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The InBetween Season 1 Episode 9- The Devils Refugee Full Movie
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00:00Previously, on The In-Between.
00:06I can't wake up my mom.
00:07The woman I saw was dead.
00:09He'd taken out her eyes.
00:10Her name was Ed Rovin.
00:11Texas, mid-90s.
00:13Six women murdered.
00:14Same MO, same signature.
00:15Executed October 2nd, 2005.
00:17Rovin screwed up when he left his last victim's son alive.
00:20Mark Waterman told the cops everything Rovin did to his mom.
00:23He couldn't save her and he blamed himself.
00:25So he starts to create violent fantasies in which he's like Rovin.
00:27We're not a team.
00:28I want an hour to The In-Between.
00:31You'll go help me, Cottontail.
00:49Hey, we're closed.
00:58Last call was half an hour ago.
01:02Hey, you don't have to go home, but you can't stay here.
01:11Millie?
01:12Find me.
01:28Find me.
01:42Okay.
02:00I understand.
02:00Thank you so much for calling, doctor.
02:04Why is the doctor calling so early?
02:05He had some news.
02:09He took a look at my most recent film and the steroids aren't shrinking the tumor quite as fast as he'd like.
02:20I see.
02:22So, what does that mean?
02:24Look, we knew that the surgery was inevitable.
02:27Yeah, but not this soon.
02:29Well, he also had some good news.
02:32Dr. Ramona Ashcroft, who's one of the best brain surgeons in the country, said she's available to fly in in the next few weeks to perform the procedure.
02:43Okay.
02:43Oh, let's not get into it right now.
02:46Hey, guys.
02:47Hey, sweetie.
02:48How's it going?
02:49Hey.
02:50I need a favor.
02:51Yeah?
02:53Can you look into a cold case for me?
02:55Yeah, sure.
02:56Do you have a name?
02:58Millicent Pierce.
02:58I saw her last night at the bar, and then I spent a few hours looking through missing persons websites until I found her photo.
03:06She disappeared in the summer of 1985.
03:10She wants me to find her.
03:121985?
03:13That's almost ten years before you were born.
03:15Yeah.
03:16There were other things, too.
03:17There was a fishing boat and rope and another dead woman.
03:21Okay.
03:22Well, look, I'm going into the office early, so I'll look up the file.
03:24I'll give you a call.
03:27I'll see you later.
03:28Did we catch a case?
03:33Millicent Pierce disappeared August 29th, 1985.
03:38A cold case.
03:39So no body, no forensics, not to mention a 34-year lag time for witnesses' memories to fade.
03:45What are you thinking?
03:46Re-interview the parents?
03:47I can handle that.
03:49But if you would mind, I could use some help with these files.
03:51What files?
03:52These files.
03:53Thanks, fellas.
03:54Anytime, detective.
03:55I did a quick search.
03:56In 1985, every detective on Millie's case was working at least two other missing women.
04:01Mostly sex workers and runaways.
04:03Was Millie a runaway?
04:04No, but she was pegged as one because she snuck out of the house post-curfew.
04:07Never came home.
04:08But she was a good student.
04:09She was close to her family.
04:10No.
04:10What's the connection?
04:14Cassie.
04:15She said when she saw Millie, there was another girl there as well.
04:19Now, it could be they were taken by the same person.
04:22These seven women went missing the same year as Millie.
04:25And like her, the bodies were never found.
04:27A task force worked on the cases as long as they could back in 85, but eventually the trail went cold.
04:32The detectives retired.
04:35Files were sent to storage.
04:38These women were forgotten.
04:40And if he was never caught, whoever took them could still be active.
04:45I've asked unis to gather all missing persons files for the last 34 years.
04:49But basically, any woman that disappeared in that time and hasn't been found is potentially a victim.
04:54Especially prostitutes.
04:55Well, I'll check with Vice.
04:57Seeing if any sex workers have recently gone missing.
04:59I've already done that.
05:00According to them, this woman, Becky Russell, disappeared just five days ago.
05:06Last seen down near Seatack.
05:08The airport's popular with working girls.
05:10Yeah.
05:10A friend of hers said the last time she saw her, she was getting into a car with an older guy.
05:14Didn't see his face.
05:15Well, I guess it goes without saying that if he's been active for over 30 years, he'd best be described as older.
05:21He'd be in his 50s or 60s by now.
