Lie To Me s03e06 Episode Script

Beyond Belief

Oh, my God, I can't believe this.
This is incredible.
Who we are, what we've done.
We are Scientific Re-Patterning.
[CROWD CHEERING.]
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
You know, before I came out here today, I was backstage working on my speech and I noticed that there were no collisions.
Nobody was getting in anyone else's way.
Everybody had a sense of purpose of direction.
They belonged.
And I realized that I was watching this pattern where everyone knew exactly what to do and where to be but without disrupting anyone else's flow.
They were embraced by the same energy.
They were connected.
Connected by the pattern that the work needs in order for it to get done efficiently and comfortably.
[ANSWERING MACHINE BEEPS.]
Hey, Danny, it's Mom.
Listen, honey.
All that stuff, you know, that happened? I never meant to hurt you.
Everything's gonna be all right.
Goodbye, Danielle.
I love you.
No matter what happens.
STAFFORD: We re-pattern through the transitions and the precepts.
We learn to live.
We crave life.
Would you guys stand up? These guys have re-patterned.
[CROWD CHEERING.]
They've transitioned.
Thank you, guys, and welcome.
[CROWD CHEERING.]
WOMAN: Yeah! STAFFORD: Singularity courage resolution integrity pride and finally transcendence.
The goal is transcendence.
Believe and be free.
[CROWD CHEERING.]
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
CAROL [ON RECORDING.]
: I never meant to hurt you.
Everything's gonna be all right.
Goodbye, Danielle.
I love you.
No matter what happens.
John Stafford is responsible for your mum's suicide attempt.
Are you asking or saying? I'm just telling you what you wanna hear.
My mother placed this call from John Stafford's office phone.
I came here prepared to pay you whatever it takes for you to take her away from that man and SRP.
Why not start at the hospital, Danielle? I did go to the hospital first.
She's not there.
Where is she? Back at the mother ship.
She won't speak to me.
Stafford won't let her.
- Well, how do you know that? - I know it.
Trust me.
I'm gonna expose John Stafford for the scam artist that he is.
All I care about is my mother.
She says, smiling.
I beg your pardon? What hospital did they send your mum to? Stanton Park.
CAL: Loker, Torres, now.
Is he taking the case? If he doesn't believe me, why's he taking the case? You had him at "suicide.
" [CAR ALARM BEEPS.]
Mr.
Gareth Sunderland? Dr.
Sunderland.
- Can I help you? - Like you helped Carol Ashland? - I'm sorry? - Carol Ashland.
Last night? Overdose? - Are you, uh? ELI: Police? Do we need to be? We're from The Lightman Group.
I'm Ria Torres, this is Eli Loker.
Maybe you've heard of Dr.
Lightman.
Oh, you have? Good, so enough about us.
Carol Ashland.
You need more time to think of an answer that sounds like the truth? I'm not permitted to discuss this.
Doctor-patient confidentiality.
Gastric lavage would be the standard treatment.
It's stomach pumping.
Batting a hundred so far, but she's not at the hospital.
Isn't attempted suicide an automatic three-day hold, doctor? A very negative approach, if you don't mind my saying so.
It's a simple question.
Doesn't violate any laws.
I evaluated Mrs.
Ashland.
She's not a risk to herself or others.
She's receiving the appropriate care.
Would that appropriate care be Scientific Re-Patterning? Three for three, Loker, not bad.
Fear dilates the pupils, limits visibility, reaction times.
You might wanna take the bus.
It seems simple at first.
Identify the negative patterns that are holding us back.
We have to break down the problem.
Tap the infinite energy within.
Can I get more volume on my left monitor? I can hardly hear myself.
What a load of old bollocks, John.
Your name is John, right? [RYAN STAR'S "BRAND NEW DAY" PLAYING.]
Dream Send me a sign Turn back the clock Give me some time I need to break out And make a new name Let's open our eyes To the brand new day How you doing? You all right? Doctors Lightman and Foster, from the Lightman Group, good morning.
- Morning.
- Dr.
Sunderland called.
He's a friend of Scientific Re-Patterning.
- Oh, yeah.
STAFFORD: Welcome.
We're actually in the same line of work, doctor.
We help people find a positive truth.
I'll bet you do.
And then some, eh? - These are two of our initiates.
- Well, our initiates are back at the office digging up crap on you, mate.
How's Carol Ashland doing? She's doing very well.
Thanks for asking.
No.
She's very well considering.
That's what you mean, right? She's in a re-integration session.
Part of our program.
- Oh.
- Well, maybe we should come back later.
CAL: Yeah.
With some of our police initiates.
