Yellowstone (2018–…): Season 4, Episode 9 - No Such Thing as Fair - full transcript

John and Beth squabble; Jimmy has an important decision to make; Kayce begins a new quest; Jamie realizes Garrett's past might affect his own future.

♪ MTV... ♪

- Hey.

- Why didn't you stop him?

- Stop him from what?

- From walking into a diner
full of armed robbers.

- Beth, I can't stop your
father from doing anything.

He does what he does because
he thinks he's right.

I can either help him
or I can watch him.

I notice you aren't too worried
about me running in there.

- Baby, I never worry about you.

I know nothing's
happening to you.



- Hm.

It's gonna happen to me
one day.

It happens to us all.

I'll see you later.

- Just you today?

- Yeah, just me.

You know how to ride?

- No.

But if there's an Olympic event
for shoveling shit,

I'd win a medal.

Sir. Sorry...

- Bunch of goddam
pirates working for me.

Saddle another one.

Today you learn to ride.



Hurry up.

- Ouch, my balls! Fuck!

- Well,you gotta bounce
with the horse.

- I am bouncing with the horse.

- No, no, no.

All right? You're bouncing
against the horse.

All right, when
the horse bounces up,

let it stand you
in the stirrups,

then when it comes down,
sit back in the saddle.

Let's try.

Better?

- Better on my balls.
Harder on my legs.

- That's life, Carter.

Something's always getting beat
no matter what.

- You guys do this all day?

- It gets easier.

- Well, it can't get
much fucking harder.

- You know...

You know what we're gonna do?

We're gonna ride the foul
right out of your mouth.

- Fuck!

God damn it, slow down!

- Just shut up and ride.

They call this
the Buffalo valley.

- Are there buffalo in it?

- Yeah, well, sometimes they'll
wander up from the park...

In 1889, when they thought
all the buffalo were gone,

the Army came to our ranch
asking if anyone had seen any.

My great grandfather
told 'em "no",

'cause he thought they wanted
to kill the rest,

but he knew where they were.

They were right here.

When the park started
to protect the buffalo,

he and my grandfather herded
them down through Gardiner

back into the park.

And now, every buffalo
in the nation is descendants

of the buffalo my ancestors
found right here.

- Why'd they kill them
in the first place?

- Well, the rich people
in New York

liked to eat their tongues

and the women in France liked
to wear their fur as coats.

And the Army...

Well, the Army
just wanted them gone.

- Why'd the army want 'em gone?

- Because they wanted
the Indians gone,

and buffalo is what
Indians depended on.

Now the buffalo live
on ranches or preserves.

Not much different
for the Indians.

- That's not fair.

- No.

- Let me...

Let me tell you what fair means:

fair means one side got
exactly what they wanted

in a way that the other side
can't complain about.

There's no such thing as fair.

Come on.

You mind pouring me
one of those, honey?

- Sure, Daddy.

- What the fuck are you doing?

- What the fuck
are you doing?

You don't know
how lucky you are.

Your coma, that was
a gift from God.

God didn't give me any gifts:
I had to watch it.

I watched pus and bile bubble
out of you.

Here. And here.
Here.

And here for 60 fucking days,

I had to watch the life
leak out of you.

And then you look for
a way to lose it again.

You fucking seek it...

Well, I'm not doing that again.

I am not willing you back
to life the next time you die.

- What was I supposed
to do, Beth?

Let a dozen people
get killed for the change

in their pocket--
- Yes!

Because when you die
everything that you fought for--

and everything that you had me
fight for dies with you.

- I'm not made like that, honey.

- Then get fucking remade!

I fight so hard for you, Dad.

And you do nothing to help me.

You do the opposite.

- I do what's right
in my heart.

What's in my soul
and I won't stop.

I won't stop for anyone
including you.

- You look for justice
everywhere.

Everywhere but the mirror.

Where's the justice for the man
who tried to kill you? Huh?

You will risk your life
for strangers,

but what are you risking to find
the man who fucking did this?

Dad, look at it!

You won't look

because you know who did it.

You have some...

false connection with him.
You think he's your child?

Fine.
No, think it. I don't care.

