Eclipse

[27th precinct]
[four men escort in a prisoner (Siracusa)]
Hallett: Hallett. Internal Affairs. Open the cage.
[Welsh, in his office doorway, nods permission to Huey]
Huey: So this is the guy.
Hallett: Yeah, doesn’t look like much, does he? Gonna cost you all your jobs.
Brandauer: All right, people, find a spot, stand in it, and listen up. My name is Brandauer, State’s Attorney’s office. This is Detective Hallett, Internal Affairs. I’m sure you all recognize these as court documents. They are the product of two months background investigation, and they authorize me to conduct a probe into allegations of corruption concerning this district. We will be at this for as long as it takes, so go about your business. But if we call, you drop everything and come running. Bear in mind, no one is outside our interest and no one is above suspicion. Any questions? No? Good.
[Welsh finishes drinking his coffee and walks past him]
Brandauer: You still a lieutenant, Harding?
Welsh: You still a jerk?
Brandauer: What a funny guy. But I think you’ll be even funnier sitting in the state penitentiary. So where is he?
Welsh: He’s a cop. He’s out working. He’s not wasting people’s time like you.
Brandauer: He’s not gonna show up?
Welsh: Oh, don’t worry. He’ll show.
Brandauer: Oh, I-I’m not worried, Lieutenant. But if I were you I’d be worried. ‘Cause it could be one hell of a dark day, and not just on account of the eclipse. If Vecchio doesn’t show up by the end of his shift, you’re in for a rocky ride.


[Kowalski’s apartment; kitchen; he’s making instant coffee with tap water]
Radio: And coming up later today, a solar eclipse. And remember, kids, it’s perfectly safe to look at the sun. No matter what anyone else has told you, the sun’s rays are completely harmless. No, no. [laughs]
  Just kidding! Keep your head. Keep your eyes closed. Now let’s have a listen to Crowbar with a blast from the past.

[Music: “Oh, What a Feeling” by Crowbar.]

[Kowalski pours Smartie candies into his hand, counts out six into mug, and eats the rest of them, then stirs his coffee with the handle of a wooden spoon; his phone rings & the machine gets it]
Welsh: [voice]  It’s Welsh. We need you in here, Detective, now.
[Kowalski hits the machine with the spoon, then continues stirring; he tastes his drink & exits]


[bedroom; Kowalski loads & spins gun, gets cuffs]
[phone rings]
Welsh: [voice]
  I don’t see you in here, Vecchio. You’d better be on your way.

 

[living room; Kowalski packs bag with radio, canteen, flashlight, listening equipment, other stuff; takes bag to dining room table & adds binoculars and a bottle of scotch]

[phone rings]
Welsh: [voice]  Vecchio, where the hell are you? That is, of course, I’m assuming you still want to work at this station. We got urgent matters here need your attention, Detective. Serious stuff. Get your butt in here now.

Ray: Not today, Welsh.

[slings bag on shoulder & leaves apartment as camera zooms in on a red-circled notice in the newspaper]


[27th precinct]
Welsh: This whole thing began with the con that they have in the holding cell called Siracusa. Apparently he had a sit-down with one of the reps from the State’s Attorney, tried to cut himself a deal for an early release. He said that our whole station was bent, taking in drugs with arrests, skimming off the top. How did he come by this information, they ask? He said he used to be a stoolie for one of the dirty cops, a detective. Which detective, they ask?
  He points the finger at Ray Vecchio.

Fraser: Ray Vecchio is not corrupt, sir. [carrying a cabbage & his Stetson in one hand and a trout in a bag in the other]
Welsh: Oh yeah. You know that and I know that, but between them all, IAD doesn’t have a half a brain. In here, please.

[maintenance closet; complete darkness]
Welsh: Now on top of that, Brandauer and I have this thing. [turns on light]
  We been going at each other on and off for about twenty years. Now any excuse he gets he’s gonna jump on, and he’ll start digging. Now I know this station is clean, but there are always loose ends. If Vecchio doesn’t show, this district will have its collective ass in the sling.
Fraser: So you need Ray Vecchio.
Welsh: By end of shift. Five o’clock.
Fraser: Which one, sir?
Welsh: Which one what?
Fraser: Which Ray Vecchio? The detective formerly known as Ray Vecchio, or the current detective known as the former Ray Vecchio?
[door opens and a cop steps in]
Welsh: What!
Cop: I’m looking for toilet paper.
Welsh: [hands him newspaper]
  Here. Scram.
[cop leaves]
Welsh: I can’t go in there and tell them that Ray Vecchio is undercover on another operation, and that this guy at the desk is not the real Ray Vecchio. If I do, these
morons’ll have it on the six o’clock news, and the real Ray Vecchio will end up the dead body leading off at eleven. See? The only way to handle this is we gotta bluff it out. You look for the new guy, and I’ll stall.
Fraser: Understood.
Welsh: All right.
[they leave; Fraser turns off the light]

 

