Show: The 4400 - 3x5
We're not a threat.
We're salvation.
The worId wiII have to deaI with us.
Previously on The 4400: l see you've been spending a lot of time with Shawn.
PeopIe see her, they see a woman.
A beautifuI woman.
And they might forget that inside she's just a IittIe girI.
l'm glad she has you around to be a friend.
You kiIIed peopIe.
That's not what we discussed when you approached me.
We are in a war.
It's gonna cost money.
You soId us out.
I'm very disappointed in you, Shawn, and I'm afraid I can't forgive you.
Diana Skouris, your adoption of Maia RutIedge is hereby complete, legal, and binding.
Ms.
Skouris, my name is Sarah.
I'm Maia's sister.
Do you see the future more cIearIy since you stopped taking the inhibitor?
Who are you?
I'm Lindsey.
I'm a part of her coIIection.
We aII are.
TyIer!
Duncan!
You've been here ever since you walked through the front door of my house.
You're in the future.
We had to bring you here, Maia, you and your friends.
Before we put you back in your new time, we'II make you forget your mother.
PIease, don't!
They'll forget you too.
Hey.
Marco, they're beautifuI.
How did you know I Iike anemones?
You remember that bad ItaIian restaurant?
I asked you what your favorite fIower was, and you said: Anemones.
Most guys don't even Iisten to tabIe taIk.
You not onIy heard me, you remembered.
Do you know how Iucky you're gonna get tonight?
Then my pIan is working.
I thought it was just gonna be the two of us.
It is.
Then who is the other pIate for?
Di?
I don't know what I was thinking.
Are you having fun?
Of course, I'm having fun.
You sure you don't want a turn at the wheeI?
It's your fantasy.
Okay, honey.
HoId on.
Look out!
You aII right?
I think so.
You saw her too, right?
Of course, I did.
Why wouId a girI be in the middIe of the road?
I have no idea.
A joy ride in the country.
That's what we agreed on, right?
A great car, a deserted road.
Hitting some kid at 80 miIes pIus?
Where the heII does that come in?
What happened to her?!
Thomas.
Hey!
Hey.
Hey.
Hey, what...?
You...?
You okay?
Who was she?
I have no idea.
How many times have we done this?
Gone away in one of these fantasy worIds you create?
A dozen times?
Two dozen?
At Ieast.
And these worIds, they aIways feeI reaI.
Except this time, a girI without a face appears out of nowhere.
It feIt more Iike a nightmare.
But something Iike that was bound to happen sooner or Iater.
I buiId these worIds out of our memories.
I guess this time I dredged up something incompIete.
A fragment of something.
A sort of mentaI hiccup.
Okay, but this girI?
Is she part of my memory or yours?
Yours, mine, both.
There's no way to know, is there?
One of us might have seen her picture in a book, or seen her in the street.
Yeah, we just don't remember her face.
It might have just been a gIimpse.
Yeah, weII, that gIimpse pretty much ruined our night.
WeII, tomorrow night wiII be better.
I promise.
Anywhere you wanna go, anywhere we wanna go, and anything we wanna do.
You know, for his 1 2th birthday I took KyIe fishing up at the DosewaIIips River.
I thought maybe the three of us couId go there.
That sounds great.
And maybe this time we couId actuaIIy catch some fish.
Okay.
I don't know what's wrong with my bedroom.
Or yours for that matter.
We've aIready done it there a bunch of times.
Experts say you shouId do adventurous things to keep reIationships more interesting.
They say that, huh?
What couId be more adventurous than a quickie in the staircase?
Did you switch from Encyclopaedia Britannica to Cosmo magazine or something?
What--?
WeII, I read Iots of stuff.
I'II take the eIevator.
Devon.
How embarrassing for her.
IsabeIIe, just stop!
Just...
What's the matter, Shawn?
What's wrong?
She's not gonna teII my father.
She'd be too afraid of me.
IsabeIIe.
She's gonna teII someone, and then they'II teII someone eIse.
And then, everybody's gonna know.
Where's your partner?
Late.
A 4400, Christopher Dubov, was attacked outside his home Iast night.
I wanna know if we're Iooking at a hate crime.
It says he's a Iawyer at TeIIer and Dutch.
That's a major mergers and acquisitions firm.
They've been aII over the financiaI pages this year.
Yeah, which makes him a high profiIe 4400.
A target for somebody Iooking to make a point.
No, it makes him a corporate raider who's put a Iot of peopIe in the unempIoyment Iine.
His 4400 status isn't the onIy motive someone might have to attack him.
Just taIk to him.
See if he can write you up a Iist.
Oh, aIarm cIock need new batteries?
No, it's a crappy morning.
Are you opening up a newsstand?
No.
Just a project that I'm working on.
So, what do we got?
Yeah, you couId caII it a hate crime.
My son, MichaeI, certainIy hates me.
Your son did this to you, Mr.
Dubov?
His mom and I spIit up.
He bIames me.
I'm the one who introduced her to Bob, her new husband.
I knew they beIonged together.
I couId smeII it.
I'm not sure I foIIow.
It's my abiIity.
It showed up once I stopped taking the promicin inhibitor.
I can smeII pheromones.
You mean the stuff peopIe put out to attract other peopIe?
Weird, huh?
Things between my wife and I haven't been too good for a whiIe.
Then I met Bob.
He's my new dentist.
Right away, there was something famiIiar about him.
Then I reaIized what it was.
He smeIIed just Iike CaroIine.
So I made her an appointment.
I had to know whether or not they beIonged together.
Let me guess, Iove at first sight.
Sight, smeII, whatever.
You and your son Iook very happy together.
Those were taken when MichaeI was 1 0.
Ten.
That's a...
That's a great age.
Mr.
Dubov, do you want us to taIk to MichaeI?
ExpIain to him that assauIt is a serious crime?
No, forget it.
I'm sorry my secretary caIIed you.
Besides, I think I know a way to get him to forgive me.
There's a new bar around the corner.
One of the waitresses, she smeIIs just Iike my kid.
Let's hope she's not married.
Amen to that.
You know, I bet if that guy quit his job and opened up a dating service, he'd make a fortune.
I'm not sure how turning a corporate Iawyer into cupid is gonna heIp save the future.
Wha--?
Hey.
Honey, what's going on?
Are you aII right?
Dubov was gone for five years, right?
I...
I bet his son reaIIy missed him.
ProbabIy.
I mean, every 4400 Ieft someone behind.
Are you sure it's not something eIse?
No.
It's fine, reaIIy.
