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[ Wind whistling ]
[ Truck horn blares ]
Hey.
Hey, pal.
[ Brakes screech ]
What's going on?
Everything okay?
You all right?
You a little turned around?
If you're headed to Harrisburg,
you're going the wrong way.
You hear me?
What do you got there?
[ Clatters ]
Assistant US Attorney?
He hasn't spoken.
The doctor said
he experienced severe trauma.
Where did you find him?
On a highway
outside of Harrisburg.
We're still
piecing it together,
but we think
he may have been hitchhiking.
Ma'am? Are you okay?
It's just
it's been 12 years.
[ Sighs ]
Mark? Mark?
It's me.
It's Donna.
[ Crying ]
Where have you been?
It's been 12 years.
[ Laughs ]
[ Sighs ]
What is this? A '78?
You got a picture?
My father loved Cadillacs.
And she's alive?
She's calling herself
Jolene Parker.
I'll notify you
when I find her.
You don't have
all the information.
- I have all I need.
- No.
She's --
Do I tell you
how to do your job?
No, I don't.
So don't tell me
how to do mine.
If I was able to find you
hiding on that sheep farm
outside of ***,
I can find this girl.
Don't you worry how.
I love hats.
But that
honestly, that takes
a certain kind of man.
What size are you?
I'm a 7 1/2.
I'll find the girl.
I don't want you to find her.
I know where she is.
I want you to tell me
where she's been.
Cities, safe houses, aliases.
She's already
faked her death to elude me.
Now she's back.
I want you to tell me
everything you can
about where she's been,
what she's been up to.
I mean, I thought this was
a teacher conference,
not a book burning.
Burt: There's nothing wrong
with a little editing.
They're children.
Kids shouldn't be
reading "Lolita.
"
Why not? I mean, th-the heart
goes where it wants to go.
Uh, Mr.
Whitney's heart
sent him
right into an affair
with Timmy Logan's mom.
Are you saying that's okay?
No, I just --
I-I-I don't think
books are anything
to be afraid of.
[ Cellphone vibrating ]
I mean, I think that people have affairs
because they're miserable
in their marriages.
And I don't think you should
judge them for it,
and I certainly don't think
you can blame a book.
[ Vibrating continues ]
What do you think, Tom?
Um
I think Mr.
Whitney
should thank his lucky stars
because Timmy Logan's mom
is way out of his league.
[ Scoffs ] Oh.
Rosa: Call me provincial, but I
for one think it's inappropriate.
I mean, how old is he, anyway?
[ Indistinct conversation ]
[ Door closes ]
Lizzy.
- Have you seen the paper?
- What about it?
Mark Hastings,
US Attorney from Maryland --
the head of the Reynoso cartel.
A week later, he went missing.
I remember.
The Bureau assumed
it was a retribution killing.
Yeah, well, two days ago,
he was found
wandering on a road
in Pennsylvania.
Nobody knows where he's been.
Was he in hiding?
I believe he was held captive,
but not by the Reynoso cartel.
It's all quite a mystery.
They say he's too traumatized
to speak.
But if what I believe
about Hastings is true,
if he has been held captive
all these years,
then it would confirm
that the myth is true --
The Judge is real.
The Judge?
Every culture
has a justice myth,
an avenging angel
who exacts retribution
for the weak and innocent.
Golem for the Jews,
Tu Po for the Chinese.
The Ancient Greeks had Adrestia,
the Goddess of Revenge.
And we have The Judge.
Think of him as a prisoner's
court of last resort.
When your legal appeals
have all been exhausted
and there is no hope left,
you can make one last plea
to The Judge.
What kind of plea?
Prisoners can state their case,
argue their innocence,
explain why
they were convicted unfairly
and who is responsible --
a prosecutor,
a corrupt detective,
maybe an incompetent
public defender.
This demand for justice --
where does it go?
Supposedly,
it's passed among inmates
until it finally reaches
some book depository
at the Federal Penitentiary
in Monroe, Virginia.
- And then?
- Nobody knows for sure.
Nobody's ever met him.
Somehow, the appeals
make their way to The Judge.
He reviews the case,
and if he thinks
you're innocent,
he evens the score.
If freedom or life
were taken unfairly,
he demands the same in return --
an eye for an eye.
Reddington says
Mark Hastings was held captive?
Yes, but not by Reynoso.
He thinks it might've
been payback
for a different case
Hastings prosecuted
Aram?
