Hawaii Five-O (1968–1980): Season 9, Episode 22 - See How She Runs - full transcript

Sunny Mandell, a teenage runaway, holes up in Honolulu with a man who helped her back in Los Angeles. But the helpful man is a gangster with a grudge against Sunny's father, a Los Angeles ...

LORD: This is Jack Lord
inviting you to be with us next

for "See How She Runs."

You can be reborn right now.

You could have a
new name, a new life.

You are Willow.

There's a possibility that
there were other people

in that motel room with Sunny.

That she was framed for the
murder of Clifford Braswell.

Who wanted to murder Braswell?

I'm afraid the question
is who hates you enough

to wanna set your kid up.



I'm looking for a 17-year-old
girl. Her name is Sarah Mandell.

She's a suspect in a murder.

If you're hiding her here, you could
all be subject to criminal charges.

There's no one
here by that name.

Check upstairs.

You finally found your
type of family, didn't you?

Where Daddy talks
about peace and love

instead of how many
heads he's busted.

You're just as stupid
as you ever were.

Willow isn't leaving.

Step aside.

Sunny and me got business.

LORD: Next, "See How She Runs."

Be here, aloha.



You can be reborn right now.

You can have a
new name, a new life.

You are Willow.

Who wanted to murder Braswell?

I'm afraid the question is,

who hates you enough
to wanna set your kid up?

Willow isn't leaving.

Step aside.

Sunny and me got business.

[GUN COCKS]

[MELLOW JAZZ MUSIC
PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS]

Looks like we just tricked this fine
establishment into breaking the law.

Do I really look 21?

Only when you're with me.

I can do anything
when I'm with you.

I can't believe you
happened to me.

You're the best thing that's
ever come through my life.

Excuse me.

- You're gonna get us kicked out yet.
- Ha, ha.

[RINGS]

- Liana? LIANA: You
can bring her over now.

Right.

Todd. A motel?

An old friend of mine's in town.

I told him we'd stop by.

Couldn't he find a
nicer place to stay?

DANIELS: Shh.

[MAIKI CHUCKLES]

MAIKI: Mmm. Ha, ha.

Are you sure he's here?

Just have a seat.

Four people in one room.

Hot time.

Maybe like go join, huh?

You wanna go down there too?

[LAUGHING]

Leave that shade.

Aw. Kill my fun.

You must be Sunny Mandell.

- Yes.
- Hello, Sunny Mandell.

This is Liana.

Oh, let's get rid of this.

I was never one of them
weirdos that went in for brunettes.

Todd?

[DANIELS CHUCKLES]

You haven't seen nothing yet.

Come on.

Maybe you better
pick it up, sweet thing.

Pick it up.

That's right.

Now turn around.

Open that door.

Good. Now look inside.

[SUNNY SCREAMS]

How about that, huh?

Now get out.

You got a moonlight
boat-ride coming up.

Only don't plan on coming back.

LIANA: Whoa, doll. Be careful.

DANNY: Steve. Got a minute?

McGARRETT: Yeah,
Danno. Just about a minute.

What have you got? I've got
to be in that courtroom at 12:15.

There was a fatal shooting in a
motel. H.P.D. came up with a suspect.

Well, how does that concern us?

You know who Babe Mandell is?

Sure, he's one of the best
cops in L.A. What about him?

It's not him.

The prints on the murder weapon

were those of Babe Mandell's
17-year-old daughter, Sunny.

Wait a minute.

How can you trace the
prints of a 17-year-old girl

without a prior arrest?

She left her purse.

We compared the prints
with her driver's license.

She left her purse
at the murder scene?

Boy, that's convenient.

I've gotta go, Danno.

I want all the details
as soon as I get back.

Right.

MAN [ON RADIO]: A cache
of 20 sticks of dynamite

and 15 blasting
caps were discovered.

A former tenant of
the apartment building,

the last one to use the storage
area, is being held by police.

Also in the news, Sunny Mandell,
daughter of a prominent member

of the Los Angeles police force,
is being sought by Honolulu police

in connection with a
motel room slaying.

Forty-nine-year-old Clifford
Braswell was found shot to death

early this morning
in the Sunset Motel.

