[0:07]Okay, here's the thing. I'll give you the dollar. I just need a quarter. Buy something.
[0:20]Twenty four cents is a change. Have a nice day. You have one saved message to hear your saved messages, press seven. I got it. I got it. Lindsay, it's Teresa Woo. I was hoping you could meet me at Gear Street news stand, 8:00 a.m. I know we're not exactly friends, but it's important. Thanks, Lindsay. See you in the morning.
[0:42]I'm here. Where are you? At the moment in my kitchen making coffee. Tom, You still recognize my voice.
[0:57]married once. Lindsay! Lindsay, are you okay? Lindsay, Lindsay, are you okay? Teresa Woo just fell on my car.
[1:19]I want to know if the blood spatter is impact or cast off. Shoe prints, get them before the wind does. Got it, Inspector.
[1:29]Welcome to your day off. Yeah, like you'd know what to do with a few free hours. For your information, I had plans. I was going to go for a run and I was going to clean my apartment. Shut up. Go ahead and stare. We decided to meet up with the reporter. Look where it got you. Look where it got her.
[1:53]Don't hover out here.
[1:59]Well, tell dispatch, man, Medical Examiner wants a toe tag. I have to haul in the whole kit and caboodle. Hey, Sammy. Deputy DA Bernhardt. It's really Teresa Woo? A sad day for San Francisco.
[2:17]Inspector Boxer said you might need this. Yeah. Yikes.
[2:26]Yikes.
[2:32]We're not going to be in a loss for suspects. Teresa Woo, God bless her, bashed and exposed half of San Francisco for sex or corruption or sexual corruption. Just won what? Six Pulitzers for the register in the past ten years. So wait a minute, you were standing there on the street and Crash? Uh, I was at that exact moment talking to Tom. He called. Tom called. What did he say? Have you called him back? Teresa Woo fell. Why would Tom call you? Our two year divorce anniversary is Sunday, maybe it was a nostalgia thing. And maybe he misses you. What I'm trying to figure out is Teresa's message said to meet her in front of the news stand, so why was she on the roof? To make sure she wasn't followed. She was super secretive. So the question is, who was making Teresa so afraid, that she was desperate enough to call me? Obvious place to start is with the subjects of her exposés. If anyone was mad enough to take her to court, maybe they were mad enough to kill her. I'll find out if there's any pending litigation. I'll get her back to the morgue. Hopefully she managed to pick up some DNA evidence in the back and forth. I'll grab Jacoby, see if anything turns up at her apartment. And you're going to call Tom back. Yeah, totally. Teresa's address book is a dead end. You got anything? No. Uh, some receipts, paid bills, mostly dog related. You know, I'm starting to get why Teresa called me. She didn't have anyone else. The woman was obsessed with her job. Her address book doesn't even have in case of an emergency contact. At least you have a couple of human friends. I'm not going to miss you, you know, when you get your promotion, I get a shining new partner, young, handsome, two good knees. If I get the lieutenant spot, I'll make sure you get plenty of me from behind my shining new boss man desk. You know what there's any sign of a computer? Teresa was old school, everything by hand, always carrying around those ratty old notebooks. Yeah, well, where are they? She didn't bring them to the meeting. They could be back at her office. Well, let's hit the road. I got years of newspaper exposés to weed through.
[4:55]What?
[4:59]Oh, hell no.
[5:07]But, what she likes you. I said call the dog pound. It's just a little stroll. I can't take her into the morgue or does she eat some evidence? Come on, Jill, it's just a key. It's moving in. Hulk can't have worms, can't we just be in love and happy and have lots of sex? Oh, we can do that, too. Didn't we decide you weren't going to come by my office? Yeah, well, I just signed a lease. Landlord gave me two sets of keys and I'm off for a 24-hour shift at the hospital, so I broke the rules. Giving my boss further ammunition for hating me should she decide to drop in. Yeah. She'd hate if she were to see us. Yeah, definitely not. Yeah.
