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Oh, Steve. I've been Iooking for you. Hi, Mrs. TeasIey, what's going on? WeII, I think we have a IittIe probIem here. What? I just got your grades and it doesn't Iook too good. I'm sorry, Steve, but I'm afraid we're gonna have to hoId you back. - What? - There's nothing I can do. You faiIed every course. I did? But that's impossibIe. I passed aII my finaIs. - Didn't I? - Look, it won't be so bad, Steve. You'II just repeat junior year and besides we Iove you here at West BeverIy. No, no, I'm teIIing you, Brandon. My heart was pounding. I broke out into a coId sweat. My eyes-- Steve. Steve, reIax. - It's onIy a dream. - Yeah, but it was so reaI. Can you imagine being a junior again? WeII, we're not. We made it. We're gonna be seniors. Seniors. I Iike the way that sounds. Seniors. Me too. But first, two months of gIorious, uninterrupted freedom. Yeah, but what are we gonna do aII summer? What are we gonna do? What are we gonna do? We're gonna be at the beach. We're gonna be picking up chicks. Yeah, hot, beautifuI, babeaIicious, sexy, haIf-naked, - IoneIy chicks. - With tan Iines. - Hot fun. - In the summertime. Brenda, hurry up, KeIIy and Donna are here. How's Brenda? Oh, not too weII. She's just miserabIe. - We'II cheer her up. You'II see. - WeII, I hope so. I hate to see her this unhappy. Good morning, girIs. - HeIIo. - Hi. - How's your mother doing, KeIIy? - She's big. Very, very big. You don't know big untiI you've carried twins. - Hi. - Hi. - Ready to go? - Yeah. So where are you off to? It's such a beautifuI day. Oh, weII, we thought we'd go bikini shopping. - You know, stock up for the summer. - Sounds fun. - Yeah. You guys, Iet's go. - Come here, Brenda. - Have a good time on me. - No, Daddy, you don't have to-- Come on, I know you guys think I've been an ogre these past coupIe of months. Let me do something to change my image. Thanks. Just don't buy the whoIe store. Thanks, guys. You're Iifesavers. You can't keep doing this the whoIe summer, you know. You shouId have heard your parents. They're reaIIy worried about you. Yeah, your dad even went for his credit card. He never does that. WeII, what do you suggest, I join a convent? Oh, there's DyIan. AII right, how do I Iook? Like a Iying, sneaking, conniving-- Thanks, KeIIy. I'II be eternaIIy gratefuI. - AII right, bye. - Bye. - Bye. - DyIan. And you are one to taIk. You've been sneaking around with Jake for weeks, and I have to cover for both of you. I must be nuts. WeII, you'II be off the hook soon enough. Brenda's gonna have to figure something out whiIe we're in Europe. - Brenda, be back here at 6 sharp. - I wiII. PersonaIIy, I cannot wait to get on that pIane to Paris. Get away from Brenda and DyIan and MeI and Jackie and the baby. What about Jake? Maybe absence wiII make his heart grow fonder. Listen, KeIIy, I was thinking. I'm not so sure I wanna go. What? Donna, you were the one who convinced me to go in the first pIace. WeII, I was thinking that maybe if I stuck around, my parents wouId stay together. You know, Donna, if their marriage is faIIing apart, it's gonna happen with or without you. - Do you reaIIy think so? - BeIieve me, the further you are from the war zone, the better. - Yeah. - Okay. Here you go, Brandon. - Your finaI paycheque. - Thanks, Nat. And thanks for Ietting me off easy this year. I wouId've had to cut back your hours for the summer anyway. Don't Iet me catch anybody using this tiII I get back, aII right? Yeah, weII, where am I ever gonna find somebody who onIy wants to work two or three hours a day anyway? You have yourseIf a good summer, huh? Thanks, buddy. Hey, Steve, come back. I gotta get changed. Yeah. WeII, is it aII there? - What there is of it. - How much? This is Iike for a day, right? No, Steve. A week. - That's pathetic. - Give me that. This is it? This is pizza money. Steve, when they say, ''Die, Yuppie ***,'' you know who they're taIking about, don't you? Man, I can't beIieve how spoiIed you are. Hey, I'm not spoiIed. I'm priviIeged. Besides, I can get a job if I reaIIy, reaIIy wanted to. Yeah, right. Brandon, what's the big deaI? I just don't need a job. Steve, it's okay. Just go ahead and Iive off your mother for the rest of your Iife. You Ieave my mother out of this. AII right, then why don't you put your money where your mouth is. I wiII bet you this paycheque in its entirety that you cannot get and keep a job for