Brothers & Sisters s01e16 Episode Script
The Other Walker
Previously on Brothers and Sisters: You're gonna buy my interest in Ojai Foods.
Holly and I are going to take the proceeds from the sale of the stock and buy Greendale Winery.
Sex will replace my drug addiction with After rehab you're sworn to celibacy? Yeah.
Kind of.
I gotta go.
You're looking for something.
I'm not enough! Am I enough for you? Are you running for president? Yes I am, Ms.
Walker.
Dad, he had another kid.
With Holly.
- Does Mom know about this? - No! And Kevin, she never will.
- You told your sister about us? - That we're friends.
- It's fine.
Don't worry.
- We got to be careful.
Prodigal daughter returns.
Thought it'd be a nice surprise.
Oh, my God.
Hey.
Do you know what this editorial is about? That one reason Whitmore's candidacy is a stretch is because his daughter's too fat to be first daughter.
She's 13.
You're right.
That's awful.
I mean, my children are going through a divorce.
They need time.
They don't need to be judged by the national media or anyone.
And not to mention Oh, no.
No, no.
No way.
I'm not gonna be a factor in that decision.
You know that there's no way for us to have a normal relationship.
- You can forget about it, right? - OK.
There is a personal cost when you run for president.
But as far as we're concerned, there's no reason why you and I can't be a normal couple.
How? Well, uh, for starters, we could try and sleep in a little bit.
- Is that what normal couples do? - Mm-hmm.
What about this? Yeah.
Yeah, that's normal.
- That cannot be good thing.
- No, no.
It's gearing up.
- Just give it a few minutes.
- Wow, Holly.
It sounds like it's in its final death throes.
No, no.
That's impossible.
It's brand new.
No.
My condolences.
Maybe we better read the manual.
- OK.
- How's your Italian? L.
A.
Sucks.
I spent one hour on the 110 and I missed breakfast with Caitlin.
Sorry, I didn't realize you had a guest.
No, it's fine.
Saul, this is my daughter Rebecca.
- Saul and I work together at Ojai.
- Oh.
Yeah, it's so nice to meet you, Rebecca.
Your mother never said that you were so lovely.
I guess Mom doesn't talk about me much, because I doubt she'd use the word "lovely".
Becca, that was a compliment.
Say thank you.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome.
- Is there any cereal left? - Uh, yeah.
Try the top shelf.
Well, I didn't realize it was getting to be so late.
It's very nice to meet you, Rebecca.
- Bye.
- Bye.
We'll talk more at the office.
Sorry about interrupting the mid-morning booty call.
Maybe you should put a sock on the door.
Saul was just helping me with the coffee machine.
Is that what the senior set is calling it these days? Yes, we are seeing each other, if that's what you mean.
At least that embarrassing little run-in clarified some things.
The sudden windfall, the winery, the Maserati, the expensive housewares.
No.
Saul has nothing to do with any of that.
- Right.
- Rebecca, I told you the truth.
A close friend died and left me some money.
This is a good thing, Becca.
I mean, you can go back to college if you want.
You can take classes.
Writing, photography.
You can travel if you want.
The point is, we have options.
Why can't you be happy? I would be happier if we had coffee.
OK.
No.
We swore for the sake of our sisterhood that we would never, ever ask each other to double date again.
Oh, come on, Sarah.
We were 19 years old.
That is ancient history and besides, I already told Robert that you would come.
It's "Robert" now.
I have seen the birthmark on his butt, so we're on a first name basis.
Would you just come on? Lt'll be fun.
One thing Joe and I are not at the moment is fun.
I'd say we're downright gloomy.
Well, shake it up.
Get out.
Yeah, right.
Um Intensive couples counseling didn't work, but a good dinner out, that'll fix everything.
I know you and Joe have been having a hard time.
If I honestly believed staying home was going to help, - I'd drop it.
- There's a problem.
OK, listen.
Fine.
But if it's a complete disaster, don't say I didn't tell you.
What's the problem? - It's your sister.
- I just got off the phone with her.
Not Kitty.
- What do you mean you knew? - I ran into her at Holly's house.
You didn't think it was worth mentioning? - I didn't think you wanted to hear it.
- You were right.
- Well, what was she like? - I don't know.
She She seemed fine.
How long is she staying? If this is just a visit, drop it.
It's not just a visit.
She dropped out of college and was living with a friend.
When that didn't work out, she moved back home.
Indefinitely.
Sounds like Holly raised a real winner.
Despite your opinion of Holly or Rebecca, the question remains, what are we going to do? Nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
Not with everything that's been going on here.
- What's that supposed to mean? - What I mean, Tommy, is do you think this business with Holly can go on if Mom finds out about Rebecca? This is exactly why I didn't want to say anything.
Holly is working here.
What if Nora runs into Rebecca? What if your mother asks questions? I say we tell her.
I can't believe I'm hearing this from you, Saul.
Mom finding out now will destroy her.
You're in a relationship with Holly.
How long can that last if this whole thing blows up? We all have things at stake, Sarah.
If it's out in the open we have a chance to diffuse it.
Saul, Rebecca's lived in this city most of her life.
It hasn't affected any of us.
Justin and Kitty don't know she exists.
That's another thing.
Justin's out of rehab.
Are we going to throw this at him? Right.
If your mother found out we were keeping this from her - We've been keeping it from her.
- Before Rebecca moved back home.
Our chances of keeping this a secret from her are Nobody will find out if we don't tell them.
Holly's lied to Rebecca her whole life.
I don't think she's going to risk telling her now.
Come on.
Haven't we learned anything this year? - Tommy, you're with us, right? - Yeah.
Good.
Apparently you've all made up your minds.
It's settled then.
He had this one lone hair.
Like this Fu Manchu thing.
And he had this little fuzz on his upper lip.
He was so proud of it.
You're kidding.
And he called it a mustache? - No.
Yeah.
- It was a mustache.
It was a mustache.
Mom, is there anything else? How about my acne or that piano tie I wore to the senior prom? Oh, my God.
You were the guy in the piano tie.
I can't believe this is happening.
Mom, you're killing me.
Don't be ridiculous.
I'm going to make you a bagel.
If it'll stop the humiliating trip down memory lane, please.
I thought we were being discreet.
You're not dressed.
I'm not naked.
What are you two whispering about down there? I was just offering Tyler a ride to work today.
Justin, come on now.
You don't need to feel uncomfortable.
Tyler is welcome to stay over anytime she likes.
You two are old enough to do what you want.
Just stay safe.
- We are.
- All right.
Here you go.
- Thank you.
- Eat up.
I'm going.
I'm going to get ready for my day.
- Bye.
- Bye.
You must've really won her over.
She does not dig up those stories for just anyone.
