Homicide: Life on the Street s03e09 Episode Script

Every Mother's Son

- Another bad night, Beau? - No, I'm good.
Beth's mum just called.
Beth's coming back.
She's bringing back the kids, wants to give it another try.
- Well, that's great.
- Yeah who knows? I've got a different feeling about it this time.
Maybe we can turn it around.
- I closed the Woods murder last night.
- What? Two uniforms brought Lashley in and he confessed.
I like that, closing cases when I'm not here.
Give me the details, I'll type up the report.
- Already done, and on Gee's desk.
- Even better.
Thanks, partner.
Did you get your coffee? Coffee.
I knew something was missing.
- Felton looks terrible.
- I think that's mainly a lack of sleep.
Open your eyes.
He has a patina of self-destruction about him.
His eyes are red, his gills are green, he has a sheen of sweat on his brow.
He's been through a lot.
You'd be a wreck too, John.
I know what it's like to have a wife leave you but drowning your woes in bourbon doesn't do a lot of good.
Stan, his wife didn't just leave him.
She took the kids and disappeared.
That's a little different than having your ex move to a condo in San Diego.
- Santa Barbara.
- Whatever! He'll be fine.
We're not the only ones.
You guys have noticed it.
- What? - You know.
That Beau's been hitting the sour mash a little hard lately.
- Has he? - Is this what you guys do? Gossip about each other? Cos it's none of your business, or mine either.
Now that you mention it, he has looked a little rocky.
Would you please stop? My partner's personal is not gonna be discussed.
He doesn't tell me how to live my life I'm not gonna tell him.
Fine.
My preference would be for a back-up I could depend upon, but that's just me.
OK, everyone, listen up.
The time has come to distribute Crosetti's open cases.
Gee, can I talk to you about that for a minute? - No.
- Come on, I want all his open cases.
- No, no.
- I'm his partner, OK! I'm responsible for those cases, I'm the one who knows them.
Your plate's full as it is, man.
As you know, at the time of his death Crosetti had five investigations underway.
Based on everyone's workloads, these cases will break down like this Young from '93 will go to Bolander.
Munch, you take the Smith case.
Pembleton will wrap up Richmar, then work with Bayliss on the Becker case.
That leaves Chilton.
That case was his worst nightmare.
It made him crazy.
It was a curse for him.
I don't know who to give this case to.
Howard.
Why me? I don't want that case.
It's a dog.
Yes and you've got the best clearance rate in this room.
- You can't beat 100 per cent.
- So? What? I'm not saying I don't like a challenge, Lieutenant I do my job, but Erica Chilton? - Maybe your luck will rub off on this.
- Luck? I'm not following your logic.
You're giving it to me cos I have a 100 percent clearance rate? I'm giving you the Chilton case because you're a detective in this squad room and that's what I've decided.
Yes, sir.
Felton, you'll work with her on it.
Lewis will bring you up to speed.
OK, everybody, these cases have been neglected far too long already.
Let's do Steve proud.
I've been thinking about food for the bar and sketched up this menu idea.
- This is French and Italian.
- Yeah.
I realise that we've gotta offer food for our customers, but this is scary! - What would you have us serve? - Hamburgers, crab cakes, turkey clubs.
- Hamburgers, crab cakes, turkey clubs? - I don't think we should serve food.
- Munch, line one.
- For me? Who is it? Pick up the phone, maybe you'll find out, huh? - Excuse me, guys.
- With food there's too much overhead.
Timmy, my boy, we have to serve food.
Well, if we have to offer food, then I say bratwurst.
What the hell's bratwurst? - The bank wants to see us.
- The bank? - About the loan.
- I thought we were done with that? We were.
Apparently somebody screwed up somewhere.
It's not me this time.
Why do you guys always assume that it's me? I want it to be really special for all of us, just me, my kids, my wife.
We'll celebrate, put the past behind us.
We'll talk about all the things we're gonna do with this year.
Maybe plan a vacation or something.
- Sounds good.
- Yeah.
I was supposed to take Alex skiing last Christmas but it didn't work out.
Poconos are nice.
They're not too far, but - It's kinda romantic but family oriented.
- Yeah.
Poconos.
- Do they think I'm stupid or gullible? - Who? The Doublemint Twins! Granger and Barnfather.
Oh, yes! They think we're stupid and gullible.