Leonard Debs --
sentenced to 14 years
for armed robbery
when he was 28.
According to this so-called
Judge, this guy is innocent?
A witness allegedly
came forward at the time
saying Debs
wasn't at the scene.
Hastings
never told the defense.
Ressler: Debs got out
two months ago.
He served 12 years
of his 14-year sentence.
Hastings went missing
Hastings took 12 years away
from Leonard Debs,
so The Judge evened the score.
And Reddington says
there have been others.
A New York homicide detective,
an appellate court judge,
two prosecutors all missing
and presumed dead,
all involved in cases in which
some impropriety was alleged,
which made them targets
for The Judge.
An underground criminal court
of appeals.
We believe that the appeals
are being processed
through a book depository run
by a prison-literacy project.
We pulled the files of everyone
who worked at the depository,
and I think we found something.
Frank Gordon -- a civilian now,
but he's a convicted killer.
He now works
for a prison-literacy project
at their book depository
in Monroe, Virginia.
He takes the letters
from the returned books,
screens them for The Judge.
Find him.
And see if you can
get anything out of him.
Frank's been with us
for almost six years now,
ever since the court
reversed his conviction.
Does his job require
he interact with prisoners?
Well, n-not directly, but he
does respond to their requests.
Our program is one of the many
that provides inmates
with reading materials.
Frank?
Who else knows
Frank stays here?
Is he in some kind of trouble?
What's back there?
Oh, I-I really feel we should
wait for Frank to come back.
It's his space.
It's
Stay here.
Hello?
Mr.
Gordon? FBI.
We'd like to talk to you.
[ Thudding ]
Liz: What is it?
Stay where you are.
Ressler?
You okay?
Ressler!
[ Gunshots ]
He was just there.
Agent Keen -- she fired,
tried to stop him,
but it happened too fast.
He got away.
I set up checkpoints
at all major roads and highways,
sent Frank Gordon's photo
to State, Federal.
You're not gonna believe this.
Pleas from inmates,
all handwritten from prisons
all over the country --
ADX, Marion, Pelican Bay.
And look at this.
Alan Ray Rifkin.
It's a case folder --
research, evidence.
Frank was reviewing trial
transcripts for The Judge.
Alan Ray Rifkin --
American college student,
dropped out, joined the army,
deployed to Afghanistan.
In 2003, he was tried
and convicted
as an enemy combatant --
fought alongside the Taliban.
He's scheduled
for execution tomorrow.
According to the charges,
Rifkin and a few dozen
Taliban fighters
raided an Afghan village,
killing dozens of civilians.
At trial, Rifkin's lawyers
claimed it was friendly fire,
that the American military
destroyed the village,
from the air, mistaking it
for a Taliban outpost.
The military denied it.
So The Judge thinks
Rifkin is innocent.
[ Knock on door ] Guys, that Rifkin
case you were asking about --
the investigating officer
was the Senior FBI Agent
in Afghanistan
at the time --
Harold Cooper.
Cooper: You think
this is a coincidence?
Reddington feeds you The Judge,
and I'm next on
that lunatic'*** list?
- We need to take it seriously.
- No, we don't.
The federal prosecutor
on the case is Tom Connolly.
His reputation speaks for itself.
So should mine.
Rifkin admitted to treason.
We're not saying he's innocent.
But if you or Connolly
are in danger --
What exactly does this so-called
Judge think that we missed?
We don't know yet.
We're reviewing the file now.
Fine.
You do what you need to do.
But I'm telling you,
Alan Ray Rifkin is guilty.
And I for one will lose no sleep
watching him pay
the ultimate price
for his crimes.
Mr.
Rifkin,
my name is Agent Keen.
I'm with the FBI.
Oh, I'd stand and applaud,
but --
Alan, be nice.
I'm sorry, but I was told
Mr.
Rifkin had waived
all representation.
He has.
All of his legal claims
have been exhausted.
Then you are?
Oh, Ruth Kipling,
The Amnesty Collective.
The capital guidelines
state that death-row inmates
are allowed
a designated spiritual adviser.
Okay.
First, let me tell you
that I'm not here
to reconsider your case.
The court rulings are final.
Uh, how's this work,
Agent Keen?
You just assume
that I'm stupid?
I'm not here to see
if you're stupid, Mr.
Rifkin.
I'm here to see
if you're angry --
angry enough to want revenge.
