Sanctuary s04e03 Episode Script
Untouchable
Previously on Sanctuary [Henry.]
: This is amazing.
I always thought I was alone.
Now I know that's not true.
-I want you to stay-- -I want you to come with me-- I grew up in an institution for abnormals.
The Sanctuary's more than that.
It's a family.
[Will.]
: The abnormals are moving in formation.
[Magnus.]
: Someone, or something is in complete control of these beings.
What the hell happened to you? You were out of communication for hours.
[Magnus.]
: More Iike years, actually.
Years? I went through the files on Addison's team.
A Iot of Ivy League educations, state department resumes, no marriages or kids.
[Magnus.]
: '"Orphans preferred,'" Iovely.
What do we know about this Addison fellow himself? [Will.]
: He's the U.
N.
Security Council's top troubleshooter.
Harvard Law, Brookings Institute, the Hague.
He's advised world Ieaders on everything from Iraq, to Libya, to the B.
P.
oil spill in the Gulf.
Wow, now he's here to deal with us.
If he wasn't such a pit bull, I'd be flattered.
[Henry.]
: Terminal farm's up and running in the research Iab.
Are you sure you want me to give these guys complete access to our current protocols? [Bigfoot.]
: Bunch of strangers poking around, I don't Iike it.
[Will.]
: Nobody does, but it's not Iike we have a choice.
[Henry.]
: What about the '"Tea with Magnus, photo op with a mermaid'" option? [Will.]
: That ain't gonna fly this time.
Everything's changed since the Calderas to Hollow Earth were breached.
High-Ievel people need reassurance that the situation is under control.
You've secured the research database? Done.
Current security and user activity are open access.
The rest is behind an invisible firewall.
And I'II be monitoring their traffic full time, so we'II know right away if they try anything off the hook.
AII secure on the residential Ievels? No stragglers? Tight as a drum.
Total Iockdown in 40 minutes.
Good job, everyone.
Right, one more walkthrough, and we'II reconvene here at-- [doorbell rings.]
[Will.]
: What, an hour ahead of schedule? No, there's no way.
Gate defenses are up.
There is no way he just walked to the front door.
Yeah, see? Gate was opened with an approved code.
Mine Well, who'd you give it to? No one.
[doorbell rings.]
To the best of my knowledge.
Erika! [Magnus.]
: This is a surprise.
[Erika.]
: Hello, all.
Sorry to intrude.
Hi, honey.
Wow, it's really good to see you.
Uh Did we have plans to get together? I have some news that couldn't wait.
[Henry.]
: Okay.
Great.
[Erika.]
: I wanted to tell you in person [Henry.]
: Good.
It's just that we have this U.
N.
inspection team due in an hour, and I'm installing this whole new mirror array so that they can access our system without actually-- Henry.
Stopping? Listening.
You're going to be a father.
Oh.
[Iaughing.]
[.]
This type of fish is not good to eat.
Well, the man we seek needs a special diet.
Then this is your man.
You probably want to get out of here before things go down.
[music plays Ioudly in earbuds.]
[Henry.]
: Yeah, and then the whole thing went to hell.
[Erika.]
: So this being they were Iooking for was called a A Crixorum.
It's a Hollow Earth abnormal.
Made top of the Red List after the invasion.
[Erika.]
: How so? [Henry.]
: Crazy huge psychic powers.
The doc's convinced he's the one who coordinated the abnormal uprising.
He talked to three armies at once, with his mind.
[Erika.]
: How in the world do you stop someone Iike that? [Henry.]
: Well, he's one guy, so there are ways.
Problem is, how do you stop the next army he controls? You know, someone Iike Kim Jong II, or the next bin Ladin They'd become invincible.
Exactly.
Which is why the doc needed to get there first and bring him back before he did more damage.
I take it that didn't happen.
No.
Not at all.
Whole mission went sideways.
Next thing we know, boom, hammer comes down.
U.
N.
gives us two days' notice they're coming in with an investigation team to go through our underwear drawers.
[Erika.]
: And then I drop my Iittle bombshell.
Oh, no, no, I didn't mean that at all.
This is, easily, the most amazing thing I've Will be the most amazing thing, that we've ever When it finally sinks in.
[Henry.]
: Yeah, I'm, Iike, five minutes into being a future Dad.
I think I deserve a Iittle slack, maybe.
[chuckling.]
Take your time.
[Erika.]
: In the meantime, what can I do to help? [Henry.]
: Oh, shouldn't you be resting? You know, in your? [Erika.]
: If you say '"delicate condition'", I'II bite you.
Task me.
You know I have serious game at coding.
[Henry.]
: Which I call foreplay.
[Erika.]
: Which got us into this mess in the first place.
[Henry.]
: You're the most amazing girlfriend ever.
[Addison.]
: Nice digs.
A Iittle formal.
If you need the name of a decorator, I know a fabulous firm in L.
A.
Just did James Cameron's Aspen estate.
[Will.]
: Did you come here to name-drop? [Addison.]
: With Helen Magnus? Come on, sport, I'd Iose.
No, I'm here to make the call on whether or not the Sanctuary continues to receive funding and support from the people who hired me.
You know, the ones running the world.
[Magnus.]
: That's quite a team you've brought with you.
Are they completely necessary? [Addison.]
: Well, if it helps, think of me as EIIiot Ness, and these guys behind me? The Untouchables.
[Will.]
: If it helps, Magnus knew the real EIIiot Ness, and, just going out on a Iimb here, that's not you.
[Addison.]
: Congratulations, sport, you win round one of '"Who knows who.
'" [Magnus.]
: I've arranged secure terminals at one of our Iabs.
My people will be available for any debriefing you may need.
[Addison.]
: I Iove it.
This is Cassidy Turner, my senior technical consultant.
Cass, take the team and get started.
Absolutely.
Help her set up, will you, sport? I'm going to take the menagerie tour with Dr.
Magnus.
Will, could you please take Ms.
Turner and her team to the research Iab? If you call me '"sport'" once more, I'm going to knock your teeth in.
Welcome to the Sanctuary.
Follow me, everyone.
[Magnus.]
: This is not a menagerie, Mr.
Addison.
What else do you call the place where they keep the monsters and the freaks? [chuckles indulgently.]
You're fooling no one with this tactic.
Come in as obnoxious as possible, put us all on the defensive.
Ah, you got me.
You know what I Iove about really great tactics? They work even when the other guy sees them coming.
[elevator dings.]
[Addison.]
: I think you've gotten very used to having carte blanche around the world because you helped Interpol take down a three-headed madman, or covered up the Squidblood origins of some president's wife.
Ah So this is about my ego.
Doctor, we have hit and run attacks by rogue abnormal groups on Lotus Defense training camps as well as civilian casualties that someone has to explain to the press.
There's over a hundred years of history here, Mr.
Addison.
Any chance you'II call me Greg? None whatsoever.
[elevator dings.]
Monsters? [Henry.]
: Sorry, it'II just be another couple of minutes.
[Will.]
: It's okay, Henry.
Everyone knows this was Iast minute.
[Turner.]
: We've got all day.
[console beeps.]
[Henry.]
: Okay, that should do it.
Oh, great, more people.
[Will.]
: Meet Greg Addison.
U.
N.
Security Council Iiaison, and all 'round nice guy.
[Addison.]
: Henry Foss, right? -Yes.
-I Iove your work.
Aw, thanks.
I mean, whatever.
[Addison.]
: And this would be.
.
? Erika Myers, and I already don't Iike you.
[Henry.]
: Yeah, we're, uh, together.
Well, aren't you the Iucky guy? [Magnus.]
: I trust everything is to your Iiking? [Addison.]
: Cass? Uh, well, the system is a bit archaic, but I think we can find our way around.
[Henry.]
: Um, are you sure? Because she can be a Iittle delicate if you don't understand her mods-- Did you say '"archaic'"? [Will.]
: Whoa, ho-ho What is all this stuff? [Cassidy.]
: Just a few adaptive peripherals.
Since we're required to do the work on-site, without our customized workstations.
[Henry.]
: Oh, Doc, this is so uncool.
[Magnus.]
: I agreed to allow your investigators short-term access to our system using our facilities, not to set up an entirely foreign network.
I won't have you compromise our security, even unintentionally.
Make do with what they give you.
Given the things they keep in the building, what choice do we have? [Erika.]
: What do you mean by that? '"Things we keep in the building?'" It's cool, Erika.