I have been up there trying to get a replacement for Gaffney.
I transferred him six weeks ago.
They still won't give me another detective! I know this song.
I've been trying to get a replacement for Crosetti for weeks.
- I know.
How have you been? - Not bad.
You headed home? No, actually.
A friend is taking me to lunch.
Celebrate my promotion.
- Where's he taking you? - Brass Elephant.
She.
- After Dalesio's, it's Baltimore's best.
- Amanda always did have good taste.
Loves food.
Why don't you come with us? Really, really! If we're ever gonna be sociable, one of us has to play hooky once in a while.
I can't.
I have reports to read, documents to sign bosses to infuriate.
And when my boys and girls are left alone, they get into mischief.
Oh, come on! You can be gone for one lousy hour to have some lunch.
Besides, Amanda's terrific.
I think you two will like each other.
- Oh, yeah? - Yeah! - Hmm - Say nothing.
Let's just walk away.
What the hell! Wait up.
There you have it.
Well, your winning streak had to come to an end sooner or later.
Really? Why is that? And who says it's ending.
I'm just saying that this might be the one, but you can take a humble, I know that you can.
No, Frank, I'm a very good detective Even the best detectives sometimes have open cases.
It's no disgrace.
That's just the way the cards fall.
You were lucky, that's all.
No, I have a 100 percent clearance rate because I have good instincts, I'm thorough Look, I know about pride.
I'm the master of the art, but in this case, it may not apply.
I hope that you close this in one day but a little red under your name won't make you less of a detective.
Are you done? Yeah, yeah.
Good, cos I got some work to do.
Hey, Amanda! How come you look so healthy? You're meant to have a job! The pink you see in my cheeks is from pique! I brought a friend, Al Giardello, my counterpart who I never see, this is Amanda DeBreaux, my oldest friend, who I also never see.
We got something in common.
- Nice to meet you.
- Nice meeting you.
Erica Chilton is found by her six-year-old daughter, half-dressed on her bed, suffocated by her pillow.
- Was she raped? - That's what Crosetti thought initially.
They had sex.
Condition of the room indicated a lot of passion, but there was no evidence of assault.
- Where's her daughter now? - Her sister took her, out west.
It's in the notes.
- OK.
What else? - It's all in the notes.
The boyfriend was at work.
Tom Marans, right? Er yeah, and the neighbours heard screams but no one saw anything.
Uh-huh.
What about Marans? Could he have slipped out of work for 20 minutes? He didn't do it.
His alibi was solid.
I remember that.
He was devastated.
Look, it is all in the notes.
Crosetti kept updating them, in case he found something new.
Yeah, I've seen his notes, Mel! - It's not an easy case.
- Yeah, and it's six months cold! What am I supposed to do with this file? There's nothing in it! - Back off, Howard! - Meldrick, we gotta head to the bank.
Yeah, sure I'm going to the bank with you.
I'd rather have a root canal than stick around here! What do you say we go back and interview these people again? Maybe they'll remember something they never remembered before.
OK.
Fine.
Let's start from scratch.
After you! I don't fuss much when I'm by myself, but every once in a while I cook and the world stands still.
I follow my impulse and then throw caution to the wind.
I'm Italian.
- Italian? - First generation.
Balangiare a la dolce vita! - Northern Italian or southern? - Both my parents are from the south.
My father's Siciliano, from Sicily, my mother from Louisiana and I make a mean gumbo.
- Amanda has some Creole blood.
- Is that so? Oh, yeah! By the way of Rhode Island! I grew up in Woonsocket, but my great-grandmother was from the Dominican Republic.
Amanda teaches history.
And I've got a class Unless anyone wants coffee No.
No.
- OK, we'll take the check.
- Thanks.
Oh, no, please! My treat.
But you didn't invite me.
- I let you sit down, didn't I? - Very well, if you insist.
But the next time it's on me.
Deal? It's a deal.
Hinks Bank! What kinda name is that for a bank, anyway? Whose idea was it to come to this one? - Our lawyer's.
- What does it mean, Hinks? Hopefully it means we'll be out in less than an hour with our mortgage! Sure you told us everything about your past? Are you a Weatherman who went underground in the 70's? - I was playing in the sandbox then.
- They recruited young! - Detective Munch! - Ingrid, right? - Inger.