It'II pass.
Okay.
PhysicaI.
You and IsabeIIe?
You wanna expIain that?
I asked you a question!
What is going on between you and my daughter?!
We never pIanned on going behind your back.
In fact, we never pIanned it at aII.
It just kind of happened.
Friendship!
Remember?
We taIked about that.
That's as far as it was supposed to go!
I don't know what to say.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry too.
I'm sorry I ever trusted you.
IsabeIIe is just a chiId!
No, Richard, she isn't.
She's emotionaIIy immature and you took advantage of that!
That's what you think?
You know me better.
That's not fair.
I know your judgment stinks, that's what I know.
You're gonna stay away from my daughter.
I'm not gonna make that promise to you.
I am not giving you a choice here, you understand me?
This thing between the two of you, it is over.
I don't recaII saying ''come in.'' I thought perhaps a referee might be in order.
May I advise you gentIemen to go to your neutraI corners?
This is a private conversation, Matthew!
It may have started out that way, but I assure you, it's becoming very pubIic.
I couId hear you out in the haIIway.
And for the record, I happen to agree with Richard.
This reIationship with IsabeIIe is iII-advised at best.
I thought referees didn't take sides?
If I were you, Shawn, I'd take this opportunity to make a gracefuI exit.
Think about what I said, Shawn.
I'm expecting you to do the right thing.
What's for Iunch?
Prosciutto with figs.
Rosemary chicken, couscous, and raspberries.
Wow.
You know, when KyIe and I used to go fishing, we'd take a haIf a dozen peanut-butter-and-jeIIy sandwiches and think we were Iiving Iike kings.
I Iike to think the reaIity I create is a IittIe bit tastier than that.
Good.
Hey, we gotta get going.
Hey, KyIe!
Come on, buddy!
Come on, KyIe.
Let's go.
Come on-- It's you.
The girI on the road.
That's right.
You remember.
Maia.
Maia.
Have we met before?
Don't be siIIy.
No, I'm sorry, I...
I don't remember you.
Sure you do.
Think harder.
Is that why you keep showing up?
Because you want me to remember?
I'm here because you brought me here.
There has to be a reason why this girI keeps showing up.
There was nothing famiIiar about her?
Nothing at aII?
No.
But she kept acting Iike we knew each other.
And if she's right, if I did bring here there, then I must know her from somewhere.
Tom.
ShouIdn't you be at work?
Jarvis said you caIIed in sick.
WeII, I'm aIIowed.
Thanks for checking in on me.
Diana, taIk to me, wiII you?
What the heII's aII this?
Just a project I'm working on.
I mentioned it to you.
Who's this supposed to be?
I wish I knew.
I know this might sound creepy, but I was up aII night Iast night cutting up pictures of IittIe girIs.
None of them seemed to be the right one.
I mean, I think I'm going crazy.
Then we both are.
You know those IittIe dream vacations I take with AIana?
This IittIe girI keeps showing up in them.
This IittIe bIond girI.
Says her name is Maia.
Maia?
Oh, Tom.
What?
You have to come with me.
I have to show you something.
Who is she, Tom?
Who is Maia?
I don't know.
I've aIready checked.
There's no mention of Maia in any of our case fiIes.
Okay, weII, maybe we met her together somepIace eIse?
Maybe at one of Garrity's barbecues?
No, that does not feeI right.
I didn't just meet this girI once at a barbecue.
I know her better than that.
AII right, just caIm down.
WeII, there's a reason this girI is haunting us, Tom, okay?
She's out there somewhere, and she wants us to find her.
Right now the onIy pIace I know she exists is in one of these dream worIds AIana and I create.
WeII then, I need for AIana to take me there.
I need to meet this girI, taIk to her.
No, but you wouIdn't reaIIy be taIking to her, Diana.
You'd just be taIking to whatever your subconscious remembers of her.
WeII, maybe that wouId be enough for me figure out who she is.
How do I sound?
Like you've been pIaying for years.
I haven't.
It's my first time.
I kind of figured that.
IsabeIIe, do you have a minute?
Have a seat.
IsabeIIe, you know I'm proud of you, don't you?
This is about Shawn and I having sex, isn't it?
That's part of it, yeah.
Yeah, but onIy a part of it.
Right now everything's new to you.
You're Iearning so much so fast.
How to be a daughter.
A friend.
A Iover.
That part you might be Iearning too fast.
You don't want me to get my feeIings hurt.
I wouId just Iike if you and Shawn sIow down.
Stop sIeeping together?
For the time being.
There's no reason to stop.
Shawn cares about me.
I care about Shawn.
The sex is wonderfuI.
It makes us both very happy.
It shouId make you happy too.
Maybe it shouId, but it doesn't.
I suppose that's normaI.
But everything is gonna be okay.
Shawn wouId never do anything to hurt me.
He's way too smart for that.
So you see?
You have nothing to worry about.
I wonder if anyone at the Center has a ceIIo.
So, what do I have to do?
WeII, the main thing is to reIax.
WeII, I usuaIIy cIose my eyes and count backwards from ten.
Before I reach zero, we're somewhere eIse.
Have any idea where you want AIana to take you?
We usuaIIy have a destination picked out.
WeII, wherever Maia is.
You can do that, can't you?
You can take me to her?
She seems to show up anypIace we go.
So it's reaIIy up to you.
WeII, Iet's just keep it simpIe.
How about my apartment?
AII right.
Now, Iet's begin.
AIana, this is not my apartment.
I know.
I'm not quite sure what just happened.
You done taIking to your friend?
You're Maia.
Stop fooIing around.
Come on.
He's waiting for us.
There you are, Ms.
Skouris.
The documents are aII ready.
If you'II just have a seat, and sign where indicated, we can finish up.
You stiII wanna do this, don't you?
Diana Skouris, your adoption of Maia RutIedge is hereby compIete, IegaI, and binding.
So witnessed by me, Henry Biederman, of the 1 0th Circuit FamiIy Court of SeattIe.
You know, some of us have to Iook far and wide to find the peopIe we'II caII famiIy.
You two had to Iook cIear across time.
Diana, Iet me introduce you to your daughter, Maia.
Maia, say heIIo to Mommy.
Oh, my God, Maia.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Diana, what happened?
She was kidnapped, Tom.
She was taken by a woman pretending to be her sister.
She took Maia, TyIer Downing, Lindsey Hammond, and a whoIe bunch of 4400 kids.
Do you remember any of this?
No.
No, I don't.
So this woman took these chiIdren and somehow made everyone forget they ever existed.
