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TRANSCRIPT:
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[Golf course. Day. Bones and Zack are
riding to the crime scene in a golf cart.]
Bones: We’ll be meeting with agents from
the FAA, the NTSB, and local police.
Zack: Usually Booth handles those people.
Bones: Plane crashes don’t belong to the
FBI.
Zack: Why not? FAA stands for Federal
Aviation Administration. The NTSB stands for National Transportation Safety
Board. That sounds Federal to me and FBI stands for Federal Bureau…
Bones: Zack.
Zack: This is the third time in a row we’ve
investigated without Booth. I don’t like it.
Bones: Why? He mostly ignores you.
Zack: Ignoring me is Booth’s way of
acknowledging my presence. It’s a guy thing.
Bones: Here we are.
(They pull up to the crime scene tape, get
out of the cart, and grab their cases. They walk up to the scene which is a
smaller plane crash.)
Ian: Dr. Brennan?
Bones: Yes.
Ian: I’m Ian Dicen with the NTSB. (they
shake hands)
Bones: This is my assistant, Zack Addy.
Ian: (escorts them to the plane) At
approximately zero four hundred last night, a private jet with five passengers
on board reported horizontal stabilizer trouble, two hundred miles southeast of
Norfolk. Yeager Airport in Charleston tracked them for thirty minutes until
they dropped off the radar screen at zero four thirty. The plane tried to make an emergency landing here when it clipped some trees and slammed to the
ground. We found another mostly intact body over near the trees. The rest is
bits and pieces.
Zack: What makes this one of our cases?
Ian: I beg your pardon?
Zack: We’re kind of special. We’re elite.
We don’t sort though just any set of bodies.
Ian: It was a state department flight with
a bunch of VIP’s on board. Is that special enough?
Zack: I apologize if I have offended you.
Usually we have an FBI Agent who mediates our interpersonal encounters.
(A medico-legal worker walks up to Zack and
Bones)
Worker: We found another skull.
Zack: Two skulls, those pieces are from two
different skulls.
Ian: I’ll leave you super elite types to
it. (walks away)
Bones: Zack, we don’t need Booth to mediate
our interpersonal encounters.(She leans down and looks in what’s left of the
cockpit of the plane) Okay, pilot, copilot, brings our count to six. Three
mostly intact sets of remains, one partial, and two fragmented.
(Bones gets up and walks a little ways away
from the cockpit and looks around on the ground.)
Zack: (leans down on the other side of
cockpit) Obviously bodies are burnt to a crisp but no dermis, very little soft
tissue, indications of high impact trauma, burst fractures to the lower
thorasic and lumbar vertebrae consistent with injuries caused by the vertical
impact of the falling aircraft. Should I keep talking as though you are paying
attention?
Bones: (picks up a bone fragment) What do
you make of this?
(Zack walks over to her and bends down to
look at it.)
Zack: Femur fragment.
Bones: No charring.
Zack: You think this fragment doesn’t
belong to the plane crash?
Bones: What are the odds?
Zack: A crashing plane falling directly on
a human being? One in ten million.
[Cut to: Dr. Goodman’s office. Angela and
Bones are seated opposite of Dr. Goodman who is standing behind his desk. Zack
and Hodgins are standing behind Angela and Bones.]
Dr. Goodman: The information that I’m about
to tell you must not leave this room
Hodgins: I am philosophically imposed to
institutional secrecy in all its forms.
Dr. Goodman: Fine, get out.
Hodgins: Pfft.
Dr. Goodman: Two communist Chinese trade
attachés were on that plane when it crashed both high ranking party men.
Hodgins: Well obviously we shot it down.
Dr. Goodman: (sits at his desk) The FAA and
the NTSB can prove that it was an accident. Also on the manifest was an
American business man, a pilot and a co-pilot, five people.
Zack: Dr. Goodman, we found six sets of
human remains on that airplane.
Bones: Not to mention, three bone fragments
which were not on the plane.
Dr. Goodman: Is there any chance those bone
fragments were on the plane?
Angela: What, you mean as carry on luggage?
Bones: No, everything on the plane burned.
They were untouched by fire.
Dr. Goodman: Hm. Then forget about the bone
fragments for the time being. The state department is extremely anxious to
find the identity of that sixth person. No one wishes this to become an
international incident. Therefore, this is our only priority.
Bones: I disagree!
Dr. Goodman: For the love of God, why?
Bones: Because the plane crash was an
accident. The bone fragments were not.
Dr. Goodman: How do you know?
Bones: Zack found unusual cut marks.
Zack: Cut marks congruent with
dismemberment.
Dr. Goodman: (sighs and stands up) People,
one hour ago I received a call from the secretary of state requesting that the
unidentified extra passenger be our first priority.
Bones: So now politics are more important
then murder?
Dr. Goodman: I’m not saying please. I’m not
being reasonable. I’m making the decision. first and foremost identify that
sixth body.
[Cut to: Lab area with boxes. Bones is
holding up a bone fragment looking at Booth. The other two fragments they
found are on the lighted table before her.]
Bones: You got it or do you want me to
explain again?
Booth: No, I got it okay. The plane goes
down, Kablooey, there’s an extra body on board which you really don’t care
about because you’re more interested in these bone (he reaches out to touch one
and Bones slaps his hand away.) fragments that you found on the ground.
Booth: Hm. Is this all you got?
Bones: So far, a piece of skull, a chunk of
vertebrae, part of a femur.
Booth: Not much to go on.
Bones: These fragments come from a person
who was hacked.
Booth: Hacked to little bits.
Bones: No, medium sized bits. I’m not sure
how it turned into little bits yet.
Booth: Okay and I’m here why?
Bones: Dismemberment, little bits, it’s a
murder.
Booth: Well FBI doesn’t have jurisdiction
at a golf course.
Bones: Well who does?
Booth: I don’t know. Try the PGA. Uh huh.