[corridor]
Elaine: Hi, Fraser. What’s with the cabbage?
Fraser: Party supplies.
Elaine: For the eclipse?
Fraser: Ah, no, actually. It’s Detective Vecchio’s birthday.
Welsh: Fraser, it’s not the new guy’s birthday.
Fraser: Well, yes, but the former Ray Vecchio always had a party. If we wish to maintain his cover it follows that the current Ray Vecchio should have a party as well.
Elaine: And we use the fish for?
Fraser: For the games. Bobbing for trout. You see, I’ve organized a traditional Yukon celebration in his honor.
Welsh: Couldn’t we just bob for apples?
Fraser: They’re not very plentiful in the Yukon.
Welsh: That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. [leaves]
Elaine: Is that a traditional Inuit game?
Fraser: No, the locals favor something called “Twister.”
Elaine: I’ll take the fish.
Fraser: Ah. Thank you kindly. [she walks off, leaving him with the cabbage]
  Oh, uh... Well.


[cemetery; caretaker pulls up in a motorized cart]
Ray: Morning. I’d like to get into that crypt.
Caretaker: Can’t be done.
Ray: Why not?
Caretaker: For one thing, you’re still breathing.
Ray: Ten bucks.
Caretaker: Do I look like a man who will take a bribe of money?
[Kowalski sits beside him on cart & pulls out bottle]

Ray: Isle of Moll, sixteen-year-old single malt scotch.
Caretaker: I’ll get the key.


[Kowalski’s apartment building]
Landlady: [about Dief]
  He okay in houses?
Fraser: Scrupulous.
Landlady: Good. [to janitor]
  Well, don’t just move the dirt around! [to Fraser]  Very mysterious man, this friend of yours.
Fraser: In what sense, ma’am?
Landlady: He clomps.
Fraser: Clomps?
Landlady: In rhythm. [lets them into apartment 309]
  Well, most tenants I get to know. But him? Very secretive. And I wouldn’t know about the clomping except that I live right below him. [she sits in a chair]  You know, I’ll be fixing my hair or something and I’ll hear this, uh... Well, it’s not really like clomping actually, it’s more like he’s shuffling or something.
[Fraser looks at a black + white photo of a man and woman]
Fraser: Dancing, possibly?

[Diefenbaker yips – he’s turned over a rug to show footsteps painted on the floor]
Landlady. There
y’are, yeah. Huh. And he’s real light on his feet. I can get hypnotized and just sit there for an hour easy.


[crypt]
[Kowalski whistles (“Oh, What a Feeling”) as he sets up equipment; mice are squeaking; he looks out of a grated window with binoculars at a freshly-dug grave]


[Kowalski’s apartment]

[Fraser looks at the red-circled newspaper, which reads: “Chicago Guardian, Monday” and “ELLERY”]
Landlady: So what’s your story? You work in a circus?
Fraser: Uh, no, ma’am, Royal Canadian Mounted Police. I first came to Chicago on the trail of the killers of my father, and for reasons that don’t need exploring at this juncture, I’ve remained, attached as liaison with the Canadian consulate.
[long pause]

Landlady: Don’t take anything.

Fraser: Understood.


[crypt]
[Kowalski looks out of window again through binoculars...right into the caretaker’s eyes]
Ray:
Aargh! Jesus, you scared me to death.
Caretaker: [holds up scotch bottle]
 This thing doesn’t work.
Ray: What do you mean it doesn’t work? It’s just a bottle, it doesn’t work or not work.
Caretaker: If nothing comes out of it, what is it?
Ray: It’s empty.
Caretaker: But it isn’t empty, so it must be broken.
Ray: If it was broken, it’d be empty.
Caretaker: Exactly. So it’s not working.
[Kowalski takes out pocketknife and smashes the neck off of the bottle]

Ray: There. Now it’s broken and it’s working.
Caretaker: Good man.


[Welsh’s office]
Brandauer: That’s nice. That’s so nice. It’s so nice to see the IRS taking an interest in you the same time we are.
Welsh: Yes. Nice to see you guys take the word of a career
scumball over mine.
Hallett: Mr. Siracusa has nothing to gain by his allegations. Why would he make them up?
Welsh: Come on, Hallett! Think I don’t know he’s up for release? Think I don’t know Brandauer here’s been waiting to nail me for most of his adult life? Look, you guys knock yourselves out, I got a station to run.
[Welsh leaves office and walks into a melee of cops and men in tuxes]
Welsh: Hey-hey-hey! Anybody wants to get their head cracked, keep talking. [to Huey]
  Who’re the penguins?
Huey: The graduating class of the
Grenville School of Deportment and Domestic Service. Apparently they were setting a table when a rumble broke out over the correct placement of a spoon.
Welsh: Book ‘em. [to Elaine]
  Fraser check in yet?
Elaine: No.
Welsh: All right. Give Ray another shot.
Hallett: Bez...Bess....Besbriss?
Elaine: One month before I get to become a real cop and this happens.
Welsh: Just be straight. You have nothing to hide.


