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- Previously on The Good Wife...
ALICIA: - What's wrong?
DAVID:
Over the past month,
the fourth year associates
have called our top clients.
DIANE: We're worried they're
thinking of leaving with them.
Do you have any insight?
We need to leave
by the end of the week.
People want to
wait for bonuses.
We can't keep fooling
the partners.
I gave an interview
to the Law Advocate.
What did you say?
I talked about the money,
the $45,000 that you took.
WILL:
We negotiate an exit package.
Diane gave an interview that
exposed the firm to criticism.
We're getting
calls from clients.
This is my firm.
It was your firm.
(indistinct chatter)
(phone ringing)
What's this? I asked for the
Greenberg deposition from March,
not November. Are you deaf?
You're the paralegal
who's good with computers.
Could you help with my laptop
in about ten minutes?
Oh, good, I need some help
moving boxes
out of Diane's office
when you get a chance.
I'll take it.
- Hey, Chrissy, how are you?
- Okay.
Uh, hey, Alicia, do
you have a minute?
Um, not right now.
How 'bout in an hour?
Sure.
What's wrong?
Nothing.
I'm just...
- It's hard.
- I know,
but it's good experience, and
you'll make a lot of connections
- for when you pass the bar.
- I guess.
ALICIA:
Uh...
- Chrissy, I'll be right back.
- No.
It's all right.
I figured out what I want to do.
What do you mean?
Nothing. Everything's good.
We're having trouble
downloading files.
You shouldn't be talking here.
Don't worry. Everybody just thinks
we're discussing the Zimbalist depo.
I spent the whole afternoon
trying to download files to take
with us, but there's some sort
of firewall in the way.
It's David Lee. He's still
suspicious that we're leaving.
The clients are coming with us,
right? Once they come with us,
Lockhart/Gardner doesn't own
the files. The clients do.
Right, but they can delay
delivering the files to us.
Once all hell breaks loose,
they're not gonna want
- to lift a finger for us.
- They'll have to. The clients will sue.
CAREY: So? Lockhart/Gardner will just
absorb the suit, knowing we can't
do a good job representing
our clients without their files.
I agree. Hey, we're stealing
their clients.
- No, no, no. We're not stealing.
- We're not stealing.
Okay, okay. Either way, they're
gonna think we're stealing them.
They're gonna be pissed.
CARY: All right, all right.
So what do we do?
CAREY:
Well...
partners can get
around the firewall.
No.
- (sighs)
- No,
- that would be wrong.
- You don't have to do all the files,
just the new ones.
Diane's cases.
(quietly):
Hey, hey, hey.
What's this?
The Zimbalist deposition.
Oh.
I need the paralegal,
the brunette one.
- Where is she?
- I don't know.
She's probably helping Will
in Diane's office.
Okay.
Good luck
with the Zimbalist deposition.
So, this is surprising.
Hi, Viola.
How are you?
I'm good, Will.
And it's always good
to see you, especially
in such a triumphant state.
So, what do you need, Viola?
Oh, may I?
You know, Diane and I were
great friends in law school.
But we were always in
competition, the same jobs,
the same boyfriends,
same everything.
So this judgeship
is hitting quite hard.
You want one.
(chuckles)
That would be nice.
But I feel
that her advancement started
when she stole...
Actually, you both stole
a client from me.
DAVID: Have you seen
that paralegal?
- What's her name?
- No, I haven't seen her.
Oh. That's why I'm here.
Your paralegal.
She's suing you.
Chrissy is suing us?
And Diane.
And the firm.
For what?
For a hostile work environment.
That ***.
I can't believe it.
David.
(chuckles)
No, that's okay.
There's a lot worse than that
in the complaints.
Something, unfortunately,
that might upset
Diane's confirmation.
So this is between you and Diane
- and we're just collateral damage?
- No.
This is between a firm
and a paralegal,
and we're all just slaves
to the facts.
(gunshots)
(chuckling):
Whoa.
(chuckles)
- You're getting better.
- I'm getting out my aggressions.
It's a turn-on.
(phone ringing)
(chuckles)
Oh...
