Better Call Saul (2015) s02e04 Episode Script
Gloves Off
1 Previously on "Better Call Saul" I can't believe Davis & Main went for it.
Did you actually think that was gonna fly? - You can't - Tomorrow morning, eight o'clock, my office, with the partners, and we wanna see this thing.
There may have been some solicitation.
I put myself on the line to get you this job.
So what, you threw me a bone? It's my word.
It's my judgement.
You want next level pay, you gotta do next level work.
You wanna tell me what we're doing here? There's a guy.
I need him to go away.
Ohh.
My husband and I scrimped and saved for so many years.
We did our best to build a nest egg so that we wouldn't be a burden to our family.
After Ronald passed, I moved to an assisted-living facility a nice place.
They told me they'd take care of everything, but then, one day, they said all my money was gone.
How could that be? Where did it all go? If you or a loved one is a resident of a Sandpiper Crossing facility or - other associated retirement community - Jesus.
You used your own voice? Strictly to save money.
- All in, the whole thing cost - Just Call the law offices of Davis & Main at 505-242-7700.
That's 505-242-7700.
The production costs $647, all in.
The one single airing was a $700 ad buy, so dirt-cheap.
You think this is about money? You think that's what this is about? I'm just trying to offer complete information here.
Now, this one airing it was an experiment, and as such, by any measure, a success.
You keep using the word "experiment" like you're âthe goddamned Wright Brothers.
When exactly were you gonna tell us about this experiment? Today.
This morning.
I-I admit, I got a little ahead of myself, a little Exuberant.
And for that, I apologize.
But the headline here is I think We've gotten nearly 200 phone calls since this one airing.
Cliff, since you and I spoke last night, 72 more.
You hear that? Right there That's the sound of victory.
Jimmy, stop selling.
And don't act like âyou don't see the problem here.
I don't.
You cut us out.
You did an end run around us.
Exuberance is no excuse.
Cliff.
Client outreach is my department.
Now, you told me that from day one.
Jimmy, if I put you in charge of payroll, would that mean I'd be okay with you giving everyone a million-dollar bonus? You and I did discuss the possibility of a commercial.
The possibility in the abstract, for a grand total of 30 seconds when I was halfway out the door.
I guess I thought I heard enthusiasm, so I I took some initiative.
"Some.
" Wow.
We are a team at Davis & Main.
This is a team approach.
You coming to us âas a solo practitioner I knew there was gonna be a learning curve.
But if you simply can't fit in as part of the team I can fit in.
I I fit in.
I am here to help you and HHM win Sandpiper.
That's all this was about.
Sandpiper's not what keeps the lights on around here.
We have clients who wouldn't want to be associated with this kind of this.
Our image, our reputation is something we've been carefully building for years.
It's worth far more than any one case.
Something like this could damage it.
Suffice it to say, there's not a lot of love for you in the room at the moment.
The vote is currently two to one to fire you for cause.
However I believe in second chances.
But know this is both strike one and strike two.
Going forward, you can expect a great deal more scrutiny.
Come on.
Come on.
Hello.
You've reached the voicemail of Kim Wexler.
Please leave me a message, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.
Hey, Kim.
I need you to call me as soon as you can, all right? It's a time-sensitive thing, so, uh, I mean, I may have, uh, just well, please call me before you talk to Howard, okay? Bye.
It's a simple question, Kim did you or did you not know about this commercial? I yes.
He showed it to me.
He showed it to you? Yes.
A few days ago.
And you didn't say anything to anyone? No.
I didn't.
You didn't think I deserved a heads-up? I didn't realize at the time, âI didn't think it was necessary.
Well, you were wrong about that.
We were caught flat-footed in front of our co-counsel, which I don't need to tell you, does not reflect well on HHM.
Or on you.
That'll be all.
You can go.
What are you going to do? So, what do you think? I figure from here, you've got a good bead on the place, but someone inside they can't pick you out.
Tuco and me that's our spot.
He always sits facing out, makes it look like it's a gangster thing, but I know it's just so he can keep an eye on his ride.
Every Tuesday, âwe're here squaring accounts.
Dealer comes in, pays what he owes.
Tuco he likes to get face-to-face.
Says everything he needs to know is written right here.
Looks 'em in the eyes.
Just stares, like he's looking inside of 'em.
I've seen him go like that 5, 10 minutes.
And what does that accomplish? Calls it his lie detector.
That's why these things go all day.
Just the two of you? No extra muscle? Don't need it.
âwe can handle our business.
Anyway, it takes hours.
Collect the cash, count it, lie detector.
One at a time guy comes in, transacts, then the next.
Then, when we're done, Tuco gets in his car, I get in mine.
Boom.
We go our separate ways.
That is where you come in.
You see him packing up wsssh drive over.
Pull up in the spot next to Tuco's.
Pop.
Head shot.
Roll out.
Easy.
I-40 onramp is eight blocks up.
You're in the wind before anyone has time to blink.
And here's the beauty all these, um, dealers? They know we're here, so the story is, one of them got ideas, decided to kill Tuco, get a cut of the business.
Could've been any of them, as far as the cartel's concerned.
These Tuesdays of yours day or night when you wrap it up? - Day.
