Mosaic (2018) s01e03 Episode Script

Zebra-ITIS

1 It's over.
Olivia and I are engaged.
- CASEY DELACROIX: Is this real? - ERIC NEILL: It is.
'Till she finds out the truth.
'Bout how it all started.
OLIVIA LAKE: We should just square up the rent and move forward.
It's not really gonna happen for you, Joey Ah, now you want me to give up, too, just so you can feel better about yourself? Are you available to, uh, talk? Who sent you here? How did you get here? Okay.
Everything that we have right now is real.
Is it real? It was you, wasn't it? You are not coming back here.
Joe, you're kind of scaring me.
What did Eric do this time? DELACROIX: You don't understand, you're not alone in this.
OLIVIA: I don't even know who you are! NATE HENRY: What I don't understand is why you changed your story twice.
No, I don't want you to talk this time.
First, I just want you to listen.
- Why don't you - Because I don't want you to tell me something, again, that closes off another avenue of defense for you, all right? I know your side, you hear mine.
Okay, I couldn't find Cliff Jones.
I know, I know.
I know.
You sat with him face-to-face.
But the fact that I couldn't locate him anywhere means probably Dick Andreesen couldn't either.
And we're already dealing with priors the Toledo thing, the New Orleans insurance thing with FEMA.
I looked this up.
None of that pertains to the case.
They are going to use it to impeach your credibility.
And not just because this is Salt Lake City, but because you are a professional liar.
It will be the first thing that Andreesen brings up, I promise you.
Unless unless he brings up Eloise Brand.
Which he can't.
Which will appear to be very similar.
Which is not similar.
It is not similar at all, you understand.
There's nothing similar about those two.
I didn't love Eloise Brand.
You understand that I didn't love Eloise Brand? Besides which, it's inadmissible.
I know this.
It's inad good, okay.
So then we'll just rely on the jurors to unhear it if Dick slips and it accidentally comes out, right? The point is, Eric, there is what you would like the playing field to be and there is what it is.
Which one do you want to play on? - Okay.
So? - Okay.
What is the reality here? The will.
Your argument with Olivia, overheard just minutes before the murder by a guy who was going to check on a sketch she was apparently drawing for his kid.
Your fingerprints are on the hammer.
I was remodeling.
Eric.
The valets in the lower parking lot describe your exit as "rattled.
" And when the police found you in Truckee, you fled.
You changed your story twice.
And I know, I know Eric, I know you didn't know she was dead, but the fact is you lied, for whatever reason.
And when you agreed to take a polygraph - Volunteered.
- That's right.
Yes, thank you.
When you volunteered against the advice of your arresting officer I was innocent.
You failed your test.
Because I was feeling guilty, but not about what they thought.
I was a mess, which is why, I know, I should have listened.
Okay.
So, I'm sorry.
Please, I'm sorry, okay? So, what what are you suggesting? Please tell me this isn't your full lunch.
Yep.
Hammersmith had me until 2:00 - bitching about the new parking.
- Oh, God.
I know, right? Honestly I don't think anybody likes it better.
Right? Then he wants us to support him on the team jerseys.
I assume you're coming here for a plea 'cause you don't have a case.
Actually, I have a great case.
You don't have a body.
(CHUCKLES) You think the jury's gonna look at one photo from the crime scene and think otherwise? Even you don't think otherwise! - I believe my client.
- Ha! Did they fix this or not? It's still cold.
Yeah, that's the new one, so I don't think you're having, whatever, Cream of - Leukemia? - (CHUCKLES) Gross.
It's first-degree murder.
You know that.
Without a body? Good luck.
What don't you like about the new jerseys? - The whole "retro" thing? It's tired.
- (SCOFFS) Look, I can agree to allocute for no more than 24 years.
That's never gonna happen.
The will? The witnesses? Even if I drop to second, 24 is a gift.
You know that.
Great, now it's too hot.
We're gonna get less than that with a jury, even in Salt Lake.
Okay, I'll agree to not oppose a request for no more than 20.
I'm going in at manslaughter, 10.
- (CHUCKLES) With his priors? Really? - Yeah.
Will you do me a favor? Will you taste this? Smell it at least? It smells like soup and chemicals.
I don't know what you want from me.
We get a jury, I'll roll we get first.
I'll risk a trial.
I will accept second, but we have to allocute for 12.
- 18, he's out in 12.