- Inger! So, why did you invite us down? Is something wrong with our loan or did you have trouble verifying our combined income? - No, that's fine.
- What? Our credit report came in bad? It's him, isn't it? Listen, my credit is just fine, OK? I carry a platinum card.
How many detectives you know carry platinum? Not many.
So there's nothing wrong, is there? - No, everything is fine.
- It is? - Your loan has met final approval.
- Right.
So, then why did you call us down here? It's our policy to give good news face to face.
At Hinks Bank we like to put a happy human face on everything we do.
Don't you try to do the same in your jobs? - We're detectives, Inger.
- I know.
- Homicide detectives.
- I know.
We never have any good news to give anybody face to face, ever.
Never? Well, hardly ever, unless a wife's happy to hear their husband got shot, but Well, that's not never.
She has a point.
I think Tom Marans is our prime suspect.
How old do you think that place is? I don't know about that kind of thing.
When the kids get back, maybe I'll buy one of these.
The change would be good.
We need that right now.
The school's are probably good around here.
Beth's mum say when they're coming back? Soon.
Probably a day or two.
New house, new neighbourhood yeah.
Beau, it Will you take another look in Crosetti's file for me, please.
- The part about possible abuse.
- All right, OK Based on the report, Crosetti thought Erica Chilton might have been battered.
Some scars, some old bone fractures.
Yes.
- Tom Marans? - Uh-huh.
What can I do for you? We're Homicide.
I'm Detective Howard, this is Detective Felton.
- About time you showed up.
- What do you mean? I've been leaving messages for weeks.
And no one bothers to return my calls.
- Where are those other two guys? - The detective that was heading up the investigation of the death of your girlfriend, he passed away.
- The bald guy with the moustache? - Yeah.
That's rough.
I'm sorry.
He was great to me.
So, you like collecting things, huh? Yeah.
Erica and I used to go to auctions together, the state sales.
She refinished the table by herself.
It took her four months, a lot of mess.
I would never have had the patience.
You still keep in touch with Erica's daughter? Sure.
We were together for three years.
That's half her life.
- She doesn't even see her own dad.
- You know where her dad is? No.
Erica lost track of him.
I have no idea.
OK.
Why was it you were trying to get in touch with Detective Crosetti? I found these letters when I got around to packing up Erica's stuff.
She never mentioned him.
They're benign but he was in love with her.
Yeah, well we'll look into it.
We'd have been married by now.
So, what do you think? He's great, right? He's sweet, but I'm not interested in - Mummy, let's get shrimp.
- Honey, you're interrupting.
I'm sorry, but can we? I love shrimp! I know you love shrimp.
All right, hang on.
OK, here's $10.
Go ask the man for half a pound, OK? OK.
Thank you.
OK, so Why? What's the problem? I don't know, but I know he's not for me.
Coward! You're afraid to fall in love again.
- Mummy, do I like the jumbo kind? - Yeah, honey, jumbo's fine.
- These are nice for this time of year.
- Amanda You know Al's a wonderful man.
Hey, you are the one that always has to be in love.
- I'm better on my own.
- Yeah, sure you are! Listen, I'm not closing any doors, but if it's meant to be, I'll fall in love again, or not.
- Either way, I'm happy.
- Hmm I'm not so sure if that's a healthy attitude or a fatalistic one.
Beau, pick up line three.
Felton.
Zach? You OK? Ssh! Why are you crying, honey? No, not at all.
I'm gonna see you real soon, pal.
Yeah! Hello? Beth.
Hey! What are Your mum said that you were coming home.
You can't just change your mind, Beth! Damn it, Beth! Beth Beth? We are now incorporated.
Wow! We got a corporate account! Did I just feel my sphincter move? I wish Felicia could see me now.
I wish Gwen and Nancy and Maria, and every woman in Baltimore would step up to the plate.
- This'll brush them back, right? - Absolutely! They think they can dig in and swing for the bleachers on me? They'll be looking at John Munch with new eyes.
- New eyes! - Bobby! Hey, hey! Big day, huh? - Did you get all the banking settled? - Absolutely.
- Let's get on with the festivities.
- Hand over the down-payment cheque made out to Hinks Bank.
Huh? Here is your cheque for the full purchase amount.
Here's your cheque paying off my mortgage.
Here's your cheque for the real-estate commission.