- So, full daylight.
- Mm-hmm.
- Plenty of traffic.
How exactly do I not get seen? My car, at least.
Murphy's law tells me somebody's gonna pull a plate.
Fine.
Go to the yard.
Buy a beater.
You're gonna stay in the car.
âain't no one gonna see you.
And if they do see you, so what? That's why you're perfect.
You're no one.
You got no connections.
- You're a ghost.
- Mm-hmm.
So, I pull in next to him that assumes there's a parking spot.
Our guys park next to him.
They come and go from the same spot.
Last one takes off, you're open.
Someone comes in behind me, I'm blocked.
Who's gonna pull in behind you? Well, I'm guessing someone who likes tacos.
What then? What's my exit? I don't know.
Get out and run.
Bad knees.
Look, the details that's what I'm paying you for.
You've got a better plan, go on, tell me.
I'm all ears.
You sure about this? Killing your partner That's a bell you don't un-ring.
See this? You know how I got this? Back in '96, '97, Tuco and I were working with these bikers out of riverside county.
They were running âthis peanut-butter crank real shit, y'know? But cheap, and we could sell it as fast as we got it.
Anyway, âTuco develops a taste for it.
And crank does not bring out the best in people.
Made Tuco erratic.
Our connect was a guy called Dawg Paulson.
One day, âTuco's settling up with Dawg.
He decides âto put on his lie detector.
Dawg's like, â"what the hell?" You know.
Tuco just keeps staring at him.
Then he goes real quiet.
"You think I'm an idiot, Dawg?" He thinks Dawg is supplying his competitor, trying to cut Tuco out.
Dawg he denies it.
"No way! Not me!" Tuco doesn't even âraise his voice, but suddenly, he's got a sawed-off and Right in Dawg's face.
I was behind him.
Sickest thing I ever saw, to this day.
And this? A piece of Dawg's skull under the skin, a little piece of him.
I tried digging it out, but it's in there pretty good.
Anyway, not the kinda thing you go to the doctor's for.
The thing about it was, Tuco really liked Dawg.
Kind of felt bad afterwards.
But when he's using, Loco, crazy.
There's no other way to put it.
And he's using again, Crystal.
Much bigger kick.
So it's like you said.
If Tuco finds out about my, y'know, independent ventures, it's gonna be Dawg all over again.
It's him or me.
There.
A man with a scoped rifle could get a clean shot.
Fire a single round, disappear before anybody knew what had happened.
No witnesses.
Clean egress.
Pretty far.
You can make that shot? Yeah.
You saying you'll do it? 50 grand? 50 grand.
I'll look into it.
Hey.
Uh.
Your brother isn't here, Mr.
McGill.
I know.
Uh, he sent me to get his ink blotter.
- I'll just be a second.
- Watch yourself.
The floor's slick.
Oh, thank you, Gesualdo.
Sorry about the floor! Oh, no.
Are you looking for Ms.
Wexler? I guess I'm too late, huh? No, she's still here.
Where? Kim.
I am so, so sorry.
I should have told you last night.
You think? I honestly thought I could fix it.
I thought they'd understand once they saw the numbers.
I knew it would work, and it did.
It worked.
Howard can't just stick you in doc review because of something I did.
Plus, at an âentirely different law firm.
What the hell kind of sense does that make?! I told you this would happen.
He can't blame you for this.
I warned you he would.
I'm talking to Howard.
What? And call him a pig fucker again? Yeah, that'll help.
I screwed up, you know? I know that.
But this this is total bs! I'm âI'm talking to him tonight! Jimmy, no.
âyou'd only make things worse.
I'll explain it to him.
âno! I'm not asking you I'm telling you.
If you go to Howard, you and I we're done.
So, we're not done now? I need this job.
And there's a weekly billing quota that I'm about 40 hours behind on, so could you please just go? I'm sorry.
Chuck! Chuck! Come on! I'm not going away! All right, you asked for it! I'm comin' in! Chuck? Chuck? Can you hear me? Can you talk to me? Do you want me âto get you to the hospital? No.
No hospitals.
I'll I'll be all right.
Get some water, please.
Extra protection here.
Ohh.
Here.
You know what? Sit up.
- Aah! - Can you sit? - Ow.
- All right.
Okay.
All right.
Here.
Mm.
Mm.
That's the Armalite AR-50 state of the art, âaccurate to 2,400 meters.
I got the Leupold Mark 4 on it now, but I can always upgrade you to a Schmidt & Bender.
Single shot, bolt.
Simple, effective, reliable.
It fires the .
50-caliber BMG very effective against soft targets in light cover behind cars, âsmall-diameter trees, and such.
As always, I've gone to the trouble of grinding down the serial number.
Well, unless you âground a hole clean through, acid will recover it.
Well, that would be true, but I follow up with a pass through âa random-stipple machine press.
Hides the patterns in the metal density.
Should throw off your x-ray diffraction and some other higher-end methods.
Nothing's perfect, of course, but this is close.
Mm.
Looks like a hernia with a scope on it.
34 pounds, not including your bipod, which adds some heft.
Too much gun.
For most applications, I would tend to agree.
SR-25 match rifle Eugene Stoner design, semi-auto.
