Rizzoli & Isles (2010–2016): Season 2, Episode 4 - Brown Eyed Girl - full transcript

When the daughter of a police officer is kidnapped in front of her younger brother, Jane and the team race to find the girl, fearing her abduction is connected to another case in which a young girl turned up dead only hours earlier.

Where am I?

Where are you?

You're at the park?

I don't see you.

Crap.

Hi, Mom. Yeah, I got Joey.

We're on our way home.

Yes, we'll do our homework.

Okay, see you soon. Love you too.

Bye.

Hi. Are you Mandy Mateo?



- Yeah.
- Hi. I'm Miss Baker...

...Joey's substitute teacher.

He's hurt himself on the playground.

- Oh, no.
- He's okay...

...but he fell pretty hard
off the jungle gym.

Get in. I'll take you to him.

Thanks.

Okay, got it? Let's go.

Wait, where are you going?

The school's that way. Joey?

Mandy! Mandy!

The cleaning lady put this in the dryer.

It's vicuna wool.
Who puts vicuna wool in a dryer?

- It's tight. Does it make me look fat?
- Yes.



You look ginormous.
I can't believe how fat you are.

What do you weigh,
like 115 pounds?

- A hundred and sixteen point eight.
- Wow, no wonder.

Really? I've been
craving carbohydrates lately.

- Maybe it's a hormonal imbalance.
- Maybe you don't have enough to do.

It's a little slow.

- Let's go to the gym.
- Yoga.

- Boxing.
- Zumba.

- Beer.
Jane!

Nicole?

- That's Dan's wife.
- Your old partner in DCU?

- What? What happened?
- Jane, Mandy's been taken.

- What?
- Joey saw it.

They took her in a car, near her school.

And I need Dan, I need you to help me.

Okay, okay.
Get Frost and Korsak. Now.

- Did you call 911?
- Yes.

Yes. And Detective Womack from Area E
said they couldn't put out an Amber Alert.

- Why not?
- Because Joey just saw a blue car...

...and it's not enough
information. I need Dan.

- We'll get Dan. Okay?
- Vince, Vince.

Get Dan Mateo.
He's undercover in DCU.

- Drug Control Unit, all right.
- Yes.

Can I talk to Joey
just for a sec?

Let's go get a full description of what
Amanda was wearing, list of her friends.

Look, I can't leave him.
He saw it happen.

It's fine, Mom. I wanna help.

Nicole, he'll be safe, all right?

I'll have him back upstairs
in just a minute.

Hey.

We got a really great caf?.

You wanna go get a cookie
or something?

I don't want anything.
Please, just find my sister.

Okay.

We're gonna find her. Okay?

Okay?
Okay.

Come on, let's go.

You get real close when you work
undercover, you know?

My life depended on Dan.

And now his daughter's life
depends on me.

I know this is difficult to talk about...

...but I wanna go through it
one more time. Okay?

- Okay.
- Okay.

Did you see the license plate?
Any letters or numbers?

No, no, just that it was blue.

Um... I bet you were looking
at your sister, weren't you?

Yeah. She was really scared.

I've never seen her
look like that before.

- I bet you were scared too.
- So scared.

You know, I used to work
with your dad.

I was his partner,
did he tell you that?

No.

Well, I bet he's taught you
a lot about being a detective, huh?

He says I'm good at it.

- I should've looked at the license plate.
Hey. It's okay.

Can you tell me about the lady again?

She was driving. I could see her.

What did she look like?
Was she Caucasian?

Was she African-American?

She was white. She had brown hair.

I think she was about
as old as my mom.

Okay, that's great.
Can you tell me about the man?

I don't know. He was big.

Okay. Okay. It's okay.

Hey. You mentioned
that the car was blue.

Was it a station wagon?
Was it a minivan?

No, no, it was just a regular car.
It was old.

Okay.

You keep thinking like a detective,
all right?

- I haven't helped much, have I?
- Yes, you have.

Hey. Yes, you have. Okay?

- We'll be right back, okay?
- Okay.

You think we can get
anything else out of him?

He's been traumatized.

I think if we give him
some drawing materials.

It's a natural form
of communication for children his age.

Maybe he can draw something
that he can't verbalize.

- Ma, you got any crayons?
- Yeah.

- We need some paper too.
- How about the paper place mats?

That's perfect. Thank you.

Hey. I found Dan. He's on his way.

Great. Okay. Um...

I'm gonna be back
in just a little while. Okay?