McVEIGH:
Work again?
Go ahead, take it. I'm fine.
No.
Finally, I don't have
to take it.
ELI: We have to talk
about the inauguration.
No, you have to talk
about it. I...
What's that mean?
Six days.
Until you
leave? Oh.
I'm gonna miss this office.
You sure you want to go?
Okay, Eli.
- What's the problem?
- You told Nora you want the
inaugural ball moved to
the Governor's mansion,
but traditionally it's held
at Exposition Hall,
and I'm getting some
trouble from the unions.
- Wait, what?
- You want the inaugural ball moved to
the Governor's mansion,
but the unions are threatening to strike
- if we move it because it's a non-union...
- Okay wait, Eli wait.
I never said anything.
I don't know what you heard,
but your office called me
and asked me if it would be
fine to move the ball
to the Governor's mansion,
and I told them
what I'm telling you. I don't care.
So you... didn't ask for it to be moved
to the governor's mansion?
Does it sound like me to say I want
it moved to the governor's mansion?
Nora said that Mrs. Florrick insisted...
And there you go.
I have a partners' meeting.
Good luck.
Nora, is Mrs. Florrick there?
N-No.
The Mrs. Florrick that asked
for the inaugural
to be moved to the mansion.
Hello, Mr. Gold. How are you?
WOMAN:
Diane.
My God.
Look at you.
Mmm, mmm, mmm.
Fran, Lyle, hi!
It's been forever.
Well, we were in Lyon
for the spring.
You look fantastic.
Well, thank you.
And this is Kurt.
- Good to meet you. Yes.
- Ah, you must be the lucky gentleman.
DIANE: These are my oldest
friends, Francesca and Lyle.
I set them up.
Blind date, right out
of law school.
Which reminds me,
I heard Viola was in town.
Did you see her?
Viola Walsh? No.
And what have you
two been doing today?
You... smell
like you've been camping.
That's gunpowder.
(Francesca and Lyle laugh)
We were out shooting
this morning.
Guns? Really?
A Smith & Wesson...
- Model 29. - Model 29.
- Well then,
that's a new side
of you, Diane.
(phone ringing)
Oh, sorry. Do you mind?
I have to take this.
Are you a hunter, Mr...
McVeigh.
Oh, McVeigh. Like-like,
uh, the other...
- like the other McVeigh?
- What other?
Uh, the one who, um, uh...
You know, the one...
He's dead now. Um, uh...
FRANCESCA: - Nixon?
- No, the one who uh, you know...
Blew up the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building
in Oklahoma City?
Yeah.
Will, what's going on?
It's your old friend,
Viola Walsh.
She's suing us.
She got one of our paralegals
to accuse us.
Well, I don't know
what that has to do with me.
You all pushed me out, remember?
She's saying
you sexually harassed her.
I... She what?
How's that gonna look to your
friends in the Supreme Court?
This is what I say...
She slimes us, we slime her.
We got Kalinda on this,
find out everything in her past,
everything we can use.
Wait. Who said
that I harassed her?
Chrissy Quinn.
She said that you asked her to
*** herself to a client,
that... Cary showed her
how he masturbated
and I asked her
how she lost her virginity.
And I tried to *** her.
I don't even know who she is.
Do you realize the United States
has the highest percentage
of civilian gun ownership...
Slime her-- that's what I say.
This is blackmail.
They want a quick settlement.
It's Viola Walsh, Diane.
She's got an issue
with your judgeship.
(sighs)
Tell me what you need me to do.
- So you don't think Sandy Hook
changed anything? - I think
that the Second Amendment keeps
everything from being changed.
But did you see
those kids' bodies?
- Did you see the photos?
- What I don't understand
- is how your guns could matter
more than that. - I didn't say that.
- You're making that connec...
DIANE: - So...
(clears throat)
How we doing?
Good, I think.
- Great.
FRANCESCA: - Well,
I think we should, um...
We're meeting
some friends, Diane.
- Join us. We're almost done.
LYLE: - No, no. We'll-we'll call you.
We'll-we'll arrange
lunch some other time.