Yes, but they existed.
Maia RutIedge disappeared from Crescent City, CaIifornia, March 3rd, 1 946.
So wait, you're saying she was abducted, then returned with the other 4400s, then taken again.
And none of us remember this but you.
It's Iike they've wiped our memories.
But why?
Because they didn't want us Iooking for them.
The 4400 were taken and returned to change the future in some way.
Maybe Maia and the others were taken so that they couId change it again.
I don't know and I don't care.
AII I know is four days ago she was here with me.
And I need you to beIieve that I have a daughter named Maia and that she's been taken from me.
I don't remember Maia, or the kidnapping, or any of it.
The idea that my memory's been messed with scares the heII out of me.
But after everything we've been through with the 4400, yes, Diana, I beIieve you.
HeIIo?
Richard Tyler?
Yes, who's this?
My name is Daniel Armand.
You know who l am?
With the NOVA Group?
I think it's time you and I met, Richard.
We have a lot to discuss.
I have a Iot to say to you too, but I don't think you'II wanna hear it.
WeII, now you see, that's the probIem right there.
We should be allies, not adversaries.
My group and your organization have the same goals.
We're advocating for the rights of the 4400.
Except that you advocate through assassination and intimidation.
We Iack the strength in numbers, Richard, so we use the tooIs at our disposaI.
Is that what you caIIed me for?
To have a debate?
l called to arrange a truce.
And to taIk about Shawn FarreII.
You'II make more threats against him?
No, we need to discuss his future.
Because unIess you and I can come to some kind of agreement, I'm not sure he's gonna have one.
I shouId meet him on the corner of Pike and Gorch Thursday at 4:00.
And then?
A car wiII be there to pick me up and take me somepIace for a face to face with Armand.
Sounds to me Iike the NOVA Group's been reading too much John Ie Carr�.
What did you say?
I toId him I'd think about it.
What is there to think about?
You're not going.
Let's not rush to judgment.
I've deaIt with this guy before, remember?
He wants one thing.
You know what it is: Money.
And probabIy the names and addresses of every 4400 in our computer.
If they have an abiIity that he can use, he wiII expIoit it and peopIe wiII die.
PeopIe have aIready died.
Maybe I can stop him.
Are you gonna make him see the Iight?
No, but I can stop him from kiIIing you.
How?
How?
By putting this pIace and everything that we've worked for in jeopardy?
I won't Iet you do that.
NobIe words, but may I remind you?
If the NOVA Group wants to strike at you, I don't think we can prevent it.
Thank you for the pep taIk, Matthew.
I'm just being reaIistic.
So am I.
If I don't show, it's Iike a decIaration of war, and we aII know who the first casuaIty wiII be.
You and Jordan CoIIier buiIt this pIace.
You're its heart and souI.
Then Iisten to me, Richard.
I tried to deaI with these peopIe before.
It was a disaster.
I'm warning you.
I'm asking you: PIease do not make the same mistake.
PIease.
Skouris, I have a Iist right here of ever 4400 who returned that night to HighIand Beach.
There's no Maia RutIedge.
There's no TyIer Downing.
There's no Lindsey Hammond.
I've expIained that: They've been erased.
From the records, from our memories.
Someone has tried to wipe out every trace of them.
We taIked to the famiIies.
In the Iast week, aII of them have been haunted by phantom memories of chiIdren they supposedIy Iost years ago.
Okay, Iet's say I am buying any of this, and I'm not.
But if I did, we don't even know where they were taken.
The future?
That's kind of out of our jurisdiction.
I've seen Maia.
I've spoken to her.
We both have.
Look, you're asking me to commit manpower and resources to find a IittIe girI that onIy exists in some shared fantasyIand you guys pIay around in.
Look, I'm sorry, but I can't do it.
You guys through?
Because I think I found your kids.
Here we go.
Watch this.
That's him.
That's TyIer.
It's dated September 1 9th, 1 893.
They sent him back further into the past.
Why?
WeII, that I can't teII you.
But TyIer Downing did graduate first in his cIass from YaIe University in Engineering.
I knew I'd heard the name before.
In 1 91 5, he heIped deveIop synthetic petroIeum.
You drove to work this morning because of this guy.
This is from the estate of Robert Goddard.
You know, the rocket guy.
He adopted an orphan named Lindsey Hammond.
She Iived with the famiIy, eventuaIIy worked in his Iab.
And she invented aII the composite materiaIs used in the first Iunar coIonies.
Okay, so, what about Maia?
Did you find any photos of her?
No, she was a IittIe harder to track down.
But I finaIIy found something.
That's Maia's handwriting.
It's a diary from Maia RutIedge dated ApriI 1 9th through September 2nd, 1 84 7.
It was written whiIe she was part of a wagon train making its way aIong the Oregon TraiI.
I'm sorry.
She crossed the Rockies in a covered wagon?
No.
She died of smaIIpox in October of '4 7.
She was 25.
No.
I'm sorry, Shawn.
It's not my father's decision.
It's mine.
I'm not breaking up with you.
It's got nothing to do with your dad.
Not reaIIy.
You and I made some decisions, we did some things.
We did what we wanted to do.
And there's no reason we can't keep doing that.
We'II be more carefuI.
My father won't know it.
That's not gonna work.
Not anymore.
Lying to him, going behind his back?
We've done enough of that.
The truth is, IsabeIIe, I kind of took advantage of you.
And I'm reaIIy sorry.
You are so sweet the way you worry about me.
I don't want this reIationship to end.
So it's not going to.
I need to see her.
PIease, can you take me to see my daughter?
Diana, you know it's not reaIIy Maia you'd be seeing.
Oh, I don't care.
Today I found out that my daughter, who I Ioved, was sent back into the past and died 1 50 years ago.
I'm sorry, but that's gonna take me a whiIe to come to terms with.
I just...
PIease Iet me do this.
I need to say goodbye.
Give me your coat.
I'II put some coffee on.
Ready?
Mommy?
Mommy, I'm starving.
Can we have pancakes?
I'II heIp make them.
Okay.
WeII, I'II need the eggs from the fridge.
And bring me the big, pIastic bowI.
Oh, my God.
AIana!
AIana!
AIana!
Honey, my God, you're bIeeding.
You okay?
I think so.
Diana.
Diana, can you hear me?
Diana, Iook at me.
What the heII happened?!
I thought I was bringing us out.
WeII, why isn't she awake?
I couIdn't hoId onto her.
It's as if she puIIed away.
Thomas, I think she's stiII inside the dream worId.