But your child, he burned
the skin from me.

And you've done nothing
about it...

- It wasn't Jamie.

- Stop lying to yourself.

- It wasn't Jamie.

His name is Terrell Riggins.

He's serving life in prison.

He attacked us to send a
message to rival gang members

that he wasn't weak.

That we didn't destroy him.

He is an animal
trying to convince

other animals he's still strong.

We proved he wasn't.

If he's alive,
and I doubt he is,

he's hiding behind his bunk
with his teeth bared,

waiting to die because
that's what animals do

when they're cornered.

And that animal is cornered.

- So we do nothing about it?

- What are you
asking me, Beth?

You asking me to waste
my life on that piece of shit?

- No, Daddy.

That's what my life's for.

- Beth...

- Hello?

- This is a collect call
from Park County Jail.

Caller, say your name.

- Summer.

- I accept.

- John? The DA's asking
for life in prison.

Life!

- For what?

- Protesting the airport.

- Oh, God. All right.

I'm on my way.
Just stay there.

I'm sorry, that was
a dumb thing to say.

I'm on my way...

- As more information comes out
about the horrific shootout

at the Ruby's Cafe
in Belgrade yesterday,

the assailants have
been identified as members

of a local militia that
has been the subject of

a continued operation between
the Sheriff's department

and Livestock Agents
that has now

taken the life of
Park County's own Sheriff.

The armed robbery interrupted

by Former Livestock
Commissioner John Dutton

would have certainly
led to a greater loss

of innocent life
had he not intervened.

John Dutton's acceptance speech
of Governor Perry's endorsement

seemed odd and out
of touch when he gave it.

Now, it has
the ring of prophecy.

- There is a war being
waged against our way of life.

They will tell you
all the reasons

why our way of life
is bad for Montana.

The ugly truth is
they want the land.

And if they get it, it will
never look like our land again.

That is progress
in today's terms.

So if it's progress you seek,
do not vote for me.

I am the opposite of progress.

I am the wall
that it bashes against.

And I will not
be the one who breaks.

No, Mister Dutton.
It doesn't appear you will.

- Now he gets to be the hero on
top of fucking everything else.

No, no, no...

He just gave you a window.

- What window?

He just secured the vote
of every rancher in the state.

- He already had them.

What window?

- He gave you more than that.
He gave you a slogan.

He's the opposite of progress?

You be the face of it.

You are progress.

Progress doesn't want
the people's land.

It wants to preserve it.

Progress wants opportunity
and equality for all.

Ranchers don't
win elections anymore.

All you need is Bozeman,
Missoula, and Helena.

Be the face
of pragmatic progressivism.

Be the bridge and
you will be Governor.

Okay, now is when we
separate from him.

Introduce Montana
to your real father.

- Um...

Hm.

We're just gonna walk
and talk some strategy.

- You do that, son.

- Um... I don't think we want
to bring my father into this.

- Now's the perfect time.

- He was in prison.

- What for?

- Murder.

Who?

Who did he murder?

- My mother.

- Your mother?

And you're just
telling me this now.

- It was 40 years ago.

And he paid his debt.
I have forgiven him.

How noble, Jamie.
That's just great.

Do you think the
voters of Montana

are going to forgive him too?

- The voters of Montana
don't need to know.

- How can someone so brilliant
be so fucking stupid?

Your birth certificate
becomes public record

when you run for office.

The RNC will
run a background check

with the sole goal
of digging up dirt

and you just gave them a pile.

Not to mention
what your father plans

to do with this information.

- I have a plan for that.

- The only plan
is to put as much distance

between you and him
as you can.

If you have any interest
in being Governor,

get him out of your house
and get him out of your life.

- She's not wrong, son.

If I'm going to be
a liability for you...

Maybe I better just...

make myself scarce for a while.

- I don't want you to do that.

- I know you don't.

But you just think about
all the times in your life

where what you wanted was
the worst thing for you.

- Not used to seeing you
come in through the front door.

- Yeah.
Might be the first time.

Drug a few in through
the back, though, didn't we?

- That we did.

- Who's Watch Commander?