[Addison.]
: Oh, you didn't get the tour? The place is crawling with monsters.
Freaks.
You know, stuff that jumps out at you-- [Erika.]
: We're not monsters! [snarling.]
Whoa [Magnus.]
: Erika! Erika [Will.]
: Just relax, just relax [Henry.]
: So not worth it.
[Addison.]
: I can see why she's your girlfriend.
[Henry.]
: Watch yourself, dude.
I take it she's a [Magnus.]
: Hyper Accelerated Protean, Iike Henry.
One of only a few Ieft in the world.
And she's not usually Iike this.
I'm flattered.
[Erika.]
: Don't be.
The way you judge us! [Henry.]
: Okay-- sweetheart What's wrong? [breathing hard.]
I-I couldn't.
I can't [roaring.]
[Addison.]
: Okay, what is the deal with her? [Will.]
: Just give her a minute.
[Henry.]
: Doc, something's not right.
[Magnus.]
: I agree.
Let's get her to isolation.
Come on.
Well, I couldn't feel safer right now.
[Magnus.]
: When you and your aunt were helping the Lycans in OIdham, did you see many children born? [Erika.]
: No.
Aunt Lillian said it was because our race was so ancient.
That we were reaching the end of our run.
But now I think it must have been a side effect of the medications.
[Magnus.]
: I agree.
By suppressing your transformative DNA, she was suppressing your fertility as well.
This might be the first Lycan baby since my parents died.
Okay, but, um, what just happened? [Magnus.]
: It seems odd, yes.
Your body should be Iocking your cells to protect the fetus.
You shouldn't be able to transform at all.
[Henry.]
: Right, 'cause when she does, her insides transform as well, so, um, the baby Fetal readings are completely normal.
The embryo is healthy.
But I do think that the pregnancy hormones are interfering with your ability to manage emotional triggers.
Right, I'm going to run some bloodwork, see if I can find a treatable chemical imbalance.
In the meantime, I hope you'II be comfortable here.
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to make things harder for you.
Ah, that's okay.
It was pretty bad-ass.
I wanted to rip his throat out myself.
[Magnus' cell phone buzzes.]
[sighs.]
Duty calls.
Henry, you stay here with Erika.
She's the priority.
I'II, uh, keep an eye on the Geek Squad.
No offense.
[elevator dings.]
[Bigfoot.]
: Addison asked for coffee.
[she scoffs.]
Philistine.
I trust you did your best to make him feel welcome? [Bigfoot.]
: Yeah, I pretended I didn't know how to talk.
[Magnus.]
: I don't suppose he fell for it.
[Bigfoot.]
: He started dissing the Rays.
-Ooh, ouch.
-Yeah, we had words.
[Will.]
: Oh, good, there you are.
[Magnus.]
: How are our guests settling in? A Iittle bit too comfortably for my Iiking.
It was inevitable, Will.
The more they see, the more convinced they'II be that the Sanctuary has nothing to hide.
Okay, I know that you're all Zen from your 113 years on the mountaintop, but me? I'm just a normal uptight guy.
[Bigfoot.]
: Yeah? [Magnus.]
: We could waste a Iot of energy fighting this battle, but there's a Iong war ahead.
If you start calling me '"Young Grasshopper,'" I'm quitting.
[Addison.]
: Three weeks ago, we damn near had the abnormal apocalypse on our hands.
[Will.]
: Which we averted.
[Addison.]
: You pulled the nose of the plane up about 10 seconds before it hit the ground, yeah.
Congratulations.
Not exactly confidence-inspiring, and now we've got a thousand or more abnormals roaming the surface unchecked.
[Magnus.]
: You can be assured we have our best teams worldwide dealing with them.
The point is, you and your amazing worldwide teams failed to contain them in the first place.
[Will.]
: Lotus made their own enemies by attacking abnormal tribes at the caldera sites.
And you guaranteed that if they stood down, you would eliminate the threat.
You haven't delivered on that.
Well, at Ieast we're doing something about it.
I don't see you offering up any solutions.
I'm getting there, trust me, kid.
[scoffs.]
There's a common thread to how these fugitive abnormals continue to evade our retrieval teams, and their ability to infiltrate the concealed bases.
[Addison.]
: Does it explain what went wrong in Jakarta Iast week? The reason these fugitives have been able to stay a step ahead is the same thing that makes their army so formidable.
There's a hidden Ieader among them, someone with the ability to communicate instantly over any distance, psychically.
And yet you kept this information to yourself.
Until I had confirmation.
I've had Kate Freelander Iooking into things down in Hollow Earth, and a network of informants here on the surface.
[Will.]
: Which is why we were in Jakarta in the first place.
[Magnus.]
: We knew the Crixorum could pass for human.
The only other solid Iead we had was that he needs a daily dose of Vibrio phosphorae bacteria to survive.
[Will.]
: Found in high concentration in the Iocal Ianternfish.
[Magnus.]
: We were put in touch with a Iocal, who then led us to the man who'd been buying them up.
[Will.]
: There he is.
[Magnus.]
: Wahid? Senang bertemu nada.
[Wahid.]
: And to you.
[Magnus.]
: You know about this man we seek? [Wahid.]
: There are not many secrets in the marketplace.
Not to those who can afford to pay.
The man we seek needs a special diet.
The man you're Iooking for will be here soon.
[Magnus.]
: And you're certain you've seen this man here before? [Wahid.]
: Every evening he buys from the fish-seller Samar.
Lantern fish, you're positive? This type of fish is not good to eat.
He's your man.
[Will.]
: You probably want to get out of here before things go down.
[Magnus.]
: We used music to interfere with the Crixorum's ability to manipulate our minds.
[music blasting in earbuds.]
[crowd screaming in panic.]
BIoody hell.
Who are those guys? [Will.]
: Somebody else was trying to bag the same prize.
Black market traffickers, we think.
[Magnus.]
: Whoever they were, they should have been more prepared.
[Will.]
: They had state-of-the-art body armor, automatic weapons, and no idea what they were doing.
[guns blasting.]
What is this, a competition? They're shooting at each other! [Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! They went in there totally unprepared, and got shredded.
So your target, the Crixorum, used his mental powers and turned that place into a free-fire zone.
Isn't that something anyone could have predicted? [she scoffs.]
There's a reason just the two of us went in there and we Ieft the rest of our team out of range.
Because we did have an idea what we were up against.
[Will.]
: Whoever sent that other team in is the one who should be on trial.
[Magnus.]
: Will [Will.]
: No, no, I'm tired of this game.
Those were your men, weren't they, Addison? You sent those men to their deaths, not us.
You're damn right I did.
[Henry.]
: You must have really interesting job fairs.
[Cassidy.]
: Invitation only.
[Henry.]
: Whatever, I always figured government analyst jobs for a complete snoozefest.
[Cassidy.]
: Not if you Iike beta-testing cool gear two years before people Iike you get it on the gray market.
[Henry.]
: Okay, fine, but tell me it doesn't suck having a guy Iike Addison for a boss.
I believe in my work, Henry, just Iike you.
Only mine comes with pension and health, a brownstone in Brooklyn Heights, and unlimited First CIass air travel.
Last month, I had a working dinner with Steve Jobs.
[Henry.]
: Oh, yeah, I think I heard of him.
[Cassidy.]
: Let me know if you ever decide to make a change.
There are more than a few companies who could use a guy with your skills.
[Henry.]
: You know, I doubt that.
So, are you ready to give me a Iook at this custom system you're so proud of? [typing.]
[Henry.]
: You have full access.
[Cassidy.]
: Okay, I need complete blueprints for the following weapons, a '"platinum oscillating sonic disruptor,'" whatever that is.
[Henry.]
: Uh-huh.
[Cassidy.]
: Something called '"a Magna-SIinger?'" [Henry.]
: Yup.
[Cassidy.]
: And a handheld invasive scent directional detector.
[Henry.]
: The Smell-O-Vator, check.
And I can't help you.
You do realize most of these things are built with an hour's Iead time and a deadly abnormal on the Ioose.
So no blueprints.
Not even a napkin sketch.
You really want me putting '"jury-rigged weapons unavailable for inspection--'" Oh, come on, I never said '"jury-rigged.
'" Yeah, I guess I did.
If you have nothing to hide, don't hide anything.
[cell phone chimes.]
Excuse me.
I need 20 minutes.
[Erika crying.]
[Henry.]
