Body of Proof s01e01 Episode Script

Pilot

Okey-dokey, Dr.
Hunt, one more pass and we'll have you out of there in a jiffy.
Super duper.
We've run every possible test, we can't find anything wrong.
- Just scan me again.
- We've run them five times already.
- My hands still go numb.
- No damage to the cervical vertebrae.
Nerve conduction study? Your condition is chronic and undiagnosable.
Keep looking.
Every test we do on you comes up negative.
It's been four years since your car accident.
There's no improvement to your paresthesia.
Your career as a neurosurgeon is over, Megan.
- Maybe it's time you accepted it.
- You think I'd wanna come back? All I'm saying is, you got a whole new career now.
Most people would count their blessings.
I'm not most people.
Megan Hunt.
Peter, what do we got here? Oh, good morning to you too.
Female jogger.
Angela Swanson, age 32.
Trauma to the back of the head and traces of foam in her mouth.
CSU is upriver trying to search for where she went in.
Liver temp is 95.
1 and water temp is 64.
Two hours, more or less.
Oh, Bud, Sam, this is Dr.
Megan Hunt.
I don't think you've pulled her on a case before.
Oh, I've heard all about Dr.
Hunt.
This must be our lucky day.
Look at that.
Already we agree on something.
Our victim has blunt force trauma to the back of the head, preliminary indications of drowning.
No scrapes or abrasions.
She went into the river clean after being hit.
Liver temp puts it at about two hours ago.
And whoever attacked her did it on the west side of the river.
- How do you know that? - She got some sun this morning.
So? So two hours ago the east side of the river was in shadow.
That's it? You haven't caught the murderer yet? No, detective, give me time.
Autopsy, two hours.
Oh, and one more thing, detectives.
Don't believe everything you've heard about me.
The truth is much worse.
Dr.
Hunt, 23-year-old man, anemia and liver failure but no cirrhosis or history of Hepatitis B or C.
What are his copper levels? Copper levels.
- What do you want, Ethan? - Nothing.
But since you're asking, I've got a female, age 41, died in a sauna of apparent heat stroke, but her urine came back normal for hydration.
What are her electrolytes? They're these things in our body that contain free ions.
Wait.
I know.
You're thinking hyponatremia? I'm thinking you should go now.
Hello, Megan.
Todd? What are you doing at Lacey's school? I'm not at Lacey's school, I'm at the office.
What are you doing calling her on her cell phone? Well, you screen my calls to the house.
You know, the phone works both ways, Megs.
She could call you if she wanted to.
Why would she want to? I'm the bad guy, aren't I? I would like to come to Lacey's birthday, please.
Look, Megs, we've been through this.
You know you're not invited.
- Wait a minute.
- You lost her just like you lost me.
- I just want - I'm sorry.
- I gotta go.
- At least let me - talk to her.
This is Dr.
Megan Hunt, medical examiner, assisted by Peter Dunlop, medical investigator, performing an autopsy on Angela Swanson, age 32.
So, what do we know about our girl? She's local.
Grew up in Narberth.
Senior associate at Paige, Howell & Walker.
Single, no boyfriend.
Colleagues say she was a workaholic, pretty much lived at the office.
Well, she's obviously in excellent physical condition.
Calluses on her feet, a few minor scars, healed bite marks on the left forearm, both posterior and anterior, probably canine.
Keeps her nails clipped.
- Little bit chewed.
- Any DNA under them? All in good time, detective.
Looks like she grinds her teeth.
Another sign of stress.
Scarring on the skull above the hairline.
And a small nodule or neoplasm at the base of her neck.
She got her head bashed in.
Can we get to the murder weapon already? Look at her.
Tell me what you see.
A dead girl.
I see a beautiful young woman who ate well and kept fit.
For whom? A boyfriend? Did she break up with him? Look deeper.
She shows signs of stress.
A workaholic.
Was she up for partner? Did she piss somebody off? Was somebody jealous, out to get her? The answers are all here, because that's what we do.
I honor the body for what it tells me about Angela Swanson's life.
And how that life came to an end.
The body is the proof.
It will tell you everything you need to know, if you just have the patience to look.
I'm gonna get some coffee.
The skull collapsed into the occipital lobe in a V-shaped depression.
There are flecks of rust throughout.
Your murder weapon is heavy, maybe cast iron, square with a dull edge, possibly a large plumber's wrench or some kind of mallet.