You can get even tonight.
My parents will be happy to fill you in on all the gory details of my adolescence.
Meeting their daughter's recovering-addict boyfriend.
Senior prom doesn't strike me as the dinner topic of choice.
They're not like that.
They're going to love you.
I hope so.
- Check out this Web site.
- "The Skinny Minnie.
" - Do people really read this? - Yeah.
Everything you've always wanted and not wanted to know about your celebrities.
Scroll down past the photo of Britney without underwear.
It's you.
And me! "Soap hunk shops for furniture in WeHo with a friend.
" - Wow.
I'm a friend? - You're a friend in italics.
"If that didn't sound the alarm check out the less-than-hetero lamp.
" I told you that lamp was gay.
And ugly.
- It gets worse.
- "It could just be wishful thinking, but we're getting a serious gay vibe from the daytime doctor.
" I've spent the morning fielding calls from my agent, my manager, my mom.
Your mom checks Skinny Minnie? She Googles my name once a week.
And that's not the point.
We need to lay low.
What? Chad we barely go out in daylight as it is.
Come on! I'm starting to feel like a vampire.
- Besides, we didn't do anything wrong.
- I know.
But Kev, I'm in this guy's sights.
There are better options than laying low, believe me.
We can call Dan Silk.
Threaten him.
No offense, but I don't think you could take him.
Pummeling this guy wouldn't do much for my public image.
I mean we could threaten him with legal action.
- It's true.
- I'm a lawyer, truth is irrelevant.
I do this all the time.
I need to make it clear, if he doesn't print a retraction, he'll face a very lengthy lawsuit.
I'll bury him in discovery and depositions.
It's Lawyering 101.
I've never seen you so litigious.
- Right.
- It's kind of hot.
- But no way can you call him.
- Why not? He's not a major corporation.
He's one guy.
He's one loser.
He'll cave.
They all do.
Believe me.
No.
We just need to let it blow over.
These stories don't have a long shelf life.
If we don't give him more ammunition, this Silk will move on to somebody else.
- Then - Then what? Daylight again? - Definitely.
- Good.
And I could totally take that guy.
You just worry too much, Nora.
You always have.
I know Sarah and Joe are going through a rough time.
Are you sure that's all? I really think Tommy's decision to buy this winery with Holly is bothering her more than she's letting on.
Tommy and Sarah have a very strong bond.
William never would've brought Sarah to Ojai Foods if he thought she and Tommy couldn't survive sibling rivalry.
You're right.
You're right.
I mean, look at us.
- What do you mean? - Our family wasn't exactly a picnic, yet here we are, after all these years, still speaking to one another.
- You want a green bean? - Thank you.
- It's a small miracle, isn't it? - Yes, it is.
I don't know.
I think maybe I was wrong about her.
- About who? - Holly.
- What do you mean? - You're seeing her.
Tommy is starting a company with her.
As much as I hate to admit it, maybe William was a good judge of character.
Well, your instincts are admirable, but you don't have to put aside your feelings for the sake of any of us.
I'm not saying I want to be the woman's best friend.
I'm just saying I have been so busy blaming her, I don't think I've ever really seen her for who she is.
OK.
So, what are you proposing? The truth of the matter is Holly is a part of our family now.
I think I should embrace that, if only to set an example.
I mean, we all have to put the past behind us where it belongs and move on.
- You think I'm crazy? - No, Nora.
I don't think you're crazy.
Good.
Because if there's one person I count on to be my reality check, it's you.
Saul? What? It's the past.
It's not behind us.
You have to tell me what.
Tell me.
William and Holly had a daughter.
- What? - Her name is Rebecca.
She's 20 years old.
She's here in L.
A.
I'm so sorry, Nora.
I'm so sorry.
- No one wanted to upset you.
- No one? Who else knows? Who else knows? Sarah and Tommy and Kevin.
- But understand - Justin and Kitty? - They don't know.
- Oh, God.
I didn't want this to be like the affair.
I didn't want it to fester under the surface, haunting us.
Come on.
- Oh, my God.
- What? Where are you going? - What are you doing? - To find Kitty and Justin.
- Wait.
Please.
- No.
There will be no more lies, Saul.
No more.
I won't stand for it.
Nora, wait.
Are you sure? How do we know Holly's telling the truth? As much as I'd like to, I don't think we can ignore the obvious.
So, what are we supposed to say? "Wow, we have a sister now"? Justin, you don't have to say or do anything you don't want to.
This is just going to take time for us all.
So what? Dad made Holly a beneficiary of the land because of Rebecca? I don't know.
But I suspect that's part of it.
- Did he know that he was her father? - I don't know what he knew.
This is crazy.
You're saying Dad hid one of his kids from us for years and then gave Holly the land, so his affair is thrown in our face because of some girl named Rebecca? I wish I could tell you what he was thinking.
- It's a shock for me too.
- I don't know why.
- He lied about having a mistress.
- That's not fair.
Why should I be so shocked that he lied to us too? This whole family revolves around lying.
- Justin, please! - Grandma! Aunt Kitty! - Hi.
- Hi, Grandma.
- Hi.
Hi.
- Hey, guys.
Hey, sweetie boy.
Hi, guys.
- This is wonderful.
- Joe.
- Hey, Nora.
- Hi.
- Hey, Kitty.
- I can hardly pick you up.
Please help me understand how you could discover your father has another child and not tell me? - We were trying to spare you the pain.
- How? By keeping me in the dark? God.
You should've seen Justin's reaction.
- Saul shouldn't have said anything.
- No! You do not get to blame Saul! He had enough faith in me, enough respect for me to be honest, which is more than I can say for you or Tommy or Kevin.
Were you never going to tell me? You've had so much to cope with.
It just didn't seem to be the right time.
I can just see Tommy spearheading this whole brilliant idea.
- He's so like his father.
- No, it was my idea.
- It was your idea? - Yeah.
I was the one who thought that we should keep this information from you.
Your father made you president of our family business, Sarah.
Not our family.
You taught me to put family first.
I was trying to.
No, it is not.
You were trying to do what was easy for you.
You think it's been easy keeping this a secret? No one asked you to! There is no justification for this.
- Oh, God.
What? - Hey.
You ready for dinner? - May I speak to Dan Silk? - Talking to him.
If you're going to make a living tarnishing people's reputations, you may want an unlisted number.
Thanks for the tip.
- Do I know you? - No, you do not.
You did print my picture without permission on your libelous Web site.
I'm the friend of Chad Berry.
- Oh, you're that dude.
- Yeah, I'm that dude.
I'm just looking for the dish on Berry.
If you want to spill, I could No, no.
You misunderstand.
I'm an attorney.