- Okay.
- Just a little bit.

Bye.

- She told Korsak they're separated.
- Dan and Nicole separated?

When?

God, this job,
it just kills every relationship.

Nicole! Nicole.
- Dan.

- Nicole. Why? Why were they alone?
- Look, I leave them for 45 minutes...

- ... after school so that I can finish work.
- She's 13, Nicole. We live in a city.

Where were you? You left me
with two kids...

...and a mortgage.

- Because you kicked me out!
- Hey. Oh, come on, stop it, stop it.

Blaming Nicole isn't gonna
get your daughter back.

Where is she? What do you know?

We got a description on the car,
it's a man and a woman.

A Jack and Jill.
We're not gonna get her.

Stop it. Yes, we will. All right?
Dan, we will find her.

Three hours.

Three hours is the average
for abducted kids.

We don't find her in three hours,
she's dead.

You let me do my job. You concentrate
on taking care of Joey and Nicole.

- Where's Joey?
- Downstairs...

- ... with my mother and Dr. Isles.
- I'm gonna go.

We can't get a hit on the girl's
cell-phone GPS.

Whoever grabbed her knew
to remove the battery.

Amber Alert with Mandy's picture
is out all over New England.

Good. How fast can we get her
computer and phone records?

Fast. It's a cop's kid.

Last time I saw Mandy, she was
just a little girl, 5 maybe.

- Where's Nicole?
- Korsak sent her...

...to get photos
and Mandy's computer.

I'm working on getting into her
social network sites.

Okay.

- Hey, what are you doing?
- Eliminating Dan as a suspect.

You think Dan snatched his own kid?

Parents are in a custody battle.
We need to make sure...

...Dan didn't have anything to do
with her disappearance.

We worked with Dan.
How could he have...

- ... anything to do with this?
- I wanna find Mandy too.

But we gotta think like cops,
not like his friends.

We gotta rule him out, Jane.
Until we do, he's a suspect.

There was a woman driving
and a man in a back.

- We're looking for a couple.
- I gotta make sure it isn't Dan.

By the time you rule him out,
Mandy could be dead.

Area E units are on their way
to Stony Brook.

They just found the body
of a young girl.

Oh, God.

- When did you guys find her?
- Uh, fifteen minutes ago.

Potheads looking for a little nature
stumbled on her.

We got here fast
because of Amanda Mateo.

Perfect spot. She could've been
laying here for months.

Yeah. She was hidden pretty well.
In the trench, covered in leaves.

We got lucky, if you can call it that.

- First responders move her?
Yeah.

We were all pulling for Dan.
Hate to see it end like this.

- Man, I was at Mandy's christening.
- So was I.

Is that Mandy?
Hey, Dan.

- Is that her? Is that Mandy?
- Dan. You can't be here, Dan.

- You can't be here, Danny.
- Get off me, Vince!

Jane. Is it Mandy?

I don't know. I can't tell. Vince.

Let him look.

- Is that my daughter?
- I don't know.

It's not her.

Who is she?
- How did she die?

She was asphyxiated...

...from the application of a slow,
constant pressure to her trachea.

She looks a little like Mandy.

About the same age.
How long has she been dead?

Not long.
She's still warm to the touch.

Less than two hours.

Murdered right after Mandy
was kidnapped.

Same age, similar build, hair color.

One girl kidnapped, another one
turns up dead an hour later.

I don't believe in coincidences.
Do you?

No.

Think Mandy was a replacement
for this girl?

Yeah.

Is that a shoe print on her neck?

It's a heavy treaded impression
consistent with that of a work boot.

- Size 12.
- Joey said the man in the car was big.

Is it possible that he crushed
her trachea with his foot?

It's possible.

What the hell?

Maybe she's bound so our kidnapper
could keep her looking young.

Okay. We need to find out
who this girl is. Now.

There's a lot of missing kids,
35,000 in New England alone.

It'll take weeks to track her
by her dental records.

Then we take a picture of her,
show it to Mandy's friends...

...and family
and see if anybody recognizes her.

- What are you doing?
- Checking her iliac crest epiphysis.

She's older than she appears.

It's in its beginning stages of fusing.
She's about 17.

Some type of staining going on
with her sweatshirt.

The edges are white.
I'm gonna take a guess, Jane.

I think a mixture of tears
and mucous.

- Look where it is.
- Yeah. It's in a weird spot.

This is not from her.
It's someone else.

What, like she was holding
someone against her?

