"THE TOWN" (2010)

STATS123pages155scenes22,423words45%dialogue31characters

Words

  • dialogue10,11745%
  • action10,94049%
  • other1,3666.1%

Scenes

location
  • INT 92
  • EXT 61
  • INT/EXT 1
  • UNKNOWN 1
time
  • DAY 26
  • NIGHT 9
  • DAWN 1
  • DUSK 1
  • CONT 13
  • UNKNOWN 105
1

OPEN

The Town

by Peter Craig

Based on Prince of Theives

Revisions by Chuck Hogan

Current Revisions by Ben Affleck & Aaron Stockard 1.5.09

Name (of company, if applicable) Address Phone Number

2

INT. KENMORE SQUARE SOVEREIGN BANK - EARLY MORNING

We are inside a bank in the morning hours, just before it opens. We hear the VOICES of people as they approach. A spear of daylight precedes a woman’s hand. Keys turn in reinforced locks, releasing strongbars.

A WOMAN, CLAIRE (30) the bank manager and A MAN, DAVID,(37) the assistant manager, enter, talking casually.

The BANDITS move with JARRING SPEED AND VIOLENCE.

They wear BLACK JUMPSUITS, hold ASSAULT RIFLES and wear Halloween masks.

The FIRST BANDIT, DOUG (35) GRABS CLAIRE by the arm and leads her toward the back.

The SECOND, JEM (34) KICKS the coffee tray from David’s hand, staining the wall, then knocks him to the floor with the butt of his AK-47 rifle.

Doug leads Claire down the short hall, taking her KEYS and handing her off to GLOANSEY (32) another thief, who pushes both employees to the floor behind the teller cages, and YANKS OFF THEIR SHOES.

Doug passes the FOURTH, (DEZ, 28) -- with a RADIO WIRE in his ear

GLOANSY
Close your eyes. Don’t move.

Doug aims his rifle at the David and Claire:

DOUG
Where’s the vault key?
3

INT. BANK, VAULT DOOR - MOMENTS LATER

Doug stands behind Claire while Jem holds Bearns in front of the closed VAULT.

DOUG
What’s the time lock set for?
CLAIRE
Nine when the bank opens.
DOUG
If you’re not telling the truth we’re gonna kill you’re friend.

The digital clock on the vault door reads 8:17.

CLAIRE
...eight eighteen.
DOUG
When it hits, no panic code. Open it clean. Understand?

Everything has gone very fast to this point. Now it moves agonizingly slow- They watch it like three people waiting for an elevator.

The timer CLACKS! Doug inserts the vault key.

Claire reaches for the big dial with a trembling hand. She rotates it once, then overshoots the next number.

JEM
Now you’re stalling.

Jem has his gun pointed at Bearns’ head. Claire makes a mistake and the TUMBLERS RESET.

JEM (CONT’D)
(re: Bearns)
Do you like this lefty? ‘Cause I’m gonna drop him like a hot rock.
DOUG
(calmer)
How many attempts before a duress delay?
CLAIRE
Th-three.
DOUG
You want us here another fifteen minutes?

Claire reaches fast, but Doug grabs her wrist, holding it steady: it looks fragile in his gloved hand.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Breathe. Once you start, do not stop.

CONTINUED: (2)

Claire reaches for the dial -- begins working the numbers. After the third turn, there’s a CLACK. Jem spins the wheel and the vault door OPENS.

4

INT. SOVEREIGN BANK, INSIDE THE VAULT - CONTINUOUS

Doug and Jem collecting CASH. They rip the color-coded bands, fanning each thick packet.

Doug deftly removes each DYE PACK from each bundle. We jump cut and watch him to the same to the TRACERS.

5

INT. BANK - CONTINUOUS ACTION

As Doug emerges, Dez halts him in the shadows, pointing.

DEZ
ATM.

A STUDENT inside the ATM vestibule at front.

Doug’s attention is pulled to Claire, lying face-down behind the teller cages.

Her heel is slowly moving Claire peeks at Gloansy, who is distracted by the student. Her foot PRESSES A BUTTON UNDER THE COUNTER -- then quickly glides back.

Claire looks the other way... and sees Doug’s mask STARING at her.

She’s caught. She’s dead.

The Student finally gives up, walking away from the ATM.

Doug stares at terrified Claire. After a beat:

DOUG
We gotta go.
JEM
Bleach it up.

Gloansy pulls ZIP CUFFS from his pocket. Jem and Dez pull jugs of ULTRA CLOROX from the work bag.

6

INT. BANK - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Bearns in a teller chair, wrists bound behind his back. Gloansy is doing the same to Claire as --

DEZ
Hold it!
(touching his ear)
Silent alarm, this address.
JEM
Who did it?
DOUG
Doesn’t matter. Let’s go.
BEARNS
Look, no one did anything --

Jem HITS HIM WITH THE RIFLE. Then rains down a flurry of punches. His knuckles pound Bearns’ temple.

Bearns slumps to one side, but Jem does not let up. He HAMMERS at Bearns’ defenseless face. Claire SCREAMING.

Jem rises, grabs a bottle of bleach. Moves to empty it over Bearns’ face. But Doug HOOKS his arm, stopping him.

DOUG
Let’s go. Load the bags.

After hesitating, Jem rises.

Doug takes the bleach, dowsing the teller station. He returns to the teller station and Bearns’ WHEEZING.

Claire’s chair is empty.

7

INT. KENMORE SOVEREIGN BANK, REAR DOOR - CONTINUOUS

Jem has Claire doubled over near the waiting bags, her hands bound, his hand gripping the back of her neck.

DOUG
Fuck is this?
JEM
They get us walled in, we need her.
DOUG
Leave her.

But Jem is already hustling her out, past the Prius. Doug hates the idea but won’t waste time arguing.

8

EXT. BACK ALLEY - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Gloansy pulls up FAST in the WORK VAN. Doug boosts Claire into the van with her head kept down.

9

INT. VAN - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Doug pushing her into the bench, sitting next to her.

DOUG
Eyes shut, no noise.

Doug pulls out a small knife. He tugs at her jacket hem, CUTTING OFF a strip of fabric -- making her flinch.

The rest of the crew REMOVE THEIR MASKS.

As THE VAN LURCHES FORWARD, he ties it around her head as a blindfold. He makes a fist and drives it -- STOPPING JUST SHORT OF HER NOSE. Making sure she can’t see.

He sits back. STUDYING her with impunity.

As he stares at her we have a NON-LINEAR SEQUENCE where we FLASH BACK TO Doug scouting the bank job, observing Claire as she came and went from work--but we HEAR a conversation between Claire and an FBI agent that takes place AFTER the robbery.

10

EXT. KENMORE SQUARE SOVEREIGN BANK - FLASHBACK

Doug watches intently as Claire comes to work in the morning.

FRAWLEY (V.O.)
I’m assuming they warned you not to cooperate with the police.
CLAIRE (V.O.)
One of them took my driver’s license and read it to me. Said he was keeping it.
11

EXT. KENMORE SQUARE SOVEREIGN BANK - FLASHBACK

Claire gets off, sunset. She is quite beautiful but it isn’t that, there is something endearing in her dignity, her poise. Doug watches from a Cadillac STS.

FRAWLEY (V.O.)
Did he say anything else?
12

INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS - WORK ROOM - PRESENT

In two chairs set next to a table, Claire facing FBI AGENT ADAM FRAWLEY, 36, talented and intense.

Claire’s legs are bare, her jacket gone. Her ELIMINATION PRINTS are being taken by a MALE TECH in blue ink.

CLAIRE
‘If you tell the FBI anything, we will come to your house and fuck you and kill you.’

The Print Tech looks up before resuming.

FRAWLEY
And then what?
CLAIRE
Then nothing. We just drove.
FRAWLEY
This was a passenger van?
CLAIRE
I went skiing in Vermont at Christmas, and we rented a Villager. I only remember because we called ourselves the Villager People. It was like that.
(nothing)
Yes. It was a passenger van.
FRAWLEY
And you never tried to escape?
CLAIRE
No.
FRAWLEY
They didn’t say anything else to you?
CLAIRE
No.
(pause)
I didn’t try to escape because they had guns.
FRAWLEY
(smiles reassuringly)
I understand.
(beat)
Then they let you go.
CLAIRE
Then they let me go.

Claire notices her hand shivering and can’t control it.

FRAWLEY
That’s the adrenaline getting out of your system. Its normal.

He drapes his jacket over her shoulders.

CLAIRE
Why did they take our shoes?
FRAWLEY
To keep you from running. Or kicking. Did you see Mr. Bearns activate the alarm?
CLAIRE
(beat)
No.

Frawley reaches over, turns off his tape recorder.

FRAWLEY
When someone feels their life is in jeopardy it often has some residual effects.
CLAIRE
I haven’t even cried.
FRAWLEY
You can expect some bursts of anxiety--you will definitely cry.
(he smiles)
If there’s anything you’re victim’s witness specialist can’t help with.

He offers his card.

CLAIRE
What are the chances that you’ll catch them?
FRAWLEY
We’re going to do everything we can.
CLAIRE
They have assault rifles and my drivers license. Can you please not give me the Dragnet answer?

CONTINUED: (2)

FRAWLEY
We have some very strong profiles for these subjects.
CLAIRE
That’s the Dragnet answer.

He has to smile. Likes her, loosens up.

FRAWLEY
When an armed robbery call comes into the Boston Police, the first thing they have done, for the last hundred years-- is close the Charlestown bridge.
(gestures around)
There are four hundred bank robberies a year in Boston, more per capita, than anywhere in the world. The world. And one square mile generates ninety percent of the perpetrators: Charlestown. People in the Town have been handing it down like a trade- like glassblowing- longer than you or I have been alive. I don’t understand it but it does make it easier when you know what bridge to close.
(beat, smiles)
Does that help?
CLAIRE
Not really.
FRAWLEY
Why is that?
CLAIRE
I moved to Charlestown three months ago.

Frawley sighs. Let’s his head fall forward, a bit. Brings it back up.

FRAWLEY
Okay. Aside from me, you are the last person these subjects want to see. They don’t want to see anyone who could link them to this. As such, you are probably the safest woman in the the Town right now.
(holds her look)
(MORE)

CONTINUED: (3)

FRAWLEY (CONT'D)
But I will come check up on you which will make you completely radioactive to these people.
CLAIRE
Thank you.
DINO (PRE-LAP)
You took your time with her.
13

INT BANK - MANAGER’S OFFICE - DAY

A POLICE PHOTOGRAPHER snaps shots of fallen ceiling concrete and a GAPING HOLE in the ceiling. Frawley walks through.

FRAWLEY
I’m very thorough.

Boston Police Detective DINO CIAMPA (50s), follows, grinning. FBI agents work alongside local police officers from the BPD. Dino and Frawley are similarly partnered.

DINO
They ran a Jack-In-The-Box. Worked a bypass and busted in overnight.
14

INT. TELLER CAGES - MOMENTS LATER

TECHNICIANS scan the walls with BLUE LASERS for prints. Frawley and Dino hold handkerchiefs to their noses.

DINO
Bleached the entire place for DNA.

They stop over the blood stain where the assistant manager fell.

DINO (CONT’D)
Silent bell came from cage two.
(beat, so...)
Assistant Manager’s at Beth Israel.

Reveal a BOX OF ELECTRONICS SAVAGELY DISMANTLED.

DINO (CONT’D)
Those were the Verizon lines

Frawley takes in the exploded telephone wiring and then deadpans, (like the Verizon commercial):

FRAWLEY
Can you hear me now?
DINO
Our guys let the time lock expire and had the manager open sesame.
FRAWLEY
(ruminating)
Even a ten foot steel safe, only as strong as the guy with the key.

THE VAULT - MOMENTS LATER

The busted cabinet is smeared with fingerprint dust.

Frawley, examines discarded stacks of cash. Holds up a bill with a thin magnetic TRACER STRIP attached.

FRAWLEY
Blew the dye packs. Even found the tracers.
DINO
Good pick. Three and a quarter?

Frawley’s Blackberry goes off.

FRAWLEY
Three and a half.
(looks at berry)
Got the van. Torched.
DINO
Where is it?
FRAWLEY
Where do you think?
SMASH CUT TO:

TITLE: “CHARLESTOWN.”

Helicopter shot of Charlestown. We see the water. The bridge, the projects --all framing the MONUMENT at the heart of the neighborhood like a sundial.

The WORK VAN IS INCINERATED and surrounded by COPS

15

EXT. O’NEIL MEMORIAL ICE SKATING RINK - DAY

Establishing. Quiet outside the hockey rink. No cars in the lot. Few pedestrians.

16

INT. O’NEIL MEMORIAL ICE SKATING RINK - DAY

Doug enters. The rink is dark and ghostly.

He climbs the bleachers to a dark corner. Jem’s knuckles are purple around his emerald-and-gold Claddagh ring.

JEM
So -- we’re out clean. Nothing went sour until the end

Awkward silence. Attention on Gloansy.

GLOANSY
Won’t happen again.
DOUG
It’s all right.
JEM
I tell you what won’t happen again.

Jem seems serious, which makes for tension in the group.

JEM (CONT’D)
That joint gets boosted again’ Happy’s keepin’ his hand off the fuckin’ buzzer.

Jem laughs. Gloansy laughs, panders:

GLOANSY
Four guys come in: Full body armor- -Ak’s--Skeletor masks. He decides that’s the time to hit the fuckin’ alarm? You gotta be fuckin’ slow.
JEM
Lucky he just got tuned up.
DOUG
What’s the magic number, Drago?
JEM
7-6-7-5-0. A piece.

Whistle from Dez.

JEM (CONT’D)
Minus some consecutives I incinerated. Plus ten off the top for the Florist.

We see a look from Doug on the Florist line.

JEM (CONT’D)
Duggy’s share is back at my place. You two...

Jem hands Dez and Gloansy ORANGE LOCKER KEYS.

JEM (CONT’D)
Your pieces are out front. And anyone who’s down--I known Gloansy’s down--it’s a laundry run to the reservation tonight.

He looks up to Doug.

JEM (CONT’D)
Now what?
17

EXT. HOCKEY RINK PARKING LOT - MOMENTS LATER

Out in back of the rink. It should be evident that these two are old friends.

DOUG
This shit with the Florist is gettin’ old.
JEM
Dig dug, do you think I would set us up for some bullshit? I’m buyin’ us a marquee score down the line. If we need to make payments to get there we make payments.
DOUG
Fuck makin’ payments. We’re takin’ risks and breakin’ him off for nothing.
JEM
Don’t let your pride get in front of your money now-- that’s somethin’ I learned.
DOUG
Now you have money expertise you acquired I don’t know about? I known you your whole life.

This pisses Jem off.

JEM
Were you with me seven years in Walpole?

Doug knows how to unwind him.

DOUG
What money did you have in Walpole?
JEM
(laughing)
Shut the fuck up.
DOUG
Let me ask you something, are we gonna start takin’ hostages now?
JEM
We’re doin’ what we need to do, brother.
DOUG
We don’t need to be workin’ with that piece of shit.
JEM
Why do you hate money, Doug E. Fresh? You think he’s a piece of shit? You can tell him tonight.
18

INT. FLORIST’S SHOP - NIGHT

Doug and Jem enter the shop. It is a dingy little hole. Jem moves in ahead of Doug who hangs back.

We find RUSTY (65) and FERGUS COLM (THE FLORIST) a sixty year old former boxer.

Jem approaches the counter and drops a plastic shopping bag on the counter. He reaches out and shakes Fergie’s hand, deferentially.

JEM
Fergie.
FERGIE
How are ya, son?

Doug nods to Fergie from behind Jem.

DOUG
How are ya, Fergie?

Evidently this was not sufficiently respectful.

FERGIE
(provocative)
How are you?

Doug doesn’t want a confrontation.

DOUG
Good.

Jem drops an envelope on the table.

JEM
(re: money)
Run that under the sink.

Fergie nods.

DOUG
(to Fergie)
Merry Christmas.

We’re on Fergie as the door closes.

19

INT. INDIAN CASINO - LAUNDERING MONTAGE, MUSIC- NIGHT

--HIGH ENERGY SEQUENCE TO MUSIC. FRUITS OF THEIR LABOR.

--We see STOLEN CASH being exchanged for CHIPS

-- Roulette wheel. High stakes. Jem and Gloansy.

-- Doug at a Blackjack table. Dez comes up and tries to play. Doug starts losing and makes Dez leave.