That's about 11 pounds there.
Not quite the range or the punch of the AR-50, but you're still talking about a .
5 M.
O.
A.
At well past 1,000 meters.
I've heard they're prone to jam.
Well, it's been known to happen in the field, but there's not a semi-auto built can boast it never jams.
If that's a concern, you ought to stick to bolts.
Good bolt-action rifle if you jammed it, I'd wager âyou were setting out to do so.
Which brings us to the M40 tried and true, battle-tested.
Essentially, the same rifle used by marine snipers since 1966.
It's light, accurate, good for soft targets in the 800 to 1,2000-meter range.
You seem to know this one.
Oh, yeah.
You could say that.
That's the a1 model.
There's not much change from the original.
Biggest difference is the stock it's fiberglass instead of wood.
It changed it over in 1970 or so.
Good.
Wood warped like hell.
You get it wet, âyou put it in the sun gone.
Somebody probably âshould've figured that out before they sent it into a damn jungle.
Yeah.
Probably.
If these aren't to your liking, I could get my hands on a few more.
No.
I've changed my mind.
Thank you.
I don't need anything at this time.
For your trouble.
Oh, it's no trouble.
I make my living on repeat business.
When you need what I'm offering, you know how to find me.
You're still here.
Yeah, I'm still here.
Mm.
Ohh.
Ohh.
Oh.
Did you get any sleep? - Some.
- Mm.
Enough.
How you feeling? I could use some tea.
Thanks.
- Ohh.
- You scared me last night.
Yeah.
Happens sometimes.
Sometimes, I overdo it that's all.
It passes.
Going into the office really takes it out of you, doesn't it? If I stay too long, yeah.
Guess it's hard not to stay.
There's so many important things for you to do there like, you know, stick it to Kim Wexler.
What did I do to Kim Wexler? She's back in the cornfield, isn't she? I didn't do anything to Kim.
I mean, I was present, yes.
But management of personnel those decisions are all Howard's.
That is rich.
But tell me, when Howard was makin' his "management decisions," was he sitting on your knee with your arm up his ass? Hey, can he talk while you drink a glass of water? That's uncalled-for.
And if Howard were my puppet, he certainly wouldn't have recommended you to Davis & Main.
Actually, I'm sure it was Kim Wexler who talked him into doing that.
Hence his anger.
Don't punish Kim.
If you're mad at me, take it out on me.
I know you like to think the world revolves around you, Jimmy, but this has nothing to do with you.
Kim had a responsibility to Hamlin, Hamlin, McGill.
She should have been looking out for her firm's interests.
Not letting us know what you were up to was her mistake.
Oh, come on.
You can't be pissed off at her about this.
I'm not.
Howard is.
And why shouldn't he be? Because she didn't know.
She didn't know âI was gonna air the commercial.
She didn't know âI hadn't gotten it approved.
She just she didn't know.
I see.
So, she didn't know there was anything that she was supposed to tell Howard.
As far as she was concerned, Cliff Main was already looped in.
You told her he was? I implied it.
So it's on me, not her.
She didn't say anything to us about that.
Well, she wouldn't.
Sh-she wouldn't want to make me look bad.
You have to admit this shows a lack of judgment on her part.
She knows you.
She should have known better.
You are such an asshole.
Why? For pointing out that her one mistake was believing in you? For Christ's sake, can we get some perspective here? It was a simple, little commercial.
It aired once that's all.
And can I remind you it worked.
It worked like a dream.
See, that's your problem, Jimmy thinking the ends justify the means.
And you're forever shocked when it all blows up in your face.
What did I do that was so wrong? You broke the rules.
âYou turned Kim into your accessory.
You embarrassed Howard, who God help him inexplicably vouched for you with Cliff Main! You made Cliff and his partners look like schmucks! Shall I go on?! How he hasn't fired you for this positively mystifies me.
"Perspective.
" You want perspective? I'll give you mine You're my brother and I love you, but you're like an alcoholic who refuses to admit he's got a problem.
Now someone's given you the keys to the school bus, and I'm not gonna let you drive it off a cliff! Now, can we just get down to brass tacks here? What can I do to put Kim back where she belongs, huh? What you want me to quit Davis & Main? That's fine.
I I never wanted that job in the first place.
I can't get through to you.
Life is not one big game of "let's make a deal"! Yes, it is! I'm Monty Hall! What's behind door number two? What'll it take, huh?! You want me to quit being a lawyer? Ju a chimp with a machine gun That's me, right, huh?! So, what do you say? You help Kim, I quit the law.
- Is that a deal? - âI didn't say that.
No, you didn't say it, but that's what you want, right?! That's why you put the screws to Kim in the first place to squeeze me! I didn't say that, âand I would never say that! Why not?! Because if I were impeding the career of one of my employees for the purpose of compelling you to do something against your will, that would be extortion.
Yeah.
âIt would.
So? You gonna extort me, Chuck? It's a lead-pipe cinch you'd get away with it.
I'm not gonna tell anyone.
It's real easy you just set things right for Kim.
You get her back in her office, out of doc review everything back to normal, and I quit the law for good.
No more Jimmy McGill, esquire poof! Like he never even existed.
Wow.
Wow.