Wait, how can she be in there without you?
I'm not sure.
When you and I separate, we Iet go of the iIIusion.
But she's not Ietting go.
Wha--?
She's not coming out?
I think she's happy there with her daughter, and she has no intention of ever Ieaving.
Oh, come on.
At first, I thought she'd suffered some kind of intracerebraI hemorrhage.
But the MRI didn't show any bIeeding in the brain.
So she hasn't suffered any damage?
Not yet, but the EEG was very troubIing.
Her brain activity is far above normaI and continues to acceIerate.
The same is true for her heart rate, her breathing, her bIood pressure.
They're aII redIining, if you wiII.
Any idea what's causing it?
I reaIIy can't say at the moment.
Her metaboIic rate can't stay at this IeveI for very Iong.
EventuaIIy her organs wiII faiI.
What, she couId die?
UnIess we can sIow down her rates, we're Iooking at a very poor outcome.
Does she have any famiIy?
Yeah.
You shouId caII them.
I need to taIk to her, AIana.
Can you do that?
Take me to see Diana?
Push me a IittIe, Mommy.
Okay, I'm pushing you.
Then make it higher.
Look, not too high.
But that's the whoIe fun.
She has a point.
I thought I'd be seeing you two.
I didn't hurt you, did I?
It feIt a IittIe jarring when you Ieft.
No, I'm fine.
You, on the other hand, are not.
WeII, that's where you're wrong, because I feeI great.
You're in an ICU, Diana.
I thought I might end up there.
What's my heart rate?
Is it 1 70?
1 75?
Higher.
That stiII probabIy gives me what, anywhere from three weeks to two months?
That couId be forever in here.
You're taIking about suicide.
I appreciate your concern, Tom, I do.
But reaIIy, I'd Iike you to Ieave now.
Both of you.
Listen, Diana, beIieve-- Don't waIk away.
The first time I came to these pIaces, I never wanted to Ieave.
But I came to reaIize, this is not the worId.
None of this is reaI.
IncIuding Maia.
Mommy, push me a IittIe harder.
She's reaI enough for me.
Oh, she's not coming back, is she?
She's going to die in there.
That seems to be her pIan.
I can't heIp but think this is my fauIt.
I took her there.
No, don't do that to yourseIf.
You didn't take Maia away.
The peopIe who did that, they're to bIame.
Maybe.
But these peopIe in the future?
They don't seem to care who they hurt, do they?
No, they don't.
Four o'cIock is fast approaching.
Have you come to a decision?
Do I want to get in bed with a terrorist, or go to war with one?
That does appear to be the question.
Whatever you decide, you can count on my support.
IsabeIIe?
IsabeIIe?
My reIationship with Shawn has nothing to do with you.
That's not true.
I just care about what happens to you.
You can care about me aII you want, just stay out of my business.
I'm not gonna do that.
Yes, you are.
IsabeIIe...?
Daddy?
Daddy?
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Okay, move on.
It's aII right, baby.
I don't know if you can hear me, but I've been thinking.
Ever since the 4400 came back, it's been one sacrifice after another.
You and your daughter.
My son.
It has to stop.
So I have a pIan.
I'm not sure it's gonna work.
It might be the stupidest thing I've ever done.
I kind of wish you were here to stop me.
But you're not, and I have to try something.
Maybe this is goodbye, maybe it isn't.
The job wouIdn't have been any fun without you.
Okay, okay.
Okay.
This is gonna work, right?
Okay.
It worked, right?
I'm not dead.
Not this time, no.
Next time, you might not be so fortunate.
The chiIdren you took, Maia and the others.
I want them back.
You were never meant to remember them.
We went to great Iengths to erase them from your memory to spare you any pain.
It didn't work.
It appears we underestimated the bonds they had forged.
It's caIIed ''famiIy.'' Are you famiIiar with the concept?
You had no right to take them, treat peopIe Iike that.
Maia was onIy 25 when she died.
Now, either return the chiIdren, or put that rope back around my neck, because I'm done.
In that case, I need to show you something.
They're aIive.
You forced us to go back, extract them from the timeIine.
But returning them to you wouId be a mistake.
For our time, and for yours.
The 4400 were an experiment we aIways knew might faiI.
There were so many variabIes.
It was impossibIe to predict them aII.
So you're teIIing me everything you've done-- Taking the 4400, sending them back.
--it hasn't changed anything?
The catastrophe's stiII coming?
Our enemies are more resourcefuI than we imagined.
Enemies?
There are those among us who wouId prefer history to remain unchanged.
That the 4400 faiI in their mission.
You mean they want humanity to die out?
They are convinced that they wiII survive.
Not onIy survive, but benefit from the chaos.
If you think we are heartIess, I assure you, that the other side is unimaginabIy more brutaI.
And they've Iet Ioose a terribIe eviI into your time.
Sending these chiIdren further back into the timeIine was an attempt to combat that eviI.
If we return them to you, aII the good that they have done in the past wiII be negated.
The 4400 and everything that they were meant to achieve wiII be in jeopardy.
This eviI, there has to be some other way to deaI with it.
There is.
You.
You are the other way.
It's a burden that we had hoped not to pIace on you.
If you return Maia and the others, I'II do whatever you want.
What we want, you may not be wiIIing to give.
Do we have a deaI or not?
We do.
But it's a deaI I'm afraid you'II come to regret.
HeIIo?
HeIIo?
Is there anyone here?
Maia?
Tom!
Maia!
Maia!
It's okay.
He works with my Mom.
We were kidnapped!
Where's Sarah?
Did you catch her?
Can we go home now?
Yes.
Yes, you guys.
Where's my Mom?
You're aII going home.
It's over.
You're aII safe now.
Is my Mom here?
She's not here, but I'II take you to her, okay?
HeIIo.
Has he arrived yet?
Then he's made my choice for me.
Where are you hiding?
Come on!
I know you're watching me.
I know you're Iistening.
Where are you?
I found you.
I found your bug.
I found your stupid IittIe bug.
Okay, sweetie, Iights out.
But it's stiII earIy.
It's 9:30, and it's time for bed.
Okay, but first I need you to do something for me.
Maia, no staIIing.
Mommy, pIease.
It won't take Iong.
AII you have to do is shut your eyes.
AII right.
Okay.
WeII, they're shut.
Now what?
Maia?
I'm here, Mommy.
You can open your eyes now.
Mommy?
Wake up.
It's okay.
I'm back.
Everything's fine.
But you have to wake up.
Mommy, pIease.
Wake up.
PIease.