- And, detective - Yeah? I take mine with cream.
No sugar.
- He's usually not so pleasant.
- Neither am I.
Heard you were some big neurosurgeon a few years back.
Used to be.
So why are you working here? You can't kill somebody if they're already dead.
Yes, the Carol Ramsey tote.
Is it in yet? Oh, great, okay.
I'll be in.
What is your name again? Thank you.
- Working hard, I see.
- You here just to annoy me? I put a hold on Angela's stomach contents.
The liquid we found was some kind of sports drink.
And the tissue sample from her neck is at the lab.
And the diaphragm too, right? Yeah, that too.
About that, why does a woman wear a diaphragm on her morning run? Well, she either she had sex or was planning on having sex, or? Some women use them as a barrier before they get their period.
- I didn't know that.
- Clearly.
And what about the scar above her hairline? I got two calls in to her physician but no answer yet.
Then let's go find out for ourselves, shall we? Brain dissection? Cool.
Dr.
Hunt.
Curtis.
I'm a doctor too, you know.
And yet no one calls you that.
Strange.
I understand you ordered an ANA panel on a suicide.
What are you doing ordering a thousand-dollar autoimmune test on a guy who blew his brains out? You know why he blew his brains out? - No, I do not.
- Neither do I.
But now we both know it had nothing to do with his immune system.
Look, I'm deputy chief medical examiner.
The entire budget of this office is on my shoulders.
You keep pulling that crap, I don't care how many friends you have.
What makes you think I have friends? It's true.
She doesn't have any.
Mild depression and hemosiderin staining from prior brain trauma, causing a lesion of the amygdala, approximately two years ago.
What does all that mean? It means Angela's been hit on the head before.
And I do have friends, thank you very much.
Yeah? Like who? So amygdala regulates emotional learning and fear conditioning Room one, this is Peter.
and sexual arousal.
A lesion like this would turn everything upside down, so heightened emotions, loss of fear and hypersexuality.
Okay, thanks.
Call the lab and tell them to put a rush on the diaphragm results.
You were right, Angela was hit on the head before.
She had an ex-boyfriend named Tom Hanson.
He threw her down a flight of stairs and put her in a coma.
Morris has tracked him to a halfway house in Overbrook.
He was paroled three weeks ago.
Now, we can come, but we're just supposed to observe.
Yeah.
Like that's gonna happen.
I loved Angela.
I would never hurt her.
What do you call throwing her down a flight of stairs? I didn't.
We got in a fight outside my apartment.
The neighbors heard us yelling at each other, but they didn't see her trip all by herself.
I got screwed, man.
Two years for something I didn't do.
Then why didn't Angela back up your story? She couldn't.
Post-coma memory loss.
It's consistent with the autopsy.
I don't suppose you two had sex this morning, did you? What? Dr.
Hunt, can I have a word with you outside, please? Here's how this is supposed to work.
You tell us what you know, we ask the questions, and then we catch the bad guy.
So this morning you weren't being serious, you were just mocking me? Let's say Angela did fall down the stairs accidentally.
That's all the more reason for Hanson to hold a grudge.
Angela was hit on the back of the head.
If Hanson killed her, don't you think he'd want her to see his face, that he was punishing her for sending him to prison? And Angela didn't have any defensive wounds, did she? Because she never saw it coming.
Hanson didn't do it.
- Is that a fact? - Let's call it a theory.
Look, here's a theory.
He bashed her on the head and tossed her in the river.
- Case closed.
- Maybe.
You're an ex-cop, put a muzzle on that woman or I'm gonna do it for you.
Unbelievable.
Smooth, Megan, very smooth.
I'm right, he's wrong.
The question is, how to prove it? I know this is very difficult for you, but when was the last time you spoke with Angela? About a week ago.
She'd just finished with the trial.
What did you talk about? It was just a hello.
She was going to bed.
She had a sore throat.
Strep, I think she said.
- Do you know what was she taking for it? - No.
Excuse me.
Did Angela's dog ever bite her? Oh, you mean the scars on her arm? No, Buddy was killed by a pit bull.
She tried to save him.
I notice that there's a lot of pictures of Angela alone.
- Did she have friends? - Not many.
In school, she was always about her grades, all about her career after that.
What about romantically? Was she seeing anybody recently? No.
L I got her doctor on the phone.
It was Strep A.