Fingerprints on
the murder weapon

were identified as
those of Miss Mandell, I7.

Police Captain Babe Mandell is
reportedly en route to Honolulu

and had no comment
to make on the killing.

[HAIR DRYER HUMMING]

LIANA: Go easy on the place.

I want my deposit back.

I can't find her.
I can't find her.

She could've hitched, she
could be anywhere on this island.

Did you watch the news?

- What?
- I told you to watch the news.

Well, I did. The
cops don't have her.

Her old man just arrived.

Mandell is here?

- What?
- Turn that thing off.

[HAIR DRYER STOPS]

I could go back to the joint.

If they get to her before I
do, she could send me back.

- You're gonna find her.
- Yeah? Where?

LIANA: Well, where would she be?

She's a kid.

She's scared out of her wits.

So where would she hide?

Someplace where she'd blend in.

Lots of young faces.

Dark corners.

Music.

Dope.

Action.

That's where she'd hide.

[DANCE MUSIC PLAYING
OVER SPEAKERS]

Hey, bartender, come here.

Have you seen this
chick around here?

My kid sister. She ran away.

Have you seen her
anywhere around here?

CLOUD: Hey.

Cop's up the way making
his wake-up rounds.

He's really heavy into hassling
people. Better rise and shine.

Oh, thanks.

CLOUD: Hey, you
want something to eat?

Yeah, well, I don't
have any money.

So who does?

MAN: And they think the
whole world is built on yesterday,

with their Freud
and their Marx...

His name's Osiris.

You ought to listen.

OSIRIS: and their
scars of experience

and their sins of the father.

There's a whole
new life in tomorrow.

Life doesn't have to be
made of days that are gone.

It can be made of days to come.

You see, process
is what life is.

Continual rebirth.

Continually aligning
yourself with the future,

with what you want to be,
not with what you've been.

Rebirth.

With the past,
there is only death.

You can be dying every moment
or you can be born every moment.

There are the dying
and there are the Reborn.

The Reborn have no
past, no yesterdays.

Just a lifetime of tomorrows

and whatever we want
those tomorrows to be.

Do you wanna ask him something?

- No.
- He has good answers.

Come.

I liked what you said.

Uh, but it couldn't be that way.

- Not for everybody.
- Why not?

I'm Sunny Mandell.

You probably heard
my name on the news.

You're someone who's
been tossed about.

I can tell that from your
eyes, not your name.

You've had to bend in the wind.

Many times.

But you haven't
broken, have you?

And you won't break, will you?

- But...
- Yesterday is for throwing away.

You can be reborn right now.

I can tell you want to be.

You can have a
new name, a new life.

Yes.

You are Willow.

- Starting right now.
- Willow?

Welcome to tomorrow.

[KNOCKS]

McGARRETT: Come in.

You're saying that it looks like
a simple pick up then, eh, Chin?

Okay, good, thank
you. Thank you.

Keep up the good work.

Braswell was a CPA
on vacation here.

He was seen leaving a bar
the night he was murdered

with a girl with
long, dark hair.

- Sunny Mandell?
- Well...

That's what the prints on
the murder weapon suggest.

Judging from the time
Braswell registered,

it looks like he went directly
from the bar to the motel,

where he took a bullet.

There may be a
lot more to it, Steve.

There's somebody
outside I'd like you to meet.

McGARRETT: Let's go.

Mr. and Mrs. Maiki,
this is Steve McGarrett.

Mr. Maiki came in
because he doesn't believe

everything he
reads in newspapers.

There were four people
in that room that day.

Not two, you know.

These guys that write about
this stuff, they don't know nothing.

What did you see?

I watch motel room, you know,

with binoculars.

Well, I figure if I can see,
I'm gonna watch, huh?

And I see first a man and
a woman go in the room.

Then another man and
then another woman.

This take about
one hour, you know.

Four people in one room.

I thought there was gonna
be a swap meet, you know.

What did they look like?

MAIKI: I couldn't see
their faces, you know.

The angle was bad.

But I had good view of the room
until somebody pulled the shade.

- Did you see them leave?
- Yeah.

