Bull (2016) s04e04 Episode Script
Her Own Two Feet
1 How does it look? Fetching? Mmm.
I love that word.
Fetching.
Pretty badass, too, huh? Now, I know you're thinking it's a little O.
T.
T.
for the office.
It's just one of 16 creations by me, Sadie Williams, and my Define Yourself line of makeup and beauty must-haves.
So, thanks for the listen, ladies.
Thanks for the look.
We're good.
Thanks, guys.
Um, I'm gonna need you to get that to me as soon as possible so I can have a chance to review it before it goes up on the website and on my Insta.
Yeah, by the end of the day.
- Got it.
- Come with me.
Dad.
- Hey.
Excuse me.
- Hey! Ah.
Everybody's here.
They're all waiting in the conference room.
So the, uh, financials are in the envelope, the creative and operational proposals are in the binder.
Now, if you agree to accept our proposal and allow Raybury Cosmetics to acquire Define Yourself by Sadie, our first order of business will be to globalize the brand, to find and groom Sadies in different countries.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
What are you talking about? Uh, I'm Sadie.
There's no one to find, no one to groom.
I'm happy to go wherever you need me to go, happy to do whatever you need me to do.
Sadie, we understand that you built this brand.
We understand how personal it all is for you, uh, how intimate the connection is between you and your audience, your videos, your unique approach to product development.
But our company operates in 150 countries and territories.
We decided to start our initial push in the Asia-Pacific region, because Because it's 36% of the cosmetic global market share.
- I have no issue with that.
- We'd start by getting toeholds in Japan, China, South Korea, then expand south to Singapore and westward - into the Indian market.
- Terrific.
It means that I can be in each country as it launches.
Uh, work with the local teams, uh, get a sense of the culture and figure out the best messaging for my videos.
A-Again The thinking here is that each market will have its own Sadie.
Think about it, an Asian Sadie in Asia.
W-We're selling beauty and skincare products.
Sadie kind of needs to look like the people she's selling to.
Wouldn't you agree? What they're trying to tell you is you've built a brilliant brand.
But you've also built a brilliant business model and a brilliant marketing model.
They want to take that model and replicate it all around the world.
And pay you very handsomely for it.
I need the room back for a few minutes.
How could you? That deal is worth over $100 million to you.
It's all the money you'll ever need, Sadie.
You're acting like someone's stabbing you through the heart.
You are.
This is my company.
I started it in our garage when I was 16.
I can't just hand it over to some corporate monolith so they can try and clone an ethnically-preferred version of me for every country on the planet.
You're starting to swing.
Even this reaction you're having right now, I see you starting to swing.
Dad, I am upset.
I am allowed to be upset.
Let's get them back in here.
Make them see that they need my input.
But, Sadie, they don't need your input.
And they don't want it.
Giving you that kind of power is a risk, and no global conglomerate is going to take that risk.
Not with your history, not with your challenges.
But it's my company.
But according to the court, it's my decision.
And I've made up my mind.
Anna, hey, it's Dad.
Got your message.
Dinner, tomorrow, I'm on it.
I'm bringing gifts.
Don't try and stop me.
Bye.
And who is this again? You've honestly never heard of Sadie Williams? Honestly, I've never heard of Sadie Williams.
Wow, even I know who Sadie Williams is.
Okay, here are the Cliffs Notes.
Starting as a teenager, Sadie Williams began posting videos, mostly makeup videos.
How to put it on, then how to make your own.
Then she started manufacturing it.
I think she's, like, 18 at that point? She's getting millions of views.
My sense is it's always been about more than makeup.
When Sadie started experimenting with her looks, not many people were marketing beauty products to black and brown girls.
She was a teenager.
Just like the people that she was talking to.
Got it.
So, what are we looking at here? Just as she was exploding, just when she had finally gotten on everyone's almost everyone's radar she had what I guess you'd call a meltdown.
Unfortunately, she had it while she was making one of her videos.
Even more unfortunately, is someone got ahold of that video that never should've seen the light of day and they posted it, uh, leaked it.
Sounds like something I ought to see before she gets here.
Will you do the honors? Ladies, today, we are going to be talking about underto That says "undertoes.
" It's supposed to say "undertones.
" I I guess I have to write the-the damn cue cards myself, too? Turn the card.
Thank you.
Your foundation color needs to be the same as your skin's underto I'll fix that.
You'll fix that.
Great.
And today, we're going to show you how to test your skin, your skin's complexion, so you can figure out which of those three undertones you have.
What? What? What is going on?! Are you kidding me? You guys are idiots! I hate this place! I hate this life! Get away from me! And this is something everyone has seen.
I need help with something, something I probably should've done a year or two ago.
We're all ears.
I was involved in an incident several years ago.
Uh, there is a tape.
I'm guessing you've all seen it.
Right.
Turns out, I was diagnosed with bipolar 1 disorder.
Uh, the tape, the incident that was caught on tape, was the culmination of it.
Okay.
And did you seek treatment? Oh, yes.
Yes, I was, I was committed.
Hospitalized.
I couldn't take care of myself, couldn't work.
Luckily, my father stepped in.
He petitioned the court, and he got guardianship.
And what kind of conservator ship are we talking about? Personal, professional, medical? All of the above.
But it's been three years, and you're ready to end the guardianship.
Yes.
I am on medication, I am in therapy, I've been stable for almost two years at this point.
But now, he wants to sell the company sell my company.
I just can't let him do it.
So you need to go to court and end the guardianship.
Got it.
But why us? Why TAC? The main focus of our practice is juries.
Guardianship cases are typically handled by judges.
Yes.
Judges with special mental health training.
And who would know more about what a mental health judge is looking for than a former forensic psychologist and someone with three PhDs? Sorry to interrupt.
Gerald Williams is in the lobby.
Ms.
Williams' father.
Should I let him up? Well, that depends.
Would you like him to join us? I didn't even tell him I was coming here.
He He tracks my phone.
I don't want there to be a scene.
I'm-I'm gonna go downstairs.
Sorry.
Wait a second.
You want to go to court and assert that you're prepared to run your own life? You need to start doing it.
He already knows where you are, and he's probably got a pretty good idea of why you're here.
Sit down.
Let's get to work.
The reason I called this pretrial conference is, I'm trying to come to some sort of resolution with this guardianship situation.
As both sides know, Sadie Williams has petitioned this court for relief from said guardianship.
Ms.
Williams, I've read your petition and can sympathize with your desire to be fully independent again.
But I do feel it is my duty to caution you that two years is not such a very long time to be mentally stable in the grand scheme of things.
Thank you, Your Honor, but I do feel very confident that I am ready to take back control over my business and control over my life.