-- Roulette wheel stops, Jem losing BIG this time. He points out a Hot Waitress to distract Gloansy and Dez -- then nicks chips from their dwindling stacks.

-- Doug hits 21. He rises, done, many chips in his tray.

They turn in their CHIPS FOR CLEAN MONEY

20

INT. FOXY LADY - FROM ABOVE - LATER

The four of them sitting around the stage -- three of them wasted -- smiling up at a sinuous STRIPPER.

Jem and Gloansy do cocaine with a stripper.

21

INT. FOXY LADY - LATER

Doug sits for a private lap dance.

22

EXT. BOSTON - DAWN

The guys make it back to Charlestown just as the sun crests the horizon.

23

EXT. BANK BOSTON (KENMORE SQUARE BRANCH) - DAY

A COMCAST CREW in a cherry picker examines the hacked junction box above the Kenmore Square bank.

Below, Frawley, Dino and the CREW CHIEF examine fresh wounds in a telephone pole: GOUGE MARKS left by a lineman’s spikes.

CREW CHIEF
They obviously knew how to work the box but I like how they zappped the bipper to the back-up alarm to the D-4 Station.
FRAWLEY
How would you learn that?

The crew chief looks down -- realizing he’s set himself up for an uncomfortable admission:

CREW CHIEF
Get a job at Comcast.

SAME - MOMENTS LATER

Dino and Frawley alone now, walking back to their cars.

FRAWLEY
Let’s subpoena work logs, employee records. Start with everyone who lives in the Town.

ECU: Claire Keesey 321 Monument Ave Boston

And her Picture. Beautiful, even on her license.

24

EXT. MONUMENT AVE, CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - MAGIC HOUR

Doug is sitting up on the Bunker Hill Monument, holding Claire’s license, looking down at her place. He watches as she leaves her house.

On a long lens, back lit, that time of day she looks like nothing he has known--he is transfixed...

25

INT. THE TAP - NIGHT

Brick-walled, low-ceilinged. A dungeon of piss and beer.

Jem sees Doug.

JEM
This is my brother right here.

Jem puts his arm around, slightly drunk. Gloansy rolls over holding some drinks.

GLOANSY
There’s the man.
JEM
Are we lucky or are we just good?
DOUG
Fuckin’ A, we’re the best.

Doug’s heart is only half in this ritual.

JEM
Let me know when you man up and start drinkin’ again, I’ll fuckin’ buy this place.

SAME - LATER

Doug at the bar, observing the scene without expression. KRISTA COUGHLIN (29) comes up and sits next to him.

KRISTA
I’m starting to feel old.
DOUG
Still look young.
KRISTA
I think we’re being replaced.
DOUG
Maybe that’s not a bad thing.
KRISTA
Not if you got somewhere to go.
(a long beat)
Fuck, we smoked it to the filter, right?

She turns to him.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
You want me to come up later?

Doug smiles, maybe a little sad.

DOUG
I’ll be right back, Kris.

Doug stands and squeezes through the crowd of drinkers. He pushes through the front door...

26

EXT. TAP - NIGHT (CONTINUOUS)

...and out of the bar. He breathes in the fresh night air and moves off up the street.

27

EXT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - LATER

Doug passes Claire’s apartment on Monument Square and looks up to see the lights on. He stands and looks.

28

INT. DOUG’S APARTMENT - LATE NIGHT

A KNOCK.

Doug, barefoot, in boxers, pads into the hall to listen. He sees a shadow in the stripe of light beneath the door.

KRISTA (O.S.)
Dug-ggy.

Her voice is bar-hoarse and bourbon-rich. The knocking becomes a cat-like NAIL-SCRATCHING.

KRISTA (O.S.) (CONT’D)
I know you’re in there...

The door moves faintly, her body against it. He puts his hand on the opposite side, holding it still.

KRISTA (O.S.) (CONT’D)
You don’t want to fuck me?

He glances over at his sofa -- where the armrest has GROOVES where Krista’s NAILS have made their mark.

KRISTA (O.S.) (CONT’D)
(singing lightly)
How do you want to fuck me Duggggggy?
(MORE)
KRISTA (O.S.) (CONT’D)
(whispers)
I’ll let you do it.

Then, mercifully, she gives up and retreats down the stairs; her shadow slipping back...

29

EXT. MONUMENT SQUARE - DAY

The morning sun is brilliant in the city. Doug sits in his car outside Claire’s apartment.

Her front door opens and she exits, cap brim low, trundling a basket of laundry.

Angle on Doug: thinking...

30

INT. JAY’S ON THE CORNER LAUNDROMAT - MINUTES LATER

The bell above the door jingles as Doug pushes through hefting a sack of laundry over his shoulder. He sneaks a glance at a bank of washers Claire is filling with clothes.

SAME - LATER

Doug feigning interest in a newspaper,watching Claire’s back as she folds a load of clean whites. They are alone but for the Greek proprietor and an Old Woman watching TV.

Claire heads to a CHANGE DISPENSER in back. Over and over, she tries to feed it a crumpled dollar bill.

Tentatively, Doug approaches with a fistful of quarters. But as he nears, the dispenser accepts her dollar and rattles out four quarters -- leaving him stranded. She returns to folding her laundry.

Doug takes a deep breath -- gathering his courage.

DOUG
(to her back)
Excuse me?

She turns fast, startled to see him there.

There are TEARS IN HER EYES, she tries to smile again.

DOUG (CONT’D)
You all right?
CLAIRE
I’m fine.

With Doug hovering, she scoops the rest of a load from the dryer, dumping her clothes into the basket and bee- lining for the front door.

CROSS FADE TO:

DRYERS

Still churning around him, Doug sits in a bucket seat. A figure stands above him; it’s Claire.

CLAIRE
Excuse me, hi. Hello?
DOUG
Oh, hey -- how are you?
CLAIRE
Really embarrassed. I wanted to apologize...
DOUG
No, no. You got nothing to apologize for.
CLAIRE
I’m having a really bad month, and it all kind of hit me at once.
DOUG
No problem at all.

Some of her remaining clothes sit folded on the table.

CLAIRE
Anyway -- thanks for the quarters, and pulling my clothes out. And --
DOUG
No problem.
(steps after her)
Maybe, maybe you can let me buy you a drink? I don’t even know what that means but people say it-

She looks up at him, wasn’t expecting this. Says nothing.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Not now. It’s ten thirty in the morning. At a normal time.

She’s not saying anything.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I actually don’t even drink myself. I don’t mind if you do. Or we can get dinner.
CLAIRE
Uh.
DOUG
This is why I’ve never done the public ask out before.
CLAIRE
No, I just wasn’t expecting this. Dinner?
DOUG
That’s what I was going for.
(beat)
But I could also just put some more quarters in the machine and mind my business, too.
31

EXT. BASEBALL FIELD, CHARLESTOWN - SUNSET

The baseball field is underneath the Tobin bridge. Jem, Doug, Dez and Gloansy in the empty stands.

JEM
When somethin’s your job, that’s your job. Are you gonna not go to work the next day?
DEZ
None of you ever go to work except me.
DOUG
I got two things I’m looking at, a Newton thing and a just over here thing two miles away thing.
GLOANSY
Newton’s a fuckin’ haul in a chase.
DOUG
Bread truck is waist high in Newton.
JEM
I don’t give a fuck. Let’s fire one of ‘em up.
DOUG
Have you even stashed your money yet?
(looks to Gloansy)
Mailboxes etcetera don’t count.
32

INT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - DAY

The buzzer is ringing. She opens the door. Its Frawley

FRAWLEY
May I come in?

JUMP TO- ONE MINUTE LATER-

They are coming upstairs, she is talking fast.

CLAIRE
I’ve been doing better, actually. It finally happened, like you said. My breakdown. In a Laundromat of all places...
FRAWLEY
Good. It gets easier now.
CLAIRE
So is there any progress?
FRAWLEY
I think so, yes.

Frawley sits her down on the couch, kindly:

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Tell me about the Laundromat.

Claire lets some of her angst go.

CLAIRE
There was this guy in there, he was really nice and he asked me out. I just said yes, sort of in the moment. He’s a furniture mover or something, I don’t know. I’m not sure I’ll go.
FRAWLEY
Oh... good.

Not the story he was looking for.

33

INT. NORTH END RESTAURANT - LATER

Claire and Doug at dinner. Slightly awkward.

DOUG
So, now, where are you from?
CLAIRE
I grew up in Canton.
DOUG
Canton. Nice out there.
CLAIRE
It’s okay.

Their WAITER arrives with their dinner.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
What kind of work do you do?
DOUG
Demolition. Well, the owner named the company ‘Sky Makers’ -- like every time we knock down a building we’re really ‘making sky.’ But the truth is I hit big cinder-blocks with little cinder- blocks and at he end of the day I punch a card and slide down the back of a brontosaurus like Barney Rubble.
(beat)
And we make more dust than sky.
CLAIRE
Don’t sugarcoat it for me.

He laughs.

DOUG
What about you?
CLAIRE
I’m a manager at a bank.
DOUG
Oh, Yeah? That’s a good job.
(off her grimace)
You don’t like it?
CLAIRE
I did...
DOUG
Not anymore?

Doug wishes he had that question back.

CLAIRE
We were robbed, last week. They were waiting for us inside. Made us take off our shoes. I don’t know why I’m stuck on that, But now I’m barefoot in all my dreams.
DOUG
But you weren’t hurt.
CLAIRE
No. David was. My assistant manager. The silent alarm went off and they...assaulted him.
DOUG
They did that because of a silent alarm?

She avoids answering. Then, softly yet plain:

CLAIRE
They took me with them. I thought I was going to die. They let me out at the beach in east Boston-- where the planes come in.
(beat)
The FBI agent told me this would feel like I was in mourning.
DOUG
So you’re working with the FBI?
CLAIRE
This ne guy, he’s been great.
DOUG
He what, he calls you, checks in?
CLAIRE
Yeah.
DOUG
Are you happy with the investigation? Progress? Suspects?

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
I’m not sure that’s the kind of thing that makes you happy.
DOUG
They haven’t talked to you about that?
CLAIRE
Not beyond telling me that all robbery investigations, evidently, begin in Charlestown.
DOUG
The FBI said that?
CLAIRE
To that effect.
DOUG
They don’t see you as a suspect, do they?
CLAIRE
No. Why would they?
DOUG
Just, you said they hurt this other guy and they let you go...
CLAIRE
No. I wouldn’t say that’s the dynamic between me and the investigator right now.
DOUG
Just be careful.
(beat)
Do you have a lawyer?
CLAIRE
No.

It becomes clear how much this is wearing on Claire by her silence.

DOUG
You know what? We can not even talk about this.
CLAIRE
I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to-

CONTINUED: (3)

DOUG
No- no It’s my fault. I should keep my mouth shut. I don’t even know the story.

A quiet beat passes between them.

CLAIRE
Anyway, that’s why I was crying in the laundromat. And why I’m not loving my job so much these days.
(beat)
The health insurance sucks too.

She smiles.

34

EXT. CHARLESTOWN BRIDGE - NIGHT

Doug and Claire walk across the bridge back home to Charlestown.

CLAIRE
So all this time I had been thinking, “I found the cutest apartment, cheap, close to work- there has to be a catch” Turns out the neighborhood was built around a prison years back and the inmates families moved in. So here I am, living in a prison community, known for unsolved killings and armed robberies.
DOUG
Yeah...that’s a catch. But I don’t- -who told you all that?
CLAIRE
The FBI.
DOUG
The FBI told you that.

Did she offend him?

CLAIRE
I had asked how one small place had so many robbers and murders- I mean not everyone here’s a bad person...

They walk in silence for a moment. Then Doug speaks without looking at her.

DOUG
When I was a kid we used to go for ice cream, at Wizards across from JJ’s bar--where all the big armed car guys hung out-- they were like rock stars here. All we ever saw were the cars and pretty girls... You heard all about the jobs they ran and the houses they had up Billerica, Winthrop... There were a lot of kids in that ice cream parlor, faces pressed to the glass, couldn’t wait to grow up and be like the big guys--some did, some went another way. I was scared of those guys. I just wanted to play hockey.
(that’s enough)
But it’s all condos here now.
CLAIRE
All us immigrants from the suburbs.
DOUG
The neighborhood’s gone to pot!
CLAIRE
Easy Lou Dobbs.
35

EXT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT, MONUMENT SQUARE - LATER

Having said their good-byes, Doug watches Claire go inside the foyer and unlock the inner door, she turns back one more time and WAVES to DOUG. He WAVES back. Stands there for a beat and mutters:

DOUG
What the fuck am I doing?
36

INT. WARREN TAVERN - AFTERNOON

Different date, different guy.

A colonial-era pub, crowded and upscale. Claire and Frawley sit by the window.

CLAIRE
You know, somebody warned me that I shouldn’t talk to you without a lawyer.
FRAWLEY
Somebody from Charlestown, right?
CLAIRE
How’d you know?

He considers how to answer this, then:

FRAWLEY
It epitomizes the character of this place--- suspicious, parochial, clannish and rude. I get cursed at every time I walk into a 7-11, like I’m the bad guy. This isn’t a very civil libertarian thing to say but in my experience the only people who lawyer up are guilty. Whoever your friend is, he did something.

BLACKBERRY GOES OFF. He looks at it. Nasal exhale.

CLAIRE
What?
FRAWLEY
Stick up. Chelsea Credit Union.

He shows her his BLACKBERRY IMAGE: A JPEG STILL of the SECURITY CAMERA--GUY AT A TELLER WINDOW WITH A .22.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
(flips it off)
What would we do without Chelsea?
CLAIRE
So, can I ask you a professional question and you’ll tell me the truth.
FRAWLEY
Depends on the question.
CLAIRE
Am I a suspect?
FRAWLEY
(surprised, amused)
A suspect? Would I ask you out if I thought you were a suspect?
CLAIRE
I don’t know. Would you?

CONTINUED: (2)

FRAWLEY
Not if I wanted a conviction.
CLAIRE
I might be seeing someone already.
FRAWLEY
The piano mover? The guy in the Laundromat?

He smiles when he sees, by her reaction, that it is.

CLAIRE
What’s so funny? He’s...
FRAWLEY
No, good. That’s good.
CLAIRE
He’s not a piano mover. And anyway, aren’t there FBI rules...?
FRAWLEY
Against dating the vic? There is a rule.
(forces a smile, wry)
It’s not, uh..you don’t do it.
37

INT. FBI OFFICE - DAY

Frawley sits at his desk, an array of STILL PHOTOS from the bank’s security cameras spread out before him.

DINO (O.C.)
Look at this.

Dino stands over Frawley’s desk, extending a piece of paper towards him. Frawley grabs it.

FRAWLEY
(reading)
Desmond Elden.
DINO
Works at Comcast. Never seen the inside of a jail cell.
FRAWLEY
Great. Should we send a gift?
DINO
These guys get no show jobs, right?
(MORE)
DINO (CONT'D)
So when they rob a bank, we go to the foreman he says ‘oh yeah guy was here yesterday’ and shows us a forged time card. But they can’t play them games at comcast because it’s a public company--they have actual rules. If you don’t show up to work it’s a recorded sick day. And ‘Dezzy’ has some interesting sick days.

He names banks that were robbed, the dates of the robberies coincide with Dez’s sick days. He holds up 8X10 surveillance stills taken from each of the robberies.

DINO (CONT’D)
Bank Boston, Strong Armored, Arlington Brinks and... Kenmore Sovereign.

Frawley can’t quite believe it.

FRAWLEY
Jesus Christ.
38

INT. CHURCH BASEMENT - HARD TO TELL

An AA/NA meeting. A SPEAKER shares his story.

While his story goes, we push through the attendees, coming to rest on DOUG. Speaker points to woman in front.

SPEAKER
That’s Janice, she’s my wife. She’s right there. Anyway, I was dying. But I was hardheaded and I didn’t think it could change. Like the guy at the bar-- he sees a priest pull up a chair. The guy says to the Priest, “I hate to do this to you but you’re wasting you’re time. I know for a fact there is no God.” Priest says, “How is that?” He says, “Because I was an explorer at the north pole. I got lost in a storm once, I was blinded and freezing to death and I prayed, if there is a God, save my life, but God didn’t come.” The Priest looks at him confused and says, “but you’re alive...God saved you.” Guy says, “God? God never showed up.
(MORE)
SPEAKER (CONT'D)
Some Eskimo came along and took me back to his camp.”
(reaction)
That’s what happened. I met Janice. She’s my Eskimo.

On Doug.