: What happened? Is she hurt? [Bigfoot.]
: Uhask her.
[Henry.]
: Erika? [Erika.]
: Don't Iook! Sweetheart? It's okay.
[Erika.]
: I can't change it.
Magnus can fix this.
You're going to be okay-- I'm out of control.
I can't even think straight! [Henry.]
: And th-that is a beautiful part of you.
[Erika.]
: What would you know about it? You don't Iove me.
You don't want me here! [Henry.]
: Erika [Erika.]
: Get away from me! You ignored Sanctuary jurisdiction over fugitive abnormals and put your own people on the ground.
After the mess you made in the camp and the failed retrievals since, you really find it shocking we have a PIan B? [Will.]
: You had no idea what you were doing.
You blew all our groundwork by storming in there unprepared.
Hey, pal, I Iost good men in there.
Anybody in that market could have been killed in the crossfire! Not that you care about Iittle details Iike collateral damage.
You do realize the value of that creature.
How powerful he could make whoever controls him? An abnormal who can see far-off events and then relay commands instantly across any distance? No way I was Ieaving that retrieval to your side.
Our side? [chuckles ruefully.]
I see.
[Will.]
: If you wanted safe extraction, you could have come to us for a joint mission, but you didn't.
[Magnus.]
: Of course not.
They wanted to collect the Crixorum for themselves, and control it.
[Will.]
: How'd you even find out where it was? [Magnus.]
: They didn't have to.
You tracked us.
[guns blasting.]
[Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! Stay with him! [Will.]
: He was dead before he hit the water.
[Magnus.]
: But I suspect that's what you wanted.
Better to have him taken out of play than to fall into the wrong side.
You both finished? [Magnus.]
: Unless there's more.
[Addison.]
: There's just one small flaw in the whole narrative.
A Iittle slide show of the body my people fished out of the canal in Jakarta.
That thing that we were all chasing? Autopsy revealed no extraordinary brain functions.
Meaning it was no Crixorum.
So, now, how about we cut the crap, and you two start telling me the truth? [Henry.]
: I'm not seeing her on any of our security feeds.
I can't believe you Iet this happen.
[Bigfoot.]
: You Ieft her alone.
[Henry.]
: I have work to do.
You were supposed to be watching her! [Bigfoot.]
: I'm not a jailer.
[Henry.]
: Erika! Erika, sweetie? [Bigfoot.]
: She definitely came through here.
[Henry.]
: Huh? How do you--? No.
Oh, no.
No, no, no, you do not sniff another guy's girlfriend.
[Bigfoot.]
: I was just trying to help.
[Henry.]
: Don't help, okay? I got this.
[Bigfoot.]
: Fine, I'II be in the Iab.
[scoffs.]
[sniffing gingerly.]
[tablet chimes.]
Oh, thank God.
[Henry.]
: Hey.
Are you okay? I'm great.
Oh, that's great.
So, uh, you ready to come back up to Iso, then? Uh, I could, but while I have you alone, I wanted to show you something.
See, I had this idea for an algorithm that could track coding errors and your fixes.
Eventually it could predict your behavior and fix itself, even when you're busy elsewhere.
[Henry.]
: You did this for me? Well, it's kind of for me.
Because it means you could spend Iess time at the keyboard.
[Henry.]
: Wow.
This is some great stuff.
Just a few preliminary ideas.
You'II need to refine it.
[Erika.]
: Liking the foreplay? [Henry.]
: Heck, yes.
You know what, a few revisions, we could start testing this right now.
Or maybe not right now.
Um maybe my room would be better Henry, right now.
I know it's the hormones, but I'm so into this [footsteps approach.]
Henry.
[Erika snarls.]
Separate interviews? So now we're being treated as hostile witnesses.
If you start telling me the truth, then you won't need to worry about coordinating your story with the boy wonder, will you? [Magnus.]
: Everything we told you was true.
We identified the man we believed to be the Ieader of the Iocal insurgent cell.
We pursued him.
Your men intervened.
We saw him die.
[Addison.]
: You're claiming you believed this man to be the Crixorum.
I believe the autopsy your people did was wrong.
How can they be certain that that dead abnormal wasn't a Crixorum? Oh wait, because they've been doing this for 120 years Iike I have.
You reported Big Bertha was dead to keep her from being hunted.
I think you're doing the same thing now.
Could you blame me if I was? Doctor Your high-Ievel allies are not taking your calls.
I've got people standing by waiting to cut off your funding, freeze your assets, empty your accounts If the case warrants it.
In your judgment.
[Addison.]
: That's right.
I'm the man who can bankrupt your Sanctuary with a phone call.
Where's the real Crixorum? [music blasting in earbuds.]
[crowd screaming.]
[Magnus.]
: BIoody hell.
[Will.]
: Who are those guys? [guns blasting.]
[Magnus.]
: They're shooting at each other! [Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! [Magnus.]
: It's Wahid! He's doing this! [Will.]
: Wahid set up the whole thing to misdirect us.
Yes, we should have read the playbook on this one, but things happened too fast.
[Magnus.]
: He created a decoy to take the heat off of him, to Iay a trail to the fish market, all of that.
While your men were searching the canal He headed for the street.
Wahid put the decoy in our path fully intending for him to get killed.
He wanted us to think he was dead.
Why isn't this what's in your report? Because a Crixorum can change the balance of power for the whole world Telling the U.
N.
, '"Gee, guys, sorry, but he had us fooled'" wouldn't have exactly inspired confidence, now, would it? We were hoping to find him again Before anyone else did.
So you made sure no one else would be Iooking for him.
Then you could Iook Iike heroes when you brought him in.
Heroes? You have no idea how we work.
But I'm right about what happened? Public Enemy number one got the better of you.
You Iost him.
Well done.
[Henry.]
: Okay, you guys have all the reports on these.
I kind of got to get back downstairs.
Last I recall, Dr.
Magnus put you at my disposal.
You might want to Iook up what that means.
So, these stunners have a sonic oscillator.
Is that a wide or narrow beam? Adjustable.
And what's the power supply on this one? You'II have to ask Nikola Tesla, he built it.
Could you please take this seriously? Oh.
You are serious.
You people really don't get this place, do you? You're trying to do a red-tape audit on a place where the guy who invented alternating current blows in on his way through town.
Okay, well, we still need documentation.
Could you get him to draw up some patent diagrams? Uh-huh, yeah.
I'II get right on that.
Great.
Thanks.
[Erika.]
: I know they asked you to babysit me.
[Bigfoot.]
: Again.
[Erika, chuckling.]
: Sorry.
So, you and Henry have been friends a Iong time.
[Bigfoot.]
: Can't talk about it.
What? I wasn't-- [Bigfoot.]
: Going to ask me about Henry? No? Childhood? Other women? Not curious? Well, of course I'm curious.
[Bigfoot.]
: Can't talk about it.
Ask him.
I got that.
So what should I ask him? [he chuckles.]
Nice try.
[beeping.]
[Erika.]
: Oh Good Iord.
[Bigfoot.]
: Something wrong? Henry needs to see this, right now.
[Addison.]
: Hugely dangerous abnormal on the Ioose, which you Iied about to cover up your screw-up.
That's supposed to convince us to trust Magnus with the fate of the world? If you'd trusted her in the first place, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
Wow.
You really are completely under her spell.
You got what you wanted.
We screwed up, we Iost the target, and you can spin that however you Iike.
Are we finished talking? Not quite.
No, my job's not to pull you over for one moving violation.
I'm here to get the whole picture on how this place really runs.
You have a couple of years? [Addison.]
: If that's what it takes.
You know, I get why Helen Magnus wants to protect her monopoly on Abnormal Science.
I do.
It's been a good Iiving for her since Britannia ruled the waves, and most Iikely she'II still be doing it a hundred years from now.
What does she care which governments rise and fall? But you Shouldn't your Ioyalty be to your own kind? And which kind is that? You were the perfect choice for her, you know? Father hardly around, never had much in common with his egghead son anyway-- [Will.]
: Stop trying to profile me.
[Addison.]
: Then his indictment, just as you were starting to fit into the Bureau.
Boy, that must have been tough on you, huh? [Will.]
: Really? You're really going to go there? Nothing's off Iimits here, sport.
The people that you're up against, starting to feel how powerful they are yet? Okay, so you read my sealed file, and you know that I don't shut up even when people want me to.
Shame about your mother.