I'm sure you do.
But the decompensation rates for individuals with bipolar 1 disorder are extremely high, as are the attendant suicide rates.
I cannot tell you how many people have come before me and promised they would continue to take their medication, only to wind up back in the hospital, back in the courtroom, or worse.
Your Honor.
May we take a short break and confer with our client? This judge is not gonna be our friend.
Yeah, I heard.
He doesn't think I'm ready.
Well, he just told us how he granted independence in the past, only to have it come back and bite him in the butt.
- I want to request a jury trial.
- Wh A jury trial? In a guardianship case? Is that even allowed? Well, you don't see it done very often, but, yeah, - it's allowed.
- Huh.
New York Mental Hygiene Law guarantees Sadie the right to trial by jury if she requests one.
My feeling is she should request one.
That judge was thoroughly ticked.
My father certainly didn't look too pleased either.
Easy.
Don't let this throw you, okay? Excuse us.
Well, that was very impressive.
You handled that like a pro.
- I am a pro.
- Good, because now that we've seated a jury, public perception is gonna become even more important.
Benny's right.
No matter where you are work, home, on the street just assume you're being watched and judged.
Truthfully, I already do.
There's my scholarship girl.
My Pulitzer Prize- winning journalist-to-be.
Pride and joy.
Dad.
Are those for me? Why? You need suitcases? Are you going somewhere special? Oh, man.
Don't make this harder than it already is.
Hard? I'm bursting with pride.
My little girl gets chosen out of 1,500 students for a journalism scholarship to Jordan? Please.
- Keep the hard stuff coming.
- Dad.
I just Um I don't really feel like eating any dinner.
Is there any way we could just walk? True story.
A week before I left home, left your mother and went to college, I couldn't eat.
I couldn't do anything.
I couldn't sleep, I couldn't think.
I was just terrified.
I Felt like I was diving headfirst into this giant unknown future and I I couldn't talk to my parents about it.
I-I-I didn't have anyone to talk to about it.
No one I knew had ever been to college before.
But the difference is is that you got me.
Look, I-I-I know I-I wasn't there for you for so long, and I didn't step up and behave like a parent, like a father, but now, I'm-I'm here.
Now I'm ready.
Whatever you need.
So, look, I get it, you're feeling pressure, and how could you not? It's a huge honor and a huge responsibility, but when you go over there, you're not going alone.
I'm here.
You got me.
And I'm so damn proud of you.
I'm pregnant, Dad.
Shh Hello? Oh, Marissa, hold Slow down.
What? Who assaulted a photographer? It's okay, Dr.
Bull.
I've already paid her bail.
Ah, Mr.
Williams.
Ms.
Baker.
What do we know? We know she's being charged with assault.
We know it's gonna be in all the papers in the morning.
Apparently, she struck a paparazzo.
And what's her side of the story? What difference does it make? She's obviously not well.
People who are in control of their mental faculties don't go around assaulting strangers.
Well, let's reserve judgment until we have all the facts.
- Shall we? - I am not the enemy, sir.
I'm not the villain.
I am the father.
Ah.
Dr.
Bull.
Dad.
I'm sorry I worried you.
I'm sorry I worried all of you.
It's okay, honey.
But can we just put an end to this thing? Tonight's adventure's gonna be all over the news in the morning.
If Raybury Cosmetics is still interested in buying us out, let's just do it.
Let's just close while we can.
Really? Thatâs the first thing you say to me? You don't want to know if I'm okay? You You don't even want to hear what happened? I know what happened.
I just bailed you out of jail.
Now how about we go home and get you to bed.
Actually I'm not ready for bed, Dad.
I want to talk about what happened last night with my legal counsel.
But thank you for posting my bail.
Sadie I'm not asking you to come home.
I'm telling you.
Mr.
Williams, she's a grown woman.
No one is talking to you.
Mr.
Williams, don't force my hand.
Hey, I'm not forcing anything.
I'm just taking my daughter home.
We are in a city jail, and there are police everywhere you look.
Unhand your daughter, or I'll have you arrested.
On what grounds? On the grounds that she's an adult, and she doesn't want to go with you, and that means it's kidnapping.
Dr.
Bull, you know damn well I have a guardianship that allows me to make I understand that, but by the time the police figure it out, you'll be in your second news cycle, and whatever's left of this Raybury Cosmetics deal will have completely evaporated.
First thing in the morning, I'm going to court.
Judge is gonna hear about this.
Right after he hears about how you keep interfering with my ability to confer with my client.
And then I am gonna be forced to ask for interim relief from your guardianship for the remainder of the trial.
Can he do that? You bet I can do that.
So why don't you let me give Sadie a ride home so we can talk.
I promise I'll get her home safely.
He loves me, you know.
I don't doubt that.
You want to tell me what happened tonight? Not that anyone's gonna believe me, but the whole thing was a setup.
After court, I went to my guardian-approved monthly dinner with my friend from high school.
We always go to the same spot, this little neighborhood place.
But someone must have tipped off the press, because the moment we walked out, the moment we stepped out of the restaurant, I was surrounded.
You seem to navigate the paps at the courthouse just fine.
Why was this any different? This one guy, he just He kept shoving his camera right in my face.
Like, literally.
I mean, he hit me twice.
And so I-I reached up my hand to brush the camera out of the way, and before I even made contact, he's on the ground, moaning, screaming, saying that I hit him.
And then, of course, the rest of them are snapping away, and one of them is calling the police.
Do you think our jury knows? I think our jury is asleep.
But I'm sure when they wake up, somebody will show them the pictures.
Somebody will tell them the news.
Dr.
Matthews, you are Sadie Williams' psychiatrist? I am.
And how long has that been the case? I began treating Sadie when she was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility where I'm on staff.
And what was your initial impression? That she was gravely ill.
In fact, when Sadie came to the hospital, her mania was so severe as to have psychotic features.
She was hallucinating.
She actually thought my staff was trying to kill her.
And after her initial hospitalization, how did your treatment of Ms.
Williams progress? Slowly.
She was extremely non compliant at first.
She refused to take any medications whatsoever until Mr.
Williams secured his guardianship and was able to force the issue.
Uh, after that, it took about a year for us to find the satisfactory balance of medications to manage her condition.
And would you say that Ms.
Williams is stable today? I would say that her moods are much more consistent, but medications can lose their efficacy over time.
I believe that vigilance and constant monitoring, like that provided by Mr.
Williams, are essential for Sadie's continued progress.
Thank you, Doctor.
No further questions.
Good morning, Dr.
Matthews.
Now, you said that when you first met Sadie, that she was a non compliant patient.