She was taking erythromycin.
Oh, one last question.
Two years ago, after her fall down the stairs, did you notice any change in Angela's behavior? You have to understand, we've always loved our daughter.
But when she was a teenager, she became a hard, driven girl.
She left home, sometimes we wouldn't hear from her for months.
But after the coma, it was like we got her back again.
Our little girl.
She would come by once a week.
She'd call just to say hello.
I've heard of someone getting some sense knocked into them.
But feelings? That's a new one.
I'd throw my ex down the stairs if I thought I'd get the same result.
- Here you go.
- Thank you.
It looks like a pumpkin wearing a tutu.
It is the Carol Ramsey Ruffle Tote.
And before you make another crack it's not for me, it's for my daughter.
Do you ever even look at a price tag? She's gonna be 12, I wanted to get her something nice, okay? For $1100? - Are you seriously considering this? - Please stop talking.
Okay, but getting your daughter that bag is a bad idea.
Oh, really? And what could you possibly know about my daughter? You know something, you're right.
I've been assigned to you for what, six months now? What could I possibly know about your daughter? Lacey lives with her father.
We divorced five years ago.
He got full custody.
And he got it because a woman who works 18 hours a day is an absentee mother, and a man who works the same hours is a good provider.
Do you have any idea what it takes to be a practicing neurosurgeon? I was damn good at what I did.
I saved lives, and if I had missed playdates and phone calls because of that, then I'm very sorry.
But I was under the bizarre impression that my husband had my back.
And instead he I lost my child to my career.
And then I lost my career.
All because of the damn accident.
My hands still go numb.
L I still don't get the handbag.
It's all I'm allowed to do.
I pay for summer camp and dance lessons, and whatever she needs, and then he tells her that I'm trying to buy her affection.
Which you're not? I'm trying to have a relationship with my daughter, okay? Well, maybe you should just try having some fun with her, you know? You know what? Let's just forget we had this conversation.
Dr.
Hunt, the chief wants to see you.
Dr.
Hunt.
- That would be our boss.
- I'm still not talking to you.
Or the chief, apparently.
Good career strategy.
I'll handle the chief.
You light a fire under somebody's ass.
I want those diaphragm results.
Okay.
- What do you want, Ethan? - Nothing.
I'm really not in the mood.
Okay, that female heat stroke victim I mentioned? Her electrolytes were normal.
Negative tox for drugs and alcohol too.
Any psychological problems? Depression, paranoia? Why? I mean, I'll find out.
What do I do if there were? Order an ANA panel.
Wait.
Isn't that the test that got you in trouble with Curtis? Great.
Do you want something or are you just lurking? I didn't know if you were talking to me again.
Fingerprints? Finger impressions from finger oils that survived the water.
I also found damaged hair shafts at the same location.
If they were torn as a result of the head wound, the edges would be rough and fractured.
But these are uniform, intact and compressed.
So they were either cut by a dull pair of scissors or caught in something and pinched.
Like a bracelet, segmented watchband, or a ring maybe.
I think you're right.
You got the diaphragm results.
They found trace amounts of semen.
The DNA tests will take a few days but one thing's for sure.
There were no spermatozoa.
The guy had a vasectomy.
Do you know any bachelors that would get snipped instead of wearing a condom? Not one.
She was sleeping with a married man.
The police say she pretty much lived at the office.
So if she was having an affair, odds are it was with somebody at work.
So why ask me? He had a vasectomy.
Where else would he go? You're the number one ball-cutter in all of Philadelphia.
I thought you held that title.
Look, we go way back, Megan.
But you're asking me to betray doctor-patient privilege, and you know I won't do that.
I'm not asking for me, I'm asking for a woman who was murdered.
Tell me something.
This new you, Megan Hunt, ME, who seems to care about dead people more than she ever did about the living.
Is she for real? Or is she just working off her guilt after killing a patient on the operating table? Both.
If you'll excuse me, I need to use the restroom.
Bradford Paige.
Please come in.
Mr.
Paige, I appreciate you meeting with us.
We're trying to establish a timeline for anyone who might have seen Angela yesterday.
Where were you at 8:30 in the morning? I was at home preparing notes for a meeting.
Can anyone back that up? No, my wife, Jill, was taking our sons into school early.
She's a school nurse.
You're head of the Partnership Committee.
- Yes.
- Angela was a seventh-year associate.
