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[pounding]
[dog barking in distance]
Mickey: Okay!
Harder! Harder! Don't stop!
Don't ever stop! Keep going!
Yes! Yes! Yes!
This ain't some fancy workout,
girls, and it sure ain't yoga.
My workout will get you in shape.
You'll become a fighting machine.
You work out with me, and I'll
turn you into one tough broad.
We're doing it all here.
Come on.
Work out.
See her form?
See what she's doing? Yes! Yes!
You are one tough broad!
[distorted shouting]
Enough already.
[sighs]
You're only gonna be gone
for three days.
You're pregnant.
You're vitamin-ing for two.
Do we need to revisit the pictures
of the iron-deficient spleen?
I'm so excited for your
medical examiner's convention.
Is there anything I can do that
will help you get out the door?
- Take your pyridoxine.
- Is it the one that looks
like Fred Flintstone
or Barney Rubble?
[door opens]
- I'm gonna miss you.
- I'm gonna miss you, too.
Mwah!
But I'm excited I'm gonna get
to spend some one-on-one
time with Jane.
[grunts]
[grunts]
So, there will be
a temporary fill-in M.
E.
And Susie will be available
at the crime lab.
And, of course,
I'm always available by phone.
- Day or night.
- Everything is gonna be fine.
Yeah, but,
I mean, I don't know.
What if something goes wrong
with the house?
Or we have another big case?
Maybe I should just stay.
I thought you were really
looking forward to this.
I was.
But ?
Graywoods casino.
- Food by Wolfgang Puck.
- Oh.
- Table magic by David Blaine.
- What?
Sounds incredibly awesome.
I know.
Way better than my convention.
What? The one you hosted?
It was a big hit.
Yeah, but it just wasn't fun.
Well, medical-examiner conventions
aren't supposed to be fun.
That's not the point.
They're
supposed to be educational.
Oh! [gasps]
Andrea Bocelli.
[inhales sharply]
Double hubba-hubba.
[chuckles]
Ooh!
I'm marrying you off
before Maura gets back.
Good luck.
[laughs]
[cellphones ring, vibrate]
- Rizzoli.
- Isles.
Yes.
I'll be right out.
Okay.
I'm on my way.
- Cab.
- Homicide.
Ohh!
- Maybe I should stay.
- Go to the convention.
Save a life.
Okay, we're walking.
We're moving.
We're going.
See.
You're having fun already.
5x06 - Knockout
[indistinct conversations]
- Sergeant Korsak.
- Morning, Jenkins.
Guy just left this for you.
Bobby Symanski.
[cellphone vibrates]
Korsak.
I'll be right there.
- Hey.
- Hey.
The temp M.
E.
is on his way.
Deceased is Judith Barnett, 40.
Multiple stab wounds on her back.
Weapon?
[camera shutter clicks]
Uh
Jane: Two round blood smears
on either side of her,
- so the killer was kneeling over her.
- No sign of forced entry.
Neighbor saw a white truck
gunning away from the curb.
- License plate?
- No.
And no description of the driver.
Neighbor saw the open door,
came in, found the body, called 911.
What about relatives?
The victim's husband,
Alan, is a dentist.
He's been with a patient, in surgery.
Here's the address.
All right.
Let us know what you turn up.
We'll go talk to Alan.
Dr.
Barnett should be
finished any moment.
Are you sure I can't
help you, detectives?
Uh, no, thank you.
We really do need to
speak to Dr.
Barnett.
Here you go, sweetie.
Thanks.
See you tomorrow.
[door opens]
Oh, here he is.
You have someone coming
to pick you up, right?
- My son Sam.
- Excellent.
Very good driver, Sam.
I'm sure.
Good to see you, Marion.
Dr.
Barnett.
These detectives from the Boston police
would like to speak with you.
Oh.
Really? Why?
What time did you leave
the house this morning?
I met Mrs.
Gold here at 6:30.
- And your receptionist can confirm that?
- What?
No.
She comes in at 8:00.
I was alone with Mrs.
Gold for the gum graft.
She needs extra attention.
I told Judith that
something like this might happend.
- What do you mean?
- Judith was big all her life
as a girl, when I met
her, when we got married.
And I loved her.
Just the way she was.
But she didn't love herself.
She tried dieting.
Never worked.
Then, a year ago, she found tough broad.
- The workout.
- She lost a hundred pounds.
- And I was really worried for her.
- Could explain that for us?