39

EXT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - DAY

Doug pulls up outside and DOUBLE PARKS. He heads toward’s her door when she EMERGES FROM IT, surprising him.

DOUG
Hey, I was just stopping by to see you.

Claire is slightly taken aback, obviously this wasn’t planned, but not completely unwelcome.

CLAIRE
Hi. Were we supposed to?
DOUG
No, I just wanted to stop by. Thought maybe we could go out and do something, spur of the moment. Whatever.
CLAIRE
Oh, I’m actually on my way out.
DOUG
I can come with you if you want. I don’t know what you’re doing but-- I can give you a ride, it’s a nice day, I got nowhere to go.

He smiles. She looks at him.

CLAIRE
Okay.
40

INT. DOUG’S AVALANCHE - MOMENTS LATER

They get in.

CLAIRE
Wow.

He recognizes her look as amusement. He feels the sudden sting of foolishness.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
This is not a work truck that looks as though its been on the job site recently.
DOUG
I keep it clean for re-sale.
CLAIRE
My car is going to be jealous.
DOUG
I figured I would get the Prius lecture eventually.
CLAIRE
How did you know I drove a Prius.

Whoops. A few beats for him to come up with something.

DOUG
That wasn’t your Prius I’ve seen by the apartment?
CLAIRE
I guess so.
(beat)
I thought maybe you’d been spying on me.
DOUG
Where we going?
CLAIRE
Mass General.

Doug realizes this might be bad for him.

41

INT. HOSPITAL HALLWAY - DAY

A hospital hallway. Claire leading. Doug sees that she seems more nervous than he is.

DOUG
You seem worried about something.
CLAIRE
I don’t like hospitals. My brother died in one.
DOUG
When was this?
CLAIRE
I was young. He was little. He had lymphoma.

Before Doug can come up with something to say in response, he sees they are coming up on a COP sitting in a chair outside a room. Doug slows.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
It won’t take long. I promise.
DOUG
It’s fine, I can wait out here.
CLAIRE
No, meet him.
42

INT. HOSPITAL RECOVERY ROOM - MOMENTS LATER

David Bearns propped up against an avalanche of pillows, gauze and bandaging masking his face..

Doug stays put while Claire crosses the room and kisses his cheek.

CLAIRE
I wish you had let me bring you something, David.
BEARNS
Uh, people bring so much clutter -- it’s like, what am I supposed to do with balloons? Make animals?
CLAIRE
(pulling up chair)
So they’re hopeful?
BEARNS
Well, hopeful means I may recover fifty percent of my sight in this eye. I just want to get back to work.
CLAIRE
Really? Back to work?
BEARNS
God, yes. Preferable to large print sudoku.
CLAIRE
That’s the last place I want to go.
BEARNS
Well, you have memories, sweetie. The one inconvenience I was spared.
DOUG
I’m gonna leave you guys alone.

Doug does an awkward wave, as he retreats to the doorway.

BEARNS
I won’t keep her long. But we will talk about you.
43

INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR - A SHORT WHILE LATER

Claire exits and Doug catches up to her. They walk.

DOUG
Your friend got a tough break.

Claire says something he doesn’t catch. Doug realizes she has stopped, turns back to her.

DOUG (CONT’D)
What?
CLAIRE
It was me. I hit the alarm. He just doesn’t remember.

She lets go.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
The FBI instructions are very clear, we’re told to hit the alarm when the ‘subjects’ are still in the bank. That’s what I did.
(emotional)
I could have told them it was me but I let it happen. Because I was scared.
DOUG
Hitting an alarm during an armed robbery is brave. There aren’t too many people who do that.
(quieter)
And there was nothin’ you could do to help your friend.
CLAIRE
Should I tell the FBI?
DOUG
No. No. Cops are just people. They just want to find a bad guy so they can go home and nuke their supper. And usually whoever’s runnin’ their mouth the most.
CLAIRE
I should hire a lawyer.
DOUG
I think you need to try to let this go Claire
CLAIRE
I have to, I know.

She looks at him and smiles, recovering a bit.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Thanks.
DOUG
Guidance through the justice system is how we show affection in Charlestown.
44

INT. RESTAURANT - NIGHT

They’re now at dinner. A WAITER refills Doug’s glass with water and Claire’s with WINE.

CLAIRE
(re:wine)
Are you sure this doesn’t bother you?
DOUG
No, it’s fine.
CLAIRE
But you don’t drink?
DOUG
Nope.
CLAIRE
Don’t like to talk about it?
DOUG
Uh, not really.
CLAIRE
If you’re worried about making a bad impression-- I’ve seen your truck. How much worse can it get?

He laughs.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Your life didn’t go well with alcohol. You can say that.

He exhales a little. Okay.

DOUG
I don’t mind telling you my life didn’t go well with oxycontin and cocaine...but I wouldn’t mind talking about something else now, either.
(beat)
And I really don’t know what you have against my truck.
CLAIRE
(smiles)
Okay.
(beat, teasing)
What about your family? You can’t shut it down on the family, too--
DOUG
What are you talking about? I’m an open book.

He smiles.

DOUG (CONT’D)
My mother left when I was six. My father, uh, we don’t talk. He lives in the suburbs.
CLAIRE
Your mother left when you were six?
DOUG
Yeah.
CLAIRE
That’s terrible. What happened?

Doug goes back to his food.

DOUG
She left.

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
Doug, I just want to know about something that tells me who you are. If I can’t know that I don’t know what I’m doing here.

Doug just looks at her. Then he starts talking.

DOUG
I just turned six. This noise woke me up in the morning. I thought it was an animal maybe. I’d never heard what a man sounded like just, you know, crying.. When I saw my father in the kitchen all I remember is the ashtray. Looked like he’d been through a hundred cigarettes. Ash like a little mountain. He had stopped crying and he was sitting there watching TV on our little black and white with no sound. I think he just didn’t know what else to do. He saw me standing in the doorway and he just goes, “your mother left. She’s not comin’ back.” Just like that. Smokin’ cigarettes and eatin a tv dinner at six in the mornin’.
(beat)
We lost our dog the year before. I thought “lost” was a place people went. I wanted to make these posters so if she was lost she could call us like they did when someone found our dog. To this day my father will tell you he helped me make those posters. But he didn’t. He sat there and drank a case of beer and I went around by myself on school street asking people if they seen my mother. I always assumed she went off and started another family somewhere and knowing my father-- I don’t blame her.

Claire doesn’t know what to say. We see she is extremely moved.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Glad I told that story... Now you’re never gonna call me.
(realizes)
(MORE)

CONTINUED: (3)

DOUG (CONT’D)
Did I just say, “now you’re never gonna call me?” How did I turn into Sex and the City all of a sudden?

She laughs, breaking the tension.

CLAIRE
I’ll call you, believe me.
DOUG
Well, that’s good.
CLAIRE
At the very least I need someone to walk me home at night.
DOUG
No...Charlestown’s pretty safe in terms of street crime.

She sighs.

CLAIRE
Guess I’m just lucky-- or maybe I attract the right kind of people.
DOUG
What kind of people?
CLAIRE
I didn’t even want to say anything. I didn’t want you think i was some kind of crime magnet.
DOUG
If you can’t tell me, I don’t know what I’m doing here.

She smiles.

CLAIRE
I’m fine. I came out of store twenty-four and these guys came grabbed me and kind of shoved me and were grabbing for my purse but the store owner saw it and started yelling-- and I’m at the point where I felt like, “I’ve been in the big leagues, you guys are JV criminals” and they ran off and I went home and went to bed.

The look on Doug’s face is as deadly serious as we’ve seen him. She realizes this.

CONTINUED: (4)

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
I’m fine. It just scared me.
DOUG
No, it’s not fine.

He lifts her sleeve and sees she has a LONG SCRAPE/CUT on her arm that is ugly from where she was manhandled.

CLAIRE
Doug, I’m fine. I’m just going through a lot.
DOUG
Did you get a look at, uh, either of their faces?
45

INT. JEM’S APARTMENT - FIFTEEN MINUTES LATER

Doug walks in. Jem is watching television.

DOUG
I’m asking for your help. I can’t tell you why, you can never ask me about it after and it involves hurting people.

Jem stares at him, eyes thoughtful.

JEM
Whose car we gonna take?
46

EXT. MISHUAM PROJECTS - NIGHT

Doug and Jem cruise slowly through the project streets. People are out, standing around their cars.

JEM
Like little reddish hair? Reddish brown? Puerto Rican kid?
DOUG
Yeah.
JEM
Yup, Agarid Colazzo, Alex they call him. Hangs with a big fat kid all the time.

The slowly cruise around another corner and pull to a STOP outside one particular UNIT.

JEM (CONT’D)
Top floor, apartment B.

The pull out Baklava MASKS, jump out of the car and grab a SLEDGEHAMMER from the trunk.

47

INT. ALEX COLAZZO’S APARTMENT - MOMENTS LATER

We are at the stairway landing. Doug and Jem arrive, don masks, and quickly step up to the door.

DOUG
Alex!

He raps on the metal door.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Alex!

From within.

ALEX
What?!

The door cracks, Alex is about to look through using the chain but Jem HITS IT with the SLEDGEHAMMER-- sending ALEX SPRAWLING BACK into his apartment.

Doug and Jem seamlessly continue their momentum and rush through behind the door.

48

INT. ALEX COLAZZO’S APARTMENT, INSIDE - CONTINUOUS

Jem removes an EXPANDABLE METAL STICK and uses it to CRACK the FAT FRIEND of Alex’s across the face as he emerges to help.

Doug is all over Alex, punching and stomping him. It is a very fast, brutal flurry of violence that is more a beating than a fight--despite the fact that if anything, Jem and Doug are outsized.

Jem and Doug let up--they stand heaving and sweating over the two thugs and their demolished apartment.

Jem opens a bag of WHITE POWDER and THROWS some on ALEX’s FACE and SCATTERS THE REST ON THE FLOOR.

JEM
Another deal gone ‘sour’ for yous two.
DOUG
Lets go.

Jem is looking at Alex.

DOUG (CONT’D)
C’mon, we’re done.

Jem isn’t done. He seems curious about Alex.

JEM
(to Alex)
What did you do?

Alex says nothing, his face is a bloody mess--it’s all he can do to keep one eye open and hope this ends soon.

JEM (CONT’D)
You hurt my friend? This is my brother right here. I would die for this motherfucker right here. You hurt him?

Jem’s gun comes out.

ALEX
No! No! I aint’ do nothin’.
JEM
Yes you did.
ALEX
Chill.
JEM
Don’t tell me to chill.

He aims the gun at Alex’s head.

DOUG
Easy.
JEM
What did you do?
ALEX
Nothin!

BOOM! Jem shoots him in the thigh. Alex HOWLS!

JEM
There goes college soccer!

BOOM! BOOM! Two shots in the other leg.

CONTINUED: (2)

JEM (CONT’D)
You’re fucked up now.

Jem puts the gun to Alex’s head.

JEM (CONT’D)
What did you do?
DOUG
No!

Doug grabs Jem and the gun. Looks at him.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Let’s go. Now!

Jem turns to both of the thugs, thinks for a beat and takes of his mask.

JEM
You know who I am? Go tell the cops. ‘Cause I know who you are, too.

He shakes Doug off him.

JEM (CONT’D)
Let’s go.
49

INT. JEM’S CAR - MOMENTS LATER

The drive in silence. Neither man looking at the other. The city rolling by at night. Four CRUISERS ZOOM BY the other way, lights off.

DOUG
I don’t need to be up there killin’ people.
JEM
You called me.

DISSOLVE TO BRIGHT SUNLIGHT

50

EXT. CHARLESTOWN GARDENS - DAY

Claire is gardening in her plot. Doug is watching from behind the fence. They have been talking there.

DOUG
Five years since they made these you’re the first person I know who uses one.
CLAIRE
Do you think that reflects more on me or on you?
DOUG
Oh, me, definitely. Embarrassing because I’m a big fan of flowers.
CLAIRE
Really, which kind?

She is kneeling in the garden and the top of her UNDERWEAR is revealed above her jeans. The underwear have LILACS on them.

DOUG
Lilacs.

She half smiles half laughs but doesn’t jump up.

CLAIRE
Me, too.
(puts down tools)
I’m at the point where I’ve started having dreams about you.

She stands, brushing away dirt, moving to him.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
I dreamt you worked at the bank. In one we were both barefoot and then you were six years old. You’re a little boy in a lot of them. The thing is-- you’re never a real person. You never have any context. You’re just vapor. And it made me realize, I know you really well but you’re not real. It’s like I invented you. Are you real Doug?
DOUG
I think so.
CLAIRE
All I have is a cell number. It’s like al-Qaeda. I don’t have your address, no house to drive past and torment myself and wonder, ‘is he home?’
DOUG
You mean you want references?

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
No. I want to do what girls do: subtly go through your things. I want to rifle your medicine cabinet, stand for five minutes in your closet. Am I crazy? Are you married?
DOUG
(laughs)
Am I married? No.
CLAIRE
Well? That’s what I mean.
(beat)
Just tell me if I’m making a mistake, Doug. I’ll still make it. I just want to know.
DOUG
No.

She holds his look.

CLAIRE
Okay. You promised.
DOUG
Be nice wouldn’t it? No past, no history. Meet each other for the first time every day?

She smiles extends her hand.

CLAIRE
Claire.
DOUG
Doug.
(beat)
No chemistry.

She pushes him. He uses that as an opportunity to put his arms around her, swallowing her up, in a wide shot we see them in the garden.

51

EXT. COUGHLIN TRIPLE-DECKER (BACKYARD) - DAY

LONG SHOT of our crew barbecuing in the backyard.

Doug and Jem sit on the steps of the back porch; Gloansy tends the grill; Krista and Joanie are in lawn chairs near SHYNE (2) Krista’s daughter, who clamors around a play pen.

Dez pushes through the back door with an arm-load of beers. Jem snatches one of them, and as Dez descends the steps, we FREEZE-FRAME on him and hear:

The CLICK OF A CAMERA SHUTTER...

DINO (O.S.)
Desmond Elden.
CUT TO:
52

INT. MINI-VAN - CONTINUOUS

Behind tinted windows, Dino snaps photos with a long-lens camera and Frawley watches through binoculars.

DINO (O.S.)
Systems tech at Comcast.

BACK TO BARBECUE

Jem takes a swallow from his beer, then turns and says something to Krista.

DINO (O.S.)
James Coughlin. Killed a drug dealer over a girl with when he was nineteen. Served seven for manslaughter. Father killed in prison. Mother died HIV. Left him and the sister this three-banger. He’s your prototype. Townie; lifer, killer, shithead. These guys plan and execute with sophistication and discipline-- and you know that ain’t Coughlin. We think the architect is his best friend- Douglas MacRay.

CLICK. FREEZE on tight shot of Doug.

53

INT. FBI OFFICE (CONFERENCE ROOM) - DAY

The FBI’s ARMED ROBBERY TASK FORCE is gathered around a table in a conference room. FIVE OTHER GUYS listen to Frawley and Dino’s presentation.

Surveillance photos, mug shots, and rap sheets litter the table, wall, A VIDEO WALL, full multi-media.

FRAWLEY
Mac senior got life for the Dunbar job where Steven Burke executed both guards. Young MacRay did eight months easy for going over the counter of a BayBank with a nailgun after he washed out from pro hockey.
COP
Pro hockey?
DINO
He was a big deal for a minute. Got drafted, went to camp but-- here’s a shocker he started fightin’ guys and gettin’ high.
COPS
No!!

Cops: “Not a Boston kid!” “A Townie!”

DINO
Got booted-- came home and joined the family business.

Laughter. Dino places a PHOTO of Gloansy up.

DINO (CONT’D)
Last is: Alfred Magloan. Only in Boston is a guy named “Alfred MacGloan.” Never walked by a car he didn’t boost--Alfred’s one of these kids can start your Cherokee for you while you’re standin’ there lookin’ for your keys.
FRAWLEY
We’re a long way from a grand jury but if those aren’t our guys--
(thinks what to say)
...I will make love with Dino.

Laughter. Dino rolls his eyes. Guys start moving.

DINO
Is that supposed to be a win for me?
CUT TO:
54

EXT. COUGHLIN TRIPLE-DECKER (BACKYARD) - BACK IN TIME

Back to the barbecue. We’re closer on them now.

A TEENAGER hops the back fence and walks toward them.

TEENAGER
Didn’t see nothin’ inside. Tint on the windows is black as fuck. But the antenna’s base’s quarter inch thick.