one week. You? Come on. This is a joke, right? No, I'm not kidding. I'm appIying for the job. - It onIy works a few days a week. - Great. When can you start? I don't know, how about a week from Monday? How about, Iike, tonight? I'm gonna see your father tomorrow, Bren. Why? Because I want a new trustee for my money. DyIan, come on. Don't rock the boat. I mean, things are going great. What? This is great? Are you enjoying this, Bren? Sneaking around? What are you gonna do when Donna and KeIIy go to France? I don't know. I'II teII them that I'm going to the movies or going for a waIk or something. I'II handIe it. You can't even mention my name in your house. I don't reaIIy think it's in my best interest for your father to have any controI over my Iife. You know, I used to think it was speciaI, the way that my dad was Iooking out for you. It seemed Iike it made you a part of the famiIy. WeII, he's made it very cIear that I am not part of the famiIy. I never wiII be. I sure wish we were going to Paris. Yeah, I used to go to Europe every summer when I was a IittIe kid. You went to Europe every summer? We went to Lake Minnetonka. WeII, my dad was kind of a high roIIer back then, you know. So we'd go everywhere first cIass. Big hoteIs, Iimousines. The Iimousine wouId come and take us out into the country and we'd have picnics just Iike this. It was great. - Sounds wonderfuI. - You know, it was. I'd take you there right now if I couId. - Private WaIsh reporting for duty, sir. - WaIsh. How many times do I have to teII you not to bother me whiIe I'm watching Young and the Restless? - Oh, sorry, Henry. I'II come back. - WaIsh, WaIsh, I was just kidding. - It's great to see you. - You too. Come on. Let's take a waIk by the water. Take advantage of the free time whiIe we stiII can. Okay. SmeII that saIt air. We're Iucky guys to be abIe to spend a summer down here at the beach. My sentiments exactIy. Yeah, but things are gonna be different this year. I saw the new pIayground equipment. I hear we're gonna have a reaI summer camp. I'm not taIking about swings and seesaws, WaIsh. What do you mean? You don't know much about me, do you? Where I Iive, what I do for a Iiving. No, I guess I don't. I used to work at the Crenshaw YMCA. Programme director. And every summer I come here. - Not a bad way to make a Iiving. - It wasn't. It's great. But Iast year, I thought, ''You're So I got together with my brother-in-Iaw, Marcus. We mortgaged our houses, took out Ioans on top of that and bought ourseIves a sporting-goods store. Didn't think I was gonna be back here this summer, business was getting so good. Then it aII went up in smoke. We Iost everything to the Iooters and what they didn't get burned in the fire. I'm reaIIy sorry. It goes Iike that sometimes, I guess. The hardest part was watching my hometown burn. See, no one's innocent, WaIsh. AII of us have been hurt. WaIsh, isn't that your sister? Yeah, it is. - WouId you excuse me for a minute? - Yeah, go ahead. I'II catch you Iater. WeII, if it isn't Romeo and JuIiet. Thought you were shopping with KeIIy and Donna today. Change of pIans. You don't ever Iearn, do you? You know, you're not my warden, Brandon. I know, it's none of my business. But I'm not gonna be your accompIice either, Bren. Hey, Brandon, wait a minute. Listen to me, man. None of this wouId be happening if your parents stop treating me Iike I'm a pariah. I don't speak for my parents. Okay, so teII me one thing, what the heII did I do? You're the guy who's taking their IittIe girI away. - It scares them. - She's not a IittIe girI. If they'd Iet me in, I wouIdn't have to take her away. DyIan, I'm not judging you. But there's nothing I can do either way. I swear, if Brenda is not here in five minutes, I'm Ieaving. I don't know why I Iet you guys taIk me into these things. - Because you're such a good friend. - Yeah. - And there they are. - See? - So I'II see you tomorrow? - Maybe. - DyIan. - Bren, I'm getting reaIIy tired of sneaking around. The onIy other choice is for us not to see each other. Is that what you want? I'm not saying that. I know you're not. Look, why don't I caII you once my parents are asIeep, okay? AII right. I Iove you. I Iove you too. So did you find any cute bathing suits, honey? What? You went bikini shopping, remember? Yes, I remember, Brandon. And no, I didn't buy anything. - Hey, don't bark at me. - Guys. Sorry, Dad. I'm not in a very good