Isn't that the cutoff year? If you don't make partner you never will? - So? - So how long you been sleeping with her? Angela had sex yesterday with a man who had a vasectomy.
Even without the sperm I can still match for DNA.
- Care to give me a sample? - Dr - She was sleeping with you.
- That's not true.
She was in a position to ruin your marriage and sue your law firm if she didn't get what she wanted.
I know my rights.
So you followed her, bashed her on her head, threw her in the river.
Okay, that's it.
You are out of here.
Dr.
Hunt, it is time for you to go.
Todd, I told you I cannot pick Lacey up today.
I have surgery in half an hour and I'm late already.
I have a job.
Hey, you wanna tell me what the hell you were doing up there? Just a little good cop/bad cop.
I was softening him up for you.
Wanna know what the problem with that is? You're not a cop.
You talk like that to a suspect, you could blow my investigation.
I know a lot of ME's, and none of them are as big a pain in the ass as you are.
They're also not as good as I am.
You like to think that, don't you? When did she kick you out, detective? You have an impression on your ring finger where a wedding ban was recently removed.
That cut on your chin is from a double-bladed razor, probably disposable.
And your aftershave, I'm hoping it's the best the hotel has to offer.
Work with me or not, detectives, but I want justice for Angela just as much as you do.
Fine.
Paige denied everything.
The last time he saw Angela was at the firm's annual dinner, Sunday night.
She sat at his table but she didn't stay long.
- She had a sore throat.
- He's lying.
About the sex, maybe, but that doesn't make him a murderer.
Hanson had motive.
So does Paige if Angela was blackmailing him to make partner.
Angela didn't need to blackmail him.
She'd already made partner.
She won a big lawsuit a couple weeks ago.
It wasn't public yet, but the Partnership Committee had already voted.
And there goes your theory.
Let's get out of here.
You know, that guy's gonna be a lieutenant someday, so you might try playing nice once in a while.
What was the lawsuit about? Angela was defending a member of the Roberts family.
Roberts? That's as close to royalty as Philadelphia gets.
Yeah, and get this.
Their dog attacked a boy in Fairmont Park.
Angela was attacked by a dog when she was a teenager.
Which makes you wonder, right? What the hell was she doing defending a case like that? He hasn't talked since the trial, you know.
Not a word.
That was three weeks ago.
Bad enough getting attacked by a dog.
That bitch lawyer put him on the stand and blames him for everything.
Mr.
Young, where were you two days ago around 8:30 a.
m.
? Work, janitor at the Community College of Philadelphia.
Did anyone see you there? Why? Because about that time, Angela Swanson was murdered.
And you think I killed her? Get the hell out of my house.
- Get the hell out of my house.
- Okay, we can do this downtown.
Did you know that Angela was bitten by a pit bull when she was a teenager? Detectives, if you don't mind? Mr.
Young, I'm sure the trial was hard on you.
I'm sure that you hated Angela for what she did to your son.
But, what I don't understand is how she ended up on the other side of your lawsuit.
She wasn't on the other side, was she? She's right.
Angela came by the day after the trial.
She told me about her dog, showed me her scars.
She said that she wanted to settle out of court but she got overruled.
And she gave me this.
What is it? Grounds for my appeal.
Information withheld by the law firm, saying that the dog that mauled my son was an attack dog trained to do just that.
Mr.
Young, do you know who overruled Angela for settling out of court? Oh, yeah.
Angela's boss, Bradford Paige.
So you think Paige killed Angela because she went behind his back? - It's a theory.
- Hold on a second.
Why would she give privileged information to Young knowing she would reverse the case she just won? After her fall down the stairs, Angela wasn't the same person.
She had an affair, she violated attorney-client privilege, and she started calling her mother just to say hello.
Guess we're gonna have to go talk to Paige again.
Without you, if you don't mind? I don't mind at all.
Oh, doctor, the chief really needs to see you.
Dr.
Hunt.
- Hello, chief.
- Let's have a talk, shall we? So Ethan tells me he ordered an ANA panel on your recommendation.
- I'm so sorry.
It was Curtis.
- So? So you've been rather profligate with our lab budget lately.
An ANA panel on a suicide, now an ANA panel on a heat stroke victim.
The suicide didn't leave a note.
Had a family history of Lou Gehrig's disease.
If he thought he was symptomatic, it would explain why he took his own life.
- We're not interested in the why.