05:23Cassie said Millie wants to be found.
05:25What if she's also trying to help us bring down a serial killer?
05:33So you're saying seven other women went missing this same year as Millie?
05:36Mm-hmm.
05:37All prostitutes.
05:38All last seen near Seatack.
05:39Asante and I are looking into it.
05:44That's her.
05:45This is the woman I saw in the fishing net.
05:47Tara Burns.
05:49She went missing two days before Millie.
05:51All right.
05:53You ready for this?
05:54Grieving relatives?
05:56It's never easy.
05:58I understand.
05:59What did you tell them about me?
06:01I told them you were my daughter.
06:03You saw Millie's case on the internet and you asked me to look into it.
06:06But they're not going to tell me anything that they haven't already said to the original detectives a million times.
06:10If there's any new information to glean in there, you'll be the one getting it.
06:15From Millie.
06:16We were surprised to get your call, detective.
06:23It's been a long time since anyone's been interested in looking for Millie.
06:27Very long time.
06:29I can't make any promises.
06:31We understand.
06:32It's been 34 years and if Millie were still alive, she...
06:36If my sister were still alive, she would have come back to us by now.
06:41You don't expect miracles?
06:42We just want to give our daughter a proper burial.
06:46She shouldn't be out there.
06:48Out there alone.
06:49We'll do everything we can.
06:51The night Millie disappeared, you thought she'd slipped out of the house to meet someone?
06:56Earlier that summer, I caught her sneaking out the back door.
06:59She was all dressed up.
07:00She had a date, I'm sure of it.
07:02And she never mentioned to you the name of the person that she was seeing?
07:06No.
07:07None of her friends knew either.
07:09Millie wasn't supposed to be dating.
07:10I mean, we had her on a strict curfew.
07:14But...
07:15Our daughter was headstrong.
07:18Independent.
07:19She wanted one of those Walkmans, you know?
07:22Henry told her that he would buy her one for Christmas if she kept her grades up.
07:27But she couldn't wait.
07:29She...
07:29She made the money herself.
07:32Babysitting.
07:33I swear I never saw her without those headphones.
07:35Music playing all the time.
07:37Millie didn't walk.
07:38She danced.
07:40Everywhere she went.
07:42Is the Walkman still here?
07:44They think she was wearing it.
07:46When...
07:48Anyway, we never found it.
07:52Everything else in her room is exactly as she left it.
07:56Would it be okay if...
07:57That is, do you think I could look in Millie's room?
08:03Upstairs.
08:04Second door on the left.
08:20You had style, Millie Pierce.
08:23Yes.
08:25Let's go.
08:26Yes.
08:35Okay.
08:35Okay.
08:36Okay.
08:36Okay.
08:36Okay.
08:37Okay.
08:38Well, nothing you made.
08:57How about you?
08:58I'm not sure.
09:00Do you remember the Peter Rabbit song?
09:02The one I said would be important in the Shannon Bell case?
09:05Yeah.
09:05I heard it again.
09:07Up in Millie's room.
09:10Mark Waterman wasn't even alive when Millie disappeared.
09:12No, but Ed Roven was.
09:16What do you know about Ed Roven?
09:18The night you caught Waterman, Roven came to visit me.
09:23Just the once?
09:26No.
09:27Why didn't you tell me?
09:28I knew you'd be upset.
09:29Oh.
09:30But he's been not unhelpful a couple of times.
09:34The guy knows his way around the underworld.
09:37Putting aside my keen discomfort with this for a moment, what could Ed Roven have to do with Millie's disappearance?
09:42He was killing women in Texas.
09:43Yes, but not until the 1990s.
09:46Right?
09:48I don't know what it means.
09:49It might be nothing, but I don't think it's nothing.
09:54I'll look into it.
09:56Is there anything else you want to tell me?
09:57Yes, uh, I love you.
10:04Bye.
10:07You got me where you want me.
10:09You better stay out of my penis, little girl!
10:26You think all these women were grabbed by the same guy?
10:44Oh, we think the killer was concentrating on high-risk victims.
10:47Prostitutes and runaways.
10:49Any bodies turn up?
10:49No.
10:50None of these women have ever been found alive or dead.
10:53We're still going through files, but looks like our guy has a type.
10:56Young, Caucasian, brunette.
10:59All of these women were last seen near Sea Tech.