Here are the keys to the kingdom! VoilĂ ! - Contemplez! - That's it! We're done! You need to write a cheque for $2,000.
- Huh? - What is that? Your fee? - No, it's for Dram Shop insurance.
- That's not covered in the contract? No.
Do we have $2,000? Well, yeah Yeah! The EIV will give us a discount, right? There are no discounts.
This is a standard fee.
"Hinks Life and Accident Insurance.
" How about that? OK - If I can write one, I can write two.
- Take your time.
Hinks Life I'm on to new business.
You said drop the investigation, I dropped it.
Now I'm telling you to get on it again.
- I got no leads.
- My wife's been missing a month.
How could you still have no leads? Missing Persons isn't Homicide.
Cases move slower down there.
The only thing moving slowly, Roger, is your fat butt! Keep talking like that and your case goes to the bottom of the bin.
With you in charge, it doesn't matter! - I'll keep looking for my kids by myself.
- Look, be my guest! Better yet, why don't you hire yourself a good private investigator.
I can give you a list of names, if you want.
All right.
Thanks.
Thank you for your time.
Very good.
No, I got the number.
All right, thank you.
Yeah.
Bye.
It's nice of you to show up.
I was gonna send out a search party.
Sorry.
We're placing calls to the Chilton family today, right? I'm almost done.
Those old injuries we thought were abuse Erica's mother said she got trampled by a horse when she was 14.
Spent five months on her back.
Nobody else knows anything.
Hey, Beau How about tonight you try something different? - Sleep in pyjamas.
- Oh - What's our next move? - Let's look at those letters.
Find out who this guy is, where he's from.
It may be nothing, but it's all I've got.
The letters.
Hey, Beau Give me a minute.
- What did you do with them? - I threw them here in my pocket.
You checked your pocket four times.
You take them home with you? - I don't know.
- You got bombed again last night.
- No! - I thought that was over.
- I did not get bombed last night.
- You're disgusting! I can smell it! Kay, I had a call from Beth last night.
It was Beau I have to close this case, you understand? Yeah, I understand.
I'm sorry.
I'll find the letters.
We don't know if they're anything That is not the point.
You have a responsibility to this job, to me, and right now you're a liability, so why don't you just take off? Or have yourself another drink? I gave you the letters! The guy's name is right on there! What are you asking me his name for? Look, Detective Howard has the letters and she's not reachable.
We were just hoping you could help us out.
I wanna get a head start.
Maybe you could recall Erica's old boyfriend's name? Alex something, I think.
I don't know.
It's not like I wanted to keep reading them over and over.
Right.
Listen, I'm sorry.
You don't have to worry about it.
It's She's probably waiting at the office for me.
I won't bother you again.
Oh, Kay Frigging process takes forever.
Yeah, it's always too light, too dark, isn't it? Mmm.
- You gonna be long? - Probably.
Contractor with a conscience signed a bunch of cons up on a work-release programme last year.
They gutted and restored a building across the street from Chilton's place.
I'm hoping a neighbour remembers seeing one of them talking to her, or something.
- Hmm - What the hell does that mean? I thought you had something.
From the boyfriend? A diary or Yeah, some letters.
I don't have them now, OK? It's a long shot, but it's better than nothing.
Well, you think maybe I could just jump in there real quick? - Yeah, sure.
- I got a fresh one.
You go right ahead.
Thanks.
Great.
- Hey, Megan! - Hey, Al! Thanks for inviting me to lunch yesterday.
- I'm glad you could join us.
- I'd like to call Amanda, repay my debt and take her out.
- Really? - Why not, right? - What? - Al Walk with me, Al.
- She's been hurt a couple of times.
- Haven't we all? Sure, but Amanda's twice divorced.
She She won't go to the next step if it doesn't feel right.
Typical! You know, I I should have seen this coming.
What? It's not personal, it's chemistry, or something.
Yeah.
Maybe it's not chemistry, maybe it's biology.
Maybe I'm too black.
What? Come on, you're not serious? Yes, I am.
Women like Amanda never go for a guy like me.
Wait, what are you talking about, "women like Amanda, guys like you"? Men whose skin's a little darker, whose lips are a little fatter.
This is not a new thing.
So, you're saying that Amanda won't go out with you because you're blacker than she is? Yes, I am.
Black women like Amanda feel like a man like me will bring them down that we're no good, that we're unclean.