But I need to hear the words come out of your mouth, okay? âYou're a man of your word.
You're an upstanding man, right? - For God's sake, Jimmy.
- Come on, Chuck! Extort me! Say "quit," and I will quit, but I need to hear it from your mouth! You want me to commit a felony Because that's what you'd do, right? Because you want to believe that deep down, I'm some hypocrite! Let's find out.
Come on down, Chuck! Roll around in the dirt with me! All your dreams will come true! Go on! Do it! Go on! I am not the bad guy here.
You don't want to be a lawyer that's between you âand the New Mexico State Bar.
You want to quit Davis & Main? Be my guest! You clearly don't need any help from me to tank your career.
You're doing just fine on your own.
Speaking of which, it's an hour's drive to Santa Fe.
Even iyou leave right now, you're still gonna be at least 20 minutes late for work another feather in your cap with Clifford Main.
So? I'm not gonna do it.
What âare you negotiating now? No amount of money makes this a good idea for you.
Look, man, âI told you that I'm not No, it's a bad move because it doesn't solve your real problem.
My real problem? What's that? It's not Tuco.
It's keeping a secret.
A dead Tuco âdraws salamancas like flies.
The cartel noses into the business, looks for who hit one of theirs.
You gonna be able to keep your secrets then? Something's got to give.
With you, without you I don't care.
But something's gonna happen.
You said it yourself.
You don't need him dead you need him to go away.
You mean snitch? Man, I drop a dime on Tuco, who do you think the cartel looks at? Me.
And if I call the cops, I get picked up, too.
I'm what you call a known associate.
So I'm locked up with Tuco, who's looking for the guy that put him there.
Tell me how that helps me.
You won't have to talk to the cops.
You won't have to do any time.
There's no killing, but your Tuco problem? It goes away.
It's all there.
Shh.
Let the man count.
We're good.
So, uh till next time, huh? Tuco.
Okay.
Go.
Okay.
I'll, uh âI'll see you next week, Tuco.
Nacho.
Yeah, see you, Domingo.
He's got good numbers.
He's hustlin'.
What do you think? Solid? Uh, uh, y-yes, I would like to report a fight going on at the El Michoacano Restaurant in the 5000 block of the Isleta Boulevard.
There's a man threatening another man with a gun.
It looks to be some sort of gang thing.
Oh, uh, uh, uh, sorry.
I I I'm a passerby.
I I don't want to get involved.
The fuck? Did you see that? See what? That old man just hit my car.
Hey.
- Hello.
- Oh.
Hmm.
Well, let me see.
Um Give me the number four, the pollo, por favor.
- That's to go.
- Yes, sir.
Hey, you.
Hey, gramps.
You just hit my car.
Uh, you're talking to me? Check out Mr.
Magoo here.
Uh, y-yes, sir.
You see that car that you parked your piece of shit next to? That's mine.
You just ran into it.
No, I don't think I did.
You calling me a liar? Oh.
Uh, no.
Hey.
I saw it, too.
You gonna stand here and deny it? Um, guys, um, I I don't know what to tell you.
I'm not aware âof hitting anyone's car, but if I did I apologize.
- So - $6.
33.
Mm.
You keep the change.
Thank you.
Excuse me.
Don't you walk away from me.
Hey, pops.
You better listen to the man.
Come on, guys.
Let's just keep things friendly, all right? I ain't your friend.
Look! You see that? You you did that.
Oh, come on.
That'll buff right out.
You're gonna make this all right.
You're not leaving until you do.
Fine.
You got a pen? A pen.
A pen we'll exchange information, insurance.
I have very good coverage.
They'll take care of this.
I'm not messing around with insurance, ése.
Cash.
Listen, I'm willing to accept responsibility, but if you're not going through insurance, then I have maybe 20, 30 bucks on me that's all.
Kay, now you're lying to me.
I saw your wallet.
You got plenty in there.
Take it out.
Let's look together, jog your memory.
You heard him.
Take out the wallet.
I just cashed my social security check.
It's all I have till the end of the month, and I am not giving it to you.
You're not? I offered to do this the right way.
If you can't accept that, then I can't help you.
Aw, come on, guys.
I'm gonna make this real simple for you.
Give me your wallet, and maybe you walk away from this.
I'm not giving you a damn thing.
Nah, homes.
Give me your wallet.
Let's just stay calm here.
You see me sweating, bitch? Wallet.
Wallet.
Wallet.
There's like $400 here.
You got some crazy lip on you, old man.
Your life worth 400 bucks? Hey, Tuco, time to bounce.
Yeah, go.
Go.
You're one lucky old man.
What the hell? Leggo! Let go! LetLet let go! Let go! âLet go! Let go! Let me see your hands! Hands up! Now! On the ground! That all you got? Get on the ground! Wow.
Look at you.
Are you gonna have to testify? The cops witnessed him in the commission of a felony.
My wallet in his pocket.
Add the gun âhe gets a 5 to 10 stretch.
$25,000.
You definitely earned it.
Still, you could've gotten twice as much for 1/10 the hassle.
You would've done the world a favor.
You wouldn't look like someone took a lead pipe to your face.
Plus, when Tuco gets out, maybe he comes looking for you.