And I demand that you cease and desist publishing uncorroborated information about his personal life.
Hey, man, what can I say? Inquiring minds want to know.
He's contemplating filing a complaint.
The cause of action: Invasion of privacy, libel, unfair business practices, infliction of emotional distress.
- Should I go on? - But you're not denying Berry's gay? Listen to me, son, and I'll say this in a way that you understand.
If you don't stop targeting my client, I will bury you so deep in litigation, it will be your great-great-grandchildren paying off the legal bills.
Do I make myself clear? Yeah, I get it.
You made your point.
Good.
Then thank you so much for your time.
Hey, Mom.
What's wrong? Kevin, what are you doing? Please, please, tell me exactly what you were thinking, because I'm quite sure we all agreed we would not say a thing! - You agreed, Saul! - Kevin.
I didn't want it to happen the way it did.
I'm sorry.
Do you even get what you've done? Mom is furious.
Kitty and Justin are reeling.
I mean, Sarah is mortified.
As am I.
As is Tommy.
Did you stop and think for a split second how bad this makes us look? I wasn't thinking about you.
- You weren't thinking of anyone! - I was thinking about your mother.
You had absolutely no right to do this without consulting us.
I have every right.
She's my sister.
You wouldn't do the same thing if it were Kitty or Sarah? I wouldn't single-handedly sell out the rest of my family, no.
You weren't there, Kevin.
She was sitting in front of me, opening up her heart to Holly.
Berating herself for misjudging her.
She expected me to tell her that she was doing the right thing.
And I will be damned if I will let her make herself vulnerable in that way, only to have her world come crashing down again.
You better hope this family finds a way to repair itself.
Because if this does any lasting damage, I'm holding you responsible.
I learned something interesting today.
You know the San Francisco cable cars are the only moving national monument? Didn't know that.
I've told you every time I sleep with somebody I work with.
- You can't tell me we have a sister? - Half-sister.
For the 400th time, Kitty, I am sorry.
- I don't know what else to say.
- I thought you were gonna table this.
- Yeah, so did I! - We are.
What's happening in D.
C? I'm working on legislation that would dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
It will be like taking 100 million cars right off the street.
- It'd be groundbreaking.
- Impressive.
- The other - For the record? I don't see why I should be the one to take the fall for this.
- I wasn't the only one that knew.
- You're bearing the brunt because you're here.
Believe me, I wish that Tommy and Kevin were here too.
- Is it always like this? - You dreamed of having a baby sister.
Sarah, you know what? I was six, OK? That wish didn't include Dad cheating on Mom.
I didn't know what to do, Kitty.
So I thought the best thing to do was nothing.
So shoot me.
Oh.
Do you like cigars? I got some good ones and we could That would be great.
You didn't know what to do so you did nothing.
I would've told you, Sarah! Justin, where are you? You were supposed to be here an hour ago.
- I can't make it.
I'm sorry.
- What? My mom's been cooking all day.
I'm sorry, OK? It's something with my family.
I can't talk about it now.
Look, I got to go.
I'll call you tomorrow.
- Hey.
- Glad you called, man.
- It's been a while.
- Thanks for coming.
It's bad enough my dad was in love with another woman.
Like my mom wasn't enough.
- But another kid? - I guess you weren't enough? I almost died and yet there I am back in the same place.
- Ready to do it all again.
- But you didn't.
You didn't use.
And that's good, man.
- Yeah, but I came close, bro.
- Of course you did.
This whole thing is textbook you.
Look, I know you, Justin.
You didn't become a medic for nothing.
You can't stand to see people in pain.
And right now you and your family are suffering.
There's nothing you can do to make that go away.
If it gets overwhelming, you know the drill.
Find a meeting, work the steps.
I don't get it.
How could he lie to us about his own daughter, knowing what it would do to us when we found out? And her.
Rebecca, right? You know, I didn't even think about her.
God, what if? I wonder if she even knows.
Not exactly a normal couple night out, huh? It was surprisingly normal considering how blindsided you were.
You want something to drink? Yes, please.
I think I have to just sit.
And not move.
If I do, who knows what else is going to come along and rip my life apart.
- You're right.
- Thank you.
Let's not move.
It's too big a risk.
I just don't know what I'm supposed to do.
Why do anything? Well, eventually I'm going to have to get up.
The thing is, everybody keeps telling me that I have this sister.
I don't know what the hell that means.
I mean, when I think of Sarah, I don't think of her DNA.
I think about how we grew up together in the same house with the same weird family.
And how we, you know, shared our diaries and our shampoos.
But am I supposed to have those same feelings - for a woman that I never even met? - I don't think anybody expects that.
Well, and then there's my dad.
I've been grieving for a father that I don't even know.
And I was just starting to get all happy.
I wouldn't let this destroy that.
You hold on to what's good.
To what makes you happy.
You make me happy.
- I do? - Yeah.
Would it be OK with you if we still just sit here for a while? As long as you want.
The kids wake you up? No.
I just couldn't sleep.
You want to talk? No.
It's all right, Joe.
You don't have to stay up.
You'll get through this.
Everyone's so mad at me.
Mom, Kitty, Uncle Saul.
I don't have you.
You know? I'm right here.
- Justin.
- Hey, Mom.
Justin.
- I'm fine.
- Are you all right? I'm fine.
I'm just exhausted.
- OK.
- Hey.
I told Tyler it would be all right if she waited here.
I'll give you guys privacy.
I'll be upstairs if you need me.
- All right.
I love you.
I'm OK.
- I love you too.
I'm OK.
OK.
Your mom told me what happened.
I'm sorry.
- Sorry about missing dinner.
- It's OK.
I was just worried.
The last time you sounded like that I was with my sponsor.
Oh.
- That's good.
- Look, I get it if you're angry at me.
I'm not angry.
I just don't know if I can handle it.
That's why they tell you not to date anyone your first year you're clean.
I never understood that before tonight because I couldn't deal with anyone or anything but me.
That's how it should be.
Look, you weren't wrong to worry, OK? I just don't think I'm ready for a relationship, Tyler.
I know.
I just want you to be OK.
More than anything I want for us, I want that for you.
Come here.
It's OK.
Have you talked to Mom? I keep trying to reach her, but she's not picking up, at least not for me.
Yeah, not for me either.
Let me be the one to kick Holly out of our lives once and for all.
Sarah, Holly's not going anywhere.
Nor do I want her to.
I hope you don't think what happened last night changes anything.
It changes everything.
You can't still be planning to go into business with that woman.
- I am.
- She won't be satisfied until she has destroyed everything we've created here.
Don't be fooled, Tommy.
This whole nightmare is because of her.
Sarah, there is enough blame to go around.
- Is that a dig at me? - We lied.
Dad lied.