It's my understanding you filed
for a demand of justice
with The Judge.
No, as I said, all of his legal
appeals have been exhausted.
He knows what I mean.
Since when does the FBI
believe in prison-yard myths?
It's a story.
He doesn't exist.
Here's what I will say --
I have a sacred duty to battle
the evil that put me here.
And who put you here?
You read his file.
You know he confessed.
I assure you,
not of my own freewill.
You're saying you were coerced?
I'm saying that I was beaten.
I'm saying that FBI Agent
Harold Cooper --
he beat me under the orders
of Assistant US Attorney
Thomas Connolly.
[ Indistinct conversations,
television chatter ]
Jolene: What's the story with
guys and basketball, anyway?
Honestly, if the Wizards
were playing,
I could stand
in front of my TV naked,
and you know
what my fiancé would say?
"Move.
"
[ Chuckles ] Really?
- [ Chuckles ]
Waiter: - Ma'am?
Uh, Maker's.
Double.
She's having an affair
with Mr.
Whitney.
- Have you talked to him about it?
- Yeah, I have.
Believe me, it's not good,
especially during
parent-teacher conferences
- Ohh!
- because her husband has no clue.
But, you know, that's the job.
I mean, teachers
get to know every part
of their students' lives,
their families.
Some of it
you just have to keep secret.
Are you good at that?
At what?
Keeping secrets.
Where's your wife?
Sh-she couldn't come.
Did you invite her?
I thought --
I thought you had a fiancé.
Oh, I do.
We haven't picked a date yet.
I'd invite you to the wedding,
but I don't think he'd like you.
Why is that?
Isn't it obvious?
You here buying me drinks
while your wife's back home?
I haven't done anything wrong.
[ Moans ]
[ Door opens ]
[ Chuckling ]
Oh, my God.
[ Laughs ]
Hi.
[ Chuckles ]
Oh, my God.
Oh, uh
Oh, God.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Yeah, me too.
You know, actually,
I'm not that sorry.
I'm in room 618.
Yeah.
I'm there now.
Where are we on the Rifkin case?
Understood, but I need to know
that you and your men
will be ready
to grab Connolly and Cooper
if the execution goes down
as scheduled.
Okay, bye.
Kipling: Damn FBI.
Couldn't find their own ***
with a mirror and a GPS.
How the hell did they find you?
I don't know.
Somebody must be talking,
and it's certainly not me.
Oh, Frank, I believe you.
You're a John, not a Judas.
Walk with me.
It's feeding time.
[ Groaning,
coughing in distance ]
Hastings,
the one we released --
do we know if he's talking
to the authorities?
He's not.
His mind's too far gone.
My sources say
he's with his family --
still hasn't spoken a word.
Ah, it's just a matter of time.
About the Rifkin execution --
we're ready to respond, but
Yeah, but what?
Frank, Frank, look at me.
You were innocent.
People like this
put you in jail.
They took 20 years of your life,
But if they're on to us?
If they find us, so be it.
Until then, I'm not gonna stop
the work we're doing.
If Rifkin dies, tell the others
to carry out the sentence.
Just because
you're on the outside now
doesn't mean you can forget.
Good night, mother.
[ Rattling ]
Ressler:
Okay, so, the question is,
why does The Judge
think Rifkin is innocent?
Meera: We've been together
a timeline of events
using the file you found
in Frank Gordon's room,
and we found a problem.
After Rifkin was caught,
Cooper had him flown from Bagram
to Andrews Air Force Base
in Virginia.
From there,
prison transport took them
to a federal holding facility
in Alexandria.
That trip should've taken
At trial, the US Marshal
supervising the transport
said it arrived on schedule.
But look at this --
the event log.
It recorded the actual time
that the Marshal swiped in
to Alexandria.
That trip didn't take
half an hour.
It took 2 1/2 hours.
Why wasn't this presented
at trial?
Another event log was --
one that matched
the 30-minute timeline.
One of the event logs is fake.
We should find the Marshal,
ask him directly.
[ Wind howling ]
William Munson?
Agent Keen.
FBI.
I'm investigating a case
you're connected to.
The defendant
is Alan Ray Rifkin.
Not here.
I don't want
the people I work with
knowing I'm involved in this.
I'm running out of time,
Mr.
Munson.
Alan Ray Rifkin
is running out of time.
I know that.
Why the hell
do you think I came forward?
Came forward?