- Ramsey, till
the end of the day.

- He retiring?

- Appointed him interim Sheriff.

- Not Sam?

- Not Sam.

- John, how are you.

- Well, I'm breathing, Bill.

- At this point
I don't need a statement

from you beyond what we have.

County attorney is
compiling witness statements,

and that's gonna take a while.

- Not why I'm here.

May I sit?

- Please.

- Against my better judgment,

I'm looking into this case
against Summer Higgins.

- Two felony assault
against peace officer charges,

on two separate occasions
which makes it habitual.

There's criminal trespass,
reckless endangerment,

resisting arrest.

- Life in prison, Bill?

- I'm not the prosecutor, John.

- May I see her?

She's a family friend of sorts.

- She's in with
the public defender now.

Want to sit in with them?

- If I could.

- 149263 in Interview One.

Ask the inmate if she would
like John Dutton to join them.

- So, Sheriff.

- Interim Sheriff.

- We both know where that leads.

Big shoes to fill.

- You think so?

- Don't you?

- Donnie was a gambling
addict and an alcoholic

who only protected
and served the highest bidder.

- He was a father.

- Half the men in my jail
are fathers.

On our way.

- I know where it is.

- Things will be different
with me in charge.

- New rules, huh?

- Still the old rules.

But now they'll be enforced.

- Oh.

So the county can
sleep good tonight.

- I will ask that both Class B
felonies be dropped.

In exchange, we don't contest
class D reckless endangerment.

Pull up a seat.

The felony criminal
trespass will likely be

dropped to a misdemeanor.

- I didn't assault him,
I pushed him back.

- That's assault.

- Well, technically,
it's battery.

- Do you want to try the case?

It is termed "assault"
before this court.

- They're making an example of
me, that's what they're doing.

- It's exactly
what they're doing.

And we need to let them,
just a little.

Because there's
no jury of your peers here.

Your peers are in Portland.

And in Portland,
he may be the enemy

or I may be the enemy, but here?

The enemy is you.

We don't want
to go before a jury.

Let me go try
and plea this down.

- Can I talk to him
for a minute, please?

- I'll be outside.

- I can't believe
this is happening.

- Yeah.
Well, it's happening.

- Do you know the judge?
- I know the judge.

- Can you talk to him?

- Let's...
Let's save that card.

- They're asking for life.

- That'll come down.

- To what? 30 years?

I'm going to do
three decades in prison?

My God, I mean...

That's makes you the last guy
I fuck for thirty years!

- Go ahead, you just, uh...

you just bang away
at the old ego.

- That's not what I mean,
I just.

Ugh!

All I did was--

- All you did was assault
two police officers.

And broke a bunch of other laws.

This ain't New York, Summer,
and it ain't L.A.

Our jails aren't overcrowded,
there's plenty of room.

And we are not
afraid to fill them.

But you're not a criminal.

You got so mad
you broke the law.

And they're mad
as hell you did it.

But you're not a criminal,
they know that.

Now let them know you're sorry.

- I'm not sorry.

- Okay, well you...

You'd better get sorry,
and real quick, young lady.

You be mad at the world
when you're free

and far away from here.

- I should have never
listened to your daughter.

- What do you mean?

- She's the one who told
me to protest here.

She said,
"Take one for the team.

Make some noise. Make the news."

Well, I made the news, and
I don't see my fucking team.

- This was Beth's idea?

- Yeah, she's not wrong,

I mean... putting an airport
next to a national park

is barbaric,
but it wasn't my idea

to slap the first cop I saw.

- It was hers.

I'm going to get
you out of this. I promise.

And when I make a promise,
it means something.

What do you think, cooler
heads gonna prevail here?

- Not seeing many cool heads.

They are in a "nip it
in the bud" kind of mood.

I'm going to offer
a big suspended sentence--

15, 20 years,
something that says to them

"She's never coming back."

- Maybe I'll have
a word with the judge.

- I don't know.
That always makes it worse.

- Yeah, well, you can only ask
for favors if you're owed one.

And he owes me one.

- How many times
have you seen it?

- Four.

- What happens after?

- After what?

- In your life.

