The Night Agent – S03E02 – Package Deal – Transcript

Peter considers a deal with the devil. Isabel follows a suspicious document trail down the rabbit hole. Night Action gets a harsh lesson in compliance.
The Night Agent - S03E02 - Package Deal

The Night Agent
Season 3 – Episode 2
Episode title:
Package Deal
Original release date: February 19, 2026

Plot: Back in the US, Peter tells Mosley and Catherine he believes Monroe funded the LFS attack on Pima 12 via the companies. They get Peter to demand names of five corrupt agents from Monroe in exchange for Batra. Believing they can both obtain the moles identities and arrest Monroe at the handover, Batra agrees to accompany Peter. However, Monroe anticipates the betrayal, and leads Catherine and a JTTF team to a duplicate car rigged with explosives, which kills her. He keeps Batra and releases Peter without the names, demanding blind obedience moving forward. Isabel shows the intel to her editor Mike Fonseca, and identifies Peter as FBI and involved in extracting Batra. They track down Vernon Tyvek, the former banking compliance officer who filed the SARs. He points them to veterans non-profit Heroes In Healing, the only suspect company that wasn’t a generic shell corporation. However, Mike is killed by The Father, an assassin, after meeting with a contact in Washington, D.C. but before updating Isabel.

Transcript

Note for Students & Writers: This transcript is archived here for educational purposes, critical analysis, and screenwriting study. All rights belong to the original creators.

[suspenseful music swelling]

[music fades]

[ominous music playing]

[indistinct chatter]

[keyboard clacking]

[horn honking in distance]

[gasping] Send a text next time.

Sorry. Kopelson’s got me on deadline for this insider trading piece.

So I need a little favor.

You mean grunt work, as the most junior reporter here?

No, as the reporter with the most energy.

But it is grunt work. It’s a learning opportunity.

What is this? More junk from the tip site?

Whoa, whoa. The tip site is not junk. That’s how I got my first byline.

Okay, most of it is junk.

But every so often, there’s a “there” there. You know what I mean?

Hey, I’m not asking you to stay late. Just look it over when you can.

Please, with a cherry on top, and a crisp $20 bill on top of that cherry.

Okay.

[pensive music playing]

[sirens wailing in distance]

[Isabel sniffing]

[suspenseful music playing]

[drawer opening]

[drawer closing]

There’s a “there” there, right?

If I’m reading this correctly and the dates are accurate, then this guy, this Jay Batra, basically predicted the terrorist attack on Pima 12 a few days before it happened.

Yeah. Using suspicious activity reports. And apparently, he still has them.

That’s why he submitted to the tip site.

He says the companies listed in that memo were involved.

A whistleblower with a paper trail. Now that’s a rare bird.

Where is he? Istanbul.

Turkey? So he’s already on the run. He’s scared for his life.

Then we need to be very deliberate with next steps.

If he’s legit, this story can be bigger than the Panama Papers.

But if he’s not, then– [knocking on door]

Mike, the FBI is on their way up. [Mike] What? Why?

They wanna talk to you. Give us a sec.

They can’t be onto us already, can they?

Shit.

When you texted last night, I reached out to my source at FinCEN to verify the memo’s authenticity.

He must have given them a heads-up.

I gotta call Legal. Wait, wait.

Let me go where the proof is.

I’ll find Jay and get the rest of the reports.

To Istanbul?

That’s not just dangerous. It’s crazy.

We have no idea what we’re dealing with yet.

Mike, you told me yourself that crazy and bold are the same exact things, just different perspectives.

Let me do this. Now, before they shut us down.

Keep in mind, I am going, whether you okay this or not.

Be careful.

[suspenseful music playing]

[Mike] And keep receipts.

Oh, thank you.

Don’t mention it.

[receptionist] May I help you?

FBI.

[opening theme music playing]

[jet engine whirring]

[pensive music playing]

Friends of yours?

Yeah. Come on.

Just give me a second.

Sit tight. I’ll be right back in a second.

All right.

I got four missed calls from The Broker while we were in the air.

He’s not tracking you on that thing? No, I cloned the SIM.

The original one he gave me is back in D.C.

Four calls? He’s eager to talk.

What does he want with our boy over here?

Jay told me the suspicious activity reports he took off with connect the LFS attack on Pima 12 with some American shell corporations.