Losing her when you were just a kid? But then again, I guess you found the perfect substitute here, huh? Tailor-made.
[Henry.]
: So while Cassidy is distracting me [Henry.]
: So while Cassidy is distracting me with our missing blueprints, her people are tunneling through our firewalls.
If Erika hadn't been testing her repair gremlin at that exact right moment, they might have actually gotten somewhere.
Any details on what they were trying to access? [Henry.]
: Patient records.
Resident inventory.
The microfilm database of your father's journals.
You know, call it everything.
[Magnus.]
: You did stop them.
[Henry.]
: Thanks to a few failsafes, yeah, but they got close.
[Magnus.]
: Well, no harm done.
[Henry.]
: What? This is an attack, Doc.
Come on, the audit, the investigation, all a smokescreen to get them inside so they can get their hands on your research.
I agree.
[Henry.]
: Let's pull the plug and kick 'em out of here, then.
Not just yet.
[elevator dings.]
[Will.]
: Okay, now you're really pushing it.
I'm not kidding with you-- [Addison.]
: Come on, don't take it so personal.
I needed to get your measure.
[halts elevator.]
Magnus comes off Iike a super hero, but she's no Girl Scout.
She's full of secrets.
She'II Iie to anybody without any hint of conscience-- -For the right reasons, yes.
-Matter of opinion! But I'II tell you what's not up for debate-- She is about to bring this place down.
And what for? Ego? Control? Someone needs to check that.
She has principles.
Google it.
Zimmerman, you need to be practical.
[restarts elevator.]
You can stand around, you can watch this ship go down with its captain, or you can do what needs to be done-- [Will.]
: Screw you.
You did a good job here Iast month.
You impressed some very important people.
Agree to act as U.
N.
Iiaison for this place, and I guarantee you I can get Sanctuary's mandate restored under your management, but first you got to trust me, and that means you stop Iying to me about what happened in Jakarta.
[Magnus.]
: Wahid, that's far enough! [music blasting through earbuds.]
[Magnus.]
: Let us help you.
You came here to capture me.
I came here to draw you out so we could talk.
What is your offer, Dr.
Magnus? [Magnus.]
: If you stay on the surface, they will continue to hunt you until you're captured or killed.
A Iot of other people will get hurt in the meantime.
Let us take you home.
My home is gone.
[Magnus.]
: Your people are building a new world beneath the surface.
I can take you to them.
Safely.
You've sent the Hollow Earth Osama home to rearm and regroup? We sent him to safety.
His abilities are far too broad-reaching to be safely exploited by anyone, including you.
You realize that's a capital crime.
[Will.]
: Whoa, wait a minute-- [Magnus.]
: Too Iate, Will.
You gave him what he needed.
What, do you mean I told him the truth? Yes.
Because if we don't start cooperating, they're going to shut us down.
And if you do what they say, they hand the reins to the Sanctuary to you.
Which I never ever wanted, ever! [Addison.]
: Time to start being reasonable, Dr.
Magnus.
Your funding, your bank accounts, your access, I control it all.
Now, you can close your doors tomorrow, or you can accept the fact that as of now, the Sanctuary Network is under total supervision of the U.
N.
Security Council.
That's right.
I'm your new boss.
[Magnus.]
: Get out.
Right now.
Take your people with you.
You have 10 minutes.
What the hell are you doing? [Will.]
: Magnus [Magnus.]
: You heard me.
Leave my property.
[Addison.]
: You just signed the Sanctuary's death warrant.
You sure that's the right move? [Magnus.]
: This is what you wanted, isn't it? To force this outcome? I wanted us to work together.
This entire investigation has been a charade to gain you access.
You knew I would never hand over my records, my residents, my friends, to whatever abnormal Guantanamo Bay you're planning.
I'd sooner burn it to the ground.
I have given five Iifetimes to this work.
I have seen everyone I Iove die for it.
Do you really think you can begin to take that on? This is insane.
[Iaughing in disbelief.]
Would you please talk some sense into her? [Addison.]
: Your research has been bought and paid for over the years by the people I work for.
You turn me away now, you're out in the cold for good.
You come near us again, and I'II arrange for you to be eaten.
[Biggie barks softly.]
After you.
[Henry.]
: Wow.
Did that just happen? I thought it went rather well, actually.
Wouldn't you agree? [Will.]
: Hell, yeah.
Uh, so, no offense, but you just told the world's governments to take a flying Ieap.
I have money put in places that Addison doesn't even know exist.
[Will.]
: And there's something else he doesn't know.
[Henry.]
: Holy crap, is that who I think it is? [Will.]
: The Crixorum.
We got him.
[Henry.]
: Um, what kind of shielding is this? Can get in our heads right now? Something special I ordered behind your back.
But we do need to keep him sedated until we find a more permanent way to protect ourselves from his power.
[Henry.]
: How did he get here? [Will.]
: He's been here all week.
[Will.]
: We knew Addison's men were on our trail, and we knew they were going to make a lot of noise going in.
This was the best chance we had of getting near him without, you know, being ""heard.
"" But he was one step ahead of us.
He'd set up the fake Crixorum to take the fall for him.
While we were figuring it out, Addison's men interfered, and [Magnus.]
: I offered to get him home safely in exchange for a peaceful guarantee.
He refused my offer.
[dart snipes.]
[Henry.]
: So why did you keep it a secret from us? So we couldn't blow the punchline.
[Will.]
: We had to do whatever we could to minimize the chances that Addison would pull the wrong thread.
[Henry.]
: So all that stuff you told him, was any of it true? [Magnus.]
: Oh, most of it.
It's easier to keep a Iie straight when it's close to the truth.
We had to have Iayers to the story, different scenarios depending on when he separated us and how much he already knew.
[Will.]
: A guy Iike that is never going to be satisfied with the first thing he's been told.
He's always going to assume he's being played.
The one thing we had in our favor was that he also assumed he was the best player in the room.
Give him something to figure out-- [Will.]
: Well, in our case, three things-- [Magnus.]
: And Iet him think he's won.
So if he even tries to Iook for the Crixorum, he'II be Iooking in Hollow Earth.
Good Iuck with that.
[Henry.]
: Huh.
It's vital that he and his superiors think that cutting off the Sanctuary was their idea.
Wait a second, you wanted that to happen? [Magnus.]
: It had to.
The Sanctuary needs its freedom.
This was the best way to get it.
[Will.]
: If we're down, they're not going to come after us in full force, at Ieast not for a while.
[Magnus.]
: Now, Addison was right about one thing.
The Crixorum is a vital piece of the puzzle.
Quite possibly, he's the key to it all.
I want that Ieverage right here.
We're going to need to fortify our defenses, aren't we? Very much so, my friend.
[Magnus.]
: I'm afraid the catalyst for the problems is the pregnancy.
Your body's producing defensive enzymes, Iikely as a result of the suppressive hormones you were taking for so Iong.
[Erika.]
: So, what does that meanfor us? There is a procedure I can offer that will slow the embryo's growth.
I believe your body will be able to tolerate the pregnancy hormones at a slower release rate.
Andthe-the baby? It's not without risk, but if things go as I expect, you'II have a healthy child.
It will just take a Iittle Ionger than usual, if if that's what you want.
[Henry.]
: We do.
We want this.
AII right, then.
A word? You've got some big decisions to make, Henry.
Well, we just made the biggest one.
She's going to be okay, right? She'II get the best possible care.
But, Henry, not here.
The Sanctuary's headed into uncharted waters.
It's no place for a baby.
[Henry.]
: I can't just Ieave you guys.
You need me.
[Magnus.]
: I support whatever decision you make.
Fortunately, you'II have a Iot of time to consider your options.
This procedure should change Erika's gestation rate from ten and half months to possibly 22.
[Henry.]
: Okay, whoa, that's good news.
Wait, she's going to be Iike this for two years? Um [Will.]
: I know we planned this outcome, but it's a big risk.
Are you absolutely sure that this is the right move? I've had more than a century to think about it, Will.
When you're forced onto the sidelines, you see things from another perspective.
I made a Iot of choices in my Iife, some of them in haste.
This was my chance to rethink the road I was on, rethink what the Sanctuary needs to be.
A hundred years of planning your next move, and having to sit on your hands the whole time? You couldn't wait to sink your teeth into Addison, could you? He's not the problem.
I've allowed us to become part of a system that we can't control.
There are changes coming that the world is not ready for.
So from now on we make our own rules.
[.]