But isn't it possible that her initial noncompliance had less to do with a character trait and was more likely the result of the imbalanced brain chemistry caused by her then-undiagnosed illness? Yes.
Th-That's possible, yes.
After her initial resistance, how would you describe Sadie as a patient? Has she been open to your treatment recommendations? Committed to her recovery? I would have to say that she has been.
But that doesn't mean we shouldn't be vigilant.
Ah, yes.
Vigilance.
You mentioned that earlier.
Uh, but answer this for me, Dr.
Matthews.
If you really believe that Sadie's recovery is uncertain enough to warrant constant monitoring, why do you see her only once every three months? Well, that's well within the professional standard.
Yes, it is.
For patients who are stable and don't need strict oversight.
It kind of seems like the way you choose to deal with Ms.
Williams completely flies in the face of your testimony here today.
Objection.
Despite the counsel's clever framing, that wasn't really a question.
My apologies, Your Honor.
Let me put it this way.
Dr.
Matthews, how much is Mr.
Williams paying you for your testimony here today? The witness will answer the question.
Oh, that's all right, Your Honor.
I think she already did.
Clearly more than enough.
No further questions.
Ms.
Anders, when did you become the chief operating officer of Define Yourself by Sadie cosmetics? Mr.
Williams originally hired me three years ago to help him get the business in order while his daughter was being hospitalized.
And how would you describe the business when you first started it? It was in quite a bit of disarray.
Not completely surprising, given the demons that Sadie was wrestling with.
And when you say "disarray," can you be more specific? To be honest, the company was hemorrhaging money.
Apparently, Sadie had spent millions on real estate that had no practical corporate purpose.
And as I recall, there were five-figure line items for designer suits that she wanted to be worn as custodial uniforms.
I mean, there's just no other way to say it.
It was clear from the books that the person making the fiscal decisions was not thinking rationally.
Objection, Your Honor.
Ms.
Anders is not qualified to make that kind of assessment.
Sustained.
The witness will refrain from editorializing.
Of course.
Sorry.
And how's the company doing now? Better.
In the case of some of Sadie's more reckless decisions, there was nothing to be done.
But Gerald and I have applied ourselves.
And I think, by any measure, we've really turned the business around.
And do you believe the business would suffer if Ms.
Williams were to take the helm unsupervised? I like Sadie.
I think she's quite extraordinary.
But if past is prologue, she really has no business running a business.
I'm sorry.
Thank you, Ms.
Anders.
No further questions.
She is the last one in and the first one out.
She and I haven't spoken for more than 20 minutes in the two years since I've been back.
Apparently, she's very fond of you.
Ms.
Anders, thank you for being here today.
Simple question to start.
Do you stand to profit if Gerald Williams retains his guardianship and sells Define Yourself by Sadie to Raybury Cosmetics? Yes.
When I was hired, I was given shares in the company.
If it sells, I do stand to benefit.
Whereas Ms.
Williams, Sadie despite all your stated affection for her made it very clear to you that she was not a fan of your work, hasn't she? We haven't always seen eye to eye.
No, you haven't.
So, on one hand, you stand to make a lot of money if this guardianship stays in place.
And, on the other, you are likely out of a job if it ends.
Why should this jury believe anything you have to say? That's okay.
Forget I asked.
No further questions, Your Honor.
I knew you both weren't coming back to the office, and I thought you'd want to see this.
What are we looking at here? Ledger entries? Yep.
After that COO testified that decisions Sadie made prior to her diagnosis were still costing the company money, I used a password Sadie had given me to take a long look at the books.
And while I wasn't able to find any evidence that Sadie's breakdown is still costing the company anything, I did find these.
And for those of us who don't read or write forensic accounting The highlighted portions are wire transfers.
Half a million dollars made every three months for the last three years.
- Okay - It took some doing, but I was finally able to track where it was the money was being sent to.
The routing number is for a personal money market account.
An account in Sadie's father's name.
You're telling me Sadie's father has been moving money from Sadie's company to his own personal account? To the tune of $6 million.
Mr.
Williams, why did you initially petition the court for a guardianship over your grown daughter? I love my daughter.
I always have.
She accomplished so much at such a young age.
But then, a few years ago, it was like she stopped being herself.
Like some other person had crawled inside her and taken over.
I mean, we always talked all the time.
But then, suddenly, there'd be periods where I wouldn't hear from her for days.
Weeks, at one point.
Then I couldn't get her to stop calling.
12 times in one hour.
All about nonsense.
How she could hear the Internet, hear her microwave.
Next thing I know, she's talking about buying this very expensive building in SoHo.
Makes no sense to me.
Makes no sense to the bankers.
It's not a residential building.
And it's not like we needed any additional manufacturing space.
So I asked her.
Tell me about this building.
And she tells me she had this brainstorm.
She's going to start a new line.
A whole new business.
She's going to make invisible clothing.
We're down to a single green juror, Bull.
Then, once my daughter had her now-famous breakdown throwing things at people, all of it captured by a camera the court didn't hesitate.
She was clearly a danger to herself and others.
I did what any father would do.
Thank you, Mr.
Williams.
You're sure you want to do this? Yeah.
Thank you for your emotional testimony, Mr.
Williams.
But if you don't mind, I'd like to switch gears and discuss the more practical side of your guardianship.
Absolutely.
Okay.
Now Take a look at these financial records from the corporate account of Define Yourself by Sadie.
Of course.
Now, these highlighted transfers here, they show corporate money being transferred into a private account.
Now, that account is registered to you, isn't it, Mr.
Williams? And by that, I mean it is a personal account, isn't it? It is.
Yes.
So what are we to make of this? According to these records, over a period of three years, while the company was entrusted to your guardianship, $6 million made its way from the corporation's bank account to yours.
A personal money market account.
You embezzle that money, sir? Your Honor, I'd like to request a recess - to confer with my client.
- Fine.
This court will take a ten-minute recess.
Would you and your team mind joining us in the conference room, please? So you're not denying you took the money? No.
I took it.
But I did it for my daughter.
What are you talking about, Dad? The night you were hospitalized.
You do remember throwing things, don't you? Yeah.
Well, you hit your cameraman.
Hit him in the face.
In the eye.
Directly.
Hard enough to cause something called a globe rupture.
An ophthalmologist performed surgery on him.
Managed to close the rupture, control the internal bleeding, save the eye.
But he just couldn't restore the man's vision.
Oh, my God.
So, the money are you telling us it went to pay this man's medical bills? That.
And for his silence.
I told him how terribly sorry I was and how we wanted to do right by him.
He was a cameraman.
We'd taken his vision.