You know you’ve done a couple of cases without me and you miss me.
Bones: Zack misses you not me.
Booth: Zack and I don’t even talk.
Bones: He seems to think it’s a male
bonding ritual.
Booth: Maybe he’s right?
Bones: No he’s not.
Booth: Could be?
Bones: You told him that so you wouldn’t
have to talk to him.
Booth: Well it was nicer then shooting him.
Bones: Mm. Goodman has ordered me to
investigate the other extra body.
Booth: Well then you better get on that.
Next time you know, you miss me pick up the phone call me we’ll do lunch or
something.
Bones: I do not miss you!
Booth: Yeah you miss me. C’mon.
Bones: I do not miss you!
Booth: Say it.
(A security guard walks in.)
Guard: Dr. Brennan, Agent Booth, you have a
visitor. (he leaves)
Booth: You miss me.
Bones: No I don’t. (she walks out.)
Booth: You miss me. You miss me.
[Cut to: Booth and Bones walking together.
They enter her office and see a man waiting for them.]
Kane: Dr. Temperance Brennan.
Bones: Yes. (they shake hands)
Kane: Special Agent Seeley Booth, I’m Jesse
Kane.
Booth: You’re Jesse Kane?
Kane: You’ve heard of me?
Bones: I haven’t.
Booth: Jesse here is sort of an expert in
missing person’s cases.
Kane: I’ve done some writing on missing
person’s laws and investigative techniques, inner agency cooperation,
jurisdictional dispute, that kind of thing. I heard about the bones you found
at the golf course.
Bones: I can’t really talk about that.
Kane: I don’t mean the Communist Chinese on
the plane.
Booth: Whoa, whoa, whoa, Communist Chinese.
Kane: The other bones, the fragments.
Booth: How did you hear about the Communist
Chinese?
Kane: (ignores him and keeps looking at
Bones) Those pieces of bone you found at the golf course, I’m pretty sure
that’s my dad.
[Roll Intro.]
[Cut to: Wong Fu’s. Kane, Booth, and Bones
are sitting at a small table in the middle of the place.]
Kane: My expertise in missing person’s
investigations derives from one thing, my search for my father. (hands Bones a
newspaper article) He went missing five years ago during a trip to his cottage
in Virginia Beach.
Bones: What makes you think these (Booth
jerks the article out of her hand to look at it.) bone fragments come from your
father?
Booth: Alright, you know there is a
question of National security here that is my jurisdiction. (To Bones) He’s not
supposed to know about the Chinese.
Kane: My investigations lead me to conclude
that my father was murdered in the area and his body disposed.
Bones: What did the police say?
Kane: They gave up four years ago.
Booth: (hands Kane the newspaper article
back) Because there was no evidence of foul play.
Kane: The investigation was bungled. The
city police didn’t have the manpower, the state troopers said it was a federal
matter, and you guys suggested a private investigator.
Booth: It was not bungled, okay, because
there was no evidence of foul play. It’s a common story. Okay? A guy goes in
for a pack of cigarettes and ends up renting out snorkeling gear in Guam.
Kane: He doesn’t know what it’s like to
loose a parent you do.
Booth: (angry) You want to back down a jot
there buddy?
Bones: How do you know about that?
Kane: No offense, Dr. Brennan but you’re a
writer. You’re a well know scientist, it’s out there plus you’re one of us.
Bones: One of us?
Kane: People who’s loved ones have simply
vanished, in your case both parents.
Booth: Okay, how do you know about the
Chinese? (Kane ignores him and Booth snaps in his face and puts his hand in
front of Bone’s face) Do not look at Dr. Brennan, okay? Whether you like it or
not, this is an issue between you (Bones moves his hand away) and the FBI.
Kane: If body parts are found in roughly
the area where my father disappeared, I’m going to know about it. Radio
chatter, the internet, the local law enforcement, that’s all I’m prepared to
tell you. (to Bones) Do you mind if I ask you how many bone fragments you
found?
Bones: Yes I do. I don’t discuss ongoing
investigations.
Booth: She doesn’t discuss ongoing
investigations.
Kane: Fair enough, Dr. Brennan. (He puts
his hand on a box of papers sitting on a chair next to him.) These are my notes
from the last five years, every lead, every clue; every person I have ever
talked with is here.
Booth: Mm. Hm. And why would Dr. Brennan
care about that?
Kane: Cause it will least give her a
candidate to eliminate.
Bones: He’s got a point.
Kane: My father’s medical records,
pictures, last known whereabouts, even a connection to the golf course. Also my
phone number but don’t worry if I don’t hear from you, you’ll hear from me. (he
leaves.)
Booth: Wow (sighs and whistles) pushy.
Bones: Well maybe he discovered that being
pushy is how you get cops to pay attention.
Booth: What are you hawking at me for?
Bones: The Chinese, the plane crash, that’s
geo politics. This is murder. Will you help?
Booth: Well you know I guess if you’re uh,
really asking me, I guess I could uh you know fudge it with my boss to make it
look like it was attached to the Chinese plane crash thing.
(Bones smiles at him.)
[Cut to: Lab area with boxes. Bones is
looking at the three bone fragments. Angela walks in with Zack and Hodgins.]
Angela: We’ve made some progress on the
mystery passenger.
Bones: Fill me in.
Zack: Nasal ridges indicated she was a
cocazoid female approximately five feet 10 inches, epiphyseal fusion puts her
age somewhere between twenty to twenty-five.
Angela: I have a theory.
Hodgins: Femme fatal assassin.
Zack: Unregistered flight attendant.
Angela: Young, beautiful girl, doesn’t
appear on the in flight manifest, group of how powered politicos.
Hodgins: Oh.
Zack: Wait. What? What?
Bones: Someone on that flight might have
been doing his daughter or girl friend a favor.
Angela: Ugh, you’re so sweet, honey. You
really are.
Zack: Oh, you think she was the in flight
entertainment.