What happens in your life
after the moment you see it?

- First time I was with my wife.

Second time the Governor came,

asked me to take the appointment
for Livestock Commissioner.

Then I was
with my wife again...

Then the other night.

- When you see the wolf
and your wife together,

what are you doing?

- I'm gonna plead
the fifth on that one.

Last time I saw it,

she came out
and told me she was pregnant.

- The wolf is our protector.

Your spirit animal.

Because in your heart,
you're part wolf, too.

But carrying
the wolf is a burden...

- He is the hunter most hunted.

The killer most killed.

Man and wolf evolved together.

We form packs like they do.

We raid territories
like they do.

Destroy their enemies
like we do.

And we have tried everything
in our power to destroy them.

Before guns and bows, they tried
everything to destroy us.

It is said the wolf exists
to manage the spread of man

and man exists to manage
the spread of the wolf.

- So if we're supposed
to destroy each other...

why is one protecting me?

- I don't know.

You'll have to ask the wolf.

- How do I do that?

- Hanbleceya.

Cry for a vision.

If you cry hard enough,
he might tell you.

- I don't know how.

- Your wife knows how.
I know how.

When you're ready,
we'll teach you.

- I'm ready.

- What are you doing here?

- What are you doing here,
except cheatin' on me?

- How am I cheating on you,
you're still my waitress.

- You didn't know
I worked here too.

That means you were
gonna let some other hussy

bring you lunch.

- Little early to be
flirting, now, idn't it?

- It's a little too
early to follow through,

but it's never
too early to flirt.

Usual?
- Yeah.

- Last time I saw you,
a judge gave you life.

Guess life don't mean
what it used to, does it?

- I spent 30 years...

inside a concrete box

fighting to survive,
fighting to stay sane,

praying that a bird
would fly by my window

so I'd have
proof of some better place

than the hell you put me in.

- Naw, you...
you put yourself in it.

You didn't deserve the bird.

- Hm.
You could've told the truth.

You could've told
them what she'd become--

- She became what you made her.

And then you killed her for it.

I raised your
son with love and respect,

and I made him what he is today.

If he chooses to let you
unmake it, I can't stop that.

But if your plan
is to get me back

for what you did to yourself,

I will treat you like
everyone else who showed up

with the same idea,

and I will rid
the fucking world of you.

Best Salisbury Steak in Montana.
You enjoy it.

'Cause you never know which
meal will be your last.

How long you
gonna be gone?

A whole week.

- Mm. You're gonna miss me.

- Yeah, it's gonna
be hard on you,

but I need you to stay strong.

- I'm being serious.
I have that effect on people.

The symptoms,
just so you're aware:

some serious melancholy,
shortness of breath,

extreme discomfort
in the groin area.

- Okay, so loving you is kind
of like a venereal disease.

- Oh, look at you.

Using the L word,
just a week in.

- Fuck.

- Yeah, you're so hooked.

- Yeah, I'm in over my head,
that's for sure.

- Pussy-whipped is what it is.

- I think you're pecker-whipped.

- Pecker-whipped?
- Pecker-whipped.

- Okay, so now you're
just making up words.

All right, I might be
a little pecker-whipped.

But you are pussy-whipped.

- To my very core.

- How am I different
from the barrel racer?

- Really, no segue at all?

Just straight
to the serious stuff?

- Not serious.
Just curious.

- I think that...

she liked...
the potential in me.

I never really got it.

Sure as hell
didn't live up to it.

But it seems like you like me
for who I am right now.

- I do.

My standards are low.

I think it's hard
to lose someone

who thinks you let them down

'cause there's no way
to prove 'em wrong.

Even if you do,
they ain't around to see it.

But I ain't here
to set standards for you.

Gotta set those for yourself.

Yeah, I wish you
weren't leaving.

- Me, too.

- Feels good to miss
someone again, though.

- Yeah. It does.