- Okay, say hi to the kids.
- Okay.
Stimulating conversation?
Your friends have
some strong opinions.
So does my fiancé.
You knew that about me.
I did.
If we settle for $2 million,
insurance will cover 40%, but...
we may lose some clients.
- No, we fight it.
- Then we have to move quick.
So who do we get
to represent us?
(beeping) I'm sorry. I have to
hit 10,000 paces or my Bangle
- gets mad at me.
- We'd like to hire you, Ms. Tascioni.
Actually, we're considering
- hiring you.
- We're being sued by a female paralegal
- for being a hostile workplace.
- And...
how long has this paralegal
worked for you?
- Two years. Why?
- I don't know.
I keep asking questions
until they make sense.
And... who's
representing her?
Viola Walsh, a lawyer from LA,
but she's opening up offices
here.
Is she tall?
ALICIA:
A bit.
Five-seven?
You're kidding me.
The worry, Ms. Tascioni,
is that we're in
a transition period at the firm
and that this suit
could be used to hurt us.
(beeping)
So...
you think this suit
is about your transition period.
Yes.
Okay. Then we move fast.
Call this tall lawyer's bluff.
Arrange depositions now.
And I'll get
your investigator...
um, Kalinda, right?
- Right.
- I'll get her looking into this.
paralegal's background.
Slime her
before she can slime you.
When can you start?
♪
♪ I got the devil inside,
he's a political man ♪
♪ He turns my money
into his own religion ♪
♪ Teaching the nation,
makes realization ♪
Sync and corrections by n17t01
www.addic7ed.com
JACKIE:
To the right.
A little to the left.
To the left. Good.
And you can put the seal
over there.
So, Jackie,
what are we doing here?
- Rearranging.
- Mm-hmm.
Do you think the seal
would look good there?
There? Why not the men's room?
- (chuckles) Mr. Gold.
- Take it down and put the seal
- back up in its place.
- What are you doing, Mr. Gold?
Putting the state seal back up
and keeping every reporter
from asking if the governorship
- has gone to Peter's head.
- He won, Eli.
It's not wrong to put
such a beautiful portrait
in a place of prominence.
Hmm, maybe it's not wrong,
Jackie, but it is stupid.
Perhaps you and I should
have a little talk, hmm?
Put the seal back!
Yes, sir.
Jackie, you and I
have had some...
times together.
We have... over the years.
And we've had some...
disagreements along the way.
Not so many.
But now your son is governor,
and any disagreement
results in bigger issues,
so we need to stop.
Whenever you want
something changed
around here, no
matter how small,
no matter how insignificant,
you have to ask.
- Certainly.
- No.
You have to ask me.
Not Peter, not Alicia.
Not the little fairies
that sit on your shoulder.
Just me.
He's my son, Eli.
You can't keep me
from speaking to my son.
I can, actually.
You don't want to challenge
me on this, Jackie.
Not the campaign manager
that got his candidate elected
by six points.
I'll talk to Peter.
Do that.
I'll have him call you
in 20 minutes.
The call will last
exactly four minutes, so,
keep it quick.
(door slams shut)
ELSABETH:
Hi.
Hi.
Christina Quinn, the paralegal
who used to work here--
I need everything
that you can find on her.
- Dirt?
- Yes.
Work history, *** history.
Anything that would be...
Where do you get
your hair done?
Where? Uh, I don't know.
Different places.
I wish my hair would behave.
It just flops. Just...
I flop it this way or that way.
You knew this paralegal?
Uh, the one suing us? Yeah.
What do you think of her?
I think she's very... young.
You read her accusations?
Yes.
She accused everybody
of improprieties but you.
Yeah, I saw that.
Are her accusations true?
No.
But you're hesitant?
No. I just think some things
are open to interpretation.
Do you think *** harassment
is open to interpretation?
No.
(beeping)
Okay, time to walk.
Look at us--
out to save the world.
Who took that?
FRANCESCA: - Viola Walsh, wasn't it?
- Mm.
So, here you are
in my apartment
for the first time
in five years,
and my guess is that you have
something to get off your chest.