The Broker probably knows about it.

You think one of those companies is his? I think all of them are.

Look, Raúl Zapata and the LFS are a small terrorist organization that have been dormant for, what, a decade now?

More.

Now they’re back on the scene with enough military equipment and money to swat a commercial airliner out of the sky?

What are you implying?

How does a bush-league terrorist group go pro all of a sudden?

And who do we know that can facilitate that?

Same man who facilitated the UN attack last year.

Exactly. It’s got The Broker’s fingerprints all over it.

So Jay connected the dots he wasn’t supposed to.

You said Jay leaked his findings to the press. Which outlet?

The Financial Register.

Oh shit.

It wasn’t Mike Fonseca, was it?

Our New York field office was trying to question him last week.

The reporter’s name was Isabel De Leon. Let me get somebody on her.

Realistically, we’re not gonna get those documents back anytime soon.

Not without a court order.

[cell phone vibrating]

It’s him. Answer it.

Put it on speaker.

Hello?

[Monroe] You haven’t been answering my calls.

Yeah, I was in the air.

Just landed back in the States. I’m in New York.

Oh, welcome home.

Did the package arrive with you safely?

Yeah. Yeah, I got him.

Good.

I’ll send details as to where he’s to be dropped off.

I trust you can handle that?

[tense music playing]

Peter?

No. No, that’s not how this is gonna work.

[Monroe] Oh? And how do you imagine it happening?

Enlighten me.

You taught me a lesson once on value.

Now, this package clearly has some big value to you, so I’m not gonna be handing him over to you no questions asked.

Do I have to remind you of our arrangement?

I honored that deal when I broke into the UN and got you those documents.

You don’t own me forever.

I have some security footage that might change your tune.

[Peter] Then use it.

But you won’t, ’cause then I’ll have no value to you.

[Monroe] Let me propose something new.

Ever play the game Go Fish?

Not since I was a kid, no.

[Monroe] Well, I’m asking you for a jack.

A single expendable card. One I know you have.

So you give him to me, and then you ask me for a card.

And I’ve got a damn near whole deck in my hands.

So you’re suggesting, uh… a trade?

[Monroe] I’m suggesting a mutual benefit.

I get what I want, you get what you want.

Look, this analyst that you want me to hand over, I need to know I’m not putting his life in danger.

[Monroe] Of course not.

What we’re dealing in here is an exercise in economics.

A value exchange, nothing more. What if I say “go fish”?

[Monroe] Then we’ll move on to a different game.

One with deadlier stakes.

Think about it.

I’ll be in touch.

[Peter breathing deeply, sighing heavily]

[music fades] [siren wailing in distance]

[indistinct chatter]

[Mike] Welcome back.

I figured you’d be hungry, so I ordered some–

Onion rings? It’s 10:00 a.m. What’s wrong with you?

What are you, my mother? These are the best in the city. Try one.

Here you go, hon, black. Thanks, Fran.

Hey, you want me to stow your luggage behind the bar?

Yes, please. Okay.

[Isabel] This pile are suspicious activity reports of all the companies whose cash withdrawals match the cash flow that went into this pile.

Records for a crypto wallet known to fund La Fuerza de La Soberanía.

The LFS?

Jesus, this kid really did have the goods.

Yeah, and you tried to talk me out of going.

No, I just made you fight for it.

Builds character. You can thank me later.

How’d Jay seem?

Terrified. He should be.

He killed his boss and fled the country.

The FBI grilled me for hours after you left.

He thinks the Feds are trying to kill him, not arrest him.

That’s a little paranoid. Maybe, maybe not.

As soon as I got Jay talking, this guy who tried to hit on me the night before showed up.

Recognize him?

Yeah, that’s the guy wanted for kidnapping Ashley Redfield’s daughter a couple of years ago.

Peter Sutherland Jr.

He was exonerated though. He was.

Which begs the question, what’s a former FBI agent doing with our source?

They don’t send a guy like him for nothing.

You thinking cover up? I don’t know what I’m thinking.

A mentor once taught me never to assume anything.

But Jay hasn’t messaged me in 24 hours, and I’m starting to worry.

Is there anything in the tip site? Not yet.

Maybe he went back underground. Yeah, maybe.

All right.

Well, we certainly got enough here to start digging in.

What’s our next move? Why are you asking me?