Get to the point.
Just saying you went a long way to not pull that trigger.
Why?
Did you actually think that was gonna fly? - You can't - Tomorrow morning, eight o'clock, my office, with the partners, and we wanna see this thing.
There may have been some solicitation.
I put myself on the line to get you this job.
So what, you threw me a bone? It's my word.
It's my judgement.
You want next level pay, you gotta do next level work.
You wanna tell me what we're doing here? There's a guy.
I need him to go away.
Ohh.
My husband and I scrimped and saved for so many years.
We did our best to build a nest egg so that we wouldn't be a burden to our family.
After Ronald passed, I moved to an assisted-living facility a nice place.
They told me they'd take care of everything, but then, one day, they said all my money was gone.
How could that be? Where did it all go? If you or a loved one is a resident of a Sandpiper Crossing facility or - other associated retirement community - Jesus.
You used your own voice? Strictly to save money.
- All in, the whole thing cost - Just Call the law offices of Davis & Main at 505-242-7700.
That's 505-242-7700.
The production costs $647, all in.
The one single airing was a $700 ad buy, so dirt-cheap.
You think this is about money? You think that's what this is about? I'm just trying to offer complete information here.
Now, this one airing it was an experiment, and as such, by any measure, a success.
You keep using the word "experiment" like you're âthe goddamned Wright Brothers.
When exactly were you gonna tell us about this experiment? Today.
This morning.
I-I admit, I got a little ahead of myself, a little Exuberant.
And for that, I apologize.
But the headline here is I think We've gotten nearly 200 phone calls since this one airing.
Cliff, since you and I spoke last night, 72 more.
You hear that? Right there That's the sound of victory.
Jimmy, stop selling.
And don't act like âyou don't see the problem here.
I don't.
You cut us out.
You did an end run around us.
Exuberance is no excuse.
Cliff.
Client outreach is my department.
Now, you told me that from day one.
Jimmy, if I put you in charge of payroll, would that mean I'd be okay with you giving everyone a million-dollar bonus? You and I did discuss the possibility of a commercial.
The possibility in the abstract, for a grand total of 30 seconds when I was halfway out the door.
I guess I thought I heard enthusiasm, so I I took some initiative.
"Some.
" Wow.
We are a team at Davis & Main.
This is a team approach.
You coming to us âas a solo practitioner I knew there was gonna be a learning curve.
But if you simply can't fit in as part of the team I can fit in.
I I fit in.
I am here to help you and HHM win Sandpiper.
That's all this was about.
Sandpiper's not what keeps the lights on around here.
We have clients who wouldn't want to be associated with this kind of this.
Our image, our reputation is something we've been carefully building for years.
It's worth far more than any one case.
Something like this could damage it.
Suffice it to say, there's not a lot of love for you in the room at the moment.
The vote is currently two to one to fire you for cause.
However I believe in second chances.
But know this is both strike one and strike two.
Going forward, you can expect a great deal more scrutiny.
Come on.
Come on.
Hello.
You've reached the voicemail of Kim Wexler.
Please leave me a message, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.
Hey, Kim.
I need you to call me as soon as you can, all right? It's a time-sensitive thing, so, uh, I mean, I may have, uh, just well, please call me before you talk to Howard, okay? Bye.
It's a simple question, Kim did you or did you not know about this commercial? I yes.
He showed it to me.
He showed it to you? Yes.
A few days ago.
And you didn't say anything to anyone? No.
I didn't.
You didn't think I deserved a heads-up? I didn't realize at the time, âI didn't think it was necessary.
Well, you were wrong about that.
We were caught flat-footed in front of our co-counsel, which I don't need to tell you, does not reflect well on HHM.
Or on you.
That'll be all.
You can go.
What are you going to do? So, what do you think? I figure from here, you've got a good bead on the place, but someone inside they can't pick you out.
Tuco and me that's our spot.
He always sits facing out, makes it look like it's a gangster thing, but I know it's just so he can keep an eye on his ride.
Every Tuesday, âwe're here squaring accounts.
Dealer comes in, pays what he owes.
Tuco he likes to get face-to-face.
Says everything he needs to know is written right here.
Looks 'em in the eyes.
Just stares, like he's looking inside of 'em.
I've seen him go like that 5, 10 minutes.
And what does that accomplish? Calls it his lie detector.
That's why these things go all day.
Just the two of you? No extra muscle? Don't need it.
âwe can handle our business.
Anyway, it takes hours.
Collect the cash, count it, lie detector.
One at a time guy comes in, transacts, then the next.
Then, when we're done, Tuco gets in his car, I get in mine.
Boom.
We go our separate ways.
That is where you come in.
You see him packing up wsssh drive over.
Pull up in the spot next to Tuco's.
Pop.
Head shot.
Roll out.
Easy.
I-40 onramp is eight blocks up.
You're in the wind before anyone has time to blink.
And here's the beauty all these, um, dealers? They know we're here, so the story is, one of them got ideas, decided to kill Tuco, get a cut of the business.
Could've been any of them, as far as the cartel's concerned.
These Tuesdays of yours day or night when you wrap it up? - Day.
- So, full daylight.
- Mm-hmm.
- Plenty of traffic.