We're here on behalf of the concern of Carol's daughter, Danielle.
Right.
Yes, Carol mentioned her.
She wanted her to leave SRP.
You really don't like Danielle, do you? Carol's come a long way.
I'm not sure why her daughter - would want her to leave.
- So you have nothing to hide at all? Suppose I interrupt Carol's session, so you see her and decide for yourselves.
Think positive.
That's what I always say.
Carol? This is Dr.
Lightman and Dr.
Foster.
Hello.
Sorry, were you talking to me? Only you was looking at God over there.
Carol we're here on behalf of your daughter, Danielle.
She's very worried about you.
Please tell my daughter not to worry.
There's She's always worrying.
She's as bad as my mother, always getting into my business.
You know you can leave with us right now.
If you like.
I hear you, Carol.
I really do.
Sure you didn't hear what you wanted to hear from Carol? Look, she's trapped in there with those SRP robots.
Because you read it on Stafford when you told Carol she was free to leave with us? She's terrified of him.
- No, what you saw in Stafford, not Carol.
- Man's a snake.
You've got nothing on him.
When I've got nothing, that is when I really start to worry.
No, that's prejudice talking, not science.
[SHOUTS.]
- Where are you going? - We were gonna go out get coffee.
What's wrong with our coffee? I don't know.
Nothing.
Keep digging on Stafford.
You can go out for coffee.
You don't have to do everything he says.
- He's right.
- This coffee is good.
Go get the coffee you like.
Now.
Oi, oi.
Dad, uh, this is Liam.
Liam.
No, I got nothing.
What happened Dick-I-Mean-Rick? - Shut up, Dad.
CAL: No, it's It's well out of order.
You're right.
You said you were just leaving? You asking me to leave? Sorry.
Can I just call you later? Yeah.
It was nice to meet you.
I hear you're writing another book.
Can't wait.
- Yeah.
Don't hold your breath, son.
EMILY: Dad, he was just being polite.
LIAM: See you tomorrow, Em.
- He seems like a nice boy.
- Does everything have to be a confrontation? What? I was being nice, you know.
Considering, you know, I just come home from work you know, hard day, nose to the grindstone and that, you know.
I just want a little bit of peace and quiet.
Maybe a touch of the old telly, you know.
Just like any normal dad, you know, with their normal daughter.
Well, you picked the wrong house for that.
- I know what your game is.
- What? You think you can mess with me by getting an 8-foot boyfriend - who's built like a brick.
- Oh, he's a good guy.
[PHONE BEEPS.]
Does he treat you well? I think you'd really like him, Dad.
Liam.
Short for William.
Willie.
Is that a work text, Dad? I think you better get going.
Can I have my hug now? RIA: These people all share the same essential characteristics: A projection of certainty, a sense of their own infallibility a sense of being called to a global mission and so on.
We need to find SRP members to talk to.
Or ex-members.
Find out what's going on.
Oh, yeah.
I have been looking and, uh, I found Jane Prescott.
Ex-member, very prolific on the blogosphere.
Let's see if she wants to, uh, come out and play.
Carol? Oh, I want some of what she's smoking, please.
[CHUCKLES.]
Thank you for coming back, Dr.
Lightman, Dr.
Foster.
I feel the last time we met I didn't express myself clearly enough.
We understand.
You've been through a lot in the last couple of days, Carol.
Oh, I get it.
Carol, I do, I get it.
Shame, right? Only you don't wanna talk about it.
I mean, not yet, you know, obviously.
I can take a hint.
Right.
I feel like I'll go for a nose about then.
Don't run.
Panics the initiates.
[GROANS.]
I'm in the wrong game, mate.
Oh, we're not so different.
Well, paycheck for starters.
How'd you get started in this racket, then, eh? It was a natural transition from work I did earlier in my life.
Part of my personal journey.
What, into the Fortune 500? It's not about the money, Dr.
Lightman.
SRP is a not-for-profit organization.
All revenue goes toward helping people.
If you hold down anger like that all right, that's like holding down a sneeze.
Sooner or later you're gonna get hurt, mate.
You know, your negative view of the work isn't uncommon.
One of your acolytes tried to kill herself the night before last.
Let's get one thing clear.
SRP is not a religion or a cult.
We don't have acolytes.
What do you call them then, eh? Do you ever wonder how people see you, Dr.
Lightman? You're gonna tell me.
You override people, ignore them.
And then when you feel threatened, you get mean.
You're a bully, Dr.
Lightman.
I'm a bully.
Without acolytes.
[CHUCKLES.]
Do you mind? This is Joan, it's okay.