I just didn't want lawyers and insurance companies or God forbid, a trial.
Do not make me go back in there and make this tragedy a matter of public record.
If you do, what kind of future will she have? So? So, she confirmed it.
It's for real.
I'm about seven weeks along, which is what I figured.
Okay.
Well, we're gonna we're gon we're gonna figure this out.
Um, do-do you like her? I mean, is she someone you can imagine yourself seeing again? The doctor? Yeah, yeah.
Um, I think she's kind of perfect.
Good.
Okay.
So, um, let's figure out next steps.
Did you schedule a follow-up appointment? - Yeah.
- Good.
Okay, uh, well, now the hard part.
We, uh we got to call your mother.
I'm guessing you haven't talked to her yet, huh? I can't do that.
Not yet.
Okay.
All right.
Well, we'll circle back on that.
Can I ask about the boy? Forget about the boy.
I have.
Okay.
So, um, I guess the next thing that we got to talk about is school.
For now, you should be okay, but I guess we need to tell them about Jordan, right? Talk to them about what? Well, obviously, you're not going, not now.
Look, do the math.
Right? Look, you're-you're supposed to be there in January, right? And you'll be almost four months pregnant then.
And then, you're not due to come back until June.
And I'm not letting my daughter give birth in the Middle East.
Dad.
I'm not giving birth anywhere.
No.
They do that there? How can they do that and the other? It doesn't make sense.
Anyway, it-it doesn't matter.
You're not doing that.
- We are not doing that.
- Why not? Because it's-it's a it's a it's a sin.
It's a mortal sin.
What do you? Right.
Because when was the last time you went to church? - How old were you like, 15? - That's beside the point.
Dad, I was selected out of 1,500 students.
This is an opportunity of a lifetime.
The girl who did this last year? She's working for the London Tribune now.
Well, I'm guessing that she didn't get herself pregnant.
Look, if your mother and I had done what you are contemplating doing, y-you wouldn't even be here right now.
Well, I am here.
And I have a problem, and I need your help.
You don't need my help, 'cause we're not gonna do this.
We aren't doing anything.
I am.
And I need $400, and I need someone to bring me to this woman's office and wait and then bring me home and take care of me.
And I'm asking you.
You always talk about how sorry you are that you were never there for me growing up.
Well you're here now.
And I need you.
But I can't do this.
I didn't even know his name.
Can you guys help me find his name? The cameraman? I I'd like to reach out to him.
I'd like to try and I can do that.
I can help you find a discreet way to reach out and try to make things right.
But in the meantime, we have court at 9:00 in the morning, and there are some choices to be made.
How do you mean? Well, we can let Benny finish cross-examining your father, and then put you on the stand and take our chances with the jury.
Of course, in that version, the truth comes out.
My guess is, you'll become the Internet's new punching bag, your business will probably be rendered worthless, and that cameraman whose name you don't know will suddenly be thrust into a spotlight he probably doesn't want.
And the other option is? Well, you could drop your petition to end the guardianship.
And let my father make every important decision for me for the rest of my life? I don't know how to do that, Dr.
Bull.
Especially not after today.
Well, let Mr.
Colón and I put our heads together, see if we can't come up with something, okay? - Okay.
- See you tomorrow morning in court.
Tomorrow.
Tell me you have a brilliant idea.
I have a brilliant idea.
Ooh, let's hear it.
I'm sorry.
I I was just doing what I was told.
It's like I said when we first got into this thing the situation does not belong in a court of law.
This is the kind of thing that gets solved by Sitting down and looking someone in the eye, and forcing them to look you in the eye.
You know what I mean? Yeah.
Actually, I think I do.
Thank you for coming.
Thank you for meeting me before court.
I came because my daughter's not answering my calls.
I know yesterday must have been difficult for her.
She's fine.
Overwhelmed but fine.
Angry, too.
You've never told her what happened.
She never got a chance to apologize, make amends, grieve.
I know what I did, and I know why I did it.
Deep down, Sadie knows, too.
She knows I love her.
Like I told you, I am not the villain.
All I want is to know that my daughter is taken care of.
There's an opportunity to do that, - and I don't want her to miss it.
- Fine.
But then what? Your daughter she's a tenacious woman.
And she'll be rich.
So what happens when she wants to start another company? You gonna stand in the way of that one, too? And the one after that, and the one after that? Now, look, the jury already knows about the six million.
You come back into this courtroom, and you tell them the truth about what happened, where all the money went, you might win.
But I doubt that the buyer is gonna shell out for a company whose figurehead comes with all that baggage.
And then, well, so much for financial security.
On the other hand, you keep your secret, and then, Sadie will probably walk away with the win, but you will be seen as a criminal who took advantage of his daughter's illness.
I can tell you're trying to convince me of something, but I'll be damned if I know what it is.
I'm trying to convince you to loosen your grip, trust your daughter a little, 'cause I got a feeling, if you're willing to do that, I can get Sadie to meet you halfway.
I understand the parties have reached an agreement.
We have, Your Honor.
My client has agreed to Mr.
Williams' proposed sale of her cosmetics company with a few stipulations.
And in return, my client has agreed to end his daughter's guardianship.
And this is acceptable to you both? - It is, Your Honor.
- Yes, Your Honor.
Then I ask the attorneys to put this agreement in writing, and we shall conclude these proceedings.
Hi.
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to frighten you.
Note for the future.
When you're trying to not frighten someone, put on some lights.
Are you drinking? Have you been crying? No to both.
Hmm.
You texted me.
You said you'd set a new client meeting for early tomorrow morning, left a file on my desk.
There is no file on my desk.
I may have lied about that.
Okay.
I just wanted to see you, to talk to you.
I need a name.
A family law attorney, maybe a woman.
I really have very little use for men at the moment.
Present company excepted, of course.
I'm so sorry.
Are you serving him, or did he serve you? No, no.
It's not for me.
Oh.
What a relief.
Why do people always leave? All I've ever wanted in my life was someone to cleave to.
A mother.
A father.
A husband.
Marissa, life is not over.
I know.
You're right.
Life is not over.
Every day's a new day.
Mm-hmm.
Every day, you learn something new.
Mm.
Yes.
Know what I learned today? Please don't make me guess.
I like scotch.
Well, then, you are in for a treat, because I know a secret.
It's even better when someone else pours it for you.
Shh.
Preferably in a very dark environment surrounded by complete strangers.
Mm-hmm.
Or failing that sitting with an old friend.
Would you like me to give you a ride home? Could we stop along the way and test out that "It's better when someone else pours it for you" theory? Absolutely.
And you can tell your friend that I will have a name for her tomorrow morning.