- You're not, but I am.
And if I'm going to understand what happened to my patients, I will order any test that I deem necessary.
If you don't like it, fire me.
Don't test me.
You blow my budget, that's exactly what I'm gonna do.
Before you do that, my heat stroke victim? - She didn't die of heat stroke.
- What? She showed psychological symptoms, paranoia, depression.
Yeah, just like you said.
Then given normal electrolytes and hydration her ANA panel, in all likelihood, showed elevated levels of anticardiolipin immunoglobulin G.
Which if it does, means she was hypercoaguable.
Combine that with depression and paranoia, we have a diagnosis of what, Curtis? Can I see that for a minute? Thank you.
Lupus! - I would've gotten that eventually.
- Yeah, I know.
Eventually.
If there's nothing else, I have my own case to attend to.
That's it? That's all you're gonna do? I will deal with Dr.
Hunt in my own way.
Is there anything else? Yeah, you could tell people to call me "doctor" around here.
- What are you still doing here? - New lab results.
This is a Giemsa stain of the nodule from Angela's neck.
It's a benign neurofibroma.
You see these purple cells? Those are mast cells.
They're degranulated.
But why? Degranulation is caused by physical trauma, but this is tissue taken from her neck, not from the head injury.
- So, what caused it? - How about a bicycle? - What? - For your daughter.
I mean, nothing says fun like a bicycle.
Can't you see I'm working here? Yeah, I see you all right.
I see someone who reminds me an awful lot of Angela Swanson.
Workaholic.
No friends.
Just her career to keep her company.
But then one day a miracle happens.
She falls down a flight of stairs and she discovers emotion.
And empathy.
You've had this high-flying life and now you're here, and you're still pissed at that car accident that made it happen.
But maybe that car accident was your own fall down the stairs and you're just too scared to let the benefits kick in.
What the hell are you talking about? Megan, you talk about your daughter like you're stuck with only one card to play.
But you're not stuck at all.
But if you really wanna connect with her, give her something that comes from your heart.
Okay? Because nobody gives a damn about a handbag.
Lab one, Dr.
Hunt.
Thank you.
They made an arrest on the Swanson case.
Bradford Paige? No, Angela's ex-boyfriend, Tom Hanson.
And we have a witness now that puts you in the park at 8:30 in the morning.
Okay.
Yes, I was there.
- It doesn't make me a murderer.
- It makes you a liar.
I did two years for something I didn't do, she won't even answer my calls? I went there to talk to her, not to kill her.
Then what did happen, Mr.
Hanson? What happened? I wanted to look her in the eye, face to face.
Find out why she hung me out to dry.
Hey.
Morris? I thought you were zeroed in on Paige.
- Paige didn't do it.
We got our guy.
- Were you listening in there? Hanson wanted a confrontation that never happened.
What is it with you? You can't just be a regular ME, you have to be the Smocked Crusader? Why don't you do us all a favor, go back to being whatever it was you were before.
I can't.
I killed someone.
Don't all surgeons lose patients on the operating table? What's your point? Well, would you go back to neurosurgery if you could? What are you, my shrink now? Okay, you know what, Megan? Forget about it, okay? Peter.
Her name was Marianne.
A tumor on the optic nerve.
And there was an autopsy as part of the inquest.
All those hours studying the scans, rehearsing the operation, and I never knew that she had a broken heart tattoo because of an old boyfriend, or that she fractured her arm horseback riding when she was a kid, or dozens of other things that her body revealed to me that our conversations never did.
And the truth is, until she died, I never really cared.
Okay, but that still doesn't really answer my question, does it? Yes, it does.
Don't you have a birthday party to go to? I don't have a present.
And don't you dare say bicycle.
Are you seriously telling me that you can't think of one thing that was important to you as a kid that you'd want your daughter to have? Oh, finally.
So, what is it? - Hey, guys, want a piece? - No, thanks.
When I was a kid, Lacey's age actually, my dad he had this tool shed in the back yard Oh, come on, it's delicious.
I'm sorry, nut allergy.
Yeah, so he had a tool shed in the back yard and? - What? - Allergies.
Do me a favor, get this to the lab, have them run a tox screen for prescription medication.
Okay, but that'll take a while.
In that case, I'm going to Lacey's birthday party.
I thought you didn't have a present.
I know what I'm getting her.
- All I wanna do is give her - You just had to come, didn't you? Dad, who is it? It's your mother.