I see first the woman. She's
running out wiki-wiki, you know.

And then the man
and then the woman.

But funny thing, I never
see that other man come out.

You're sure it was the same
room where the murder took place?

You betcha.

- Same day?
- You betcha.

Mr. Maiki, the shot
was muffled by a pillow,

but did you hear any sound at
all that could've been a gunshot?

Nope.

What about the cars the
people came or left in?

I couldn't see the cars.

But you're sure two of the people
were men and two were women?

I sure.

If you couldn't see them,
how could you be sure?

I know the difference
between a man and a wahine.

I watch that motel
room day and night.

You know, this is
like one hobby for me.

It's a great hobby.

Mrs. Maiki, Mr. Maiki,
thank you very much.

You may have been
a great help to us.

If we have any more
questions, we'll call you.

See, honey, you
always complaining.

But you see, these cops,
they thank me for what I do.

- It takes all kinds, doesn't it?
- It sure does.

Danno, tell Che Fong to
get his fine-tooth comb out.

Two more sets of identifiable
prints from that room

could mean a
whole new ball game.

Right.

CLOUD: Got any
more or is that it?

There's one behind the door.

CLOUD: Capitalists.

That's Mariah,
Rainbow and Phoenix.

They're off to make our living.

They sell things?

Mm. Every day, out on
Diamond Head Road.

That's Rhyme and Cassiopeia.

SUNNY: How long
have they been here?

They're here today.

OSIRIS: This is Aquarius.

SUNNY: Hello.

And Cloud you know.

The names are so pretty.

KARMA: That's
because he named us all.

And Karma.

He only names those
he's sure will stay.

The others you see
around come and go

because they can't decide
between yesterday and tomorrow.

What's your name?

I'm Willow.

And I'd like to stay.

Yeah, Danno?

H.P.D. couldn't find any prints
on the knob of the main door.

There were plenty of latent
prints all over the place

but none on the
main door itself.

- None at all?
- No.

Like it was wiped clean.

What I can't figure out is if Sunny
was trying to get rid of her prints,

why didn't she bother
with obvious places?

Yeah, and why did she
leave the gun and her purse?

So if what that Peeping
Tom told us is true,

we've got four people
in that motel room.

Danno, could it be that someone
wanted to murder Braswell

and needed a patsy
to take the rap?

Or... Or...

Was it that someone
wanted to frame the girl

and needed a victim?

[KNOCKS]

Hey, McGarrett.

Come on in. Come on in.

Five years.

Five damn years.

McGARRETT: Too
long, Babe. Too long.

Hey, uh, how about a belt?

Never use it. You know that.

You know, you still look like a guy who
gets about 45 minutes of sleep a night.

Yeah?

And you still resemble the
classic Lombroso criminal type.

- Ha-ha-ha.
- Good to see you, Babe.

What have you got
for me? About Sunny.

Nothing. Not yet.

MAN [OVER RADIO]: Hotel 41...

I didn't think so.

MAN: Suspect at
west side of house.

BABE: You sure you
got everything covered?

Yeah. Everything.

Babe, I want you to
stay on the sidelines.

Is that understood?

It's your rock. It's your show.

Just make sure
that you find her.

- Why did Sunny leave home?
- Some guy.

She met some guy,
thought she was in love.

Seventeen years old.
Can you imagine that?

What was the guy's name?

She never brought him home.
She knew I didn't approve.

And then one day, she was gone.

Wasn't she happy at home?

Heh. Nobody's happy at home.

Not my home.

Marianne, that's my wife.

You see her here?

No, she wouldn't come. Couldn't.

Her husband's been
a cop for 25 years.

I guess I don't come
on like much else.

But what has my being
a lousy father got to do

with what happened
in that motel room?

Did your kid have any enemies?

What the hell kind of
a question is that? No.

No.

But you do?

Of course I do.

I got more two-bit
punks and 5-dollar hoods

dreaming about laying me out
than there are people on this island.

There's a possibility

that there were other people
in that motel room with Sunny.

That she was framed for the
murder of Clifford Braswell.

- My daughter was set up?
- Could be.

Who?

Who wanted to murder Braswell?