(Hodgins just shakes his head and rolls his
eyes.)
Angela: Yeah. (to Bones) Anything you want
to tell us about the bone bits you care about?
Zack: (turns around and looks at them
displayed on a screen) Supra orbital margin is rounded suggesting a male.
Bones: Yes and there are signs of osteolytic
lipping or polish on this piece of vertebrae.
Hodgins: Arthritis.
Angela: So middle aged guy.
Bones: Weathering and discoloration
suggests these bones have been out there for approximately five years. I’m
going to ask you guys to help me on this.
Angela: You mean after the Communist thing?
Bones: No, immediately.
Hodgins: I’m in.
Zack: You want us to defy Dr. Goodman.
Hodgins: I’m in.
Bones: Not defy per say, do both jobs but
keep one a secret.
Hodgins: I’m in.
Angela: We get it. You’re a rebel.
Bones: Zack, I need you to analyze the cuts
on the bone.
Zack: I was kinda hoping to keep my job.
Angela: There’s not enough skull here for
me to do a reconstruction.
Bones: If I gave you a picture, you could
tell me if the skull piece doesn’t match?
Angela: Ah, I could construct a schematic
and see if the shard fit the general shape of the skull if I had a picture.
Hodgins: Has anyone noticed that I was the
first to offer help and apparently I’m useless.
Bones: Not true. You are the one that’s
going to keep Goodman from finding out.
Hodgins: I’m in.
[Cut to: A diner. Bones is at a lunch
counter talking with Kane.]
Kane: So the bone fragments were the same
sex and age of my father.
Bones: Yes.
Kane: Thank you.
Bones: It’s a long way from conclusive.
Kane: Yeah I know at times like these not
to get hopeful but on the other hand you’ve got to have hope.
Bones: Even after five years?
Kane: People are found after decades, Dr.
Brennan, after centuries. You’ve done some of the finding.
Bones: Booth says you’ve made a living off
of the disappearance of your father.
Kane: About six months after my father
disappeared, I found out nobody was actually looking for him. Next thing I
knew I was an expert in motivating the police, victims rights, becoming well
known is a by product of my search for my father not the goal of my search.
You should understand my motivation better then most people in law enforcement.
Bones: I’m not really interested in bonding
over the loss of my parents. Booth is looking over your file now.
Kane: I wasn’t looking for his help.
Bones: We work together. Booth knows that
the bone fragments are evidence of foul play. That’s all the motivation he
needed.
Kane: You didn’t have to lean on him?
Bones: (smiles) Not at all.
Kane: If you say so.
[Cut to: Lab. Platform area. The camera
pans over the six bodies lined up next to each other on tables. They all have
pictures of the victims except the last one which is the unknown one. It just
has a card with a silhouette on it. Hodgins, Zack, and Angela are down next to
the platform looking at the bone fragments on a computer screen.]
Zack: Well, one of the bone fragments has
distinctive ridge mark indentations.
Hodgins: Knife mark.
Zack: Yes specifically a carving knife.
Angela: What about the other ones, the
jagged marks?
Zack: Some kind of machine blade. (sits)
Angela: What like a jigsaw or a chainsaw?
(Dr. Goodman clears his throat off screen
and they all look up.)
Dr. Goodman: Are you suggesting one of the
Chinese diplomats was wielding a chainsaw?
Hodgins: Ah, good one sir, very droll.
Zack knows much more about this then I do but we weren’t discussing a literal
chainsaw cut but rather the pattern it leaves on the bone. Right? Zack?
(Zack just stares at Dr. Goodman with his
mouth open.)
Angela: You know blades move in several
distinctive ways.
Hodgins: Several distinctive ways.
Zack: (very fast) Circular elliptical segmented,
chainsaws are designed to cut soft materials at high speed when cutting hard
materials like bone they create wave marks by the action of the blade. This
pattern is too organized, too linear.
Hodgins: Therefore, no Chinese chainsaw
massacre scenario.
Dr. Goodman: Hm, yes, fascinating. What
has it got to do with the victims of the plane crash?
Hodgins: We not only have to reassemble
each of the plane crash victims but figure out how their remains were
scattered.
Zack: Not by being cut up, that’s for sure.
Hodgins: Now we’ve eliminated blades.
(Dr. Goodman rolls his eyes and walks
away.)
Hodgins: (leans down.) Never freeze on me
again.
Zack: I find Dr. Goodman scary.
Angela: Well, I’m never trusting any of us
again. We’re that good at lying, huh?
Hodgins: We’re going to do much better.
[Cut to: Booth’s SUV night. He’s driving,
Bones is riding along.]
Booth: Well, you know, I have to admit Jesse
Kane’s file on his father is both well organized and complete. Yep, his main
suspect is his fathers’ girlfriend.
Bones: (looking at a file) Karen Anderson.
Booth: No alibi and since they were living
together at the time of the disappearance she remains in the house and has
access to their joint accounts.
Bones: Well how much money are we talking
about?
Booth: Max Kane, he was a stockbroker, he
was worth millions but you know, after seven years missing the courts will
declare him officially dead but you know, by that time she could have siphoned
out half of the money so I say we go visit Miss. Anderson and we’ll know pretty
fast if she’s a suspect.
Bones: How?
Booth: How? Subtle psychological
indicators, Bones.
Bones: I looked those up on the internet,
body language, sweat, tonal quality, shifty eyes.
Booth: Hey you know what? I don’t go poking
around your bones stuff, okay. Just leave the human stuff to me.
[Cut to: Karen Anderson’s house. Night.
Bones and Booth sit across from Miss. Anderson and her boyfriend, Eddie, in
the living room.]
Karen: Why has Max’s disappearance become a
matter for the FBI?
Booth: Max’s disappearance is not an FBI
matter.
Eddie: You’re an FBI agent.
Bones: Human remains were found in the
course of a Federal investigation. Agent Booth is taxed with the job of
identifying them.