♪ I took the long way
through Laredo ♪

♪ And Laredo took me in ♪

♪ I set out cross the desert
just to see if I fit in ♪

♪ I shook loose of the Texan
All them parasitic people ♪

♪ We'll see how my
complexion holds up ♪

♪ When I cross the river ♪

♪ It took a day or two
to translate ♪

♪ That I'm in desperate need
for shelter ♪

♪ Tu camión y cochino ♪

♪ If I can get out
of this weather ♪

♪ Cause they laughed
at my appearance ♪

♪ Turned a nose up in disgust ♪

♪ Hueles como Marrano
and my name forever stuck ♪

♪ Javelina ♪

♪ Knocking at my door ♪

- Come on.

She's ready for you, sir.

- Thank you.

♪ I'd be lying if I tried
to tell you ♪

♪ I don't think about you ♪

♪ After all the miles
and the wild nights ♪

♪ That we been through ♪

♪ Lord knows we had a few ♪

♪ 'Tween almost had 'ems
and broken bones ♪

♪ The dream of a buckle
I'll never put on ♪

♪ I'm jaded ♪

♪ Oh, I hate it ♪

♪ But somehow the highs
outweigh the lows ♪

♪ And I'd do it all again
even though ♪

♪ We both know
I still have to let you go ♪

- Tammy Joe,
when you put him up,

help Kelby get
Crazy Horse put together,

and I need that
Smart Shiny Lights.

Or Sweet Shiny... the fucking
sorrel, the seven year old.

- Yes.
- I don't know his fucking name.

What's up, brother?

- Hell of a run, brother.

- Oh, shit. Thank you.
We'll see if it sticks.

- Oh, shit, it'll stick.

- Well, I'm just gonna assume
you want one of these.

- Absolutely.

- There you go, cheers.
- Cheers, man.

- Well, if it ain't
the bronc buster.

- Congratulations.

That was, uh...

That was beautiful.

I don't know
another word for it.

- Well, thank you.

The Sixes got you
hauling horses?

- Boyd was a little shorthanded

so they sent me
down here to help.

- That a fact?

Well, Jimmy, I guess you
must've learned quite a bit

if they sent you to help here.

- Hey, you were right.

'Bout everything.

It's just you and a horse.
That's all there is.

This old timer
told me that, uh...

cowboyin's an art
without an audience.

But guess he was wrong.

Pretty big audience out there.

- Oh, shit, Jimmy. This isn't...
this ain't cowboying.

This is...
This is just showing off.

That's all it is.

I mean, it's a lot of fun

and when it pays, it pays good,
but it is not cowboying.

The best ride of my life,

the best cow I ever worked was
in a field in San Saba, Texas,

and nobody saw it.

Not a soul.

So your old timer was right.

- Mine was a steer that didn't
want to cross the Wichita.

- I know the river,
and I know the steer.

- Hey, guys, they're bringing
in Metallic Cat.

- Oh, shit.

Come with me, Jimmy,
this will interest you.

The 2021 NRCHA
Snaffle Bit Futurity

is sponsored by
the leading sire in the NCHA

and NRCHA with over 37 million
in offspring earnings.

Let's have a big
Ft. Worth welcome

for the NCHA stallion
of the year,

Metallic Cat.

Owned in partnership
with the Rocking P. Ranch

in Ft. Worth, Texas and
the Yellowstone Dutton ranch

in Paradise Valley, Montana.

- Wait, the Yellowstone
bought Metallic Cat?

- Half owners.

If you're wanting to get
into this game, buddy,

you're gonna have
your pick of the litter.

I'm gonna have you drive him
back when we're done.

- Wait, when are we
heading back?

- Right after
the dispersal sale.

School's over, Jimmy,
and you came out of it a cowboy.

- Hey, Travis, we're going
to the bar. You coming?

- Oh shit, you don't have
to ask me twice.

- You weren't supposed
to be here yet.

Don't look too happy
to see me.

- The Sixes is sending
me back to Montana.

My contract's up.

- If it's up, they
can't send you anywhere.

Just try the Pitchfork.
Hell, it's next door.

- I love how thirty miles away
is next door here.

No, I...

I owe him.

John Dutton.
I gave him my word.

- I respect that.

Hate hearing it,
but I respect it.

Man, life refuses to play fair.

- Ain't played fair with me yet.

- Me neither.

We'd better rip this band aid
off quick then.