He makes a ring with his fingers the like a sand dollar.

TEENAGER (CONT’D)
Feebie, son.
DOUG
God damn it.
GLOANSY
You sure?
DOUG
Yeah. Statie and BPD are thinner.
JEM
That fucking bank manager.
DOUG
What could she say? What? There were four of us?
JEM
You tell me, then.
DOUG
Maybe we pushed the phone stuff too hard.
DEZ
Now it’s the phones...
DOUG
We gotta bench the other thing.
JEM
Why?
DOUG
The FBI’s down the corner. Besides that, we’re good..
JEM
That’s right. They think we’re goin’ dark now. We come over the top.
DOUG
Okay look, it’s not even prepped. Let me keep working I’ll tell you when. For now, let’s not be seen with each other if we can help it.
55

EXT. PIZZERIA - DUSK

Claire and Doug share a pizza in a Boston Pizzeria. His is plain. Hers in Hawaiian, pineapple and sausage.

CLAIRE
So, I’ve been telling my friends all about you.

This is not Doug’s favorite thing to hear.

DOUG
Oh yeah? All good things I hope.
CLAIRE
Mostly good.
DOUG
(smiles)
What do they say?

Her momentary pause tells Doug the answer. Of course.

DOUG (CONT’D)
They can’t believe your luck. You moved to Charlestown snagged a rock breaking Townie. Couldn’t even snag one that owned a scratch ticket store?
CLAIRE
No...They just think it’s a rebound. I’m like, rebound from what? The robbery? Anyway, I feel sort of estranged from them now. I think that’s what they’re picking up on. I’ve changed. I can feel it. They still have this, carelessness- which I sort of envy but at the same time I hardly understand anymore. It feels like I’m leaving them behind.
DOUG
I know what you mean.

People walk by. We feel the day outside.

CLAIRE
My brother died on a day like this. I was holding his hand.

The sun is bright through the shop.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Now on really sunny days I think about someone dying. That’s wrong, isn’t it?
DOUG
I’m sure he’d be glad you’re thinking of him.

She smiles, the mood is melancholy but they are no less connected to one another.

Doug gestures to the pizza, the cafe, the day.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I’m having a good time. This is a good day.

She sets her napkin on the table, pushing back her chair.

CLAIRE
Good. Then you’ll miss me while I’m gone.

Claire disappears inside to the bathroom. Doug sits back, tipping his chair, looking up at a jet trail in the sky.

Someone pokes him in the back of the neck.

VOICE (O.S.) Money, Bitch.

Doug tenses -- but notices the rest of the diners eat calmly. He turns and sees that it’s Jem.

JEM
I froze you.

Doug glances hard at the pizzeria door.

JEM (CONT’D)
What’re you doing here?

CONTINUED: (2)

Jem steps over the low fence, drops into Claire’s seat.

DOUG
(watching the door)
What?
JEM
Fuck is this? Who you here with?

Jem scoops up Claire’s slice and bites in.

DOUG
No one.
JEM
No one?

Jem picks up Claire’s lemonade glass. He puts his lips on her straw and SUCKS.

JEM (CONT’D)
What is this?

Doug peels off two twenties, making to stand. He sees the pizza is “Hawaiian” pineapple and sausage.

JEM (CONT’D)
Is this yours?
DOUG
You wanna get outta here?
JEM
Naw, naw, I’m cool. Let me get a beer.

The door opens and Claire steps back outside. Doug goes deaf -- the sound of the ballpark drowning all else, like a passing jet. Without sound, Claire’s lips say, “Hi.”

“Hey,” says Jem, chewing. He surrenders his seat with a flourish -- SOUND RETURNING to Doug’s ears.

CLAIRE
I’m Claire.
JEM
Jem.
CLAIRE
Jim?
JEM
Jem. Just Jem.

CONTINUED: (3)

Claire nods, turning to Doug for help.

JEM (CONT’D)
I’m a friend of this loser. He lives with me. Not with me, domestic partners. Above me, my house. Third floor of my house.

Claire sits staring across the table at silent Doug.

JEM (CONT’D)
Yeah, I saw the Avalanche parked around the corner.
(to Doug)
I told you that thing stands out.

Doug flashes to Jem, realizes he has been following him.

CLAIRE
The Avalanche?
JEM
His truck. The work truck. Duggy’s quite the worker.
CLAIRE
You two have been friends a long time?
JEM
Like brothers. Since we were six. But he never breathed a word about you, the secrets with this one.
CLAIRE
I’m sorry, did you say your name was Jim or Gem?
JEM
Both actually. Teachers always used to say, ‘You can have this one, he’s a real gem.’ It kind of stuck.

Claire smiles

JEM (CONT’D)
So what do you do for yourself there, Claire?

Claire takes up her lemonade. Her lips move to the straw. She takes a long draw as Doug looks on, helpless.

CLAIRE
I work in a bank.

CONTINUED: (4)

JEM
Oh yeah? Which one?
CLAIRE
Kenmore Square.
JEM
Wasn’t that the one -- ?
CLAIRE
We were robbed, yeah
JEM
Yeah I read about that. So how’d you two meet?
CLAIRE
Um... we met in a Laundromat.
JEM
Love among the bleach. Happens more than you think.

Doug dead-staring at Jem now. No cracks in Jem’s facade.

JEM (CONT’D)
Don’t you trust a word he says, Claire.
CLAIRE
You mean he’s not really an astronaut?
JEM
Well, -- that one’s true. We’re in the space program. So if you got any friends interested in -- manned exploration, preferably redheads.
CLAIRE
I’ll let them know.
JEM
Don’t get too used to your life of leisure here. Duggy -- he’s a real workaholic...

Jem’s smile vanishes a moment under his dead eyes as he rises to leave.

JEM (CONT’D)
... always taking his work home with him.

CONTINUED: (5)

Claire watches him go. She turns to Doug.

CLAIRE
I guess you haven’t been telling all your friends about me.
DOUG
Not that one, anyway.

He tried to smile it off. She reaches for her lemonade again, but this time DOUG TAKES THE GLASS from her hand.

56

INT. JEM’S BASEMENT - DAY

A dank stone cellar of weeping walls. The CLANK of iron on iron. The basement has been made into a weight room.

Doug comes down the stairs, seeing Jem doing presses.

Jem sits up, veins swollen in his forearms. He sees Doug and drops a curling bar.

DOUG
You got something to say, say it now.
JEM
That’s my line here.
DOUG
That was a mistake coming over there.
JEM
Me?? You’re at fuckin’ Stefani’s pizza with the witness from our armed robbery!
DOUG
Relax. I know what I’m doing.
JEM
Duggy, if you fuck up in this life, there are consequences. And you’re fuckin’ up.

Jem holds Doug’s look.

JEM (CONT’D)
Is it over?
DOUG
Don’t worry about me.
JEM
I am worried about you, motherfucker. You’re tryin’ to get me incarcerated and you’re slow rollin’ this other deal, too.
DOUG
I haven’t been slow rollin’ shit.
JEM
This pussy must be tight. It got you on a three week bender and you don’t even drink. But don’t let it be some five week delay pussy and really don’t let it be some get- your-boys-in-the Lewisberg pussy neither!!

In the face of Jem’s anger Doug gets Zen.

DOUG
We got heat on us right now and this shit takes time to get right.
JEM
We got heat on us, lets start fuckin’ all the witnesses. I’m blowin’ the assistant manager. Did I forget to tell you?
DOUG
Fuck you. You want to take over, you’re welcome to start.
JEM
Douggy, no one needs to know you’re fuckin’ her and no one needs to know you’re puttin’ hits out on Puerto Ricans for her neither. So get off your ass and set it up.

Doug turn on Jem, gives in to anger.

DOUG
Jem. It’s been set up. You got such a fuckin’ hard on to go? We’ll go tomorrow.
57

INT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - NIGHT

Doug enters Claire’s apartment, she sees him arrive on the top step. He sees her and has a slightly off look.

CLAIRE
What?
DOUG
Nothing?
CLAIRE
What is it?

He says this plainly and honestly.

DOUG
It’s just-- every time I see you I keep thinking I’ve exaggerated in my mind how beautiful you are and you can’t really look that amazing in real life. But then I see you- and...you do.
CLAIRE
That is...a great line. How girls are there in Charlestown whose hearts were broken with that line?

He laughs.

DOUG
None.
(beat)
They’re in Brighton and Malden and suburban areas.

She moves toward the back and throws the line over her shoulder:

CLAIRE
I saw your picture yesterday.

This slows him. His instinct kicks in.

DOUG
Sure it was me?
CLAIRE
Pretty sure, yeah.

He holds her look. She’s giving him nothing.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Why do you look horrified. It wasn’t that bad-- as hockey pictures go. The hair was bad.
DOUG
Oh. That picture.

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
I was volunteering at the Boys and Girls club and there you are in a hockey uniform a local heroes banner...awww.

She makes a sweet face.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Well, when I said I knew you, they were very intimidated. I felt like I was dating Tiger Woods.
DOUG
I wasn’t that good.

Doug gets uncomfortable.

CLAIRE
Apparently you were ‘drafted.’ I don’t know exactly what that means but I’m fairly sure they don’t do it to the bad players.
DOUG
You’d be surprised. I got drafted by the St. Louis Blues, they aren’t even a team anymore.
CLAIRE
You were pretty good. There was only one other picture up there and he was a pro football player who’s on TV now. Howie something.

Doug plainly tells her the truth.

DOUG
Yeah, I was good. And I got drafted. And I didn’t do what it took to make the team. I wasn’t smart enough to know it or classy enough to accept it and when I got a second chance, I blew that, too. So when I look at that picture, all I see is a guy who fucked up every chance he ever got.

Doug’s vulnerability takes him by surprise and has a self- propulsive quality.

CONTINUED: (3)

DOUG (CONT’D)
But it’s a good reminder about the price you pay when you throw away the most important thing in the world can I be your boyfriend?

She smiles, surprised.

CLAIRE
I haven’t had a ‘boyfriend’ since sixth grade...

The gap between them closes, and the kiss, once it comes, is at once both soft and electric.

58

INT. CLAIRE’S ROOM - NIGHT

Claire and Doug, in her bed. The camera floats over the bed, alternating between ECUs and slightly wider shots. Love scene. We don’t hear what they’re saying. The sound of score and the drift of the camera creates something impressionistic.

59

EXT. OUTSIDE CLAIRE’S DOOR - NIGHT

Doug exits Claire’s door, as high as he’s been in a long time.

60

EXT. CITY OF BOSTON - CRACK OF DAWN

The city as the sun peeks over the edge of the world.

61

INT. SEEDY HOTEL ON MELNEA CASS BLVD. - EARLY MORNING

In a series of shots we see Jem, Doug, Gloansy and Dez as they prepare.

62

INT. SEEDY HOTEL ON MELNEA CASS BLVD., SHOWERS - MORNING

Scrubbing down vigorously in the shower, thick brushes over hands, trying to remove as much loose skin as possible.

63

INT. SEEDY HOTEL ON MELNEA CASS BLVD. - MORNING

Preparing the weapons- Jem meticulously wipes down not just each weapon but each piece of AMMUNITION with an ALCOHOL SWAB, eliminating DNA traces.

Magazines for the AK-47’s are held together, separated only by the broken end of a paintbrush and HOCKEY TAPED together. They are then SNAPPED INTO PLACE.

64

INT. SEEDY HOTEL, MELNEA CASS BLVD. - MORNING

Each man puts on a black track suit, taping it down at the ankles and wrists.

65

INT. DARK SPACE - MORNING

Dez, Jem, Gloansy and Doug huddled across from one another, in a dark space--packing weapons into large duffel bags. They place masks on top of the bags, zip, etc.

DOUG
We don’t need to get hurt and we don’t need to hurt anyone else.
(he looks to all)
If its a cruiser, we have the firepower. We take the tires, the radiator--we’re gone. More than a cruiser, we see how fast they are.
CUT TO:

OUTSIDE THE DARK SPACE

We reveal that the four of them are inside:

66

EXT. DEZ’S COMCAST TRUCK - DAY

We see in a parking lot across from a SOVEREIGN BANK

CUT TO:
67

INT. FRAWLEY’S CAR - SAME

Frawley and Dino are parked at the other end of the lot, Frawley looks through BINOCULARS at the COMCAST TRUCK. They have the guys STAKED OUT.

A THIRD, YOUNGER, SURVEILLANCE AGENT (24) is in the back seat.

FRAWLEY
When did he get here?
SURVEILLANCE AGENT
Six this morning according to GPS we have on his truck. There’s no reason for him to be here, so we alerted you.
68

INT. DARK SPACE - CONTINUOUS

The four guys conference, Jem checking slide on a handgun.

DOUG
The messenger will come around back, open the doors, and load the coal bag--we hit him right then-- get the bags and whatever we can from the back. That’s when the call goes out.
GLOANSY
(has stopwatch)
How long do we have once a call goes to dispatch?
DOUG
(indicates stopwatch)
You can throw that out. Depends how close or far a cruiser happens to be.
69

EXT. DEZ’S COMCAST TRUCK PARKING LOT- SAME

Wider shot lets us see, as we move through the parking lot, EVERY THIRD CAR HAS UNDERCOVER OR UNIFORMS IN IT.

70

INT. FRAWLEY’S CAR - SAME

Frawley, Dino and the younger agent wait.

DINO
Let’s go pop the door and get these fucking numb nuts.
FRAWLEY
We should wait for them to commit a crime, don’t you think?

The younger agent tries to chime in.

SURVEILLANCE AGENT
Conspiracy...
FRAWLEY
A real crime, Henry. Dino, they aren’t going home in the cable van. With no switch car this is probably surveillance.

An undercover detective comes to the car and drops a radio in the window.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
We’re dark--
UNDERCOVER
This is encrypted.
FRAWLEY (INTO RADIO)
Go ahead.
CAPTAIN (ON RADIO)
Ran a q-hot on the parking lot. That Cherokee is boosted. It’s gotta be their getaway.

Frawley goes ashen.

FRAWLEY
Call tactical, get ‘em down here quick.
71

INT. DARK SPACE - CONTINUOUS

Jem holds up a bullet and shows it to Doug.

JEM
This is for our friends in law enforcement. .762 round. Go through a car door, a vest and the ceramic chest plate an engine block and two people.
GLOANSY
They give you a nice boost to your sentence for that.
JEM
They gonna add twenty years to two hundred? They go after me they need to know- I’m taking motherfuckers with me.
(to Doug)
You good?
DOUG
Let’s go.

They start to rise.

72

INT. FRAWLEY’S CAR - SAME

They see the DOORS OPEN on the TRUCK!

FRAWLEY
(drawing his gun)
They’re coming out!

They get out and draw their weapons.

73

EXT. WORK TRUCK - SAME

Police move forward towards the truck. COPS SWARM.

POLICE
DONT MOVE!!! ON THE GROUND!
CUT TO:
74

INT. DARK SPACE - SAME

We counter with the guys as they rise and open the door, revealing they were in a BLACKED OUT HOTEL ROOM and NOT THE VAN, they EXIT INTO THE STREET and TOWARDS THEIR WAITING CAR.

75

INT. DEZ’S COMCAST TRUCK - SAME

A HOMELESS GUY is waking up, having slept off his drunk. He is TERRIFIED.

This fear is matched in intensity by Frawley’s frustration and anger.

FRAWLEY
Cooocksucker!

Younger surveillance agent tries to make sense of it.

SURVEILLANCE AGENT
They must have had him drive the van and follow them in a car we don’t have...
FRAWLEY
Nothing gets past you...except the people you are salaried not to let get past you--in which case you’re a fucking sieve.
DINO
Easy.

He moves Frawley away.

DINO (CONT’D)
You want to close the bridge? Just put someone there at least?
FRAWLEY
That’s a metaphor, about Charlestown, Dino. You don’t literally “close a bridge.” Do I want to close a major traffic artery and compound our professional embarrassment for a wives tale? No.
DINO
Okay. Just asking.
FRAWLEY
You know what we should do? We should tell people to be on the general lookout for bank robbers today...
76

INT. MINIVAN - MOMENTS LATER

GLOANSY drives the MINIVAN through the North End. DOUG and JEM are in the BACKSEAT. They are cruising the North End. The hold their weapons and masks on their laps so they cannot be seen from outside the car.

Children trickle in to a parochial school they pass by.

They must circle the block, orbiting while they wait for the truck to arrive. No one says a word, until:

GLOANSY
Here we go!