- (SCOFFS) Seriously, that is the most disgusting thing I think I've ever tasted.
That's because you have to add hot water to it, Dick.
You can't just put cold water in it and then microwave it.
- Right.
I put cold water in? - Yes.
14.
Aggravated, 16.
That's it.
That's all I'm doing.
- (SIGHS) - Oh.
There they are, by the way.
Yeah, there is kind of a "Damn Yankees" thing going on there.
- Right? - All right, 16.
But we're gonna have to do this as an Alford.
That's fine by me.
It's all guilty.
(CHATTER) NATE: Hey.
Hi, Alan.
Hey, so I still cannot get Eric Neill to make any sort of a statement other than a flat-out denial.
And I know you're gonna think that I'm crazy, but I'm kind of actually I'm starting to believe him.
- You know, Nate - And he gave me a name.
Actually, he gave me a bunch of names, but the one that stands out is this Cameron Morgan.
He's this thuggish, young guy.
Apparently, Olivia loved to surround herself around young guys.
Nate, Amy and Dick have come to an agreement.
Who's Amy and Dick? Dick Andreesen? Wait, the prosecutor Dick Andreesen? Yeah, and Amy Lambson, that new public defender up out of Provo.
Nice gal.
Probably not that new anymore, actually.
Wait, whoa, whoa, whoa.
This isn't possible.
I've still got some more stuff to lay out.
Listen to this this guy, Cameron, he's got a list Take yes for an answer, Nate.
We have the guy.
- No.
- You arrested him.
No, I need a few more Please, can we have a few more days? - Please? - It's over.
You done good.
Excuse me, Petra.
Sorry.
There's a guy to see you from the TV show "Heart of Homicide.
" - Oh, thank you.
- Sure.
B.
DAVID: It must have been very, very traumatic.
PETRA: To put it mildly, yep.
The FBI storming your kitchen.
Christmas Eve, right in the middle of dinner.
What was that like? Seeing your own father dragged off like that? (SCOFFS) Right.
Okay, so flash forward 10 years, here we are.
Your brother's been arrested.
Does it bring up any memories? You know, we're gonna ask you a lot about your brother.
You're okay talking about all this? Yeah, I think it it's gonna get out there anyway.
AMY: That's what you tell a reporter when they ask you about your brother's arrest? Well, I wasn't surprised.
I mean, it's a pattern.
And I really don't see how it matters now anyhow.
It matters because your brother's case is flimsy at best.
And pre-trying him in the court of public opinion doesn't exactly do him any favors.
Well, there's something else I told him that I guess you're really gonna like.
Oh, God.
I'm the one who told the police where he was.
When the detective came to Mom's hospice room, I told them he was at our family's cabin in Truckee.
Great.
Okay, actually, maybe you should be standing with the prosecutor.
This is him in here.
His name is Dick Andreesen.
And I'm happy to introduce you if you like.
If not, I'll just see you in the courtroom.
(SIGHS) JUDGE: On the docket is case number 2013-0009.
State of Utah versus Eric Neill.
It's my understanding the parties involved have come to an agreement.
DICK: Yes, sir, Your Honor.
We have indeed reached an agreement.
The defendant has agreed to a change of plea to the reduced charge of aggravated manslaughter.
- (PIANO MUSIC PLAYING) - (DISHES CLATTERING) (CHATTER) TOM: Christmas in February.
Excuse me.
- MAN: Cheers.
- MAN #2: Cheers, man, cheers.
- Tom Davis.
- Alan Pape.
I know, the man himself.
Uh, listen, I'll get right to the point.
It was really impressive work with Eric Neill.
- Really good stuff.
- Mmm.
Now, I understand, if this doesn't fly for you, I totally get it, but this crime, this this Eric Neill intrusion, it has spooked the heck out of a lot of folks up here.
The consensus is we need new security.
A new private firm, one we can count on, headed by a real pro.
Oh, gosh, we already got some pretty top-notch outfits here.
You're a very gracious man, as I've heard.
But I have not heard this bunch agree on anything as simple as setbacks from mailboxes like they agree on this one big thing.
The person for the job is Alan Pape.
(CHUCKLES) Oh, well Well, I, uh honestly, I I've been with the department 32 years.
I hope you don't mind, a couple friends of mine at county let me know your salary.
Oh.
You decide to accept this, we're prepared to triple it.
Bring in a couple guys your pick.
It's all your call.