She was a grown woman who'd
never learned how to deal
with men's advances because
no one was ever interested.
Most woman develop some kind
of defenses as teenagers.
Judith was getting a lot
of attention from men.
She didn't know how to handle it.
[cellphone vibrating]
Excuse me.
Frankie.
Was there a specific man
giving your wife attention?
No, but
Guys were starting conversations
with her in the supermarket.
Waiters were fawning over her.
The mailman hung around to chat.
Okay.
Thanks.
- Did that bother you?
- Me? No.
I was proud.
I was the guy with this amazing wife.
Was Judith expecting anyone
at your house this morning?
Our handyman.
He's been putting in new insulation.
- And what is his name?
- Luis Benitez.
[pen scratching]
We'll be in touch, Dr.
Barnett.
We are very sorry for your loss.
- What's up?
- That call from Frankie.
They found the knife
used to stab Judith.
It's got the initials "L.
B.
"
carved into the handle.
Let's have some uniforms bring
Luis Benitez in for a chat.
Let's.
He's got a long rap sheet.
Multiple arrests for
breaking and entering.
Multiple incidents of
assault with a deadly weapon.
- Wild guess on the weapon a knife?
- Wild and correct.
[cellphone vibrates]
Korsak.
He did so much work for the Barnetts,
they set up an account for
him at factory hill hardware.
He bought locks a month ago.
So he'd have a key.
Could this get any easier?
When the uniforms went to
pick up Luis, he was gone.
His mother said he went out of town
took some clothes, left in a hurry.
So our guy's not ready to
jump into cuffs just yet.
- What's up, Chang?
- Susie: Jane!
Uh, Dr.
Crosby gave me the initial
findings from the crime scene.
- Well, why didn't he give them to me?
- Oh, there's a reason
why he works in a
one-man office in Maine.
[chuckles]
Anyhoo
these are Judith's wounds.
the length and the shape of
the knife found at the scene
match the wound pattern.
The edges were serrated,
which is why ribs were
broken and bone was sawed off.
- What about the blood on the knife?
- Matches the victim.
No fibers or hair on the
body that weren't hers.
So you think the killer snuck
up behind her and stabbed her?
- I can't say.
- Well, take a guess.
- I'm a scientist.
- So's Maura.
She does it.
I'm not Dr.
Isles.
I know that, but she's not here.
So, throw out a theory.
Stretch your wings and grow.
It's your time to shine.
Whoo!
That's a mixed metaphor.
Okay, see.
There you go.
That's very Maura.
Nope.
Okay.
everything is different, though
and nothing has changed
walking these streets,
I still feel strange
if you want to see
the things I see
- # come on and take a little walk with me #
- Vince?
come on and take a
little walk with me
Vince?
[guitar playing]
turn a corner,
you're caught off guard
- # you thought you were tough #
- Oh, hey, Angela.
- # you thought you were hard #
- Hi.
Who's that?
Bobby Symanski, my
friend Peter's grandson.
- He's good.
- Very.
I like that song.
His grandfather wrote it.
We used to have a band.
Wow.
He must be proud.
- # come on and take a little walk #
- He's dead.
[click] I'm sorry.
Oh, it's a long time ago.
Bobby dropped this off.
He's playing in Boston.
That's great.
You gonna go see him?
- He wants me to play with him.
- Vince, even better!
I don't play those songs
anymore.
It's not who I am.
You know, in one lifetime, we
lead a lot of different lives.
- Well, that one's over.
- If you want it to be.
- Tell Jane I was looking for her.
- Sure thing.
Luis was an almost constant presence
at the house the last year.
So he witnessed Judith's
total transformation.
- Hi!
- Hold on.
- No more shots for Carla.
- I'm not driving!
- More shots for Carla!
- Whoo!
Continue.
Well, they spent a lot of time together.
Uh, maybe that allowed Luis
to think there was something
more going on than her
just being nice.
[cheering]
What is going on in your room?
I've turned it into a hospitality suite
with an open bar.
[cheering]
Ah! Good job, Gary!
- He hit the bull's-eye.
- Great.
- Well, it looks like you're having fun.
- Jane, it's a nightmare.
Carla is out of control,
and they've wrecked my room.
And now they think I'm
this crazy party person.
You're not?
[cellphone vibrates]
Look, don't do anything
that makes you uncomfortable,
all right? Just be yourself.
Right.
Absolutely.
Good advice.
Man: Dr.
Isles!
