[street]
Ray: You want your
soggy chop suey, you go to the ‘burbs. Down here, it’s the
real deal. Fish heads, bird nest soup, shark fins so fresh
they’re still swimming in the bowl. But ya gotta act like
a regular, otherwise they stick you with yesterday’s
mooshoo.
Fraser: Well, I’ll
just follow your lead, then.
Ray: Yeah, just try
not to hold the menu upside down.
Fraser: Oh
dear.
[to
Dief]
Uh, you see that sign?
[No Dogs Allowed]
That includes you. No, no, no.
You can’t take that attitude. It’s a health regulation.
There’s a very good reason for it.
Ray: Yeah, you
stink.
Fraser: Ray, please,
he’s already feeling excluded.
Ray: Well, he should
feel excluded, he’s an animal.
[Dief whines]
Fraser: Well, there
you go. Now you’ve done it. Satisfied?
Ray: Strangely,
yes.
[Fraser holds door open]
Ray: Thank
you.
Fraser: You’re
welcome.
[Dief whines & lies down beside the
entrance]
[restaurant]
Ray: How could you
be out of bird nest soup? There’s gotta be one in every
tree.
Lee: The wonton soup
is excellent.
David: I’m going to
take a break, Dad.
[exits]
Ray: All right, look
just give us a couple of orders of mandarin duck, will
ya?
Lee: Sorry, no
duck.
Ray: How about a
chili dog?
Fraser: Uh, Ray? May
I?
Ray: Yeah go ahead
Benny, but it’s in Chinese.
Fraser: Oh, so I
see.
Ray: And try not to
order anything with internal organs, will ya?
Fraser:
Uh
. [Chinese, something like “dai yut, dai Sei, yung gnai
choii, bok fon, gai uyp dip sei gyup
tim.”]
Lee:
Ho go do je sai. Do je sai.
Fraser:
Ng goi.
Ray: How did you do
that?
Fraser: I just went
with the specials.
[kitchen]
[Family talks (in Chinese); David leaves; Dad (Lee) asks friend to go with him]
[down the back stairs]
Friend : [Chinese]
David : But she worries too much.
Friend : [Chinese]
David
: I know, I know.
[restaurant]
Fraser
: My grandparents helped set up
an English language library in China before the
revolution. And they taught me the Cantonese/Mandarin
dialects when I was little. But I’m afraid I’ve forgotten
almost all the Fuchow and Amoy-swatow that I knew.
Ray: Oh yeah, I hate
when that happens.
Fraser: You think
he’s all right?
Ray: Who?
Fraser:
Diefenbaker.
Ray: He’s a wild
animal!
Fraser: He didn’t
look all
right.
[Vecchio
sighs]
[street]
Street guy:
[to
Dief]
Now who would go off and leave
a nice dog like you. Nice
cookie?
[restaurant]
Lee:
[serving]
Sei ho, chow fun, dow sei jueng, hom sui gok, sei
yow.
[street; Friend talks to a
girl, David keeps
walking]
Kidnapper: Got a
light?
David:
Sure.
[the guy takes the matchbook,
lights his cigarette, and goes to hand it back, but drops
it]
Kidnapper: Oops.
Sorry.
David Lee: No
problem.
[David bends to pick up the book, and the guy opens the car door into David’s head; he & another goon take David]
Kidnapper : Go, go!
David : Let go! Let go of me!
[struggling, he breaks the
window... a woman
screams]
[restaurant]
Fraser: Glass.
Lee:
Certainly.
[places a glass on the table]
Fraser: Excuse
me.
Ray: Oh, no, Benny,
not the window! I don’t think they have doors in
Canada.
[street; the car’s escape is blocked; Fraser climbs out the window; Dief pushes the street guy out of the way]
Fraser : Ray! Kidnapping! Call for assistance!
[he runs off after the car; it
gets away, so Fraser starts climbing
again]
[Riv]
Ray
: Unit 3-4-2, request a
back-up.
[rooftop; Fraser listens intently; sound effects]
[street; Mr. & Mrs. Lee
& Friend are talking in
Chinese]
Ray: English. Speak
English.
Fraser: Who was
it?
Ray: Nobody saw
anything.
[crowd dissipates
rapidly]
[street in front of
restaurant]
Gardino: So, you
were sitting up there when this supposed crime took place
where?
Fraser:
Approximately 35 meters south-southwest.
Huey: And you saw
this from across the room, through the pagoda and around
the corner, right?
Fraser: No, I heard
it.
Huey: You heard
it.
Gardino: You heard
it.