Dan's clear. Just saw the video.

Squad had him under surveillance.
Doing drug buys the whole time.

Thank God. I'm sorry, Jane.

No, you were right, Korsak.
This is tough.

Please, Maura.
We gotta find an ID on this girl.

Okay? She could be the key.

You have to help us find Mandy.

I really love the way you put
the clouds behind the lighthouse.

- Can I get you some more coffee?
- No, thank you.

Honey, Joey, look,
I want you to eat something. Okay?

- Not hungry.
- Oh, that's too bad.

I have a big bowl of cauliflower
with your name on it.

- Yeah, he loves cauliflower. Right?
- No, I don't.

I could put some hot sauce
and some asparagus on the side.

Yum, yum.

- Do you have any hotdogs?
- Sure do.

- Can I have fries?
- Yeah.

- Hey, Joey.
- Hi.

I brought Mandy's computer.

Okay, great.
Detective Frost will go through it.

Dan and I, we argued about
whether or not...

...she should have her own computer.

I mean, she needs it for school.

I'm sorry, Nicole.

Oh, wow, she's so grown-up.

She's beautiful, Nicole.

Did I tell you that she plays soccer
for school?

- She's really good.
- I didn't know that.

She looks strong.

Um, I have a picture
that I need you to look at.

- Okay, yeah, the girl you found?
- Yeah.

- No, don't recognize her.
- Okay.

Honey, Detective Rizzoli
is gonna show you a photo, okay?

I need to know
if you recognize this girl, okay?

Uh-huh.

- Is she dead?
- Yes.

- Joey, do you know her?
- No.

- Okay.
- Would you like some chocolate milk?

- I just want Mandy.
- I know you do, sweetie. We all do.

It's been over three hours
since Mandy was abducted.

- It's an average, Jane.
- God, she looks so young.

She's so thin.

What happened to you?

Well, she has a Vitamin D deficiency...

...atrophied muscles, stunted growth,
pale skin...

- ... exhibits signs of malnutrition.
- Was she held in captivity?

That's my opinion.

- Any signs of sexual assault?
- Yes.

She has elevated estrogen
and progesterone levels.

She was on birth control pills.

When I first heard
that it was a couple...

...my mind immediately went to
Jaycee Dugard and Elizabeth Smart.

- How long was she held?
- Given my findings...

...I'd say this girl was in captivity
from three to five years.

I've arrested hundreds of male
sexual offenders.

I'm not saying I understand that,
but what I can't get my head around...

...is how a woman could help
do this to someone.

Well, you have to look at the women
as victims too.

They're typically
very damaged people...

...ripe for abuse.

- And the abused becomes the abuser.
- Exactly.

And they help him...

...create this bizarre version
of a nuclear family...

...with him in the center.

It's Frost.

- He's got Mandy's phone records.
- All right. Go. I'll be here.

Jane, I'm doing-
I'm doing everything I can here.

I know you are.

Help me find Mandy.

What am I not seeing
that I need to see?

Sweet girl.

I'm so sorry this happened to you.

She had a Facebook account,
Myspace and Twitter.

This generation puts
their whole lives online.

Yeah, pretty much.

Only her friends could see most of it...

...but there were some public areas.

- So anybody could get a look at her?
- Afraid so.

Got her phone records.

What are those?

Are those social network sites?
I didn't agree to that.

Dan. You can't be in here
if you're gonna interfere.

- I'm sorry, what do you have?
- Mandy's phone records.

Look, she gets out of school
at 3:15, okay?

She's supposed to pick Joey up
and take him home.

He said that she told him to wait
at the playground.

- Why?
- Well, here's her last call, 3:29 p. m.

- It's from her mother.
- She texts non-stop. Where are the texts?

Your wife said she got Mandy
a new smart phone.

- Keep going, Frost.
- Well, it's actually good for us.

I got a whole series of IM's.

- What's the difference?
- Texts go through the phone system.

We can get the phone numbers,
but not the content.

Instant messages go across
wireless Internet.

So Mandy was instant messaging?

- Can you see what she was saying?
- Yes. And we can track the messages...

...back to phones and computers.
Here's every name...

...she messaged in the last week.

We got a whole series of IM's
between Mandy and Suprgurrl97.

Who's super girl?

- Chloe Cameron.
- That's her best friend.

So, "MADMANDY97: Where are you?

See you at park entrance. Come on. "

"See you at the park entrance"?
Why is she at the park entrance?