Well, give it some thought.
I'll give you a call in a couple of days, just check back in.
Again, it's really stellar work.
It's really impressive.
Thank you.
- (EQUIPMENT BEEPS) - MAN: Lookin' at ya.
Got it.
- Okay, .
147.
- 147.
- (BEEPING) - Edge of water.
Other side.
NEWSCASTER: Authorities say what could be the hand of famed children's book author Olivia Lake has been discovered in a stream a half mile from her property, adding both closure as well as renewed attention to the events surrounding her now four-year-old murder.
Investigators are swarming the abandoned mine shafts that dot the estate surrounding Lake's AUTOMATED VOICE: This call is subject to monitoring and recording.
(BREATHING HEAVILY) So many, whatever, pithy lines I wrote for this very moment.
Was that one of them? No, but this is.
Unless I'm wrong, which I doubt, because I have nothing else to do but go over this ad infinitum, the last I heard, it was you who turned me over to the fucking police.
Why are you here now? (SNIFFS) State law says that conditional gifts when the condition's precedent go unfulfilled become the property of the giver, the condition in this case being "Will you marry me," the nonfulfillment being "I can't, I'm dead.
" The fucking police gave it to me.
What would you like me to do with it? So, you're here 'cause you wanna know what to do with Aunt Beth's ring.
What happened? Since Mom died, you don't have any other projects? You know what? This will be in Salt Lake in storage.
You can get it in 2032.
I'm not interested in being the rudder that keeps you from free-forming around your life.
Are you serious? Or one of your books you get 600 pages in writing and then abandon completely.
Okay, you know what? I was wrong to think that you might not deserve this.
W-Wait! I'm sorry.
I'm sorry! I'm sorry.
Don't abandon me.
- There you go.
- Great, thank you so much.
You're welcome.
NATE: Hey, Jim, take care of this for me, okay? Yeah, I'm back.
So, when? Monday? No, no, no, what do you mean Monday? This is mining country, man.
There are more geologists than there are Starbucks.
Then you call someone else.
No, hold on, there has to be something that can dig that deep in the amount of time that we need it.
Then then you make new connections, thank you! - Detective Henry.
Hi.
Nate.
- What? Hi.
- We met a few years ago.
I'm Petra.
- Petra.
You're familiar with the Government Records Access and Management Act, I assume.
I'm not, but I am with you.
What department did you say you were with again, Petra? Actually, I'm not with a department.
I'm Petra Neill.
Oh, Jesus.
No, no, you can't be here, then.
- Please, just give me a moment.
- No, no, no, you can't be here.
A GRAMA request makes cops' notes available GRAMA? - G-R-A-M-A - GRAMA.
makes cops' notes available to the defense, which makes them part of the trial record.
Okay, which means you have my notes, and I need you off the property now.
I have copies, which is why I have a few questions for you.
On the night of the murder, you interviewed Joel Hurley.
That's what this is, right? Then you also interviewed his friend, Frank Scott.
Uh, yeah.
What I noticed was when referring to the night Olivia was killed, Joel said, "We took El Camino to Arroyo Parkway to the Eastridge Mall and saw the 10:20 'Hobbit 2.
'" - Yeah, if you say so.
- Now listen to what Frank said.
- (REPORTERS CLAMORING) - No comment.
"We went to Eastridge Mall.
We took El Camino to Arroyo, and we saw the 10:20 showing of 'Hobbit 2: The Desolation of Smaug.
'" Go to two.
I don't understand your point.
They both almost said exactly the same thing.
They were going to see the same movie.
Okay.
Okay, sure, fine.
But here's my question.
Who says which road they took and the exact time of the show when they're talking about where they were one night? Two people who are talking to a police detective the day after a murder was discovered.
Hey, if you're suggesting that two guys that I've known, one I knew for two years, one I've known for well over 30, are lying for some reason No, what I'm saying is that every other person in your notes spoke a certain way, and these two didn't.
And honestly, I'm surprised you didn't notice.
You ever heard of zebra-itis? - No.
- Okay, here's what zebra-itis is, and then I'm gonna need you to step back and stop contaminating my crime scene.
If it smells like a horse and it leaves a trail of horse prints and a big pile of horse manure, it's a horse.
But amateurs and rookies, they think they're so smart.
Web sleuths spend all day poking through rainbows, looking for zebras.
- Unicorns.