I may have lied about the friend.
Wow.
You had me fooled.
I love that word.
Fetching.
Pretty badass, too, huh? Now, I know you're thinking it's a little O.
T.
T.
for the office.
It's just one of 16 creations by me, Sadie Williams, and my Define Yourself line of makeup and beauty must-haves.
So, thanks for the listen, ladies.
Thanks for the look.
We're good.
Thanks, guys.
Um, I'm gonna need you to get that to me as soon as possible so I can have a chance to review it before it goes up on the website and on my Insta.
Yeah, by the end of the day.
- Got it.
- Come with me.
Dad.
- Hey.
Excuse me.
- Hey! Ah.
Everybody's here.
They're all waiting in the conference room.
So the, uh, financials are in the envelope, the creative and operational proposals are in the binder.
Now, if you agree to accept our proposal and allow Raybury Cosmetics to acquire Define Yourself by Sadie, our first order of business will be to globalize the brand, to find and groom Sadies in different countries.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
What are you talking about? Uh, I'm Sadie.
There's no one to find, no one to groom.
I'm happy to go wherever you need me to go, happy to do whatever you need me to do.
Sadie, we understand that you built this brand.
We understand how personal it all is for you, uh, how intimate the connection is between you and your audience, your videos, your unique approach to product development.
But our company operates in 150 countries and territories.
We decided to start our initial push in the Asia-Pacific region, because Because it's 36% of the cosmetic global market share.
- I have no issue with that.
- We'd start by getting toeholds in Japan, China, South Korea, then expand south to Singapore and westward - into the Indian market.
- Terrific.
It means that I can be in each country as it launches.
Uh, work with the local teams, uh, get a sense of the culture and figure out the best messaging for my videos.
A-Again The thinking here is that each market will have its own Sadie.
Think about it, an Asian Sadie in Asia.
W-We're selling beauty and skincare products.
Sadie kind of needs to look like the people she's selling to.
Wouldn't you agree? What they're trying to tell you is you've built a brilliant brand.
But you've also built a brilliant business model and a brilliant marketing model.
They want to take that model and replicate it all around the world.
And pay you very handsomely for it.
I need the room back for a few minutes.
How could you? That deal is worth over $100 million to you.
It's all the money you'll ever need, Sadie.
You're acting like someone's stabbing you through the heart.
You are.
This is my company.
I started it in our garage when I was 16.
I can't just hand it over to some corporate monolith so they can try and clone an ethnically-preferred version of me for every country on the planet.
You're starting to swing.
Even this reaction you're having right now, I see you starting to swing.
Dad, I am upset.
I am allowed to be upset.
Let's get them back in here.
Make them see that they need my input.
But, Sadie, they don't need your input.
And they don't want it.
Giving you that kind of power is a risk, and no global conglomerate is going to take that risk.
Not with your history, not with your challenges.
But it's my company.
But according to the court, it's my decision.
And I've made up my mind.
Anna, hey, it's Dad.
Got your message.
Dinner, tomorrow, I'm on it.
I'm bringing gifts.
Don't try and stop me.
Bye.
And who is this again? You've honestly never heard of Sadie Williams? Honestly, I've never heard of Sadie Williams.
Wow, even I know who Sadie Williams is.
Okay, here are the Cliffs Notes.
Starting as a teenager, Sadie Williams began posting videos, mostly makeup videos.
How to put it on, then how to make your own.
Then she started manufacturing it.
I think she's, like, 18 at that point? She's getting millions of views.
My sense is it's always been about more than makeup.
When Sadie started experimenting with her looks, not many people were marketing beauty products to black and brown girls.
She was a teenager.
Just like the people that she was talking to.
Got it.
So, what are we looking at here? Just as she was exploding, just when she had finally gotten on everyone's almost everyone's radar she had what I guess you'd call a meltdown.
Unfortunately, she had it while she was making one of her videos.
Even more unfortunately, is someone got ahold of that video that never should've seen the light of day and they posted it, uh, leaked it.
Sounds like something I ought to see before she gets here.
Will you do the honors? Ladies, today, we are going to be talking about underto That says "undertoes.
" It's supposed to say "undertones.
" I I guess I have to write the-the damn cue cards myself, too? Turn the card.
Thank you.
Your foundation color needs to be the same as your skin's underto I'll fix that.
You'll fix that.
Great.
And today, we're going to show you how to test your skin, your skin's complexion, so you can figure out which of those three undertones you have.
What? What? What is going on?! Are you kidding me? You guys are idiots! I hate this place! I hate this life! Get away from me! And this is something everyone has seen.
I need help with something, something I probably should've done a year or two ago.
We're all ears.
I was involved in an incident several years ago.
Uh, there is a tape.
I'm guessing you've all seen it.
Right.
Turns out, I was diagnosed with bipolar 1 disorder.
Uh, the tape, the incident that was caught on tape, was the culmination of it.
Okay.
And did you seek treatment? Oh, yes.
Yes, I was, I was committed.
Hospitalized.
I couldn't take care of myself, couldn't work.
Luckily, my father stepped in.
He petitioned the court, and he got guardianship.
And what kind of conservator ship are we talking about? Personal, professional, medical? All of the above.
But it's been three years, and you're ready to end the guardianship.
Yes.
I am on medication, I am in therapy, I've been stable for almost two years at this point.
But now, he wants to sell the company sell my company.
I just can't let him do it.
So you need to go to court and end the guardianship.
Got it.
But why us? Why TAC? The main focus of our practice is juries.
Guardianship cases are typically handled by judges.
Yes.
Judges with special mental health training.
And who would know more about what a mental health judge is looking for than a former forensic psychologist and someone with three PhDs? Sorry to interrupt.
Gerald Williams is in the lobby.
Ms.
Williams' father.
Should I let him up? Well, that depends.
Would you like him to join us? I didn't even tell him I was coming here.
He He tracks my phone.
I don't want there to be a scene.
I'm-I'm gonna go downstairs.
Sorry.
Wait a second.
You want to go to court and assert that you're prepared to run your own life? You need to start doing it.
He already knows where you are, and he's probably got a pretty good idea of why you're here.
Sit down.
Let's get to work.
The reason I called this pretrial conference is, I'm trying to come to some sort of resolution with this guardianship situation.
As both sides know, Sadie Williams has petitioned this court for relief from said guardianship.
Ms.
Williams, I've read your petition and can sympathize with your desire to be fully independent again.
But I do feel it is my duty to caution you that two years is not such a very long time to be mentally stable in the grand scheme of things.
Thank you, Your Honor, but I do feel very confident that I am ready to take back control over my business and control over my life.
I'm sure you do.