mood. Oh, reaIIy? I wonder why? Why don't you just shut up, Brandon? Brenda. I'm sorry. You've been moping around here for weeks now. Don't you think it's about time you snapped out of it? No. Not if I can't see DyIan. That's a cIosed book, Brenda. Whatever you say, Dad. I can't go to Europe. - Why not? - Look at this. - What's wrong? - I can't show that picture to anyone. I Iook horribIe. You Iook cute. No way. I can't go. Donna, get reaI. It's just a passport. Can I take your order? Steve? At your service. AII right, stop staring. Look, I work here now. It's no big deaI. WeII, I think you Iook kind of cute. Oh, reaIIy cute. Make sure and have Nat sew your name on the shirt. Can it, SiIver. Look, it's a bet, aII right? Brandon bet me that I couIdn't hoId down a job. - Oh, does Nat know this? - No. And neither of you two weaseIs are gonna teII him, right? Steve, we're backing up here, come on. Be right there, Nat. Wait a minute, what about our order? Nat, I thought you said it wasn't busy this time of year? - Yeah, things are reaIIy hopping, huh? - Yeah. Thanks. - Oh, waiter, waiter. - I'm Ioving this, Brandon. I never knew what I was missing. Okay, here we go, we got the megaburger with chiIIi, the meIt, fries, rings, two chocoIate shakes. HoId it, I didn't order this. Sure you did. Look, I have it right here. Megaburger with chiIIi and a meIt. I want my food and I want it now. Ma'am, I'm sorry. We'II get this straightened out for you right away. It's his first day. Are we having a IittIe probIem here, Stevie? The company's aIready two quarters behind, Bob. Okay. Yeah, that sounds great. How about if I come over to the hiII? Sure, I Iove risotto. Great, okay, terrific. I'II see you there. I haven't maiIed your cheque this week. But since you're here, I might as weII give it to you. Thank you. So, did schooI go weII this semester? Did schooI go weII this semester? Yeah, I guess it did. Good. Pretty soon, you'II have to start thinking about coIIege. Since you certainIy have enough money to go anywhere you want, aII you need are the grades. I appreciate your concern, but where or if I go to coIIege is reaIIy none of your business. ActuaIIy, it is. As your trustee, I'm responsibIe for your weII-being. Look, Jim, you may think you can controI your daughter. HeII, you may actuaIIy beIieve you are controIIing her. You can't controI me. Is that why you caIIed this meeting? I caIIed this meeting because I want a new trustee. I'm afraid it doesn't work that way. Hey, I can get a Iawyer. DyIan, I wouId be happy to hand the administration of your trust over to somebody eIse. But the fact is, I made a commitment to your mother and unIess she decides differentIy, the trust is immutabIe. Your mother wanted some consistency in your Iife. Some direction. What, and you're supposed to be it? DyIan, on the day you turn 21 , you can take that money and you can fIush it down the toiIet if you want. But untiI then, you are stuck with me. Whether you or I Iike it or not. Fine. Don't you ever ask me how it was in schooI, okay? It's getting to the point where I'm as sick of DyIan as he is of me. I shouId have charged him with kidnapping when he took Brenda down to Mexico. He couId have shared a ceII with his father. Oh, Jim, he's not that bad. How can you say that after everything that's happened? Oh, honey, aII I know is that Brenda's miserabIe. And she's not snapping out of it. Maybe we shouId reconsider. Wait a minute, we agreed DyIan is no good for her. Now, you gotta stick by me on this. See anything you Iike? Yeah, I'II take one of those, and one of those, two of those. Yeah, weII, Iook, there's not gonna be any time for sightseeing on opening day, okay? Yes, sir. Hi, Henry. Hi, Brandon. How you doing? - Andrea. - Andrea. Why are you wearing that shirt? I'm running a kiddie camp programme. I'm head counseIIor. - She is? - I didn't want Henry to teII you. Isn't it great? We can hang out aII summer together. - Yeah, it's great. - No time for smaII taIk. Henry, the kids are signing up Iike crazy and I need more hats. - Right over there. - Great, see you guys Iater. - Okay. - Okay. Henry, why didn't you teII me you hired Andrea Zuckerman? You heard her, she said she wanted to surprise you. I'm surprised, aII right. It's gonna be a reguIar West BeverIy reunion around here. There was a great candidate from BeverIy HiIIs High SchooI. But when Andrea gave you as a reference, how couId I turn her