In fact, right now, Holly's probably the most honest one of us all.
You can't be that naive.
I already told you! I didn't start this winery for you or Mom.
All right? I did this for me.
Building something for myself.
That was before the horror show landed on my lap! Look, it landed in our laps.
You want to control everything.
God, you just thrive off of control.
- But this is out of your hands.
- Spare me, Tommy, OK? I already pay for therapy, I really don't need your amateur psychoanalysis.
Just let it go.
OK.
Well, clearly I'm the only one who still gives a damn about Ojai, so you'll understand that I have work to do.
Excuse me.
I'm looking for Holly Harper.
She's not in her office.
I don't know where she - Do I know you? - No, I don't think so.
I'm her daughter, Rebecca.
Right.
I thought you'd look more like your mom.
- I'm Sarah Walker.
- It's nice to meet you.
You too.
So Holly? Oh, um - I have no idea where she is.
- OK.
Thanks.
Sorry.
Rebecca.
Um Do you have a minute? Could I talk to you? Yeah, sure.
Hey, Becca.
Where you been? I stopped by Ojai today.
I wanted to check out your new digs.
- You did? - Yeah.
I got the address from some papers you had lying around.
Thought I'd surprise you.
Well, I'm sorry that I missed you.
I was out meeting with a distributor and I didn't want to drive all the way back to the office.
So, um, would you like me to make lunch for both of us? No.
I don't really have an appetite right now.
I met some people there.
At Ojai.
Like Sarah.
Mom, do you remember that Christmas, when I was eight and I had my tonsils taken out? And then after the surgery, your friend Bill came by to visit.
And he gave me that doll with the long red hair.
Did Bill really think that a doll could make up for abandoning me? What was it, a "sorry for being a deadbeat dad" gift? No.
Please.
Let me explain.
There's an explanation for why you lied to me for 20 years? You said that Bill was your friend and left out the part about him being your boyfriend for two decades and my father! Honey.
Oh, God.
It is complicated.
It seems pretty simple to me, Mom.
You were willing to be sloppy seconds for some rich jerk with a wife and kids.
My dad didn't want to fess up to a bastard child with his mistress because he didn't want to risk his Norman Rockwell life.
No.
I know that you're angry, but you need to hear me through.
Why? It's too late to do anything about it.
He's dead! - Yes, but but you - How much of it is mine? What? The money that William Walker left you.
How much of it is mine? I put two million dollars in a trust in your name.
And it will be yours when you're 25.
Well, I guess that's better than some stupid doll.
- Hey.
- Dude, I am so screwed.
I'm so glad it's you and not my mom.
Or my brothers.
Or my sister.
Or indeed my half-sister.
Could my life get any more complicated? - What's up? - Did you even hear what I said? A countdown clock.
Dan Silk is counting out the days until I come out on his frigging website.
"Chad Berry.
Come out, come out, wherever you are.
" That son of a bitch.
What I can't figure out is why is this guy gunning for me? Oh, no.
You called him.
Yes.
Yes, I did.
I thought I could convince him to leave you alone.
You think you're the first lawyer to try and scare this asswipe? He makes his living from screwing with people's lives.
You just egged him on! You promised you wouldn't do anything.
I come from a line of people who are incapable of leaving well enough alone.
If you had any respect for how important my career is to me, you would have listened and not gone behind my back.
You're right.
You're absolutely right.
I'm sorry.
I am sorry.
So where do we go from here? I'll tell you where we won't go.
Out to the movies, out to dinner, shopping, hiking, the gym.
I'm all for cutting out the gym.
No, the shipment was for 1,400.
Not 14.
Look, just deal with it, OK? Do you have any idea what you have done to my life and to Rebecca's? - What I've done? Are you serious? - My God! As a mother, how could you be that cruel? My daughter is crushed.
Her whole identity, everything that we had, our relationship has been decimated.
And all for what? Out of spite? So that you could get even with me? But I just told her the truth.
I was planning on telling her everything on my timetable.
In my way.
- It was not your place.
- My place? Oh, you are unbelievable.
It wasn't your place to have an affair with a married man.
It wasn't your place to have my father's child.
It certainly wasn't your place to come crawling out of the woodwork and demand a piece of our family business! But none of that stopped you, did it? You've done nothing but cause my family pain.
So if your perfect little world has come crashing down around you because the truth has come out, you know what? Join the damn club! I let you treat me like dirt because I love and respected your father.
But I am done treating you with any measure of civility.
- Is that a threat? - You bet your ass it's a threat.
And you? I trusted you.
I had to do what was best for my family.
- Don't you ever call me again.
- I'm sorry you feel that way.
Not sorry enough.
What are you reading? Seeing with Serenity: How to Cope With What Life Deals You.
I took a trip to the self-help section at the bookstore.
So far, it's just pages and pages of vague platitudes.
Mom, you've been avoiding my calls.
I didn't know what I wanted to say.
I wish I could turn back the clock and make a different decision.
- But I can't.
- I know.
You seem angrier at me than Kevin or Tommy.
Am I wrong? Probably not.
You hold me to a different standard than anyone else.
That's not fair.
Yes.
You're right, it's not fair.
I just always felt this connection with you.
You raise a boy and you don't expect them to tell you anything.
You're lucky if they acknowledge you on their way out the door.
But you always confided in me.
I felt like you trusted me to handle whatever came along.
I never had that relationship with my mother.
I always thought I had it with you.
Mom, we do have that relationship.
The last thing in the world I wanted to do was hurt you.
I know.
But that doesn't mean you didn't.
Justin.
I get the feeling you're not here to see me.
No, I'm not.
Is Rebecca here? Rebecca, this is Justin.
Justin Walker.
So you're one of them? - His family? - Yeah.
- I got it, Mom.
- OK.
If you're expecting tears from me, you can forget it.
I'm not expecting anything.
I just wanted to meet you.
Well, I'm here.
I'm real.
You can even touch me.
- Uh you want to walk? - OK.
It's so bizarre.
We live, like, 15 minutes away.
In L.
A.
, that's practically like being neighbors.
- Where did you go to school? - I started at La Salle.
Swanky.
I got kicked out junior year and I finished up at San Marino.
- What about you? - Marshall.
I think we played you in football.
- I didn't play football.
- Oh, that's good.
I hate it.
Marshall Did you know a Carter Espen? Oh, God.
Totally.
- He used to date this girl, Rebecca.
- Yep, that was me.
OK, I'm officially freaked out now.
I mean, what if we had met and? What if we? Oh, the Greek tragedy of it all.
So, what do you do? Presently, not much.
I'm a vet.
I was in Afghanistan.
Wow.
Afghanistan.
- That must've been intense.
- Yeah, it was.