Huey: Tell me
Fraser, what exactly does a kidnapping sound like?
Fraser: Well, in
this case, there was the sound of a foot breaking glass.
This was followed by the scream of a female bystander, and
then the squeal of tires as the vehicle pulled away from
the curb.
Huey: And did you
happen to hear a license plate number, too?
Fraser: No, no. The
license was obscured by mud.
Gardino: You know
what we have here, Jack? Another case of speeding with a
dirty license plate.
Huey: Damn! This
city’s going to hell.
Fraser: I did find
this. Whoever was kidnapped must have tried to escape
through the rear window. I believe you’ll find that’s
human blood.
Huey: Ah, someone
nicked themselves while driving.
Gardino: This case
keeps getting worse and worse.
Fraser
: Mm hmm.
Ray: Okay the owner
says he didn’t get out in time to see anything. Likewise
everyone else on the block.
Huey: So no
witnesses, no victim, no evidence. You know what this
sounds like, Louis?
Gardino: A UFO
sighting?
Huey: I’m afraid so.
It’s all yours, Vecchio.
[they walk away]
Ray: You guys going
back to the donut shop so soon? Yeah, thanks for your fine
police work.
Gardino:
[over his
shoulder]
Thank you, Vecchio.
Ray: Okay, have you
humiliated me enough for one night, or do we need to
cruise the neighborhood so you can smell out a
robbery?
Fraser: No, I think
we’re still needed here, Ray. The kidnappers are bound to
make contact sooner or later.
Ray: With who? We
don’t even know who was kidnapped.
Fraser: No, but I
will wager that Mr. Lee
does.
[restaurant]
Fraser: Did you
notice the restaurant next door?
Ray: Yeah, it was
packed, so what?
Fraser: Well, based
on the menus displayed in the window, Mr. Lee’s prices are
cheaper by half and yet his restaurant sits empty on a
Saturday night.
Ray: Yeah, well, if
he stocked up a little better he’d have a fighting
chance.
Fraser: No
restaurateur would allow his key ingredients to be
depleted, at least not willingly.
Ray: So you think
he’s being squeezed.
Fraser: Yes, I
do.
Ray: Look, it’s a
mom and pop establishment. There’s no money here. Who
would bother?
Fraser: Well, I
don’t know. But whoever it is, I think they just raised
the
stakes.
[kitchen]
Lee:
[on
phone]
Where is my son?
Wong: My people tell
me he has been kidnapped. I was shocked, certainly, but
not surprised. For some time now there has been talk of
drugs, of gambling debts unpaid.
Lee: Those are
lies.
Wong: Of course, but
let us keep at the issue at hand. As you know I have the
resources to find your son. I offer to do this and return
him to you. In return I would ask a similar favor.
[David is tied with tape over his
mouth]
You will stop the lies you are
spreading about me in the community and you will
demonstrate your respect for us by accepting the
reasonable and generous business offer we have made to you
in the past. Do this and I will find your son for
you.
[hangs up]
Mrs. Lee: Will you
please give him what he wants.
Neighbor 1: You
cannot do that!
Lee: He has my
son!
Neighbor 2: He’ll
come for ours next, if you give in to him..
Neighbor
1
: You were the one who told us
to stand together when the Tong came to our
neighborhood.
If you give in, we all go
down.
[knock knock knock]
Fraser: Mr. Lee? I’m
terribly sorry to intrude.
Lee: Excuse
me?
Fraser: It was your
son they took, wasn’t it?
Lee: We will speak
later, my friends. Goodnight.
[friends exit]
Fraser: I wasn’t
able to see the occupants clearly, but one of them was
wearing kitchen whites.
Ray: Your son, he
never came back from his break.
Lee: Thank you for
your concern, but whoever this unfortunate boy is there is
nothing you can do for him. You do not realize what will
happen to him if the police get involved. The Tong makes
the law down here.
Fraser: I don’t
think you believe that, Mr.
Lee.
And if you give them what they
want they’ll take it, and they’ll still betray you.
Lee: Perhaps. But
this boy’s father may not have any choice
but to trust they
will keep their word.
Fraser: There’s a
wise Chinese expression. Under the fragrant bait you will
find a hooked fish.
Lee: I cannot help
you. Please,
go.
[they exit]
Ray: ‘Under the
fragrant bait you will find a hooked fish’? Do you have
any idea what you’re saying? You sound like a fortune
cookie.
[down restaurant
stairs]
Ray: What did I tell
you? Talking nice gets you nowhere. These people come from
a culture that only responds to strength.