Oh Al I've known Amanda for a long time.
She has been fighting for equal rights since she was 16.
She can't listen to a Polish joke without going off on ethnic stereotyping! I I can't tell you how many times this has happened to me.
I once had a black woman that told me, "I could never love you because "because your nose is too wide.
" Still, I I think you're making an unfair assumption, a generalisation.
You're being guilty of exactly the same thing you say Amanda is guilty of.
I don't expect you to understand, being a woman and white.
I don't expect you to understand.
- What? You waiting on a suspect? - No.
Then what's all this? Photos and cases files of felons working across the street from Chilton's place.
Carpenters, bricklayers, loafers.
Yeah, well, patience is virtuous, huh? Sometimes it's harder than work.
I'll find something, eventually.
Yeah.
Look, I know you think you're a better cop than Crosetti but he did what he could on this case.
I know that now.
This isn't about Steve, and his skill or ability, it's about me, understand? Sure.
But you could sit on a shot tower spitting nickels and you still wouldn't solve this.
No, I will.
It's frustrating, I know.
Crosetti and I spent three months on this murder and he knew we were stuck after the first four weeks.
It's just one of them cases.
Well, I've never had one of those cases.
Yeah, I know you haven't until now.
All right, four, five Hey, Gee! You got a minute? Am I gonna be getting a new partner any time soon? I know working solo might be Pembleton's style but I like to work with somebody, you know, somebody I can bounce ideas off and so forth.
I'm a collaborator at heart and I know that I ain't never gonna replace Crosetti but it's time for me to move on.
Well, call Captain Granger, call Colonel Barnfather.
Better still, call the Deputy Commissioner.
I've been trying to reach him for two weeks.
If you made the telephone call, he might listen to you and get all misty eyed and finally make a move.
Get this thing out of my way! OK, you see what I mean? He's been schizo for a few days, right? First he's depressed when he has to give out Crosetti's open cases, but then he comes back from lunch, he's practically floating.
Today he's furious.
Man! Talk about your mood swings! Maybe it's hormonal.
I don't know what it is, but I know Gee is doing the loop-de-Ioop.
I don't think it's healthy.
Maybe it's dangerous.
- What are we supposed to do? - I don't know.
Something.
No, big man, don't go there! Don't do it! Did you eat anything? I'm starving.
I'm busy.
Come on, I'll take you to Jimmy's, warm your innards.
No, thanks, I'm skipping meals for a while.
Something you wanted? No, no.
Well, go and pull the door for me, would you? We are the Three Musketeers! - Oh, yeah? Who am I? - Name them, Munch.
You got Darlene, Annette and Cubby.
Just kidding! You want musketeers, not mouseketeers.
So you have - Aramis, Athos, Porthos, D'Artagnan.
- That's four, not three.
You can count better than Alexandre Dumas.
That's why I'm in business with you and not him.
- How are you coming along? - I'm pushing all these buttons.
Nothing.
But you're computer literate.
I am, with computers, not with dinosaurs like this.
There's gotta be an of operating manual.
- Hey, fellas! - How do you open this? - You got me.
I never used it.
- How did you handle money? From here to here! Excuse me! Excuse me! What are you doing with our beer? - This ain't your beer.
- Of course it is! I have had it about up to here with this, OK? This morning, we kicked down nine grand for so-called "incidentals" - and you ain't taking the beer nowhere.
- We gotta.
It's a state law.
State law! State law! I'll talk to you about state law! - We know state law.
- Chapter and verse! The state code forbids transfer of liquor from one owner to the next.
- Since when? - Since the Baltimore Catechism! Look, I'm out of the booze business.
I'm trying to keep you in compliance.
The County Sheriff's boys are gonna come by to make sure the liquor is gone.
Now, you wanna give us a hand, start clearing the liquor off the bar.
Well, I guess our grand opening ain't gonna be so grand, huh? You wouldn't have lunch with me.
How about dinner? - I'm not hungry.
- I insist.
I've already eaten.
I still insist.
Kay, hi! Hey, Lieutenant.
- What a mess, huh? - Mmm.
Big bus crash, in addition to the usual homicide crowd.
Piling up the bodies all the way down the hall.
- Good luck finding yours! - Gee gave me one of Crosetti's cases.
I was trying to put it down as wrongful death, respiratory failure due to the suffocation.