Booth: I’d like to eliminate Max Kane as a
possibility and just move on all together.
Karen: So this is a pro forma interview?
Booth: Yes, yes, absolutely.
Karen: Because I know Max’s son Jesse
accuses me of his murder.
Booth: Why do you think he suspects you?
Karen: Because of the age difference
between me and Max, because I’m still living in the house, because after five
years I dared to fall in love with someone new. (she puts her hand on Eddie’s
knee.) I mean who knows.
Bones: Some people find it harder then
others to get over the loss of a loved one.
Booth: Bones. (snaps and whistles at her.)
Bones: (quietly) What?
Karen: Jesse got to you, didn’t he? The
dimples and the sad smile, and melancholy on a mission to find his beloved father,
you know all that.
Bones: Jesse didn’t love his father?
Karen: Max and Jesse didn’t speak for the
two years before Max disappeared and that was before I came into his life.
Booth: What do you think caused the riff?
Karen: Max cut Jesse off financially. Max
thought Jesse was lazy running around New York doing nothing with his life and
well Jesse was furious.
[Cut to: Lab. Bones, Hodgins, and Zack are
in a room discussing the bone fragments at a table. Angela is in there to
peeking out the door keeping guard.]
Zack: Hack marks were caused by a hietal
carving knife.
Hodgins: The osteological profile suggests
evidence of post mortem freezing.
Bones: Max Kane disappeared mid winter.
What about the jagged cut marks?
Angela: This is the part that makes me
queasy.
Zack: The victim was frozen, dismembered,
and fed into a wood chipper.
Hodgins: And spread over a golf course.
Angela: Either talk loudly enough so I can
hear all the way or whisper so I can’t.
Zack: Maybe if we told Goodman what we
know, he’d authorize a change in priorities.
Angela: Or he’d suspend us all for defying
him.
Bones: Angela’s right.
Zack: So we’re going to drop this and get
back to what Dr. Goodman told us to do in the first place?
Bones: No, we are going to keep doing what
we are doing behind Goodman’s back. (slaps Hodgins in the back with a file as
she leaves the room.)
Hodgins: (claps hands and rubs them
together.) That’s the spirit. (he leaves)
(Angela and Zack both sigh.)
[Cut to: Booth’s office. Booth and Bones
are there with Kane.]
Kane: Yeah it’s true. My father cut me off
financially so I take it that means you talked to Karen.
Booth: Is there anything else you failed to
mention to us?
Bones: Why didn’t you tell us?
Kane: I know I didn’t kill my father so I’d
rather you didn’t waste your time on that line of investigation.
Booth: (makes a buzzer sound) Too late so
what happened between you and your father, hmm?
Kane: About five years ago I was enrolled
at NYU. All I really did was go clubbing and have a good time. My father was
right to cut me off. I was a disappointment to him.
Booth: But if he could see you now.
Kane: I’d like to think he can see me now.
Bones: Your father is dead. A dead person
can’t see anything.
Kane: Maybe that’s true, maybe it isn’t but
either way at least I know my dad would be proud.
Booth: Bones, tell Jesse what happened to
the victim.
Bones: Really? (he nods yes)
Kane: What?
Bones: It’s just that usually you tell me
not to tell people.
Kane: It can’t be worse then some of the
things I have imagined.
Bones: The victim was frozen, dismembered,
and fed through a wood chipper.
(Kane looks upset.)
Booth: Bones has figured out what type of
wood chipper was used. We’re going to trace it to the manufacturer and see if
one was sold in Virginia Beach.
Kane: I can’t believe someone would do that
to my dad.
Bones: We haven’t positively identified the
victim as your father. I have our artist comparing the skull fragment to
pictures of your dad.
Kane: Could I see the bone fragments?
[Cut to: Lab. The boxes are. Bone and Kane
walk into the room where there are three bone fragments lying on a lighted
table.]
Kane: This is all?
Bones: Yes. I mean…it’s all of somebody.
Kane: He was a big man, my dad. It’s hard
to believe that this is all that is left of him. How can you get anything from
three small bits of bone?
Bones: It’s more then a lot of people get.
Kane: I know where my dad was right before
he disappeared. I know my dad met with a client at the Northstar grill in Virginia Beach. I know he had meatloaf. Hm. I know he was supposed to meet Karen at the
pier but he didn’t show up. I know she waited two days before reporting him
gone. I have a good timeline and I have three small bits of bone. You don’t
have any of those things and I realize how hopeless you must feel.
Bones: Come with me.
[Cut to: Bone’s office. She hands Kane a
file]
Kane: (opens it) This is all you have?
Bones: Yes, you were right about how little
it is.
Kane: No, I mean this is simply your copy
of the official file.
Bones: Yes, what else would there be?
Kane: You never tried to hire any private
investigators, did any poking around yourself?
Bones: Well I’m pretty new at field work.
I’ve mostly been a lab rat my whole career plus I trusted the authorities would
do what they could.
Kane: The authorities have rooms filled
with files like these, warehouses.
Bones: I’m the authorities, Booth is the authorities.
Kane: Did you ever show this file to Booth?
Bones: No, no.
(Kane leans in to kiss her and she backs
up.)
Bones: This is where I work.
(Angela comes walking up.)
Angela: Uh which is my cue?
Bones: Uh, um, Angela, come in. This is Jesse
Kane.
(Angela walks over and shakes his hand.)
Angela: Hello.
Kane: Hi.
Angela: Hi, Angela Montenegro.
Bones: (notices a paper in Angela’s hand.)
What’s that?
Angela: Oh, uh nothing that can’t wait.
Kane: Is it about my father?
Angela: In as far as I know, which is quite
far believe me, no one has tried to kiss Brennan in this office and lived to
tell about it.
Bones: Angela.
Kane: Would one of you please tell me what
that piece of paper is?
Angela: It’s a uh, it’s a schematic
comparing the skull fragments we found on the golf course to pictures of your
father.