- I'm sorry? Which still would work as a metaphor, but rainbows is unicorns, even though I totally get your point.
I need you to move now.
- You didn't think it was a horse.
- Yo, Adam! - Please.
- "All signs point to Eric, but in my gut, hmm, it just doesn't feel like Eric to me.
" Emphasis mine, but you said it to yourself in your own case notes right here, page 31.
You didn't think it was Eric at the time.
(HELICOPTER WHIRRING) I got this, Adam.
Thanks, anyway.
Look, I'm just one guy.
I'm not the system, so But you got angry at the system.
Your letter to the prosecutor, Dick Andreesen, asking for more time, it's in the discovery.
Even though he had already closed down the investigation.
You were looking for the elusive zebra, perhaps? Unicorn maybe, even? My issues with what went down four years ago have nothing to do with what's happening here now.
Olivia's friend JC said Joel owed her 10 months' back rent by the night of the murder.
And Horacio, the gardener, said that Joel sold him his truck for a quarter of what it was worth and then split town three days after the murder.
What are you trying to say? I want to talk to Frank Scott.
PETRA: You don't think it's weird that you found the hand on Michael O'Connor's property? And on the day Olivia was murdered, she called Michael O'Connor and talked to him for, like, a minute - 52 seconds.
- just before she died.
Yeah, I did find that weird at the time.
And? Believe it or not, you know, I followed up on that.
There were witnesses to the call.
Olivia was upset.
She had had a fight with your brother.
Michael tried to console her.
He couldn't.
Okay, don't you think it's weird that she that Michael and his associate, Tom Davis, flew to Turks and Caicos the very next day? As they did every New Year's.
Same destination, same flight.
You know what would've been weird? If they didn't leave.
Have you re-interviewed him? - No.
- Because? Because (CLEARS THROAT) because of what you've already read in my notes.
He never left the house.
His cell phone never left the house.
- There were - Witnesses, I get it.
- Wait, was the hand? - What, cut off in the murder? Not unless she was killed by a dozen tiny rodents over a period of 8 to 10 months, no.
And, yes, we are checking all the old mine shafts that feed into that stream.
I got a question for you.
You care so much about your brother Eric Where were you when he needed you most? Hmm? And why now, four years later, are you suddenly all over this? I think I might have been wrong about Eric in this specific situation.
Ah, oh.
(CHUCKLES) Okay.
Hmm.
Okay.
So, this is about you.
I mean, yeah.
What? We went to the movies.
"Hobbit.
" "Hobbit 2.
" 10:20 show.
You took El Camino to Arroyo Parkway to the Eastridge Mall.
It's all in the case notes.
- Do you wanna stick with that? - Would you let me? I'll ask the questions.
Hey, so, all we need to know is if you and Joel, for whatever reason, made up that story.
I can find out now or we can talk later.
I can find out then.
Okay.
Okay.
- If you're really asking me.
- NATE: Yeah.
I've got this to say about Joel.
There's the Joel that everyone sees and then there's the other Joel.
MELISSA: I don't understand why that's emasculating.
NATE: Oh, co at the crime scene? In front of everybody? And making me have no choice about it? Uh, where's Morgan? At Owen's.
I'll text Marney.
And you know Frank.
I mean like I'm going to empower her to talk to him? To Frank? You're not empowering her.
She already has the power.
She's a private citizen.
She can talk to whoever she wants.
You're just afraid that 'cause Frank is - The loosest cannon ever.
- That you're gonna lose control.
I don't even know what it's control of.
But this hand comes up, and then this girl shows up, and suddenly I have no choice but to follow somebody else's agenda and it's not mine.
It sounds like she was right.
- Which is beside the point.
- Which is exactly the point.
- No, it's not.
- Yes.
You had the case completely yanked away from you four years ago.
You never liked the result, and if it was some dude who just suddenly showed up out of the blue, you would be saying to me, "Mel, oh, my God, the luckiest thing happened.
" I don't see where this is going.
You were emasculated because it was a woman, is what I'm saying.
Okay.
I believe you're correct.
Yeah, I know.
You'll be fine.
You can handle her.
You know who I would be worried about is Alan.
Assuming she can get Joel back, when do you think that would be? Oh! And that's another thing.
She's so supremely confident that she can get Joel to come back.
I mean, Joel? Joel freaking hated it here by the end.
I mean, come on, you saw his Facebook posts.
- (KEYPAD BEEPING) - (CLICKS) He's a totally different guy down there.