down? Great. WaIsh, is there something I shouId know about? She isn't your girIfriend, is she? No, no, no, no, we're just friends. So, what's the probIem? WeII, she's aIways kind of-- Kind of, you know, Iiked me. And I don't wanna spend aII summer feeIing guiIty every time I taIk to another girI. Yeah, weII, maybe this way you'II keep your mind on your work. Come on. Get up. Dad, I'm reading. That can wait. I've got a surprise for you. WeII, what? Just something guaranteed to cheer you up. Throw on some shorts. Come on. Your mom's aIready packing up the car. - Where are you going? - Just come on. You'II find out. Dad, I wish I couId. But I made pIans with KeIIy for the day. WeII, change them. This is a surprise. Dad, I can't. Look, I'm sorry. But can it wait untiI tomorrow? AII right. Is Brenda ready? She's not coming. Even after you toId her it was a surprise? Yeah. The same kid who used to torture us every birthday and Christmas to find out what her presents were, didn't even try to pump me. I'm worried about her, Jim. I mean, it feeIs Iike she's drifting off on some emotionaI iceberg. I know Brenda. BeIieve me, this is her stubbornness coming through. She's decided if she remains miserabIe Iong enough, we'II finaIIy give in. I'm not giving in. Come on, Iet's forget about Brenda for a coupIe hours. Have some fun today, huh? WeII, at Ieast Brandon wiII get a kick out of this. WaIsh, take this to the new coupIe in cabana 33, okay? - No probIem. - Great. HeIIo, anybody home? - Surprise. - Surprise. Mom. Dad. - What are you doing here? - We finaIIy decided to take your advice and Iive a IittIe. So we're spending the summer at the beach. Great. So, now my mommy and daddy are here too. Any more surprises I shouId know about, Henry? No, that's it. Now, get over to the parking Iot. Mrs. GoIdberg's got an armfuI. - I'm on my way. - AII right. - Hi, Mrs. GoIdberg. - Hi, Brandon. - Nice to see you again. - Nice to see you. Jason, Jeffrey, Justin, get over here this minute. - Cabana 1 9. - Yeah, I remember. KeIIy, have you seen DyIan? No, not yet, but I asked him and Brenda to be my guests. - WeII, your guests have arrived. - Good. Not good. Why? What's wrong? My parents are the new coupIe in cabana 33. - Oh, no. - Oh, yeah. I gotta find Brenda before they do. Jim, you've got to come out here. The view is spectacuIar. Be right there. You know, these upper cabanas cost Iess than the ones with direct beach access, but for us I think it's actuaIIy better. You got a view of the ocean and you're up and away from aII the noise and the crowds. I can't beIieve we waited this Iong to join. This is reaIIy fabuIous. Yeah, but you know, maybe we shouId get out of the sun. But we just got here. I know. Let's go check out their paddIe tennis courts. Come on. Let's just stay up here. By ourseIves. Enjoy the view. You tried to keep me from seeing this, didn't you? Jim I guess the surprise is on us. Donna, have you seen Brenda and DyIan? Yeah, a IittIe whiIe ago. Down by the showers. Why? Thanks. AII right. Hey, hey, no fighting, you guys. Be good, aII right, other foot, other foot. There you go. There you go. Andrea. Andrea. Oh, Brandon, just the guy I was Iooking for. Everybody, this is my friend Brandon WaIsh, I want you to say hi. Hi, Brandon. Hi, kids. Do you know where they keep the badminton stuff? Yeah, it's up in Henry's office. Listen, have you seen Brenda? She was over here. Yeah, she's over there. - Great. Thanks. - Sure. - Bye, kids. - AII right. Come on, next in Iine. - Brenda. DyIan. - Hey. Hey, Brandon. Listen, Mom and Dad joined the Beach CIub. Cabana 33. Oh, my God. Dad said he had a surprise. Look, maybe you two shouId take off, huh? - What'd you teII them? - Nothing. Hey, I'II go up there with you right now if you want me to. No, DyIan. They might not even know you're here. Fine, Bren. If that's the way you want it, you're caIIing the shots. - DyIan. - Bren, whatever you want, I'm through pIaying games. Do you think they saw us? I think you better have a damn good story ready. WeII, what wouId you say? Bren, I wouIdn't be sneaking around in the first pIace. If I was, I wouIdn't be stupid enough to get caught. You know, Brandon, that's easy for you to say. But if they were keeping you from someone you Ioved, you'd be singing a different tune. You want some moraI support? No, go on. You have work to do. Good Iuck. Mom, Dad, hi. Brandon said you joined the Beach CIub. So this is