I'd like her here.
Thank you, Carol.
I'm pleased to meet you.
Why'd you take the pills, Carol? I can't dwell on that.
It was a mistake and now I need to redirect my energies to purging the negative and focusing on the positive.
Are you happy here? Yes, I am.
Can't you tell? Danielle misses you.
She's very worried about you.
"Misses" is such a negative term, but I hear you.
My daughter loves me and I love her.
Carol, can you say her name? Don't be so distant.
Danielle.
[CHUCKLES.]
Thank you.
See? We all have something that we can offer each other.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, of course, of course.
I'm happy to be here.
- How you getting along with this lot, then? - I'm moving into the Fourth Transition.
The Fourth Transition.
What's that, then? "Become nothing.
Embrace the void.
" - Well, that's better than nothing, I suppose.
STAFFORD: It's a process.
That's why we're all here.
Glad you could make it, Dr.
Lightman.
I would not have missed this for the world.
Ready when you are.
STAFFORD: Carol, let's begin with you, okay? Tell us about your regression to Transition Six.
I need the group to help me.
You need help self-delivering.
Could you explain what you mean? Self-delivering is when we embrace the positive realities that we create for ourselves.
What's that mean, then? It means we acknowledge our faults things holding us back, and we re-pattern.
We self-deliver.
Re-patterning is possible for everyone.
Carol, wake up.
This is a nightmare.
Dr.
Lightman, I invited you here to see our work not be a negative disruption.
Right then.
Well, I think I'll self-deliver back to work.
There's room in the van, all, if anyone needs a lift.
Send my love to Danielle? Tell her that I'm where I wanna be and there's no need to come back.
I'm happy.
If you stick around, he's gonna hurt you.
CAL: Emily? Hey, what's going on now? How'd this get here? I don't know.
I've never seen it before.
- How long have you been home? - Since I last saw you, why? And you got absolutely no idea how this got here? None.
What is it? You do lock the doors and that while I'm out, don't you? Yeah.
Why? All right.
Get dressed.
Go on.
You know, I had plans tonight with a friend.
All right, call your Willie, all right? - And tell him you can't make it.
- Why? I want you to proofread some pages of my book.
I'll pay you.
- I'll make it up to you, Em, I promise.
- You can start by dropping the Willie joke.
Done.
All right.
So you actually wrote some pages.
I've got a little problem, Em.
Semicolons.
I never understood them.
But you use them anyway.
- Hey, Em.
EMILY: Hey, Gillian.
They snuck this into my house.
While Emily was there alone, doors locked.
That ex-SRP member is gonna be here tomorrow.
Maybe she can help.
These bastards are going down.
You mark my words.
Cal.
Whatever people may feel personally about John Stafford and SRP it's been a great help in my life.
And in a lot of people's lives.
And John would never hurt anyone.
But you left SRP.
- Why? - You can leave whenever you want.
When your course work is finished, it's time to move on.
Broken eye contact, hesitation.
That's a straight up lie, Jane.
No, it's not.
I still embrace the precepts, but I choose to live my own life now.
Precepts? Defensive.
She feels attacked.
CAL: I'm not trying to attack you but from the look in your eye, you've got a story to tell.
He's in.
I knew John.
In the beginning.
SRP started off as a beautiful thing.
Just a few of us exchanging ideas on how we could change our lives.
People got interested and more people came.
We were doing something special.
We were helping them.
And then what happened? Money.
And more money, eh? You hate the money.
Don't you? Ruined everything.
It changed John.
He appointed himself our leader.
My boyfriend at the time, Martin, he was the first one to leave.
So where's Martin now? There was a fire.
The police said it was an accident.
John said it was Martin's own negativity that lit the fire that killed him.
You blame Stafford.
You blame Martin.
"Blame" is a very negative term.
You blame yourself.
- I blame no one.
- You blame everyone.
Head down, eyes down.
Blocking the eyes with the hand.
Shame.
Were you what they call an initiate? - What are you suggesting? - You're the one doing that, darling.
- You still love him.
- I'll always love Martin.
I'm not talking about Martin.
Stafford's done with you, though, right? He's through.
- How old are you? - I'm 37.
You're outraged at the fact that you're being replaced by younger women, right? You ever thought of suicide? Shame again.
Send this one home to Florida before she goes running back to Stafford.
Stafford's a narcissist.
He's his own weak spot.
We wait, he'll trip himself up.
No time for that.
He had his thugs break into my house.
I called him a narcissist, you make this about you? Oh, that reminds me.
I want a big wanky picture of myself to put up in my office.