[5:48]Hey, Liz. Hi. So, I'm going to leave this right here. Okay? No pressure. But come on, come in with me.
[6:03]Guess who's moving in with the boys? Considering moving in. Where? God. Well, given your usual terrible taste in men, this is good news. I actually don't hate Luke. What do you know?
[6:17]Time of death, no mystery there. Cause? If the fall hadn't gotten her, the gunshots would have. Three of them, all through the torso. What about DNA? Not looking promising. Just came from her apartment, screams lonely workaholic. Speaking of, did you call Tom back? I'll give you workaholic. Lonely? Don't think so. Yeah, inappropriate. Yikes.
[6:45]Well, not your mama's bikini wax. Meant like that she was definitely sleeping with somebody. There was no man stuff at her apartment. No extra toothbrush. Only one towel on the rack. So whoever she was seeing it must have been new. Her secret. Men? No. No men, no friends, just work. And I have no idea what she was working on. Never had any idea until she was ready to publish. But I guarantee you, it was incendiary and honest. See, that's how much Teresa trusted me. Now I got to call a damn locksmith.
[7:26]Don't you need a warrant for that? Cindy Thomas, Metro Desk. There's nothing in there, anyway. And you know that how? Common knowledge. Teresa never left anything in the office. Plus, I picked it already. It's empty. You're a friend? Yeah, no, no, uh, colleague, I, I guess, um, well, admirer, mostly. Teresa was sort of a mentor from afar. We didn't really talk, actually.
[7:58]She did say nice work to me once. Do you know that to her? Do you know anything about her personal life? She had one? Oh, okay. Bad boss. I got a- I got a-
[8:10]I'm going to have some people come over and go through Teresa's computer. Well, they won't find anything, it's all in her notebooks. Do you know where they are? No, but listen, if by some miracle you find them, I see them first. Technically, they're the property of the San Francisco Register. Technically, they're evidence in a murder investigation. Thank you.
[8:43]Okay, Teresa, those notebooks are in here somewhere. Freeze! Police! Hi, again. Put the bag down! I was going to give them to you. I just wanted to read them. Now.
[9:03]Really? You don't have to do that. You don't have to break and enter. I didn't. Seriously, I told the super that I was Teresa's sister, the adopted sister.
[9:16]What are they? Uh, sweater drawer. I checked that this morning. No, it was a false bottom. Pretty intricate one. She must have it specially made. And and don't feel bad. You would have found it eventually. Jeez, thanks. Now tell me why I shouldn't arrest you for murder. Um, because that's crazy. Teresa was like my idol. And you were angry at her because she didn't pay as much attention to you as you wanted. You were here to steal her story, that's what you're doing now, right? Whatever Teresa was researching, she died for it. If the story dies with her, I can't let that happen. And I have an alibi. A whole handful of people saw me at the register this morning. It's uh, in shorthand. Some kind of code. Teresa was really paranoid. Is it paranoia if you're right? I mean, clearly, someone was out to her.
[10:20]Police! Stop!
[10:27]Stop! Dammit!
[11:05]Dammit!
[11:09]I've spent half the night trying to decipher these things. Only came up with three words. You're mad that I went back to the apartment without you. I'm mad you didn't catch the guy. No, I'm mad I didn't catch the guy. You're mad that I didn't arrest the reporter. Jacoby, I asked the super, he did let her in. So far, I've got alibis for every corrupt jerk Teresa Woo exposed in the last three years. Leaving her current story, whatever it is, as our best lead. What about the guy last night? Didn't my sketch come back yet?
[11:45]I think Martha is depressed. You should I am not taking the dog. You're mad at me about the dog? That goes upstairs, the new boss's office. They named the new Lou. It's not you?
[12:02]What idiot did the idiots in charge give it to? This idiot.
[12:10]Tom. I tried to call you four times.