11:01Looks like that was his hunting ground.
11:02Becky Russell Fister profile.
11:04Yeah, but Millie Pierce doesn't.
11:05She wasn't a sex worker.
11:07She had light eyes, light hair.
11:08Yeah, that's true.
11:09But Millie disappeared two days after Tara Burns was last seen, August 27th, 1985.
11:14Could be a coincidence.
11:15Or maybe Millie was an outlier.
11:17Then how do you explain the fact that these eight women and Becky Russell disappeared 34 years apart?
11:23We don't think he quit in 1985.
11:26We think he just slowed down enough to stay under the radar.
11:28Becky's suspected abductor was thought to be in his 50s or 60s.
11:32Unis are going through missing persons reports from the last 34 years.
11:36How many?
11:3815 women so far.
11:39I just hung up with Becky Russell's sister.
11:43Their mother's sick, and Becky was helping take care of her.
11:46The family's sure she wouldn't have left town without telling anybody.
11:50If you're right about this, and there's a serial who's been operating under the nose of the police department for over 30 years,
11:57I want us to be the ones who catch this guy.
12:00Keep digging.
12:01Find out everything you possibly can about these missing women, and keep me posted on Becky Russell.
12:06Let's go.
12:16Cassie's sure Ed Rovin was involved in Millie's disappearance.
12:19Yeah.
12:19But obviously he couldn't have taken Becky Russell.
12:22What are the odds two serials were operating in Seattle at the same time?
12:26It's happened before.
12:27In the 1970s, Santa Cruz had three.
12:29So maybe Rovin's responsible for Millie, and her other women, the prostitutes, belong to our unknown serial.
12:35Look at this.
12:37Bank statements in the early 80s show that Rovin was mostly in the southern states.
12:43Until April 85, the cash is a check in Colorado.
12:47He was heading northwest.
12:49Mm-hmm.
12:50After that, the trail goes cold until he shows up back in Texas almost eight months later.
12:55So it's possible he was in Seattle the summer of 1985.
12:58Right.
12:58Maybe he was working off the books.
13:00He's living out of pocket him.
13:04Cassie said she saw a fishing boat.
13:07And a net.
13:09Could be he worked a fishing trawler for cash.
13:12Let's get down to the docks.
13:13Last chance, Cotton Tail.
13:32Walk away.
13:35How'd you know Millie, Ed?
13:37Got a piece of fluff in your ears?
13:38I said it ain't your business.
13:42Her parents want her back.
13:45It's their business, isn't it?
13:47She doesn't belong with you.
13:49It's fine where she is.
13:51She's in a loveless spot.
13:53Millie disagrees.
13:56You've seen her.
13:58You said you wanted out of the in-between.
14:02Wanted to do some good so you could move on.
14:05Here's your chance.
14:06Where aren't you taking it?
14:11What will I learn about you when I find Millie?
14:14Nothing.
14:16Because you won't find her.
14:18Ever.
14:20Now you leave it be.
14:22Or you'll what?
14:27That's what I thought.
14:28We're just about to close up.
14:54And we'd just like to ask some questions.
14:58How long have you worked here?
14:59Since right after high school.
15:01Do you by any chance recognize this man?
15:04Ed Roven.
15:05Is he a fisherman?
15:07Was.
15:07This would have been in the mid-1980s.
15:09This is what he'd look like then.
15:12Hey, Frank.
15:13Can you come here a sec?
15:15It's Frank Blair.
15:16It's my boss.
15:18Good evening, sir.
15:19What can I do for it?
15:20Do you ever remember seeing this man?
15:22Would have been 1985.
15:24Sorry, these guys all blend together, especially if it was that long ago.
15:27But we've got records of every vessel that's come and gone from this port since the 1950s.
15:32Some of them have the names of crew members.
15:34And we need May to December 85.
15:36All right.
15:36Give me a minute to pull the files.
15:38Thank you, sir.
16:09What the hell's going on here?
16:17Help me, please.
16:20Oh, God damn.
16:24You think I was coming to save you?
16:27Remember now.
16:28I said the next one's mine.
16:29So you don't know who the other guy was?
16:40I couldn't see his face.
16:42It was horrible.
16:43They were so cruel.
16:45They talked about the next one.
16:46Roven said it was his turn.
16:48They must have been working together.
16:50For that summer, at least.
16:52Right.