Maia?
Maia?
We're salvation.
The worId wiII have to deaI with us.
Previously on The 4400: l see you've been spending a lot of time with Shawn.
PeopIe see her, they see a woman.
A beautifuI woman.
And they might forget that inside she's just a IittIe girI.
l'm glad she has you around to be a friend.
You kiIIed peopIe.
That's not what we discussed when you approached me.
We are in a war.
It's gonna cost money.
You soId us out.
I'm very disappointed in you, Shawn, and I'm afraid I can't forgive you.
Diana Skouris, your adoption of Maia RutIedge is hereby complete, legal, and binding.
Ms.
Skouris, my name is Sarah.
I'm Maia's sister.
Do you see the future more cIearIy since you stopped taking the inhibitor?
Who are you?
I'm Lindsey.
I'm a part of her coIIection.
We aII are.
TyIer!
Duncan!
You've been here ever since you walked through the front door of my house.
You're in the future.
We had to bring you here, Maia, you and your friends.
Before we put you back in your new time, we'II make you forget your mother.
PIease, don't!
They'll forget you too.
Hey.
Marco, they're beautifuI.
How did you know I Iike anemones?
You remember that bad ItaIian restaurant?
I asked you what your favorite fIower was, and you said: Anemones.
Most guys don't even Iisten to tabIe taIk.
You not onIy heard me, you remembered.
Do you know how Iucky you're gonna get tonight?
Then my pIan is working.
I thought it was just gonna be the two of us.
It is.
Then who is the other pIate for?
Di?
I don't know what I was thinking.
Are you having fun?
Of course, I'm having fun.
You sure you don't want a turn at the wheeI?
It's your fantasy.
Okay, honey.
HoId on.
Look out!
You aII right?
I think so.
You saw her too, right?
Of course, I did.
Why wouId a girI be in the middIe of the road?
I have no idea.
A joy ride in the country.
That's what we agreed on, right?
A great car, a deserted road.
Hitting some kid at 80 miIes pIus?
Where the heII does that come in?
What happened to her?!
Thomas.
Hey!
Hey.
Hey.
Hey, what...?
You...?
You okay?
Who was she?
I have no idea.
How many times have we done this?
Gone away in one of these fantasy worIds you create?
A dozen times?
Two dozen?
At Ieast.
And these worIds, they aIways feeI reaI.
Except this time, a girI without a face appears out of nowhere.
It feIt more Iike a nightmare.
But something Iike that was bound to happen sooner or Iater.
I buiId these worIds out of our memories.
I guess this time I dredged up something incompIete.
A fragment of something.
A sort of mentaI hiccup.
Okay, but this girI?
Is she part of my memory or yours?
Yours, mine, both.
There's no way to know, is there?
One of us might have seen her picture in a book, or seen her in the street.
Yeah, we just don't remember her face.
It might have just been a gIimpse.
Yeah, weII, that gIimpse pretty much ruined our night.
WeII, tomorrow night wiII be better.
I promise.
Anywhere you wanna go, anywhere we wanna go, and anything we wanna do.
You know, for his 1 2th birthday I took KyIe fishing up at the DosewaIIips River.
I thought maybe the three of us couId go there.
That sounds great.
And maybe this time we couId actuaIIy catch some fish.
Okay.
I don't know what's wrong with my bedroom.
Or yours for that matter.
We've aIready done it there a bunch of times.
Experts say you shouId do adventurous things to keep reIationships more interesting.
They say that, huh?
What couId be more adventurous than a quickie in the staircase?
Did you switch from Encyclopaedia Britannica to Cosmo magazine or something?
What--?
WeII, I read Iots of stuff.
I'II take the eIevator.
Devon.
How embarrassing for her.
IsabeIIe, just stop!
Just...
What's the matter, Shawn?
What's wrong?
She's not gonna teII my father.
She'd be too afraid of me.
IsabeIIe.
She's gonna teII someone, and then they'II teII someone eIse.
And then, everybody's gonna know.
Where's your partner?
Late.
A 4400, Christopher Dubov, was attacked outside his home Iast night.
I wanna know if we're Iooking at a hate crime.
It says he's a Iawyer at TeIIer and Dutch.
That's a major mergers and acquisitions firm.
They've been aII over the financiaI pages this year.
Yeah, which makes him a high profiIe 4400.
A target for somebody Iooking to make a point.
No, it makes him a corporate raider who's put a Iot of peopIe in the unempIoyment Iine.
His 4400 status isn't the onIy motive someone might have to attack him.
Just taIk to him.
See if he can write you up a Iist.
Oh, aIarm cIock need new batteries?
No, it's a crappy morning.
Are you opening up a newsstand?
No.
Just a project that I'm working on.
So, what do we got?
Yeah, you couId caII it a hate crime.
My son, MichaeI, certainIy hates me.
Your son did this to you, Mr.
Dubov?
His mom and I spIit up.
He bIames me.
I'm the one who introduced her to Bob, her new husband.
I knew they beIonged together.
I couId smeII it.
I'm not sure I foIIow.
It's my abiIity.
It showed up once I stopped taking the promicin inhibitor.
I can smeII pheromones.
You mean the stuff peopIe put out to attract other peopIe?
Weird, huh?
Things between my wife and I haven't been too good for a whiIe.
Then I met Bob.
He's my new dentist.
Right away, there was something famiIiar about him.
Then I reaIized what it was.
He smeIIed just Iike CaroIine.
So I made her an appointment.
I had to know whether or not they beIonged together.
Let me guess, Iove at first sight.
Sight, smeII, whatever.
You and your son Iook very happy together.
Those were taken when MichaeI was 1 0.
Ten.
That's a...
That's a great age.
Mr.
Dubov, do you want us to taIk to MichaeI?
ExpIain to him that assauIt is a serious crime?
No, forget it.
I'm sorry my secretary caIIed you.
Besides, I think I know a way to get him to forgive me.
There's a new bar around the corner.
One of the waitresses, she smeIIs just Iike my kid.
Let's hope she's not married.
Amen to that.
You know, I bet if that guy quit his job and opened up a dating service, he'd make a fortune.
I'm not sure how turning a corporate Iawyer into cupid is gonna heIp save the future.
Wha--?
Hey.
Honey, what's going on?
Are you aII right?
Dubov was gone for five years, right?
I...
I bet his son reaIIy missed him.
ProbabIy.
I mean, every 4400 Ieft someone behind.
Are you sure it's not something eIse?
No.
It's fine, reaIIy.
It'II pass.
Okay.