How exactly do I not get seen? My car, at least.
Murphy's law tells me somebody's gonna pull a plate.
Fine.
Go to the yard.
Buy a beater.
You're gonna stay in the car.
âain't no one gonna see you.
And if they do see you, so what? That's why you're perfect.
You're no one.
You got no connections.
- You're a ghost.
- Mm-hmm.
So, I pull in next to him that assumes there's a parking spot.
Our guys park next to him.
They come and go from the same spot.
Last one takes off, you're open.
Someone comes in behind me, I'm blocked.
Who's gonna pull in behind you? Well, I'm guessing someone who likes tacos.
What then? What's my exit? I don't know.
Get out and run.
Bad knees.
Look, the details that's what I'm paying you for.
You've got a better plan, go on, tell me.
I'm all ears.
You sure about this? Killing your partner That's a bell you don't un-ring.
See this? You know how I got this? Back in '96, '97, Tuco and I were working with these bikers out of riverside county.
They were running âthis peanut-butter crank real shit, y'know? But cheap, and we could sell it as fast as we got it.
Anyway, âTuco develops a taste for it.
And crank does not bring out the best in people.
Made Tuco erratic.
Our connect was a guy called Dawg Paulson.
One day, âTuco's settling up with Dawg.
He decides âto put on his lie detector.
Dawg's like, â"what the hell?" You know.
Tuco just keeps staring at him.
Then he goes real quiet.
"You think I'm an idiot, Dawg?" He thinks Dawg is supplying his competitor, trying to cut Tuco out.
Dawg he denies it.
"No way! Not me!" Tuco doesn't even âraise his voice, but suddenly, he's got a sawed-off and Right in Dawg's face.
I was behind him.
Sickest thing I ever saw, to this day.
And this? A piece of Dawg's skull under the skin, a little piece of him.
I tried digging it out, but it's in there pretty good.
Anyway, not the kinda thing you go to the doctor's for.
The thing about it was, Tuco really liked Dawg.
Kind of felt bad afterwards.
But when he's using, Loco, crazy.
There's no other way to put it.
And he's using again, Crystal.
Much bigger kick.
So it's like you said.
If Tuco finds out about my, y'know, independent ventures, it's gonna be Dawg all over again.
It's him or me.
There.
A man with a scoped rifle could get a clean shot.
Fire a single round, disappear before anybody knew what had happened.
No witnesses.
Clean egress.
Pretty far.
You can make that shot? Yeah.
You saying you'll do it? 50 grand? 50 grand.
I'll look into it.
Hey.
Uh.
Your brother isn't here, Mr.
McGill.
I know.
Uh, he sent me to get his ink blotter.
- I'll just be a second.
- Watch yourself.
The floor's slick.
Oh, thank you, Gesualdo.
Sorry about the floor! Oh, no.
Are you looking for Ms.
Wexler? I guess I'm too late, huh? No, she's still here.
Where? Kim.
I am so, so sorry.
I should have told you last night.
You think? I honestly thought I could fix it.
I thought they'd understand once they saw the numbers.
I knew it would work, and it did.
It worked.
Howard can't just stick you in doc review because of something I did.
Plus, at an âentirely different law firm.
What the hell kind of sense does that make?! I told you this would happen.
He can't blame you for this.
I warned you he would.
I'm talking to Howard.
What? And call him a pig fucker again? Yeah, that'll help.
I screwed up, you know? I know that.
But this this is total bs! I'm âI'm talking to him tonight! Jimmy, no.
âyou'd only make things worse.
I'll explain it to him.
âno! I'm not asking you I'm telling you.
If you go to Howard, you and I we're done.
So, we're not done now? I need this job.
And there's a weekly billing quota that I'm about 40 hours behind on, so could you please just go? I'm sorry.
Chuck! Chuck! Come on! I'm not going away! All right, you asked for it! I'm comin' in! Chuck? Chuck? Can you hear me? Can you talk to me? Do you want me âto get you to the hospital? No.
No hospitals.
I'll I'll be all right.
Get some water, please.
Extra protection here.
Ohh.
Here.
You know what? Sit up.
- Aah! - Can you sit? - Ow.
- All right.
Okay.
All right.
Here.
Mm.
Mm.
That's the Armalite AR-50 state of the art, âaccurate to 2,400 meters.
I got the Leupold Mark 4 on it now, but I can always upgrade you to a Schmidt & Bender.
Single shot, bolt.
Simple, effective, reliable.
It fires the .
50-caliber BMG very effective against soft targets in light cover behind cars, âsmall-diameter trees, and such.
As always, I've gone to the trouble of grinding down the serial number.
Well, unless you âground a hole clean through, acid will recover it.
Well, that would be true, but I follow up with a pass through âa random-stipple machine press.
Hides the patterns in the metal density.
Should throw off your x-ray diffraction and some other higher-end methods.
Nothing's perfect, of course, but this is close.
Mm.
Looks like a hernia with a scope on it.
34 pounds, not including your bipod, which adds some heft.
Too much gun.
For most applications, I would tend to agree.
SR-25 match rifle Eugene Stoner design, semi-auto.
That's about 11 pounds there.
Not quite the range or the punch of the AR-50, but you're still talking about a .