Fraser: That’s a
cultural stereotype, Ray.
Ray: Yeah, look
who’s talking.
Fraser: Mr. Lee
heard what I had to say. Now he’ll make his choice.
Ray: Yep, and that’s
the last we’ll see of
him.
[27
th precinct;
interrogation
room]
Fraser: It’s all
right, Mr. Lee. Just take your time.
Lee: For years, the
Tong ignored our neighborhood, concentrating on the more
prosperous merchants of Chinatown. Then Charlie Wong came
to town.
Ray: Heard of him.
Heard he’s hungry.
Lee: He wanted to
make a name for himself. I told him to get lost and I
encouraged my neighbors to do the same. That’s why he took
David.
Fraser: He didn’t
actually say he has your son, did he?
Lee
: He’s not a stupid man.
Fraser: Well, you
did the right thing in coming to us, Mr. Lee. We will find
your son.
Lee
: Yes.
Ray: Okay, now I
want you to tell us as close as you can remember exactly
what he said on the phone.
[enter Huey & Gardino]
Huey
: Gentleman. I hear Mr. Lee is
prepared to make a statement.
Ray: Good going,
Jack.
See what happens when you take
the donut holes out of your ears?
Gardino
: Pack it up, Vecchio. You
called us in. It’s our case.
[to
Fraser]
You, out.
[to Mr.
Lee]
You, stay
put.
[puts down his little tape recorder and throws Vecchio’s
at him]
Ray:
[to
Gardino]
No. You, out.
[to
Fraser]
You, stay put.
[throws Gardino’s tape recorder back at
him]
Gardino: Touch this
again, I’ll toss you out.
Fraser: Perhaps we
should all step out.
[enter Ford &
Deeter]
Ford: Good idea.
Agents Ford and Deeter, FBI. We’re taking over the
case.
[knocks Gardino’s recorder off the table and replaces it
with a very big one]
Gardino: Hey! I just
bought that.
Fraser
:
Hmmph.
[Welsh’s office; everyone
yelling at
once]
Welsh: All right,
one at a time.
Ford: Kidnapping is
a federal
offense.
There is no discussion
here.
Huey: Lieutenant,
they just can’t walk in and kick us off our case.
Ray: It’s not your
case, it’s my case.
Huey: Yeah, right,
Ray.
Fraser: Uh, sir,
perhaps I can be of assistance.
Agent Ford: Who’s
he?
Welsh: He’s a
Mountie.
Agent Ford: What’s
he doing here?
Welsh: I’m never
entirely sure.
Fraser: Leftenant, I
understand your dilemma. In Canada, we have more than a
passing familiarity with confusion. We’re comprised of 10
provinces and 2 territories communicating across 6 time
zones in 2 official languages. The English don’t
understand the French, the French don’t understand the
English, and the Inuit, quite frankly, couldn’t give a
damn about either of them. Added to the equation is the
Assembly of First Nations, with a total of 633 separate
Indian bands speaking 180 sub-dialects among their 50
linguistic groups. And as if that weren’t enough, there
are some fisherman on the east coast with a remarkably
whimsical accent--
Welsh: There is a
point to this, I assume?
Fraser: Oh yes sir.
I believe so. The key that we have found is compromise. I
would suggest we devise the plan that would use everyone
to the best of their abilities.
Ford: This man knows
nothing about police work. Get him out of here.
Welsh: Ray,
please.
Fraser: I thank you
for your
time.
[bullpen]
Lee: It is settled
now. You will help my son.
Fraser: The FBI is
on the case now, Mr. Lee. They’ll help you.
Lee: But I don’t
know those men. Can I trust them?
Ford:
I want wire taps on the restaurant and on the home phones.
And I want background checks on everyone in the restaurant
including the victim. Oh, and I want two of our best
people undercover in Chinatown. Get McClusky and
O’Hara.
Deeter: Roger.
Ford: You the kid’s
father?
[Lee
nods]
In here.
Fraser: Put your
trust in the
law.
[corridor]
Ray: Are you nuts?
The kid is done for. The FBI guys couldn’t find Waldo if
they took the book home for the weekend.
Fraser: I said trust
in the law, Ray, that doesn’t mean we can’t give the law a
leg up.
Ray: Atta boy,
Benny, now you’re talking! So where do we start?
Fraser: In
here.
Ray: Benny? This is
a closet.
Fraser: I
know.
[darkened supply
closet]
Ray: How long are we
gonna sit in
here?