The ARMORED CAR turns out onto the street in front of them and pulls up in front of the bank. Everyone’s adrenaline level skyrockets.

Doug reaches down and pulls up his mask, pulling it over his head. Their masks have the faces on the back of their heads and a sheer black which cover their faces--this has the disconcerting effect of making one not immediately sure if they are coming toward you or walking away.

The ARMORED CAR pulls up IN FRONT OF THE BANK and TWO GUARDS (MESSENGERS) EMERGE. One holds a dolly.

Our guys will time their arrival just as the messengers are opening the back door of the truck and loading money.

96fps on a boy on the side walk, looking into the minivan.

Angle on the minivan: three masked men with submachine guns ride by.

RAMP UP to 24fps.

The messenger opens the back. The MINIVAN DOORS SPRING OPEN SIMULTANEOUSLY.

Doug and Jem JUMP from the car, weapons out.

JEM CRACKS Messenger #1 with the butt of the AK.

JEM
Stay on the ground.

Doug takes aim at messenger #2.

DOUG
Messenger get on the ground.

The GUARD FLAILS. Doug QUICKLY SUBDUES HIM, grabs the COAL BAG. He stands over the two guards, waiting for Jem.

One GUARD appears to be making a move, DOUG gets the AK in HIS FACE.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Think about it brother. Thirteen dollars an hour.

Jem GOES THROUGH THE BACK OF THE CAR looking for loot.

Passersby are FROZEN IN PLACE, STARING AT THE ROBBERY.

DOUG (CONT’D)
(to pedestrians)
We’re bailing out this bank. It’ll be over in a minute.

Jem looks through the bulletproof glass at the DRIVER, who is terrified. Jem turns his head, revealing the MASK.

77

INT. MINIVAN - SAME

Gloansy has a police scanner in the car.

GLOANSY
Call went out!

Jem jumps out and Doug heads for the car. The entire armored car robbery will happen very quickly.

78

INT. US DEPT. OF JUSTICE. 1 CENTER PLAZA. 6TH FL - SAME

Frawley and his entire staff mill around their office. Frawley’s BLACKBERRY goes off. He looks at it. Then, to Dino:

FRAWLEY
You see this BankNorth. Something’s in front of the camera Can someone call down there.
79

INT. MINIVAN - CONTINUOUS

They pile into the car, throw bags. Doug checks watch.

DOUG
Two-twenty.

Gloansy fires up the car and they start down the street when a SIREN goes off. They all turn back to see a POLICE CRUISER bearing down on them.

GLOANSY
That was quick.
DOUG
Must have been down the street.

Jem picks the gun back up.

JEM
Light him up.

Gloansy locks up the brakes. The CRUISER comes SCREECHING TO A HALT behind them.

Jem and Doug get ready to light up the cruiser with AKs.

Doug sees that behind the cruiser to one side is a schoolyard FILLED WITH CHILDREN.

DOUG
Wait, wait WAIT!

Jem looks, Gloansy looks.

JEM
Fuck.
80

EXT. NORTH END STREET - MOMENTS LATER

The minivan comes CAREENING around the corner of a narrow street, nearly taking out a bench.

A van is parked up on a sidewalk so the minivan is forced to drive up on the opposing sidewalk.

The cruiser gives chase around several incredibly narrow, ancient turns and alleys-- built to accommodate horses(and even those only narrowly) in the 1700’s. Driving though at 60 mph is harrowing.

The chase lasts about thirty seconds until a car PULLS OUT in front of them AND SLAMS ON ITS BRAKES forcing our guys to a halt.

The driver of the front car gets out, our guys go for their guns, we reveal the driver is DEZ in the ‘switch car’ and our guys are readying themselves to shoot it out with the pursuing policeman.

The guys jump out of the minivan, and leave it in the middle of the street, Gloansy grabs the bags of money while Jem uses the door for cover, taking aim at the cruiser who has pulled up behind them.

Jem starts FIRING at the car, incredibly loud automatic rifle report-BANGBANGBANG-quickly disabling it and forcing the driver out of the car.

Another CRUISER arrives from the street perpendicular, followed by a third. Jem, supported by Doug, begins firing at the police. The automatic weapons totally overwhelm the police officers who retreat quickly under the loud and terrifying onslaught.

81

INT. MINIVAN - CONTINUOUS

The back is filled with JUGS OF GASOLINE. Doug OPENS ONE, dumping as much of it as he can over as much area of the interior as he can. He calls to Jem.

DOUG
Let’s go.

He stands back, cracks a zippo and lets it drop.

THE WHOLE THING GOES UP IN FLAMES.

82

EXT. SALEM ST., SWITCH CAR - CONTINUOUS

They pile into the switch car as the minivan burns, blocking any pursuing traffic and take off.

83

INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS, 6TH FLOOR - SAME

Frawley, Dino and several agents are in the bullpen area. Frawley is staring at IMAGES FROM THE ROBBERY as they come across his BLACKBERRY.

Frawley lets the handset drop a bit.

FRAWLEY
Dino.

Dino is distracted.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Dino.
DINO
Yeah?
FRAWLEY
Close the bridge.
DINO
What?
FRAWLEY
Close the fucking bridge!
84

EXT. COOPER ST. - SAME

The Jeep Cherokee SCREAMS down the street, headed back to Charlestown. Gloansy drives without ever touching the brakes. We see he steers this car with a ‘suicide knob.’

85

EXT. CHELSEA ST. FROM ABOVE -- SAME

Black and White cruisers light up their roofs. Traffic pushes back.

86

EXT. ENDICOTT ST. FROM ABOVE - MOMENTS LATER

The Jeep flies down the wrong side of the street, headed for the bridge.

87

EXT. CHELSEA ST. -- SAME

The cruisers move the traffic aside and make better speed.

88

EXT. CHARLESTOWN BRIDGE - MOMENTS LATER

The Jeep makes the bridge, zooms across it and onto Route 99 towards Malden.

We pan with the Jeep and just as it goes out of sight the CRUISERS ARRIVE, stopping traffic-- a moment too late.

89

INT. JEEP CHEROKEE - MOMENTS LATER

The four guys are elated.

GLOANSY
Ho!
DEZ
Damn!
GLOANSY
That’s how you drive a fuckin’ car.

Laughter and adrenaline.

90

INT. SWITCH CAR - CONTINUOUS

Gloansy turns onto School street, approaching the intersection of School and Main streets.

The guys grab their bags in one hand, rifles in the other, still wearing masks.

As they hit the intersection, Gloansy pulls up behind the SECOND SWITCH CAR and they JUMP OUT.

91

EXT. SCHOOL ST. AND MAIN - CONTINUOUS

Dez, Doug, Jem and Gloansy come out of the jeep, carrying duffel bags in one hand and AK-47’s or tech-9’s in the other. They stay low and move quickly.

As they get to the second switch car, Doug looks across the street (towards camera) and sees something that stops him cold. The other four guys stop immediately after.

Reveal: A POLICE OFFICER ACROSS THE STREET-- SITTING IN HIS CAR STARING BACK AT THEM.

The cop is in his late fifties, doing lazy duty on a construction site. Now he finds himself no more than thirty feet from four guys with bags, masks and assault rifles.

Angle on our guys: not moving a muscle.

Angle on the cop: his face hasn’t even had time to react to what’s happening in his brain.

After a long beat, the cop simply TURNS HIS HEAD THE OTHER WAY, holding his stare in the opposite direction.

Our guys wait a beat, frozen still... Then they simply pick up where they left off, throw their stuff in the switch car, fire it up and get on their way.

92

INT. THIRD SWITCH CAR - MOMENTS LATER

Doug, Jem, Gloansy and Jem all tear off their masks and start stashing their weapons.

GLOANSY
Now why aren’t there more guys like that in uniform?
JEM
He didn’t want to go for the plaque at the VFW banquet this year.
93

EXT. SALEM ST. - SAME

Police are everywhere. The burned out minivan is cordoned off. Dino and Frawley are taking stock of the scene.

FRAWLEY
They missed ‘em on the bridge?
DINO
Yup, they missed ‘em on the bridge.
(beat)
Same as when you asked me thirty second ago.
FRAWLEY
Yeah.
(beat)
FUCK!
(MORE)
FRAWLEY (CONT'D)
(beat)
Print the van.

Frawley walks closer to the minivan. The bullet-riddled cruiser is still behind it. Small yellow markers have been laid next to all the casings on the ground.

DINO
What do you mean ‘print the van?’ The van is a volcano.
FRAWLEY
Just find something and make it look like something that looks like a print.
(circles car)
Because right now they’re burning the money bands in a safe house-- someone’s cousin’s wife’s sister who got paid twenty thousand not to be home for the day. Their alibis were paid a week in advance. We won’t find any DNA here or on the switch car. And that, as they say, is the end of that. This is the ‘not fucking around’ gang. So, get me something that looks like a print so I can shake their tree. ‘Cause the not fucking around thing can go both ways.
94

EXT. CONSTRUCTION SITE - DAY

Several POLICE OFFICERS are waved over to Doug, who JOGS UP to them, carrying his hard hat. He nods at them, expecting this, and heads with them to their car.

95

INT. POLICE STATION, DIGITAL PHOTO - DAY

Jem has his photo taken, done it a million times.

96

INT. CRUISER - MOMENTS LATER

Doug sits handcuffed in the back, looking out over the front onto the road.

DOUG
(to the officer driving)
(MORE)
DOUG (CONT'D)
You might not want to take Storrow Drive unless you’re gonna light up your roof.
97

INT. POLICE STATION, LINE UP - DAY

Gloansy, who has been arrested for car theft since he was eleven, is accustomed to this process and takes the piss a bit.

GLOANSY
The top part again or the whole thing?
(beat)
Yellin’ loud like I had a gun? MESSENGER!!! Don’t FUCK AROUND!

Something garbled is said off screen, Gloansey responds.

GLOANSY (CONT’D)
I know, but I’m tryin’ to put it in my own words so it sounds better. What’s a messenger?
(beat)
Were they robbin’ bike messengers? Ten speeds? I’m playin’.
98

INT. INTERROGATION ROOM - DAY

Doug and Dino enter. Dino waves at Doug to have a seat. There is a seat and three chairs.

DINO
Have a seat, son.
DOUG
Thanks.
DINO
I knew your father.
DOUG
Me, too.
DINO
Got a few years left on his bid.

Doug opts not to reply, knows where this routine goes.

DINO (CONT’D)
I hear they got to the old guy last year. Split him up the back.
(MORE)
DINO (CONT’D)
You’d think they’d go after a younger kid. Makin’ a statement I guess. Charlestown crew ain’t what it used to be. Maybe you can change that when you’re up there.

Dino smiles in his eyes, tweaks his head.

DINO (CONT’D)
You know we pulled a print off the van, right?

Doug is opaque.

DOUG
Let me ask you something. Let’s say someone is around a group of people, just by chance. So naturally, because they associate with him, he has personal information about those people. Work, neighborhood, whatever. Now let’s say that person gives that information to the police for money. What do you call him? A rat. Now lets say that person has a badge, what do you call him?
(beat points at Dino)
Dino. Dino the dego from Somerville. The cops need to know who had an abortion, who got thrown out by their aunt. Big D. But let me ask you somethin’, Dino, the neighborhood expert, when your friends here decide to get serious and go on the big operations, how come they always put you in the back seat?

The DOOR OPENS and Frawley enters. He walks over to Dino and stands beside where he is sitting, across from Doug.

FRAWLEY
Do you know what they teach us at the academy, Mr. MacRay?
(no response)
During interrogations, always begin treating the subject kindly so as to win his trust, the logic being that you can always turn ugly later but its very difficult to start off unsympathetic and later become a ‘trusted figure.’

CONTINUED: (2)

Frawley takes a large file, conspicuously labeled MacRay and puts it on the table between them.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Even in light of that, Doug, I gotta tell you, I think you’re a shithead.

He points to photos on the wall of the armored car that was robbed.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
And you fucked up-- look at me, asshole. You fucked up. You didn’t roll a star market in Malden for boxes of quarter rolls. You hit an A Car in The North End with AKs and body armor and left .762 rounds in the fucking streets of Boston!

He regains his composure a bit.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
400 Bank robberies a year in this city and guess what wanted number you are, toolbox?

He holds up his index finger. Number “one.”

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Congratulations, I bet you’ve never been number one at anything in your life. Well, it’ll be short lived because now you’re threatening my job and my friend’s jobs and you’ve jeopardized things like dollars appropriated to our division-- matters so far beyond the extraordinarily limited scope of your Townie, douchebag mind that I seriously question the wisdom of even bringing it up. But I do want to say this so we’re both very, very clear: because sometimes, in these circumstances, various parties bandy about the possibility of sentence reduction in exchange for cooperation, testimony or otherwise assisting the prosecution.

He leans over the table and looks Doug right in the eye.

CONTINUED: (3)

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Not this time. You’re here today so I could tell you personally that you’re going to die in federal prison. And so are all your friends. No deal. No compromise. So when you start trying to stab each other in the back--and you will--I know you have a pitiable, misguided, Irish ‘Omerta’ but in the end you will cry and beg--you always do--and when that day comes... I just want you to know, its gonna be me who tells you to go fuck yourself.

A moment. This sinks in.

DOUG
I thought it would be the federal prosecutor telling me to go fuck myself.

Frawley smiles.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I’m glad you came in here because this room smells like piss and you’re wearing a nice cologne.

They all look at each other.

DINO
Get the fuck out of here.
DOUG
All right take it easy guys.
(exiting)
Good luck with that print.

And he is gone.

DINO
So, what kind of tree did we shake?
FRAWLEY
A fuckhead tree. We’re gonna see if any little fuckheads fall off.
DINO
Me and my mom used to go fuckhead picking when I was a boy.

They rise.

CONTINUED: (4)

FRAWLEY
I don’t know about Mrs. Ciampa but you’re gonna get to relive that experience because I got surveillance picking him up when he walks out the door.
99

EXT. COPELY PLAZA MALL, FOOD COURT - EVENING

Early evening crowd, Doug and Claire walking hand-in- hand. They come towards the food court.

DOUG
Hey I want to show you something. I wanted to wait for the right time but I’m gonna abandon that and go with the food court.
CLAIRE
Okay, what are we abandoning and doing?
DOUG
I got you something.

Doug reaches into his pocket and produces a BOX. He opens it and reveals a DIAMOND PENDANT NECKLACE.

DOUG (CONT’D)
This is for you, because you make me happy and I don’t know how to thank you except to buy you something. I know that makes me shallow but I hope you can see past that and try to forgive me.

Claire looks at the diamond, amazed and stunned and a little overwhelmed.

CLAIRE
I’ll work on it.
100

EXT. TRINITY CHURCH PLAZA - DAY

Sitting on a bench. She is admiring her diamond.

CLAIRE
Doug, I can’t take this.
DOUG
I guess you could hock it, but I’m not taking it back.
CLAIRE
How can you afford this?
DOUG
I have a job, Claire. I put away some money.
CLAIRE
(looks up at him)
I quit my job today.
DOUG
Really, what are you going to do?

She tucks her diamond away.

CLAIRE
Teach maybe. Volunteer more.
DOUG
What if I told you I been thinking about quitting my job?

She looks up at him and smiles, thinks he is saying this out of misguided sympathy.

CLAIRE
Then I guess I’ll have company.
DOUG
How many people do you know who have changed their lives?
CLAIRE
Not very many.
DOUG
I’m gonna change mine.

She recognizes that he is serious.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Why don’t you do it with me. Take the money we have. Quit our jobs..

She looks at him.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Why not?
CLAIRE
Where would we go?
DOUG
Wherever we want.

CONTINUED: (2)

She looks away, seems bothered, distracted by something.

CLAIRE
Do you know that newspaper, the Town?

Doug is thrown for a second.

DOUG
The giveaway paper? Yeah?
CLAIRE
They keep putting it in the foyer of my building and it just piles up. I was recycling it the other day and I saw this face in it I recognized but I wasn’t sure from where and then I realized, it was the guy who tried to mug me.
DOUG
Really?
CLAIRE
Yeah. It was an article about how he had been robbed and someone shot him.

She just holds Doug’s look. She could know something. It could be his imagination.

DOUG
They say who did it?
CLAIRE
No. The Police said they he was too terrified of them-- local gangsters apparently.
DOUG
Shouldn’t have been dealing drugs.
CLAIRE
What makes you say he was dealing drugs?

A beat...

DOUG
What else would he be getting robbed for? I grew up here, believe me.
(beat)
Am I right?