You’re the one that has decades more forensic accounting experience than I do.

Oh, now you’re just making me sound old. Decades and decades more experience.

Don’t act like you haven’t been gaming this thing out the whole flight home.

You got good instincts.

Use them.

What’s next?

[tense music playing]

Okay. So I’ve been looking for common threads, and I found a pretty big one.

[Mike] Vernon Tyvek? Who’s that?

The compliance officer who filed all the SARs that Jay handed us, until he was fired two months ago.

Do you ever sleep? That’s what coffee’s for.

The only problem is that these banker types, they have a LinkedIn or a profile page somewhere.

But Vernon, he’s not really online, so I’m having a hard time tracking him down.

How old is he? Around my age. Why?

[Mike] Fran, I’mma borrow this. Yeah.

What century is that even from?

2019, the last year they printed ’em.

What? You’d be surprised how often this comes in handy.

There’s no way he’s in there.

No, but if his parents are my age, they might be.

And he’s got a unique last name.

It’s ringing.

[Mosley] Would you take a lie detector test?

Yes, please. I got nothing to hide, man. I just want my life back.

I’m just a low-level analyst, for Christ’s sake.

I don’t need to get involved in… whatever the hell this is.

All right. You’ve had a long flight.

There’s a shower upstairs, fresh towels. Wash up. We’ll order some food in.

Okay, but aren’t we going to, like, an FBI office or somewhere with real security?

We’re not just gonna hang out at some rando’s house, are we?

This place isn’t random, Jay. It’s ours, okay? You’ll be safe here.

Okay, it’s just…

[Jay sighing]

Look, I get it.

You got questions.

I promise you, we’ll get you answers.

But right now, we have to talk, so just, uh, go get cleaned up, you know?

Okay.

Hey, uh, Peter.

Yeah.

Thank you.

Of course.

[dramatic music playing]

I think the kid’s telling the truth. Me too.

[Mosley] We should fold him in.

He found a needle in a haystack once.

What’s to say he can’t recreate the evidence, given more time and resources?

You’re saying we walk away from The Broker’s offer, a chance to finally ID him and maybe get the evidence to put him away?

I’m saying it’s a rigged game using his rules. We don’t have to play it.

We have the leverage here. Do we?

All we know is that he wants Jay. But even Jay doesn’t know why.

Then what do you propose? Use him as bait?

After everything that happened at the UN last year?

We sat on every building he ever touched, reviewed hundreds of hours of security tape, and even with all of that, we’ve never been closer to setting our sights on this guy.

Aiden, what does that tell you?

We can’t just hand Jay over to him. What if The Broker kills him?

This is an opportunity we cannot pass up.

What if we don’t do either?

[pensive music playing]

[birds chirping]

[music fades]

[Father sighing]

[paper rustling] [hand thudding on table]

What was your favorite part?

Well, I kind of liked the part where the kid, he found the treasure map in the chest of the old pirate Billy Bones.

[Father] Mm-hmm.

It was kind of sad that he died but also cool and mysterious.

Like the adventure was just starting.

Go on, then. Yes.

[cell phone vibrating]

Yes.

I understand.

But we already had this conversation, and you wouldn’t agree to my price.

You chose local hires in Istanbul, and they created a mess… with more exposure and more risks.

Which means that yesterday’s price is no longer today’s price.

No.

Triple.

Send over the details then, and I’ll get started this evening.

[Father grunting]

You have to work again?

I do.

But we get to go to New York this time.

[Son chuckling softly]

Can we see the Statue of Liberty? We can, and we will.

Now…

[exhales] You leveled up in the last session, right?

Yeah.

All right.

[bag rustling]

[dice clattering] Let’s see what further dangers await.

[tense music playing]

[cell phone vibrating]

[Peter] Yeah? Now’s the time for choosing, Peter.

Is there a deal to be made, or are we both gonna be walking away empty-handed?

Yeah, I’d like to, uh, propose something.

[Monroe] Well, excellent news.

I’m listening.

[Peter] I want names of corrupt agents within the FBI and the CIA.

[drill whirring] [Monroe scoffing]

Is that how you justify working with me?

Putting a few bad guys away so you can sleep better at night?

It’s not about you.

Okay? I… I can’t just misplace a FinCEN agent that’s in my custody without someone to blame it on, so I need names, I need dirty agents.

