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And you didn't feel like you could trust my wife with this news? |
I just didn't want to take a chance. I didn't want to risk it. It could have been frozen along with everything else. |
You had it all figured out. You move into my house. You raise my kids. You sleep with my wife. It was a good plan, Arnie. |
Carl, that's insane. |
So my wife is lying? |
Carl, think about it, if I was trying to rip you off, I would have left town after Ruiz was killed. I wouldn't sit next to you in court listening to the dismissal. |
Arnie, do think there's a difference between a reason and an excuse, because I don't think there is. |
Carl |
Goodbye Arnie. |
Helena, I'm so sorry |
Arnie, thank God. |
I understand. You're upset. You want to know what's going on. That's good. |
Why are you talking like that? |
Listen to me carefully. First of all, Carl isn't here. DEA's got him and they'll hang on to him until arraignment, which will probably be tomorrow. So here you're wasting your time. Are you with me? |
Good. From now on I want you to expect that every word you utter will be taperecorded, that the movement of your lips is being read. Got it? |
Arnie, this is crazy. |
Got it? Good. Do not discuss anything over the telephone. Do not talk to the neighbors. Stay out of your yard. |
What is he being charged with? |
I don't know, but under no circumstances would I talk about it here. I want you to go home and relax the best you can. Continue your life as if nothing has happened. That is very important. |
Arnie, I feel like Alice stepping through the looking glass. |
That's a very apt analogy, Helena. Now, go home and be with your children. |
I am on the board of my son's school. I had a fundraiser for A.L.V. in my front yard. I have a right to know if my husband is a legitimate businessman. |
Of course he is. I've known him for twenty years and he doesn't jaywalk... |
If all our assets are frozen and our "sales force" has scattered... How am I supposed to survive? I'm giving birth in three months. How do I get through this? |
You're gonna get through it, but the first thing we do is get Michael Adler to represent Carl. We get Adler and we beat this thing. |
How much do I pay him? |
I suspect he'll accept his payment in publicity. |
This place is swept twice a day. I learned that in Miami in '85. Then the U.S. shut down the whole Caribbean, but it's a big game of wackamole. Knock it down in Miami, it pops up here. And San Diego is so much more relaxing. |
Arnie, I need money. Somebody threatened my children. They want a first payment of three million dollars. |
Helena, if I had it I would give it to you, but I don't have that kind of money. |
Arnie, help me. Doesn't anyone owe us money? |
Yes, I told you before, there are people who owe you money but they're not paying. There's too much heat on Carl. |
Please. Tell me who Carl sells to. |
Even if I knew I wouldn't tell you. You do not want to come into contact with these people. Only Carl knows who they are. That's his real asset. Ruiz doesn't know them. They don't know Ruiz. Church and State. |
What about legitimate businesses? We own a construction concern, real estate |
Laundromats for the washing of money. Unfortunately, Carl had only one successful business. |
Don't you have some good news? Isn't there something positive you could say. |
Sometimes I wonder what I'll do if Carl doesn't get out. I'm not very adept at being on my own. I've always had a man in my life. Always. |
I remember when I first met you: little Helen Watts from the wrong side of somewhere. I had a feeling even then that your survival instincts were pretty well honed. |
I'm glad you think so, but I'm picturing a debtridden, thirtytwo yearold mother whose exhusband is being compared to Pablo Escobar. And I'm wondering who would want to be with someone like that? |
That was a stupid thing you did. Incredibly stupid. |
I tried, Arnie. And, I will continue to try. |
Have you gone crazy? You are not Carl. You aren't as good as Carl. They are moving the trial to a high security location. The press has gone berserk. The jury will be influenced. Stay out of things. Let us try to win the case. |
That is going to be rather difficult when all the evidence is against us. |
Helena, please. This is out of your hands. |
I know I made things worse. I know that and I'm sorry, but Arnie I need something from you. Something only you can help me with. |
Helena |
I need an introduction to the Obregon Brothers. |
I can't do that. |
Did you get it? |
What are you thinking, calling me at home with a message like that? You've compromised me and our relationship |
It's the same stuff? From the rainy day stash? |
It's the same. What happened to what they gave you? |
Even if that were true, they're not going to come to your house where you're waiting for them. |
He's right. They'll do it when you're walking somewhere, make it look like street crime. |
Anna. What's wrong? What do you want? |
I can't find Manolo. |
He's not here. |
He never came home last night. Was he with you? |
No. |
What? What is it? |
It's very hard for me to come and tell you this. |
Why does he need money? |
He has debts. He has gambling debts. He owes a lot of money. |
How much? |
Nine thousand dollars. |
What is he planning on telling them? |
Well, you know, he's going to say about Madrigal... and Salazar. |
If Manolo hadn't gone and told them what he did then Salazar and Madrigal would never have been brought to justice. He did a great thing for Tijuana. He did a great thing for Mexico. |
I want to believe you. I really do. |
You will believe me, because it's true. |
I appreciate you coming in so early. |
Judge Wakefield, it's an honor to handle it for you. Consider it gone away. She's a minor; it probably would've expunged on her 18th birthday anyway. |
Still, this was a sensitive issue for me and I wanted to thank you personally. |
Like I said, open container, P.I., Misdemeanor possession. Easy to make it disappear. For you, poof, it's gone. |
One thing bothers me... That kid they dropped off had coke and heroin in him. Serious amounts. He's lucky he lived. So I gotta ask: what's your daughter on? |
I don't know what you mean. |
I mean, did you ask her? What kind of drugs has she tried? |
I... I don't really know. |
Is she in any kind of therapy... professional help? |
No, of course not. She's one of the top students at her school. |
Well, I hope it stays that way. |
I'm Melanie. |
You're late for breakfast. |
Did you do this? |
Victoria |
What? Did you let that child play with one of my toys? I don't like children playing with my toys. Have to fix you up with another hammer, won't we. Give her a saucepan to play with, that'll do. |
You're well built; how old are you? |
Sixteen. Well, nearly sixteen. |
I wanted my Leda to be a little girl. Leda and the swan. See? |
Oh no you can't. Get on with the painting. |
It's all right, Finn. |
'Have ploughed the stormy seas ' |
Storms? |
They're going to fly everywhere. Mean things. They should have taken us. |
We're too young. |
I'm not too young. Juliet was my age. |
Juliet who? |
In the play. She was married, by my age. And Mummy. Mummy wasn't much older than me when she got married. Well, not <i>that</i> much older. |
You'll need to know who we are, we're the brothers of his wife, which makes us in an unsanctified kind of way, your uncles. Me name is Finn, me brother is called Francie |
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