16:53The serial killer hunting is Ed Roven's mentor.
16:57This is the guy you said was taking prostitutes?
16:59Roven went to Texas at the end of the summer.
17:01After that, we found reports for 31 more missing women in Seattle.
17:06Caucasian, brunette.
17:07All the victims were prostitutes.
17:08Runaways are homeless.
17:09Every one of them was last seen down your sea tank.
17:12The last woman we found who fit the profile, Becky Russell, she went missing five days ago.
17:18Maybe this is why Roven doesn't want us looking for Millie.
17:21He's protecting his friend.
17:30Hey.
17:31I've gone through the paperwork from the dockmaster's office.
17:34You saw that, Roven?
17:35No.
17:36But the summer Millie disappeared, there was a private boat moored on the marina called Acquiesce.
17:40It stayed there for five months and left, two days after Millie disappeared.
17:44Something special about that boat?
17:46The captain, Amos Scott.
17:48He retired to Fedago Island.
17:49I sent him a photo of Millie, but he didn't recognize her.
17:52But he did remember Ed Roven.
17:54Said Roven worked for him that whole summer.
17:57Thanks for coming in, Captain Scott.
17:59Well, it's not many things get me over to the mainland these days, but a call from the cops is one of them.
18:04Captain, Detective Asante said you remembered this man.
18:07Yep.
18:09That's Eddie.
18:11Signed on to my crew sometime in 85, I guess.
18:17Didn't stay long, though.
18:18How come?
18:19The way Eddie was, he was a bit off.
18:23Tell you the truth, he gave us all the heebie-jeebies.
18:25I was glad to get rid of him at the end of the season.
18:28Did Ed have any friends?
18:30Yeah, he spent most of his time with his buddy of his from town.
18:33What the hell was his name now?
18:35Can you describe him?
18:37Yeah, he's dark hair, tan, a bit of a salesman.
18:42Always ready with a glad hand and the short guys, you know what I mean?
18:47Worked in construction.
18:48I think he got Eddie a few jobs off the books.
18:50I remember one time Eddie barbed my truck and a few hundred bucks against his salary to go bail this guy out of jail.
18:58Did Eddie say what the charge was?
19:00Solicitation.
19:01This guy picked up a prostitute down by Sea Tector.
19:05It wasn't until 1984 that the brass finally convinced the city to prioritize arresting John, who's over working girls.
19:14Well, gives us a nice pool of suspects to wade through.
19:18It's mostly out-of-towners, guys at their bachelor party.
19:21Look at this.
19:22You get something?
19:25Frank Blair.
19:27What, the dockmaster?
19:28Well, he is now, but yes, look at this.
19:29Back in 85, he was working in construction.
19:35Arrested for solicitation on July 1st, 1985.
19:39Bailed out by one Edward Roven.
19:42Frank Blair is Ed Roven's mentor.
19:51Frank Blair, Seattle PD.
19:53Help me!
19:55Help me!
19:57Help!
19:58Help!
20:01Go, go, go, go, go!
20:05Help me, stop where you are!
20:07Open it.
20:13Please.
20:13Please, you're safe.
20:14I'm clear, detective.
20:15You're safe.
20:16Help!
20:16Help!
20:27Hey, kid, it's me.
20:28Hey!
20:29What's up?
20:30We found Ed Roven's mentor.
20:31Guy named Frank Blair.
20:32What about Becky Russell?
20:34She's pretty banged up, but she's still alive.
20:37And Millie?
20:38CSU is in Blair's yard now, using ground penetrating radar.
20:42They think there are at least seven bodies buried there.
20:45If they find Millie, I want to be there.
20:47Well, we're at the precinct now.
20:48We're booking Blair for murder.
20:49Meet me here.
20:50I'll drive you over to Blair's.
20:51Okay.
20:52I just finished my shift.
20:53I'll be there in 15.
20:53He told me what you are.
21:02He told me to take your eyes.
21:04You're a witch.
21:20He told me you have to be stopped.
21:23Hey.
21:35Hey, girl.
21:37Are you sure you're all right?
21:38Yeah.
21:39I'm okay.
21:42I guess that pepper spray keychain I brought you came in handy after all.
21:46You're gloating.
21:47Really?
21:48No.
21:49I'm just glad you're safe.
21:50Did they arrest the guy?
21:52Yeah, he's got multiple assault priors, a long history of mental illness.