[crypt]
[Kowalski hears a sound, tiptoes behind a stone statue... suddenly jumps out, aiming his gun]
Ray: Don’t move!
Fraser: Hi, Ray.

Ray: Hmmph! [lowers gun]

Fraser: So we’re on a stakeout. Good. Who’s the target?
Ray: None of your business.
Fraser: Ah. Secrecy. That’s very wise. You know, it reminds me of a time I spent near Skull Rapids. I was holed up in the carcass of a caribou for almost 72 hours. And you know, to this day I have no idea who we were actually waiting for. But I can tell you that after 72 hours, the smell of a caribou carcass is almost hallucinogenic.
Ray: Are you unhinged?
Fraser: Not that I’m aware of.
Ray: Hey, how did you find me?
Fraser: Well, you’d circled an obituary notice in a newspaper that was lying on the counter in your apartment.
Ray: Wait a minute, wait a minute. You broke into my apartment?
Fraser: Well, no. That would be illegal. Your landlady simply let me in. She’s very fond of you, by the way.
Ray: You invade my castle, you track me down, you almost get your head shot off. You wanna tell me why?
Fraser: Well, two reasons. First, I brought you a present.
Ray: For what?
Fraser: For your birthday.
Ray: It’s not my birthday.
Fraser: Yes, it is.
Ray: No, it’s not.
Fraser: Well, I think you’re wrong about that. You see, Ray Vecchio was born--
Ray: Hey, let’s just drop that, okay, Fraser? You and I both know I’m not Ray Vecchio.
Fraser: You’re not.
Ray: No.
Fraser: You’re sure about that.
Ray: I don’t even look like him.
Fraser: Well, you could have had plastic surgery.
Ray: You are unhinged.
Fraser: You think?
Ray: Yes, I think. Look, I’m not Ray. I mean, I am Ray, but I’m not Ray Vecchio. I’m... Kowalski. Stanley Raymond Kowalski.
Fraser: Your name is Stanley Kowalski?
Ray: Look, my Dad had a thing for
Brando. Me, it was always Steve McQueen. So I go by Ray.
Fraser: Well, it’s a pleasure to meet you, Ray Kowalski.

[they shake hands]


[27th precinct]
Huey: Come on.
Waiter: Yes, sir.
Huey: Get your butts over here.
Waiter: Sir.
Huey: Enough with the good manners.
Waiters: As you wish, sir.
Huey: I said, enough.
Waiters: Yes, sir.

[they push Huey’s chair in for him]


[Welsh’s office]
Hallett: Is this your phone log?
Elaine: Yeah.
Hallett: Why all the calls to Vecchio?
Elaine: Maintaining contact with the detectives is part of what I do.
Brandauer: Not after you’ve clocked out, it isn’t. You got a dozen calls in there after your shift.
Elaine: It’s not a
  9-to-5 job.
Hallett: What does “China white” mean to you?
Elaine: Nothing.
Brandauer: Try again!
Elaine: Dishes.
Hallett: Drop the attitude, Besbriss.
Brandauer: You know it’s heroin. You were in on it, weren’t you?
Elaine: I don’t know what you guys are talking about.
Hallett: Missing drugs.
Brandauer: Besbriss. You wanna be a cop? Give me Vecchio and give me Welsh. Most importantly Welsh. Then you just might get to be a cop. Otherwise, who knows what might happen?


[crypt]
Fraser: People are counting on you, Ray. They could lose their jobs.
Ray: Look, Fraser, let’s get this thing straight. You want me to sit in front of a bunch of guys who are going to grill me about corruption that never happened, but if it did happen it happened to another guy, but I’d have to answer for it anyway?
Fraser: Yes.
Ray: Forget it.
Fraser: If you don’t, Ray, you will lose your shield.
Ray: Look, Fraser, I’ve humped this job for a long time. Bad hours, bad food and bad guys. And for what?
Fraser: For the pride and honor of knowing that we make it possible for good people to tuck their kids in at night, turn out the lights, and know they’ll be safe.
Ray: You gotta be kidding me.
Fraser: No, I’m not.
Ray: You believe all that?
Fraser: Yes, I do.
Ray: You never doubt it?
Fraser: Never.
Ray: You’re a lucky guy, Fraser. Me, I never wanted to be a cop in the first place. I always wanted to be something else.
Fraser: Why didn’t you become something else?
Ray: That is the reason I’m here today.
Fraser: Do you mind if I ask you what that reason is?
Ray: [looking out window]
  Do you mind if I ask you what your wolf is doing?
[Diefenbaker is carrying flowers over to the grave of a dog]
Fraser: I’ve no idea. Although in his youth, Diefenbaker did demonstrate a keen interest in horticulture.
Ray: You know, Fraser, when they offered me this assignment, they made it sound kind of normal. They say, Hey, Ray, here’s a chance to start over, ditch the past.
  What’s the catch, I say. Oh, your partner’s Canadian. Canadian? I got nothing against Canadians, except for the time when they won the World Series.
Fraser: Two times.
Ray: Which I’m willing to overlook.
Fraser: Thank you.
Ray: But at no time did they say, Oh, by the way, you’ll be working with a Mountie who’s got a wolf that’s a florist. Hold these, will you? [hands his glasses to Fraser]
  Oh, that’s good.