I'm afraid the question is,

who hates you enough
to wanna set your kid up?

Oh, God.

Makes sense.

They go through my
daughter to get back to me.

Somebody sets her up,

gets his jollies out of
knowing all the grief I'll take...

and then he kills her.

Well, yeah, it could work.

There is something
you can do, Babe.

It's a little late
for that, isn't it?

If it was a frame,

if somebody hated you so
much that he'd resort to that,

there is something you can
do to help us pin him down.

Maybe there is.

Listen, uh, could you rent
me a desk, a telephone?

Maybe three lines to the
West Coast? Just for starters.

You got it.

We'll even pay the phone bill.

Good to see you.

It's good seeing you, McGarrett.

TOURIST: You got this in blue?

Maybe we'd like it for
our blue dining room.

[MAN LAUGHS]

Hey, lady. Heads up.

[WOMAN SCREAMS]

Phoenix. Come on, Phoenix.

TOURIST: We'll call the
police, get an ambulance.

No, that's okay.

But sure, it's no problem.

- No. Let's get her home.
TOURIST: But you can't move her.

Look out that gash.
She needs a doctor.

No. No doctors.

Why don't we call the police?
Those kids ought to be punished.

No. That's okay, man.

TOURIST: No, it's not okay.

[ALL CHANTING]

OSIRIS: Phoenix.

I named you
Phoenix for a reason.

You know how to rise,

how to come up from
the blackness and go on.

Start over.

You'll rise again this time.

That's the van.

[CHANTING RISES]

COP: Understand
there's a problem here.

Some kind of assault
on Diamond Head Road.

We have no
problems in this house.

Didn't she get hit in the
head with a beer bottle?

Doesn't matter. This is
now, not 30 minutes ago.

She's here. And she's smiling.

COP: You don't wanna
make a complaint?

And you don't need an ambulance?

BABE: I never said it was
gonna be a piece of cake.

Yes, I want the
names of all the guys

who were arrested or
paroled within the last year.

Oh, what am I doing,
speaking English or what?

You're damn right you'll call me
back. Yeah, in about one minute.

- Steve. McGARRETT: Yeah?

I just got the word from H.P.D.

that a girl answering
Sunny Mandell's description

was seen by a cop at some
kind of hippie joint in Manoa.

Danno.

You and Chin check it, just
in case. I'll get you a warrant.

- Keep me posted.
- Right.

Malia? Get me John Manicote.

How's it going, Babe?

BABE: Oh, you tell me.

- Forty-one names and counting.
MALIA: McGarrett for John Manicote.

- We may have a line on your kid.
MALIA: Thank you. One moment.

- Mr. McGarrett, John Manicote, line 2.
- I'll keep you posted.

McGARRETT: John,
I'll need a warrant.

Well, so far it's been described
as a hippie joint in Manoa.

I'll get you an exact address
and a description of the house.

Dan Williams will pick it
up in about ten minutes.

Yeah. Thank you.

DANNY: Chin, you and
Rowan check the outside.

Chuck?

DANNY: Williams, Five-0.

We're looking for
a Sarah Mandell.

We've got a warrant
to search this house.

Sure.

[LIGHT SWITCH CLICKING]

Sorry, no electricity.

Cheaper that way.

There are no drugs here.

We're not looking for drugs.

We're looking for a 17-year-old
girl named Sarah Mandell.

She's a suspect in a murder.

If you're hiding her here, you could
all be subject to criminal charges.

There's no one
here by that name.

Check upstairs.

Could be under the house.

Nope. Looks like it hasn't
been opened for years.

I don't know. I could've
sworn she was here.

Well, she doesn't
seem to be here now.

Let's go.

Bye now.

Toodle-oo.

[GRUNTS]

Oh, it was like being buried.

And being born again.

They're gone, Willow.

They're all gone.

MAN [ON TV]: Today's weather
report for the greater Honolulu area.

- There'll be mostly clear skies...
- Page three.

Leave that on. There
may be a special bulletin.

"Sunny Mandell sought
by police as suspect.

Five-0 reported as
making progress.

Girl's whereabouts
still unknown.

Circumstances
surrounding motel murder

being given a second look."