Kane: And?
Bones: It doesn’t not match your father.
Kane: So it could be him?
Angela: (hands him the schematic)Yeah
there’s a pretty good chance.
Kane: I knew it.
[Cut to: Angela and Bones walking through
the lab.]
Angela: Are you hooking up later?
Bones: We didn’t arrange anything.
Angela: Why not?
Bones: Cause you were right there hovering.
Angela: I was not. I was being your wing
man.
Bones: What’s that?
Angela: I was rendering assistance and
enabling where needed.
Bones: Booth thinks he might be a suspect.
Angela: Oh now you’re just looking for
excuses not to get involved.
[Cut to: Holograph lab. Bones, Angela, and
Dr. Goodman are looking at the holographs.]
Angela: Plane crash victim number four,
captain Jacob Howard, pilot, age forty-seven, height five foot six, weight
approximately one hundred and sixty seven pounds.
Bones: Overlay the photograph. Frontal
zygomatic sutures line up, cranial meninges are in sync.
(A skull appears and then a face is placed
over it.)
Dr. Goodman: Excellent that’s one more off
our list.
Angela: Victim number five, Shen Ru Fong,
age fifty-six, height five foot six, weight approximately one hundred and forty
pounds.
Dr. Goodman: Yes that’s terrific except we
knew all of these people were on the plane. What the state department wants to
know is the identity of our mystery woman. I hope I can count on your full
energies on this Dr. Brennan.
Bones: If I could be completely honest sir…
(Hodgins walks in with Zack.)
Hodgins: Toxicology reports came back from
all six victims. Pilot and co-pilot were clean. Our two Chinese nationals had elevated
levels of alcohol and sildenafil more commonly know as Viagra and our mystery
girl showed traces of alcohol and cocaine. So will the cover up start now or
somewhere between here and the state department?
Dr. Goodman: (to Bones) You were saying about
being completely honest?
Bones: Yes sir. Regarding the bone shards….
Zack: Uh, the prostitute was six inches
taller then anyone else on the flight and she had occupational stress markers.
Dr. Goodman: Let’s not call her a
prostitute yet, Mr. Addy. What occupational markers?
Hodgins: Eh, it’s a foot thing.
Dr. Goodman: She was a fetishist?
Zack: Both her cuboid and medio malleolus
show signs of wear.
Bones: You can relax Dr. Goodman. She wore
extremely high stiletto heels.
Angela: I reconstructed her face from the
partial skull. (Angela enters data and a blonde woman’s upper torso shows up.)
Hodgins: She was hot.
Dr. Goodman: What’s our next move?
Bones: I suggest we try to match this
reconstruction with escort ads both internet and print in the DC area.
Zack: Oh, I’ll do that. (They all look at
him.) Was that overly enthusiastic?
Dr. Goodman: Thank you for the update.
This case continues to be your top priority, correct?
Bones: If I could suggest…
Hodgins: Dr. Brennan has been very clear
about your priorities on this, Sir.
(Goodman nods his head and leaves.)
[Cut to: Road out front of the lab. Day.
Booth has a wood chipper hooked up to his hitch and he’s undoing straps off of
it. Bones is walking up to him.]
Bones: What’s that?
Booth: It’s the only black mantis wood
chipper in Virginia Beach. I subpoenaed the records from the manufacturer and
traced it back to the town equipment yard. Eh, my people they uh, couldn’t find
any blood residue.
Bones: That makes sense if the corpse was
frozen.
Booth: Yeah not to mention this puppy here
has grounded up about ten thousand trees, you know. Hey I figured you could
match the blades to the cuts in the bones, right or do something I haven’t
though of much more confusing and scientific?
(Zack comes out of the building and walks
over to them.)
Zack: Booth, nobody told me you were
working this case.
Booth: (to Bones) Only two people have had
access to this machine in the past seven years, a city maintenance foreman and
a city maintenance worker by the name of Ray Sparks. Sparks has got a jacket
so… What do you say, huh? You want to come with me to go talk to him?
Zack: (leans over to Bones) Told you. It’s
a guy thing. (smiles)
Bones: Um, yes I’d like to come.
Booth: Alright, here we go.
Bones: (to Zack) Let Angela do the escort
matching. I have something a lot more interesting for you and Hodgins.
(Bones opens the SUV door behind her.)
Booth: What’s more interesting then escorts?
Bones: I need you guys to run a dispersal
pattern test on the chipper.
Zack: Using what medium?
Bones: Assume the victim was frozen solid
when he was fed into the chipper.
Zack: No way.
Booth: (to Bones) The correct response
would be (whispers) yes way.
Bones: Oh, yes way.
(Bones gets into the SUV and Booth shuts
the door. Zack hold his fist up for him to tap with his fist and Booth ignores
him.)
[Cut to: Spark’s house. Day. Booth and
Bones walk up the front porch to the door.]
Bones: You ignore Zack to make him think
that you’ve got some special bond.
Booth: Yeah but it works doesn’t it? I’m
happy. He’s happy.
Bones: It’s not the truth.
Booth: But it works. (knocks on door) Ray Sparks
I would like to have a word with you please.
Bones: Zack wants to fit into the real
world more then anything. You’re not helping.
(Booth knocks again and you see Ray behind
him move the curtain out of the way in a bay window to see who it is. Bones and
Booth don’t notice him there.)
Booth: (calls out.) FBI, Special Agent
Booth.
(He hears Booth and takes off through the
house. Booth hears a loud crash from out back.)
Booth: He went out around the back.
(Booth takes off down the porch steps and
heads left around the house. Bones follows him and bumps into him at the
corner. Booth stops for a second and looks at her.)
Booth: No, no, the other way, Bones!
(She turns and runs around the other side
of the house. Booth continues around his side and pulls his gun out. He meets
up with Ray Sparks first and aims his gun at him.)
Booth: FBI! Freeze!