We're dry over her!
Well, give me that bottle of rye,
and I'll show you how to
make a Dr.
***! [cheering]
Hey, Frankie.
Uniforms spotted Luis'
car in the South end.
Okay.
Where are you?
In an alleyway near the
corner of Mass and Columbus.
[rattling]
There he is, Jane.
I gotta go.
He's coming out the back.
Move.
Move!
Freeze! Boston police!
Put your hands on the car.
[siren wailing]
Get your hands on the car!
[tires screech]
[groaning]
Okay! Ow! Okay!
Aah! Aah!
Didn't you learn anything
the last time you got
arrested, Luis? Don't run.
Makes you look guilty.
[speaks Spanish]
Tell us what happened yesterday morning.
I showed up for work at the Barnetts'.
I knocked on the door.
No one answered.
So I used my key.
I walked around, and
I found Mrs.
Barnett.
- But I didn't do it.
- Then why did you run?
Because I've got a record.
Because I know how it looks.
'Cause no one believes an ex-con.
Do you have your initials
on all your tools?
No, just my knife.
To remind me that what's used for evil
can also be used for good.
And where is that knife now?
I don't know.
I can't find it.
You've got multiple priors for robbery,
Breaking and entering,
three separate stabbings.
Jane: All that time in
the house with Judith.
You must have thought
that could go somewhere.
So you made a move on her.
And when she refused, you got mad.
- That could have happened.
- It did happen.
No.
But it could have.
I had no self-control.
When I got out of prison the last time,
even moms told me she
wasn't gonna be there for me,
that I had shamed her, that I
that I had shamed god.
And I heard her.
I went back to our
church.
I went to A.
A.
Moms gave me my room back,
and I moved in so she
could see I was trying.
And I changed.
Well, Judith was changing, too.
That must have been attractive to you.
Yes.
Yes, it was.
I-I [sighs]
She became a different person.
S-s-she
It gave me hope.
I told her so.
She inspired me.
Padre nuestro, que estas en el ciel.
[speaking Spanish]
What does your gut tell you?
[sighs] We need evidence.
He knew the victim.
He was in her house.
The *** weapon belonged to him.
- What about motive?
- I can think of 10.
Me, too, but none of them feel right.
We've got no witnesses and nothing
but the knife to tie him to the ***.
What do you want to do?
Give me five minutes.
[elevator bell dings]
Jane: Susie!
I was, uh, just coming to talk to you.
Oh, I'm not there.
I'm here.
To show you how I shine.
Okay.
Great.
- What's that?
- It's my theory.
Your theory's in a box?
It's a "die-o-rama.
"
- Oh.
D-I-E.
- Yes.
- For dead people.
- Well, not all of them are dead.
But it's a representation
of how they got to be.
It's amazing.
Yes.
And the killer is wearing a Tyvek suit.
Yes.
Because there was no forensic evidence
found at the crime scene,
which means the killer was wearing
some sort of protective outerwear.
The handyman had Tyvek
suits in his truck.
- Yes.
- You made all this just to tell me that?
No, I made this to figure it out.
I'm a visual thinker.
Well it's fantastic.
Really.
Susie, thank you.
We got him.
- Except the handyman didn't do it.
- Okay, but you said
The handyman's too tall
to make the stab wounds
at the angle of entry they
were made on Judith's body.
See, this killer is to scale,
but your suspect would not be to scale.
But the Tyvek suit
He uses them a lot.
Maybe someone knew that.
- You just guessed.
- I theorized.
You guessed.
No, no.
You guessed.
That was a guess.
That was
You don't use these
things to illustrate stuff
- in your personal life, right?
- Uh okay.
Wow.
[door closes]
Luis, you spent a lot of
time at the Barnett house.
Did you ever see anything unusual?
Mostly Mrs.
Barnett was alone.
The only person that came
by was the tough broad guy.
- Mickey Rizzo.
- Yeah, the boxer.
He was over all the time
private coaching.
They always closed the door.
We talked to Luis
Benitez's parole officer,
his A.
A.
sponsor, his mother,
his bible-studies group.
They all tell the same
story he's a changed man.
The knife wounds are
precise and deliberate.
Not what you'd expect from
an ex-con with anger issues.
And Susie says he's not to scale.
What?
We'll talk about Susie
when you get back.
Hey.
I think it's time we go meet the man
- who turned Judith into a tough broad.
- I've got another lead to pursue.
- Take Frankie.