[.]
Didn't hurt.
: This is amazing.
I always thought I was alone.
Now I know that's not true.
-I want you to stay-- -I want you to come with me-- I grew up in an institution for abnormals.
The Sanctuary's more than that.
It's a family.
[Will.]
: The abnormals are moving in formation.
[Magnus.]
: Someone, or something is in complete control of these beings.
What the hell happened to you? You were out of communication for hours.
[Magnus.]
: More Iike years, actually.
Years? I went through the files on Addison's team.
A Iot of Ivy League educations, state department resumes, no marriages or kids.
[Magnus.]
: '"Orphans preferred,'" Iovely.
What do we know about this Addison fellow himself? [Will.]
: He's the U.
N.
Security Council's top troubleshooter.
Harvard Law, Brookings Institute, the Hague.
He's advised world Ieaders on everything from Iraq, to Libya, to the B.
P.
oil spill in the Gulf.
Wow, now he's here to deal with us.
If he wasn't such a pit bull, I'd be flattered.
[Henry.]
: Terminal farm's up and running in the research Iab.
Are you sure you want me to give these guys complete access to our current protocols? [Bigfoot.]
: Bunch of strangers poking around, I don't Iike it.
[Will.]
: Nobody does, but it's not Iike we have a choice.
[Henry.]
: What about the '"Tea with Magnus, photo op with a mermaid'" option? [Will.]
: That ain't gonna fly this time.
Everything's changed since the Calderas to Hollow Earth were breached.
High-Ievel people need reassurance that the situation is under control.
You've secured the research database? Done.
Current security and user activity are open access.
The rest is behind an invisible firewall.
And I'II be monitoring their traffic full time, so we'II know right away if they try anything off the hook.
AII secure on the residential Ievels? No stragglers? Tight as a drum.
Total Iockdown in 40 minutes.
Good job, everyone.
Right, one more walkthrough, and we'II reconvene here at-- [doorbell rings.]
[Will.]
: What, an hour ahead of schedule? No, there's no way.
Gate defenses are up.
There is no way he just walked to the front door.
Yeah, see? Gate was opened with an approved code.
Mine Well, who'd you give it to? No one.
[doorbell rings.]
To the best of my knowledge.
Erika! [Magnus.]
: This is a surprise.
[Erika.]
: Hello, all.
Sorry to intrude.
Hi, honey.
Wow, it's really good to see you.
Uh Did we have plans to get together? I have some news that couldn't wait.
[Henry.]
: Okay.
Great.
[Erika.]
: I wanted to tell you in person [Henry.]
: Good.
It's just that we have this U.
N.
inspection team due in an hour, and I'm installing this whole new mirror array so that they can access our system without actually-- Henry.
Stopping? Listening.
You're going to be a father.
Oh.
[Iaughing.]
[.]
This type of fish is not good to eat.
Well, the man we seek needs a special diet.
Then this is your man.
You probably want to get out of here before things go down.
[music plays Ioudly in earbuds.]
[Henry.]
: Yeah, and then the whole thing went to hell.
[Erika.]
: So this being they were Iooking for was called a A Crixorum.
It's a Hollow Earth abnormal.
Made top of the Red List after the invasion.
[Erika.]
: How so? [Henry.]
: Crazy huge psychic powers.
The doc's convinced he's the one who coordinated the abnormal uprising.
He talked to three armies at once, with his mind.
[Erika.]
: How in the world do you stop someone Iike that? [Henry.]
: Well, he's one guy, so there are ways.
Problem is, how do you stop the next army he controls? You know, someone Iike Kim Jong II, or the next bin Ladin They'd become invincible.
Exactly.
Which is why the doc needed to get there first and bring him back before he did more damage.
I take it that didn't happen.
No.
Not at all.
Whole mission went sideways.
Next thing we know, boom, hammer comes down.
U.
N.
gives us two days' notice they're coming in with an investigation team to go through our underwear drawers.
[Erika.]
: And then I drop my Iittle bombshell.
Oh, no, no, I didn't mean that at all.
This is, easily, the most amazing thing I've Will be the most amazing thing, that we've ever When it finally sinks in.
[Henry.]
: Yeah, I'm, Iike, five minutes into being a future Dad.
I think I deserve a Iittle slack, maybe.
[chuckling.]
Take your time.
[Erika.]
: In the meantime, what can I do to help? [Henry.]
: Oh, shouldn't you be resting? You know, in your? [Erika.]
: If you say '"delicate condition'", I'II bite you.
Task me.
You know I have serious game at coding.
[Henry.]
: Which I call foreplay.
[Erika.]
: Which got us into this mess in the first place.
[Henry.]
: You're the most amazing girlfriend ever.
[Addison.]
: Nice digs.
A Iittle formal.
If you need the name of a decorator, I know a fabulous firm in L.
A.
Just did James Cameron's Aspen estate.
[Will.]
: Did you come here to name-drop? [Addison.]
: With Helen Magnus? Come on, sport, I'd Iose.
No, I'm here to make the call on whether or not the Sanctuary continues to receive funding and support from the people who hired me.
You know, the ones running the world.
[Magnus.]
: That's quite a team you've brought with you.
Are they completely necessary? [Addison.]
: Well, if it helps, think of me as EIIiot Ness, and these guys behind me? The Untouchables.
[Will.]
: If it helps, Magnus knew the real EIIiot Ness, and, just going out on a Iimb here, that's not you.
[Addison.]
: Congratulations, sport, you win round one of '"Who knows who.
'" [Magnus.]
: I've arranged secure terminals at one of our Iabs.
My people will be available for any debriefing you may need.
[Addison.]
: I Iove it.
This is Cassidy Turner, my senior technical consultant.
Cass, take the team and get started.
Absolutely.
Help her set up, will you, sport? I'm going to take the menagerie tour with Dr.
Magnus.
Will, could you please take Ms.
Turner and her team to the research Iab? If you call me '"sport'" once more, I'm going to knock your teeth in.
Welcome to the Sanctuary.
Follow me, everyone.
[Magnus.]
: This is not a menagerie, Mr.
Addison.
What else do you call the place where they keep the monsters and the freaks? [chuckles indulgently.]
You're fooling no one with this tactic.
Come in as obnoxious as possible, put us all on the defensive.
Ah, you got me.
You know what I Iove about really great tactics? They work even when the other guy sees them coming.
[elevator dings.]
[Addison.]
: I think you've gotten very used to having carte blanche around the world because you helped Interpol take down a three-headed madman, or covered up the Squidblood origins of some president's wife.
Ah So this is about my ego.
Doctor, we have hit and run attacks by rogue abnormal groups on Lotus Defense training camps as well as civilian casualties that someone has to explain to the press.
There's over a hundred years of history here, Mr.
Addison.
Any chance you'II call me Greg? None whatsoever.
[elevator dings.]
Monsters? [Henry.]
: Sorry, it'II just be another couple of minutes.
[Will.]
: It's okay, Henry.
Everyone knows this was Iast minute.
[Turner.]
: We've got all day.
[console beeps.]
[Henry.]
: Okay, that should do it.
Oh, great, more people.
[Will.]
: Meet Greg Addison.
U.
N.
Security Council Iiaison, and all 'round nice guy.
[Addison.]
: Henry Foss, right? -Yes.
-I Iove your work.
Aw, thanks.
I mean, whatever.
[Addison.]
: And this would be.
.
? Erika Myers, and I already don't Iike you.
[Henry.]
: Yeah, we're, uh, together.
Well, aren't you the Iucky guy? [Magnus.]
: I trust everything is to your Iiking? [Addison.]
: Cass? Uh, well, the system is a bit archaic, but I think we can find our way around.
[Henry.]
: Um, are you sure? Because she can be a Iittle delicate if you don't understand her mods-- Did you say '"archaic'"? [Will.]
: Whoa, ho-ho What is all this stuff? [Cassidy.]
: Just a few adaptive peripherals.
Since we're required to do the work on-site, without our customized workstations.
[Henry.]
: Oh, Doc, this is so uncool.
[Magnus.]
: I agreed to allow your investigators short-term access to our system using our facilities, not to set up an entirely foreign network.
I won't have you compromise our security, even unintentionally.
Make do with what they give you.
Given the things they keep in the building, what choice do we have? [Erika.]
: What do you mean by that? '"Things we keep in the building?'" It's cool, Erika.
[Addison.]
: Oh, you didn't get the tour? The place is crawling with monsters.