(Ray turns and tries to run the other way.
Bones comes out from her side of the house and grabs him by the throat and
shoves him backwards. Ray falls on his back on the ground in front of her
grunting.)
Booth: (says to himself.) Bones, jeeze.
(Bones puts her foot on his chest and close
to his neck to pin him down with her arms in a fighting position.)
Booth: Ray Sparks.
Ray: Hey, I didn’t do nothing wrong!
Bones: (to Booth) I feel like kicking him.
Booth: (pulls out handcuffs) That’s normal
after a pursuit. We try not to do that.
(He leans over and pulls Ray up off the
ground.)
Booth: Come on, get up.
(Booth then handcuffs him.)
[Cut to: Outside lab. Day. Security has
roped off the area around the wood chipper. Hodgins and Zack roll out a gurney
with something covered on it. There are several lab people standing around
watching them.]
Zack: (notices everyone) Too many people.
How are we going to keep this from Dr. Goodman?
Hodgins: Ah, he’s having lunch with the
President of Harvard.
(Angela walks up to them and notices the
lab people and the gurney. She has a drink and a hotdog in her hand.)
Angela: What’s going on? Why is every guy
from the Jeffersonian out here?
Hodgins: (puts on gloves and looks the
crowd.) Their scientists, this is a fascinating scientific inquiry.
Angela: Oh my God! They’re all out here
because you’re going to feed something through this wood chipper.
Hodgins: Not just something. (he removes
the sheet on the gurney) Ta da! A frozen pig.
Angela: (disgusted) Oh, ugh.
Zack: The morphology of pig bones is almost
identical to human bone.
Hodgins: By feeding the pig through the
wood chipper we’ll be able to determine the dispersal pattern of the fragments.
Zack: By comparing the pulverized pig
remains to the fragments we found at the golf course we’ll be able to tell if
this is the actual wood chipper the victim was fed through.
Angela: Liars! You just want to see what
happens when you toss some frozen pig into a wood chipper.
(Hodgins hits the button to start the
chipper up. The crowd cheers and claps. Hodgins grabs the frozen pig by one
arm and leg on his side while Zack does the same on the other side.)
Hodgins: Ready? (everybody shouts with
him.) One, Two, Three!
(Zack and Hodgins release the pig mid air
tossing it into the chipper. It grinds it up and shoots it out into the air.)
Hodgins: (clapping) Yeah.
(Zack claps and watches the pieces fly
through the air. Chunks go flying into the crowd and people move to avoid
getting hit by them. Angela is disgusted and throws her hotdog into a nearby
garbage can. Zack notices Dr. Goodman standing a little ways behind Hodgins.
Hodgins turns and sees him too. Dr. Goodman flicks a piece of meat off his
lapel on his suit and glares at them.)
[Cut to: FBI Headquarters. Day. Booth is in
the questioning room with Ray. He walks behind him and slaps him in the back
of his head with a file.]
Booth: Okay. What do we got here? (opens
file) Breaking and entering, drunk, disorderly…wow (whistles)
Ray: Yeah, I’ve been keeping myself out of
trouble for the past four years now.
Booth: How long have you been a maintenance
worker for the city of Virginia Beach?
Ray: Since 92.
Booth: You ever meet a guy by the name of
Max Kane?
Ray: No.
Booth: Karen Anderson?
Ray: Yeah, I know her.
Booth: How?
Ray: She bartends at the golf course.
Booth: (laughs a little) You don’t strike
me as a golfer, Ray. (chuckles again.)
Ray: (chuckles.) City land is right across
the creek from the course and I…I go to the club house a couple times a week to
have lunch.
Booth: Hey, how did you pay for that house
you live in Ray? I mean that’s…that’s pretty nice.
Ray: You got a hard time sticking to one
topic, huh? My mom left me the house. She left it to me and my brother Frank,
five years ago.
Booth: Five years ago Max Kane disappeared
(sits), Karen Anderson’s boyfriend so you know you can see how my suspicions
might be a little aroused.
Ray: Yeah but the thing is I didn’t live in
Virginia Beach five years ago. I was in South Hampton correctional center
doing six months for skipping out on a (whispers) DUI warrant. (laughs) I guess
I don’t need a lawyer, right?
[Cut to: Lab. Hodgins is sitting at a
computer typing and Dr. Goodman walks up to him.]
Dr. Goodman: There’s no way that wood
chipper experiment is connected to the plane crash at the golf course.
Hodgins: Look.
Dr. Goodman: Don’t say anything. Just
listen. Your primary job is to do what I say failing that your job is to fool
me. You failed to fool me, Dr. Hodgins.
Hodgins: (looks down at some papers) I’d
have fooled you if you would have gone to lunch as planned.
Dr. Goodman: I’ll find some administrative
ways to punish you, parking, dining room privileges, budget reviews, that sort
of thing but if it happens again.
Hodgins: I got it.
Dr. Goodman: No you don’t. (leans in close)
You think I’m a kind and fair man, egoless, balanced, ruled by intelligent
reflection but I do have an ego. I can be vindictive and petty. I will take
you down even if it means striking at you through your friends and co-workers.
(Hodgins looks at him a little shocked) Now you understand.
(Dr. Goodman turns to leave and then smiles
with his back to Hodgins.)
[Cut to: Booth’s office. Bones is sitting
across from Kane and Booth is standing next to him facing him.]
Booth: Ray Sparks was in jail when your
father disappeared.
Kane: He might have acted as a go between,
put Karen in touch with the hit man.
Booth: One of the things that you lecture
about is that the simplest theory usually turns out to be true.
Kane: Usually, not always.
Bones: What’s the simplest theory in this
case?
Booth: Disowned son realizes that his
father may remarry, loose his inheritance.
Bones: Booth, are you accusing Jesse of
murdering his own father for money?
Booth: Did you ever hear of the Menendez
brothers?
Kane: I came to you about the bone shards
saying it might be dad.