That's the last message there.
Maybe that's why she left Joey.

Only Chloe can tell us now.

Thank you for coming down
right away.

- It's okay. Anything we can do.
- Are you gonna find Mandy?

I hope so, Chloe.

Can you tell us
why you were meeting her...

- ... in the park this afternoon?
- I wasn't.

You're not in trouble.
We have to do everything...

...we can to find Mandy.

Why did Mandy leave Joey
to come meet you?

What are you talking about?

You were IM'ing with her
right after school. We have the records.

- No, I wasn't.
- Chloe, you two are texting all the time.

- Please, just tell the detectives.
- We don't text anymore, Mom.

Mandy got a new phone
so we could IM.

- And what did you IM?
- I told you, I didn't.

I had volleyball practice
right after school. No phones allowed.

Okay. Can you take a look at these
messages between you and Mandy?

That's not me.
Look, there's a U.

I'm Suprgrrl. G-R-R, no U.

- Someone was pretending to be Chloe.
To lure Mandy to the park.

They knew her eye would skate
over that extra U...

...while she was IM'ing her friend,
just like ours.

This has been a setup from the start.

I don't get this texting
and you-ing and I'm-ing-

- IM'ing.
- Whatever.

But I'll tell you one thing,
that kid was stalked.

Whoever took her knew everything
about her, down to her friend's handle.

- Screen name.
- Will you stop correcting me...

- ... and think about what it means?
- It means she was targeted.

They knew her schedule
down to the very minute.

Even got her to ditch her brother,
get her alone.

- Might be better than a random snatch.
- How?

Random, they kill her. This kind?

They use her, abuse her like Jane Doe
downstairs, then kill her.

- I'm just saying it buys us some time.
- God, I hope so.

Okay, we got a counterfeit
screen name, Suprgurrl97.

Already trying to track it.

Jane, I wanna show you something.

Blunt-force trauma
to the right side of the body.

Her right was facing her attacker?

Yes. There's no bruising
on her left side.

Why is that significant?
So she was fighting like this.

She was left-handed, Jane.

Yeah. I'm left-handed.

Why would I expose my weaker side...

...defend myself
with my weaker right hand?

Exactly. You wouldn't.

Unless you were holding something.
Or someone.

The tears on the sweatshirt.

She might've been holding someone
close with her stronger arm...

...as she fought off her attacker.

It's Mandy. It fits the timeline.

Oh, God. She died trying to protect
a complete stranger.

The DNA from the tears will tell us
if it's Mandy.

Maura, we don't have
that kind of time.

What about her other clothing?

Maybe there's something on that
that connects this girl to Mandy.

- Everyone is working all night on this.
- I promised Dan that we'd find her.

I know she's out there. Okay?
We can't let her end up like this girl.

We just can't.

Got something, Dr. Isles. A positive
match on the hair we found on the jeans.

- Who does it match?
- Amanda Mateo.

She's alive, Maura, I know she is.

So this guy lurks online,
watching young girls chat?

Like shooting little fish in a barrel.

They have no idea
how vulnerable they are.

Did you find this bastard online?
Who is he?

We don't know yet.

Tell me what you do know.

What I'm thinking in my head
is worse than anything you could say.

He was chatting with Mandy
for two days pretending to be Chloe.

- He knew her schedule.
- Did he know her dad wasn't around?

Come on.

Got an IP address.

It's a caf? with
free public Internet service.

Public Internet service. Great.

Wait. Washington Street.

That's a quarter mile
from where we found Jane Doe's body.

Gotta be his stomping ground.
That's something.

It's not enough.

- Where are you going?
- To find her.

Let him go, Jane.
He needs something to do.

- Where are you going?
- Check on Nicole.

All right, thanks.

Hey, Maura,
look for anything on Jane Doe...

...that can narrow down a location
around Stony Brook.

Okay, thanks.

Hey.

How about a ride home? I'll call you
the second we have something.

No. I'm not going anywhere
until you people find my daughter.

- Let me make you a cup of coffee.
- Thank you.

Sorry, Vince. That was harsh.

No, it's all right. You can yell at me
any time you need to.

Dan blames me.

I blame me.

Where is he? Where is Dan?

He's out in the streets,
doing what he does best, Nicole.

Digging, looking for Amanda.

That's what I wanna do. I wanna
look for her, I wanna scream her name.

Can't leave Joey though.

The job, it's crushed him, crushed me.

Hey, I've had three wives leave me
because of the job.