People I can give my bosses so they don’t think I’m crooked.

[Monroe] Well, luckily for you, names are my stock-in-trade.

Will two suffice?

Ten. Ten?

[Monroe chuckling]

Don’t overplay your hand.

If I was overplaying my hand, you would’ve hung up by now.

Now is the time for choosing.

[Monroe chuckling softly]

Four.

Five.

[Monroe] Five?

You know you’re a tough little son of a bitch when you decide to be.

Good for you.

Five it is. [inaudible]

I need one of the names now, with evidence, so I can verify the ID.

So you don’t trust me to deliver the goods, Peter?

If you were in my shoes, would you?

I’ll send one over now.

The rest, upon delivery.

Deal?

Deal.

We get him?

Only if he’s in seven different cities all at the same time.

[Peter quietly] Fuck.

[cell phone vibrating]

Is that…

[suspenseful music swelling]

He sent the name.

[music fades]

You’re not my food. [Mike] Vernon Tyvek?

I’m Mike Fonseca from The Financial Register.

This is my colleague, Isabel De Leon.

We were hoping to ask you some questions.

How’d you get this address?

[Mike] Your mother was kind enough to lend a hand.

She’d appreciate a call every once in a while, you know.

May we come in? What’s this all about?

Your time at Walcott Capital Bank. We learned you parted ways with the bank.

And we were hoping you would help us understand why the sudden exit.

Simple, downsizing.

Got a good exit package though. I see you’re enjoying your time off.

Yeah. Anything else?

[Isabel] Yes.

The story we’re working on involves a number of suspicious activity reports that you filed during your time at the bank.

We were hoping you could verify their authenticity.

Where did you get those? Sorry, we don’t reveal our sources.

Which is how you know anything that you share with us will be treated with strict confidentiality.

[Vernon scoffing]

Confidentiality?

Uh, listen, I… I really can’t be talking to you guys.

We understand. We do. We can go away and never come back.

But you’ll have to tell us where to go instead, or the trail for the reports ends here on your doorstep.

Leaving you with some tough questions to answer for the next people who come knocking.

[Vernon sighing]

Okay, fine, let me see ’em.

[Isabel] Anything will help us.

If you notice a certain pattern with the companies–

My job was to identify bogus transactions, not run investigations.

That’s FinCEN’s job. [Isabel] Yes, I understand.

But looking at the SARs altogether, is there anything that jumps out at you?

Not really. They’re all textbook shell companies.

Except for this one.

[Mike] Heroes In Healing?

Yeah, they’re a nonprofit for injured vets, which seemed legit until I started flagging their activity.

Could you expand on that, please?

Rapid movement of funds, incomplete or false documentation, smurfing.

Know what that is?

Yes, large transactions broken down into multiple smaller ones to avoid detection.

Mr. Tyvek, can you help us fill in the gaps?

Please, we could really use your expertise.

You asked me to point a finger. I did. I… I really can’t get deeper than that.

Right. We understand.

Thank you for your time, Vernon, really. [Vernon] Don’t mention it.

Like, literally, don’t.

[tense music playing]

Nonprofit for injured vets? Heroes In Healing.

Do you know it? No, but I have a contact who might.

What, another name from the phone book?

No, an old source from inside the Beltway. I’ll try and set up a meeting.

Maybe they’ll be able to clarify some things.

I’ll look into the nonprofit, see what I can find.

No, I’m gonna drop you home. You must be exhausted.

What? Yeah.

How could you think about sleep at a time like this?

[Ando] A thousand pages on Camp David, no black marker.

[Solomon] Any mention of him? You want…

[Mosley] Special Agent Shigeru Ando.

Can’t believe we were about to make him section chief.

He’s definitely dirty.

There’s at least four more where he came from.

Only if we give him Jay.

Right?

Say we play along a little longer.

We could root out some of the biggest intelligence breaches in decades.

Agent Ando is just the tip of the iceberg.

There’s no telling what other names he’ll hand over, what other departments they’ll be embedded in.

She’s not wrong.

We play this right. Record the exchange.

His list for the analyst. That’s a federal charge.

Conspiracy, racketeering.

We could put him away for good, Peter.

Not a year from now, today.

And you could get your life back.

What about Jay’s safety? We can protect him.

I’ll put a few HRT units together.