So you and Carter? I can't believe that.
We really didn't know each other well at all.
Holly and I are going to take the proceeds from the sale of the stock and buy Greendale Winery.
Sex will replace my drug addiction with After rehab you're sworn to celibacy? Yeah.
Kind of.
I gotta go.
You're looking for something.
I'm not enough! Am I enough for you? Are you running for president? Yes I am, Ms.
Walker.
Dad, he had another kid.
With Holly.
- Does Mom know about this? - No! And Kevin, she never will.
- You told your sister about us? - That we're friends.
- It's fine.
Don't worry.
- We got to be careful.
Prodigal daughter returns.
Thought it'd be a nice surprise.
Oh, my God.
Hey.
Do you know what this editorial is about? That one reason Whitmore's candidacy is a stretch is because his daughter's too fat to be first daughter.
She's 13.
You're right.
That's awful.
I mean, my children are going through a divorce.
They need time.
They don't need to be judged by the national media or anyone.
And not to mention Oh, no.
No, no.
No way.
I'm not gonna be a factor in that decision.
You know that there's no way for us to have a normal relationship.
- You can forget about it, right? - OK.
There is a personal cost when you run for president.
But as far as we're concerned, there's no reason why you and I can't be a normal couple.
How? Well, uh, for starters, we could try and sleep in a little bit.
- Is that what normal couples do? - Mm-hmm.
What about this? Yeah.
Yeah, that's normal.
- That cannot be good thing.
- No, no.
It's gearing up.
- Just give it a few minutes.
- Wow, Holly.
It sounds like it's in its final death throes.
No, no.
That's impossible.
It's brand new.
No.
My condolences.
Maybe we better read the manual.
- OK.
- How's your Italian? L.
A.
Sucks.
I spent one hour on the 110 and I missed breakfast with Caitlin.
Sorry, I didn't realize you had a guest.
No, it's fine.
Saul, this is my daughter Rebecca.
- Saul and I work together at Ojai.
- Oh.
Yeah, it's so nice to meet you, Rebecca.
Your mother never said that you were so lovely.
I guess Mom doesn't talk about me much, because I doubt she'd use the word "lovely".
Becca, that was a compliment.
Say thank you.
- Thank you.
- You're welcome.
- Is there any cereal left? - Uh, yeah.
Try the top shelf.
Well, I didn't realize it was getting to be so late.
It's very nice to meet you, Rebecca.
- Bye.
- Bye.
We'll talk more at the office.
Sorry about interrupting the mid-morning booty call.
Maybe you should put a sock on the door.
Saul was just helping me with the coffee machine.
Is that what the senior set is calling it these days? Yes, we are seeing each other, if that's what you mean.
At least that embarrassing little run-in clarified some things.
The sudden windfall, the winery, the Maserati, the expensive housewares.
No.
Saul has nothing to do with any of that.
- Right.
- Rebecca, I told you the truth.
A close friend died and left me some money.
This is a good thing, Becca.
I mean, you can go back to college if you want.
You can take classes.
Writing, photography.
You can travel if you want.
The point is, we have options.
Why can't you be happy? I would be happier if we had coffee.
OK.
No.
We swore for the sake of our sisterhood that we would never, ever ask each other to double date again.
Oh, come on, Sarah.
We were 19 years old.
That is ancient history and besides, I already told Robert that you would come.
It's "Robert" now.
I have seen the birthmark on his butt, so we're on a first name basis.
Would you just come on? Lt'll be fun.
One thing Joe and I are not at the moment is fun.
I'd say we're downright gloomy.
Well, shake it up.
Get out.
Yeah, right.
Um Intensive couples counseling didn't work, but a good dinner out, that'll fix everything.
I know you and Joe have been having a hard time.
If I honestly believed staying home was going to help, - I'd drop it.
- There's a problem.
OK, listen.
Fine.
But if it's a complete disaster, don't say I didn't tell you.
What's the problem? - It's your sister.
- I just got off the phone with her.
Not Kitty.
- What do you mean you knew? - I ran into her at Holly's house.
You didn't think it was worth mentioning? - I didn't think you wanted to hear it.
- You were right.
- Well, what was she like? - I don't know.
She She seemed fine.
How long is she staying? If this is just a visit, drop it.
It's not just a visit.
She dropped out of college and was living with a friend.
When that didn't work out, she moved back home.
Indefinitely.
Sounds like Holly raised a real winner.
Despite your opinion of Holly or Rebecca, the question remains, what are we going to do? Nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
Not with everything that's been going on here.
- What's that supposed to mean? - What I mean, Tommy, is do you think this business with Holly can go on if Mom finds out about Rebecca? This is exactly why I didn't want to say anything.
Holly is working here.
What if Nora runs into Rebecca? What if your mother asks questions? I say we tell her.
I can't believe I'm hearing this from you, Saul.
Mom finding out now will destroy her.
You're in a relationship with Holly.
How long can that last if this whole thing blows up? We all have things at stake, Sarah.
If it's out in the open we have a chance to diffuse it.
Saul, Rebecca's lived in this city most of her life.
It hasn't affected any of us.
Justin and Kitty don't know she exists.
That's another thing.
Justin's out of rehab.
Are we going to throw this at him? Right.
If your mother found out we were keeping this from her - We've been keeping it from her.
- Before Rebecca moved back home.
Our chances of keeping this a secret from her are Nobody will find out if we don't tell them.
Holly's lied to Rebecca her whole life.
I don't think she's going to risk telling her now.
Come on.
Haven't we learned anything this year? - Tommy, you're with us, right? - Yeah.
Good.
Apparently you've all made up your minds.
It's settled then.
He had this one lone hair.
Like this Fu Manchu thing.
And he had this little fuzz on his upper lip.
He was so proud of it.
You're kidding.
And he called it a mustache? - No.
Yeah.
- It was a mustache.
It was a mustache.
Mom, is there anything else? How about my acne or that piano tie I wore to the senior prom? Oh, my God.
You were the guy in the piano tie.
I can't believe this is happening.
Mom, you're killing me.
Don't be ridiculous.
I'm going to make you a bagel.
If it'll stop the humiliating trip down memory lane, please.
I thought we were being discreet.
You're not dressed.
I'm not naked.
What are you two whispering about down there? I was just offering Tyler a ride to work today.
Justin, come on now.
You don't need to feel uncomfortable.
Tyler is welcome to stay over anytime she likes.
You two are old enough to do what you want.
Just stay safe.
- We are.
- All right.
Here you go.
- Thank you.
- Eat up.
I'm going.
I'm going to get ready for my day.
- Bye.
- Bye.
You must've really won her over.
She does not dig up those stories for just anyone.
You can get even tonight.