[two men move a coffin from one hearse to another]
Fraser: Is this the target of the stakeout?
Ray: Nah, just something’s queer. Let’s check it out.

[dog’s grave; Dief barks enthusiastically]


[hearses; Jimmy opens a black bag that’s filled with money]
Jimmy: It’s all there?
Bronco: Uh-huh.
Ray: [fake sobbing]
  Mom. Mom.
Jimmy: What?
Ray: That’s my mom in there.
Jimmy: No, it’s not.
Ray: Yeah, it is. [hugs Jimmy]
Jimmy: No, it’s not. You’re confused with, uh--
Bronco: Grief.
Jimmy: Yeah, see, that ain’t your mother, that’s, uh, Mister--
Bronco: Smith.
Jimmy: Smith.
Bronco: Jones.
Ray: No, that’s my Mom. Mom, I’m so sorry. Just wanted to see your face one last time. [opens coffin]
Jimmy: Hey, you can’t do that!
Ray: Mom, how you’ve changed. Into Cuban cigars.
Jimmy: That’s it. That’s enough. [pulls gun on him]
  Out of the car. Easy. That’s it. That’s it. Easy. Easy.
Fraser: Gentlemen. My name is Constable Benton Fraser, Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Ray: Pull out your gun.
Fraser: I don’t have a gun.
Bronco: You don’t got no gun?
Fraser: No, I’m afraid not. But if you would be so kind as to step to one side, the detective will read you your Miranda rights. I assume that weaponry you’re holding is illegal.
Jimmy: Does a bear shop in the forest?
Fraser: In my experience bears don’t shop.
Jimmy: Hey, wise guy, step out of the way.
[Diefenbaker woofs, runs towards them & disarms Jimmy]
Fraser: Run.
[they run; Kowalski picks up black bag]
Ray: You don’t have a gun?
Fraser: Well, obviously you weren’t fully briefed. [gunfire]
  I’m not licensed to carry a firearm.
Ray: And you didn’t bother to tell me before?
Fraser: Well, it didn’t seem germane at the time.
[they shelter behind a gravestone]
Ray: What the hell kinda word is that?
[Kowalski gets out his gun]

Fraser: I’ll be right back.

Ray: Where you going?

[Fraser leaves hat behind, somersaults out from behind gravestone, grabs something from the ground, and dashes back]
Fraser: It’s your birthday present. I dropped it.
Ray: Are you a freak?

[stands, shoots 3 times and hits a tree; Jimmy returns fire]
Fraser: It’s a dreamcatcher. I made it myself. You see, you hang it in your window, it catches all your bad dreams. You sleep well at night.
[Kowalski shoots again and hits a Madonna statue]

Fraser: These are eagle feathers.
Ray: Fraser, when they shoot us I’ll be glad I knew that. Come on, let’s go!
[they run under fire]

Fraser: You’d be surprised at how difficult it is to acquire an eagle feather. First of all you have to apply to the National Eagle Repository in Commerce City, Colorado.
[Kowalski shoots once more, and again]
Fraser: And then, you just have to hope that someone finds a dead eagle in the woods... [bang
bang bang] 

Fraser: ...and that they have the presence of mind to put it on ice and then courier it to Commerce City.
Ray: Really?
Fraser: Really.
Ray: Go.
Fraser: Go. [as they are running and ducking]
  And then basically you just wait, and you hope that no shaman or tribal elder needs an eagle feather in some sort of sacred ritual, which of course would take precedence over your relatively minor desire to use the feather in a gift for your partner.
Ray: How many rounds have I fired?
Fraser: By my count seven.
Ray: Duck.
[they shelter behind a large monument]
Ray: We’re sunk. I left all my clips in the crypt. I’ve only got two rounds left.
Fraser: You know, I don’t mean to be critical, but you might want to consider some remedial practice on the target range. Your aim is appalling.
Ray: Hey, I’m a good shot.
Fraser: By what criteria? You fired seven rounds, you haven’t been within 50 meters of your target.
Ray: I’m a good shot, I just need my glasses. I also left them in the tomb.
Fraser: No, you didn’t. Here. [hands him glasses]
Ray: Why didn’t you tell me you had them?
Fraser: Well, I didn’t realize you were blind.
Ray: I’m not blind, I just don’t see all that good.
Fraser: All right, we’ve got a bit of time, so just to finish this off. If you happen to pass all of these hurdles, you might be one of the few, the lucky few, as I was, to have this precious symbol of freedom delivered right to your door.
Ray: What are you talking about?
Fraser: The eagle feather.
[gunfire]
Ray: You are a freak.