It's hard being married to a cop.

Dan just kept doing deep-cover
drug assignments.

Disappearing on us. The job was more
important to him than we were.

That is not true, Nicole.
It sucks you in.

- And it's who he is.
- Uh... I know.

Just feel so alone all the time.

I mean, even before we split up,
I felt like a single mother...

...raising our kids without him.

- And I know that he loves them.
- He loves you too.

I made a fresh pot.

Please eat.

You've really been so kind,
but you can go home.

I'm not going anywhere.
I'm part of a cop family too.

She has fluorosis of the enamel.
Discoloration of her permanent teeth.

She grew up in an area...

...with high concentrations
of natural fluoride in the water.

- Well water.
- Yes.

So she's from a rural area
or a farming community, maybe.

We gotta narrow it down more.

Frost has been through
a thousand missing children reports.

Start with Massachusetts.

Worcester County,
Berkshire County, Hampshire County.

Slow down, slow down.

No missing kids in Worcester County
matching Jane Doe's description.

What are you doing?

Checking water quality reports in
Massachusetts and surrounding states.

Nothing in Hampshire County
or Berkshire County.

Maybe if I narrow down the search
parameters to 1.4 milligrams per liter.

Okay, that helps.

Here it is. What about
Wyndham County, Connecticut?

Wyndham County.

Anything?

Maybe, 13-year-old girl
disappeared four years ago.

Maura, didn't you say
she was about 17 years old?

- Frost, you got a picture?
- Right here.

There she is. Sophie James.

Sophie James.

She's been missing four years.
I'm gonna call her family.

Let them come get her
and take her home.

I'm so sorry.
- Don't be.

Her mother and I have been praying
for a long time...

...to get this phone call
in the middle of the night, just to know.

It's hell to not know.

I understand.

That's Sophie. That's my daughter.

Can I go to her?

Sure.

- I'm so sorry, Mr. James.
- Thank you.

I've been carrying this around
for four years.

It's her dental records, photos.

Where's she been?

Who took my daughter?

We don't know yet.

I saw another family upstairs.
They're missing a child, aren't they?

Yes.

A girl, 13.

We think your daughter might have
been killed trying to protect that girl.

That sounds like my girl, Sophie.

Find that girl, will you?

Don't let those parents
go through this.

- Anything?
- No, not yet.

You were right,
he just keeps on drawing.

Oh, wow. I like how the waves
move against the lighthouse.

Did your family take a vacation
in Maine?

My dad's always working.

No. No, we've never been. Why?

I guess you like lighthouses
then, huh?

Not really.

Joey, let me see.

He is drawing a lot of lighthouses.

He's never done that before.

Joey, is this the car that took Mandy?

Mm-hm.

Look at the smoke.
What's the smoke from?

- From the back of the car.
- The tailpipe.

No, it's the muffler.

Joey, Did the car sound like:
"Pop-pop-pop-pop?" Like that?

- Mm-hm, it was loud.
- Car had a broken muffler.

- Nicole, can I borrow your laptop?
- Yes, of course.

Maybe he saw the license plate,
but he doesn't realize it.

Okay. Did the blue car maybe have
a Connecticut license plate...

...that looked like this?

Yeah, maybe.

I'll let you know if we find something.

Good job.

Frost. Track Connecticut vanity plates,
the lighthouse ones.

See how many were cited for
defective equipment in the last month.

- The kidnapper's car had a bum muffler.
- Think we're gonna find her on that?

Hey, they caught the Son of Sam
on a parking ticket.

State troopers are relentless
on equipment-violation tickets.

Found two, 2000 minivan
and an '89 Dodge Dynasty.

- It's blue, Jane.
- Who's it registered to?

Heidi Rodman, 35.

Show me her face.

Where's Amanda?

- You got the plate?
- Putting out a BOLO.

We'll have every cop in the state
on it.

Hey. Put out a BOLO on a Connecticut
plate 936-Romeo-Zulu-Baker.

Let's get all the locals
to her New London house.

- Not gonna help.
What?

Got her address there:
800 Harbor View Drive.

It's bogus,
address is a shopping mall.

Damn it. Is she married?

No marriage certificate on file,
no joint accounts.

All right. Print up her driver's license
photo. I wanna show that to Joey.

You got it.

Take your time.

That's her.

Great job, Joey. You did good.
We're gonna get her.

It's her. Joey made her.

Yeah. Good.

- Is that Operations?
Yeah. What do you got?