Booth: Hey look, your father is declared
dead, you get your inheritance before Karen Anderson spends it all. Well, you
don’t seem too upset about the accusation.
Kane: Agent Booth, for four years I have
been making enemies with law enforcement, attacking me is a pretty typical
response.
Bones: Booth, is this one of the times when
you just poke and prod to get reactions?
Booth: Listen Bones, we have to treat him
like a suspect. He is not a member of the team.
Kane: (to Bones) Look, I’m like you. I
need the truth.
Bones: (tears up) I have to get back to the
lab. (leaves.)
[Cut to: Lab. Office area. Angela is
sitting at a computer and Bones is sitting next to her. There is a overhead
picture of the golf course on the screen with three red dots on it.]
Angela: Satellite imagery of the golf
course. These three dots show where the bone fragments were found.
Bones: Can you show me the results of the
wood chipper test?
Angela: The V shape indicates the maximum
distance from the point of origin a bone fragment could have traveled given
similar wind speeds and ambient temperatures.
Bones: Okay and remove the plane crash it’s
irrelevant to this.
Angela: The question is, in order to use
the guy’s pig grinding experiment, where do we place the wood chipper?
Bones: I bet the murderer aimed the wood
chipper over the stream.
Angela: So the evidence would wash away.
Bones: Mm, Hm. (points to a clear section
of the map.) What’s that?
Angela: That is a small access road for
maintenance vehicles.
Bones: Try putting the wood chipper there.
(Angela enters some data and moves the wood
chipper to the maintenance road facing sideways towards the stream.)
Angela: Ooh, fresante of success.
Bones: We should see if we can find anymore
bone fragments here and here.
Dr. Goodman: Are we any closer to
identifying our mystery woman?
(Angela hits a button on the computer and
the screen changes to the labs logo.)
Bones: Um, I’m not …I’m not certain.
(clears her throat.)
Angela: Brennan is still waiting for an
update.
(Hodgins enters)
Hodgins: I saw you come in, Sir and I have
an update. I have a list of possible matches on our Geisha in the sky.
Bones: She is Caucasian, our mystery woman
is definitely Caucasian.
Hodgins: We sent a list to the FBI and they’re
checking it out.
Dr. Goodman: Ah, well in that case you
might want to turn your attention back to the bone fragments.
(Bones smiles at him and notices his
glare. She quickly looks down.)
[Cut to: Hotel. Day. Bones knocks at the
open door to Jesse’s room. She sees him sitting at a computer and he looks up
at her and smiles.]
Bones: (enters) I came for the file on my
parents.
(Jesse grabs it off the desk and walks over
to give it to her.)
Kane: (sighs) You think I might have killed
my father.
Bones: No, it’s just…I asked the wrong
person to help me and…
Kane: What?
Bones: I just don’t think it’s healthy what
you are doing, putting your whole life into this.
Kane: And I suppose what your doing,
putting nothing into solving the disappearance of your parents, I suppose
that’s healthy?
(Bones looks down at the file. It is
labeled Matt and Christine Brennan.)
Bones: We’re searching the golf course for
more bone fragments. (she leaves)
[Cut to: Golf course. Day. There is an area
roped off in red. Lab workers along with the team are scouring the area for
more bone fragments. Booth is nearby the area watching them. Booth turns and
sees Kane standing up on a hill top behind Booth watching also. Bones turns and
sees Kane and he hangs his head.]
[Cut to: Lab. Hodgins is standing near a
table with more bone fragments they found from the site. Bones is standing at
the top of the table with her arms crossed. Zack his sitting behind them with
his back to them at a computer.]
Hodgins: Amazingly we found a finger with a
nail still attached and underneath that nail…
Zack: Polyurethane, the tough stuff. The
victim must have been scraping at something before he died. I… I can’t identify
this bone anomaly. It’s full of osteoids, thick, maybe part of the mandible?
Bones: (walks over to him and looks at the
screen.) Human, something odd with the cell structure.
Hodgins: A wood chipper wouldn’t do that
damage at the cellular level.
Bones: It’s a non-malignant bone tumor. I
need the most recent bone scans from Max Kane’s medical records.(The phone on the table near them rings and
Hodgins picks it up.)
Hodgins: (in phone) Hodgins. (to Bones)
It’s Booth. The locals just arrested Jesse Kane for attacking Karen Anderson.
[Cut to: Booth’s SUV. Bones is with him.]
Booth: The local Sheriff’s say Jesse Kane
showed up at Karen Anderson’s house to confront her. He was ranting about the
murder of his dad. Eddie tried to throw him out. The two of them they
exchanged punches. The fact that Jesse confronted him doesn’t mean that he
isn’t the killer.
Bones: I know.
Booth: Alright, you know what? He might
have done this just to make us think that he was angry at her, alright? He’s
smart.
Bones: No poking and prodding, do you think
Jesse murdered his father?
Booth: You know Bones, all I’m saying is we
get into these things, we look into murders, and we can’t let our heart strings
get all plucked. Okay? We got to poke at people wounds, we got to make them
bleed a little, we got to make them tell us things that they normally wouldn’t
want to tell us. Alright? We got to be willing to be hard on them is what I’m
trying to say even when we know that we’re no different then them.
Bones: You didn’t answer my question.
Booth: Well I have an opinion. You want to
know? (she looks at him.) If I had to bet, I’d say he didn’t do it.
Bones: Me too.
Booth: I’m going off my gut. I mean
what…what’s persuading you?
Bones: The bone fragments at the golf
course, they didn’t come from Max Kane.
Booth: That’s great. You knew that when you
asked me what I thought. You testing out my instincts, Bones?
Bones: Poking and prodding. I learned from
the best. (pinches his cheek.)
(Booth laughs.)
[Cut to: Police station. Bones is sitting
across a table from Kane who is in handcuffs and a dark blue jump suit. Booth
is standing in the corner of the room.]