But the decompensation rates for individuals with bipolar 1 disorder are extremely high, as are the attendant suicide rates.
I cannot tell you how many people have come before me and promised they would continue to take their medication, only to wind up back in the hospital, back in the courtroom, or worse.
Your Honor.
May we take a short break and confer with our client? This judge is not gonna be our friend.
Yeah, I heard.
He doesn't think I'm ready.
Well, he just told us how he granted independence in the past, only to have it come back and bite him in the butt.
- I want to request a jury trial.
- Wh A jury trial? In a guardianship case? Is that even allowed? Well, you don't see it done very often, but, yeah, - it's allowed.
- Huh.
New York Mental Hygiene Law guarantees Sadie the right to trial by jury if she requests one.
My feeling is she should request one.
That judge was thoroughly ticked.
My father certainly didn't look too pleased either.
Easy.
Don't let this throw you, okay? Excuse us.
Well, that was very impressive.
You handled that like a pro.
- I am a pro.
- Good, because now that we've seated a jury, public perception is gonna become even more important.
Benny's right.
No matter where you are work, home, on the street just assume you're being watched and judged.
Truthfully, I already do.
There's my scholarship girl.
My Pulitzer Prize- winning journalist-to-be.
Pride and joy.
Dad.
Are those for me? Why? You need suitcases? Are you going somewhere special? Oh, man.
Don't make this harder than it already is.
Hard? I'm bursting with pride.
My little girl gets chosen out of 1,500 students for a journalism scholarship to Jordan? Please.
- Keep the hard stuff coming.
- Dad.
I just Um I don't really feel like eating any dinner.
Is there any way we could just walk? True story.
A week before I left home, left your mother and went to college, I couldn't eat.
I couldn't do anything.
I couldn't sleep, I couldn't think.
I was just terrified.
I Felt like I was diving headfirst into this giant unknown future and I I couldn't talk to my parents about it.
I-I-I didn't have anyone to talk to about it.
No one I knew had ever been to college before.
But the difference is is that you got me.
Look, I-I-I know I-I wasn't there for you for so long, and I didn't step up and behave like a parent, like a father, but now, I'm-I'm here.
Now I'm ready.
Whatever you need.
So, look, I get it, you're feeling pressure, and how could you not? It's a huge honor and a huge responsibility, but when you go over there, you're not going alone.
I'm here.
You got me.
And I'm so damn proud of you.
I'm pregnant, Dad.
Shh Hello? Oh, Marissa, hold Slow down.
What? Who assaulted a photographer? It's okay, Dr.
Bull.
I've already paid her bail.
Ah, Mr.
Williams.
Ms.
Baker.
What do we know? We know she's being charged with assault.
We know it's gonna be in all the papers in the morning.
Apparently, she struck a paparazzo.
And what's her side of the story? What difference does it make? She's obviously not well.
People who are in control of their mental faculties don't go around assaulting strangers.
Well, let's reserve judgment until we have all the facts.
- Shall we? - I am not the enemy, sir.
I'm not the villain.
I am the father.
Ah.
Dr.
Bull.
Dad.
I'm sorry I worried you.
I'm sorry I worried all of you.
It's okay, honey.
But can we just put an end to this thing? Tonight's adventure's gonna be all over the news in the morning.
If Raybury Cosmetics is still interested in buying us out, let's just do it.
Let's just close while we can.
Really? Thatâs the first thing you say to me? You don't want to know if I'm okay? You You don't even want to hear what happened? I know what happened.
I just bailed you out of jail.
Now how about we go home and get you to bed.
Actually I'm not ready for bed, Dad.
I want to talk about what happened last night with my legal counsel.
But thank you for posting my bail.
Sadie I'm not asking you to come home.
I'm telling you.
Mr.
Williams, she's a grown woman.
No one is talking to you.
Mr.
Williams, don't force my hand.
Hey, I'm not forcing anything.
I'm just taking my daughter home.
We are in a city jail, and there are police everywhere you look.
Unhand your daughter, or I'll have you arrested.
On what grounds? On the grounds that she's an adult, and she doesn't want to go with you, and that means it's kidnapping.
Dr.
Bull, you know damn well I have a guardianship that allows me to make I understand that, but by the time the police figure it out, you'll be in your second news cycle, and whatever's left of this Raybury Cosmetics deal will have completely evaporated.
First thing in the morning, I'm going to court.
Judge is gonna hear about this.
Right after he hears about how you keep interfering with my ability to confer with my client.
And then I am gonna be forced to ask for interim relief from your guardianship for the remainder of the trial.
Can he do that? You bet I can do that.
So why don't you let me give Sadie a ride home so we can talk.
I promise I'll get her home safely.
He loves me, you know.
I don't doubt that.
You want to tell me what happened tonight? Not that anyone's gonna believe me, but the whole thing was a setup.
After court, I went to my guardian-approved monthly dinner with my friend from high school.
We always go to the same spot, this little neighborhood place.
But someone must have tipped off the press, because the moment we walked out, the moment we stepped out of the restaurant, I was surrounded.
You seem to navigate the paps at the courthouse just fine.
Why was this any different? This one guy, he just He kept shoving his camera right in my face.
Like, literally.
I mean, he hit me twice.
And so I-I reached up my hand to brush the camera out of the way, and before I even made contact, he's on the ground, moaning, screaming, saying that I hit him.
And then, of course, the rest of them are snapping away, and one of them is calling the police.
Do you think our jury knows? I think our jury is asleep.
But I'm sure when they wake up, somebody will show them the pictures.
Somebody will tell them the news.
Dr.
Matthews, you are Sadie Williams' psychiatrist? I am.
And how long has that been the case? I began treating Sadie when she was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility where I'm on staff.
And what was your initial impression? That she was gravely ill.
In fact, when Sadie came to the hospital, her mania was so severe as to have psychotic features.
She was hallucinating.
She actually thought my staff was trying to kill her.
And after her initial hospitalization, how did your treatment of Ms.
Williams progress? Slowly.
She was extremely non compliant at first.
She refused to take any medications whatsoever until Mr.
Williams secured his guardianship and was able to force the issue.
Uh, after that, it took about a year for us to find the satisfactory balance of medications to manage her condition.
And would you say that Ms.
Williams is stable today? I would say that her moods are much more consistent, but medications can lose their efficacy over time.
I believe that vigilance and constant monitoring, like that provided by Mr.
Williams, are essential for Sadie's continued progress.
Thank you, Doctor.
No further questions.
Good morning, Dr.
Matthews.
Now, you said that when you first met Sadie, that she was a non compliant patient.