You see, I have this thing
about the dark. I mean-I mean I’ve dealt with it. I’m
comfortable with it. I mean-I mean it’s not like I’m
afraid of the dark. Hey!
[Dief growls & barks; Fraser lets him in & shuts
the door]
Ray: No, no. Three
in a closet is where I draw the line.
Fraser: Would
everyone please settle down? I’m trying to listen.
Ray: To what?
Fraser:
Shhhh.
[silence, then the sound effects from the
roof]
I’m not certain but it sounds
like ‘doowsh, doowsh.’ What does that sound like to
you?
Ray: How about the
sound of my job going down the toilet? I’m sitting in a
dark closet with a Mountie being licked by a deaf
wolf...That was the wolf, wasn’t it?
Fraser: Yes,
Ray.
Ray: Oh, thank
God!
So what the hell we doing in
here anyway?
Fraser: I’m
recreating the sounds of the kidnapping in my mind. The
noise the limo made after it sped out of sight. If I can
piece these noises together it should lead us to David
Lee. There. There we go.
Ray: What is
it?
Fraser: I think it’s
a clunk. No. No wait a minute. It’s a thud. Definitely a
thud.
Ray: But what does
it mean?
Fraser: It doesn’t
matter what it means. All that matters now is to
remember.
[Elaine opens the closet door and stares at
them]
Elaine: Hi.
Fraser:
Hi.
Ray
: Hi.
Elaine: I saw you
guys come in here.
Fraser: Ah, well we
were just um...have you ever heard of a sound that goes
‘doowsh doowsh.’
[Elaine just...walks
away]
[corridor]
Ray: No more
listening in closets, okay?
Fraser: I’m sorry,
Ray.
Ray: Is it strictly
necessary to humiliate me every step of the way? I mean is
it necessary--
Fraser: Ray, Ray.
Please, I can’t have the both of you sulking.
[to
Dief]
Well are you coming?
[Dief goes the other
way]
You know, you-you let a wolf
save your life, they make you pay and pay and pay.
Ray:
[smugly] That’s why
I don’t own a
wolf.
[further down the
hallway]
Gardino: I don’t
like this Jack. I feel dirty.
Huey: There’s no
time for scruples, Louis. We’ve got to get back on this
case.
Gardino: I hate
these FBI guys. Why would I want to help them?
Huey: Because that’s
how it works. We scratch their backs, they scratch
ours.
Gardino: They broke
my tape recorder.
Huey: Louis, try to
grasp this concept. A Mountie and a badly dressed Italian
are solving more cases than we are. Our image is
tarnished, our case load had slipped, and I spend more
time plucking out gray hairs than I do with my tailor. We
need a break.
Gardino: I know
that, Jack. I’ve got a tailor, too, you know.
Huey: So think.
We’re dealing with the feds here. What’s the one thing
they want most from this case?
Gardino: To get the
credit?
Huey: Exactly. So we
help them get the credit and we keep some for ourselves.
All right?
Gardino: All
right.
Huey: You
cool?
Gardino: Yeah.
Huey: Good.
Gardino: Yeah, I’m
cool.
[parking
lot]
Fraser: Well, the
car that was used in the kidnapping. What was it?
Ray: Lincoln Town
Car. Late model.
Fraser: Is that a
common car to Chicago?
Ray: Nah. There
couldn’t be more than five thousand of them.
Fraser: Do you think
we can get a manual?
Ray:
Yeah.
[interrogation room; knock
knock
knock]
Ford: Do you know
what this is?
Huey: No.
Ford: It’s a bug.
You know how to plant one?
Gardino: What do you
think?
Ford: I think you’re
morons. But do it right and we’ll bring you in for the
kill.
[corridor]
Huey: Louis. He just
called you a
moron.
[alley in Chinatown; Fraser is
walking along while Vecchio follows in
Riv]
Ray: This is exactly
what I was afraid would happen.
Fraser: Ray,
please.
Ray: You cannot
track a Lincoln Town Car through the streets of Chicago.
It’s not like a beaver. It doesn’t leave nice little tail
tracks in the tundra.
Fraser: Wait.
Ray: What is
it?
[Fraser remembers the sounds, applies them to the Town
Car]
Fraser
: We’ve picked up their
trail.
Ray: Why do I feel
more and more like Dale Evans? Hey, Roy, wait for
me
! [speeds up to catch
Fraser]
[another alley]
Ray
: I thought you said it was a
clunk.
Fraser: No, it was
more like a thud accompanied by a chkkkk and followed by a
tccchhh.
Ray: Spend a lot of
time alone as a child, Fraser?