Are we that obvious?
A bit. What is it?
How well do you know Kurt?
LYLE:
What?
He disagrees with you
about the right to bear arms.
Look, he disagrees with me
about that.
I disagree with him.
It's not a stumbling block.
FRANCESCA:
But his views, Diane.
All his views.
He supports Sarah Palin.
I know.
I can't believe it.
I fell in love with a Palin supporter.
(laughs)
It's not funny, Diane.
Do you see her?
She's back on Fox.
Oh, you don't watch Fox.
They show clips on Jon Stewart.
His views on Obama
and secessionism.
Okay, so, what is this,
an intervention?
No, it's just...
Issues matter.
I know we're all supposed
to disagree and smile
and go home and pretend
it's all some big tennis match,
but people end up poorer,
guns end up
killing people.
Global warming keeps
destroying our...
So, you're saying
I shouldn't be happy?
No, what we're saying
is, do you really know
who this guy is?
Do you know his religion,
his politics?
Thanks for stopping by,
- but I actually do have to go to work.
- No.
Diane, please,
just sit and talk.
Fran, Lyle,
if I fell into a life
of addiction,
then, please, do intervene,
but don't for this.
Not for love.
The best advice
you ever gave me, Diane,
when I met Lyle was,
make sure your love can survive
outside the bubble.
I give it back to you.
(beeping)
(clears throat)
How long have you worked
at Lockhart/Gardner?
Shall we say hello first?
(sighs)
Hello.
How long have you worked at
Lockhart/Gardner?
Two years.
Who hired you?
Alicia... Florrick.
What were your duties?
Paralegal.
Uh, typing up briefs,
researching cases,
making copies,
that sort of thing.
How did you lose
your virginity?
Objection.
How is that relevant?
Chrissy charged
in her complaint
that Alicia Florrick asked her
how she lost her virginity,
so I'm just asking,
what was the answer?
I... didn't answer.
Was there anyone else there
when she asked you this?
Myself, Cary Agos, our client
and six other associates.
And the issue
of virginity came up?
Well, it didn't come up.
The lawsuit was about someone
selling their virginity online,
and the difference between
implied and explicit contract.
ELSBETH: In other words,
you didn't bring up
the issue of virginity,
it was the issue of the lawsuit?
- Do you want to take over
the questioning? - Sure.
Was virginity the
subject of the lawsuit?
Yes.
And how did you come
to ask Chrissy
about her loss of virginity?
The other associates were
discussing their experiences,
and I saw Chrissy
laugh to herself.
I thought she had something she
wanted to share, so I asked her,
did she have something to add?
Those were your exact words?
They were.
Wow.
I can see why you're suing.
VIOLA:
Then what happened?
Cary Agos asked me to stay late
on the Ginsberg case.
And this was
a *** case, too?
Yes, prostitution.
Lockhart/Gardner just seems
to obsess on these *** cases.
- Is that a question?
- No.
It's just an odd observation.
Then what happened
during your late-night work
on this case?
Cary showed me how
he masturbated.
And how did he show you this?
With his hand?
Uh... his right hand?
VIOLA: And it was
just the two of you?
Yes.
And what was being
discussed at the time?
A plea bargain.
The State's Attorney offered
to sit down with us
and discuss a plea
of three years.
- And you didn't think much of it?
- No. No, I didn't.
So, when Chrissy reported this
offer to you, what did you do?
I made a gesture.
A gesture of-of ***?
- Yes.
- And
by this gesture,
did you mean...
this is how I ***?
No. No.
What did you mean by it?
That it was
a pointless exercise.
Strike two.
Maybe... maybe try something
other than sex.
VIOLA:
Had you ever seen this partner?
Howard Lyman? No.
He's the oldest partner. He only
comes in every now and then.
And he sent you an e-mail
about a week ago.
Can you read it?
"Chrissy, I need
to discuss something with you.
Please come to my office
at 1:00 p.m.,
enter quietly,
and sit down at my desk."
VIOLA: And you had
no case with him?
- That's correct.
- And then,
when you got there,
what happened?
He took off his pants and
exposed himself to me.