[12:17]I'm going to need a minute. Jacoby has 22 years on the job, more citations than I can count. He's seasoned, he's grizzled. Do you know how many bad guys you have to catch to get that grizzled? A lot. That's right, a lot. What has Tom done? Other than reorganize a citywide gang task force and that huge drug bust? Blah, blah, blah. Jacoby deserves to be the new Lou. Why would Tom take the job? Do you think he's maybe exploring the idea of getting back together? It's possible. Things change. Well, I care about my job the same amount as I did when we were married. That hasn't changed. Tom didn't leave you because you cared about your job. He left because it was all you cared about. Why are we friends? Because I always tell you the truth, just like I did when I warned you that whole thing about the kiss me not killer was going to cost you your marriage. Obsession. I did not say it, but yes, obsession was going to cost you your marriage. That psycho murdered two women. He brutalized them. He sewed their lips shut. We know, we were there, too. You both gave up. So did Tom. Can you change the subject? This is why I am not moving in with Luke. Moving in leads to marriage. Marriage leads to ick. Giving the key back. If it's the right guy, the ex is worth it. Trust me. Mr. Mark. Tom wasn't the right guy. It was a youthful mistake that lasted six years. Four of them really happy, if you remember. And now he's my boss. We're adults, it'll be fine.
[13:56]Five years ago, Teresa filed a restraining order against a Walton James. She kept it active until last year. Teresa had a stalker. I'm betting he looked a little something like this. Mr. James, open up! It's police!
[14:15]Elevator! He's going to the elevator!
[14:21]Walton James. You are under arrest for pissing me off. Twice. You have no right. I'm an American citizen. Touch nothing. Yeah, whatever you say.
[15:25]Police brutality strikes again. I remember this. Yeah, he was one of the protesters who got their butts kicked at that World Bank to do. Sued the city and got a tidy settlement. She turned him into a hero for a day. He turned her into a victim for five years. Yeah. Seems that way, doesn't it?
[15:49]So what happened, Walton? Teresa finally had enough so you let her free fall? I have rights. Your rights don't include murder. I know how the police operate. You're liars, you're bullies. You want me to believe she's dead, so I'll tell you everything I know. Walton, it's on the news. It's in all the papers. Everything we see, everything we hear, it, it's, it's been manipulated by governments and corporations. That's why Teresa is so special. That's why you were snooping outside of her place. I was trying to find out why she was killed. Where'd you send her? Guantanamo? Teresa is under that sheet, Walton. You ready for this? It's a replica or something. You people are exceptionally well-funded. Trust me, we're not.
[17:01]Who did this? Who hurt you? No.
[17:12]Teresa! No!
[17:17]Walton, come on.
[17:21]It's all right. It's all right. It's all right. It's all right. Teresa. It's all right.
[32:27]That's it.
[32:30]Are you coming in, Lou?
[37:20]Here's the thing. I don't need to talk. Because showing up at work to find your ex-husband is your new boss isn't a big deal. Were you watching me? You okay? So good you make me doubt how good I am. Guess I'm going to have to get used to that all over again.
[37:38]I don't suppose you've ever cheated on me.
[37:45]You really need an answer? No. Look, Liz, we were married. That comes with stuff. Good stuff, bad stuff, but stuff. And we cannot talk about it, but it's there. Works for me. At least you're predictable.
[38:03]Okay. The not talking when we were married, that's totally different than the not talking now. It is. I avoided the talks back then because according to Claire, I, I was scared of being in love with you. Now? Well, now I'm I'm not in love with you, so there's simply no need. Okay.
[38:28]Well, never mind what I was going to say, it's uh, it's irrelevant.
[38:34]What's irrelevant?
[38:38]Just. I'm getting married. Oh.
[38:47]Is she a cop? Kindergarten teacher. Her name is Heather. That's great. That's great. Uh, congratulations. Lieutenant.
[39:06]Hi, baby. Dad ordered a pizza. So I see.
[39:16]She wasn't talking to you. So, can I get a kiss? We're eating.



