina make the call.

It's their lives on the line.

- We're talking about
handing Nina over

to an executioner here.

- If Nina wanted out,

she would have
given us a signal.

She's got this.

- I'm not going anywhere.

I need to know my son's alive.

Put the kid on.

Luke.

- Mommy, I want to go home.

- I know, honey,
I know. It's oK.

I'm coming. I'm on my way.

- Drive.

- Do we know where
they're headed yet?

- Somewhere in Long Island.

- We have a problem.

- The licensed car just
turn down a private road.

If we follow it now, our
cover's gonna be blown.

- No, no, no. We
don't know that.

- If we pull them over right
now, we can spook them.

It could get Nina
and Liza killed.

- Take it easy.

- Don't move.

Do you who we are?

She won't answer
you. She's stubborn.

Hasn't said a word
since I picked her up...

Then how do I know she
is who you say she is?

I want to hear voice.

Speak.

Speak.

- You OK?
- Yeah, I'm good.

- Tiff, how far out are y'all?

- We're about six minutes away.

We have your location.
- OK.

Here.

- OK, wait for
backup to make entry.

We will be there
in five minutes.

- OK.

Liza, hey. Where
are you going?

- I'm not waiting.

- Come on. They're close.

We don't know how many
guys are in there, Liza.

- My son is in there.

You do what you
want. I'm going in.

- Liza... Liza!

- No, Nina, wait for backup.

Nina!

- Ah!

- Hey, hey, hey,
hey, hey. He's down.

Are you OK?
- I don't think I can stand on it.

- OK. Put pressure on it, OK?

I'm gonna stay with you.

- Mom!
- Luke?

Stay where you are.

Please, you have to go find him.

- OK.

Stay covered.

I'll be back.

Luke?

Hey, hi.

Hi. My name is Nina, OK?

I'm gonna take you...
- Step away from the child.

- Stay here.

- Step away from the child.

- OK, OK!

Come here. Come on.

I'm gonna take you
to your mom, OK?

Come here, buddy.

- OK.

Give Mommy one last big
hug, then we have to go.

- Bye-bye, sweet boy.

Be good for Daddy.

- Hey.
- Hey.

I don't know how to thank you
for what you did in there.

I know I put you at risk.

- It's all right.

They're gonna take
you to the hospital,

get your leg all fixed up, OK?

- And then what?

- They are gonna charge you
with the abduction of Kerimova

and violation of
the Espionage Act,

but we're gonna talk
to the U.S. Attorney

let him know the
situation you were in.

- I appreciate that. I do.

But I'm good.

I did what I had to do.

They were gonna kill my son.

And at the end of
the day, he's safe.

That's enough.

- Hey, what's that about?

- I don't know.

- Are you good?

- Yeah, I'm good.

This is gonna be my last case
with you guys for a while.

- What are you talking about?

We were just getting started.

- Yeah, I know.

I just... I need to take
some time and clear my head.

But I'm just gonna go down
to white collar, you know?

I'm gonna take on all
the dangerous dudes

on Wall Street there who are
doing insider trading, so...

OK.

I'll be honest, though.

I don't think I'm
completely OK with this,

but if it's for the best...

- I'll be two floors down.

Don't get emotional.

- Bye-bye.

- Can I walk you out?

- Of course.

- So will you talk to me, Nina?

What's going on? why?

Why are you really leaving?

- I just need some time,
like I said, you know,

to figure things out,

what I'm gonna do
with my life and you.

- So what about the baby?

- I don't know.

Like I said, I just
need some time.

I'll call you, OK?

- Yeah.

Bye.