We have a problem.
Howard Lyman.
PEOPLE (chanting):
...have got to go!
ELI:
Look, I told you.
We're not having the
inaugural at the mansion.
We moved it to a union house.
But you won't call
off the strike?
That's right.
Why not?
Because your guy supported
Scott Walker in Wisconsin.
Oh, come on.
It's a governor
in a nearby state.
He had to show some support.
Eli, unions in this country
are endangered.
Every time someone comes out
in support of Scott Walker...
So you're going to
protest our inaugural?
That is blackmail.
That is bad faith.
It's not just you, Eli.
We're making a stand
across the Midwest.
Don't take it personally.
You told me it was
about the mansion.
I got Jackie to
back off the mansion,
- and now you're saying...
- Jackie Florrick?
What? Yes. Why?
How's she doing?
Jackie? She's fine. Why?
Say hello for me, huh?
So, what do we ask him?
Whether he brought
Chrissy here,
and if took his clothes
off in front of her.
- Howard?
- (gasps) Oh, my God.
What? Huh? What
time is it?
- 1:00.
- I don't have a meeting till 2:00.
You have a meeting now.
We have a problem.
She came in here.
I didn't ask her to,
I didn't invite her in.
But you didn't have your pants
or your underwear on?
I always take it off for lunch.
I take a nap.
I get all sweaty on... on my...
you know, bottom half.
And I did not keep her
from leaving.
*** screamed. I was just
- offering her some water.
- Oh, dear God.
Look, I am the
innocent party here.
The girl came in here
and tried to...
She, uh... she
tried to...
I don't know what
she was trying to do.
I was just taking a nap.
What's wrong?
I don't know.
They just got called
into the partner's meeting.
ALICIA:
Damn it.
It might not be anything.
You need to get those files.
DIANE:
Alicia?
Diane. How are you?
You know, I just got a glimpse
of what my life would look like
if I'd never started this firm.
- And?
- Yeah, I liked it.
I liked it a lot.
Shall we?
I understand your frustration,
but it isn't what it seems.
It was a joke.
A prank. That's all.
- In what way was it a joke?
- Look, we all
knew Lyman slept off his lunch
without his pants on.
And we'd sent out some e-mails
to some of the paralegals.
CARY: Not just the women.
It was the men, too.
So you sent this e-mail to
Chrissy from Howard's account?
Yes.
Still haven't negotiated
my exit package yet.
No.
We've negotiated your package.
You just haven't accepted it.
Do you want to talk or not?
Give me my gun control case,
and let me finish out
the Sonya Rucker contract,
and I will agree to the terms.
You'll keep your clients
in house?
I'll do everything I can.
One more thing.
Indemnify me against this case.
- This Howard Lyman thing is BS.
- Good.
Then indemnify me.
Sure.
Whatever you want.
Good luck.
Not with a ***.
(typing)
_
_
(indistinct chatter)
(typing)
What are you doing?
W-What am I...?
The Sonya Rucker contract.
Excuse me?
You're downloading my file.
I couldn't access it.
No, I, um...
I-I think I stumbled...
Alicia, I talked to Will;
it's my case.
There's a firewall
protecting it.
Look, my mistake.
McVEIGH:
Hey.
How'd it go?
Oh, I have to stay a few hours.
Okay, I'll come back.
I want to meet
your friends, Kurt,
your best friends.
- Why?
- Don't you find it odd
that we've been talking
about marriage
and I've never met
a single one of your friends?
No.
Is this about your
friends yesterday?
Do you remember their names?
No.
Is that important?
I want to meet your friends.
ELSBETH: Uh, before Lockhart/Gardner,
you worked at Hoffman/Ross.
Is that correct?
Yes, why?
And did you ever
make an accusation
against your boss there?
What, is this
a fishing expedition?
It is.
Luckily it's a deposition.
Did you ever make an
accusation against your boss
there, Chrissy?
KALINDA:
'Cause we have the texts
on your Lockhart/
Gardner cell phone.
How very NSA of you.
It's our cell phones,
our property.
Did you ever make an accusation
against your previous boss?