I say there's no way she'll get him to come back.
What? I think you're underestimating this person.
(BOAT MOTOR WHIRRING) JOEL: We'll go right up these lilies here.
MAN: All right! Whoo-hoo! Here we go! (WHOOPING) Oh, yeah! Whoo! - Whoo-hoo! - Whoo! BOY: What can kill an alligator? Let's see.
What can hurt one of these things? What can harm an alligator? Nothing.
Well, scratch that.
We can.
We're its only predators.
Unless you keep leaning over the edge like that, Junior.
Then things are gonna change.
JOEL: Uh, uh, Junior - You see that out there? - MAN: Where? - Straight? - JOEL: That's our little trophy.
MAN: Straight ahead, right there! - Right there.
- Let's not spook this one.
See him right there - just beyond that tree? - Yeah.
All right, the next job is get that sucker on the boat.
Who's gonna do the deed? Ava? - Thanks, but, no, thanks.
- (CHUCKLES) Okay, definitely not Ava.
How about you, Dad? - Taylor? - Oh, Junior? You gonna do it? - Huh? - I think so.
All right.
I thought you might be unsure, but you're gonna give her a go, huh? Put it on your shoulder, son.
You ever handle one of these before? - Not too many times.
- (CHUCKLES) I know it's hard with that life preserver, but you just put her right up there on your arm there.
Make sure it's on safety until you get that sucker ready.
You're gonna wanna hit it just between the eyes here.
That's the sweet that's the sweet spot.
Nice, deep breath.
JOEL: Nice, deep breath.
You don't wanna ruin that trophy.
- (GUNSHOT) - JOEL: Yeah! - (DAD CHUCKLING) - JOEL: There you go, Junior! Skin's all rolled up.
Tell Ty I sent you.
He'll cut you a deal on that taxidermy.
- Sounds good.
- I got your meat on the ice here.
Keep these "not for sale" stickers visible in case the DWF stops you.
- (CHUCKLES) - You are good to go.
- Thanks, Joel.
- My pleasure.
Buckshot, hold onto that.
Bye.
Hope you had a great time.
If you did, we're Big Bayou Gator Guides.
If not, we're Outdoor Adventures, as the joke goes.
- (CHUCKLES) Thanks, Pat.
- (ENGINE STARTS) Hope they got the sizes right this time.
Bobby.
Oh, hi.
I didn't see you there.
Can I help you with something? - Are you Joel Hurley? - I am.
Oh, thank God.
Can we go somewhere and talk? - (MUSIC PLAYING OVER STEREO) - (JOEL SIGHS) Ugh! Bobby! Sorry.
They got the kids large again.
You gotta call them about next week.
I still haven't gotten their thing.
BOBBY: I'll give them a shout and get it straight.
Sorry.
Is this your art? It is.
(CLEARS THROAT) Do you recognize me? Should I? I'm Petra Neill.
I'm Eric Neill's sister.
- PETRA: Please, just hear me out.
- Look, I hardly knew him.
- And from what I did know - I know he could be complicated.
No, he could be an asshole is what he could be, to be honest.
Well, he said that you were a good guy.
He said you might be the only one who could help me.
He said you'd at least listen.
Please.
(SIGHS) Do you mind if we change the music? - Sure.
To what? - Silence.
- Okay, the music is now silence.
- (MUSIC TURNS OFF) What's up? Do you remember one night, maybe a week or two before the murder, when you saw someone on the property and you chased him off? Why? You told Eric about it that night.
You said his name was Cameron.
I think, uh (SIGHS) someone told me then that it would've been Cameron, so, sure, Cameron.
I need to find him.
Well, I saw him for about 10 seconds.
It was in the dark.
It was the woods.
He got in the car and drove off, so I'd have no idea on how to locate him.
So he could he said those will work until we get the 400s.
There was someone in that car that Cameron got into.
And you told Eric back then that you might know him.
I think I said that he might have looked vaguely familiar, yeah.
You said he was a bartender.
Look, I don't know.
It was four years ago.
Do you remember which bar? Oh, God, I I really don't know.
Please don't tell me this is what you flew all the way down here to find out.
Keep going.
I'm listening.
I believe my brother is innocent.
Of the crime that he confessed to committing? He pled out without admitting guilt.
He had no other choice.
The media, his lawyer, everyone rushed to judgment.
But they never found a body.