I have my doubts so I'm gonna see if Scheiner will back me up on exhuming the body.
Huh.
What do you think you're gonna find out? Maybe she ingested something, made it look like asphyxiation.
It's happens.
Uh-huh.
Something that wouldn't have shown up from the standard toxicological tests.
Yeah, maybe.
The missing link.
I just have to find it, that's all.
Everyone keeps saying this case is unsolvable.
So, you need to be the one to put it down? Yeah, you've got it.
We have a higher standard to maintain, right? They still don't know we're just as good as they are, better sometimes.
You wanna be thought of as a great woman detective? Yeah! You were the first woman shift commander here.
- Don't you wanna be thought the best? - No.
Not any more.
Making the comparison only compounds what shouldn't be an issue.
Look at it like this, would you rather be the sole female hotshot detective in Homicide or one of a team of hotshots? I am part of the team, Lieutenant, and I'm a good detective.
Yeah.
Isn't that enough? Goodnight.
Good luck! You too.
As I stand here I ponder greater things You're no longer a part of A part of your lover's dreams So much for your Common complications So much for your Constant desperation For what's to come It's all been We reach a certain age when we realise we know less about life than we did when we were 17.
Women get smarter.
When I was 17 I remember I believed in life.
I trusted life.
I believed there were answers to questions.
I had hope.
A woman can affect a man totally.
How a woman feels about a man, that's how he'll feel about himself.
His friends, his job Right now I wanna tell you I hate myself.
I don't have any friends to speak of.
All I have is this job and it disgusts me.
You like collard greens and cornbread? - Not particularly.
- Because you never tasted my wife's.
That's all it would take, no matter how bad a day it was.
She had that touch.
I remember how she used to touch me, so gently on the cheek and when she was dying I remember how she touched me.
She said"Remember "how much I love you.
" I'll never forget that.
It's hard to meet single women on this job.
You know? You meet plenty of widows, sure, but the timing just don't seem right.
I don't wanna be alone any more.
I find myself folding in.
I think this is what Crosetti found out and I refused to recognise it in him because I wouldn't see it in myself.
I understand.
I understand completely.
- Hello, Beau.
- Hey.
Could we talk for a while? Oh I don't know if that's such a good idea.
Um Do you wanna go home? I was just on my way home.
I thought I'd stop by, see how you were doing.
Please.
- I spoke to my son last night.
- You found them? They're OK? I don't know.
Beth said she was coming back.
Then she changed her mind.
Zach sounded afraid, confused and then she took the phone from him before he could tell me where they are.
You don't need to hear this.
I'm sorry.
No, no, it's all right.
Really.
If someone tried to take Caroline away from me, I I can't even imagine what I would do.
I'm falling apart.
It's like this big hole's opened up underneath me and I can't stop myself from falling.
I'm a big boy.
I'll land on my feet, right? You know, when Mike died, I almost died.
I felt I felt so angry.
You still are, I think.
- Maybe.
- Well then it'll get easier.
How? My family's what I've worked for all my life.
My house isn't full unless all of us are there unless I'm there.
You're a good man.
Megan I need to stay here with you tonight.
I don't know.
I don't know if that's No, I Just, just here.
Quietly.
I miss my children.
All right you just rest here for a while, OK? I'm scared, Megan I know.
I know.
I know.
All right! - Kay, I've been thinking - Yeah.
What if the father of Chilton's child came into town and murdered her? Maybe he thinks this is the only way he can get his daughter back.
That's very good thinking.
I checked it out and the guy's been in Alaska for two years, but I appreciate that.
You know something? I know a good detective never gives up but a good detective may, when the time is right, move along.
Could I please get a uniform to escort Mr Hessler in there down to Holding? He confessed to the murder of Niels Richmar.
Yay! Congratulations.
- I was lucky.
- Yeah, right! All right! - I'll get it.
- No, it's OK, I got it.
Howard, Homicide.
Yeah.
All right, hold on a moment Do you feel a change coming on No As I lay here I wanna fall asleep No longer No longer A part of your TV screen No A part of your TV dreams I said so much for your So much for your Your common complications So much for your Constant desperation For what's to come It's all been Written down, yeah Written down Yeah, yeah, yeah But I feel that a change is A change is gonna come I said I feel so alive now And you know I feel a change is A change is gonna come Do you feel a change is gonna come Do you feel a change is gonna come
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