21:55Looks like you're in the wrong place at the wrong time.
21:59I'm not so sure.
22:00What do you mean?
22:02I've seen him before.
22:05With Roven, they were talking.
22:07Are you saying Roven got someone to attack you?
22:10The guy called me a witch.
22:11Said he wanted to take out my eyes.
22:13That's pretty Roven-specific.
22:20I'm probably just paranoid.
22:24Roven's a ghost.
22:25I mean, when he talks to people, they can't hear him.
22:29Unless they're like you.
22:31Right?
22:34CSU found 13 bodies at Blair's cabin so far.
22:37Preliminary IDs came in for the women who disappeared in 1985, including Tara Burns.
22:43Wow.
22:43A lot of grateful families are finally getting answers about their missing daughters and sisters.
22:49Did they find Millie?
22:52There's no sign of her at Blair's cabin.
22:56If Millie was taken the same week as Tara killed by the same man, then it stands to reason that they would be buried together.
23:03Frank Blair's got a lawyer and he's talking.
23:05He says he doesn't know where Millie is.
23:08Can I see him?
23:09Roven killed Millie.
23:13I'm sure of it.
23:14If I get close to his best friend, maybe I can get something off him.
23:20My client has agreed to cooperate.
23:22He can help close over 60 cold cases today.
23:25You keen to make a quick deal, Frank?
23:27I had a good run.
23:29We know you were friends with Ed Roven.
23:31The only reason you gave us the ship's manifest is because you knew we wouldn't find his name on any of the crew list.
23:39You didn't think that we'd look for him on private boats?
23:42Track down retired captains?
23:45You're thorough.
23:46I'll give you that.
23:47We know you and Ed Roven took Millie Pierce.
23:52I told you already.
23:53I don't know nothing about that little bitch.
23:55Pick one of the 60 other cases my client is willing to confess to, detective.
23:59Right after we get an answer on this one.
24:01Where is Millie?
24:05You're asking the wrong guy, detective.
24:08The only man with all those answers.
24:11He's long dead.
24:21He'll talk.
24:22They always do.
24:22He doesn't know where Millie is.
24:25I think Ed Roven took her somewhere.
24:27He's the only one who knows.
24:28And that is why he's so sure we'll never find her.
24:31And we won't.
24:32Unless.
24:33Unless what?
24:36How do I question Roven?
24:38Like, get him to tell me what he knows?
24:40It's not that simple.
24:43Detectives go through years of training before they sit down to interrogate serials.
24:46Yeah, we don't have that kind of time.
24:47Break it down for me.
24:48Well, there are a couple of simple techniques you can try.
24:54You can ask him if he has to do it.
24:56I'm not throwing Cassie into a game of psychological cat and mouse with Ed Roven.
24:59I can handle myself.
25:01He's not your average visitor, Cassie.
25:05Spectral or not, he is capable of harming you in ways that go beyond physical.
25:08We told Millie's family we would do everything we could to find her.
25:11And we will.
25:13Asante and myself.
25:17So it's fine when you need my help with a case.
25:20But when it's the other way around and I come to you, I get shut down?
25:25You need to decide how you see me, Tom.
25:29Am I the little girl you want to protect?
25:31Or am I the woman who helps you solve crimes?
25:34You can't have it both ways.
25:50I'm going to head home, grab a shower.
25:53And I was thinking on the way I'd stop at council.
25:56Talk to Cassie.
25:59Sure.
25:59Asante, I've worked my share of cereals, but never a copycat until Mark Waterman.
26:08Would you say he was fairly typical?
26:10Typical?
26:13No.
26:14Waterman was a special case.
26:16I chalk it up to him having an up-close-and-personal relationship with Roven.
26:19Saw him work firsthand.
26:21But he was more dedicated to Roven's M.O. and signature than any copycat I've ever seen.
26:26I mean, their kills were almost identical.
26:30Why do you ask?
26:31I'm just curious.
26:34I'm keeping you.
26:43All right, but you're sure Roven can't hear us?
26:46Yeah, we're good.
26:48I can feel when he's here and when he isn't.
26:51And right now he isn't, so.
26:53It's good to know the universe has your back a bit and all this.
26:55Yeah.
26:57Where do we start?
27:00Let's talk about Roven.
27:01You know, a guy like that, he needs to feel that he's in control.
27:04That he's the smartest person in the room.