5 M.
O.
A.
At well past 1,000 meters.
I've heard they're prone to jam.
Well, it's been known to happen in the field, but there's not a semi-auto built can boast it never jams.
If that's a concern, you ought to stick to bolts.
Good bolt-action rifle if you jammed it, I'd wager âyou were setting out to do so.
Which brings us to the M40 tried and true, battle-tested.
Essentially, the same rifle used by marine snipers since 1966.
It's light, accurate, good for soft targets in the 800 to 1,2000-meter range.
You seem to know this one.
Oh, yeah.
You could say that.
That's the a1 model.
There's not much change from the original.
Biggest difference is the stock it's fiberglass instead of wood.
It changed it over in 1970 or so.
Good.
Wood warped like hell.
You get it wet, âyou put it in the sun gone.
Somebody probably âshould've figured that out before they sent it into a damn jungle.
Yeah.
Probably.
If these aren't to your liking, I could get my hands on a few more.
No.
I've changed my mind.
Thank you.
I don't need anything at this time.
For your trouble.
Oh, it's no trouble.
I make my living on repeat business.
When you need what I'm offering, you know how to find me.
You're still here.
Yeah, I'm still here.
Mm.
Ohh.
Ohh.
Oh.
Did you get any sleep? - Some.
- Mm.
Enough.
How you feeling? I could use some tea.
Thanks.
- Ohh.
- You scared me last night.
Yeah.
Happens sometimes.
Sometimes, I overdo it that's all.
It passes.
Going into the office really takes it out of you, doesn't it? If I stay too long, yeah.
Guess it's hard not to stay.
There's so many important things for you to do there like, you know, stick it to Kim Wexler.
What did I do to Kim Wexler? She's back in the cornfield, isn't she? I didn't do anything to Kim.
I mean, I was present, yes.
But management of personnel those decisions are all Howard's.
That is rich.
But tell me, when Howard was makin' his "management decisions," was he sitting on your knee with your arm up his ass? Hey, can he talk while you drink a glass of water? That's uncalled-for.
And if Howard were my puppet, he certainly wouldn't have recommended you to Davis & Main.
Actually, I'm sure it was Kim Wexler who talked him into doing that.
Hence his anger.
Don't punish Kim.
If you're mad at me, take it out on me.
I know you like to think the world revolves around you, Jimmy, but this has nothing to do with you.
Kim had a responsibility to Hamlin, Hamlin, McGill.
She should have been looking out for her firm's interests.
Not letting us know what you were up to was her mistake.
Oh, come on.
You can't be pissed off at her about this.
I'm not.
Howard is.
And why shouldn't he be? Because she didn't know.
She didn't know âI was gonna air the commercial.
She didn't know âI hadn't gotten it approved.
She just she didn't know.
I see.
So, she didn't know there was anything that she was supposed to tell Howard.
As far as she was concerned, Cliff Main was already looped in.
You told her he was? I implied it.
So it's on me, not her.
She didn't say anything to us about that.
Well, she wouldn't.
Sh-she wouldn't want to make me look bad.
You have to admit this shows a lack of judgment on her part.
She knows you.
She should have known better.
You are such an asshole.
Why? For pointing out that her one mistake was believing in you? For Christ's sake, can we get some perspective here? It was a simple, little commercial.
It aired once that's all.
And can I remind you it worked.
It worked like a dream.
See, that's your problem, Jimmy thinking the ends justify the means.
And you're forever shocked when it all blows up in your face.
What did I do that was so wrong? You broke the rules.
âYou turned Kim into your accessory.
You embarrassed Howard, who God help him inexplicably vouched for you with Cliff Main! You made Cliff and his partners look like schmucks! Shall I go on?! How he hasn't fired you for this positively mystifies me.
"Perspective.
" You want perspective? I'll give you mine You're my brother and I love you, but you're like an alcoholic who refuses to admit he's got a problem.
Now someone's given you the keys to the school bus, and I'm not gonna let you drive it off a cliff! Now, can we just get down to brass tacks here? What can I do to put Kim back where she belongs, huh? What you want me to quit Davis & Main? That's fine.
I I never wanted that job in the first place.
I can't get through to you.
Life is not one big game of "let's make a deal"! Yes, it is! I'm Monty Hall! What's behind door number two? What'll it take, huh?! You want me to quit being a lawyer? Ju a chimp with a machine gun That's me, right, huh?! So, what do you say? You help Kim, I quit the law.
- Is that a deal? - âI didn't say that.
No, you didn't say it, but that's what you want, right?! That's why you put the screws to Kim in the first place to squeeze me! I didn't say that, âand I would never say that! Why not?! Because if I were impeding the career of one of my employees for the purpose of compelling you to do something against your will, that would be extortion.
Yeah.
âIt would.
So? You gonna extort me, Chuck? It's a lead-pipe cinch you'd get away with it.
I'm not gonna tell anyone.
It's real easy you just set things right for Kim.
You get her back in her office, out of doc review everything back to normal, and I quit the law for good.
No more Jimmy McGill, esquire poof! Like he never even existed.
Wow.
Wow.
But I need to hear the words come out of your mouth, okay? âYou're a man of your word.