To whom?
That group,
the one that fights
against the death penalty --
The Amnesty Collective.
You and Cooper, you were
at Andrews when Rifkin landed.
- You drove him?
- Yeah, I was there.
But Cooper and me,
we weren't the only ones.
That prosecutor, Tom Connolly,
he was waiting on the tarmac.
- Connolly was there?
- He was angry.
Said the Rifkin case
was assigned to him.
Kept saying they didn't have
enough to convict.
He was going places, you know,
and he wasn't gonna
wreck his career
by losing
a high-profile case.
You heard this?
He said they needed
a confession.
He told Cooper to pick him up,
take him over
to one of the hangars,
and not let him out
until he admitted it.
Mr.
Munson, did Agent Cooper
physically coerce Rifkin?
"Physically coerce"?
Man, you feds are too much.
He beat him, yeah.
I swept out the entry log,
made the timeline make sense,
and I had Rifkin treated
in his cell
instead of the infirmary
to avoid any record.
Everyone said
he was betraying our country.
But now,
if he's really gonna die
[ Sighs ]
Tom.
Harold.
What are you doing
out this way?
Looking for you, Tom.
We have a problem with Rifkin.
We need to contain this.
I found a flash drive,
and your girl got some stuff.
The last six months,
she's been in Havana,
Port-au-Prince, Miami,
various aliases.
Last September,
she was in Prague.
This Jolene is definitely
moving towards something.
Red
best I can tell,
the girl's tracking someone,
causing trouble.
She's either got
lots of little targets
or one real big one.
[ Door opens, closes ]
We need to talk about Rifkin.
I've already said everything
I have to say on the subject.
Sir, I need to know
whether you --
What's going on?
Agent Keen, this is
US Attorney Tom Connolly.
Harold's been telling me
what a great agent you are.
Dog with a bone.
Sir, may we speak privately?
The thing is,
this Rifkin case --
the court has made
its decision.
Agent Keen, whatever you have
to say to me,
you can say to both of us.
I need to know what happened
at the airport
after you landed with Rifkin.
Rifkin was transferred
to a holding facility,
as documented.
You beat a confession
out of him.
Who told you that?
Your transport log
was doctored.
This is the real log,
which shows
how long Rifkin
was actually at the airport.
There's a two-hour gap.
- Where'd you get that?
- Does it matter?
Let's not play games.
You clearly have a theory.
Let's hear it.
No, I don't have a theory.
I have a witness
who says he heard you
order you to beat
a confession out of Rifkin.
He saw it happen.
I did not railroad
an innocent man.
There were witnesses,
firsthand accounts.
Did you beat him?
Yes.
Agent Keen,
Alan Ray Rifkin deserves
the sentence he received
for his crimes.
He's being transferred
for execution.
We have to stop it
until the court
looks at his confession.
His day in court is over.
He's exhausted his appeals.
Once that happens,
the supreme court is clear.
Why he confessed
or whether he's even guilty
becomes legally irrelevant.
We'll see if
the Federal Clemency Officer
agrees with you.
[ Chuckles ] He won't even
agree to a meeting.
Be careful who you go around
talking to, Agent Keen.
Are you telling me this,
or is he?
The only career you should
worry about is your own.
Warden: Upon arrival
at the execution facility,
the condemned shall be provided
a form BP 199,
in which he will be asked
where his body is to be sent.
Liz: I understand.
No.
He's the Federal
Clemency Officer.
I need to talk to him.
Yes, please have him call me.
Warden: He may have not more
than one spiritual adviser,
two defense attorneys,
and up to five adult friends
or relatives.
Connolly was right.
They don't consider
the event log new evidence,
and even if they did,
the deadline to consider
Rifkin's factual innocence
has passed.
Do they realize
how insane that is?
His innocence
can't be considered?
[ Whimpers ]
[ Breathing heavily ]
I just want to say
I didn't do it.
You're killing an innocent man
here tonight.
Even God won't forgive you
for this.
We're ready.
Good night, mother.
Good night.
Good night.
[ Whirring ]
[ Monitor beeping, flatline ]
We did the right thing.
Yes.
Just not the right way.
Let me ask you something.
That agent, Keen,
the task force.
I mean, I've asked around
on the Hill, Main Justice.
Nobody knows what the hell
it is you do.
I've heard the stories.
They say you guys
are taking down everybody --
people who aren't even
on our radar.