Fraser: Yes. What is
this?
[Vecchio gets out of
car]
Ray: It’s a
pothole!
Fraser: This is
it.
Ray: How do you
know?
Fraser: Look at
this.
Ray: Yeah, that
looks like where the tailpipe mighta hit.
Fraser: And
these?
Ray: Two tire
tracks, but if this is a Lincoln, they didn’t lay much
rubber.
Fraser: Well maybe
the tire didn’t have much left. What does the manual say
about the wheel base?
Ray:
[opens the manual he is
carrying]
Seventy inches.
Fraser: What’s the
distance from the tailpipe to the left rear
wheel?
Ray
: Thirty-three inches.
Fraser: This is the
car, and they turned right.
Ray: Oh great. Now
we know the Lincoln turned right before it disappeared
into thin air. Is this what you call a hot trail up in the
north country?
Fraser: Look at
this.
Ray: What is
it?
Fraser: Mud.
Ray: Mud. You found
mud. Now that is something amazing.
Fraser: The license
plate was intentionally obscured. Now this piece must have
fallen off when they hit that bump. Now see this? It could
be the negative image of a 3.
Ray: Yeah or a 5 or
an
8.
In other words, we’re nowhere,
the trail is over and we got zip.
Fraser: Not
necessarily. What does it smell like?
Ray: Mud.
Fraser: But what
else?
Ray: Mud and fresh
towels?
Fraser:
Exactly.
Ray: What are you
doing?
[Fraser is breaking up the mud in the
puddle]
That is the only piece of
physical evidence we have and you’re destroying it.
Fraser: Well, the
mud isn’t the evidence we need, Ray. This is. Do you see
these white flecks?
Ray: Yeah so?
Fraser: Watch
this.
[swishes hand in water – suds appear]
Ray: Soap!
Fraser: How many
laundries are there in this area?
Ray: Fraser, this is
Chinatown.
Fraser: And how many
laundries are there directly on the river?
Ray: The
river.
Fraser: This is fine
grain alluvial mud. It’s only found close to a river bank.
Do you have your phone?
Ray: Yeah.
[dials]
Elaine: Hello?
Ray: Elaine.
Elaine:
Uh-huh.
Ray: Yeah, Vecchio.
How many Chinese laundries are there right on the river
bank?
Elaine: Why? You two
having trouble squeezing into a booth?
Ray: Elaine.
Elaine: You know,
occasionally just occasionally, you might want to consider
doing your own grunt work instead of foisting it off on me
with out so much as a word of appreciation.
Ray: Okay, I
appreciate you, Elaine.
Elaine: Eh, who
cares.
Ray: Elaine, we
really appreciate you.
Elaine:
Really?
Ray: The laundry,
Elaine?
Elaine: Yeah. Here
we go. Looks like there’s only one. 2193-A China Place.
Sho Ma Laundry.
Ray: Thanks,
Elaine.
[FBI and The Duck Boys listening in on
conversation]
Gardino: And they
called you a
moron.
[Sho Ma laundry;
night]
Ray: You know what
we’re going to find in there? Six old ladies playing
mah-jongg.
Fraser: Maybe, maybe
not.
[shows Vecchio the white powder spilling onto the
ground]
Ray: Soap.
[they go in & look around]
Ray: Police!
Freeze!
[empty
room]
So much for your mud and soap
theory.
[they come upon a table &
chairs]
Fraser: Whoever
kidnapped David Lee was here last night. At least four of
them. They bound him in duct tape.
Ray: What is
it?
Fraser:
Listen.
Ray: Oh, Benny, not
again.
Fraser: Shhh.
[footsteps on
roof]
Ray : [whispers] (Get back!) [they see movement outside] (Front door!)
[more movement, guys with
guns]
Fraser: (Across the
street.)
Ray: Since when do
thugs start wearing flak jackets? Oh, no!
[heavy gunfire into laundry]
Ford
:
[through a
bullhorn]
This is the FBI. You are
surrounded. Throw down your weapons.
Ray: Oh
great!
[27
th precinct;
bullpen]
Ray: What kind of
idiot are you?! You eavesdrop on my phone call. You blast
in there with assault weapons, and everyone in Chinatown
knows we’re on the case.
Ford: Who’s fault is
that, Detective? This is a federal investigation. You were
specifically instructed not to interfere.
Fraser: Leftenant,
David Lee and his kidnapper were in that building. The
tire tracks in the alley confirm this and there’s more
evidence inside. Now if we can just gain access to--
Ford: No! This is a
crime scene. I will not have unauthorized personnel
entering that--
Lee: Where is he? My
son? You have found him?