Liana, come on.

- Where are you going?
- I'm going down to the pool.

Oh, no, you're not.

We got a teeny-bopper to find before
she opens her not-so-teeny mouth.

You find her.

I'm sick of this.

For two months, I turn
you over to that little jerk

and even with her gone,
you're still ignoring me.

I'm tired of it.

Then you better rest up,

seeing what you did to
that man in the motel room.

That was part of your plan.

Yeah, but you pulled
the trigger, remember?

Where I go, you go.

You're in this thing right up
to your gold-filled earrings.

You're not weeping,
are you, Willow?

Thinking.

Can you say what
you're thinking?

Mostly about how
much I wanna stay.

Then stay.

I can't forget how I got here.

That's past.

Drop it behind
you and start again.

[SIGHS]

I got a father who's a cop

and a boyfriend who
framed me for murder.

My picture's probably up
in the post office by now.

There's too much
to leave behind.

I can't be reborn
like the others here.

Something can't be true for
some people and not for others.

You can be.

I'm sorry. I have
trouble believing it.

It's not a matter of believing.

It's a matter of accepting.

I've accepted things
before that I shouldn't have.

Uh, I'm sorry.

What's wrong?

That's not what I want.

What you want is a father.

And a father doesn't put his
arms around little girls that way.

They don't put their
arms around them at all.

You see?

How can I leave behind
what's happened inside?

[ROCK MUSIC PLAYING
OVER SPEAKERS]

Bartender.

Bartender, have you seen her?

Not her, but I've
seen her picture.

Weren't you here asking before?

Yeah, a couple of nights ago.

That wasn't me.

I said that wasn't me.

Must have been
some other cop then.

It's not possible.

Whatever you say.

But somebody was
flashing her picture.

Are you sure it was her?

I'm sure.

OSIRIS: Think of
the past as secure.

It's an anchor.

Good or bad, sunk in
water that is clear or muddy.

Now some of you think
that's all you've got.

And it is,

until you turn around
and face the future.

Now, you don't walk backwards.

Why should you live backwards?

Today isn't just the beginning
of the rest of your life.

Now is.

MAN: Hey.

This guy I'm meeting down the
beach has got some incredible cocaine.

I mean, what do
you say we, uh...

Uh, no, thanks.

Listen, this stuff
is really smooth.

I mean, it'll mellow you all
the way down to your toes.

Look, I'm not interested.

Hey, wait a minute.

Listen, you ever been
swimming when you're stoned?

I mean really, really loaded?

So the water just kind of rushes
up on your body like needles?

You know where that's at?

Come on, why don't
you... You know.

Come on. You're gonna thank me.

- No.
- Believe me, listen, you...

It suddenly appears

that we're not the only ones looking
for Sunny Mandell, huh, Duke?

DUKE: The owner of a
discotheque in Waikiki

says somebody
besides us has been by

showing a picture of
her and asking questions.

Could be the guy who framed her.

Are we assuming the guy who
framed her is the guy she left L.A. with?

Well, has to be.

Getting Sunny in the motel
room at just the right time

took a lot of planning.

And that tells us something.

He must be fairly young to have
attracted Sunny in the first place.

Is Mandell taking that into
consideration with his list?

He sure is. He
figures he's young too.

He's going over his arrest
records for the past five years.

Hm. You know, something
tells me the list he comes up with

is gonna be long enough
to wallpaper a room with.

Knowing Mandell's
reputation, I'd say three rooms.

We can guess all we want,
gentlemen, but let's not forget one thing.

The person or persons who
had Clifford Braswell killed

did it in cold blood,

as if he were a minor detail.

Now, whether Babe Mandell
was after this person before or not,

one thing is certain:

I want him now.

Have you seen this girl?

No.

No, sir.

Have you seen her?

Hey, man, you hang
around here a lot?

Yeah, this is supposed
to be where it's happening.

This is the biggie. Waikiki.

You, uh, seen this
chick around here?

It's my kid sister.
She ran away.

Yeah.

- Yeah, I've seen her.
- Where?

Where was she?

You got, uh, a finder's
fee or something for her?

Yeah, maybe I have.