Goodbye, Jimmy.

- Thanks.

- We're eating in
the dining room tonight.

- Why are we eating
in the dining room?

- 'Cause I like eating in here.

But you and I aren't
going to like this dinner.

- Shall we?

- Not on your life, sweetheart.

Tell you what? Let's go around
to the bunkhouse

and we see what the boys
are making for supper. Come on.

- Discretion's
the better part of valor.

- Ain't that the fucking truth.

Well, Beth, you
have a good time, hon.

- Quitter.

- Come find me
after your ass whipping.

- You forget
who you're marrying?

- There's always a bigger
bear, darling.

- Have a seat.

- I fight standing.

- This isn't a fight.

- The fuck it's not.
Come on, let me have it.

- If you were one of my sons--

- You'd what?

Brand me? Fight me?
Huh?

Don't treat me any different,
you want to brawl, let's brawl.

- You done?

Or you need a little more
time to psych yourself

into being right.

Or are you just throwing
a tantrum for no reason

because if this wants
to be a contest

about who can lose
their composure the most

I will put this table
through the fucking wall.

Or you and I can sit down and
have a conversation like adults.

You used that girl.

You used her and now
she's facing prison.

- Yeah?
- Yeah.

- Well, that's life
in the Serengeti, Dad.

- What we do to our enemies
we do to our enemies.

That woman is not our enemy.

- The thought was complete
before you mentioned the woman.

I do anything
to hurt our enemies, Dad,

If I hurt others, so be it.

I don't care.

I don't care
if she dies in prison.

I don't care if she gets out,
I do not fucking care, okay?

I care about you,
I care about Kayce,

I care about Rip.

- Well, if you care about them
then you need to care

about having some morality
in the way you fight.

- There's no such thing.
Not in a kingdom.

And that's what this is.

There is no morality
here, Dad, none.

There is keep the kingdom
or there is lose the kingdom.

Or break your
fucking promise, Dad.

Break it and sell this place.

Take the money,
buy up half of Oklahoma

and run cattle for
the next 20 generations

where no one gives a fuck
about you or your land.

- My kingdom, my rules.

We fight with dignity.
You aren't.

You start or find another fight.

- What does that mean?

- I'm saying no more collateral
damage, you understand me?

We don't kill sheep.
We kill wolves.

What you did was cruel, honey.

- Because you fucked her,
it's cruel?

- Did you do it
because I fucked her?

Because that is cruel.

Goddam, Beth, I never
thought I'd feel

this way about you before,

but you have really
disappointed me, honey.

And I never thought
I'd say that about you.

- Me neither.

- You know, maybe it's best
if I fight this alone.

Maybe it's best if you
go somewhere else

while I do it.

- This is my home.

- Might be time
to find another one.

- Got 'em all sorted, huh?

- Yep.

- Sale's done?
- Yep.

- Goodbyes are too hard, Jimmy.
That's why I said it quick.

Let's not do this.

- I'm not saying goodbye.

I'm keeping you.

I'll day work, I'll do
what I have to do.

- Can't let you break
your word over me.

It'll be the thing that breaks
us, then you'll have nothing.

Keep your word.

Then come back to me.

If you ask me to wait,
I'll wait...

- Wait for me.

- Okay.

♪ There's a scar
on my soul ♪

♪ So let me down easy ♪

♪ Break my heart sweetly ♪

♪ Like you always do ♪

- ♪ One-night stand
in Mississippi ♪

♪ Final leg... ♪

- Look at this fucking kid.
He's done this before.

- My first time.

- You're shuffling the cards
in the air.

- First time actually playing.

- Hey.
- All right.

♪ Singing songs
along the highway ♪

Triple it.

- Triple the bet he says?

- Madman.

- This little card shark
motherfuckin' kid.

- Hay ain't no kid, he's just
a motherfucking card sharkin'--

little elf.

- You tell him, baby.

- I love it when
you call me baby.

You want to scratch
me behind my ears?

- No.
- What about my other ears?

- Don't listen, just start.

- Get a room, you guys.

- Here's the flop.
- The flop?

- He knows the terminology.