You're an upstanding man, right? - For God's sake, Jimmy.
- Come on, Chuck! Extort me! Say "quit," and I will quit, but I need to hear it from your mouth! You want me to commit a felony Because that's what you'd do, right? Because you want to believe that deep down, I'm some hypocrite! Let's find out.
Come on down, Chuck! Roll around in the dirt with me! All your dreams will come true! Go on! Do it! Go on! I am not the bad guy here.
You don't want to be a lawyer that's between you âand the New Mexico State Bar.
You want to quit Davis & Main? Be my guest! You clearly don't need any help from me to tank your career.
You're doing just fine on your own.
Speaking of which, it's an hour's drive to Santa Fe.
Even iyou leave right now, you're still gonna be at least 20 minutes late for work another feather in your cap with Clifford Main.
So? I'm not gonna do it.
What âare you negotiating now? No amount of money makes this a good idea for you.
Look, man, âI told you that I'm not No, it's a bad move because it doesn't solve your real problem.
My real problem? What's that? It's not Tuco.
It's keeping a secret.
A dead Tuco âdraws salamancas like flies.
The cartel noses into the business, looks for who hit one of theirs.
You gonna be able to keep your secrets then? Something's got to give.
With you, without you I don't care.
But something's gonna happen.
You said it yourself.
You don't need him dead you need him to go away.
You mean snitch? Man, I drop a dime on Tuco, who do you think the cartel looks at? Me.
And if I call the cops, I get picked up, too.
I'm what you call a known associate.
So I'm locked up with Tuco, who's looking for the guy that put him there.
Tell me how that helps me.
You won't have to talk to the cops.
You won't have to do any time.
There's no killing, but your Tuco problem? It goes away.
It's all there.
Shh.
Let the man count.
We're good.
So, uh till next time, huh? Tuco.
Okay.
Go.
Okay.
I'll, uh âI'll see you next week, Tuco.
Nacho.
Yeah, see you, Domingo.
He's got good numbers.
He's hustlin'.
What do you think? Solid? Uh, uh, y-yes, I would like to report a fight going on at the El Michoacano Restaurant in the 5000 block of the Isleta Boulevard.
There's a man threatening another man with a gun.
It looks to be some sort of gang thing.
Oh, uh, uh, uh, sorry.
I I I'm a passerby.
I I don't want to get involved.
The fuck? Did you see that? See what? That old man just hit my car.
Hey.
- Hello.
- Oh.
Hmm.
Well, let me see.
Um Give me the number four, the pollo, por favor.
- That's to go.
- Yes, sir.
Hey, you.
Hey, gramps.
You just hit my car.
Uh, you're talking to me? Check out Mr.
Magoo here.
Uh, y-yes, sir.
You see that car that you parked your piece of shit next to? That's mine.
You just ran into it.
No, I don't think I did.
You calling me a liar? Oh.
Uh, no.
Hey.
I saw it, too.
You gonna stand here and deny it? Um, guys, um, I I don't know what to tell you.
I'm not aware âof hitting anyone's car, but if I did I apologize.
- So - $6.
33.
Mm.
You keep the change.
Thank you.
Excuse me.
Don't you walk away from me.
Hey, pops.
You better listen to the man.
Come on, guys.
Let's just keep things friendly, all right? I ain't your friend.
Look! You see that? You you did that.
Oh, come on.
That'll buff right out.
You're gonna make this all right.
You're not leaving until you do.
Fine.
You got a pen? A pen.
A pen we'll exchange information, insurance.
I have very good coverage.
They'll take care of this.
I'm not messing around with insurance, ése.
Cash.
Listen, I'm willing to accept responsibility, but if you're not going through insurance, then I have maybe 20, 30 bucks on me that's all.
Kay, now you're lying to me.
I saw your wallet.
You got plenty in there.
Take it out.
Let's look together, jog your memory.
You heard him.
Take out the wallet.
I just cashed my social security check.
It's all I have till the end of the month, and I am not giving it to you.
You're not? I offered to do this the right way.
If you can't accept that, then I can't help you.
Aw, come on, guys.
I'm gonna make this real simple for you.
Give me your wallet, and maybe you walk away from this.
I'm not giving you a damn thing.
Nah, homes.
Give me your wallet.
Let's just stay calm here.
You see me sweating, bitch? Wallet.
Wallet.
Wallet.
There's like $400 here.
You got some crazy lip on you, old man.
Your life worth 400 bucks? Hey, Tuco, time to bounce.
Yeah, go.
Go.
You're one lucky old man.
What the hell? Leggo! Let go! LetLet let go! Let go! âLet go! Let go! Let me see your hands! Hands up! Now! On the ground! That all you got? Get on the ground! Wow.
Look at you.
Are you gonna have to testify? The cops witnessed him in the commission of a felony.
My wallet in his pocket.
Add the gun âhe gets a 5 to 10 stretch.
$25,000.
You definitely earned it.
Still, you could've gotten twice as much for 1/10 the hassle.
You would've done the world a favor.
You wouldn't look like someone took a lead pipe to your face.
Plus, when Tuco gets out, maybe he comes looking for you.
Get to the point.
Just saying you went a long way to not pull that trigger.
Why?