Freaks.
You know, stuff that jumps out at you-- [Erika.]
: We're not monsters! [snarling.]
Whoa [Magnus.]
: Erika! Erika [Will.]
: Just relax, just relax [Henry.]
: So not worth it.
[Addison.]
: I can see why she's your girlfriend.
[Henry.]
: Watch yourself, dude.
I take it she's a [Magnus.]
: Hyper Accelerated Protean, Iike Henry.
One of only a few Ieft in the world.
And she's not usually Iike this.
I'm flattered.
[Erika.]
: Don't be.
The way you judge us! [Henry.]
: Okay-- sweetheart What's wrong? [breathing hard.]
I-I couldn't.
I can't [roaring.]
[Addison.]
: Okay, what is the deal with her? [Will.]
: Just give her a minute.
[Henry.]
: Doc, something's not right.
[Magnus.]
: I agree.
Let's get her to isolation.
Come on.
Well, I couldn't feel safer right now.
[Magnus.]
: When you and your aunt were helping the Lycans in OIdham, did you see many children born? [Erika.]
: No.
Aunt Lillian said it was because our race was so ancient.
That we were reaching the end of our run.
But now I think it must have been a side effect of the medications.
[Magnus.]
: I agree.
By suppressing your transformative DNA, she was suppressing your fertility as well.
This might be the first Lycan baby since my parents died.
Okay, but, um, what just happened? [Magnus.]
: It seems odd, yes.
Your body should be Iocking your cells to protect the fetus.
You shouldn't be able to transform at all.
[Henry.]
: Right, 'cause when she does, her insides transform as well, so, um, the baby Fetal readings are completely normal.
The embryo is healthy.
But I do think that the pregnancy hormones are interfering with your ability to manage emotional triggers.
Right, I'm going to run some bloodwork, see if I can find a treatable chemical imbalance.
In the meantime, I hope you'II be comfortable here.
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to make things harder for you.
Ah, that's okay.
It was pretty bad-ass.
I wanted to rip his throat out myself.
[Magnus' cell phone buzzes.]
[sighs.]
Duty calls.
Henry, you stay here with Erika.
She's the priority.
I'II, uh, keep an eye on the Geek Squad.
No offense.
[elevator dings.]
[Bigfoot.]
: Addison asked for coffee.
[she scoffs.]
Philistine.
I trust you did your best to make him feel welcome? [Bigfoot.]
: Yeah, I pretended I didn't know how to talk.
[Magnus.]
: I don't suppose he fell for it.
[Bigfoot.]
: He started dissing the Rays.
-Ooh, ouch.
-Yeah, we had words.
[Will.]
: Oh, good, there you are.
[Magnus.]
: How are our guests settling in? A Iittle bit too comfortably for my Iiking.
It was inevitable, Will.
The more they see, the more convinced they'II be that the Sanctuary has nothing to hide.
Okay, I know that you're all Zen from your 113 years on the mountaintop, but me? I'm just a normal uptight guy.
[Bigfoot.]
: Yeah? [Magnus.]
: We could waste a Iot of energy fighting this battle, but there's a Iong war ahead.
If you start calling me '"Young Grasshopper,'" I'm quitting.
[Addison.]
: Three weeks ago, we damn near had the abnormal apocalypse on our hands.
[Will.]
: Which we averted.
[Addison.]
: You pulled the nose of the plane up about 10 seconds before it hit the ground, yeah.
Congratulations.
Not exactly confidence-inspiring, and now we've got a thousand or more abnormals roaming the surface unchecked.
[Magnus.]
: You can be assured we have our best teams worldwide dealing with them.
The point is, you and your amazing worldwide teams failed to contain them in the first place.
[Will.]
: Lotus made their own enemies by attacking abnormal tribes at the caldera sites.
And you guaranteed that if they stood down, you would eliminate the threat.
You haven't delivered on that.
Well, at Ieast we're doing something about it.
I don't see you offering up any solutions.
I'm getting there, trust me, kid.
[scoffs.]
There's a common thread to how these fugitive abnormals continue to evade our retrieval teams, and their ability to infiltrate the concealed bases.
[Addison.]
: Does it explain what went wrong in Jakarta Iast week? The reason these fugitives have been able to stay a step ahead is the same thing that makes their army so formidable.
There's a hidden Ieader among them, someone with the ability to communicate instantly over any distance, psychically.
And yet you kept this information to yourself.
Until I had confirmation.
I've had Kate Freelander Iooking into things down in Hollow Earth, and a network of informants here on the surface.
[Will.]
: Which is why we were in Jakarta in the first place.
[Magnus.]
: We knew the Crixorum could pass for human.
The only other solid Iead we had was that he needs a daily dose of Vibrio phosphorae bacteria to survive.
[Will.]
: Found in high concentration in the Iocal Ianternfish.
[Magnus.]
: We were put in touch with a Iocal, who then led us to the man who'd been buying them up.
[Will.]
: There he is.
[Magnus.]
: Wahid? Senang bertemu nada.
[Wahid.]
: And to you.
[Magnus.]
: You know about this man we seek? [Wahid.]
: There are not many secrets in the marketplace.
Not to those who can afford to pay.
The man we seek needs a special diet.
The man you're Iooking for will be here soon.
[Magnus.]
: And you're certain you've seen this man here before? [Wahid.]
: Every evening he buys from the fish-seller Samar.
Lantern fish, you're positive? This type of fish is not good to eat.
He's your man.
[Will.]
: You probably want to get out of here before things go down.
[Magnus.]
: We used music to interfere with the Crixorum's ability to manipulate our minds.
[music blasting in earbuds.]
[crowd screaming in panic.]
BIoody hell.
Who are those guys? [Will.]
: Somebody else was trying to bag the same prize.
Black market traffickers, we think.
[Magnus.]
: Whoever they were, they should have been more prepared.
[Will.]
: They had state-of-the-art body armor, automatic weapons, and no idea what they were doing.
[guns blasting.]
What is this, a competition? They're shooting at each other! [Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! They went in there totally unprepared, and got shredded.
So your target, the Crixorum, used his mental powers and turned that place into a free-fire zone.
Isn't that something anyone could have predicted? [she scoffs.]
There's a reason just the two of us went in there and we Ieft the rest of our team out of range.
Because we did have an idea what we were up against.
[Will.]
: Whoever sent that other team in is the one who should be on trial.
[Magnus.]
: Will [Will.]
: No, no, I'm tired of this game.
Those were your men, weren't they, Addison? You sent those men to their deaths, not us.
You're damn right I did.
[Henry.]
: You must have really interesting job fairs.
[Cassidy.]
: Invitation only.
[Henry.]
: Whatever, I always figured government analyst jobs for a complete snoozefest.
[Cassidy.]
: Not if you Iike beta-testing cool gear two years before people Iike you get it on the gray market.
[Henry.]
: Okay, fine, but tell me it doesn't suck having a guy Iike Addison for a boss.
I believe in my work, Henry, just Iike you.
Only mine comes with pension and health, a brownstone in Brooklyn Heights, and unlimited First CIass air travel.
Last month, I had a working dinner with Steve Jobs.
[Henry.]
: Oh, yeah, I think I heard of him.
[Cassidy.]
: Let me know if you ever decide to make a change.
There are more than a few companies who could use a guy with your skills.
[Henry.]
: You know, I doubt that.
So, are you ready to give me a Iook at this custom system you're so proud of? [typing.]
[Henry.]
: You have full access.
[Cassidy.]
: Okay, I need complete blueprints for the following weapons, a '"platinum oscillating sonic disruptor,'" whatever that is.
[Henry.]
: Uh-huh.
[Cassidy.]
: Something called '"a Magna-SIinger?'" [Henry.]
: Yup.
[Cassidy.]
: And a handheld invasive scent directional detector.
[Henry.]
: The Smell-O-Vator, check.
And I can't help you.
You do realize most of these things are built with an hour's Iead time and a deadly abnormal on the Ioose.
So no blueprints.
Not even a napkin sketch.
You really want me putting '"jury-rigged weapons unavailable for inspection--'" Oh, come on, I never said '"jury-rigged.
'" Yeah, I guess I did.
If you have nothing to hide, don't hide anything.
[cell phone chimes.]
Excuse me.
I need 20 minutes.
[Erika crying.]
[Henry.]
: What happened? Is she hurt? [Bigfoot.]
: Uhask her.