Not an official accusation.
How about an unofficial one?
He came on to me.
Yes, you accused him
of taking off his clothes
in your presence.
- Okay, that is so dirty. You are trying...
- I'm just saying,
- ...to make a connection...
- it's quite a coincidence that all these
- ...between two completely unrelated...
- bosses want to take their pants off.
So, we got rid
of most of the charges
and we lucked into something
that neutralized
the Howard Lyman threat.
Thank you, Kalinda.
But, uh, we still
have two issues.
Do you mind if I eat?
I missed lunch.
- Please.
- Two problems-- well, three.
Chrissy's suggesting that you,
Diane, prostituted her out.
I have no idea
what she's talking about.
And that you, Will,
created a hostile workplace
by sleeping with underlings
in your office.
I can answer that.
DAVID: Have you noticed,
I'm the only one
- in the clear here?
ELSBETH: - Now
here comes the third problem.
Kalinda.
I found this saved
onto Howard Lyman's IT file.
It's from his laptop.
Hey, why don't you come
over here
and sit on Daddy's lap,
huh, honey?
Oh, dear God.
- Who is that?
- Another paralegal-- Lacey Atkins.
Hired last year.
This should have no
impact on this lawsuit.
The fact that he approached
another paralegal has
marginal bearing on this case.
Or you can tell yourselves that.
Thanks, Diane.
DAVID:
So we bury it
and get rid of Howard.
Uh, Will.
I was looking into the partner
decorating stipends.
About a month ago, Alicia
stopped decorating her office.
Did you ask her to stop?
- No, why?
- I don't know.
I just found it odd.
INSTRUCTOR:
Lift.
Think of the ball
as your grandkids.
There you go.
And up...
I'm sorry, Jackie.
What are you sorry
for, Mr. Gold?
You made yourself very clear.
Beth, I'll be with
you in a minute.
I'm sorry because I've had
a change of heart.
I find... I need your help.
My help?
No, no, there's too much chance
of disagreement between us.
- Jackie, I'm apologizing.
- And I'm telling you,
you have no reason
to apologize.
You were right and I was wrong.
INSTRUCTOR: And what do you say we dance?
So, forward.
Two, three, and go back.
Really feel it in the arms.
Okay, what do you want?
Control of the inauguration.
Really?
- All right, and...
- (sighs)
Control of the ball.
And decorating
of Peter's offices.
INSTRUCTOR:
And forward...
- Agreed.
- Good.
What kind of assistance
do you need?
You know the Food
Service Union chief?
No, who's that?
Ronald Erickson.
(chuckling):
Oh, yes, Ronnie.
How is he?
This is his number.
Excellent, excellent.
Give him a call.
And one more time.
Forward.
CHRISSY:
I like Diane a lot.
I wanted to be like her.
VIOLA: And you went to her with
this client's undue attention
- because you liked her?
- Yes.
I know Mr. Gainsborough is
one of her top clients, but
I told her what he said.
- That you looked hot?
- Yes, and
that he kept watching me
and asked me my bra size.
And what did Diane say?
CHRISSY:
She said,
"Don't worry about it.
He meant it as a compliment."
That's when I lost
my respect for her.
VIOLA:
Yes,
I can understand that.
Chrissy never mentioned
she was uncomfortable
with Mr. Gainsborough's comment.
Yes, but she came to you,
Ms. Lockhart,
and told you what he said?
Yes.
And you told her to take it
as a compliment and let it go?
- Yes.
- Comments about being hot,
questions about bra size--
these are compliments?
From a gay fashion
designer, they are.
So you're saying that, um...
(clears throat)
Strike that.
Um,
you didn't know...
Chrissy didn't know
that Mr. Gainsborough was gay,
did she?
I don't know, I thought she did.
She knew he was
a fashion designer.
Really, so now you're saying
that paralegals
should stereotype
fashion designers or, or anyone
who they deem to be someone
that might not fit into a...
You're in a hole,
Ms. Walsh, best to stop digging.
$1 million.
(chuckles)
- No.
- Oh, come on,
it's not going away.
Pay us $1 million and it's over.