My parents will be happy to fill you in on all the gory details of my adolescence.
Meeting their daughter's recovering-addict boyfriend.
Senior prom doesn't strike me as the dinner topic of choice.
They're not like that.
They're going to love you.
I hope so.
- Check out this Web site.
- "The Skinny Minnie.
" - Do people really read this? - Yeah.
Everything you've always wanted and not wanted to know about your celebrities.
Scroll down past the photo of Britney without underwear.
It's you.
And me! "Soap hunk shops for furniture in WeHo with a friend.
" - Wow.
I'm a friend? - You're a friend in italics.
"If that didn't sound the alarm check out the less-than-hetero lamp.
" I told you that lamp was gay.
And ugly.
- It gets worse.
- "It could just be wishful thinking, but we're getting a serious gay vibe from the daytime doctor.
" I've spent the morning fielding calls from my agent, my manager, my mom.
Your mom checks Skinny Minnie? She Googles my name once a week.
And that's not the point.
We need to lay low.
What? Chad we barely go out in daylight as it is.
Come on! I'm starting to feel like a vampire.
- Besides, we didn't do anything wrong.
- I know.
But Kev, I'm in this guy's sights.
There are better options than laying low, believe me.
We can call Dan Silk.
Threaten him.
No offense, but I don't think you could take him.
Pummeling this guy wouldn't do much for my public image.
I mean we could threaten him with legal action.
- It's true.
- I'm a lawyer, truth is irrelevant.
I do this all the time.
I need to make it clear, if he doesn't print a retraction, he'll face a very lengthy lawsuit.
I'll bury him in discovery and depositions.
It's Lawyering 101.
I've never seen you so litigious.
- Right.
- It's kind of hot.
- But no way can you call him.
- Why not? He's not a major corporation.
He's one guy.
He's one loser.
He'll cave.
They all do.
Believe me.
No.
We just need to let it blow over.
These stories don't have a long shelf life.
If we don't give him more ammunition, this Silk will move on to somebody else.
- Then - Then what? Daylight again? - Definitely.
- Good.
And I could totally take that guy.
You just worry too much, Nora.
You always have.
I know Sarah and Joe are going through a rough time.
Are you sure that's all? I really think Tommy's decision to buy this winery with Holly is bothering her more than she's letting on.
Tommy and Sarah have a very strong bond.
William never would've brought Sarah to Ojai Foods if he thought she and Tommy couldn't survive sibling rivalry.
You're right.
You're right.
I mean, look at us.
- What do you mean? - Our family wasn't exactly a picnic, yet here we are, after all these years, still speaking to one another.
- You want a green bean? - Thank you.
- It's a small miracle, isn't it? - Yes, it is.
I don't know.
I think maybe I was wrong about her.
- About who? - Holly.
- What do you mean? - You're seeing her.
Tommy is starting a company with her.
As much as I hate to admit it, maybe William was a good judge of character.
Well, your instincts are admirable, but you don't have to put aside your feelings for the sake of any of us.
I'm not saying I want to be the woman's best friend.
I'm just saying I have been so busy blaming her, I don't think I've ever really seen her for who she is.
OK.
So, what are you proposing? The truth of the matter is Holly is a part of our family now.
I think I should embrace that, if only to set an example.
I mean, we all have to put the past behind us where it belongs and move on.
- You think I'm crazy? - No, Nora.
I don't think you're crazy.
Good.
Because if there's one person I count on to be my reality check, it's you.
Saul? What? It's the past.
It's not behind us.
You have to tell me what.
Tell me.
William and Holly had a daughter.
- What? - Her name is Rebecca.
She's 20 years old.
She's here in L.
A.
I'm so sorry, Nora.
I'm so sorry.
- No one wanted to upset you.
- No one? Who else knows? Who else knows? Sarah and Tommy and Kevin.
- But understand - Justin and Kitty? - They don't know.
- Oh, God.
I didn't want this to be like the affair.
I didn't want it to fester under the surface, haunting us.
Come on.
- Oh, my God.
- What? Where are you going? - What are you doing? - To find Kitty and Justin.
- Wait.
Please.
- No.
There will be no more lies, Saul.
No more.
I won't stand for it.
Nora, wait.
Are you sure? How do we know Holly's telling the truth? As much as I'd like to, I don't think we can ignore the obvious.
So, what are we supposed to say? "Wow, we have a sister now"? Justin, you don't have to say or do anything you don't want to.
This is just going to take time for us all.
So what? Dad made Holly a beneficiary of the land because of Rebecca? I don't know.
But I suspect that's part of it.
- Did he know that he was her father? - I don't know what he knew.
This is crazy.
You're saying Dad hid one of his kids from us for years and then gave Holly the land, so his affair is thrown in our face because of some girl named Rebecca? I wish I could tell you what he was thinking.
- It's a shock for me too.
- I don't know why.
- He lied about having a mistress.
- That's not fair.
Why should I be so shocked that he lied to us too? This whole family revolves around lying.
- Justin, please! - Grandma! Aunt Kitty! - Hi.
- Hi, Grandma.
- Hi.
Hi.
- Hey, guys.
Hey, sweetie boy.
Hi, guys.
- This is wonderful.
- Joe.
- Hey, Nora.
- Hi.
- Hey, Kitty.
- I can hardly pick you up.
Please help me understand how you could discover your father has another child and not tell me? - We were trying to spare you the pain.
- How? By keeping me in the dark? God.
You should've seen Justin's reaction.
- Saul shouldn't have said anything.
- No! You do not get to blame Saul! He had enough faith in me, enough respect for me to be honest, which is more than I can say for you or Tommy or Kevin.
Were you never going to tell me? You've had so much to cope with.
It just didn't seem to be the right time.
I can just see Tommy spearheading this whole brilliant idea.
- He's so like his father.
- No, it was my idea.
- It was your idea? - Yeah.
I was the one who thought that we should keep this information from you.
Your father made you president of our family business, Sarah.
Not our family.
You taught me to put family first.
I was trying to.
No, it is not.
You were trying to do what was easy for you.
You think it's been easy keeping this a secret? No one asked you to! There is no justification for this.
- Oh, God.
What? - Hey.
You ready for dinner? - May I speak to Dan Silk? - Talking to him.
If you're going to make a living tarnishing people's reputations, you may want an unlisted number.
Thanks for the tip.
- Do I know you? - No, you do not.
You did print my picture without permission on your libelous Web site.
I'm the friend of Chad Berry.
- Oh, you're that dude.
- Yeah, I'm that dude.
I'm just looking for the dish on Berry.
If you want to spill, I could No, no.
You misunderstand.
I'm an attorney.
And I demand that you cease and desist publishing uncorroborated information about his personal life.