27:07And you have to go in there and rock his confidence.
27:09You have to make him give you the information you need.
27:13I've already tried asking him.
27:14You were feeding his ego instead of attacking it.
27:18It's not that psychopaths have no feelings.
27:20They just have no empathy for anyone but themselves.
27:21Now, you can get to Roven, it just has to be about his needs.
27:25It's not yours and not Millie's.
27:29I mean, challenge him.
27:30Push him.
27:32Make Roven prove he's smarter and better than you by giving you what you want.
27:36You want me to piss him off?
27:40In a nutshell, yeah.
27:43Look, it's a dangerous move and I won't lie and say that I know exactly how Roven's going to react because I don't.
27:49But based on his profile, it's the one that will best get a reaction.
27:55Right.
27:56Okay, I can do that.
27:59So what have you got in your arsenal?
28:01I think he cares about Millie.
28:04When he realized I'd seen her, he seemed jealous.
28:07Great.
28:08Use that.
28:09Lift that rock and you'll see all the squirmy bugs that run through his brain.
28:12Uh, there's something else.
28:16There's something I wouldn't mention otherwise.
28:19You look like Millie.
28:21I don't think he's hanging around you just because you can see and hear him.
28:25Gross.
28:28Anything else?
28:30There's this quote by Frederick Nietzsche.
28:34We used to say at the Bureau,
28:36if you gaze long into an abyss,
28:39the abyss also gazes into you.
28:42Ed Roven is the abyss.
28:47Don't be careful.
28:49I promise.
28:52Hey.
28:57Anytime.
28:57Here goes nothing.
29:13Peter Rabbit in the little boy blue.
29:17Living in the price with the Mr. Magoo.
29:20I don't mean to die with his trusty gun.
29:24He goes.
29:26Everybody run.
29:27Peter Rabbit.
29:28Peter Rabbit.
29:29Peter Rabbit.
29:33Peter Rabbit.
29:35He'll be half of the law.
29:40Peter Rabbit.
29:42Hey.
30:05We need to talk.
30:06You're playing with fire, girl.
30:12Careful you don't burn your fingers.
30:14Did you hear about your buddy, Frank?
30:17He's telling the cops everything.
30:20Says he killed more women than Ted Bundy.
30:23Says they'll be finding bodies for years.
30:26Not Millie, though?
30:28No.
30:29Because she was too special to go into that pit behind Frank's house.
30:33You didn't want that for her.
30:35You're sweet on her.
30:37You think that loving Millie made you human?
30:40Made you normal?
30:42But that's just a fake out.
30:45A con.
30:47You're no better than Frank.
30:49You couldn't control yourself.
30:52You're pathetic.
30:55Careful now.
30:58Do I remind you of her, Eddie?
31:01Is that why you started coming around?
31:04Because I look like the girl you lost.
31:07I don't want to stop.
31:08Is it the eyes?
31:10Or the hair?
31:11Me?
31:12Mm?
31:13You didn't lose Millie, Ed.
31:16You killed her.
31:17And you enjoyed it.
31:20Just like you'd kill me.
31:22If you could.
31:25You're thinking about it.
31:28Look at you.
31:30Just dying to wrap those hands around my throat and squeeze.
31:38But you can't hurt me.
31:40Anna.
31:43I'll show you.
31:45I'll show you what I did to her.
31:48I'll show you everything.
31:50I'll show you what I did to her.
31:51Do it then.
31:54Come on, you coward!
31:55Come on, you coward!
31:55Come on!
32:11Pretty, ain't she?
32:12And the way she looked at me with those emerald eyes of hers.
32:23She didn't know you were a killer.
32:25Not yet, I wasn't.
32:27Never killed anything, didn't have four legs and a brain
32:30the size of a plum.
32:33When I was with Millie, I didn't think about that.
32:37And when you were with Frank?
32:41Well, now, that was a different story.
32:45That's the summer I fell in love with Millie.
32:47In the summer I discovered who I was.
32:51Oh, help me.
32:56Oh, Cartoon Taylor, you think I was going to save you?
33:01I don't know, you said the next one's mine.
33:04Frank showed me a whole new world.
33:06It was as dark as Millie's was light.
33:11I could have gone on like that forever.
33:13Spending my days with Millie, my nights with Frank.
33:22I had everything I wanted.
33:25It was Frank who said I had to choose.