CONTINUED: (3)

CLAIRE
Yeah, you’re right.
DOUG
Okay. Trust me, they had, he got what was coming to him.
CLAIRE
He did?
DOUG
He hurt you, would have hurt you worse- if someone hadn’t come out. He got what he had coming. Laws of the universe. That’s karma.
CLAIRE
I don’t think Karma works that way.
101

EXT. MCI CEDAR JUNCTION CORRECTIONAL FACILITY - DAY

The monster maximum security facility. Guards, fences, guns, steel. The whole ominous thing. Visitors parade in and are searched.

102

INT. MCI CEDAR JUNCTION (WALPOLE) VISITORS AREA - DAY

Doug is opposite his FATHER (70). A shrunken man, who wears a prison jumpsuit and sits opposite Doug.

DOUG’S FATHER I could tell there’s something wrong with you, what’s the fuckin’ problem?

Doug ignores this.

DOUG
Just come up to say. Drop off your dirty books.

DOUG’S FATHER Yeah. You get in here you won’t be a fuckin’ smart-ass about it

DOUG
(beat)
Thinkin’ about goin’ dark. Takin’ a trip.

DOUG’S FATHER Takin’ heat?

DOUG
Making a change.

DOUG’S FATHER (contemptuous) Don’t tell me “makin’ a change.” Either you got heat or you don’t. (on to him) I heard a bread truck got dropped.

DOUG
Yeah? I didn’t hear about it.

DOUG’S FATHER Read the paper.

A GUARD calls out.

GUARD
THATS IT! Wrap it up.
DOUG
(rising)
All right, Dad...

DOUG’S FATHER I got something to say.

This stops Doug as he is putting on his coat

DOUG’S FATHER (CONT’D) Do you remember when your mother left?

There is a beat, Doug realizes his father is waiting for an answer.

DOUG
(sardonic)
If I think back on it.

DOUG’S FATHER I never seen a kid cry so hard. You started throwin’ up. I told you if you looked hard enough she might come back. Trying to make it better for you. Then you turn around and carried that like it was your fault. It wasn’t. There’s nothin’ wrong with you--and there’s nothin’ wrong with me. There was something wrong with your mother. Plenty. (beat) That’s the last thing I owe you. (MORE)

CONTINUED: (2)

DOUG’S FATHER (CONT'D) See you next time, (taps visitors glass) This side or the other.

A con’s leathery grin.

103

INT. FRAWLEY’S OFFICE - DAY

Frawley is at his desk looking at the internet. Dino enters.

DINO
Hey Frawl.
FRAWLEY
(not looking at him)
Yeah.
DINO
Just got off with surveillance- earlier this afternoon Macray--
(starts laughing)
You’re gonna hate this.

Now Frawley looks up.

104

EXT. MISHUAM HOUSING PROJECTS ROOFTOP - SUNSET

Doug, Gloansy and Dez come up a stairwell and out onto a rooftop, they look around, Jem is waiting for them.

GLOANSY
Do the four of us need to be coming up here right now?
JEM
It came in.
DOUG
What came in?
JEM
The Florist. Came through.
DOUG
Oh Jesus. Are you fucking kidding me?

Doug turns away, walks toward the ledge.

JEM
This is large.
DOUG
We’re smoked. Punt it.
JEM
It’s time sensitive.
DOUG
Sell it.
JEM
Tell me who can buy it out there right now?
DOUG
Should have thought about that before you broke the gardner off for twenty dimes.

Dez and Gloansy watching like a tennis match. Finally:

GLOANSY
Duggy, they were on us before this one and we got by...
DOUG
Oh, now you, too?
JEM
We’re robbin’ motherfuckers. Do you understand that? Boostin’ people. Banks. There’s ain’t no time out in this shit.
DOUG
Do you want to get caught? You’re fuckin’ up. The hostage was a bad play.
JEM
I been fuckin up?
DOUG
--Tune up the assistant manager.
JEM
He hit the bell.
DOUG
No he didn’t.
JEM
“No he didn’t.” Yes he fuckin’ did!

CONTINUED: (2)

DOUG
She did!

A moment of quiet. Doug looks to Jem, its all out there, now.

GLOANSY
How do you know, Duggy?
DOUG
She told me.
JEM
He’s been fuckin’ that cooze from the Kenmore job. Oh, wait -- but I’m the one who wants to get caught.
DEZ
(stunned)
How long, Duggy?
DOUG
She doesn’t know anything.
GLOANSY
Christ, Duggy -- she better not.
DOUG
Listen, she doesn’t know anything, I’m telling you straight. I’m out. Okay. I’m done. I consider us lucky to be where we are.
JEM
That’s not the way Fergie sees it.
DOUG
I don’t give a fuck how Fergie sees it.
JEM
You should. He set this aside for us and now that’s the expectation.
DOUG
You know something Jem? This conversation’s over. I’ll adjust his expectation. You adjust yours.
JEM
Is that right?
DOUG
I’m gonna talk to him.

CONTINUED: (3)

Doug starts to walk away.

JEM
Get back here.

Doug continues.

JEM (CONT’D)
Oh you’re gonna walk away now, little a little bitch?

Doug turns back.

DOUG
Do you need to have everything explained to you? It’s finished.
(was this it?)
Did you think I was gonna be with your sister for the rest of my life?
(deeper)
I ain’t the father, Jem, you know that, right?

No one says anything.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I don’t know who is, but there ain’t enough free clinics in Matapan to find out.

Jem SWINGS AT DOUG, who is quick enough where he only takes half the impact. He grabs Jem by the SHIRT and they go at it, TRADING PUNCHES, vicious and quick. Gloansy tries to break it up but has to back off.

Jem comes loose and trips, falling toward the edge of the roof. He lands and NEARLY FALLS OVER THE EDGE. Doug comes toward him. Jem raises his hand as if to say “enough.”

JEM
Dougie. Wait.

Doug slows. JEM SUCKER PUNCHES Doug, sending him back. He lands on top of him, throwing more punches. Doug pulls his shirt over his head, tying up Jem’s hands and puts the other hand around his neck-- holding him there. Both out of breath and bloodied.

DOUG
I’m done.

Doug gets up and heads for the stairs.

105

EXT./INT. CLAIRE’S DOOR - DAY

Frawley enters, holding a MANILA ENVELOPE.

FRAWLEY
Ms. Keesey, thanks for seeing me. May I come in?
CLAIRE
(struck by this odd formality)
Yes, come in.
FRAWLEY
I didn’t realize you’d left your job at the bank.

He moves past her, down the hallway into the living room.

CLAIRE
Last week, yes.

His eyes spark to a TIFFANY JEWELRY CASE on the table. He takes out the diamond necklace like a jilted lover.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
That -- it was a gift.
FRAWLEY
From the piano mover?

She doesn’t answer. He sets it down, exhales.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
I need to talk to you, Claire.
CLAIRE
Agent Frawley, I tried to be clear about this. I’m seeing someone.
FRAWLEY
The furniture mover.
CLAIRE
He isn’t a furniture mover.
FRAWLEY
No, he isn’t.
CLAIRE
I’m not interested in pursuing this with you any further. I appreciate what you’ve done--
FRAWLEY
I’m not interested in pursuing anything with you, either.
CLAIRE
Maybe you should leave.
FRAWLEY
You asked me to keep you apprised of the investigation. We have our prime suspects.

Frawley holds up the envelope.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
I came here to share that with you. Or I can certainly leave if that’s what you’d like.

He takes her silence as indication of consent and starts going through the mug shots.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Alfred Macgloan...Desmond Elden...lesser figures.

He sets those aside.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
James Coughlin we think assaulted the assistant manager.

He turns the paper over, revealing JEM’S PHOTO.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
The one is the architect, the bank job, the North End, and at least three other armed car robberies.

He holds a beat, his look on her. Turns over the MUG SHOT revealing an old MUG SHOT OF DOUG.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Douglas Sean MacRay. Look familiar?

On Claire.

CONTINUED: (2)

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
I personally don’t think you were anything but completely taken advantage of, Claire, but you opened the safe, he left you unharmed, and you are now carrying on a relationship with him about which you lied to the FBI.
(beat)
You can see how someone might have a less forgiving interpretation. Your friend was right. You should get a lawyer.
106

INT. FLORIST’S SHOP - EVENING

Fregus moves through the small shop spraying flowers. His Bodyguard reads a newspaper on a small stool.

Doug enters and they both look up.

DOUG
Fergie.
(to Bodyguard)
Don’t get up.

Half smile.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I just wanted to come tell you myself, you’re going to have to find someone else.
FERGIE
I would love to, son, believe me, but the only qualified people besides yourself are currently incarcerated.
DOUG
Whatever you got my guys can handle it without me.
FERGIE
I wouldn’t hire them without you and I wouldn’t hire you without them.
DOUG
With respect, I didn’t come here for a debate. I’m not doin’ it. So work it out best you can.

He reaches in his pocket. Rusty starts to stand.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Calm down.
(takes out envelope)
This goes against my better judgement but-.

A beat. He puts the money on the table. Fergie picks it up, opens it, looks inside, closes it and looks back at Doug.

FERGIE
Not gonna cut it.
DOUG
Beg your pardon?
FERGIE
Nothin’ compared with what I lose if this doesn’t get done. You’re gonna do what I ask.
DOUG
Who do you think you are? The only guy in Charlestown with a gun? You run numbers and pump dope. Good for you. You’re an old man with a fucked up face who don’t know his glory years are behind him. I ain’t workin’ for ya.
(to bodyguard)
Fuck the both of you. If you have a problem with that I live at one sixteen pearl street. Stop by any time. You know where to find me.

He grunts a little smile out, placing flowers in a jar.

FERGIE
(plainly)
You’re gonna do this for me or I’m gonna clip your nuts like I clipped your father’s.

Doug stiffens a bit.

DOUG
Don’t bring up my father.
FERGIE
Son. Son. I knew your father. He worked for me for years. Years. He started like you, wanted his own thing so I had to cut his nuts for him. Don’t make me cut yours.

CONTINUED: (2)

Doug holds Fergie’s look.

FERGIE (CONT’D)
You play the Horses?

Fergie’s accent makes it sound like “husses.”

FERGIE (CONT’D)
Never bet a stallion. You can only count on a gelding. When they cut balls off the horses they either cut ‘em, or they use chemicals, take ‘em over time.
(beat)
When your father said no to me I gelded him the chemical way-- strung your mother out on dope. Took what he loved. But your mother saw it clearer than he did. Doped up and hung herself up with a wire down on Melnea Cass.

Fergie looks at Doug, who hasn’t moved.

FERGIE (CONT’D)
All them fliers you passed out when you were little-lookin’ for your mother. He never had the heart to tell his son he was lookin’ for a suicide doper, who wasn’t never comin’ home. Ask him next time you’re up there, if he wishes he made the smart play now.

Angle on Doug: impassive, dark.

FLORIST
I do what I have to do. I hear you got a nice girlfriend. Bank teller. I don’t want to have to send her funeral arrangement to your house, son. But I will if I have to.
(beat)
Since I know where to find you.

Fergie smiles at Doug, skeletal bad teeth.

107

EXT. MONUMENT SQUARE - AFTERNOON

Doug comes down the street in a hurry. He turns the corner and stops in front of Claire’s DOOR. He is FROZEN by something off camera.

A FUNERAL ARRANGEMENT rests against Claire’s door. There is no name on it, just her address, 321 MONUMENT AVE. We recognize this as a brand from the Florists.

Doug’s heart drops. He rings her buzzer. She doesn’t answer. He POUNDS the door. No answer.

He HURLS his body into the door- SMASHING it. It comes partially loose.

DOUG
CLAIRE!!

He KICKS the door again, twice. It SMASHES OPEN. He runs up.

108

INT. CLAIRE’S APARTMENT - CONTINUOUS

Doug comes running up the stairs, breathing heavy, slows as he reaches the top of the stairs.

He takes his HANDGUN from his waist and holds it low in his right hand.

DOUG
Claire?
(beat)
It’s me.

He moves the through the apartment with stealth.

Through the front living area, to a dining/kitchen, then through a ‘guest/den’ and ultimately into the bedroom.

Doug Stands in the bedroom, sensing something, not sure what it is. He moves to the bathroom, sees the door slightly AJAR and a SHADOW on the FLOOR. He PUSHES IT OPEN slowly.

We reveal: CLAIRE, SITTING ON THE FLOOR, she’s been crying.

Doug quickly sticks the gun away and moves toward her. She PULLS away.

CLAIRE
Get out.
DOUG
Claire...
CLAIRE
I know who you are, Doug.
DOUG
Hold on a second.

She indicates her cell phone.

CLAIRE
I have this on 911.

Doug moves very slowly. He eases himself across from her.

DOUG
I don’t know what they told you. Okay? But why don’t you give me a chance to tell you.
CLAIRE
You had a chance.
DOUG
Who talked to you?
CLAIRE
The FBI Doug--
DOUG
Okay, just listen to me--The robbery, whatever, that’s true-

She is shaking despite herself

DOUG (CONT’D)
But I’m the same person you knew.
CLAIRE
Everything you told me was a lie.
DOUG
I never lied to you.
CLAIRE
You hurt people.
DOUG
I don’t want to hurt anybody--

She moves into anger.

CLAIRE
You’re a criminal Doug. You tried to manipulate me and make me feel sorry for you-
DOUG
Sorry for me?

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
You want to know why people think you’re trash Doug? Because you are.
DOUG
Claire.
CLAIRE
You go to FUCKING hell!

Anger, turned brittle, breaks and tears start.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
Why did you do this to me?
DOUG
I was going to tell you. I wanted to tell you that night.
CLAIRE
The night you fucked me? Is that your thing? It’s not enough to terrorize someone you have to fuck them, too?
DOUG
Claire. Calm down.
CLAIRE
Never, never let me see you again.
DOUG
Listen to me.
CLAIRE
Get out.

She presses SEND on HER 911 CALL.

CLAIRE (CONT’D)
GET OUT!

Doug backs out, propelled by the sheer force of her energy.

109

EXT. UNDER TOBIN BRIDGE - SUNSET

Doug watches the cars rumble overhead, DRINKS A 6 PACK. He lobs beers down the hill that land crashing below.

He lines up some bottles, walks away and SHOOTS THEM.

110

INT. FLORISTS - EVENING

Doug stands in the door facing the Florist Rusty.

DOUG
I’m in. But if anything happens to her, by the two of you or anyone else or if I get worried something might happen to her I’m gonna come back here and kill both of you in your own shop.
(beat)
All right?

Angle on Rusty and the Florist, unmoved.

111

INT. COUGHLIN HOUSE - KRISTA’S DOOR - EVENING

Doug’s KNOCK brings Krista to the door in a tank shirt, nylon pants, and Tweety slippers. She straightens, surprised.

DOUG
I’m hungry.
KRISTA
Come on in then.
112

INT. KRISTA’S PARLOR - MOMENTS LATER

Shyne is confined to her sticky high chair, shredding string cheese into white threads.

KRISTA
(indicates Shyne)
You want me to put her away?

...so they can have sex in private.

DOUG
No, its okay.

She moves off into the kitchen.

DOUG (CONT’D)
I’m going away.

The microwave opens and shuts in the adjoining kitchen.

KRISTA (O.S.)
You in some kind of trouble?
DOUG
How it is.
KRISTA (O.S.)
When you coming back?

Doug doesn’t answer.

KRISTA (O.S.) (CONT’D)
Jem know?

She enters, setting down a plate of Chicken a la king in front of him and a child’s knife and fork.

DOUG
I told him. He didn’t want to hear it. He asked me to do one last thing for him. So I’m gonna do it.
(beat)
Could you tell him that for me?

Krista looks at him for a long moment...

113

INT. TOWN FLOWERS - WALK-IN COOLER - DAY

Doug, Jem, Gloansy and Dez sit on folding chairs by a walk-in cooler. Fergie speaks.

FERGIE
Now, there’s a fella, on the inside. He likes to play the ponies from time to time. Can’t pick a fuckin’ horse to save his life. Now he got a red figure with me. I got this:
(holding envelope)
Security chart, Good for one day. Diagrams when the cash gets brought out from the safe, packed, then held for ten minutes by security before the truck gets there. That’s when you hit it.
(beat, hands out)
For those that were good in school: hundred ten thousand beers at seven bucks a pop. Sixty thousand dogs at five a shot. Forty thousand sausage, plus paraphanelia, plus restaurants-- three day cash take:
(beat)
One point nine million dollars.