Can you just wait until I get my purse? You know, it's easy to be negative.
Everything around us is designed to make us think negatively.
But guess what.
We ain't buying.
We ain't buying.
Go on, say it.
CROWD: We ain't buying it.
We ain't buying because we know a truth - that can't be bought or sold.
- I'll just bust in.
Young lady, would you come up here? Welcome.
Mind your bag.
That's it.
How long have you been with us? Eleven months.
STAFFORD: And how's it going? - Thank you.
WOMAN: Good.
I'm on the Fourth Transition.
- Where's Carol? - I don't know.
No one's seen her.
STAFFORD: I don't think they could hear you in the back row.
- SRP is the best thing I've ever done.
- You can say it.
It's okay, you're with family now.
SRP's the best thing I've ever done.
Aah! [CROWD CHEERING.]
She's disappeared? CAL: Yeah.
And he knows it.
Dr.
John.
Carol Ashland? Any news? Would you excuse me? [CLEARS THROAT.]
I don't know where Carol Ashland is.
That's the truth and you know it.
You wanna know why you get up my nose? I'm gonna tell you anyway.
Although I don't see any lies on your face also, I can't see any truth.
I'm sure you thought you were helping Carol by coming here, Dr.
Lightman.
Any fear for her safety? I can't even see that, can you? Maybe Danielle knows something.
Carol's daughter? Danielle? The way you said Danielle's name just now you seem more familiar with her than her own mother does.
CAL: See? You know, even though I don't get sweet F.
A.
from your face that? That's a classic, that is.
[CLEARS THROAT.]
So were you ever a member of SRP? Not really a question, that one, love.
So on you go.
How did you find out? Stafford.
- He told you? - In a manner of speaking, yeah.
I was in SRP until a few months ago.
It just wasn't for me.
What did he do to you? I was in the core group.
An initiate.
We had sex every day for nearly a year.
I'd be in the middle of something, someone would say John wanted me so I'd go.
Anytime, night or day.
Sometimes you wouldn't know where you were going.
They'd send a jet and fly you back in the morning.
At first I liked it.
I was proud of myself.
Felt like I was better than the rest of the women.
But then I saw myself.
What I was really doing.
It got bad.
Really bad.
Some nights I would just scratch myself.
My face.
I wanted to be ugly.
I didn't want him to touch me.
But you didn't leave.
You couldn't.
It feels like there's no world outside SRP.
So you come to see us about your mum? But it's not just her.
I wanna kill him.
It could cost you a little extra.
What are you so excited about? RIA: John Stafford loves a close-up.
Everything's right here.
He's just hard to pin down.
All the distorted microexpressions, so I isolated the most obvious examples.
All right, stop.
Pan on the left.
Go back.
All right, there.
Subcutaneous muscle damage.
No wonder we couldn't get a read on him.
You care to take a guess? Surgery.
I was already there.
All right, calm down.
This is the first time I've seen these.
- Wanna see what he looked like before? - Fire away.
No wonder we couldn't get a read on him.
Meet Carl Weatherly from Ontario.
Wanted by the RCMP since 1989 for vehicular manslaughter.
Leaving a wife and a kid.
John Stafford is not John Stafford.
[CROWD CHEERING.]
Thank you.
Thank you.
You are about to begin the greatest journey of your life.
Look around you.
Meet your new family.
These people will be with you forever.
Will be with me forever.
Well, by "forever," all right, what John means is for as long as he needs a family, you know.
Or you or whoever, really.
- Excuse me CAL: How you doing? You all right? Nice pants.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to introduce you to John's wife, Sandy and his lovely daughter, Liz.
On your feet, girls.
Who've been kind enough to join us from Toronto where they've been living since he abandoned them 14 years ago.
[CHATTERING.]
Whoo! This is the Stafford family.
Or rather, the Weatherly family as Mr.
Stafford was known before he had to leave town.
- Lovely family.
- Ahem.
CAL: John.
Very handsome.
Let's, uh, take a break.
I think we've been invited backstage which, rumor has it, is a rare honor, you know what I mean? Re-pattern amongst yourselves.
Could you clear this area, please? Please, now.
MAN: Right away.
All right, you heard him.
Let's clear this area please.
Well, go on then say something.
You talk for a living, don't you? They came all this way.
Sandy.
Liz.
Dad.
I'm really sorry.
I was wrong to leave, but I'm a different person now.
Wrong to leave? Just wrong? So everything's good now? And young and stupid.
I thought you'd be better off without me.
I really did.
No, he believes that.
He's probably standing there trying to figure out how to spin this into a positive.
I don't have to listen to this.