And I believe that if I can prove there were other suspects, people that the attorney overlooked, then I believe I can get him an appeal.
Now, after all this time? There's new information.
In prison, someone told Eric that that guy Cameron was talking about a safe in Olivia's studio and how she kept cash and drawings in there.
And Eric has been writing to his lawyer, but don't get me started on her.
So, please do you think maybe you can remember which bar? If I can find out who that bartender is, I think maybe I can find Cameron.
You know the town.
There are a lot of bars.
Could you point it out if you were standing there? (CHUCKLES) I don't know.
Possibly.
Would you know him if you saw him? What are you asking me? No, I can't go back there.
Just for a day or two.
That's all I need.
Please.
You know the area.
You lived on the property.
You know the town, you know the people.
Knew.
Please, just think about it? Here's my number.
I have no one else I can turn to.
You're literally the only person on the planet who could help me.
Please.
I'm sorry.
I can't.
(CAR APPROACHING) (ENGINE TURNS OFF) - Hey, babe.
- How was work, honey? Fine.
LAURA: What's going on? So, this is all just about finding Cameron, really? Yeah.
You I mean, the weird thing is that I was gonna tell the police back then about Cameron, but, you know, I just got caught up in the whole "Eric, Eric" thing with everybody else, and I mean, even when we got here, it just it still kept eating at me, that look on Cameron's face that night.
It was like, you know how crocodiles, they have that lower row of teeth like they're smiling at you, like they know something about you? That was Cameron.
Then Eric confesses and four years go by and Olivia's hand shows up and his sister flies down to Louisiana, and now, fuck.
So, what's the problem? There's a reason we left there, and it wasn't just Olivia.
(SIGHS) To be honest, I don't think I can go back there again.
Why are you looking at me like that? Well, of course you can.
(CHUCKLES) I swore to myself I never would.
Yeah, but you're different now.
Everything's different now.
I know you don't believe in the universe Well, I believe it exists.
(CHUCKLES) But you don't believe it gives you opportunities.
Oh, it really hasn't.
Well, what if the one thing between - How long is it total? - 15 to 20.
Yeah, well, what if the difference between 16 more years of jail and his sudden freedom is you? How come you get to be so perfect? - Because I don't.
- Because you do.
And you are.
I still can't believe we made it here.
Come here.
JOEL: I love you.
LAURA: I love you, too.
JOEL: It's kind of okay, actually.
In my mind, Summit had morphed into this Arkham, Hellboy, Lovecrafty, Salem, Hall of Ghosts thing, and then I get here and it's like, "Oh, right, it's just craft stores and galleries and here's a word I don't use that often it's quaint.
" And she is in a pipe dream.
I don't wanna say I feel sorry for her, but Uh, all right.
Speak to you soon, love.
We're off to go track down a ghost.
Yeah.
Love you, too.
Bye.
- Sorry.
- Got you one anyway.
- Thanks.
- It's okay.
Oh, here.
Also if you need it.
I need to step away for a few minutes.
I have some things I need to take care of.
Uh, wait, seriously? Yeah, I I, uh I gotta follow up on some stuff that I started the other day.
But if you find anything, just text me.
- All right.
- Otherwise, an hour, hour and a half? Yeah, all right.
I'll, uh I'll just go track down the dude that knew Cameron.
Great.
Yeah, should be easy.
- (LAUGHS) All right.
- Okay.
- Hour.
- Oh, and, Joel? - Yeah? - Seriously, thank you.
Yeah, of course.
- All right, I'll see you soon.
- Okay.
(NO AUDIBLE DIALOGUE) (NO AUDIBLE DIALOGUE) MAN: Yeah, shit, I remember that clown.
If you do find him, tell him he still owes me for two months.
Better yet, bring him here.
I'll tell him myself.
Well, he was here with a girl, though, right? Yeah, poor little señorita.
She didn't know what hit her.
Then that guy, pfft, bolts day before Christmas.
(SIGHS) Any idea where she is? Mmm, I wanna say she was gone about a week later.
She's Mexican.
Could be anywhere.
JOEL: She got a name? MAN: Yeah, Leticia.
I can't remember the last name, but I remember Leticia.
Pretty name.
(PHONE CHIMES) Don't blame our town.
I'm told you need suffering to make art.
Yeah, but it's the artist who's supposed to suffer.
- Ah.
- You owe me a dollar.
Yes, I do.