You two will never leave our sight. No, we need to keep this small.

There’s no telling what other names are on that list.

Anyone could be compromised.

I know some Joint Terrorism Task Force guys out in Jersey.

They owe me a favor. They’re solid.

You’re not listening. I promised Jay that I would keep him safe.

Now you’re asking me to dangle him in front of the biggest shark we know?

I think you’re under the illusion that we have other options.

We don’t. The analyst is our best path forward.

I’m not putting him at risk because a bunch of people who aren’t Jay agreed to it.

It’s not our choice to make. It’s his.

What if Jay says no?

Then he says no.

Peter. It’s his decision, Catherine.

[footsteps approaching]

Hey.

Hey. [Peter] Where’d you find those?

[Jay] It was just lying around.

Trying to keep my mind focused.

Solve something so I don’t spiral out, you know.

Yeah.

Listen…

Everything okay?

You’ve been kept in the dark on some things.

Okay? I think you deserve to know what’s being discussed down there and, uh… how you fit into it all.

Okay.

About a year ago, I was working a case.

And…

[sighing] I made a deal with the devil.

He was an intelligence broker, and he had details about a terror plot at the UN.

The arrangement that I made with him, it saved a lot of lives, but… it also came with a pretty big IOU.

Now that same guy, he wants to collect on his debt.

He wants you, Jay.

What do you mean?

What do you mean, he wants me?

Wait, who even is this guy? Can’t you just arrest him?

It’s not that easy.

This guy, he’s extremely careful about what he says and who he says it to.

Peter, you said I’d be safe here.

I should’ve just listened to the reporter and tried to get asylum.

The good news is, you have options.

Option one, we can move you into the Witness Protection Program.

We can put you someplace safe, and you can start a new life.

Now that’s low risk, but it’s also low reward.

‘Cause you’ll always be looking over your shoulder.

But option two is you let us use you to draw this guy out into the open.

Okay, now that’s high risk, but it’s also high reward.

Because once we arrest this guy, he’s gone.

Okay? He’ll never bother you again.

It’s just that there are a lot more unknowns.

And that’s it? Two options?

Okay, what’s the bad news, then?

[Peter] The bad news is this is your decision to make.

No one else can make it for you. This is your life.

What kind of choice is that? I just don’t wanna die.

And I can’t keep running either.

What would you do if you were me? I’m not you.

No, just say you were. What would you do?

Peter, my whole life is just about numbers.

Adding them up, making sure they fit.

But I don’t know what the risks are ’cause I’ve nothing to weigh them against.

So just humor me for a goddamn second and just tell me what would you do.

Please.

If there was a way that I could’ve gotten this guy behind me before now, I would’ve done it.

But that’s me.

So you’re saying I should–

No, I’m not saying you should do anything.

You asked me what I would do, and I told you.

Now what you need to do, figure out the percentages, and we’ll stand by for your decision downstairs.

[pensive music playing]

[woman] Isabel?

Isabel, Mike’s been calling for you.

Oh, he has?

[woman] Yeah.

Said he’s just finishing up with the source and wanted you to meet him at the place with the good onion rings?

Okay.

Oh, and the Anderson file. He wants you to bring it.

The Anderson file? Are you sure that’s what he said?

Yeah. That’s what he said.

[tense music playing]

[papers rustling]

♪ …tears falling like rain ♪

♪ All the dreams, they had to change… ♪

[indistinct chatter]

Here you go. Thanks, Fran.

Hey, what’s the deal with the jukebox? You trying to drive away us regulars?

Sorry, it’s a bar crawl.

[Fran sighing]

Barely even sounds like music.

[Father] No soul.

Pardon me?

I said no soul.

This crap we’re listening to.

Yeah, I hear you.

I don’t wanna throw rocks at the next generation, but this just sounds, um, overprocessed, right?

Not my taste.

What’s your poison?

IPA.

No, no. I mean music.

What do you like? Journey, Eddie Money, Santana?

Yeah, they’re all good.

What about Bon Jovi?

Oh, Bon Jovi for sure.

You know, I saw them in ’88 in the Jersey Syndicate Tour. Amazing.

“Livin’ on a Prayer.” That is a song you can drink to.

In my case, too much, but yeah.

[Father chuckling]

Know what messes with your head?