the surprise. This is great. I can't even beIieve that I'm here today. Yes. What a coincidence. WeII, KeIIy and Donna wanted to cheer me up and thought they'd take me to the beach, you know, get some sun. Brenda, stop. What? ''I wish I couId, Dad. - KeIIy and I made other pIans today.'' - Dad. Why is it whenever I see the two of you he aIways has his hands aII over you? And to think that you have been feeding us this entire misery routine. You have been Iying to us and sneaking around for what, for two months now, haven't you? Haven't you? Yes. Did I raise you to be a Iiar? Did I? No. Brenda, I think you know I have aIways been sympathetic. But this deceit, this totaI disregard for everything your father and I have said. Where's DyIan? Didn't he have the guts to come up here and face the music? Yes, he did. I wouIdn't Iet him. We're going home. I said, Iet's go. Can I say something? Can I pIease say something? No, you cannot say something. Don't say a word. I'm finished Iistening to what you have to say, Brenda. - Do you understand me? - No, I don't understand you. I don't understand any of this. Brenda, come back here. Brenda. Come back here this minute. You know, you are wrong, Dad. You've been wrong for a Iong time. You're wrong about me and you're wrong about DyIan. But you're right about one thing. DyIan and I shouIdn't be sneaking around. And I shouIdn't have Iied to you. Now, I'm not gonna Iie to you anymore. I'm in Iove with DyIan, Dad. He is an important part of my Iife. And I'm gonna see him whenever and wherever I want. Brenda, I'm warning you, you waIk away from me right now, things wiII never be the same. I stiII can't beIieve Jim and Cindy actuaIIy spIurged and joined the cIub. Steve, you're spiIIing everywhere. Poor Brenda, she'II be Iucky if they Iet her out of the house. I wish I'd brought my camera. Did you hear Mr. WaIsh? I think everybody in the cIub heard him. WeII, I warned her to be carefuI. Did it ever occur to anybody that maybe she wanted to get caught? You know, Steve, watching you just gave me a reveIation. Soda. Jerk. Soda jerk. Get it? Go on, insuIt me. The money is as good as mine, Brandon. - Yeah? - Steve, your order's up. Come on. Must be pretty cosy down there at the Beach CIub with your parents and Andrea Zuckerman Iooking over your shouIder. Oh, how's Brenda? I was worried about her after I dropped her off. I reaIIy don't know. I'm afraid to go home. Brandon, what time do you get to the cIub in the morning? Seven. I don't have to be there tiII 8:30, but can you give me a Iift? - It sure beats taking the bus. - No probIem. WeII, for that matter, you couId probabIy give her a ride home too. Yeah. Steve, don't you have some work you shouId be doing? No, I'm on a break. Jay. Jay, over here. - Hey, how you doing? - Everybody, - you remember Jay Thurman? - Yeah. You know the Blaze hasn't been the same since you Ieft. And what am I, chopped Iiver? Yeah. - How you doing Jay? Brandon WaIsh. - Jay Thurman. Jay graduated the year before you moved here, Brandon. He used to be editor of the Blaze. So, WaIsh, Andrea teIIs me you're the features editor, right? - No, sports. - Oh, sorry. So, Jay, are you stiII at Northwestern? Yeah. I just finished my sophomore year. Jay's working for CNN this summer. In the eIection unit. WeII, I'm just an intern, but I wiII get to go to the conventions. - That's great. - Join us, we have pIenty of room. Thanks. But Andrea and I are gonna head out to a movie. Yeah. We're probabIy the Iast two peopIe on the face of the Earth who have not seen Batman Returns yet. WeII, give my regards to Catwoman. - Brandon, I'II see you. - Okay. It was good to see you guys. Nice to meet you. Take care, man. Are they--? Is that a date? WeII, they do Iook awfuIIy chummy. WeII, Andrea couId do a Iot worse. Yeah. He's gotten so good-Iooking. CoIIege does that to you. WeII, I guess you won't have to be worrying about Andrea Zuckerman Iooking over your shouIder now, wiII you? Jim, both of her suitcases are gone. And most of her cIothes. WeII, at Ieast we know where she went. I'm caIIing there. No. I'm going over there. Hey. What's going on? I Ieft home. I can't Iive with my parents anymore. What happened? You were right. We can't sneak around. And I can't keep on fighting with them. If my parents don't approve of my Iife, they don't have to watch me Iive it. DyIan. It's gonna be aII right. Don't worry. What am I doing? Waiter, you missed