Come on, please.

Okay, thanks.

Walking Beat just spotted the car
parked in Stony Brook.

- Yes.
- Frost, call Dispatch.

Have Walking Beat keep an eye
on that car, keep everybody out.

We're gonna follow Heidi Rodman
straight to Amanda.

Bring her home.

There it is.

Walking Beat's
keeping an eye on it.

- They spotted the driver yet?
- No.

Well, then we wait, and that car
will take us straight to Mandy.

That's her.

No, no, it's Martinez.
No, no, no. Come on. No.

What is he doing?

Hands on the wheel.
Let me see your hands.

Whoa! Hey! Whoa!

Do you have any idea
what you've just done?

- She's wanted, there's a BOLO.
- Don't listen to your radio?

Get out of the car.

We called everybody off this location.

I'm sorry. I-

Where's Mandy? Where is she?

She's dead.

Where is he? Where is he at?

You should've let me go back.

Amanda might still be alive
if you let me go back to him.

He'll be mad.

Look at this. Camera equipment.
A lot of it.

Are you a pornographer too, Heidi?

Oh, you're gonna talk to me.

Sophie James.

He stepped on her neck.

Crushed her trachea.
Did you watch him kill her?

Help hold her down?

Did you watch him
do the same thing to Mandy?

He's a prophet.

You can't understand.

Let me in there.
Let me in!

Where's my daughter?
Do you hear me?

You killed my daughter.

Killer!

Jane! I'm gonna kill her, Jane!

Where's my daughter?

You know who that is?
That's Mandy's father.

You don't start talking,
I'm gonna let him in.

- Now, where is he?
- It's too late.

You've angered the prophet.

She's gone.

Where's Dan?

Thought we were gonna
have to lock him up.

Downstairs with Nicole.
Get anything?

No. Nothing.

They're processing the car.
We'll get him, Jane.

I kept her dental records, but here are
Sophie's photos for your case file.

Crime Techs are collecting
that piece of crap's clothing...

...checking for trace evidence.

Hey, Frost,
pull up Mandy's profile page.

Look at that.
Mandy and Sophie both played soccer.

- Is Mandy left-handed?
- I don't know. Why?

I think she is. Her dominant hand...

...is holding the soccer ball.
Sophie was left-handed.

You're saying he's targeting
left-handed soccer players?

- Come on. That's crazy.
- I don't know.

Alphabet killer went after girls
with the same initial in their names.

There's a lot of mythology
associated with left-handedness...

...that might trigger something.

The devil is often portrayed
as being left-handed.

But they lived a hundred miles apart.

How would he know
if they were left-handed?

The soccer. I mean,
the coach would know.

Yeah, look. Mandy played left-wing.

Mandy and Sophie are four years apart,
from two different states.

Those official player photos,
they're in the same position.

No, wait, the camera equipment
in the trunk.

He's a photographer.
He takes pictures of kids.

Maybe Game World Photography
took Mandy's photos too.

- Can you check that?
- On it.

- No one ever notices the photographer.
- No, and he's around kids all the time.

He keeps looking until
he finds the one he wants.

Owen Lamb is the owner.

Is Mandy's school team
on his list of clients?

Yeah, right here.

Owen Lamb,
617 Atkins Road, Stony Brook.

Let's get him. If I can't bring Mandy home
alive, we're at least gonna get him.

Thank you, Sophie.

Let's get this bastard.

Psst.

Aaagh!

Clear.

Mandy. Oh, honey. Mandy.
Oh, sweetie.

Okay. It's all right. There.

There we go. It's okay.
We'll get you out of here, all right?

Your mommy and daddy
are gonna be so happy to see you.

Okay? There, there.
Okay, baby, it's okay.

We're gonna get you home, all right?

We're gonna get you out of here.
We're gonna get you home.

Oh, honey, it's all right.

- Who's that?
- Mom.

Mandy. Oh, my sweet baby girl.

Mandy.
You're okay?

- Let me see you.
Daddy.

I am never getting married
or having children.

- You think that'll protect you?
- No.

You brought her back to me, to us.

We all did.

I'm never gonna be able to thank you.

Yes, you can.

- Go back to your family.
- Thanks, partner.

- Maybe they'll get back together.
- God, I hope so.

Bye.

Bye, Mandy. Go home, baby.

Well, that was a long day.

Because it started yesterday.

Now can we get a beer?

Really? Oh, thank God.
Yeah.

You hear beer and your ears perk up?