Is hearing the songs of our youth in commercials now for boner pills.

That’s how you know you’re getting old.

Well, what are you gonna do? It’s their world now.

You know what I say to that?

Screw it. [Mike] Huh.

Seriously.

You want Bon Jovi?

Go get some Bon Jovi on me.

You sure? Yeah.

You know what to do.

[Mike exclaiming]

[Father chuckles softly]

[ominous music playing]

[“Livin’ On A Prayer” by Bon Jovi playing]

There it is. The Jersey Syndicate Tour rides again.

I queued up “Don’t Stop Believin'” for you after.

Yes. Cheers.

Oh, hey, sorry.

Could I get some quarters for the meter out front?

[register ringing] Here you go.

Another parking ticket and my wife will have my tit in a wringer.

Oh, we don’t want that. [Father chuckling]

♪ Union’s been on strike He’s down on his luck, it’s tough ♪

♪ So tough ♪

♪ Gina works the diner all day ♪

[Mike groaning]

♪ Working for her man She brings home her pay, for love… ♪

Hey, Mike, you okay? [softly] I’m…

Hey, Mike?

[Mike groaning, grunting]

Hey… hey, buddy!

Somebody call 911!

[music stops]

[crickets chirping]

[Peter sighing]

[cell phone vibrating]

[ominous music playing]

Yeah. [Monroe] So, what do you say, Peter?

Have I won over your trust yet?

The name you sent checked out, so as long as the others are just as good…

[Monroe] Well, of course. So it sounds like we’re on then, yes?

Yeah.

Yeah, we got a deal.

Excellent.

And I have your word that you’ll come alone?

Just you and the trade in question.

As long as I have your word that no harm will come to him.

Well, then we’re ready to meet.

Midnight.

59th Street Bridge.

I’ll have you picked up. And, Peter, I’m looking forward to seeing you again.

[officer] Step to the side.

[indistinct chatter]

[door opening]

[officer 2] Ma’am. Stay back. It’s okay.

He’s my friend. What happened? Is he okay?

You knew him? I was just with him. What happened?

He have a history of high blood pressure, hypertension, heart disease, AFib?

I don’t know. I was just with him today. He was fine. He was totally fine.

Is he gonna be okay?

[siren wailing in distance]

Is he gonna be okay?

[suspenseful music playing]

[faucet squeaking]

[shower running]

[lock beeping] [door opening]

[music fades]

[Father] I’m back.

Hey.

Oh, what’d you get? Burgers?

[Father] Subs. Oh.

[bag rustling]

How was your work?

What do you mean?

Each time you go on a new business assignment, I assume there are aspects of it that are different.

Different problems, obstacles.

I love the questions you ask. I really do.

Yes.

This new assignment comes with certain unique challenges.

That’s how we measure ourselves.

[bag rustling]

That’s right.

[siren wailing in distance]

What page you on?

Two hundred and six.

Wow. That’s great.

I knew you’d love this one. Yeah, it’s not too bad.

[Father] What’s your favorite part so far?

[Son] The part where White Fang gets captured by the hunters.

[Father] Oh yeah.

[soldier] Here, check. Let’s go.

Standing by.

[suspenseful music playing]

[guns cocking]

[soldier 2] Let’s go.

[soldier 3] I got you.

[Catherine] Peter, Jay.

This is JTTF Commander Chip Highmore. Good to meet you.

He and his men will be following your every move in the trail van.

Thanks for helping us out tonight.

[Chip] No sweat.

Anything for Catherine.

Good luck out there, yeah?

You boys are in good hands. We got you.

Thank you.

[siren wailing in distance]

What? Nothing.

Damn right, nothing.

Here, take this. It’s new tech out of DARPA.

Works by frequency hopping, making it impossible for surveillance countermeasures to pick it up.

Is that like a radio? Kind of.

Only works one way, though, so they can hear us, we can’t hear them.

Remember, we need the list of names in exchange for Jay.

Once that happens, Catherine, Highmore, and his team can swoop in.

Don’t push too hard. We don’t want him getting suspicious.

We don’t wanna blow the case on entrapment.

Got it.

[Mosley] And, Jay, same rules apply, plus one extra.

You can’t let on that you’re being followed.

So no wandering eyes. You play confused, even angry.

I know that there’s a lot riding on this, but we finally get a chance to hear this intel broker’s voice and how he operates in live time.