She never stopped waiting for you.
Even when she went to college she'd call to ask if you'd come home.
Not even a letter.
Nothing.
You just disappeared, you son of a bitch.
I thought you were dead.
I hoped you were dead.
I told Liz you had died, but she didn't believe it.
She always believed that she was gonna see you again.
You left us with nothing, Carl.
Nothing.
[SOBBING.]
You're seeing this for the first time but I've been living with it for 14 years.
Come, Mom.
Let's go home.
This, John Stafford, is your life.
The only crime I've committed, the only wrong I've done abandoning a woman and her child was done out of youthful ignorance and stupidity.
Only crime, my ass.
You're wanted by the Mounties, mate.
- That matter was resolved.
CAL: Oh, really? Oh, well, I'll get right on that one then, shall I? No extra charge.
Look, I've got a new family that I need to protect.
So for all their sakes just go.
I'll take care of my family and you take care of your family.
Are you saying something about my family, mate? Emily? Em! STAFFORD [ON RECORDING.]
: The people who are problems in our lives will reprogram also, become less negative.
We change others by changing ourselves.
We find ourselves placing expectations on others which reflect our fears, and have nothing [CAL SHOUTS.]
CAL: Get out here, now.
Both of you.
- We were just experimenting, Dad.
- Did you bring her here with this bollocks? We were trying to understand the person who would be attracted to that.
Don't play with fire, all right? Neither of you.
- Ever.
- Dad, seriously? All right, take her up to my office.
And stay there, all right? Both of you.
I'll be back in a couple of hours.
You got it? - Give me the keys, give, give me.
- Here.
I don't need any more pamphlets, mate.
Now, I'm keeping the car for the police, all right? - Walk back to the mother ship.
MAN: Okay.
If I see you in my neighborhood or anywhere else for that matter, ever again, all right that tire iron is gonna have a mind of its own.
Get me? I hear you, yes.
- Now, you tell John Stafford this is over.
- Okay, it's over.
But not in a negative way, okay? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Marvelous.
Now, sod off.
STAFFORD: Call you back.
You all right, mate? The trouble with hubris, Mr.
Weatherly, you know, we hold on to stuff.
Things we shouldn't.
And we keep them in places where if anyone knows our original name they can find them.
Where's my property? Where's my private papers? The cops took the lot, mate.
What was this place for, then? Was it like a record of your life history, you know? For posterity? You plonker, you didn't even divorce Sandy, did you? - That's gonna cost you an arm and a leg.
- SRP was never about the money.
- Oh, what was it about then? - We helped thousands of people.
What about all the other ones? Did you find Carol Ashland? She ran away from you.
She was probably scared that she'd have another go at herself if she stuck around you.
I had something to do with Carol's suicide attempt? Taking an overdose in your office, at your desk.
Saying goodbye to her daughter on your phone.
What was that about then? - I don't know, I CAL: You ran away from your family and a manslaughter charge in Canada.
Did you ever think of just manning up? Oh, well, here's your chance, all right.
We'll call this the Eighth Transition to jail.
First precept, knife the nastiest bastard you can find in there within your first day.
After that, I've heard they'll leave you alone.
OFFICER: All right, turn around.
[FOLK MUSIC PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS.]
Liam.
- Dr.
Lightman.
- Right you are, then.
Dr.
Emily? Dad.
What should we talk about next then? Semicolons? What about sport, eh? Dad, come on.
Just because he looks like a jock doesn't mean that that's all he is.
All right, Mr.
Not-A-Jock.
Semicolons.
Go.
Well, you can use a semicolon as a soft period.
By using a semicolon instead of a period between two sentences you show that those two sentences have a closer relationship to each other than they do to the sentences around them.
CAL: As in: Emily's my daughter semicolon and I'm having a hard time adjusting to her being a grown-up.
Right.
I'll get tea, then.
Bunch of garbage.
Some of that SRP stuff actually got me thinking.
I mean, some of it makes sense.
It's common sense dressed up, so people wanna pay for it.
There's whole shelves at mall bookstores dedicated to that.
The trouble is men like Stafford, they prey on you, they make you feel like you're lacking something and that only they have the answer.
Yeah.
It sounds like Lightman.
Did you get me one? - What's wrong with the coffee here? - Nothing.
It's a lot to carry, you know, to have to work through.
I don't think I can do it.
I don't know what to say to her.
What Stafford did to you, to your mother, to all those people, it's horrifying.
But he's a sociopath.
But we push back.
And we hold on and we push back.
And we get help from people who really care about us.
So take this step.
Take all the time you need, love.
[English - US -SDH.]

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