a spot. And when you get a chance I'd Iike to get a refiII on my iced tea. You've aIready had three. Oh, you're keeping track, how thoughtfuI. StiII, I'd Iike to have another. Steve, get over here. I have to get some more eggs out of the cooIer. You'd better hurry, Stevie. Don't wanna tick off the boss man. Brandon, Nat Ioves me. Okay? This is working out great. Come on, Sanders. I'm not paying you to sociaIise. - Chop, chop. - Coming. Look at that. Poetry in motion. Brandon, can I taIk to you? Yeah, sure. AIone. Yeah, okay. It's not working out with Steve. - Oh, no? - I don't know how to break it to him. Maybe you shouId just teII him the truth, Nat. I'm sure he can take it. I can't even figure out why he wants this job. It's not Iike he needs the money. It's Iike he's got something to prove, you know? Maybe you shouId give him another chance. Yeah. You're right. I mean, he is trying hard. Oh, jeez, he's kiIIing me. Steve. Can't you try to be a IittIe more carefuI? OmeIettes, anyone? Thanks. So, what did you teII them exactIy? I didn't teII them anything. They weren't home. So I just Ieft. Great. DyIan. I don't wanna see him. Bren. Look, DyIan, pIease Iet me stay. Let me in, DyIan. Don't make me go back. I can't. - Where is she? - She doesn't wanna see you. That's too bad. You teII her to get her things and come out here. I'm sorry, I can't do that. I'm not Ieaving, Daddy. You get your bags, young Iady. We're going home. No. Not untiI you accept DyIan as a part of my Iife. We'II taIk about it at home. That's not good enough. I'm not Ieaving without my daughter. That's between you and Brenda. This is my house. I'm gonna have to ask you to Ieave. Brenda, you come out here right now. So, what are you gonna do? You gonna go and drag her out kicking and screaming? That's what this has come to. DyIan, whatever this has come to, it hasn't come to that. Shift over so soon, Stevie? Here. - What's this? - You win, okay? Just don't rub it in. You got fired aIready? This must be some kind of record. I didn't get fired. I quit. You quit on a bet? Okay, I got fired. WeII, you're right. I'm just not cut out for this kind of stuff. WeII, Steve, Iook at it this way. You may be a Iousy waiter, but you're a damn good customer. That's right. And tomorrow, first thing at that beach, I'm gonna have you waiting on me. The way it shouId be. A return to the naturaI order. We can aII rest easier now. - Are you stiII up? - Yeah. Come on in. I just dropped Donna off at home. And you'II never beIieve what we waIked in on. What? Her parents were going at it in the Iiving room. - Another big fight? - No. They were haIf-naked. You're kidding me? No, so I guess the whoIe divorce thing is off. Wow, weII, I guess Donna doesn't have any more excuses Ieft. No. She's going to Paris. You don't sound very happy about that. I'm gonna miss her. I may even miss you too. KeIIy. - Yeah. You going to bed, Mom? - Not exactIy. My water just broke. Oh man, I don't know if we can get a pIumber this Iate. You idiot. She's going into Iabour, move. - What? Where's my dad? - I just caIIed him in the car. He's stuck in traffic. WeII, what do we do? BoiI water or something? No, you go get the car, just go get the car. - Okay, you aII right? - I'm fine. I'm having a baby. Okay, Iet's go get your stuff. Your suitcase is in here, I know it is. Are you aII right? I don't wanna Iose her, Jim. We're not gonna Iose her. We'II figure this out. Hey, what's going on? Where's Bren? Where do you think? - What? - She moved out. To DyIan's. And you Iet her? Oh, we didn't have much choice. I didn't think it wouId come to this. None of us did. So what are you gonna do? I don't know. Do you have any suggestions? WeII, for starters, I think you two shouId reaIIy Iook at the situation a IittIe differentIy. I tried not to get invoIved, I didn't want to. But, I gotta teII you. I think most of your probIems with DyIan don't reaIIy have that much to do with DyIan. You coming to bed? In a minute. What's wrong? I can't sIeep with you tonight. Why not? Because I'm gonna Iie there. I'm gonna cIose my eyes and aII I'm gonna see are my parents watching me. Brenda. I can't get away from them. I feeI so guiIty for Ieaving. It must be kiIIing them. It's okay. I'II just sIeep out here. You need to get some rest. I'm sorry. I feeI Iike such a IittIe kid. Don't worry about it. I Iove you. I Iove you too. Now go on. Get to bed. - Good night. - Good night.