But isn't it possible that her initial noncompliance had less to do with a character trait and was more likely the result of the imbalanced brain chemistry caused by her then-undiagnosed illness? Yes.
Th-That's possible, yes.
After her initial resistance, how would you describe Sadie as a patient? Has she been open to your treatment recommendations? Committed to her recovery? I would have to say that she has been.
But that doesn't mean we shouldn't be vigilant.
Ah, yes.
Vigilance.
You mentioned that earlier.
Uh, but answer this for me, Dr.
Matthews.
If you really believe that Sadie's recovery is uncertain enough to warrant constant monitoring, why do you see her only once every three months? Well, that's well within the professional standard.
Yes, it is.
For patients who are stable and don't need strict oversight.
It kind of seems like the way you choose to deal with Ms.
Williams completely flies in the face of your testimony here today.
Objection.
Despite the counsel's clever framing, that wasn't really a question.
My apologies, Your Honor.
Let me put it this way.
Dr.
Matthews, how much is Mr.
Williams paying you for your testimony here today? The witness will answer the question.
Oh, that's all right, Your Honor.
I think she already did.
Clearly more than enough.
No further questions.
Ms.
Anders, when did you become the chief operating officer of Define Yourself by Sadie cosmetics? Mr.
Williams originally hired me three years ago to help him get the business in order while his daughter was being hospitalized.
And how would you describe the business when you first started it? It was in quite a bit of disarray.
Not completely surprising, given the demons that Sadie was wrestling with.
And when you say "disarray," can you be more specific? To be honest, the company was hemorrhaging money.
Apparently, Sadie had spent millions on real estate that had no practical corporate purpose.
And as I recall, there were five-figure line items for designer suits that she wanted to be worn as custodial uniforms.
I mean, there's just no other way to say it.
It was clear from the books that the person making the fiscal decisions was not thinking rationally.
Objection, Your Honor.
Ms.
Anders is not qualified to make that kind of assessment.
Sustained.
The witness will refrain from editorializing.
Of course.
Sorry.
And how's the company doing now? Better.
In the case of some of Sadie's more reckless decisions, there was nothing to be done.
But Gerald and I have applied ourselves.
And I think, by any measure, we've really turned the business around.
And do you believe the business would suffer if Ms.
Williams were to take the helm unsupervised? I like Sadie.
I think she's quite extraordinary.
But if past is prologue, she really has no business running a business.
I'm sorry.
Thank you, Ms.
Anders.
No further questions.
She is the last one in and the first one out.
She and I haven't spoken for more than 20 minutes in the two years since I've been back.
Apparently, she's very fond of you.
Ms.
Anders, thank you for being here today.
Simple question to start.
Do you stand to profit if Gerald Williams retains his guardianship and sells Define Yourself by Sadie to Raybury Cosmetics? Yes.
When I was hired, I was given shares in the company.
If it sells, I do stand to benefit.
Whereas Ms.
Williams, Sadie despite all your stated affection for her made it very clear to you that she was not a fan of your work, hasn't she? We haven't always seen eye to eye.
No, you haven't.
So, on one hand, you stand to make a lot of money if this guardianship stays in place.
And, on the other, you are likely out of a job if it ends.
Why should this jury believe anything you have to say? That's okay.
Forget I asked.
No further questions, Your Honor.
I knew you both weren't coming back to the office, and I thought you'd want to see this.
What are we looking at here? Ledger entries? Yep.
After that COO testified that decisions Sadie made prior to her diagnosis were still costing the company money, I used a password Sadie had given me to take a long look at the books.
And while I wasn't able to find any evidence that Sadie's breakdown is still costing the company anything, I did find these.
And for those of us who don't read or write forensic accounting The highlighted portions are wire transfers.
Half a million dollars made every three months for the last three years.
- Okay - It took some doing, but I was finally able to track where it was the money was being sent to.
The routing number is for a personal money market account.
An account in Sadie's father's name.
You're telling me Sadie's father has been moving money from Sadie's company to his own personal account? To the tune of $6 million.
Mr.
Williams, why did you initially petition the court for a guardianship over your grown daughter? I love my daughter.
I always have.
She accomplished so much at such a young age.
But then, a few years ago, it was like she stopped being herself.
Like some other person had crawled inside her and taken over.
I mean, we always talked all the time.
But then, suddenly, there'd be periods where I wouldn't hear from her for days.
Weeks, at one point.
Then I couldn't get her to stop calling.
12 times in one hour.
All about nonsense.
How she could hear the Internet, hear her microwave.
Next thing I know, she's talking about buying this very expensive building in SoHo.
Makes no sense to me.
Makes no sense to the bankers.
It's not a residential building.
And it's not like we needed any additional manufacturing space.
So I asked her.
Tell me about this building.
And she tells me she had this brainstorm.
She's going to start a new line.
A whole new business.
She's going to make invisible clothing.
We're down to a single green juror, Bull.
Then, once my daughter had her now-famous breakdown throwing things at people, all of it captured by a camera the court didn't hesitate.
She was clearly a danger to herself and others.
I did what any father would do.
Thank you, Mr.
Williams.
You're sure you want to do this? Yeah.
Thank you for your emotional testimony, Mr.
Williams.
But if you don't mind, I'd like to switch gears and discuss the more practical side of your guardianship.
Absolutely.
Okay.
Now Take a look at these financial records from the corporate account of Define Yourself by Sadie.
Of course.
Now, these highlighted transfers here, they show corporate money being transferred into a private account.
Now, that account is registered to you, isn't it, Mr.
Williams? And by that, I mean it is a personal account, isn't it? It is.
Yes.
So what are we to make of this? According to these records, over a period of three years, while the company was entrusted to your guardianship, $6 million made its way from the corporation's bank account to yours.
A personal money market account.
You embezzle that money, sir? Your Honor, I'd like to request a recess - to confer with my client.
- Fine.
This court will take a ten-minute recess.
Would you and your team mind joining us in the conference room, please? So you're not denying you took the money? No.
I took it.
But I did it for my daughter.
What are you talking about, Dad? The night you were hospitalized.
You do remember throwing things, don't you? Yeah.
Well, you hit your cameraman.
Hit him in the face.
In the eye.
Directly.
Hard enough to cause something called a globe rupture.
An ophthalmologist performed surgery on him.
Managed to close the rupture, control the internal bleeding, save the eye.
But he just couldn't restore the man's vision.
Oh, my God.
So, the money are you telling us it went to pay this man's medical bills? That.
And for his silence.
I told him how terribly sorry I was and how we wanted to do right by him.
He was a cameraman.
We'd taken his vision.
I just didn't want lawyers and insurance companies or God forbid, a trial.