Hey, man, what can I say? Inquiring minds want to know.
He's contemplating filing a complaint.
The cause of action: Invasion of privacy, libel, unfair business practices, infliction of emotional distress.
- Should I go on? - But you're not denying Berry's gay? Listen to me, son, and I'll say this in a way that you understand.
If you don't stop targeting my client, I will bury you so deep in litigation, it will be your great-great-grandchildren paying off the legal bills.
Do I make myself clear? Yeah, I get it.
You made your point.
Good.
Then thank you so much for your time.
Hey, Mom.
What's wrong? Kevin, what are you doing? Please, please, tell me exactly what you were thinking, because I'm quite sure we all agreed we would not say a thing! - You agreed, Saul! - Kevin.
I didn't want it to happen the way it did.
I'm sorry.
Do you even get what you've done? Mom is furious.
Kitty and Justin are reeling.
I mean, Sarah is mortified.
As am I.
As is Tommy.
Did you stop and think for a split second how bad this makes us look? I wasn't thinking about you.
- You weren't thinking of anyone! - I was thinking about your mother.
You had absolutely no right to do this without consulting us.
I have every right.
She's my sister.
You wouldn't do the same thing if it were Kitty or Sarah? I wouldn't single-handedly sell out the rest of my family, no.
You weren't there, Kevin.
She was sitting in front of me, opening up her heart to Holly.
Berating herself for misjudging her.
She expected me to tell her that she was doing the right thing.
And I will be damned if I will let her make herself vulnerable in that way, only to have her world come crashing down again.
You better hope this family finds a way to repair itself.
Because if this does any lasting damage, I'm holding you responsible.
I learned something interesting today.
You know the San Francisco cable cars are the only moving national monument? Didn't know that.
I've told you every time I sleep with somebody I work with.
- You can't tell me we have a sister? - Half-sister.
For the 400th time, Kitty, I am sorry.
- I don't know what else to say.
- I thought you were gonna table this.
- Yeah, so did I! - We are.
What's happening in D.
C? I'm working on legislation that would dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
It will be like taking 100 million cars right off the street.
- It'd be groundbreaking.
- Impressive.
- The other - For the record? I don't see why I should be the one to take the fall for this.
- I wasn't the only one that knew.
- You're bearing the brunt because you're here.
Believe me, I wish that Tommy and Kevin were here too.
- Is it always like this? - You dreamed of having a baby sister.
Sarah, you know what? I was six, OK? That wish didn't include Dad cheating on Mom.
I didn't know what to do, Kitty.
So I thought the best thing to do was nothing.
So shoot me.
Oh.
Do you like cigars? I got some good ones and we could That would be great.
You didn't know what to do so you did nothing.
I would've told you, Sarah! Justin, where are you? You were supposed to be here an hour ago.
- I can't make it.
I'm sorry.
- What? My mom's been cooking all day.
I'm sorry, OK? It's something with my family.
I can't talk about it now.
Look, I got to go.
I'll call you tomorrow.
- Hey.
- Glad you called, man.
- It's been a while.
- Thanks for coming.
It's bad enough my dad was in love with another woman.
Like my mom wasn't enough.
- But another kid? - I guess you weren't enough? I almost died and yet there I am back in the same place.
- Ready to do it all again.
- But you didn't.
You didn't use.
And that's good, man.
- Yeah, but I came close, bro.
- Of course you did.
This whole thing is textbook you.
Look, I know you, Justin.
You didn't become a medic for nothing.
You can't stand to see people in pain.
And right now you and your family are suffering.
There's nothing you can do to make that go away.
If it gets overwhelming, you know the drill.
Find a meeting, work the steps.
I don't get it.
How could he lie to us about his own daughter, knowing what it would do to us when we found out? And her.
Rebecca, right? You know, I didn't even think about her.
God, what if? I wonder if she even knows.
Not exactly a normal couple night out, huh? It was surprisingly normal considering how blindsided you were.
You want something to drink? Yes, please.
I think I have to just sit.
And not move.
If I do, who knows what else is going to come along and rip my life apart.
- You're right.
- Thank you.
Let's not move.
It's too big a risk.
I just don't know what I'm supposed to do.
Why do anything? Well, eventually I'm going to have to get up.
The thing is, everybody keeps telling me that I have this sister.
I don't know what the hell that means.
I mean, when I think of Sarah, I don't think of her DNA.
I think about how we grew up together in the same house with the same weird family.
And how we, you know, shared our diaries and our shampoos.
But am I supposed to have those same feelings - for a woman that I never even met? - I don't think anybody expects that.
Well, and then there's my dad.
I've been grieving for a father that I don't even know.
And I was just starting to get all happy.
I wouldn't let this destroy that.
You hold on to what's good.
To what makes you happy.
You make me happy.
- I do? - Yeah.
Would it be OK with you if we still just sit here for a while? As long as you want.
The kids wake you up? No.
I just couldn't sleep.
You want to talk? No.
It's all right, Joe.
You don't have to stay up.
You'll get through this.
Everyone's so mad at me.
Mom, Kitty, Uncle Saul.
I don't have you.
You know? I'm right here.
- Justin.
- Hey, Mom.
Justin.
- I'm fine.
- Are you all right? I'm fine.
I'm just exhausted.
- OK.
- Hey.
I told Tyler it would be all right if she waited here.
I'll give you guys privacy.
I'll be upstairs if you need me.
- All right.
I love you.
I'm OK.
- I love you too.
I'm OK.
OK.
Your mom told me what happened.
I'm sorry.
- Sorry about missing dinner.
- It's OK.
I was just worried.
The last time you sounded like that I was with my sponsor.
Oh.
- That's good.
- Look, I get it if you're angry at me.
I'm not angry.
I just don't know if I can handle it.
That's why they tell you not to date anyone your first year you're clean.
I never understood that before tonight because I couldn't deal with anyone or anything but me.
That's how it should be.
Look, you weren't wrong to worry, OK? I just don't think I'm ready for a relationship, Tyler.
I know.
I just want you to be OK.
More than anything I want for us, I want that for you.
Come here.
It's OK.
Have you talked to Mom? I keep trying to reach her, but she's not picking up, at least not for me.
Yeah, not for me either.
Let me be the one to kick Holly out of our lives once and for all.
Sarah, Holly's not going anywhere.
Nor do I want her to.
I hope you don't think what happened last night changes anything.
It changes everything.
You can't still be planning to go into business with that woman.
- I am.
- She won't be satisfied until she has destroyed everything we've created here.
Don't be fooled, Tommy.
This whole nightmare is because of her.
Sarah, there is enough blame to go around.
- Is that a dig at me? - We lied.
Dad lied.
In fact, right now, Holly's probably the most honest one of us all.