[stands and shoots guns out of bad guys’ hands with his last two rounds]

Ray: Hey! Down! Down! Hands.
Fraser: That’s good work, Ray. Now we’ll have to return to the station for processing.
Ray: You have the right to remain silent.
Fraser: Ray, we have to return to the station for processing.
Ray: I am not doing that, Fraser. Anything you say may be held against you.
Fraser: Ray, standard operating procedure, field manual chapter seven.
Ray: You have the right to an attorney.
Fraser: The arresting officer--
Ray: If you cannot afford an attorney, the court will assign one to you.
Fraser: --shall transfer the suspect to the nearest station house for processing--
Ray: Do you understand these rights?
Fraser: --with dispatch.
Ray: Do you understand these rights?!
Fraser: With dispatch!
Ray: You like procedure so much? You take ‘em in.
Fraser: I’m not the arresting officer.
Ray: Look, Fraser. Get something through your head. [hangs glasses off one ear]
  Keep a shield, lose a shield, I don’t really care. I am not leaving this graveyard ‘til I finish what I came here to do, take down a bent nail named Marcus Ellery. Until I do that I’m not leaving. Period. Dot it, file it, stick it in a box marked done. Okay? [to bad guys]  Come on, get up!


[27th precinct; Welsh’s office]
Hallett: Tell us about Alcorn Street.
Huey: That was a stand-up bust.
Hallett: Oh yeah!
Huey: Yeah. Took down a couple of real
dirtbags, Ray risked his life to save a child. Yeah, it was a great day for cops.
Brandauer: No kidding, you scored a big haul of China white.
Huey: What are you talking ‘scored’? We seized a shipment of heroin.
Brandauer: You seized ten kilos of heroin. By the time it was signed at evidence control there was only one.
Huey: That’s crap. [stands]
Hallett: Hey, we’ll tell you when we’re done.
Huey: I don’t have to take this.
Hallett: Sit down.
Brandauer: You’ve got a fine record, Detective. Could be you were just taking orders. Right? You give me Welsh. You give me Welsh and then maybe I can help you out.


[cemetery; Dief now has a collection of flowers at dog’s grave]

[crypt; Jimmy & Bronco are locked inside wrought-iron gate]
Ray: In the seventies, Ellery went on a tear, string of armed robberies from Illinois to Texas. He’d hit anything with cash, jewelry, armored trucks, banks. He did one bank right in my neighborhood. Ten years ago he’s convicted of a heist outside El Paso. On route to the state pen, he escaped. After that, went off the grid. It’s his mother they’re burying today.
Fraser: You think he’ll attend.
Jimmy: It’s his mother, he’ll show.
Ray: Who asked you?
Bronco: Don’t get so miffed, he’s just trying to help.
Ray: I don’t need your help.
Jimmy: Fine. But I detect a hole in your plan.
Ray: Oh, yeah?
Jimmy: Yeah. Assuming Ellery shows, which I agree he will, what you going to do? Statute of limitations has run out on the guy.
Fraser: You know, he’s right, Ray.
Ray: Look. Whose side are you on?
Fraser: I didn’t realize there were sides.
Ray: Look, Fraser, there’s always sides. There’s bad guys, then there’s everybody else. Marcus Ellery, bad guy.
Jimmy: That may be, but you have no grounds to arrest him, man.
Ray: Look, this is not official business, so shut up! It’s personal.
Fraser: You know, Ray, Francis Bacon once wrote that ‘Revenge is a wild kind of justice, which the more man’s nature runs to, the more ought law to weed it out.’
Ray: Did Francis Bacon ever meet up with Marcus Ellery?
Fraser: It’s unlikely. Bacon died in 1626.
Ray: Well, there you go. If he had he would have whistled a different tune.
Bronco: ‘A wild kinda justice.’ Yeah, I like that.


[27th precinct; Welsh’s office]
Huey: How many times I got to tell you? We only seized one kilo.
Hallett: Not according to the evidence log-in. What’s this?
Huey: It’s my name.
Hallett: Yeah, and this?
Huey: My signature.
Hallett: Ten kilos, Detective. Ten.
Huey: It was one. Ray will back me up.
Brandauer: Well, he hasn’t even bothered to show up, has he? He’s left you to take the fall. Huh? What does that tell you?
Hallett: Think about it.


[crypt]
Bronco: This guy Bacon. Does he got any books out?
Fraser: Yes, actually. The Advancement of Learning, uh,
Novum Organum, and an incomplete yet very fascinating work called Instauratio Magna.
Bronco: I gotta check into that.
Jimmy: What is wrong with you, man?
Bronco: Wait, if we don’t get off on a technicality, we’re looking at 15 to 22 years. I could put that time to good use--
Ray: Shut up.
[gunfire]
Ray: Gun.
[Jimmy hits Bronco & mumbles]


[outside]
[Fraser jumps on shooter, who turns out to be an old lady, and lands on top of her, while Kowalski points gun at her]
Fraser: Oh dear.
Ray: Who the hell are you?
Gladys: Gladys
Carls.
Fraser: I’m terribly sorry, ma’am. We thought you were a desperate criminal. Did I hurt you?
Gladys: No. It is a bit stiff, though.
Fraser: What is, ma’am?
Gladys: My leg.
Fraser: Ah yes. Let me help you up.