You know, I don't know
where you're coming from, man,

but that's not your kid sister.

DANIELS: Yeah?

Well, maybe she's not
the one you saw either.

MAN: Yeah, that's her.

It's her. She looks
different now, though.

Her hair's long and, uh, she's
wearing some kind of a white sheet.

She looks like a ghost.

Where was she?

Where's the finder's fee?

I'll give you 20 bucks.

I was thinking about 50, $50.

No personal checks.

Where was she?

She was hanging
right down the beach.

A bunch of religious
freaks called the Reborn

or something like that.

She dressed like she
was part of the group too.

But they're from
right around here.

Everybody knows
where they are, you know.

Just ask anybody, you
know, where they live.

- The Reborn.
- Yeah, that's it.

Hey, you and the kid
sister really made my night.

Sixty-four names.

Murderers, burglars,
pushers, rapists.

All the people who hate my guts
because I made them pay their dues.

You know anyone
else that could come up

with a list of
enemies that long?

Yeah.

- Me.
- Ha, ha.

I take it you're going after
the ones underlined first, huh?

Oh, yeah, the cream of the crop.

The guys that made the most
noise on their way to the joint.

I got my sergeants
working on those.

What about these over here?

Their whereabouts
are being traced too.

I got five off-duty detectives
working on that around the clock.

You know, McGarrett,

did it ever occur to you
that this guy we're looking for

I may never have busted at all?

I mean, all this may
just add up to zip.

You know, people say
I don't have any friends.

Well, where else can you
get dog-tired men to work late,

get up in the morning and
do your legwork for you?

[SIGHS]

No, I got friends back there.

I got real good
friends back there.

Sure, Babe.

One hour.

Exactly one hour.

Meet back here.

You remember what
we gotta find out?

Yeah, where a bunch of
freaks called the Reborn live.

DANIELS: You think I can
trust you to go off by yourself

and still come back here?

Of course.

You better come
back, sweet thing.

Don't threaten me.

I may get sick and
tired, but I don't scare.

So don't threaten me.

There's no need.

Babe, what about this Robertson?

"Seven years for murder
one, paroled four months ago,

whereabouts unknown?"

No, he shouldn't
even be on the list.

I just remembered
what he looked like.

He's got a face that would make
a freight train take a dirt road.

That's not exactly
my daughter's type.

- What about Alvin Garner?
- Same.

He's only about this high. Tried
to bite my leg when I busted him.

[CHUCKLES]

DANNY: Sanders. Gordon Sanders.

"Three years, grand theft auto."

Another one here, um, "Todd Daniels,
four years on a narcotics charge."

Sanders, he's
back in the slammer.

And, well, Daniels.
Oh, boy, there's a...

There's a smart one.
Very big with the ladies.

Sweet talks them into
popping pills or shooting junk.

First thing you know,
they're doing anything for him

just to, uh, take
care of their habit.

I mean, everything, from
turning tricks to peddling.

Last time I heard about him, he
was, uh, living with some woman.

Only this one was a straight.

Babe.

Think about what you just said.

BABE: What?

McGARRETT: Whoever pulled this
off had a female accomplice, right?

Yeah, that's right.

The victim, what's his name?

- Braswell.
- Braswell.

Was seen in a bar with a woman.

Now, she could easily
have lured him there.

In fact, she
probably killed him.

Who would make a more
dedicated partner than a lover?

Like Daniels.

What the hell kept you? Come on.

You didn't find out anything?

Come on. We'll look
further up the beach.

They live in a rented
house in Manoa.

They have a painted van
parked in front most of the time.

You can't miss it.

I'll drop you at the
apartment. Let's go.

First we hit the Salvation Army.

The macho look doesn't quite cut
it with the grass-and-pill generation.

You'd stand out
like a Christmas tree.

You know, I think I'll keep you.

Hey, Steve, it
just came through.

Daniels was living with
some woman in Bakersfield

by the name of Liana Meyers.

Only thing is, she sub-leased her
apartment about three weeks ago

and left town.

McGARRETT: Uh-huh.

I suppose it would
be too much to hope

that she left a
forwarding address.

