Savino excuses himself too, and then goes to see Diane in powder room, where he urges her to slip Rizzo some sort of knockout powder. Her price for drugging the guy is Laura's necklace. Naturally, Laura walks in while they're haggling over the details, and she spins on her heel and walks out, Savino chasing after her.
And now for some complete ridiculousness: Kemp and the Dixon trio gain access to this super top-secret bunker by Ralph sneaking up on a guard and knocking him out with one punch. Then they go to work search, and are interrupted by a group of APs, but Kemp pretends to have just caught Ralph, and he sends the APs on a wild-goose chase for the other two intruders, giving Jack and Dixon enough time to come up with the Surasky autopsy photos in the desk of Massey, the civilian patient of Dozier's.
Savino sends the count room kid up to Salt Lake City, sneaking him out in a meat truck and warning him not to come back. The kid agrees. Back at home, Laura comes in, having figured out Diane was the woman in Havana. She wants her gone. Savino does too, but Rizzo wants her there, so there's nothing they can do. He wants her to trust him that there's nothing going on this time, though. She looks like she wants to believe him, but doesn't yet.
Over at the sheriff's office, our heroes are trying to figure out how they can arrest Massey on the Air Force base, which they can't because it's federal land. And then Ralph has some kind of damn ranching story that's relevant or something but by this point I've checked out. Why don't you just lasso the damn guy and yank him off the federal land where you can arrest him?
What happens is Ralph goads Massey into chasing him off the base by threatening to give the photos to the newspapers, leading Massey (and an accomplice throwing shots at Ralph the whole way) over field and through a wire-cut fence off the air force base and into Clark County, where Jack and Kemp are waiting to back up Ralph (who for Christ's sake was nearly killed a couple of times as bait).
A wary Katherine shows up at the diner at the behest of Laura, who apologizes for being harsh -- and then implies that she's maybe not as keen on protecting her husband's associates as she once was. Katherine's not impressed, since Savino's rise to the top would be easier if his competitors are out of the way, but hey! Who's to say Katherine's and Laura's interests can't meet in the middle? Right now I'd be interested in giving Katherine more to do than filling in story blanks and hanging around looking sexy, although she's quite good at both.













Comments