- Sure.
You okay?
Great.
Hey.
Did you get a chance to go over
those case files I sent you?
Jane, you shouldnt have sent these.
It's a serious violation of protocol.
This is Dr.
Crosby's case.
He's the only one authorizd
to release these files.
Well, I didn't want to bother
him.
He was too busy going slow.
Well, this makes e very uncomfortable.
Just take a look, please.
See if you see anything.
Come on, Maura! We're
playing "autopsy jeopardy!"
Well, I see you've turned it
back into your kind of convention.
Oh, yeah.
Last night was a bit much.
Carla threw my toilet
seat out the window.
One game, and then we're
watching my slide show.
Oh, no, don't do that to the
[car alarm chirps]
- Hey, Vince!
- Hey.
This thing is huge!
If Maura ever kicks me out,
I'm gonna move right in.
[chuckles]
- What's that?
- My old guitar,
from when I played with
Bobby's grandfather.
I'm gonna give it to Bobby.
That's nice.
It's not what he wants.
- Yeah, but it's family history.
- History is for old people.
- Well, what do you think he wants?
- Come on, Vince.
You're smarter than
that.
Think about it.
- Bye!
- Bye-bye.
How well do you know Judith Barnett?
Very well.
She joined
the gym a year ago.
Hey, what she did with her body
took a lot of work and a lot of time.
You gave her a lot of personal
attention, make her feel special.
I mean, yeah.
That's
a big part of my job.
- Really?
- Look, these women
they don't get a lot of
attention from their husbands.
They come here to feel
better about themselves.
And if part of that's
me flirting with them,
well, hey, that's good for business.
- You ever go to her house?
- I set up her gym.
Are we gonna find your
DNA in her bedroom?
Why are you asking about DNA?
Were you having an affair
with Judith Barnett?
No.
Look.
You know
what? Judy was a client.
Where were you yesterday
morning between 7:00 and 9:00?
- Asleep.
- Alone?
You know what?
I'm not gonna answer any
more questions, all right?
Okay.
We're gonna need a list of
your clients and your investors.
And we'll let them answer the questions.
Hey, you know what? I'm the
pride of East Boston, all right?
I'm golden gloves in two weight classes.
- That's great, but it does
- Hey, you know, it's taken me years
to build this business and
gain these women's trust.
You were alone when she was murdered.
That doesn't help you.
You see how this looks, Mickey?
All right, look.
I wasn't alone.
- What's her name?
- This could ruin me.
Prison will ruin you.
Look, you got it all
wrong.
It's not like that.
I mean, these women here,
they're all great, but
I'm gay.
It would kill my business if it got out.
All right.
All right.
It won't get out.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
Look, Judy wasn't doing
anything with anyone.
She spent all her time working out.
But this dentist, he just
I don't know.
He lost interest in her.
Did she talk to her husband about this?
For sure, she did.
She invited him to come down here,
see what this place was all
about, but he never came.
You know, she thought
they'd work out together
once they got the gym in
the house, but he never did.
All he did was go to his
old cabin every weekend
and leave a beautiful
woman at home, alone.
Thanks, Mickey.
We'll let you
know if we need anything else.
- Well, he was doing something.
- Or someone.
[camera shutter clicking]
It's not exactly something a married man
leaves out in the open
when he's cheating.
One toothbrush, a can of shaving cream,
a single disposable razor.
No sign of another person
being here, let alone a woman.
Yeah, same thing here
a couple of single-serve frozen
dinners from the trash, water bottles.
He wasn't here to fish, either.
No poles, no tackle, no boat.
Well, so what?
He comes up here to get away from it all
and practice his dentistry skills?
Something you should see outside.
- Is Alan opening a fruit stand?
- It's not a great location.
Better be some interesting garbage.
I think it's a bullet hole.
I think Alan used these
for target practice.
So what? The victim was stabbed.
I know it doesn't
make any sense, but
No.
You're right.
It's crazy.
Alan's amazing wife is waiting at home
and he's out here in woodlandia,
playing with his dental tools
and shooting at watermelons?
[chuckles]
Why? There's got to be more to it.
Let's get all this
back to the crime lab,
- have Susie take a look at it.
- Yep.
Did you find anything yet?
What's that?
It's not watermelon, but
it came from inside of one.
The broken watermelons all have it.
Well, can you take
your best guess? Chalk?
I shouldn't.
I can't.
Jane, Susie has been
trained not to guess.
Really?