Gladys: Oh, thank you. My hat.

[he finally gets up & picks her up into his arms] 

Gladys: Oh. I’m-I’m just visiting my husband.
Ray: What, you hate the guy so much you fire 6 shots into him after he’s already dead?
Gladys: Hate him? Good Lord, no. I loved him dearly. I’m just executing part of his will.
Ray: What, he’s like a masochist or something?
Gladys: Oh, well, we tried that sometimes, but he hated pain. No. No he was
acarophobic. [afraid of mites]

Ray: Ah, he’s afraid of acrobats.
Fraser: No, no. Insects. [actually that’s “
entomophobia”]
Gladys: Exactly. You see, Henry was of the belief that, uh, lead would discourage insects from feasting off him, so I, uh, shoot a little in every now and again to keep them away. I don’t know if it works, but it makes me feel better.
[Kowalski puts gun away]
Fraser: I understand.
Ray: You understand.
Fraser: Ma’am, I’m afraid we’re going to have to check your firearms certificate.
Gladys: Oh, by all means.
Fraser: Thank you kindly.
Ray: [aside]
  Freak.


[27th precinct]
Welsh: [to Elaine]
  If he’s not here in an hour, we’re all going to be looking for new jobs on the back of matchbooks.

[he ponders the trout, now swimming in an aquarium]


[crypt]
Ray: [to Fraser]
  Can I ask you something? Do you find me attractive?
Jimmy: Oh, I wouldn’t say attractive.
Bronco: No. Cute, maybe.
Gladys: I’d say well-favored.
Ray: Did I ask you?
Jimmy: Sorry, I thought you were asking all of us.
Ray: Well, I wasn’t, so zip. [to Fraser]
  Well? D’you find me attractive?
Fraser: In what sense?
Ray: In the sense of, you know, being a woman.
Fraser: Do I think you’re an attractive woman?
Ray: No. No. I’m not the woman. You’re the woman.
Fraser: I’m the woman.
Gladys: No, I’m a woman.
Ray: Butt out.
Jimmy: Well, she is.
Ray: Well, I know she’s a woman, I’m asking Fraser to pretend that he’s a woman. Okay?
Gladys: Oh. Can you do that, dear?
Fraser: Well, I have done that, yes.
Bronco: So have I. It was rather fun.
Heh heh.
Ray: Look, you three zip, and you, you pretend you’re a woman, okay? You find me attractive?
Fraser: Very much so, yes.
Ray: You’re not just saying that?
Fraser: Well, I’m not really qualified to judge, Ray.
[Kowalski laughs]
Gladys: And what’s funny about that? He isn’t.
Ray: It just...sounds like something my wife would say.
Fraser: I didn’t realize you were married.
Ray: I was, not anymore.
Bronco: That is so sad.
Ray: Well, it’s, you know. Two careers, she worked at States Attorneys’ office, it just didn’t work out.
Jimmy: I recognize that tone of voice. They say, Hey, it’s no big deal. Tone of voice, you know?
Bronco: He would know, his wife left him. He was a broken window. Glass everywhere.
Gladys: What about you, dear? Are you married?
Fraser: No, ma’am, I’m not. But I am acquainted with loss, and on occasion loneliness.
Gladys: Ah yes. Loneliness, hmm?
  It may sound silly, but I wonder how the sun will feel today when it’s blocked out by the moon.
Fraser: Yes. It does seem sometimes as though the border between life and death is very poorly guarded.
Gladys: Hmm.
Bronco: Yep, and if you’re carrying the wrong passport, you wind up in a little drawer in one of these places.
Jimmy: What I’m thinking is, who the hell has all the passports? I mean, I wouldn’t be here if I had all the passports, you know?
Fraser: Or would you? That’s the question, isn’t it?
Ray: Right. Right. Like you can’t go forward until you go backward. Look, I tried to run away from my past, but you can’t do it, cause it’s in your skin, it stays with you. You gotta retrace your steps to figure out how you got here. I took this bus, I drove this car, I got on this train, I walked down this street, I turned this corner, I opened this door, and I stepped into a bank.

 

[flashback]
[bank. Music: “Oh, What a Feeling” by Crowbar.]
Adult Ray: I was thirteen and she was a Gold Coast girl. Private school. She was untouchable, but I was working it. I was lying like a maniac. I was John Lennon, James Bond, and Joe
Namath, all rolled into one.
[Young Ray and Stella at counter]
Young Stella: [whispers to Young Ray]
  I think that man has a gun.
Young Ray: Gun!
Ellery: [distorted voice]
  Down on the floor, now. Now!

[all hit the deck, except Stella]  

Ellery: You, little girl, get over here. Get over here!

[Stella goes]

Ellery: [to Young Ray]  Kid. Fill that up with money! Get up, fill it up! Get up! Now.