33:29When I couldn't, I guess you chose for me.
33:32Help me!
33:34Help me!
33:35Help me!
33:36Help me!
33:37Help me!
33:38Help me!
33:39Help me!
33:40Help!
33:41Help!
33:42No!
33:43Stop!
33:44Please, no!
33:45Stop, please!
33:46Millie swore she wouldn't tell.
34:01She just wanted to live.
34:03In that moment, she promised me anything, but I knew she was lying.
34:12I couldn't stand her staring at me like that, begging, pleading.
34:30Those pretty eyes of us were almost enough to sweet-talk me out of it.
34:37Almost.
34:38You didn't take out her eyes?
34:40No, ma'am.
34:42But I never gave another girl a chance to change my mind.
34:46You're never gonna find Millie.
34:49Never.
34:50You okay, little cotton-tail?
34:55Get away from me.
34:57Get away!
35:11Hey.
35:26You away?
35:31Never better.
35:37I think I know where Millie is.
35:39Rovan wanted to remember her when she was happy.
35:43He told me it was a lovely spot.
35:47It's where they met.
35:51It looks like it's gonna be a long day.
36:07The ground's frozen in place,
36:09and after 30 years of soil displacement,
36:11moisture, decomposition...
36:14Don't get my hopes up.
36:16I've got it.
36:21I just, uh, wanted to check in on him.
36:32Thanks.
36:36You weren't kidding about the abyss,
36:40what those women went through.
36:43I know it wasn't happening in the moment,
36:45and there was nothing I could do to save them.
36:48I just wanted to look away, shut my eyes.
36:54Millie, she came to me and she asked for my help, so...
36:59I forced myself to watch...
37:03when he killed her.
37:07She was just so scared.
37:09And even though she couldn't see me,
37:11I guess I was hoping...
37:13that the universe would...
37:17somehow find a way to connect us,
37:19so that...
37:21in that moment...
37:24she'd know she wasn't alone.
37:26Sounds crazy.
37:28It doesn't.
37:30You did a great thing.
37:32GPR said on something about 30 feet from the gazebo.
37:38Down by the trees, but it's getting dark.
37:40We're gonna have to come back in the morning.
37:42I guess Millie's waited this long, so...
37:51I'll see what we can do.
37:53I got something.
38:17We came as soon as we got your call.
38:36Is she here?
38:38Did you find her?
38:40She's here.
38:42Where are you?
38:45It's him.
38:48That's Millie's.
38:51You know who did this.
38:56We believe the man was executed many years ago.
38:59We can talk about it when you're ready.
39:03Thank you...
39:08for bringing our little girl home.
39:11This way, please.
39:15This way, please.
39:41Time is for our life'sound.
39:44This way, please.
39:46Unless you're...
39:48To see yourself.
39:49We might wait to breathe.
39:51Never to see yourself.
39:52You live in the tent.
39:54No!
39:56No garbage!
39:57No garbage!
39:58NoΡΡ‚ΡŒ!
39:59No garbage!
40:00No garbage!
40:02No!
40:03No garbage!
40:04No garbage!
40:05No garbage!
40:06No garbage!
40:07No garbage.
40:08But it's true!
40:09All C-Block inmates prepare for yard detail.
40:19Mr. Waterman.
40:21Detective Hackett.
40:23This is a surprise.
40:28I hear you're pleading insanity.
40:31The big defense lawyers were lining up to work for me pro bono.
40:35The headline-grabbing case, they say.
40:37Apparently, I have PTSD from witnessing Ed Rovin kill my mother.
40:44And that drove you to kill?
40:46Allegedly.
40:47Did you ever see Ed Rovin after that night?
40:52Did you ever hear his voice?
40:54At the trial?
40:56What about after he was executed?
40:57That's an odd question.
40:59How would I be able to see and hear a dead man?
41:01I've heard of things like that.
41:02The way you murdered Shannon Bell was very similar to Ed Rovin's work.
41:08Beyond copycat, really.
41:10It's almost like he's whispering in your ear, telling you what to do.
41:17That's crazy.
41:22Are we done?
41:23Yeah, we're done.
41:30I'll see you at court.
41:32I'll be testifying for the prosecution.
41:41Come on.
41:41Tell you what, son.
42:02It might be about time we bust you out of here.
42:05I'll be testifying for the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution of the prosecution
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