Murmurs, reaction.

FERGIE (CONT’D)
Taking down the cathedral of Boston? Priceless.

Rusty laughs. Fergie thinks the Mastercard joke is funnier than hell. Doug stares. The guys gather round the chart. We see a FENWAY PARK SEATING CHART.

114

EXT. THE FLORIST SHOP - MOMENTS LATER

Doug, Jem, Gloansy and Dez come out. Doug turns to Jem.

DOUG
This is going to be a motherfucker, you know that.
JEM
If they were easy, kid, everyone would do them.

The tension between them begins to ease.

DOUG
How long ‘till Rusty finds the inside man after the job?
JEM
He should have picked better horses.
115

INT. THE TAP - DOWNSTAIRS - EVENING

Krista sits at the bar and we see Frawley is watching her. He comes over and sits next to her.

FRAWLEY
Seems like we were having a bit of a staring contest over there.
(he gets her a drink)
Funny story, one night at a bar, this guy was going around telling ladies he was judging a Hugging Contest, And most of the time, they fell for it. He would hold them and rub their backs, I finally got sick of it, and I told him I was judging a Face-Punching Contest.
KRISTA
I’d punch him myself.

He TOASTS her his Bud, then drains it.

FRAWLEY
Oh, by the way, I’m here tonight judging a Fucking Contest.

She smiles, Frawley drops another twenty on the bar. The drinks come quickly.

KRISTA
What are you doing down here? Slumming?
FRAWLEY
Trying to do my job.
KRISTA
Oh, right. The Fucking Contest.
FRAWLEY
Basically correct. I work for the FBI.

Krista throws her head back and laughs, warming to him.

KRISTA
That’s the first laugh I had in a month.
FRAWLEY
You and Doug MacRay used to run around, right?
KRISTA
How you know Duggy?
FRAWLEY
We sorta work together.
KRISTA
Demolition.
FRAWLEY
Nooooo.

He pulls out FIVE MORE TWENTIES.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
You a pretty decent judge of size?
KRISTA
Depends. Size of what?

He holds up one of the twenties.

FRAWLEY
How big would you say this is?

CONTINUED: (2)

KRISTA
Smaller than a hundred.
FRAWLEY
Six inches? Over or under.
KRISTA
Under.
FRAWLEY
Wrong. Six point one four inches exactly. Now the width. Girth. Some claim it’s more important. Give a guess.

She just looks at him.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Two point six one inches. I know everything there is to know about money. Thickness? Point oh oh four three inches. Not much to excite you there. Weight? About one gram. That makes a twenty almost worth its weight in, say... oxy.

She’s hearing him now -- eyes wide open.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
So how’s it work? Bartender takes a call, gives you an address? You pick up a package at Point A, deliver it to Point B, and for that the Florist pays you a C.
(beat)
You’re thinking about walking out on me. See, it’s not that simple. I start waving this around.
(shows badge)
... bad for you.
KRISTA
I want a lawyer.
FRAWLEY
Good, get one. This is about protecting yourself. Not even yourself. Your daughter.
KRISTA
Don’t fuckin’ talk about my daughter.

CONTINUED: (3)

FRAWLEY
How long were you with MacRay?
KRISTA
All my life.
FRAWLEY
And in all those years you were together -- how many diamond necklaces he buy you from Tiffany?
116

EXT. CHARLESTOWN GARDENS - DAY

Doug heads through the nearby gardens to Claire’s plot. There she is. Claire turns when the gate latch CLICKS, her bare limbs glowing in the afternoon sun, she sees him

DOUG
Just let me say something.

She just looks at him.

DOUG (CONT’D)
You know who I am. You always have.
CLAIRE
If I knew who you were I would have called the police as soon as I saw you in the laundromat.
DOUG
Imagine there was no robbery. Then what? We would be the same people.

She can’t do this.

CLAIRE
You have to go away, Doug.
DOUG
If you want me to go away? All you need to do is call the police and tell them that we’ll be set up at the Howard Johnson on Yawkey way in room 224 in two days.
CLAIRE
What?
DOUG
On Monday we’re going to rob the cash room at Fenway Park.

Now he has completely exposed himself.

DOUG (CONT’D)
So I guess I’ll either end up in Walpole- or I’ll end up with you.
CLAIRE
Why are you telling me this?
(angrier)
Why are you doing this to me?
DOUG
I’m gonna change my life, Claire.
(beat)
I want it to be with you.

A HORSE’S SNORT interrupts. A MOUNTED POLICEMAN trots on the path toward them.

Claire’s eyes dampen, and she faces him.

CLAIRE
Doug --

He cuts her off.

DOUG
Come with me. I won’t leave you, I won’t hurt you and I will never lie to you again.
117

INT. JEM’S HOUSE - DAY

Jem is cleaning the weapons and ammunition on a table in a basement room. Doug comes downstairs. Jem does not immediately acknowledge him.

Doug looks at the several automatic and semi-automatic assault weapons.

DOUG
(re: guns)
You gotta love New Hampshire.

Jem keeps cleaning.

JEM
Uniforms set?
DOUG
Yup. Vests, plates.
JEM
Heard you’re thinking about leaving.
DOUG
If this goes right, might be your time to step away, too.
JEM
What am I gonna do? Go down to Margaritaville, drink up half a yard, come back in five years?
(beat)
This is who we are.
DOUG
Things change, man. Nothing wrong with it.
JEM
Depends what kind of change.
DOUG
We had a good run, Jimmy. By any standard.
JEM
We set the standard.
DOUG
The Florist -- kid, he’ll keep turning you out till you get bounced for good.

Jem snorts.

JEM
Just so we’re clear. We get hemmed in tomorrow- you won’t see my hands in the air. I expect to see no one else’s either...
118

INT. HOWARD JOHNSON HOTEL - ROOM 224 - AFTERNOON/NIGHT

Doug opens a curtain revealing a view of Fenway Park.

He checks the message light on the phone, picks up the receiver, makes sure the phone is working.

HOTEL ROOM BATHROOM - LATER

Doug’s in the shower, standing under its heat. Thinks he hears KNOCKING. He shuts off the water and listens.

HOTEL ROOM - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Wearing only a towel, Doug throws open the door. A woman three doors down turns fast to the sound. It’s Krista, not Claire, with Shyne’s dead weight on her hip.

Doug doesn’t move. Krista comes up, looking past him into the room.

KRISTA
Got any juice?

She holds up Shyne’s empty bottle.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
Dez told me you were here.
DOUG
What do you want, Kris?

He throws on his pants.

KRISTA
To see you before you go.

Krista sits on the edge of the bed.

DOUG
You can’t stay.
KRISTA
I don’t want to stay. I want to go... With you.

Doug stiffens -- looks away.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
I want to change, too, Duggy. Why can’t I change? I could be a different person.
(beat)
I’ve been so fucking patient all these years -- always thinkin’ my time was coming. My whole life- I mean, haven’t I been loyal?
DOUG
It’s not about loyalty, Krista.
KRISTA
Tell me what it’s about, then, and I’ll do it. I’ll do whatever you want me to do. I know you think I can’t make you happy, but it’s not true. I can.

Doug watches Shyne flash blue-green in the TV light, casting a small shadow. Krista releases him, hurt.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
You can’t wait for me to go, can you.
DOUG
I’m leaving with somebody else.

She looks around the room.

KRISTA
Why isn’t she here then, if she’s going with you? Such a trashy little fuck pad. After a Tiffany necklace, I’d’ve thought a room at the Ritz.
DOUG
What did you say? Who told you?
KRISTA
A little bird.

He grabs her, his anger eliciting a fierce smile from her. He shakes her, but can’t shake away that smile.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
You always did like it rough.
DOUG
What do you know about a necklace?

He GRABS HER BY THE NECK AND SLAMS HER INTO THE WALL.

KRISTA
I know you’d rather see a rope around my neck.
DOUG
It’s not a FUCKIN’ JOKE! WHO TOLD YOU?

Doug sees Shyne in his periphery. He releases Krista and scoops up Shyne and her doll, the child’s eyes never leaving the TV screen.

KRISTA
Take me with you. I’ll go to hell for you.

He marches to the door with Shyne under his arm.

CONTINUED: (2)

Doug opens the door and sets Shyne down gently on the hall floor. He steps back into the room, facing Krista.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
We’re coming with you.
DOUG
You’re getting out of here.

He starts to resolutely move her.

KRISTA
Don’t say no to me. You better think about what you’re doin’.

He grabs her arm. She fights him --

KRISTA (CONT’D)
No!

-- POUNDING his chest, pushing her nails into his windpipe, Doug maneuvers her toward the door.

She shakes free of his grip and walks the few remaining steps out into the hallway herself.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
You don’t know what you just-

Doug SLAMS the door on her, throws the lock.

He waits. Expecting banging, screaming -- but there’s NOTHING. When he looks through the spyglass, she is gone.

119

EXT. BOSTON STREETS - MORNING

Rain. Frawley is crossing the street, listening to the cell, trying to shovel eggs in his mouth and keep the ones in the box from getting wet.

FRAWLEY
Go ahead, I can hear you.
SERGEANT (PHONE)
Agent Frawley? We got a DWI here, one-car in the C-town Navy Yard.
120

EXT. CHARLESTOWN NAVY YARD - DRY DOCKS - CONTINUOUS

ACTION

Cruisers surround an accident: Doug’s Truck demolished against an old anchor on the dry docks, hood steaming.

SERGEANT (V.O.)
Coughlin, Kristina. Had a kid with her. Little girl’s fine, but the mother is banged up --
121

INT. HOWARD JOHNSON HOTEL ROOM 224 - SAME

Doug, Jem, Dez and Gloansy all prepare for the job. They are DRESSED AS COPS and loading WEAPONS into DUFFEL bags.

Doug checks the door and cracks the blinds slightly to look out.

JEM
Will you quit fuckin’ doin’ that. You’re makin’ me nervous. There’s no one at HoJo’s. Shit.

Doug ignores him and goes back to loading bags.

122

INT. MASS GENERAL - ER - TWENTY MINUTES LATER

Frawley walks in squeaking wet shoes, showing his creds -- then walks to one of the curtained bays.

123

INT. ER BAY

Krista sits in the padded visitor’s chair, gauze wrapped around her forehead, a bright red bloom over her eye. Blood spatters her shirt and jeans.

KRISTA
Here he is. Six inches.

The SERGEANT pokes his head in, nods to Frawley, leaves.

FRAWLEY
What happened?
KRISTA
You’re in the FBI. Figure it the fuck out.

Frawley glances at the EMPTY CAR SEAT in the corner, crumb-dusted and milk-stained. Krista sees him looking.

KRISTA (CONT’D)
No, she wasn’t hurt. Not a scratch.
FRAWLEY
You could be looking at Mother of the Year.
KRISTA
What do you know what I go through? Fuckin’ Barney. I’m doin’ my best. Do you know my life?
FRAWLEY
Your daughter’s in the back seat of a state van, being driven by a stranger to the Department of Social Services. How long you want to talk here?

Krista stares, eyes dampening. Frawley holds his glare.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Maybe you want a lawyer, not FBI.

She looks crestfallen as he makes to leave.

KRISTA
Why is it I’m always the one who gets used?
FRAWLEY
You’re going to need a plea agreement -- if you want any chance to retain custody.

She looks up fast, her eyes blinking wet.

KRISTA
I want your guarantee.
FRAWLEY
I never said guarantee.
KRISTA
You said --
FRAWLEY
I said I could try. If that’s not enough, maybe your brother can help. Maybe ‘Doug’ can do something?
(smartass)
Fergie have social services juice?

Her eyes spark to the last name.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
I’m kidding.

CONTINUED: (2)

Nothing in her low-eyed look is telling -- except its duration.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Oh, Jesus. You and the Florist?

The list of suspects just narrowed to one.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
(to self)
Mercy.

Krista’s chin trembles. A hard woman crumbling is an awful thing to watch.

KRISTA
Why you have to lean on me so hard?
FRAWLEY
You called me. What do you have?
KRISTA
Duggy’s going away after. With her.

Frawley is stunned. Then starts piecing it together.

FRAWLEY
Wait, what after? After what?

Krista stares at the ground. Frawley zeroes in.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
You need to be smart Krista. This is a big moment for Shyne. This can make the difference for her.

She looks away, her jaw quivering.

KRISTA
(breaking down)
She’s retarded. She’s going to need things. Special schools. For her I’m doing this. It’s not me. Not for me.
124

EXT. HOWARD JOHNSON HOTEL ROOM 224, BALCONY - SAME

The four cops emerge with their gear. Doug looks around, all directions. She didn’t come- but she didn’t dime.

125

INT. THUNDERBIRD (LANDSDOWNE ST.) - NOON

Four cops sitting in a parked Thunderbird. Gloansy at the wheel, Dez beside him, Doug and Jem in back: all wearing COP UNIFORMS. On the RADIO, a reporter is in hysterics over traffic tie-ups. Nervous anticipation is thick inside the car.

WEEI RADIO
...Tie ups on the expressway, the pike...

Doug stares out the window. He glances at his watch.

DOUG
Let’s go.
126

EXT. THUNDERBIRD (LANDSDOWNE ST.) - CONTINUOUS ACTION

The two rear doors open simultaneously as Doug and Jem exit. Gloansy and Dez remain in the car. Doug and Jem start toward an entrance under the green monster.

127

EXT. LANDSDOWNE ST. - CONTINUOUS

Steadicam, Doug and Jem through the crowd, around the ballpark, into the entrance.

128

EXT./INT. LANDSDOWNE ST. ENTRANCE - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Jem BANGS HARD ON A BANK OF EXIT ONLY DOORS. We stay with them in STEADICAM real time.

The DOOR OPENS revealing the INSIDE MAN (55). He is the PARK HEAD of MAINTENANCE. His Izod shirt is tucked in over his belly. He sports a gold pinky ring and the tan from his most recent trip to bet Jai Alai in Florida has yet to fade.

He eyes them with deep regret, not a bad man--just a guy with a sickness who couldn’t get out from under.

INSIDE MAN
Officer.
JEM
Yeah, let’s go.

Doug holds his look as he passes: the face of a dead man.

The Inside Man leads them through the doors and onto an open metal staircase. They go DOWN ONE FLIGHT.

As our camera counters, we reveal an open MAINTENANCE door the size of a truck that opens out on to LEFT FIELD and the GREEN MONSTER SCOREBOARD. It is odd to be so close, the field almost unnaturally green.

WORKERS mill around, no one gives them a second look.

The Inside man leads them into his office, a menagerie of lawn tools, odds and ends-- and gestures toward a small DOOR IN THE BACK.

They step through the door and find themselves in a CAVERNOUS AREA UNDERNEATH THE SEATS.

The Inside man indicates that this where they’ll PART WAYS.

Jem and Doug continue and are able to walk, unobserved all the way around the park and into the REAR TUNNELS. Since that would take too long to do in real time we

CUT TO:
129

INT. UNDERNEATH SEATS - MOMENTS LATER

Jem and Doug proceed to an UNMARKED DOOR.

They move through it. It leads into the security tunnels. They down the tunnels.

130

INT. TUNNEL OUTSIDE CASH ROOM - CONTINUOUS ACTION

NOW THEY SEE THE GUARDS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE TUNNEL, PREVENTING THEM FROM GETTING ANY FARTHER.

Two ARMED SECURITY PERSONNEL in blue shirts stand talking to a YOUNGER SECURITY GUARD, ERIC in a RED SHIRT. Doug starts at them, his voice BOOMING inside the tunnel.

DOUG
Who called 911?

The Guards peer down the long tunnel. Jem’s hand is on his waist.

JEM
Was it you who called?

The Red Shirt (ERIC) comes hustling up -- young and jittery.

JEM (CONT’D)
911 call we got.
ERIC
I didn’t... it wasn’t...
JEM
Robbery call. Who else is here?
ERIC
Robbery?
DOUG
Call says you’re being held up. Right now.

The concerned Guards put their hands on their holsters.

JEM
We got a distress call! Who made the call?

The Guards step into the far end of the tunnel.

GUARD #1 No call from us.

JEM GUARD #1

(closer) (raising one hand) Who called it? Hold on. Where’s Mike?

JEM GUARD #2

ID! Let’s see some ID! Hold on, hold it, now.

Guard #1 drops down into a protective crouch.

JEM DOUG

Whoa, whoa! Don’t do that.

Doug pushes Eric flat to the ground.

DOUG
Everybody on the ground now.