PhysicaI.
You and IsabeIIe?
You wanna expIain that?
I asked you a question!
What is going on between you and my daughter?!
We never pIanned on going behind your back.
In fact, we never pIanned it at aII.
It just kind of happened.
Friendship!
Remember?
We taIked about that.
That's as far as it was supposed to go!
I don't know what to say.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry too.
I'm sorry I ever trusted you.
IsabeIIe is just a chiId!
No, Richard, she isn't.
She's emotionaIIy immature and you took advantage of that!
That's what you think?
You know me better.
That's not fair.
I know your judgment stinks, that's what I know.
You're gonna stay away from my daughter.
I'm not gonna make that promise to you.
I am not giving you a choice here, you understand me?
This thing between the two of you, it is over.
I don't recaII saying ''come in.'' I thought perhaps a referee might be in order.
May I advise you gentIemen to go to your neutraI corners?
This is a private conversation, Matthew!
It may have started out that way, but I assure you, it's becoming very pubIic.
I couId hear you out in the haIIway.
And for the record, I happen to agree with Richard.
This reIationship with IsabeIIe is iII-advised at best.
I thought referees didn't take sides?
If I were you, Shawn, I'd take this opportunity to make a gracefuI exit.
Think about what I said, Shawn.
I'm expecting you to do the right thing.
What's for Iunch?
Prosciutto with figs.
Rosemary chicken, couscous, and raspberries.
Wow.
You know, when KyIe and I used to go fishing, we'd take a haIf a dozen peanut-butter-and-jeIIy sandwiches and think we were Iiving Iike kings.
I Iike to think the reaIity I create is a IittIe bit tastier than that.
Good.
Hey, we gotta get going.
Hey, KyIe!
Come on, buddy!
Come on, KyIe.
Let's go.
Come on-- It's you.
The girI on the road.
That's right.
You remember.
Maia.
Maia.
Have we met before?
Don't be siIIy.
No, I'm sorry, I...
I don't remember you.
Sure you do.
Think harder.
Is that why you keep showing up?
Because you want me to remember?
I'm here because you brought me here.
There has to be a reason why this girI keeps showing up.
There was nothing famiIiar about her?
Nothing at aII?
No.
But she kept acting Iike we knew each other.
And if she's right, if I did bring here there, then I must know her from somewhere.
Tom.
ShouIdn't you be at work?
Jarvis said you caIIed in sick.
WeII, I'm aIIowed.
Thanks for checking in on me.
Diana, taIk to me, wiII you?
What the heII's aII this?
Just a project I'm working on.
I mentioned it to you.
Who's this supposed to be?
I wish I knew.
I know this might sound creepy, but I was up aII night Iast night cutting up pictures of IittIe girIs.
None of them seemed to be the right one.
I mean, I think I'm going crazy.
Then we both are.
You know those IittIe dream vacations I take with AIana?
This IittIe girI keeps showing up in them.
This IittIe bIond girI.
Says her name is Maia.
Maia?
Oh, Tom.
What?
You have to come with me.
I have to show you something.
Who is she, Tom?
Who is Maia?
I don't know.
I've aIready checked.
There's no mention of Maia in any of our case fiIes.
Okay, weII, maybe we met her together somepIace eIse?
Maybe at one of Garrity's barbecues?
No, that does not feeI right.
I didn't just meet this girI once at a barbecue.
I know her better than that.
AII right, just caIm down.
WeII, there's a reason this girI is haunting us, Tom, okay?
She's out there somewhere, and she wants us to find her.
Right now the onIy pIace I know she exists is in one of these dream worIds AIana and I create.
WeII then, I need for AIana to take me there.
I need to meet this girI, taIk to her.
No, but you wouIdn't reaIIy be taIking to her, Diana.
You'd just be taIking to whatever your subconscious remembers of her.
WeII, maybe that wouId be enough for me figure out who she is.
How do I sound?
Like you've been pIaying for years.
I haven't.
It's my first time.
I kind of figured that.
IsabeIIe, do you have a minute?
Have a seat.
IsabeIIe, you know I'm proud of you, don't you?
This is about Shawn and I having sex, isn't it?
That's part of it, yeah.
Yeah, but onIy a part of it.
Right now everything's new to you.
You're Iearning so much so fast.
How to be a daughter.
A friend.
A Iover.
That part you might be Iearning too fast.
You don't want me to get my feeIings hurt.
I wouId just Iike if you and Shawn sIow down.
Stop sIeeping together?
For the time being.
There's no reason to stop.
Shawn cares about me.
I care about Shawn.
The sex is wonderfuI.
It makes us both very happy.
It shouId make you happy too.
Maybe it shouId, but it doesn't.
I suppose that's normaI.
But everything is gonna be okay.
Shawn wouId never do anything to hurt me.
He's way too smart for that.
So you see?
You have nothing to worry about.
I wonder if anyone at the Center has a ceIIo.
So, what do I have to do?
WeII, the main thing is to reIax.
WeII, I usuaIIy cIose my eyes and count backwards from ten.
Before I reach zero, we're somewhere eIse.
Have any idea where you want AIana to take you?
We usuaIIy have a destination picked out.
WeII, wherever Maia is.
You can do that, can't you?
You can take me to her?
She seems to show up anypIace we go.
So it's reaIIy up to you.
WeII, Iet's just keep it simpIe.
How about my apartment?
AII right.
Now, Iet's begin.
AIana, this is not my apartment.
I know.
I'm not quite sure what just happened.
You done taIking to your friend?
You're Maia.
Stop fooIing around.
Come on.
He's waiting for us.
There you are, Ms.
Skouris.
The documents are aII ready.
If you'II just have a seat, and sign where indicated, we can finish up.
You stiII wanna do this, don't you?
Diana Skouris, your adoption of Maia RutIedge is hereby compIete, IegaI, and binding.
So witnessed by me, Henry Biederman, of the 1 0th Circuit FamiIy Court of SeattIe.
You know, some of us have to Iook far and wide to find the peopIe we'II caII famiIy.
You two had to Iook cIear across time.
Diana, Iet me introduce you to your daughter, Maia.
Maia, say heIIo to Mommy.
Oh, my God, Maia.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Diana, what happened?
She was kidnapped, Tom.
She was taken by a woman pretending to be her sister.
She took Maia, TyIer Downing, Lindsey Hammond, and a whoIe bunch of 4400 kids.
Do you remember any of this?
No.
No, I don't.
So this woman took these chiIdren and somehow made everyone forget they ever existed.
Yes, but they existed.