How?
[ Laughs ]
Nothing? Really?
Well, I can tell you this.
When I'm Attorney General
and I get the President
to appoint you
Director of the FBI,
you're gonna tell me
all about it,
the truth about
your secret weapon
[ Elevator bell dings ]
because we both know
you have one.
[ Indistinct shouting ]
[ Grunts ]
The Judge
would like to see you.
An innocent man is dead
because of you,
because you lied.
Alan Ray Rifkin
was a terrorist.
You beat him
to force a confession.
To a crime he committed.
Cooper's been taken.
By whom?
The Judge, we think,
as retribution
for Rifkin's execution.
- Anything?
- Not yet.
- Alan Ray Rifkin?
- We've got nothing!
No license plate,
no surveillance footage.
They could be anywhere by now.
Back up, Lizzy.
Rifkin.
Go back to Rifkin.
Why would The Judge hold Cooper
responsible for his execution?
Because he coerced
Rifkin's confession.
You're certain of that?
Cooper admitted it to me.
How about the guy
The Judge released?
Hastings?
We're getting a court order
to talk to him
over his doctor's objections.
He's worried
about further trauma.
If you ever want
to see Cooper again,
you need to get Hastings
to talk.
Lizzy, I must be going.
Wait.
Did you hear me?
Rifkin was executed --
an eye for an eye.
Cooper is going to die.
[ Cellphone beeps ]
Dembe, you better tell Edward
there's gonna be
a change in flight plan.
Kipling: A woman's son
is dead because of you --
a husband, father, brother,
a good man.
Rifkin was given
every opportunity
to prove his innocence.
Prove to who?
To you?
To the very people who
framed him in the first place?
You know, if you did
your job right,
I wouldn't have to do mine!
How do you plead?
Lady, listen,
this thing you're doing,
th-this -- this is
a horrible mistake.
I said, how do you plead?
I guess I plead
not guilty.
Madame.
[ Chuckles ]
I find you guilty.
[ Banging ]
[ Sighs ]
Red: Richard.
Say something, Richard.
I keep meaning to attend
our academy class reunions,
and I remember how pinched
I look in dinner dress blues.
What the hell do you want?
How's your family?
My wife left me, thanks.
After I was sidelined.
You made a hell of a mess
when you left.
Nobody believed
we couldn't see it coming.
Maybe we helped you.
Maybe we facilitated
your treason.
Even without any evidence,
it was enough
to destroy some careers.
Yes.
Richard, I need to know
about the Rifkin case.
He claims
civilians were fired on
by soldiers from a Black Hawk
that CENTCOM says
it never deployed.
I can't help you.
You were operational
in the Guldara District.
If there were choppers
in the air, you knew about it.
Rooming with you
was the worst thing
that ever happened to me.
I'm offering you
an opportunity, Richard.
The men who want
this information can be
very helpful.
If you help them,
it could put you back on track.
Liz: I'm so sorry,
Mr.
Hastings.
I can't imagine how difficult
this must be for you.
But there are others
still there, being held.
- I need to know where you were held.
Donna: - Enough.
Please.
Just go.
Good night, mother.
No, Mark, it's me.
It's Donna.
Aram, the paper said
Rifkin's last words
at his execution
were "Good night, mother.
"
He said it to his
spiritual adviser, Ruth Kipling.
I just heard Hastings say it.
Okay, Ruth Suzanne Kipling --
single, 62,
attended Vassar College,
and co-founded
the prison rights organization
The Amnesty Collective.
The Marshal that covered up
for Cooper and Connolly --
that's the organization
he reached out to.
Which is how Kipling found out
about the entry-log evidence.
Okay, I've got an address
in Mercer County, Pennsylvania.
I bet that's where
she's holding them.
[ Banging ]
We ready, Frank?
[ Generator turns over ]
[ Electricity crackles ]
[ Grunting ]
Liz: Red.
Lizzy, have you located Harold?
Yes.
We're almost there.
There's been a development.
Kipling:
Thus do I commend the end
into the arms
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the preserver of all mercy
and reality, and the Father --
We got a problem.
Ressler:
Get your men out of here.
Fall back now.
Move! Move! Let's go.
What are they doing?
Why are they moving back?
They want to talk.
Ruth, this is not a tactic.
I'm not trying to negotiate.
Yes, new information
on the Rifkin case.
Someone with high-level access
is en route.