That is all thanks to you.

So… now you just go get him.

For all of us.

Yes, ma’am.

[suspenseful music swelling]

Levels good?

Aiden, you picking this up?

Clear as a bell. I got him.

Peter.

Yeah.

I’m… I’m scared, man.

That’s good. Okay? Use it.

We’re not supposed to be on the same team anyway. Remember?

Right. Hence the, uh…

[Peter] Yeah, exactly.

Hey.

You’ll be okay.

Against the car.

[tense music playing]

[Dani sighing]

[scanner whirring, trilling]

[scanner whirring, trilling]

[scanner whirring, trilling]

[Peter grunting]

[van engine starting]

[suspenseful music swelling]

[car engine revving]

Honestly, didn’t think you’d show.

Where we going? You’ll see soon enough.

They’re headed westbound.

Copy. Signal’s still good.

[suspenseful music continues]

[brakes squealing]

Shit, you don’t think the tunnel goes all the way through, do you?

Roma, call the USGS and see if the NJT plugged–

Hey, wait. [shushing]

[Peter] Where the hell are we?

[music fades]

[Monroe grunting]

[Monroe] Hello, Peter.

You’re looking well.

Can’t say the same for you. [Monroe] Yeah.

A little bit of a stomach bug.

It’ll pass.

And you must be the elusive Jay Batra.

You’re a slippery one.

Didn’t really have a choice.

[Monroe] Hmm.

[train tracks rattling]

[car horns honking in distance]

[car engine revving]

[suspenseful music playing]

[Peter] Held up my end of the deal. Now, where’s the list of names?

[Monroe] Now, don’t be rude.

You’re talking about our new friend like he’s some sort of prize to be bargained for.

Mr. Batra, I’m curious.

What do you know about me? What has Peter told you?

I told him– No, no, no.

I wanna hear it from him.

Well, he said you were dangerous.

[Monroe] Oh.

[grunting] Please.

But that you wouldn’t hurt me ’cause you always kept your word.

Which is more than I can say for him.

[Monroe] So…

It’s true.

Peter is not one for good first impressions, but it was right for him to bring us together.

Now, tell me, how exactly did you do it?

Do what?

The SARs.

I mean, your job is to untangle financial webs and puzzles, but it is your particular knack for piecing them back together that has me intrigued.

Just good with numbers, I guess.

[Monroe] Oh.

It’s quite a talent.

I’m curious to see more of that ability in action.

[suspenseful music swelling]

[Peter] Okay, we done?

The list.

Four additional names, with evidence, as we agreed.

But first… take a moment.

Drink it all in.

Because this is what true partnership looks like, Peter.

You scratch my back, I scratch yours, everybody gets what they want, including our new friend here.

Are we happy? Yeah.

We’re on. Go, go, go!

[intense music playing]

Stop here.

No, no, no.

Not yet.

We had a deal. [Monroe] Yes, we did.

But allow me one more moment.

For what?

[Monroe shushing]

[tires screeching]

Turn off the engine and get out of the vehicle now!

Get back! Now–

[explosion in distance]

What was that?

[tense music playing]

That was the sound of us learning a very difficult lesson.

Don’t move your fucking hands.

[Monroe] I offered you the carrot, Peter, and you lied to me.

So let me remind you of the stick.

[device snapping, clattering]

[Monroe] You exist in this world at my pleasure.

As does any other person unfortunate enough to call you their friend.

So when I contact you again and I require something, you will comply with blind obedience.

You will comply with expediency.

Otherwise, my next bonfire will be in California over Rose Larkin’s house.

Do you understand me?

Yes.

Good. Now get out.

[Peter] Come on.

[Monroe] No. No, no.

He stays.

I lived up to my end of the arrangement.

That sort of integrity should be rewarded, don’t you think?

Peter.

Jay. Jay, you’re gonna be okay.

[sinister music playing]

[car doors locking]

[tires screeching]

What’s going on?

Catherine.

[garbled] Catherine.

[indistinct chatter]

[Mosley] Catherine, are you there?

[soldier] Help!

[Peter panting]

[somber music playing]

[Mosley] Catherine, can you hear me?

[soldier 2 coughing]

[Mosley over garbled radio] Catherine.

[music fades]

[ending theme music playing]

[music fades]

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