Well, I'm waiting
on a phone call

but I got a feeling she's gonna
show up right here in Hawaii.

Steve, this came in
over the Telecopier.

Todd Michael Daniels. He could
turn the head of a 17-year-old.

Yeah.

Babe?

Yeah. Yeah, that's him.

Okay, Danno. Make
sure H.P.D. gets copies.

Tell them we're about a
phone call away from an APB.

Right.

Babe.

Anything about Daniels' arrest

that would make him
come after you this hard?

Nah, he was the
same as anyone else.

He broke the law, I did my job
and he blamed me for his problem.

- That's it?
- Yeah.

Well, he had his, uh, brother.

His younger brother was in the
house when we made the bust.

The kid ran, one of my
men thought he had a gun,

shot, killed him.

I see.

Was, uh, your man prosecuted?

Hell, no.

He was a damned good detective.

I wasn't gonna watch him get
canned. I supported him all the way.

He shouldn't have had his
brother in the house with heroin.

That was stupid. He
had to blame someone.

Guess who got elected.

Big daddy cop.

Me.

MAN: But you're
just copping out.

What you're trying to do is deny the
fact that what you or I or anyone else

has done in the past
has any significance.

OSIRIS: That's correct.

MAN: But that's not correct.

What you're saying
is that I can go out,

do anything I want to somebody
and ten minutes later, forget about it.

OSIRIS: That's correct.

MAN: But that's wrong.

Who's responsible
for what we do then?

You're telling people to abdicate
responsibility for their actions.

I'm telling people not
to be tied to the past.

I think of responsibility in
terms of the future, not the past.

MAN: You can't have
one without the other.

OSIRIS: Life without
the past is freedom.

MAN: Freedom without
the past is utter chaos.

Babe just got a forwarding
address for Liana Myers.

Guess what. She's been living
in Honolulu for the last two weeks.

Good. Good, Danno.

Pick her up. I'll
get you a warrant.

Malia? Get me John
Manicote, please.

[DOOR SLAMS]

You didn't think I'd
find you here, did you?

Well, I did.

- And now we're gonna leave.
- Oh, no.

We're gonna start
right where we left off.

No, please.

I won't tell anybody.

[KNOCKS]

DANNY: Police. Open up.

Danny, that's her.

Hold it.

Williams, Five-0. We're
looking for Todd Daniels.

- Well, why do you want him?
- Suspicion of murder.

We want you too.

You're under arrest for the
murder of Clifford Braswell.

I just wanna stay here.

Finally found your type
of family, didn't you?

Where Daddy talks
about peace and love

instead of how many
heads he's busted.

You're just as stupid
as you ever were.

[SUNNY GASPS]

Willow isn't leaving.

Step aside.

Sunny and me got business.

Look, I don't know what it is
you're into, but whatever it is,

I'm sure you'd much
rather do it alive. So move.

Come on, you bunch of weirdos.

Move.

Come here, Willow.

[GUNSHOT]

[WOMAN SCREAMS]

See?

You see? I told you.

Now stay back.

[YELLS]

[GRUNTS]

I'm hurt.

Help me.

My back. I'm hurt.

Ambulance. Call an ambulance.

No. No ambulance.

Not for someone at
the house of the Reborn.

We heal ourselves.

[REBORN CHANTING]

Get the back.
Babe, you stay here.

My daughter's in there.

You heard me. Stay here.

McGARRETT:
What the hell is that?

DANIELS: My back.

Get me out of here.

- Danno, call an ambulance.
DANIELS: Get me out of here.

The girl...

The girl you're
looking for is upstairs.

Okay, Babe. You can go in.

Don't touch him.

Take it easy, Babe.

Easy.

She needs a father
now, not a cop.

Baby, baby.

No.

No, you never did that before.

I know that.

Don't you think I know that?

You're just doing it now
because you're supposed to.

You're always doing things
just because you're supposed to.

When somebody breaks the rules.

Or when somebody's dead.

Come here, Babe.

Time, Babe.

Time.

And you're gonna
have to give it.

I'm gonna take her
downtown for a statement.

For God's sake, McGarrett.

Do you always have
to act like a cop?

Coming from you,
Babe, that's pretty funny.