Kane: It’s not my dad?
Booth: No. We don’t know who it is yet.
Kane: How can you be certain?
Bones: We found a juxtacortical chondroma,
a non-malignant bone tumor. Your father’s x-rays showed no sign of such a
tumor.
Kane: Maybe he got it after the x-rays?
Bones: The x-rays were taken two months
before he disappeared. It’s a slow growing tumor. It would have taken years
to get to the size and density that we found.
Booth: Look, I’m going to see if I can get
this assault stuff to go away and get you out of here. (he leaves the room.)
Bones: I’m sorry Jesse.
Kane: For what? Suspecting that I killed my
own father?
Bones: No, I’m not sorry for that. I know
what it’s like not to know what happened. I know how painful that can be and
I’m sorry for you.
[Cut to: Lab. Bones and team are sitting
around a computer talking. Booth is a few feet away leaning on a railing
playing with a lighter in his hand.]
Hodgins: If the bones don’t belong to Max
Kane, who’s our dead guy?
Bones: We can send out a description of the
chondroma to area hospitals. See if it leads to any missing patients.
Booth: (turns and faces them.) Yeah we can
do that. (to Zack) List the pertinence.
Zack: Me? Are you talking directly to me?
Booth: Yeah, you can tell because my eyes
are looking at you. My mouth is aimed in your direction.
Zack: But what about our guy thing? If
you’re speaking to me then does this mean I’m not on the team?
Bones: Zack, lets concentrate on the work.
Zack: Pertinence.
Booth: Pertinence.
Zack: The victim died. We…we don’t know
how. He was then frozen, dismembered with a Hietal carving knife, then pushed
through a black mantis 1200 wood chipper.
Angela: The exact wood chipper you fed the
frozen pig through.
Booth: The exact wood chipper that Ray
Sparks had access to.
Zack: But Ray Sparks was in jail.
Hodgins: Ray was in jail when Max Kane
disappeared.
Bones: But our victim isn’t Max Kane.
Angela: Well who else would Ray Sparks have
motive to kill?
Zack: The victim is a middle aged male…
Booth: His brother.
Hodgins: What motive?
Booth: They both inherited the house.
Okay, you guys, you look at the tumor and Bones and I will go talk to Ray. Come
on.
Zack: While you’re there, look for a large
freezer.
Booth: Why?
Angela: The body was frozen.
Zack: Polyurethane is a common insulating
liner in freezers.
Hodgins: We found it under the victim’s
finger nail like he was scratching to get out.
[Cut to: Spark’s house. Day. Booth and
Bones are in the basement looking for evidence.]
Bones: The detectives who picked up Sparks say he claims his brother was alive and well the last time he saw him.
(She walks over to a chest freezer that is
open and Booth walks up behind her.)
Booth: Yeah he might have been for about
thirty minutes until he ran out of air in here. (looks in freezer and sees old
blood.) My guys found claw marks on the inner linings on both sides.
Bones: What kind of person could lock a
living human being in a freezer?
(Booth sees something in the bloody claw
marks.)
Booth: What is that?
Bones: That’s a finger nail.
Booth: His own brother.
[Cut to: Jesse’s Hotel Room. Evening. Jesse
is packing up his things and getting ready to move on. Bones stands in the
doorway. He looks up and notices her.]
Kane: Hey.
Bones: (enters) Booth got you out.
Kane: Twelve hundred bucks bail, I promised
to stay away from Karen and Eddie.
Bones: I solved the case. I’m sorry it’s
not your father. We identified the victim. His name was Frank Sparks. I’m
sorry I couldn’t help you Jesse.
Kane: How do you live with it?
Bones: What, the disappearance of my
parents?
Kane: The fact that nobody is looking.
Bones: I never thought about it that way
until I met you.
(They smile at each other)
Bones: There’s a Zen quote; it says that if
you want to find something, you have to stop looking.
Kane: I can’t do that. My dad’s watching
and I don’t want to disappoint him again.
(They hug each other.)
Kane: Even if you don’t believe it, I know
your parents are somewhere proud of what you do.
Bones: It’s not rational but I love the
thought of that.
[Cut to: Wong Fu’s. Night. Angela, Hodgins,
and Zack are sitting at a side booth. Booth is sitting at the bar with a pen
in his hand going over some paper work. Bones comes walking in with a file in
her hand and sits next to Booth.]
Booth: How did Jesse take it?
Bones: Like an orphan. (he stares at her.)
What?
Booth: (chuckles) That’s just a little
boring for you.
Bones: I didn’t mean it that way. I want to
ask you another favor.
Booth: Oh jeeze, another favor.
Bones: I wonder if you wouldn’t mind taking
a look at this. (slides the file over to him.)
Booth: The file on your parents? Yeah okay.
Bones: Do you want to think about it? It’s
a pretty big favor.
Booth: You’d do it for me.
Bones: Yeah I would.
Booth: I’m proud you asked, Temperance.
(Zack walks up.)
Zack: Ah, Dr. Brennan, Angela wants to know
if we should order anything for you.
Bones: No, I’m not staying. Thanks Zack.
Zack: (to Booth) Guess we caught another
one, right? (Booth ignores him.) All for one and one for all.
Booth: (to Bones) I’ll take a look at this
and see what they didn’t give you and I’ll get back to you. Okay?
(Zack smiles and walks back to his table.)
Bones: You’re back to ignoring Zack?
Booth: Alright look, I know you don’t
approve but you know, it works for us; it worked for him so…
Bones: Yeah I get it and it’s kind of
sweet.
Booth: Hey, you know, your people are my
people.
Bones: What I have people? Hey, I have
people.
(Bones smiles, gets up and leaves. Booth
opens the file and looks at a picture of Bone’s parents and a picture of Bones
as a little girl. He smiles at the picture of her as a little kid.)
FADE TO BLACK.
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Transcribed by VERONICA for http://www.twiztv.com
==========================