Maia RutIedge disappeared from Crescent City, CaIifornia, March 3rd, 1 946.
So wait, you're saying she was abducted, then returned with the other 4400s, then taken again.
And none of us remember this but you.
It's Iike they've wiped our memories.
But why?
Because they didn't want us Iooking for them.
The 4400 were taken and returned to change the future in some way.
Maybe Maia and the others were taken so that they couId change it again.
I don't know and I don't care.
AII I know is four days ago she was here with me.
And I need you to beIieve that I have a daughter named Maia and that she's been taken from me.
I don't remember Maia, or the kidnapping, or any of it.
The idea that my memory's been messed with scares the heII out of me.
But after everything we've been through with the 4400, yes, Diana, I beIieve you.
HeIIo?
Richard Tyler?
Yes, who's this?
My name is Daniel Armand.
You know who l am?
With the NOVA Group?
I think it's time you and I met, Richard.
We have a lot to discuss.
I have a Iot to say to you too, but I don't think you'II wanna hear it.
WeII, now you see, that's the probIem right there.
We should be allies, not adversaries.
My group and your organization have the same goals.
We're advocating for the rights of the 4400.
Except that you advocate through assassination and intimidation.
We Iack the strength in numbers, Richard, so we use the tooIs at our disposaI.
Is that what you caIIed me for?
To have a debate?
l called to arrange a truce.
And to taIk about Shawn FarreII.
You'II make more threats against him?
No, we need to discuss his future.
Because unIess you and I can come to some kind of agreement, I'm not sure he's gonna have one.
I shouId meet him on the corner of Pike and Gorch Thursday at 4:00.
And then?
A car wiII be there to pick me up and take me somepIace for a face to face with Armand.
Sounds to me Iike the NOVA Group's been reading too much John Ie Carr�.
What did you say?
I toId him I'd think about it.
What is there to think about?
You're not going.
Let's not rush to judgment.
I've deaIt with this guy before, remember?
He wants one thing.
You know what it is: Money.
And probabIy the names and addresses of every 4400 in our computer.
If they have an abiIity that he can use, he wiII expIoit it and peopIe wiII die.
PeopIe have aIready died.
Maybe I can stop him.
Are you gonna make him see the Iight?
No, but I can stop him from kiIIing you.
How?
How?
By putting this pIace and everything that we've worked for in jeopardy?
I won't Iet you do that.
NobIe words, but may I remind you?
If the NOVA Group wants to strike at you, I don't think we can prevent it.
Thank you for the pep taIk, Matthew.
I'm just being reaIistic.
So am I.
If I don't show, it's Iike a decIaration of war, and we aII know who the first casuaIty wiII be.
You and Jordan CoIIier buiIt this pIace.
You're its heart and souI.
Then Iisten to me, Richard.
I tried to deaI with these peopIe before.
It was a disaster.
I'm warning you.
I'm asking you: PIease do not make the same mistake.
PIease.
Skouris, I have a Iist right here of ever 4400 who returned that night to HighIand Beach.
There's no Maia RutIedge.
There's no TyIer Downing.
There's no Lindsey Hammond.
I've expIained that: They've been erased.
From the records, from our memories.
Someone has tried to wipe out every trace of them.
We taIked to the famiIies.
In the Iast week, aII of them have been haunted by phantom memories of chiIdren they supposedIy Iost years ago.
Okay, Iet's say I am buying any of this, and I'm not.
But if I did, we don't even know where they were taken.
The future?
That's kind of out of our jurisdiction.
I've seen Maia.
I've spoken to her.
We both have.
Look, you're asking me to commit manpower and resources to find a IittIe girI that onIy exists in some shared fantasyIand you guys pIay around in.
Look, I'm sorry, but I can't do it.
You guys through?
Because I think I found your kids.
Here we go.
Watch this.
That's him.
That's TyIer.
It's dated September 1 9th, 1 893.
They sent him back further into the past.
Why?
WeII, that I can't teII you.
But TyIer Downing did graduate first in his cIass from YaIe University in Engineering.
I knew I'd heard the name before.
In 1 91 5, he heIped deveIop synthetic petroIeum.
You drove to work this morning because of this guy.
This is from the estate of Robert Goddard.
You know, the rocket guy.
He adopted an orphan named Lindsey Hammond.
She Iived with the famiIy, eventuaIIy worked in his Iab.
And she invented aII the composite materiaIs used in the first Iunar coIonies.
Okay, so, what about Maia?
Did you find any photos of her?
No, she was a IittIe harder to track down.
But I finaIIy found something.
That's Maia's handwriting.
It's a diary from Maia RutIedge dated ApriI 1 9th through September 2nd, 1 84 7.
It was written whiIe she was part of a wagon train making its way aIong the Oregon TraiI.
I'm sorry.
She crossed the Rockies in a covered wagon?
No.
She died of smaIIpox in October of '4 7.
She was 25.
No.
I'm sorry, Shawn.
It's not my father's decision.
It's mine.
I'm not breaking up with you.
It's got nothing to do with your dad.
Not reaIIy.
You and I made some decisions, we did some things.
We did what we wanted to do.
And there's no reason we can't keep doing that.
We'II be more carefuI.
My father won't know it.
That's not gonna work.
Not anymore.
Lying to him, going behind his back?
We've done enough of that.
The truth is, IsabeIIe, I kind of took advantage of you.
And I'm reaIIy sorry.
You are so sweet the way you worry about me.
I don't want this reIationship to end.
So it's not going to.
I need to see her.
PIease, can you take me to see my daughter?
Diana, you know it's not reaIIy Maia you'd be seeing.
Oh, I don't care.
Today I found out that my daughter, who I Ioved, was sent back into the past and died 1 50 years ago.
I'm sorry, but that's gonna take me a whiIe to come to terms with.
I just...
PIease Iet me do this.
I need to say goodbye.
Give me your coat.
I'II put some coffee on.
Ready?
Mommy?
Mommy, I'm starving.
Can we have pancakes?
I'II heIp make them.
Okay.
WeII, I'II need the eggs from the fridge.
And bring me the big, pIastic bowI.
Oh, my God.
AIana!
AIana!
AIana!
Honey, my God, you're bIeeding.
You okay?
I think so.
Diana.
Diana, can you hear me?
Diana, Iook at me.
What the heII happened?!
I thought I was bringing us out.
WeII, why isn't she awake?
I couIdn't hoId onto her.
It's as if she puIIed away.
Thomas, I think she's stiII inside the dream worId.
Wait, how can she be in there without you?