- Hi.
- Dad said you couldn't come.
He just meant that I couldn't stay very long.
Just a couple of minutes.
He lied, didn't he? Your dad just wants what's best for you.
So do I.
Just can't seem to agree on what that is.
- How's the party? - It's okay.
- Did I miss the cake? - Like you'd eat cake.
Try me sometime.
I brought you a present.
What is it? Remember that picture of me and Grandpa in front of his tool shed? Yeah? Well, that shed was his sanctuary.
It was the only place he went where he could hide from the world.
And nobody can get in there.
I mean nobody.
And then one day, when I was about your age, he gave me the key.
That's the key to my apartment where you'll always be welcome.
A sanctuary or an escape whenever you need it.
Whatever you want it to be.
You have fun, okay? There's something wrong here.
- Test came back positive for amoxicillin.
- Why do you think something's wrong? Angela wasn't taking amoxicillin, she was taking erythromycin.
Exactly.
Call Detective Morris.
Tell him to get a search warrant for Paige's house and have him meet us there as soon as he possible.
Morris.
Why so glum? Thought you'd be happy to see me.
Not after getting laughed at by the DA.
They didn't buy your theory and we don't have a warrant.
Then why are you here? I know backing down isn't in your nature, so you just better be right.
- What do you want? - Did you love Angela? - Bradford, who is it? - I got it, honey.
She was here the morning she died, wasn't she? I'm a lawyer.
I know my rights.
And you guys can't be here without a warrant.
If you loved her, you'd help us.
Or were you just screwing her? Yeah, she was here, all right? And yes, I loved her.
Yes to all of it, but I would never kill her.
- What's going on? - It's the police.
They're looking into Angela's death.
Mrs.
Paige, on Sunday evening at the firm's annual dinner, did Angela happen to mention that she had strep throat? Yes.
Did she also mention what she was taking for it? I'm guessing she did.
In fact, I'm almost positive she told you she was taking erythromycin for an infection of beta-streptococcus group A.
The interesting thing about beta-strep group A is that it's rare in adults, unless they contract it from their children.
Mrs.
Paige, have your sons had strep throat recently? So, what if they have? What are you implying? You didn't know it, but you got strep from your son and passed it on to Angela.
That's how your wife knew you were having an affair.
And that's why you killed Angela.
- This is ridiculous.
- Is it? Mr.
Paige, we'd like permission to search your house.
- Did you have anything to do with this? - No.
Then you have nothing to hide.
Mr.
Paige? - Okay, search it.
- Bradford.
Mrs.
Paige, I'm gonna need you to stay out here.
Not only did your wife know that you gave strep to Angela, she also knew, as a nurse, that erythromycin is prescribed to people who are fatally allergic to penicillin and its most common derivative, amoxicillin.
On the morning that Angela was murdered, she dropped your sons off at school and came back to find you having sex here with Angela.
During which you left your handprint on her neck and her hair caught in your wedding band.
Instead of confronting you, she had a better idea.
Spike Angela's sports drink with the same amoxicillin your sons were taking for their strep throat.
Essentially poisoning her.
Angela made it all the way to the river before she went into anaphylactic shock.
She started to shake, couldn't breathe and lost her balance.
The back of her head struck something when she fell into the water.
Dr.
Hunt.
When this formulation matches the contents of Angela's stomach that will be it.
Wanna say anything? I wish it had been you.
Jill Paige, you are under arrest for the murder of Angela Swanson.
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say can and will be held against you in a court of law.
You have the right to an attorney.
If you cannot afford one, one will be appointed to you.
Do you understand these rights as I have read them to you? Guess I'll see you at trial.
Yes, you will.
- Doctor.
- Detective.
What? What are you grinning at? Well, it's not like you not to rub it in.
Get in the car.
Got a lot of phone calls about you before I hired you.
"She's brilliant and driven.
" "She throws elbows but gets results.
" I didn't think it was possible they were underselling you, but they were.
In one year, you've managed to make even city hall notice us.
You're welcome? But the knives will come out the minute you screw up, and even I won't be able to help you.
You know, I may never have a resume like yours but there is something that I know that you don't.
You let this job get too personal and you're gonna burn yourself out.
You let me worry about that, okay? Do you have any friends? - Why? - Get some.
You can't fight everybody, everywhere, all the time, alone.
Goodbye, Angela.

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