Fraser: No I’m
afraid not, Mr. Lee.
Lee: But all the
police. The shooting.
Ford: Look, uh, Mr.
Lee. We’re sorry to disappoint you, but things like these
happen in the course of an investigation. So if you’ll
take your wife and go home, please.
Lee: I see. Nothing
to be concerned about. My son is in the hands of the
killers and I should go home and wait for you to shoot up
some other places!
Ford: We’re doing
everything we can, sir. He’s hysterical, get him out of
here.
Deeter: He’s on his
way in.
Ford: Good. Take him
into interrogation.
Ray: Who? Take up
who?
Lee:
[to
Ford]
You! Come into Chinatown. You
bring the police. FBI. What do you think will happen when
Charlie Wong hears of this? What do you think he will do
to my son?
Ford: We will deal
with Mr. Wong.
Mrs.
Lee:
[sees Wong in the corridor]
No! No!
Ray: Charlie Wong?
Are you crazy? The victim is still out there and you bring
in his kidnapper?
Ford: As you pointed
out, Detective, all of Chinatown already knows we’re
involved. It’s time to take the bull by the
horns.
Welsh
: He’s right. You’re an
idiot.
Lee:
[to Fraser]
You’ve done this to me. You’ve
killed my son.
[exits]
Ray: This is what
you get for trying to help someone?
Fraser: No, he’s
right.
Ray: You didn’t blow
up Chinatown. The feds did.
Fraser: But I led
them there. I did
this.
[Welsh’s
office]
Ray: I need this
one, sir.
Welsh: Come on,
Detective. You know I can’t do that.
Ray: The fed’s a
horse’s ass. He’s gonna blow this.
Welsh: It’s his
investigation. Look, maybe I can make a call. Maybe we can
have him replaced.
Ray: That kid’ll be
dead by then, sir. I need this one.
[Welsh stalls, Vecchio storms out]
Ray: Come on.
Fraser: Where?
Ray: I have this
room I go to when I need to close my eyes and
listen.
[upstairs restroom; cop is flossing his
teeth]
Ray
: Out.
Officer: But I was
just--
Ray: Trust me. There
are things a lot more painful than gum disease.
[pulls him out by the still-attached
floss]
Fraser: It’s not
very polite, Ray.
Ray: You like that?
You’re going to love this.
[Vecchio pulls apart a pipe and
voices can be
heard]
Fraser: We’re
eavesdropping, aren’t we?
Ray: I’ll make sure
they take your merit badge away
later.
[interrogation
room]
Wong: The police
cannot distinguish between Chinese and Japanese, let alone
an honest Chinese from a dishonest one.
Deeter: I don’t
think there’s much doubt which category you fall into,
Charlie. Where is David Lee?
Wong: I hear he’s
been
abducted.
[restroom]
Fraser: What’s
that?
Ray: What?
Fraser: It sounds
like uh...chk chk.
Ray: Will you stop
that?
[interrogation room]
[Wong is clipping his
fingernails]
Wong: I offered to
help his family in anyway I could. Unfortunately the
situation appears to be out of my control.
Ford: I think you
underestimate yourself, Mr. Wong. I think you know exactly
where David Lee is. And I think you’re just the guy to
tell us.
Wong: Why do you
think that, Agent Ford?
Ford: Because if you
don’t, we’re going to invoke the RICO Act. Raid your place
of business, seize your assets and shut you down.
Wong: So I should be
frightened. Even though you have absolutely no evidence
which would connect me to the unfortunate disappearance of
this young man.
Ford: Kidnapping is
gravy. All we need is evidence of racketeering and threats
of extortion and we can take every penny you’ve made since
kindergarten.
Wong: I don’t doubt
your zeal, Agent Ford, but if you had such evidence, I
don’t think you’d be sitting here explaining the RICO Act
to me. You would have acted.
Ford: You’ve given
us our evidence, Mr. Wong. You laid it right in our laps.
You threatened the wrong shopkeeper,
Charlie.
[restroom]
Fraser: He can’t do
this.
[interrogation
room]
Ford: He was just
downstairs. What do you think he was doing, huh? Mr. Lee
is willing to testify to your conversation, and
racketeering puts you away for twenty. Now you kill his
son, and it only makes him a stronger witness.
Wong: You have no
witness.
Louise St. Laurent:
Mr. Wong’s lawyer.
Lawyer: This is a
writ of
habeas corpus
ordering you to release Mr.
Wong immediately. Let’s go, Charlie.