What, did you buy him
at a fucking circus?

Poker circus?
That's disrespectful.

- Come on, boy.
There you go.

I love it.
- Do you know what he has?

- Don't you worry.
- All right.

- All right, well...
- Check.

- Ain't no checking today.

- Oh.
- Fuck off.

- Come on, son.

- It's down to the kid
and the unluckiest card player
on earth now.

- I wonder how
that's gonna work out.

- Do we, though?

All right,
he got something.

- And the river.

- You're fucked, kid.

- Are you alive on the river?

- Look who's back.

- You look awful sad.

- Yeah, I am.

- How come?

- I just lost the one thing

I've spent my entire life
fighting for.

I'm wondering what
else it's gonna cost me.

Do you know any sad songs?

- Most people say that's
all I know.

- Would you play one for me?

- Yeah, I can do that.

What, you got boat?

- Listen to this
fucking kid, boat.

- He's a cheating
little squirrely haired

little twat mouth
cunt motherfucking

face of death nose.

- What's wrong with her?
- What do you mean?

- She bite off
her tongue or something?

- Fuck you!
Don't laugh at that shit.

- What's so fucking
funny back there?

- He's kicking your ass and
talking shit at the same time.

- Pot's right.
Let's do it.

- Yeah, that's right. I do have
the boat you little bastard.

Aces up.
- Oh!

It's your bedtime.
- So did I.

- Oh!

- The same exact cards
last time.

- If you're so sad, how about
I play you something happy?

- No. I need to cry.

But I'm incapable
of crying for myself.

Walker, I need a song
to cry to.

- This is about a man
who got killed that...

wasn't quite ready to die.

Guess as his soul
was floating up in the air

he's looking down on all
the things he was gonna miss.

Pretty sure he cried.

- Yeah, that sounds
like a song for me.

♪ The other day I found
myself up on the corner ♪

♪ I thought I run into
a friend of mine ♪

♪ Ended up he was
just a stranger ♪

♪ Said hello
and he passed me by ♪

♪ But then he turned
and put a gun to my head ♪

♪ He said my friend,
I'm gonna rob you blind ♪

♪ I said you must be
down on your luck ♪

♪ I'm outta money
and I'm all out of time ♪

♪ He pulled the trigger
and I fell to my knees ♪

♪ My spirit left
and then my body went cold ♪

♪ I'm looking down upon
the lights of the city ♪

♪ I feel alive
but I'm dead and gone ♪

♪ Ain't no more favors
from someone I don't know ♪

♪ 'Cause there ain't
nobody hear me ♪

♪ Nobody's around ♪

♪ Hallelujah ♪

♪ He's dead and gone ♪

♪ Hallelujah ♪

- Do I have to go up
on the hill too?

- Some day.

- When?

- When your heart tells you to.

- Right here, Tate.

- Gotta be honest.

Not sure I believe
in all this.

- It sure believes in you.

Hey...

Wherever something
good's trying to happen

something bad is trying
to stop it.

Your only safe place
is inside your prayer ties.

Your only protection
is the pipe.

Everything else
around you could be evil.

Beware the coyote, he is the
trickster and cannot be trusted.

- How long is Hanbleceya?

- Four days
and four nights.

No food.
No water.

- No water?

- None.

- I'll die.

- You must stand
on the cliff of death

to understand
your purpose in life.

It's the only place
where you can see it.

She's a good woman.

- Better than I deserve.

- God doesn't work like that.

He would never let her love
someone who didn't deserve her.

- I feel kinda silly.

- Listen to Mo.

Do what he says
exactly as he says it.

I love you.

- See you in a few days.

Use the sage to keep
bad spirits off.

Use the sweet grass to call
your spirit helpers in.

Smoke the pipe when you pray.
Understand?

- You'll be surprised
how quickly you'll replay

all your moments
in life in your mind.

And then what?

When you are without memories,
without regrets to ponder,

without fantasies
to embrace or to reject,

what will you think of then?

What will come to you depends

on how hard you pray
and how much you suffer.

Close him in, Mo.

- How will you know
when I'm done?

- How will you know, Kayce?

That is the question.