[Young Ray gets up]
Ellery: Turn around! Turn around. [Young Ray turns, and Ellery laughs]
  The kid pissed himself! Heh!
[Stella struggles, breaks free and runs away]
Young Ray: Stella!
Adult Ray: Stella.


[crypt]
Ray: Stella.
Jimmy: So. Did you get the girl?
Ray: Yeah. I got the girl.
Gladys: Ah!
Ray: That was Stella, my wife.
Bronco: She married you after even, you know, what you done?
Ray: Yeah, but that’s not the point. The point is, I mean, my whole life, it all starts and ends with this one guy. I’m like one of those, um....
Whatchamacallem? Uh, knights looking for the Holy Grill.
Fraser: Grail.
Ray: What?
Fraser: Holy Grail.
Ray: You sure?
Fraser: I’m pretty sure it’s not a diner.
Ray: Grill, grail, whatever. I’m just trying to settle an old debt.

[door opens, and the caretaker staggers in, holding bottle]
Caretaker: Okay. Number one. This is either empty, broken, or not working. And. Number two. They’re here. [falls down]
Gladys: Oh, Tom, dear!
[Kowalski looks out and sees funeral procession arriving]

 

[dog’s grave; Diefenbaker howls]

[funeral ends]
Gladys: Is your wolf all right?
Fraser: I think he’s grieving. His breed is uncommonly sensitive. They feel sorrow profoundly.
Ray: He didn’t show up.
Jimmy: What kind of guy doesn’t show to his own mother’s funeral? I mean, we’re low-life, man, but that, that’s a new standard.
[Caretaker, on Gladys’ lap, stirs and mumbles]
Gladys: Hush, Tom, dear, shh, go back to sleep. Shh.
Fraser: You know, Ray, I’m pretty sure he’ll come. We have time.


[27th precinct; 4:29pm]
Huey: Running out of time.
Elaine: He’s been in there for 37 minutes.

[Welsh’s office]
Hallett: This was on your watch, Lieutenant.
Welsh: I stand by my detectives.
Hallett: Ten kilos down to one. We’re talking big-time felony charges.
Welsh: I stand by my detectives.
Brandauer: You were a clown twenty years ago and you’re still a clown, Welsh. You pushed me aside every chance you got, and when that wasn’t enough you put my brother in jail. My brother! Now
lemme tell you something. Nothing’s going to give me more pleasure than taking you and this whole stinking division down. You got me?


[cemetery]
[Fraser sees Gladys off in a taxi, and Jimmy and Bronco off in a police cruiser]

 

[crypt; Kowalski plays with the dreamcatcher]
Ray: I lied, you know.
Fraser: You did?
Ray: Yeah. About Stella, to Stella. I was in the bank, she thought I humiliated myself on purpose, to stall for time so she could get away. I never told her any different. She thought I was a hero. I played along. Whole marriage based on a lie. I was a con job then and I’m a con job now.
Fraser: You know, Ray, in my limited experience with the subject, I’ve found that very few lifelong bonds are formed based on whether one partner or the other urinated in their clothing. And I’m willing to gamble, not with money mind you, but I am willing to gamble that Stella looked beyond that one incident and saw the whole person.
Ray: What do you mean?
Fraser: In December 1988 a young boy was being held in a warehouse. You went in even though you knew your cover had been blown. You drew fire, you were wounded, yet you managed to rescue the boy. Your first citation. In December 1990, in a jewelry store you single-handedly held off three gunmen, saving four innocent lives. Your second citation. In September 1993 you faced down three escaped murderers and you brought them to justice. Your third citation. You’re a good policeman, Ray. And I would be proud to call you my partner. And my friend.
Ray: What was that last part?
Fraser: Friend.
Ray: Lend me some money?
Fraser: Money and friends don’t mix, Ray. Let’s go to work.


[outside]
Ray: How’d you know all that stuff about my background?
Fraser: Well, I had your fingerprints. I went through your files.
Ray: You’re a real Nosey Parker, aren’t you?
Fraser: I think it’s prudent to know the mettle of the man you work with.
Ray:
Heh. Prudent. Is that like germane? You think this thing would fly?
Fraser: Well, it’s not a Frisbee, Ray, it’s a
dreamcatcher. It tangles up bad dreams.
Ray: But do you think it would fly?
Fraser: There’s only one way to find out.
[Kowalski dumps bag and throws
dreamcatcher like a Frisbee, and it flies quite a distance; Ellery, standing at the open grave, catches it; Kowalski searches for the dreamcatcher, and spies Ellery; he runs and jumps on top of him... after a mighty struggle, both of them topple down, into the grave]


Ellery: Jeez. Oof. Aw. Hey, man, whatever you want, my money, my wallet, it’s yours.
[Kowalski maneuvers for his gun in the small space, then pulls it on Ellery]

Ray: You remember me? Oh yeah! You remember. Little kid in the bank. 1974. Oh yeah, you remember. Kid wet himself. Tell me you remember.