Viola,
you're losing,
you're losing badly.
We'll make you this deal.
Stop right now and we
won't countersue you
for filing a frivolous lawsuit.
We still have you
in your office
conducting ***
relations with underlings.
Oh, I forgot.
(laughs)
(clears throat)
Here is
an affidavit
from Mr. Gardner
and Tammy Linnata.
They swear they...
(wristband beeps)
...they only had
*** relations once
in his office, and she
was never in the employ
of Lockhart/ Gardner, so
she was not an underling.
And this is the only time
you've ever had sex
in your office?
It is.
Will.
That wasn't true--
what you just said.
What?
That wasn't the only time
you had sex in your office.
You don't remember?
No, I-I mean, I-I-I-I do,
uh, but it was...
We didn't have sex.
Are, are we defining sex
more restrictively?
Because, as I remember it...
I don't think we want
that to get out.
I agree,
but your affidavit
could prove problematic
because, at the point
in time we're talking about,
I was an underling.
Hmm.
Wait.
We did it in there, didn't we?
Technically that's
not my office.
That's my bathroom.
Chrissy did only say
in your office, didn't she?
Yes, sex in my office,
so we didn't have
sex in my office.
Good... good.
Thanks.
Thanks.
That was weird, wasn't it?
Talking about two years ago?
Yeah, that'll be on my mind
for the rest of the day.
Just the rest of the day?
(chuckles)
(knocking on door)
Uh, we have another problem.
Viola wants to open
the Howard Lyman charge again.
HOWARD:
They're crucifying me.
It's like McCarthyism
all over again.
Why, what does she have?
She just
e-mailed it to me.
Hey, why don't you come
over here
and sit on Daddy's lap,
huh, honey?
That's a lie.
Where'd this come from?
You taped it, you moron.
It's the same one you showed us?
Yes, the one we were going
to keep private.
- How did they get it?
- I don't know,
but the worry is, they did.
WILL:
Someone's feeding them
our dirty laundry?
Yes, now,
the question is who?
So I shouldn't bring up Obama?
Bring up anything you want.
Your friends are gonna
hate me, aren't they?
I don't want this
to poison us, Kurt.
Well, let's go then.
We don't need to do this.
No, no, no, no.
Now, I'm-I'm curious.
Let's meet your friends.
(indistinct chatter)
Jeannie?
- Kurt, there you are.
- How you doing?
Hey.
- Hi.
JEANNIE: - And this must be Diane.
We're the
fire-breathing crazies.
(laughter)
(quietly):
Hi.
(laughs quietly)
Oh, that went well, hmm?
Yup.
You didn't like 'em?
You mean Jeannie
and Bobbie and Tonya,
the skateboarder?
Why wouldn't I like them?
She's a snowboarder.
And how did you meet them?
- In class.
- Oh, in class.
And this class is all women?
You didn't like that
they were women?
No, I'm fine with the fact
that they were all women.
It's just, they were all
in their twenties.
They are all excellent
terminal ballistic experts.
Have you slept with any
of those ballistic experts?
No.
Why are we getting
married, Kurt?
Do you not want to?
I don't know.
MAN: ♪ This ain't
"corporations are people" ♪
♪ But they don't work... ♪
Ronnie?
♪ And if you're down
on your luck... ♪
Mrs. Florrick.
What is this
"Mrs. Florrick""
That's new.
Jackie. I'm intimidated now.
You're the governor's wife.
Mom, I mean.
I'm still good
old Jackie-o.
Do you remember that time
on Georgie's boat?
Yes, very well. Do you?
We were a lot younger.
We weren't that much younger.
I've gone grey.
Grey suits you.
Janice will be thrilled
that I ran into you.
Yes.
She wouldn't mind if
I took old Ronnie out
for a drink, would she?
It's been such a long time.
(elevator bell dings)
You got a problem.
Just one?
Someone in our firm
is feeding evidence to Viola
Walsh so she can attack us.
I've been asked
to find out who.
And?
It's one of your rebels.
How do you know?
Because he left a lot
of fingerprints
on an e-mail he sent to Viola.