Do not make me go back in there and make this tragedy a matter of public record.
If you do, what kind of future will she have? So? So, she confirmed it.
It's for real.
I'm about seven weeks along, which is what I figured.
Okay.
Well, we're gonna we're gon we're gonna figure this out.
Um, do-do you like her? I mean, is she someone you can imagine yourself seeing again? The doctor? Yeah, yeah.
Um, I think she's kind of perfect.
Good.
Okay.
So, um, let's figure out next steps.
Did you schedule a follow-up appointment? - Yeah.
- Good.
Okay, uh, well, now the hard part.
We, uh we got to call your mother.
I'm guessing you haven't talked to her yet, huh? I can't do that.
Not yet.
Okay.
All right.
Well, we'll circle back on that.
Can I ask about the boy? Forget about the boy.
I have.
Okay.
So, um, I guess the next thing that we got to talk about is school.
For now, you should be okay, but I guess we need to tell them about Jordan, right? Talk to them about what? Well, obviously, you're not going, not now.
Look, do the math.
Right? Look, you're-you're supposed to be there in January, right? And you'll be almost four months pregnant then.
And then, you're not due to come back until June.
And I'm not letting my daughter give birth in the Middle East.
Dad.
I'm not giving birth anywhere.
No.
They do that there? How can they do that and the other? It doesn't make sense.
Anyway, it-it doesn't matter.
You're not doing that.
- We are not doing that.
- Why not? Because it's-it's a it's a it's a sin.
It's a mortal sin.
What do you? Right.
Because when was the last time you went to church? - How old were you like, 15? - That's beside the point.
Dad, I was selected out of 1,500 students.
This is an opportunity of a lifetime.
The girl who did this last year? She's working for the London Tribune now.
Well, I'm guessing that she didn't get herself pregnant.
Look, if your mother and I had done what you are contemplating doing, y-you wouldn't even be here right now.
Well, I am here.
And I have a problem, and I need your help.
You don't need my help, 'cause we're not gonna do this.
We aren't doing anything.
I am.
And I need $400, and I need someone to bring me to this woman's office and wait and then bring me home and take care of me.
And I'm asking you.
You always talk about how sorry you are that you were never there for me growing up.
Well you're here now.
And I need you.
But I can't do this.
I didn't even know his name.
Can you guys help me find his name? The cameraman? I I'd like to reach out to him.
I'd like to try and I can do that.
I can help you find a discreet way to reach out and try to make things right.
But in the meantime, we have court at 9:00 in the morning, and there are some choices to be made.
How do you mean? Well, we can let Benny finish cross-examining your father, and then put you on the stand and take our chances with the jury.
Of course, in that version, the truth comes out.
My guess is, you'll become the Internet's new punching bag, your business will probably be rendered worthless, and that cameraman whose name you don't know will suddenly be thrust into a spotlight he probably doesn't want.
And the other option is? Well, you could drop your petition to end the guardianship.
And let my father make every important decision for me for the rest of my life? I don't know how to do that, Dr.
Bull.
Especially not after today.
Well, let Mr.
Colón and I put our heads together, see if we can't come up with something, okay? - Okay.
- See you tomorrow morning in court.
Tomorrow.
Tell me you have a brilliant idea.
I have a brilliant idea.
Ooh, let's hear it.
I'm sorry.
I I was just doing what I was told.
It's like I said when we first got into this thing the situation does not belong in a court of law.
This is the kind of thing that gets solved by Sitting down and looking someone in the eye, and forcing them to look you in the eye.
You know what I mean? Yeah.
Actually, I think I do.
Thank you for coming.
Thank you for meeting me before court.
I came because my daughter's not answering my calls.
I know yesterday must have been difficult for her.
She's fine.
Overwhelmed but fine.
Angry, too.
You've never told her what happened.
She never got a chance to apologize, make amends, grieve.
I know what I did, and I know why I did it.
Deep down, Sadie knows, too.
She knows I love her.
Like I told you, I am not the villain.
All I want is to know that my daughter is taken care of.
There's an opportunity to do that, - and I don't want her to miss it.
- Fine.
But then what? Your daughter she's a tenacious woman.
And she'll be rich.
So what happens when she wants to start another company? You gonna stand in the way of that one, too? And the one after that, and the one after that? Now, look, the jury already knows about the six million.
You come back into this courtroom, and you tell them the truth about what happened, where all the money went, you might win.
But I doubt that the buyer is gonna shell out for a company whose figurehead comes with all that baggage.
And then, well, so much for financial security.
On the other hand, you keep your secret, and then, Sadie will probably walk away with the win, but you will be seen as a criminal who took advantage of his daughter's illness.
I can tell you're trying to convince me of something, but I'll be damned if I know what it is.
I'm trying to convince you to loosen your grip, trust your daughter a little, 'cause I got a feeling, if you're willing to do that, I can get Sadie to meet you halfway.
I understand the parties have reached an agreement.
We have, Your Honor.
My client has agreed to Mr.
Williams' proposed sale of her cosmetics company with a few stipulations.
And in return, my client has agreed to end his daughter's guardianship.
And this is acceptable to you both? - It is, Your Honor.
- Yes, Your Honor.
Then I ask the attorneys to put this agreement in writing, and we shall conclude these proceedings.
Hi.
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to frighten you.
Note for the future.
When you're trying to not frighten someone, put on some lights.
Are you drinking? Have you been crying? No to both.
Hmm.
You texted me.
You said you'd set a new client meeting for early tomorrow morning, left a file on my desk.
There is no file on my desk.
I may have lied about that.
Okay.
I just wanted to see you, to talk to you.
I need a name.
A family law attorney, maybe a woman.
I really have very little use for men at the moment.
Present company excepted, of course.
I'm so sorry.
Are you serving him, or did he serve you? No, no.
It's not for me.
Oh.
What a relief.
Why do people always leave? All I've ever wanted in my life was someone to cleave to.
A mother.
A father.
A husband.
Marissa, life is not over.
I know.
You're right.
Life is not over.
Every day's a new day.
Mm-hmm.
Every day, you learn something new.
Mm.
Yes.
Know what I learned today? Please don't make me guess.
I like scotch.
Well, then, you are in for a treat, because I know a secret.
It's even better when someone else pours it for you.
Shh.
Preferably in a very dark environment surrounded by complete strangers.
Mm-hmm.
Or failing that sitting with an old friend.
Would you like me to give you a ride home? Could we stop along the way and test out that "It's better when someone else pours it for you" theory? Absolutely.
And you can tell your friend that I will have a name for her tomorrow morning.
I may have lied about the friend.
Wow.
You had me fooled.