[light gets dim]
Ellery: Hey, what the hell’s happening?
[eclipse begins]
Ray: It’s an eclipse. I don’t believe this. You don’t remember me.
Ellery: Hey, kid. I’ve robbed a lot of banks, and I’ve spent a lot of time in jail. I don’t have much of a memory about anything.

[it’s fully dark now]
Ray: I spent my entire life looking for you! Looking for some payback, some revenge, maybe even...kill you, and... Now I got you face to face, and... I can’t even see your face.
Ellery: Hey, you do what you gotta do, man. I just came here to say goodbye to my mother.
Ray: Ah. Mother. Huh. Okay. You can go now.
Ellery: You’re letting me go?
Ray: Yeah. Thanks.
Ellery: For what?
Ray: For making me what I am. A cop.
[light begins to return]
Fraser: Ray? [bumps into gravestone]
  I’m terribly sorry. Pardon me. Ray? [bumps into another one]  Ow!
[sun comes out completely; Kowalski now lies alone in the grave,
dreamcatcher on his belly]
Ray: He overpowered me. Ran away.
Fraser: Are you all right?
Ray: I’m good.

[throws dreamcatcher out, Fraser catches it]
Fraser: Well, we really should, uh....
Ray: Face the music.
[Fraser helps him out, and falls in himself as Kowalski walks away]
Fraser: Ray. Ray?
[Diefenbaker growls down at him from the edge]
Fraser: Gimme a paw, Dief.


[27th precinct; 4:58pm]
Welsh: He’s gonna show. He’ll show.
[Fraser, Dief, and Kowalski march in, past many onlookers. Kowalski gives a thumbed-nose-salute to Welsh as he goes into Welsh’s office]


[Welsh’s office]
Hallett: Ten kilos! Street-grade heroin. Down to one kilo. Where’d it go?
Ray: You tell me.
Hallett: You a hard guy. Huh? Chicago hard guy?
Ray: Your words.
Hallett: You recognize this?
Ray: Evidence log-in.
Brandauer: Is that your signature?
Ray: Looks like it.
Hallett: And is that a ten?
Ray: No.
Brandauer: We’re not playing games here, Vecchio. Unless 25 years in the big house is your idea of *fun*!
Ray: Are you guys really bozos or you just pretend to be bozos?
Hallett: You wanna repeat that?
Ray: It’s not a ten! It’s a one, with a happy face. You know, happy day, bad guys off the street. Here, let me show you. What’s this number? [writes on top of log]
Hallett: Three hundred and sixty.
Ray: No, it’s not, it’s a thirty-six... with a happy face. See? See? Do it all the time.
Brandauer: You-you want us to check through all the records?
Ray: Go ahead, knock yourselves out. Or, we can cut to the chase. This whole station is shivering on the word of some apple-polisher I never even met. Come on. Put me in a line-up. Siracusa can pick me out, I’m good to go, you book me a room in the big house. If he can’t, you can pack up your little circus and go home. Deal?! Deal?!


[line-up]
Brandauer: Give us Vecchio.
Hallett: Come on, Siracusa.
Siracusa: Number three.
Welsh: [over intercom]
  Number three, please step forward.
[Number three glances in Kowalski’s direction, then steps forward]
Welsh: Your brother was nothing but a criminal, and I stand by my detectives. [Brandauer exits in a huff]


[corridor]
[Welsh steps out, looks around, walks along past numerous expectant onlookers...he turns around and gives a thumbs-up; everyone bursts into cheers and high fives, except for Fraser who merely smiles. (Huey goes to give Fraser a high five, but misses by a mile and falls on his face)]


[bullpen. Music: “Oh, What a Feeling” by Crowbar.]
Ray: So this is a traditional Yukon celebration.
Fraser: It’s a fair approximation. Without the snow, of course.
[Welsh stares at the swimming trout]

Elaine: You all right?
Welsh: Oh yeah. Sure.
Elaine: [to waiters]
  Gentlemen.
[the waiters are serving food; everyone is wearing party hats (even Dief)]
Ray: Huey, I don’t think so.
Huey: I can do it, I can do it, I can do it, I can do it. [tries to
kickbox the cabbage-on-a-string]  Aaargh! [falls on his back]

Ray: Sad.

Fraser: Party’s going rather well, I think.
Ray: Oh yeah? You know, Fraser. [appears to step on Huey, who groans]
  That was weird, seeing Ellery?
Fraser: Yeah, I should imagine.
Ray: I mean, that guy dogged me my entire life, and now it’s like, uh, the sky opened up or something. I
dunno.
Fraser: You know, Ray, my father once told me that the sky isn’t just above you. That if you look at the horizon you’ll see that it actually touches the ground. So if you think about it, wherever you go you are actually walking in the sky.
Ray: You’re a freak.
Fraser: Understood.
[Welsh bobs for trout as Elaine looks on]
Welsh: [surfacing]
  Ooh. That’s a lot harder than it looks. [plunges back in]


End

 

 

Main Index

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Season 4

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