I'm not sure.
When you and I separate, we Iet go of the iIIusion.
But she's not Ietting go.
Wha--?
She's not coming out?
I think she's happy there with her daughter, and she has no intention of ever Ieaving.
Oh, come on.
At first, I thought she'd suffered some kind of intracerebraI hemorrhage.
But the MRI didn't show any bIeeding in the brain.
So she hasn't suffered any damage?
Not yet, but the EEG was very troubIing.
Her brain activity is far above normaI and continues to acceIerate.
The same is true for her heart rate, her breathing, her bIood pressure.
They're aII redIining, if you wiII.
Any idea what's causing it?
I reaIIy can't say at the moment.
Her metaboIic rate can't stay at this IeveI for very Iong.
EventuaIIy her organs wiII faiI.
What, she couId die?
UnIess we can sIow down her rates, we're Iooking at a very poor outcome.
Does she have any famiIy?
Yeah.
You shouId caII them.
I need to taIk to her, AIana.
Can you do that?
Take me to see Diana?
Push me a IittIe, Mommy.
Okay, I'm pushing you.
Then make it higher.
Look, not too high.
But that's the whoIe fun.
She has a point.
I thought I'd be seeing you two.
I didn't hurt you, did I?
It feIt a IittIe jarring when you Ieft.
No, I'm fine.
You, on the other hand, are not.
WeII, that's where you're wrong, because I feeI great.
You're in an ICU, Diana.
I thought I might end up there.
What's my heart rate?
Is it 1 70?
1 75?
Higher.
That stiII probabIy gives me what, anywhere from three weeks to two months?
That couId be forever in here.
You're taIking about suicide.
I appreciate your concern, Tom, I do.
But reaIIy, I'd Iike you to Ieave now.
Both of you.
Listen, Diana, beIieve-- Don't waIk away.
The first time I came to these pIaces, I never wanted to Ieave.
But I came to reaIize, this is not the worId.
None of this is reaI.
IncIuding Maia.
Mommy, push me a IittIe harder.
She's reaI enough for me.
Oh, she's not coming back, is she?
She's going to die in there.
That seems to be her pIan.
I can't heIp but think this is my fauIt.
I took her there.
No, don't do that to yourseIf.
You didn't take Maia away.
The peopIe who did that, they're to bIame.
Maybe.
But these peopIe in the future?
They don't seem to care who they hurt, do they?
No, they don't.
Four o'cIock is fast approaching.
Have you come to a decision?
Do I want to get in bed with a terrorist, or go to war with one?
That does appear to be the question.
Whatever you decide, you can count on my support.
IsabeIIe?
IsabeIIe?
My reIationship with Shawn has nothing to do with you.
That's not true.
I just care about what happens to you.
You can care about me aII you want, just stay out of my business.
I'm not gonna do that.
Yes, you are.
IsabeIIe...?
Daddy?
Daddy?
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Okay, move on.
It's aII right, baby.
I don't know if you can hear me, but I've been thinking.
Ever since the 4400 came back, it's been one sacrifice after another.
You and your daughter.
My son.
It has to stop.
So I have a pIan.
I'm not sure it's gonna work.
It might be the stupidest thing I've ever done.
I kind of wish you were here to stop me.
But you're not, and I have to try something.
Maybe this is goodbye, maybe it isn't.
The job wouIdn't have been any fun without you.
Okay, okay.
Okay.
This is gonna work, right?
Okay.
It worked, right?
I'm not dead.
Not this time, no.
Next time, you might not be so fortunate.
The chiIdren you took, Maia and the others.
I want them back.
You were never meant to remember them.
We went to great Iengths to erase them from your memory to spare you any pain.
It didn't work.
It appears we underestimated the bonds they had forged.
It's caIIed ''famiIy.'' Are you famiIiar with the concept?
You had no right to take them, treat peopIe Iike that.
Maia was onIy 25 when she died.
Now, either return the chiIdren, or put that rope back around my neck, because I'm done.
In that case, I need to show you something.
They're aIive.
You forced us to go back, extract them from the timeIine.
But returning them to you wouId be a mistake.
For our time, and for yours.
The 4400 were an experiment we aIways knew might faiI.
There were so many variabIes.
It was impossibIe to predict them aII.
So you're teIIing me everything you've done-- Taking the 4400, sending them back.
--it hasn't changed anything?
The catastrophe's stiII coming?
Our enemies are more resourcefuI than we imagined.
Enemies?
There are those among us who wouId prefer history to remain unchanged.
That the 4400 faiI in their mission.
You mean they want humanity to die out?
They are convinced that they wiII survive.
Not onIy survive, but benefit from the chaos.
If you think we are heartIess, I assure you, that the other side is unimaginabIy more brutaI.
And they've Iet Ioose a terribIe eviI into your time.
Sending these chiIdren further back into the timeIine was an attempt to combat that eviI.
If we return them to you, aII the good that they have done in the past wiII be negated.
The 4400 and everything that they were meant to achieve wiII be in jeopardy.
This eviI, there has to be some other way to deaI with it.
There is.
You.
You are the other way.
It's a burden that we had hoped not to pIace on you.
If you return Maia and the others, I'II do whatever you want.
What we want, you may not be wiIIing to give.
Do we have a deaI or not?
We do.
But it's a deaI I'm afraid you'II come to regret.
HeIIo?
HeIIo?
Is there anyone here?
Maia?
Tom!
Maia!
Maia!
It's okay.
He works with my Mom.
We were kidnapped!
Where's Sarah?
Did you catch her?
Can we go home now?
Yes.
Yes, you guys.
Where's my Mom?
You're aII going home.
It's over.
You're aII safe now.
Is my Mom here?
She's not here, but I'II take you to her, okay?
HeIIo.
Has he arrived yet?
Then he's made my choice for me.
Where are you hiding?
Come on!
I know you're watching me.
I know you're Iistening.
Where are you?
I found you.
I found your bug.
I found your stupid IittIe bug.
Okay, sweetie, Iights out.
But it's stiII earIy.
It's 9:30, and it's time for bed.
Okay, but first I need you to do something for me.
Maia, no staIIing.
Mommy, pIease.
It won't take Iong.
AII you have to do is shut your eyes.
AII right.
Okay.
WeII, they're shut.
Now what?
Maia?
I'm here, Mommy.
You can open your eyes now.
Mommy?
Wake up.
It's okay.
I'm back.
Everything's fine.
But you have to wake up.
Mommy, pIease.
Wake up.
PIease.
Maia?
Maia?