Did he put up a fight? Mmm, a bit, but not.
Hey, how did he seem? How are things with him and Laura? Seemed like he had a good thing going down there, if that's what you mean.
Sweet girl, Laura.
We used to joke that she'd need a neck brace the way that she would look up to him.
(MUSIC PLAYING) (PHONE CHIMES) - Hi.
- Hey.
Two beers, please.
Whatever's your local best.
She'll have a Polygamist Porter and I'll have a Diet Coke, please.
- You guys have Advil? - No.
Sorry.
- Thanks.
- Oh, sure.
And thank you for your message about Cameron's old apartment.
There's a guy checking on the bills and hoping to get something about the old girlfriend - Great.
- and maybe a forwarding address.
- So, well done.
- Great.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
And congratulations to me, too, I guess.
- For? - Being smart enough to bring you here.
You did more in 60 minutes than I did in three days, so thank you.
Aw, thanks.
Just trying to help.
So, I, uh I just have a few questions, (PHONE CHIMES) mostly about the property.
Oh, uh, one sec.
Um Sorry.
Wife has a question about a house thing.
- (CLEARS THROAT) - Sha, na, na, na, na, na, na, na.
Uh, sorry.
We know the murder happened somewhere between 10:15 and 11:45.
Do we know that for sure? Well, Olivia was seen leaving the party at 10:04.
And then a guy overhears her and Eric having an argument at the studio at 10:10.
Then she calls her neighbor up the hill, and then her friend JC at 10:16, the last anyone ever heard from her.
Oh, sidebar you know the people up the hill, O'Connor? Do you know that they own the Red Room? Oh, please, please don't tell me you don't know what the Red Room is.
Is that like a "50 Shades of Grey" thing? (BOTH LAUGHING) It's a private art collection.
Individually, some incredible pieces.
Overall, no unifying aesthetic.
They had a piece from from it on loan at the Denver Art Museum, this obscure French Impressionist, Henri-Edmond Cross.
When I was 12, my mother and I sat in front of it for literally six hours.
Well, if you would've told me they had, like, a Brian Bolland or a Will Eisner or something, then Don't tell me you don't know who the father of the graphic novel is.
My interest in American art ended with Hopper's "Intermedio" in 1963.
Well, Eisner was before, but, you know, whatever.
Anyhow - Her wounds.
- Her wounds.
- Yes, her wounds were - (PHONE CHIMES) they were from a variety of things, but they believe the death blow to be from multiple hammer strikes.
And there was some flesh piece of flesh they found on the wall, a tiny speck, and in it were bug eggs.
- Sorry.
Uh, wife thing.
- (PHONE CHIMES) - Bug eggs.
- Blowflies.
Which puts it no later than 11:45.
So I'm trying to figure out who was where between 10:15 and 11:45 p.
m.
Well, I can't really be of any help on that because I was at a 10:20 movie that was at Eastridge.
So I left the property about 9:45 or 9:46, which I weirdly remember.
Wow, a movie New Year's Eve.
- (CLEARS THROAT) - Crazy.
I know, right? And trust me, I, uh I wasn't one to avoid a party.
It's just the truth is me and my then girlfriend, now wife, - had had a little fight.
- (PHONE CHIMES) You weren't texting her enough? (CHUCKLES) Sorry.
Let me turn this thing off.
- Uh, yeah, so.
- (PHONE CHIMES) So, yeah, you said that, you, uh, once saw Cameron on the property out by the studio? It was actually by the, uh, story trail, actually.
Could you show me exactly? Sure.
Look, it's simple.
All you do is find a way to get him alone.
Then you casually bring it up and let him do the rest.
FRANK: Should I wear a wire? Wha no.
Why? - Wha are you joking? - Well, I don't know.
- Whenever this happens on "The Wire" - "The Wire.
" It's called "The Wire," so, yes, of course they have wires.
But this is Summit, man.
We don't have wires.
We just have one guy says something and another guy tells a third guy.
Okay.
Hey! All you need to do is this.
If he asks you to stick to the story or to continue the lie in any way, you just tell me.
Frank, what's the matter? We didn't even know about the murder when we agreed to this.
Ah.
Dude, you're not in trouble.
Okay.
You swear to God? - Yes.
- Is Joel? I don't know.
Maybe not.
Hopefully not.
Hey, hopefully not.
Enough to get this girl to bring him back up here.