Wong:
Gentlemen.
[restroom]
Fraser: He’s just
killed them
both.
[parking
lot]
Lee: I’ll give you
what you want. Give me back my son.
Wong:
(Chinese)
[bodyguard pats Lee down]
Lee : Please.
Wong
: I don’t understand, Mr. Lee.
Yesterday you were prepared to sacrifice your son for your
pride. I offered you my protection, my help. I extended my
hand in friendship and you spit on it. And now you betray
me to the police.
Lee: Forgive me.
I’ll give you anything you ask.
Wong: Too
late.
Lee: No!
Wong: Where is your
pride now, old man? You want to do something for your
son?
Lee: Yes.
Wong: Give me what I
deserve. A simple show of respect.
Lee: Anything.
Wong: My
office.
One hour. And Mr. Lee: Be sure
to walk. All of your neighbors must see you pay respect to
the man who will save your
son.
[interrogation
room]
Ray: Fraser, what
are you doing? Fraser, will you get off the floor? Fraser!
Okay, that’s it. I’m not going to stand here and watch
while you eat hairballs off the floor.
Fraser: It’s not
those, Ray. It’s these. Nail clippings. That’s the sound
Charlie Wong was making.
Ray: Oh, that’s too
bad, cause I thought you had something incriminating, like
his nose hairs.
Fraser: It’s not the
nails we’re interested in, Ray. It’s what’s underneath
them.
Ray: Fraser, this
guy wears two-thousand-dollar suits, okay? He’s not going
to walk around with dirt under his nails.
Fraser: Well
exactly. Which means anything we find had to have been
collected since he showered this
morning.
[tastes a nail]
Ray: No! No! Oh,
don’t do that! Don’t, don’t, don’t.
Fraser: Close your
eyes it won’t bother you.
Ray: Okay, just
hurry up will you?
[Fraser
tastes]
Well?
Fraser: Potassium
nitrate and a touch of sulfur.
Ray: That’s gun
powder.
Fraser: Not ordinary
gun
powder.
It’s very low grade. It’s not
like anything I’ve ever tasted.
Ray: Do you do this
a lot? Try to solve cases by gnawing on ammunition?
Fraser: Well, I
admit, it is a calculated risk, Ray, but...I am a
professional. This is not for
amateurs.
[hallway]
Fraser:
[to
Dief]
Hello! Hello?
Hello?
Pay and pay and
pay.
Mrs.
Lee
: Charlie Wong. My husband is
planning to go to him. To humble himself. To get the
release of our son. I love my son. He’s all we have, but I
trust a snake not to bite before I trust Charlie
Wong.
Ray: Where are they
meeting?
Mrs.
Lee
: There’s a club near the end
of our street. Wong and his people use it as if it is
theirs. One hour from now.
Fraser: Thank
you.
Mrs. Lee: I want my
family
back.
[parking
lot]
Ray: We’re gonna
stop ‘em?
Fraser: If he
doesn’t show up, Charlie will kill his son.
Ray: And if he does,
he’ll kill ‘em both.
Fraser: Yes. So that
gives us 45 minutes to find David.
Ray: How? We don’t
even know where the hell we’re going.
Fraser: I think we
do.
[the Riv]
Ray
: Firecrackers? Sorry, Fraser,
not good enough.
Fraser: Why not?
It’s gun powder, it’s low grade...
Ray: In case you
didn’t realize, Mr. Mountie, you cannot buy, sell, or
manufacture fireworks anywhere in the city of
Chicago.
Fraser: That is
unless you have a license to exhibit. City ordinance
section fifteen dash twenty.
Ray: You read
that?
Fraser: There’s a
world of information at your local library, Ray. You still
there, Elaine?
Elaine:
[voice]
Three. Quan Lew and Yellow
Dragon Fireworks, both on the south side, and Lucky Day
Pyrotechnics on Barrington.
Fraser: Thank you
kindly, Elaine.
Ray: Yeah, thanks
Elaine.
Elaine:
[voice]
Uh-huh.
Ray: Your
call.
Fraser: We’ll try
the one on Barrington.
Ray: That’s right in
Charlie Wong’s backyard. You actually think he’s going to
keep the kid there?
Fraser: He’s there.
Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.
Ray: Another wise
Chinese guy?
Fraser: No, Robert
Fraser, my
father.
[interrogation room; tape-recording the conversation]
Ray
:
[voice]
Barrington. It’s just ahead on
the left.
Gardino: Got
him.