You can't be that naive.
I already told you! I didn't start this winery for you or Mom.
All right? I did this for me.
Building something for myself.
That was before the horror show landed on my lap! Look, it landed in our laps.
You want to control everything.
God, you just thrive off of control.
- But this is out of your hands.
- Spare me, Tommy, OK? I already pay for therapy, I really don't need your amateur psychoanalysis.
Just let it go.
OK.
Well, clearly I'm the only one who still gives a damn about Ojai, so you'll understand that I have work to do.
Excuse me.
I'm looking for Holly Harper.
She's not in her office.
I don't know where she - Do I know you? - No, I don't think so.
I'm her daughter, Rebecca.
Right.
I thought you'd look more like your mom.
- I'm Sarah Walker.
- It's nice to meet you.
You too.
So Holly? Oh, um - I have no idea where she is.
- OK.
Thanks.
Sorry.
Rebecca.
Um Do you have a minute? Could I talk to you? Yeah, sure.
Hey, Becca.
Where you been? I stopped by Ojai today.
I wanted to check out your new digs.
- You did? - Yeah.
I got the address from some papers you had lying around.
Thought I'd surprise you.
Well, I'm sorry that I missed you.
I was out meeting with a distributor and I didn't want to drive all the way back to the office.
So, um, would you like me to make lunch for both of us? No.
I don't really have an appetite right now.
I met some people there.
At Ojai.
Like Sarah.
Mom, do you remember that Christmas, when I was eight and I had my tonsils taken out? And then after the surgery, your friend Bill came by to visit.
And he gave me that doll with the long red hair.
Did Bill really think that a doll could make up for abandoning me? What was it, a "sorry for being a deadbeat dad" gift? No.
Please.
Let me explain.
There's an explanation for why you lied to me for 20 years? You said that Bill was your friend and left out the part about him being your boyfriend for two decades and my father! Honey.
Oh, God.
It is complicated.
It seems pretty simple to me, Mom.
You were willing to be sloppy seconds for some rich jerk with a wife and kids.
My dad didn't want to fess up to a bastard child with his mistress because he didn't want to risk his Norman Rockwell life.
No.
I know that you're angry, but you need to hear me through.
Why? It's too late to do anything about it.
He's dead! - Yes, but but you - How much of it is mine? What? The money that William Walker left you.
How much of it is mine? I put two million dollars in a trust in your name.
And it will be yours when you're 25.
Well, I guess that's better than some stupid doll.
- Hey.
- Dude, I am so screwed.
I'm so glad it's you and not my mom.
Or my brothers.
Or my sister.
Or indeed my half-sister.
Could my life get any more complicated? - What's up? - Did you even hear what I said? A countdown clock.
Dan Silk is counting out the days until I come out on his frigging website.
"Chad Berry.
Come out, come out, wherever you are.
" That son of a bitch.
What I can't figure out is why is this guy gunning for me? Oh, no.
You called him.
Yes.
Yes, I did.
I thought I could convince him to leave you alone.
You think you're the first lawyer to try and scare this asswipe? He makes his living from screwing with people's lives.
You just egged him on! You promised you wouldn't do anything.
I come from a line of people who are incapable of leaving well enough alone.
If you had any respect for how important my career is to me, you would have listened and not gone behind my back.
You're right.
You're absolutely right.
I'm sorry.
I am sorry.
So where do we go from here? I'll tell you where we won't go.
Out to the movies, out to dinner, shopping, hiking, the gym.
I'm all for cutting out the gym.
No, the shipment was for 1,400.
Not 14.
Look, just deal with it, OK? Do you have any idea what you have done to my life and to Rebecca's? - What I've done? Are you serious? - My God! As a mother, how could you be that cruel? My daughter is crushed.
Her whole identity, everything that we had, our relationship has been decimated.
And all for what? Out of spite? So that you could get even with me? But I just told her the truth.
I was planning on telling her everything on my timetable.
In my way.
- It was not your place.
- My place? Oh, you are unbelievable.
It wasn't your place to have an affair with a married man.
It wasn't your place to have my father's child.
It certainly wasn't your place to come crawling out of the woodwork and demand a piece of our family business! But none of that stopped you, did it? You've done nothing but cause my family pain.
So if your perfect little world has come crashing down around you because the truth has come out, you know what? Join the damn club! I let you treat me like dirt because I love and respected your father.
But I am done treating you with any measure of civility.
- Is that a threat? - You bet your ass it's a threat.
And you? I trusted you.
I had to do what was best for my family.
- Don't you ever call me again.
- I'm sorry you feel that way.
Not sorry enough.
What are you reading? Seeing with Serenity: How to Cope With What Life Deals You.
I took a trip to the self-help section at the bookstore.
So far, it's just pages and pages of vague platitudes.
Mom, you've been avoiding my calls.
I didn't know what I wanted to say.
I wish I could turn back the clock and make a different decision.
- But I can't.
- I know.
You seem angrier at me than Kevin or Tommy.
Am I wrong? Probably not.
You hold me to a different standard than anyone else.
That's not fair.
Yes.
You're right, it's not fair.
I just always felt this connection with you.
You raise a boy and you don't expect them to tell you anything.
You're lucky if they acknowledge you on their way out the door.
But you always confided in me.
I felt like you trusted me to handle whatever came along.
I never had that relationship with my mother.
I always thought I had it with you.
Mom, we do have that relationship.
The last thing in the world I wanted to do was hurt you.
I know.
But that doesn't mean you didn't.
Justin.
I get the feeling you're not here to see me.
No, I'm not.
Is Rebecca here? Rebecca, this is Justin.
Justin Walker.
So you're one of them? - His family? - Yeah.
- I got it, Mom.
- OK.
If you're expecting tears from me, you can forget it.
I'm not expecting anything.
I just wanted to meet you.
Well, I'm here.
I'm real.
You can even touch me.
- Uh you want to walk? - OK.
It's so bizarre.
We live, like, 15 minutes away.
In L.
A.
, that's practically like being neighbors.
- Where did you go to school? - I started at La Salle.
Swanky.
I got kicked out junior year and I finished up at San Marino.
- What about you? - Marshall.
I think we played you in football.
- I didn't play football.
- Oh, that's good.
I hate it.
Marshall Did you know a Carter Espen? Oh, God.
Totally.
- He used to date this girl, Rebecca.
- Yep, that was me.
OK, I'm officially freaked out now.
I mean, what if we had met and? What if we? Oh, the Greek tragedy of it all.
So, what do you do? Presently, not much.
I'm a vet.
I was in Afghanistan.
Wow.
Afghanistan.
- That must've been intense.
- Yeah, it was.
So you and Carter? I can't believe that.
We really didn't know each other well at all.