[ Banging ]
[ Laughs ]
Of course.
A woman.
If you came to advocate
on behalf of Agent Cooper --
I didn't.
I came to advocate
on behalf of you.
After devoting your life
to a pursuit of the truth,
to making things right,
it would be such a shame
in your last act
to get it so wrong.
This is
a classified Pentagon file
on the Rifkin case.
In the spirit
of full disclosure,
it's a felony for me to have it
or for you to see it.
But under the circumstances,
who are we to quibble?
It states
that on October 3, 2002,
US military intelligence
officers deployed a unit
by helicopter
to the village of Guldara
the Kabul Province
of Afghanistan
to extract an asset whose
identity had been compromised.
The Taliban in the area
with whom Alan Ray Rifkin
had aligned himself
got word of the informant
and advanced on the village.
But they were too late.
The boys had extracted
their asset and left.
Angry and suspicious of others,
the Taliban and Rifkin
set fire to the village
and executed inhabitants.
Dozens of women and children
were killed at the hands
of the Taliban in response
to US military intelligence
in the area.
I guess,
fearing more headlines,
the Pentagon wanted no
association with the incident,
so they covered it up.
That is what happened.
That is the truth.
That's why you're not gonna
light up Agent Cooper today.
Alan Ray Rifkin wasn't executed
because of a beating
or because of a cover-up.
He was executed
because of the truth.
Now, you and I
could talk for days
about the whys and why-nots
of an execution,
but at the end of it all,
in the final moment,
the only irrefutable fact
is you better be right.
And I'm betting
you're not so sure.
How could you possibly know
what I'm thinking?
Mark Hastings.
You let him go
because he had served his time,
because this has always been
about justice in your eyes,
not blind revenge.
The day you started this,
you knew
it would inevitably end,
that when you released
your first prisoner,
you would get caught.
You don't want to diminish
your legacy of righteousness
because of him
which is why
you're going to surrender.
Harold, don't look so glum.
Come on.
[ Speaks indistinctly ]
I thought you were gone.
What happened?
My secret weapon.
Five prosecutors,
a federal judge, two cops --
there were 10 people
in that bunker.
What's this?
Pleas we found
in Frank Gordon's room
from prisoners
all over the country.
Send it to the
Justice Department for review.
Walk with me?
Agent Keen,
I regret the methods
that we employed
to obtain Rifkin's confession.
If you feel obligated
to report it, I understand.
I think we've had
enough judgment for today.
You knew this was gonna happen
with me, The Judge.
If you thought
that by saving me
you'd get some kind
of leverage --
Harold, a war is coming.
I believe the incursion
of this facility
and the rather sudden
disappearance of Diane Fowler
were just the beginning,
and I'm certain that things
will get considerably worse
before they get better.
You want my help.
Not now.
Later.
But when I do,
I hope you'll remember
what happened today.
- Is that it?
- No.
I'd like you to reach out
to Admiral Richard Abraham,
he was very helpful in resolving
the matters of the day.
He's had a rough go of it
for quite some time.
Abraham.
Yes.
Admiral Richard.
He's a good man.
I wonder if you could
pull a few strings.
I'll see what I can do.
[ Footsteps approaching ]
[ Car door opens ]
[ Sighs ]
What have you found?
Cowboy: Looks like your girl has
been following your every move.
You want me to bring her in?
No.
I believe she's finishing
an operation.
I'd like to see
how it plays out.
[ "Jolene" plays ]
d Jolene, Jolene d
d Jolene, Jolene d
d I'm begging of you,
please don't take my man d
d Jolene, Jolene d
d Jolene, Jolene d
d please don't take him
just because you can d
d your beauty
is beyond compare d
d with flaming locks
of auburn hair d
d with ivory skin
and eyes of emerald green d
d your smile is like
a breath of spring d
d your voice is soft
like summer rain d
d and I cannot compete with you,
Jolene d
d Jole-e-e-ne d
[ Door lock beeps ]
Hey.
Hey.
I'm glad you came.
[ Chuckles ]
I'm sorry.
I can't.
That's why I came here,
to tell you
that I can't do this
because I love my wife.
Wrong answer.
Elizabeth Keen is not your wife,
she's your target.
[ Scoffs ]
She's my what?
What is this?
Did they send you?
Really? To what?
Test me? [ Chuckles ]
I told you that I was
in love with her
because that is exactly
what I am supposed to be.
That is my job.