Well, can she tell me
what made these holes?
Circumferentially,
they're the same dimension
as a .
22-caliber bullet.
Jane, it took you one whole day
to corrupt senior criminalist Chang.
- Pbht!
- I'm so sorry, Dr.
Isles.
Detective Rizzoli means well,
but you cannot let her impatience
influence your methodology.
You forgot to activate
the cone of silence.
Well, can we at least talk about
whatever it is you two are doing here?
Susie's pursuing an
interesting line of inquiry,
a forensic examination of the victims.
"Victims"?
What what victims?
Those aren't victims.
Those are watermelons.
I am conducting a "fruit-opsy.
"
- That's funny.
- Hilarious.
I'll check in later.
I'm going to go get a sus-ictionary.
Angela: There you go.
- Hey, Vince.
- Hey, Angela.
Well, you can keep it from me, Vince,
but you can't keep it from yourself.
It's a lot more complicated
than the loss of an old friend, Angela.
Mm.
Complications.
Secrets.
Pain.
Happiness.
They're all the spices in the soup.
You leave one out, it
doesn't taste as good.
[chuckles]
Peter & Vince.
[gasps]
[chuckles]
We had a meeting with an
A&R record guy from New York.
He took us out on the town.
He wined us.
He dined us.
At the end of the night,
Peter wanted to go home.
He wanted to see his wife and kid.
But not me.
I was flying.
I didn't want that night to end.
I let him walk home alone, drunk.
He took a shortcut across
some railroad tracks.
He fell.
He hit his head.
- Never woke up.
- Mm.
It snowed that night.
Took a couple of days to find his body.
So how do I tell Bobby
I killed his grandfather?
Oh, come on, Vince.
You
know that's not true.
Well, I should have
No, this is not about you, my friend.
This is about Bobby.
It's about what he wants,
what only you can give him.
What the hell could
I possibly give Bobby?
How about a little
piece of his grandfather?
Because he's still
alive here in your heart.
Susie: Detective Rizzoli,
I have the lab report.
- And another box.
- It's my findings from the fruit-opsy.
They're a little hard to explain,
so I did the only logical thing.
- You made another die-o-rama.
- To scale.
Okay, well, Frankie said that
he thought the watermelons
were being used for target practice.
I agree.
The bullet traveled through
and through this one.
The projectile struck the
back wall of the watermelon
and tore out a chunk.
But in that watermelon,
the bullet didn't come out.
There were no bullets
in the watermelons.
Could you have missed them?
Oh, no, the external
examination of the subjects
showed no other means of exit.
And the X-rays were negative
for any foreign bodies within.
- E-except
- Except what?
- Nothing.
- Psst.
Maura's not here.
That stuff I found was dental plaster.
It's made from gypsum.
And it was different in each watermelon.
Almost as if they came
from different batches.
He was trying to make a bullet
that couldn't be detected in an autopsy.
- He was?
- Well, of course he was, Susie.
Everyone knows the
die-o-rama doesn't lie.
I'll be careful.
Oh, no! Aah!
I should have wrote "handle
with care" on that one.
Alan was trying to make a
bullet out of dental plaster,
something that would break apart
once it entered Judith's body.
Is that even possible?
Air marshals use bullets
that won't pass through a body
and hurt an innocent passenger
or damage the structure of the plane.
[beep]
Is that Susie's die-o-rama?
It's very realistic.
And
to scale, and the detail
Focus, Maura.
Well, I just think that detailed
work deserves appreciation.
Okay.
The plaster bullet that
did this was too hard.
It went all the way throug,
and it didn't break apart.
So he mixed and remixed the plaster.
That would explain all
the broken-up watermelons
- in the compost bin.
- That's right.
Until he found the perfect formula.
Maximum damage with no exit wound.
And there'd be no ballistics.
I'd like to remind everyone, again,
that Judith Barnett
was stabbed to death.
I'm not so sure of that.
I mean, there's something about
the nature of the knife wounds
that's been bothering me.
Frankie, can you pull up the X-rays?
[computer beeping]
See, this wound is narrow
and it's not as deep as
the surrounding damage.
Is that a fragment
from the dental plaster?
No, according to the autopsy report,
it's a bone fragment that
penetrated the pericardium.
It broke off.
That's what happens
when you are stabbed.
Yes, she was stabbed.
But the wound track here is too narrow.
That bone fragment was not driven
into the wound by the knife.