- (SCOFFS) - Doesn't mean that he's in trouble.
He's just he's (SIGHS) he's of interest.
How the fuck did she get him to come back anyway? (PHONE CHIMES) Oh, you gotta be freaking kidding me! She brought him to the site.
I gotta go.
Hold on.
What do I do? What do you mean? Stay, eat.
- But no acting, all right? - (SIGHS) Don't act, just just be normal, man, all right? JOEL: So, her one big book well, I'm sure you read it.
Everyone's read it.
- (CHUCKLES) - Mm-mm.
No? "Whose Woods These Are.
" You read it one way, it's the story of this poor hunter who tries to protect his family from this evil monster bear.
You turn it over and read it the other way, it's the story of this poor bear who tries to rescue his mom from the trap of this evil monster hunter.
- Hmm.
- Not a bad idea, right.
- Pick a direction.
- Wherever Cameron was.
Well, it's a circle.
They both end up at the same place.
Good choice.
So anyway, she'd lead these "story walks," she'd called them Cub Scouts, field trips, Girl Scouts.
- It was like she'd never tire - (PHONE CHIMES) of telling her one story.
- PETRA: Well, that's sweet.
- Well, I guess.
Or she just couldn't move on, maybe.
Anyways, at night when I'd just need to clear my head, I'd come out here and I'd walk the property.
So, on that night, I'm walking along, and all of a sudden boom he and this other guy, like I just caught them at something, right here.
Then they just disappeared off into the dark.
And so you Went to the main house, which is right over here, and I told your brother.
Where'd you live? In the barn.
(LAUGHS) I was there with all the other strays.
She was always picking up strays cats, dogs, people.
You lived in a barn? (CHUCKLING) Well, I grew up on a farm.
She had horses.
Seemed like a good idea.
And then the reality was I was just a guy living in a barn.
Not the idea you had when you first got here, I assume.
It's a long story.
You ever meet her? Once, at Thanksgiving.
Not so fun? (LAUGHS) It was an attempt.
ERIC: But I can tell there is no chance this Dennis Klein guy is legit.
One thing we know is what a scam artist looks like.
Am I right? So, I'm like OLIVIA: He says, "If I'm not absolutely right, you have to buy me a drink.
" ERIC: And whammo, to a tee.
(PIANO MUSIC PLAYING) OLIVIA: So, then he starts telling me why he's here.
Why was Eric here? Wanted to change his life, didn't want to be the Grim Reaper Actually, hon, I feel like I'm monopolizing this whole thing.
Petra, what do you do? - ERIC: She is - PETRA: I do many things.
- major into the art world.
- Peripherally.
She restores art, she teaches, she writes books.
- (CLEARS THROAT) - OLIVIA: About? She got 600 pages into one about the Italian Divisionists see, I read your e-mails and then she's like, "Wait a minute, maybe those critics back at the" - whatever they're called - Salons.
"The ones who trashed the Divisionists back in the day, maybe they were right.
" And she throws her book away and starts again.
OLIVIA: Well, they were right, right? I mean, when was that? Like, 1894? - PETRA: '96.
- '96.
Well, they were spot-on.
Well, my beef was the overt social overtones OLIVIA: Oh, I get your beef.
I'm totally with you.
I get it.
I mean, the powerful are corrupt.
Art is needed by the disinherited.
I mean, if I want a message, send me a fucking telegram.
Yeah, Olivia, 1943 just called.
They'd like their once topical "send me a telegram" reference back.
- (GUESTS CHUCKLING) - OLIVIA: Hello, JC.
Hello, 2007 called, and they want their fill-in-the-blank call joke back.
(LAUGHTER) OLIVIA: It's all overrated the neos, the pointillists.
Really? You don't think understanding the science of how the eye perceives light is Has nothing to do with art.
I mean, come on.
Yeah, can we measure human emotions through the chemical, the synaptical, the sciency-wiency whatever events? Sure.
But at the core of it, end of day, you have to feel it.
You can't think art (EXHALES) teach art, write about it.
JC: Um, didn't we just establish she thinks, teaches, and writes about art? (LAUGHTER) OLIVIA: The most beautiful piece of art I've ever seen was drawn by an 11-year-old girl in 15 minutes.
It it's no technique.
But it was raw, it was pure.
(CHUCKLES) Of course, it was about me, so, maybe I'm exaggerating a little bit.
Just eat your pie.
Sorry.

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