[Lee prepares to meet with Wong; he puts a gun in the tribute box, then walks to the meeting, in front of everyone. Music: ‘Prospero’s Speech’ by Loreena McKennitt.]
[warehouse; Fraser and Vecchio
arrive & sneak in. Vecchio holds his gun on a
thug]
Ray: Where’s the
kid?
Thug: You’re a cop.
You won’t shoot me.
Ray: I’m not that
good a cop.
Thug: Upstairs. At
the back.
Ray: How many?
Thug: Two.
[Vecchio pokes his gun
harder]
Three.
Ray: Ladies
first.
[Lee arrives at the Giant Panda
Bar and
knocks]
Wong:
[on
phone]
Give me five minutes then come
down and get him. Leave the bodies in the alley. I want
them found.
[warehouse]
Thug: You got
it.
[to
David]
You want to start smoking, now
would be a good time.
[knock knock knock]
Thug : (Chinese)
[door bursts open; Fraser,
Vecchio & David hide behind a table and there is a
gunfight]
Fraser: Ray,
gunpowder!
Ray: Oh you gotta be
kidding me!
[gunfire]
Fraser
: You all right?
David: Where’s my
father?
Ray: One crisis at a
time, kid. I think they’re reloading.
Fraser: You
sure?
[Vecchio pokes his head out,
and the thugs shoot
again]
Ray: Not
entirely.
[pause]
Fraser
: Now they’re reloading.
Ray: Go!
[they jump from their hiding place and scuffle with bad
guys]
Ray : Freeze! [thug kicks his gun away, but Vecchio punches him out]
Fraser
: You all right?
Ray: Fine.
[some more hand-to-hand fighting, and Vecchio retrieves
his
gun]
[Giant Panda Bar; Lee knocks again]
Wong
: You’ve made a wise choice.
Come in.
[outside the warehouse, Fraser pursues an escaping thug]
[Giant Panda Bar]
Lee
: Where’s my son?
Wong: Where is my
tribute?
[Lee pulls gun, Wong pushes it out of his hand and hits
him]
[Dief has joined the foot pursuit]
[Giant Panda
Bar]
Wong: You stupid old
man. Do you know what you’ve done to your son? Do
you?
Lee: Please, I beg
you.
Wong: No. No
more.
[Lee goes for his gun, but Wong is quicker; he aims,
and... Vecchio shoots the gun out of Wong’s
hand]
Ray: Don’t move,
Wong! Up against the wall! Up against the wall!
[cuffs Wong]
[Fraser apprehends thug, as Dief watches]
Fraser : [to Dief] Thank you. If you’re expecting an apology, you’ve got another think coming, mister. Pay and pay and pay.
[another warehouse]
Ford
:
[through
bullhorn]
This is the FBI. You are
surrounded. Throw down your weapons!
[they burst in & start shooting, the fireworks catch
fire... and the display is
spectacular]
[street]
Ray: Well, you have
to admire their timing.
[the Lee family is reunited]
Fraser
: Shouldn’t we stay and fill
out some reports?
Ray: Well, no. We
have to leave ‘em
something to
do.
Fraser : Nice shot, by the way...knocking it out of the guy’s hand.
Ray
: Oh, you liked that?
Fraser: Oh, I was
impressed.
Ray: I thought you
would be.
Fraser: You were
aiming for...
Ray: His
chest.
Fraser: Oh. I think
I should adjust your sights.
Ray: I’d appreciate
that. You hungry?
Fraser:
Mm-hmm.
Ray: I know a nice
little place right around the
corner.
[27 th precinct]
[Elaine is eating ice cream
&
talking]
Elaine: I know what
it is, I’m an idiot. I meet this guy, he’s like no one
I’ve ever met before, you
know?
Warm, caring, sensitive…the
kind that really rips your guts out. And right
there,
right there, I
shoulda known. There should have been this big neon sign
flashing in ten foot high letters, ‘Elaine, you’re about
to make a complete fool of
yourself!’
I mean, just who the hell does
he think he is?
[Dief sits attentively at her
feet]
Coming around here with that
dopey-looking grin, saying things like, ‘Good morning,
Elaine.’
‘How are you today,
Elaine?’
‘Thank you kindly for your
time,
Elaine.’
Like I’m supposed to just take
that? And the minute you let him get to you, you can’t
sleep, your skin starts to break out, and the next thing
you know, you’re wandering around supermarkets humming
tunes by the Carpenters at the top of your lungs! Do you
have any idea what that feels like?
[Dief whines & licks some ice cream, then
exits]
At least I won’t be the only
one who breaks
out.
End