Jane, I'd like Susie to examine
the bone fragments from the wounds.
Okay, and I want her to test
Judith's clothes for gunshot residue.
Why would he shoot her
first and then stab her?
Because if Alan snuck up
on this woman with a knife
and she caught him, she'd kick his ***.
If Alan wanted to make
a dental-plaster bullet,
he'd need two things
he'd need a gun and
something to make a cartridge.
Well, the holes in the watermelons
were the size of a .
22-caliber.
I borrowed some from ballistics.
He'd need to pull out the
lead bullet from the casing
and then replace it
with the one he made.
He spent a lot of time
pulling teeth with these things.
I believe he could take
a bullet out of a cartridge.
Well, that was easy enough.
No gun license in Massachusetts
or anywhere else for Alan Barnett.
None for Judith, either.
So, how the hell did he get a gun?
I don't see Alan Barnett going
out and making a street buy.
He didn't have to.
This is a crime-scene
photo of the cabin.
I had that part blown up.
Young Alan Barnett had a
Ruger Bearcat, .
22 caliber.
Good little squirrel gun.
I know Dr.
Crosby
says death by stabbing.
He's not Maura.
- What have you got?
- Hi, Detective Rizzoli.
I was just about to give
my results to Dr.
Isles.
[telephone rings]
Well, you have done
a wonderful job of not
guessing and preserving
your scientific mythology.
Thank you.
It's methodology, Jane.
I say tomato, you say "tomaht-ology"
[laughs]
What have we got?
GSR on the clothes?
Susie, would you describe for us
what you're seeing in the microscope?
Yes, of course, Dr.
Isles.
[clears throat]
Hmm.
There are no bone-growing cells
or proteins present in
these bone fragments.
These bone fragments
are from cadaver bone,
not your victim's ribs.
The bone fragments have
to be part of the bullet
- that Alan made.
- It's brilliant, really.
I mean, all he had to do was
add pieces of cadaver bone
to the dental plaster
before it hardened.
He created the perfect delivery system.
And the knife wounds were
meant to splinter the ribs
to hide the cadaver
bone in the wound tracks.
And to set up the handyman.
Alan used Luis' knife.
He knew he had a record.
It's a great plan, actually.
Except for the one part
that doesn't make sense.
Why would a happily
married man kill his wife
after she a lost a hundred pounds?
'Cause he liked her
just the way she was.
[door opens]
When he was the only man
who paid her any attention.
[door closes]
Thanks.
Trace evidence section
found gunshot residue
on Judith Barnett's crop top.
Jane, this changes everything.
Now I need to notify
Dr.
Crosby of my findings.
[sighs]
Although the stab wounds
are significant injuries,
given what I know now,
I'm revising my initial cause
of death to gunshot wound.
It's time we had a
talk with Alan Barnett.
Thank you for coming in.
I know you must be very busy
with your wife's arrangements.
Detective Rizzoli and I are
very sorry for your loss.
Thank you.
It has been very *** me.
She was my friend, my partner, my lover.
She was everything to me.
You two must have had
a great life together
travel, restaurants,
weekends at the cabin.
Did you go fishing up there?
Hiking?
No.
Not much.
No.
No, you wouldn't have.
No, you'd rather watch
hiking on your TV.
In your big, soft chair,
with Judith right next to you.
That's what we enjoyed.
Yeah, but she stopped
enjoying it, didn't she?
Then she joined tough broad,
got in shape, lost the weight,
and good-looking men started
paying attention to her.
Big, strong men.
Men like Luis and Mickey.
Of course.
She looked great.
And that made you happy.
It made her happy.
That's what we want for our loved ones.
What a generous little man you are.
- Hey!
- Well, considering that your wife
started a new life that you
were no longer a part of.
My wife loved me.
She would never leave me.
You were watching TV alone.
Going to the cabin alone.
You two no longer had anything in common
because she'd already left.
No! I would never have allowed
Am I being placed under arrest?
- You're free to go, Dr.
Barnett.
- Of course I am.
Because you have a
theory but no evidence.
I'm not much of a
fisherman.
Neither are you.
You've got nothing.
And that's all you'll ever have.
[groans]
He thinks he's smarter than us.
- Maybe he is.
- ***.
[elevator bell dings]
- Where's Frankie?
- We're meeting him in break.
- You got something?
- Yeah.
I had Susie take a blood
sample from the patient
that Alan was with the
morning of his wife's ***.
Ketamine?