(sighs)
Kalinda, do me a favor.
- I just did you a favor.
- Do me another.
- I have to tell Will.
- I know. Give me an hour head start.
(sighs)
You have 30 minutes.
What were you thinking, Tony?
I was thinking what
we were all thinking.
We need clients.
We need...
ALICIA:
You don't sabotage
- your own firm.
- Lockhart/Gardner
isn't my firm.
Florrick/Agos is.
It's so dumb!
They could sue us!
CARY: They're gonna fire
you in about ten minutes.
We need you to go along with it.
Don't say anything.
So, I get fired,
I lose my bonus.
I'm out $30,000.
Well, you shouldn't
have gotten caught!
No, we should share
our bonuses. There's no reason
I should suffer
for helping out the whole team.
Oh, helping out the whole team.
It was your idea
in the first place.
All right, then why should
I stay silent when they fire me?
So you're threatening us?
No, I'm telling you.
We all shared
the start-up costs.
We should share the bonuses.
What do you think?
I think
we've got the mafia here.
We've been moving software
to pay-per-use
and had a massive uptick.
But you know.
You're our lawyer.
So you're happy with the firm?
Lockhart/Gardner?
Yes.
I mean, you're not thinking
of leaving?
Well, I've been hearing rumors
that you're leaving
for a judgeship,
and if that's the case,
we might look around, yeah.
Why?
Has anyone approached you
about joining another firm?
A new firm?
Just the usual calls, you know.
But some of our lawyers
have approached you, right?
I mean, it's all right.
They... they've talked to me.
I don't think
I'm supposed to say anything
until it's official.
No, I understand.
Alicia already told me that, uh,
she's taking you on,
so, I'm fine.
Really?
Because
a firm with the governor's wife
on the letterhead
is hard to pass up.
Diane?
Yes, good.
- Did I say something?
- No, no. It's just, um...
I-I have to go.
I'll call you later.
Yes! I don't know
how you did it.
In fact, I don't think
I want to know,
but the union has backed off.
They're not going
to strike the inaugural.
I'm so happy, Eli.
Oh, a little higher.
Higher.
ELI:
So we're
putting Peter back up again?
Yes. He looks wonderful,
don't you think?
And the seal?
I don't know.
Do you have a suggestion?
No. Wherever you want.
How about in your office?
Oh, congratulations.
Congratulations.
You got stood up, huh?
Not sure yet.
Hey, I got a sister
you can marry.
I'm fine, thanks.
(sighs)
Sorry.
No.
We're good?
Always.
(laughs)
You know we don't
have to do this.
I know.
(man laughs)
(whistles)
Get a room.
_
(beeping)
You have to pay our legal fees,
- and we will forgive and forget this.
- Really?
Well, I wasn't keeping score,
but I thought the last time
I checked, I was ahead.
We just have one more witness.
ELSBETH:
And was it surprising to you
that Chrissy accused
everybody at the firm but you?
- No.
- It wasn't?
And why is that?
Well, she liked me.
And in what way
did she... like you?
KALINDA:
Uh...
In a lot of ways.
And where did she...
like you most?
In the copy room,
in the pantry, and sometimes in
the bullpen at night.
ELSBETH: - So, at work?
- Yeah.
But Chrissy said
she was offended
by all the ***
activity at work.
I know. Odd.
Thank you, Kalinda.
Your witness.
Okay, let me talk to my client.
(elevator bell dings)
WOMAN: Lockhart/Gardner. How
may I direct your call?
Yes. Yes, she is.
30 minutes?
(indistinct,
overlapping chatter)
WOMAN:
I am so sorry I'm late.
Please, my office is this way.
Missing it already?
(phones ringing,
distant, overlapping chatter)
(door opening)
Oh, I'm sorry.
I thought you had gone.
We're settling with Chrissy.
The compromise.
♪
Joely, could you give me
a minute?
Oh, sure. Sure.
I'll be right out here.
Stability.
What?
Alicia's leaving the firm
with Cary,
and she's taking
our top clients.
Sync and corrections by n17t01
www.addic7ed.com