[Henry.]
: Erika? [Erika.]
: Don't Iook! Sweetheart? It's okay.
[Erika.]
: I can't change it.
Magnus can fix this.
You're going to be okay-- I'm out of control.
I can't even think straight! [Henry.]
: And th-that is a beautiful part of you.
[Erika.]
: What would you know about it? You don't Iove me.
You don't want me here! [Henry.]
: Erika [Erika.]
: Get away from me! You ignored Sanctuary jurisdiction over fugitive abnormals and put your own people on the ground.
After the mess you made in the camp and the failed retrievals since, you really find it shocking we have a PIan B? [Will.]
: You had no idea what you were doing.
You blew all our groundwork by storming in there unprepared.
Hey, pal, I Iost good men in there.
Anybody in that market could have been killed in the crossfire! Not that you care about Iittle details Iike collateral damage.
You do realize the value of that creature.
How powerful he could make whoever controls him? An abnormal who can see far-off events and then relay commands instantly across any distance? No way I was Ieaving that retrieval to your side.
Our side? [chuckles ruefully.]
I see.
[Will.]
: If you wanted safe extraction, you could have come to us for a joint mission, but you didn't.
[Magnus.]
: Of course not.
They wanted to collect the Crixorum for themselves, and control it.
[Will.]
: How'd you even find out where it was? [Magnus.]
: They didn't have to.
You tracked us.
[guns blasting.]
[Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! Stay with him! [Will.]
: He was dead before he hit the water.
[Magnus.]
: But I suspect that's what you wanted.
Better to have him taken out of play than to fall into the wrong side.
You both finished? [Magnus.]
: Unless there's more.
[Addison.]
: There's just one small flaw in the whole narrative.
A Iittle slide show of the body my people fished out of the canal in Jakarta.
That thing that we were all chasing? Autopsy revealed no extraordinary brain functions.
Meaning it was no Crixorum.
So, now, how about we cut the crap, and you two start telling me the truth? [Henry.]
: I'm not seeing her on any of our security feeds.
I can't believe you Iet this happen.
[Bigfoot.]
: You Ieft her alone.
[Henry.]
: I have work to do.
You were supposed to be watching her! [Bigfoot.]
: I'm not a jailer.
[Henry.]
: Erika! Erika, sweetie? [Bigfoot.]
: She definitely came through here.
[Henry.]
: Huh? How do you--? No.
Oh, no.
No, no, no, you do not sniff another guy's girlfriend.
[Bigfoot.]
: I was just trying to help.
[Henry.]
: Don't help, okay? I got this.
[Bigfoot.]
: Fine, I'II be in the Iab.
[scoffs.]
[sniffing gingerly.]
[tablet chimes.]
Oh, thank God.
[Henry.]
: Hey.
Are you okay? I'm great.
Oh, that's great.
So, uh, you ready to come back up to Iso, then? Uh, I could, but while I have you alone, I wanted to show you something.
See, I had this idea for an algorithm that could track coding errors and your fixes.
Eventually it could predict your behavior and fix itself, even when you're busy elsewhere.
[Henry.]
: You did this for me? Well, it's kind of for me.
Because it means you could spend Iess time at the keyboard.
[Henry.]
: Wow.
This is some great stuff.
Just a few preliminary ideas.
You'II need to refine it.
[Erika.]
: Liking the foreplay? [Henry.]
: Heck, yes.
You know what, a few revisions, we could start testing this right now.
Or maybe not right now.
Um maybe my room would be better Henry, right now.
I know it's the hormones, but I'm so into this [footsteps approach.]
Henry.
[Erika snarls.]
Separate interviews? So now we're being treated as hostile witnesses.
If you start telling me the truth, then you won't need to worry about coordinating your story with the boy wonder, will you? [Magnus.]
: Everything we told you was true.
We identified the man we believed to be the Ieader of the Iocal insurgent cell.
We pursued him.
Your men intervened.
We saw him die.
[Addison.]
: You're claiming you believed this man to be the Crixorum.
I believe the autopsy your people did was wrong.
How can they be certain that that dead abnormal wasn't a Crixorum? Oh wait, because they've been doing this for 120 years Iike I have.
You reported Big Bertha was dead to keep her from being hunted.
I think you're doing the same thing now.
Could you blame me if I was? Doctor Your high-Ievel allies are not taking your calls.
I've got people standing by waiting to cut off your funding, freeze your assets, empty your accounts If the case warrants it.
In your judgment.
[Addison.]
: That's right.
I'm the man who can bankrupt your Sanctuary with a phone call.
Where's the real Crixorum? [music blasting in earbuds.]
[crowd screaming.]
[Magnus.]
: BIoody hell.
[Will.]
: Who are those guys? [guns blasting.]
[Magnus.]
: They're shooting at each other! [Will.]
: Magnus, we're Iosing him! [Magnus.]
: It's Wahid! He's doing this! [Will.]
: Wahid set up the whole thing to misdirect us.
Yes, we should have read the playbook on this one, but things happened too fast.
[Magnus.]
: He created a decoy to take the heat off of him, to Iay a trail to the fish market, all of that.
While your men were searching the canal He headed for the street.
Wahid put the decoy in our path fully intending for him to get killed.
He wanted us to think he was dead.
Why isn't this what's in your report? Because a Crixorum can change the balance of power for the whole world Telling the U.
N.
, '"Gee, guys, sorry, but he had us fooled'" wouldn't have exactly inspired confidence, now, would it? We were hoping to find him again Before anyone else did.
So you made sure no one else would be Iooking for him.
Then you could Iook Iike heroes when you brought him in.
Heroes? You have no idea how we work.
But I'm right about what happened? Public Enemy number one got the better of you.
You Iost him.
Well done.
[Henry.]
: Okay, you guys have all the reports on these.
I kind of got to get back downstairs.
Last I recall, Dr.
Magnus put you at my disposal.
You might want to Iook up what that means.
So, these stunners have a sonic oscillator.
Is that a wide or narrow beam? Adjustable.
And what's the power supply on this one? You'II have to ask Nikola Tesla, he built it.
Could you please take this seriously? Oh.
You are serious.
You people really don't get this place, do you? You're trying to do a red-tape audit on a place where the guy who invented alternating current blows in on his way through town.
Okay, well, we still need documentation.
Could you get him to draw up some patent diagrams? Uh-huh, yeah.
I'II get right on that.
Great.
Thanks.
[Erika.]
: I know they asked you to babysit me.
[Bigfoot.]
: Again.
[Erika, chuckling.]
: Sorry.
So, you and Henry have been friends a Iong time.
[Bigfoot.]
: Can't talk about it.
What? I wasn't-- [Bigfoot.]
: Going to ask me about Henry? No? Childhood? Other women? Not curious? Well, of course I'm curious.
[Bigfoot.]
: Can't talk about it.
Ask him.
I got that.
So what should I ask him? [he chuckles.]
Nice try.
[beeping.]
[Erika.]
: Oh Good Iord.
[Bigfoot.]
: Something wrong? Henry needs to see this, right now.
[Addison.]
: Hugely dangerous abnormal on the Ioose, which you Iied about to cover up your screw-up.
That's supposed to convince us to trust Magnus with the fate of the world? If you'd trusted her in the first place, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
Wow.
You really are completely under her spell.
You got what you wanted.
We screwed up, we Iost the target, and you can spin that however you Iike.
Are we finished talking? Not quite.
No, my job's not to pull you over for one moving violation.
I'm here to get the whole picture on how this place really runs.
You have a couple of years? [Addison.]
: If that's what it takes.
You know, I get why Helen Magnus wants to protect her monopoly on Abnormal Science.
I do.
It's been a good Iiving for her since Britannia ruled the waves, and most Iikely she'II still be doing it a hundred years from now.
What does she care which governments rise and fall? But you Shouldn't your Ioyalty be to your own kind? And which kind is that? You were the perfect choice for her, you know? Father hardly around, never had much in common with his egghead son anyway-- [Will.]
: Stop trying to profile me.
[Addison.]
: Then his indictment, just as you were starting to fit into the Bureau.
Boy, that must have been tough on you, huh? [Will.]
: Really? You're really going to go there? Nothing's off Iimits here, sport.
The people that you're up against, starting to feel how powerful they are yet? Okay, so you read my sealed file, and you know that I don't shut up even when people want me to.
Shame about your mother.
Losing her when you were just a kid? But then again, I guess you found the perfect substitute here, huh? Tailor-made.