The animal tranquilizer?
According to Maura, dentists
use it.
But an elderly patient
like Mrs.
Gold should be
administered a very low dose.
She had a detectable level of
ketamine still in her system.
Mrs.
Gold was really out of it
of ketamiwhen we saw her.
Yeah, he knocked her out
and gave himself the perfect
window of opportunity.
Strike one.
I found the best route from
Alan's office to his house.
No traffic cameras, no
homeland security cameras.
[sighs] Okay.
So, the handyman was scheduled
to arrive at Alan's house
while he was performing the gum graft.
But Judith had to be
dead by then for the plan to work.
But she couldn't have been
killed before he left for work
or that would skew the time of death.
The receptionist said
Alan was in with Mrs.
Gold
when she got there at 8:00.
Her appointment was 6:30.
So, he worked on Mrs.
Gold,
made sure she was
completely anesthetized,
left at 7:00?
This is me on the route to his house.
He gets there at 7:15.
Pulls on a Tyvek suit,
gloves and a mask,
shoots Judith before
she can kick his ***,
and then stabs her with the knife
that he stole from the handyman.
He drops the knife for us to find,
takes off the Tyvek suit,
heads for the office.
7:40?
Yeah, but he's still
got to get rid of the gun
- and the bloody Tyvek suit.
- I had some uniforms look
through all the dumpsters
and trash barrels.
Public works searched the
storm drains and sewers.
- Nothing.
- Yeah, he's too smart
to leave anything close
to the crime scene.
Mm.
I know where Alan got rid of
the gun and the Tyvek suit.
Strike two!
Thank you.
I'll take that.
- You can't just
- We called your courier service.
They said you were expecting a delivery.
- You have no right.
- This gives us that right.
When you absolutely, positively
have to have it overnight.
Which you did.
Ruger, Bearcat, .
22 caliber.
Jane: It was a slick move,
mailing yourself the only evidence
that'll tie you to your wife's ***.
All you had to do was throw
the gun in the nearest lake
and burn the Tyvek suit in the woods.
- Pretty smart.
- But not smart enough.
Strike three.
[indistinct conversations]
At least I'm to scale.
You are so, so not to scale.
Look at those things on your chest.
Those things are perfect
in form and balance.
[snickers]
Look at you.
You're all leg.
Well, I'm exactly to scale
because, you know, Susie doesn't guess.
[door opens]
Well, she does now.
[chuckles]
Ooh, here she comes.
Hello, senior criminalist Chang.
Very nice to see you, Susie.
Dr.
Isles, detective.
You
both look nice tonight.
What? Did
she didn't even notice.
- You had your right arm up a bit more.
- I was not.
You weren't you weren't
bending your foot right.
I don't bend my feet.
Objects in the die-o-rama
appear bigger than they are.
- Well, hers.
- Which ones?
General comment.
Angela talked to you.
- Yeah.
That's why I'm here.
- Me too.
I was thinking, when I go
to next year's convention,
you should come with me.
[gasps] Ooh.
Will they have "autopsy jeopardy!"?
Yeah.
Then I'm gonna schedule
surgery for that weekend.
[laughs]
Hey, look who's back in town.
Hi.
- Hi.
Hi, honey.
- Hi, Ma.
Mwah.
Hey, aren't you two a little
too old to be playing with dolls?
What?
We brought them for Frankie.
[laughter]
Oh, you're a riot, Janie.
Bobby: Hello, Boston!
Hello.
Uh, tonight's a very special night.
I'm gonna do some songs
my grandfather wrote,
the way they were meant to be sung
and the way they were
meant to be played.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Bobby.
And I'm Vince.
- Man: Whoo!
- Whoo! All right.
And tonight, we are Bobby & Vince.
[cheers and applause]
Thanks.
[mid-tempo music plays]
Everything's different,
but nothing has changed
walking these streets,
I still feel strange
if you want to see
the things that I see
well, come on and take
a little walk with me
come on and take
a little walk with me
You turn a corner,
anyore caught off guard
you thought you were tough,
you thought you were hard
staring at something
you forgot you had seen
come on and take
a little walk with me
come on and take
a little walk with me
I'll show you a world
you may not believe
where the beauty is
in me every day I see
come on and take
a little walk with me
I heard a rumor that
the mayor of this town
is trying to shut
the firehouse down
he said it was something
that we don't need
come on and take
a little walk with me
come on and take a
little walk with me
come on and take
a little walk with me