[Henry.]
: So while Cassidy is distracting me [Henry.]
: So while Cassidy is distracting me with our missing blueprints, her people are tunneling through our firewalls.
If Erika hadn't been testing her repair gremlin at that exact right moment, they might have actually gotten somewhere.
Any details on what they were trying to access? [Henry.]
: Patient records.
Resident inventory.
The microfilm database of your father's journals.
You know, call it everything.
[Magnus.]
: You did stop them.
[Henry.]
: Thanks to a few failsafes, yeah, but they got close.
[Magnus.]
: Well, no harm done.
[Henry.]
: What? This is an attack, Doc.
Come on, the audit, the investigation, all a smokescreen to get them inside so they can get their hands on your research.
I agree.
[Henry.]
: Let's pull the plug and kick 'em out of here, then.
Not just yet.
[elevator dings.]
[Will.]
: Okay, now you're really pushing it.
I'm not kidding with you-- [Addison.]
: Come on, don't take it so personal.
I needed to get your measure.
[halts elevator.]
Magnus comes off Iike a super hero, but she's no Girl Scout.
She's full of secrets.
She'II Iie to anybody without any hint of conscience-- -For the right reasons, yes.
-Matter of opinion! But I'II tell you what's not up for debate-- She is about to bring this place down.
And what for? Ego? Control? Someone needs to check that.
She has principles.
Google it.
Zimmerman, you need to be practical.
[restarts elevator.]
You can stand around, you can watch this ship go down with its captain, or you can do what needs to be done-- [Will.]
: Screw you.
You did a good job here Iast month.
You impressed some very important people.
Agree to act as U.
N.
Iiaison for this place, and I guarantee you I can get Sanctuary's mandate restored under your management, but first you got to trust me, and that means you stop Iying to me about what happened in Jakarta.
[Magnus.]
: Wahid, that's far enough! [music blasting through earbuds.]
[Magnus.]
: Let us help you.
You came here to capture me.
I came here to draw you out so we could talk.
What is your offer, Dr.
Magnus? [Magnus.]
: If you stay on the surface, they will continue to hunt you until you're captured or killed.
A Iot of other people will get hurt in the meantime.
Let us take you home.
My home is gone.
[Magnus.]
: Your people are building a new world beneath the surface.
I can take you to them.
Safely.
You've sent the Hollow Earth Osama home to rearm and regroup? We sent him to safety.
His abilities are far too broad-reaching to be safely exploited by anyone, including you.
You realize that's a capital crime.
[Will.]
: Whoa, wait a minute-- [Magnus.]
: Too Iate, Will.
You gave him what he needed.
What, do you mean I told him the truth? Yes.
Because if we don't start cooperating, they're going to shut us down.
And if you do what they say, they hand the reins to the Sanctuary to you.
Which I never ever wanted, ever! [Addison.]
: Time to start being reasonable, Dr.
Magnus.
Your funding, your bank accounts, your access, I control it all.
Now, you can close your doors tomorrow, or you can accept the fact that as of now, the Sanctuary Network is under total supervision of the U.
N.
Security Council.
That's right.
I'm your new boss.
[Magnus.]
: Get out.
Right now.
Take your people with you.
You have 10 minutes.
What the hell are you doing? [Will.]
: Magnus [Magnus.]
: You heard me.
Leave my property.
[Addison.]
: You just signed the Sanctuary's death warrant.
You sure that's the right move? [Magnus.]
: This is what you wanted, isn't it? To force this outcome? I wanted us to work together.
This entire investigation has been a charade to gain you access.
You knew I would never hand over my records, my residents, my friends, to whatever abnormal Guantanamo Bay you're planning.
I'd sooner burn it to the ground.
I have given five Iifetimes to this work.
I have seen everyone I Iove die for it.
Do you really think you can begin to take that on? This is insane.
[Iaughing in disbelief.]
Would you please talk some sense into her? [Addison.]
: Your research has been bought and paid for over the years by the people I work for.
You turn me away now, you're out in the cold for good.
You come near us again, and I'II arrange for you to be eaten.
[Biggie barks softly.]
After you.
[Henry.]
: Wow.
Did that just happen? I thought it went rather well, actually.
Wouldn't you agree? [Will.]
: Hell, yeah.
Uh, so, no offense, but you just told the world's governments to take a flying Ieap.
I have money put in places that Addison doesn't even know exist.
[Will.]
: And there's something else he doesn't know.
[Henry.]
: Holy crap, is that who I think it is? [Will.]
: The Crixorum.
We got him.
[Henry.]
: Um, what kind of shielding is this? Can get in our heads right now? Something special I ordered behind your back.
But we do need to keep him sedated until we find a more permanent way to protect ourselves from his power.
[Henry.]
: How did he get here? [Will.]
: He's been here all week.
[Will.]
: We knew Addison's men were on our trail, and we knew they were going to make a lot of noise going in.
This was the best chance we had of getting near him without, you know, being ""heard.
"" But he was one step ahead of us.
He'd set up the fake Crixorum to take the fall for him.
While we were figuring it out, Addison's men interfered, and [Magnus.]
: I offered to get him home safely in exchange for a peaceful guarantee.
He refused my offer.
[dart snipes.]
[Henry.]
: So why did you keep it a secret from us? So we couldn't blow the punchline.
[Will.]
: We had to do whatever we could to minimize the chances that Addison would pull the wrong thread.
[Henry.]
: So all that stuff you told him, was any of it true? [Magnus.]
: Oh, most of it.
It's easier to keep a Iie straight when it's close to the truth.
We had to have Iayers to the story, different scenarios depending on when he separated us and how much he already knew.
[Will.]
: A guy Iike that is never going to be satisfied with the first thing he's been told.
He's always going to assume he's being played.
The one thing we had in our favor was that he also assumed he was the best player in the room.
Give him something to figure out-- [Will.]
: Well, in our case, three things-- [Magnus.]
: And Iet him think he's won.
So if he even tries to Iook for the Crixorum, he'II be Iooking in Hollow Earth.
Good Iuck with that.
[Henry.]
: Huh.
It's vital that he and his superiors think that cutting off the Sanctuary was their idea.
Wait a second, you wanted that to happen? [Magnus.]
: It had to.
The Sanctuary needs its freedom.
This was the best way to get it.
[Will.]
: If we're down, they're not going to come after us in full force, at Ieast not for a while.
[Magnus.]
: Now, Addison was right about one thing.
The Crixorum is a vital piece of the puzzle.
Quite possibly, he's the key to it all.
I want that Ieverage right here.
We're going to need to fortify our defenses, aren't we? Very much so, my friend.
[Magnus.]
: I'm afraid the catalyst for the problems is the pregnancy.
Your body's producing defensive enzymes, Iikely as a result of the suppressive hormones you were taking for so Iong.
[Erika.]
: So, what does that meanfor us? There is a procedure I can offer that will slow the embryo's growth.
I believe your body will be able to tolerate the pregnancy hormones at a slower release rate.
Andthe-the baby? It's not without risk, but if things go as I expect, you'II have a healthy child.
It will just take a Iittle Ionger than usual, if if that's what you want.
[Henry.]
: We do.
We want this.
AII right, then.
A word? You've got some big decisions to make, Henry.
Well, we just made the biggest one.
She's going to be okay, right? She'II get the best possible care.
But, Henry, not here.
The Sanctuary's headed into uncharted waters.
It's no place for a baby.
[Henry.]
: I can't just Ieave you guys.
You need me.
[Magnus.]
: I support whatever decision you make.
Fortunately, you'II have a Iot of time to consider your options.
This procedure should change Erika's gestation rate from ten and half months to possibly 22.
[Henry.]
: Okay, whoa, that's good news.
Wait, she's going to be Iike this for two years? Um [Will.]
: I know we planned this outcome, but it's a big risk.
Are you absolutely sure that this is the right move? I've had more than a century to think about it, Will.
When you're forced onto the sidelines, you see things from another perspective.
I made a Iot of choices in my Iife, some of them in haste.
This was my chance to rethink the road I was on, rethink what the Sanctuary needs to be.
A hundred years of planning your next move, and having to sit on your hands the whole time? You couldn't wait to sink your teeth into Addison, could you? He's not the problem.
I've allowed us to become part of a system that we can't control.
There are changes coming that the world is not ready for.
So from now on we make our own rules.
[.]
[.]
Didn't hurt.