JEM DOUG

For our safety! I want IDs Get down! from everybody.

GUARD #2 Wait, hey!

JEM
ON THE FLOOR!

Panicky Guard #1 pulls the sidearm from his holster.

DOUG
Gun! Gun!

CONTINUED: (2)

JEM
Drop your weapon! Put it down now!

Both Doug and Jem DRAW AND AIM.

GUARD #2 JEM

We did not call! Stop resisting!Get down!

Cursing, Guard #1 yields, lying on his belly, arms out. Jem approaches, stepping on his wrist. Guard #2 relents.

Doug hustles to Jem’s side, quickly binding their hands with plastic ties and taking their radios.

DOUG AND JEM PULL MASKS UP FROM INSIDE THEIR COLLARS, only their eyes are exposed.

GUARD #1 (look of terror) I don’t want no trouble.

Doug grabs Guard #1. Checks watch, looks to Jem.

DOUG
We got fifteen minutes until they bring the cash out of the safe and pack it up for the truck.

Jem is staring at GUARD #1. Who is DOUBLED OVER in pain.

JEM
(to Guard #1)
Christ. Are you gonna shit?
131

INT. BATHROOM - MOMENTS LATER

Doug is outside an open stall. Guard #1 has his trousers down and hugs his bare knees. Jem at the open door.

JEM
Ho! Armed robbery enema.
132

INT. FENWAY PARK, OUTSIDE MONEY ROOM - 15 MIN LATER

Jem watches over Guard #1 and the others while Doug approaches the money room, it has a steel door and concrete walls. There is a smoked glass window. He has Guard #1. Doug calls loudly to the security guys inside the cash room that cannot be seen but that can hear him.

DOUG
Arnold Washton! In the cash room. You got a wife, Linda.
(MORE)
DOUG (CONT'D)
You live at 311 Hazer Street, Quincy -- with three small dogs.

Guard #1 looks surprised.

DOUG (CONT’D)
Also in the cash room: Morton Harford, 27 Counting Lane, Livingston Arms, Randolph -- wife also Linda. Arnold, the Lindas want you to open this door.

Nothing from the cash room.

DOUG (CONT’D)
(to Guard #1, quiet)
So much for marriage.
(to the door, loud)
Arnold, you will not always be behind a steel door. We know where you live, we will come and find you and when we do, you will fuckin’ hate that.

CLACK goes the cash room door, opening.

133

INT. CASH ROOM - MOMENTS LATER

VALHALLA --BIG BRICKS of CASH- Counting machines.

Doug and Jem pull out all the cash.

ARNOLD and MORTON are zip tied.

Jem dumps off two heavy racks of coins, the rolls BURSTING nickels and dimes to the floor.

Jem tosses cash parcels at Doug who bags them.

MONEY LOADED on a DOLLY, they set to roll out.

Jem and Doug look at each other, loaded up with a HUGE BAG OF MONEY.

134

INT. FENWAY PARK, OUTSIDE MONEY ROOM - CONTINUOUS

JEM AND DOUG TAKE: TWO HOSTAGES AND A DOLLY OF MONEY

They head toward the LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL.

Arnold is one of those guys who starts talking when he gets scared.

ARNOLD
Listen, no money’s worth-
DOUG
--That’s fine, Arnold. All be over in a minute.

Long beat as they roll down the hallway.

ARNOLD
(to Doug)
That’s two million dollars right there.
DOUG
There’s only one smart thing my father ever told me, Arnie: anyone can grab money. It’s the getaway-- separates the pros from the cons.
135

INT. TRUCK DELIVERY BAY - MOMENTS LATER

THE ARMORED TRUCK HAS ARRIVED.

There are THREE BAYS where trucks can pull in and off- load their goods into the warehouse like room. The armored truck is in BAY ONE.

BAYS TWO AND THREE ARE CLOSED with a metal grate.

Doug sees the driver of the armored car is a WOMAN -- frizzy-haired, startled.

SHE SEES THEM, TOO! She fumbles the keys in the ignition, STARTING UP THE TRUCK.

The LOCKS RESET; the rooftop BEACON SPINS. Tailpipe COUGHS diesel smoke. But the bay door is still closed -- she’s got nowhere to go. Driver begins talking fast into the handset of a ceiling-mounted radio.

GUARD #1 Assholes fucked up. Sandy’s locked in there. She’s calling five-oh.

Doug produces a walkie-talkie, pressing the call button.

DOUG
(into walkie-talkie)
Did you get the tail car?
DEZ (ON RADIO)
Ready. All clear out here.

Doug hits the switch on a second bay door, which crawls open.

Dez, in his cop slicker, enters holding his Beretta on the bound TAIL-CAR DRIVER Black Suburban.

The Suburban then BACKS INSIDE the bay, trunk end first. Gloansy leaps out, engine running, taking the Tail-Car Driver from Dez and walking him over to the Guard #1. Doug makes a remark to the tail car driver.

DOUG
Sit over here, you can go right back to sleep.

Dez touches the radio wire looped over his ear.

DEZ
There it is. Call just went out to PD from dispatch.

Doug nods calmly -- trotting with Dez to the idling can.

DOUG
(indicating uniform)
We got here just in time.
136

EXT. FENWAY PARK - GATE A - SAME TIME

Outside the “1912 Fenway Park” facade, Frawley opens his trunk and puts on his nylon FBI vest. He pulls his REMINGTON 870 TWELVE-GAUGE from its sleeve, Dino’s Taurus pulls up.

DINO
I looped the block. No vans around, nothing.
FRAWLEY
Maybe we’re too early. Too late.

A blue police CAMPER idles: the Entry and Apprehension Team Mobile-Command Center. Two pairs of EAT COMMANDOS emerge and approach Frawley. Frawley indicates the main pedestrian concourse.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Guys, we have to close off these streets.

One cop interrupts him.

TAC COP
Sir, there’s a voice inside, says they’ve been robbed. We’re setting up there now.

Frawley starts running that way.

137

INT. LOADING DOCK - DAY

Jem and Doug load the money into the follow car. Doug sees something shiny over Jem’s shoulder.

DOUG
Look out!

It’s a small mirror on a long pole poking through a crack in the wall. Doug opens up, SHATTERING the mirror -- DEAFENING. The pole clatters to the floor.

The dock suddenly fills with ricocheting fireballs: STARFLASH ROUNDS.

Jem FIRES as they take cover. Jem breaks off his empty mag and reloads, cursing.

There is ANOTHER EXCHANGE OF GUNFIRE. The HOSTAGES are yelling and screaming. Gloansy peeks out a door.

GLOANSY
That’s the fuckin’ swat team!
JEM
(quiet)
We got dimed.

He leaps out, SPRAYING gunfire, then leans back in again.

THREE GUNSHOTS CRACK from a different direction. Dez’s knee explodes and he SHRIEKS in agony -- twisting and falling.

Doug rushes to him, dragging Dez to the rear tire of the can. Hostages are YELLING.

Doug searches for the source of the gunshots. Dez, white as a ghost -- his knee blown off -- sits in a widening pool of his own blood. Then -- MORE SHOTS, over their heads.

Jem ADVANCES, FIRING on a SOURCE OF FIRE and BACKS OFF some of the EAT guys. His .762 Rounds BLOW OFF PIECES OF EAT SHIELDS.

Doug HOLLERS, but then sees: The shots are coming from the gun ports INSIDE the truck. The Driver has them pinned down.

Ducking low, Doug sees Gloansy’s feet on the other side of the can’s wheelbase. He YELLS his name, but Gloansy can’t hear him. He rips off his walkie-talkie and slides it under the truck, striking him in the shoe.

DOUG
(to Gloansy)
The door! Open the door!

Gloansy crawls and HITS the plunger -- the bay door RISING.

JEM
What are you doing?

But Doug was right: the driver PANICS, jumping into the front seat and POWERING FORWARD, SCRAPING the can against the brick door frame, lurching out onto Van Ness.

138

EXT. GATE D - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Frawley watching as the Provident truck comes out, beacon twirling, SURGING toward him. Other cops rush up, FIRING - - wasting rounds against the grill and windshield.

The truck SKIDS on the wet road, then over-corrects, veering toward the sidewalk on Yawkey -- and RAMMING THE MOBILE COMMAND UNIT HEAD-ON.

The blow is TREMENDOUS: the camper BUCKLING AND GRINDING on its rims, tearing up asphalt and uprooting ornamental trees. Cops tumble out of the open end, hurt and crawling away.

139

INT. LOADING DOCK - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Now that the full tactical team is assembled AND they know there are armed men firing at them from inside, the firing becomes a continuous assault.

Jem and Doug are firing back but they recognize that ultimately they are going to be overwhelmed. There will be improvised dialogue to this effect and a lot of shooting from inside the loading dock back out to the tactical guys, with Jem’s rounds being the only thing that keep them at bay.

Gloansy darts to the can and lifts Dez over his shoulder - - Jem emptying another magazine as cover.

Gloansy throws Dez into the Suburban, SLAMS THE TRUNK SHUT, and climbs inside.

GLOANSY
Meet you at the switch!

Gloansy gets their attention-

GLOANSY (CONT’D)
I’m gettin’ seven to ten.
(to Doug)
You’re ten to twenty.
(to Jem)
And you’re done.
(beat)
They’ll be all over me, they won’t know there’s more people in here. You two go back out through the park.
(he smiles)
Meet me at the switch.

This self sacrifice is acknowledged by shared looks- broken off quickly as gunfire comes through the door.

Gloansy heads for the follow car.

Doug turns and runs the length of the cave, hitting buttons on every bay door -- all of them rising.

140

EXT. GATE D - CONTINUOUS ACTION

The Black Suburban shoots out of the second bay door. It starts in the opposite direction of the ARMORED CAR, but APPROACHING CRUISERS make it cut back in a controlled skid, racing toward Frawley.

Frawley works the pump action on his shotgun: BLAM! -- MISSES the first shot, sparks kicking up off the asphalt. He jumps the curb, careening into the parked Thunderbird. Several other OFFICERS FIRE. GLOANSY JERKS HARD to the RIGHT and then has to OVER CORRECT.

141

INT. AMBULANCE BAY - CONTINUOUS ACTION

SOUND OF GUNFIRE AND A CRASH FROM OUTSIDE

One empty duffel remains on the floor by the cart. Jem moves to it, STUFFING IT WITH CASH.

JEM
Fuckin’ Gloansy...
DOUG
The fuck are you doing? Leave it!
JEM
How the fuck did this happen?

Jem raises the Tec-9. Doug backs off. Jem can taste his guilt.

JEM (CONT’D)
Did you do this?

Jem staring at Doug -- holding the gun on him.

JEM (CONT’D)
Why?

More SIRENS.-- His eyes and gun never leaving Doug.

Doug OPENS HIS ARMS, awaiting Jem’s bullet.

Jem stares at him until...his gun comes down. Jem hefts the bag and turns and exits back into the park.

142

EXT. YAWKEY WAY - CONTINUOUS ACTION

SIRENS AND FLASHING BLUES arrive. In the Suburban, Gloansy is slumped against the blood-streaked window and deployed airbag, unmoving. Dez crumpled to the floor of the passenger seat.

The place is SWARMING WITH OFFICERS.

Frawley is down on his haunches behind a patrol car, his shotgun on his knees, which are bobbing and jumping with adrenaline.

Frawley rises, searching for Dino among the crowd of cops and umbrellas -- finding him talking to a POLICE CAPTAIN.

FRAWLEY
Where’d the patrol cars come from?
POLICE CAPTAIN
We got a 911. Distress call from inside the armored.

Frawley looks at the armored truck at the camper wreck.

FRAWLEY
Dean, these guys... they go around alarms.
(thinking)
They wanted the call to go out.
DINO
What?

He looks back up Van Ness: a sea of cops.

FRAWLEY
They wanted police here.
143

INT. GRANDSTANDS CONCOURSE - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Doug moves back through the tunnel. He opens a door the leads him onto a MAIN CONCOURSE.

He walks up some stairs and out a SIDE DOOR.

144

EXT. YAWKEY WAY - MOMENTS LATER

Frawley is trolling slowly and sees ONE OFFICER off in the MIDDLE DISTANCE who doesn’t appear to be engaged.

FRAWLEY
Him. Follow him.
145

EXT. VAN NESS - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Doug crosses the street briskly. Painful glances at the smashed Suburban at the far end of the street.

Then, ahead of him, he sees Jem with his duffel -- a man in an FBI vest (Frawley) trailing him. Doug looks at freedom--looks back and follows Jem.

146

EXT. IPSWICH STREET - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Frawley following Jem along a row of parked cars.

FRAWLEY
Officer! Hold up a minute there, please.

Jem stops, motionless. When he turns, he turns firing his shoulder-harnessed Tec with a sweeping arm motion.

Two cops drop a sawhorse and run. Frawley spins away-- just in time. Jem FIRES. BYSTANDERS scatter.

Jem methodically comes after Frawley, who scrambles back on his haunches. He is shooting to kill Frawley rather than escape and if he hadn’t run out of ammunition-he would have.

ON DOUG

Two other Cops run past, one YELLING to Doug:

COP
Take the left flank! We’re gonna sweep up Boylston!

He sees Jem break across the street, bag in one hand, Tec- 9 in the other. Frawley stalking Jem with a shotgun.

Jem heads for a crowded McDonald’s, a panicked, grainy voice SCREAMING at him on the Drive-Thru speaker.

ON FRAWLEY

Shotgun to his shoulder. He FIRES WIDE, hitting a stand of free Apartment Guides in front of Jem, stopping him and keeping him away from the McDonald’s.

Jem cuts back the other way as people stream out of McDonald's. People are running in all directions.

ON DOUG

Seeing Frawley, panicked, looking almost childlike trying to pick up and load dirty shells from the gutter. Doug lines up A PERFECT SHOT AT FRAWLEY...

Doug tenses, waiting -- but does not take the shot.

ON JEM

Holding the money bag as a shield now, he crosses the intersection, where MORE COPS lie in wait. A FLURRY of rounds peck at his vest, his leg, his shooting arm.

Jem spits rounds back. He staggers up the ramp to an Osco Drug, arriving just as a Clerk inside locks the door. Jem stutters GUNFIRE, SHATTERING the glass -- until his Tec runs out of ammo. He throws it to the ground.

He produces a Beretta and CONTINUES FIRING.

Frawley returns fire, hitting JEM in the HAND.

FRAWLEY
On the ground, FBI. FBI!

Jem raises his extra pistol in his bloody hand. Frawley squeezes one blast low -- BLAM! - and one high.

JEM FALLS BACK, backpedaling until finally he falls off the wet curb and drops hard onto the road, back against a MAILBOX.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Coughlin! Throw me your weapon.

Doug looks back at him. A sea of police officers, skulking behind cars, holding weapons. Bouncing brass, glass and distant sirens are the only sounds.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
Coughlin!
JEM
All right!

Jem sees a DISCARDED MCDONALDS SODA, dropped in the panic.

JEM (CONT’D)
One second!

He strains to reach for it and finally grasping it, he takes a pull from the straw, quenching some deep thirst. Closes his eyes, he puts the GUN UNDER HIS CHIN AND FIRES.

The Police now enjoy a burst of courage and begin FIRING.

DOUG’S POV: Jem lying in the middle of the road, cops firing. Torn cash blowing everywhere.

Doug stares out at his friend -- his brother -- dead in the streets.

Something washes over Doug. He looks at the Beretta in his hand -- then holsters it, as he walks away.

147

EXT. MAIN STREET (CHARLESTOWN) - THIRTY MINUTES LATER

Doug walking almost in a trance, kids staring up at the beat cop. He sees nothing.

It starts to rain.

148

EXT. TOWN FLOWERS - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Doug stops, looking at the storefront window with hatred.

149

INT. TOWN FLOWERS - CONTINUOUS ACTION

The bell RINGS over the door as he enters. Doug waits a few airless moments -- Another funeral arrangement lies in the shop--like the one for Claire.

-- until Rusty pushes through the black curtain behind the counter. He looks up eyeing the cop like any customer. Then he recognizes Doug’s face. Doug indicates that Rusty should come, in a hushed, secretive manner.

DOUG
Is Fergie here? Something happened.

Rusty comes to the counter and the second he turns his head, Doug puts a GUN to it and PULLS THE TRIGGER, killing him instantly.

150

INT. FLORIST’S BACK ROOM - CONTINUOUS ACTION

The back room is empty.

Doug enters, comes to the center of the room. He sees a SMALL DOOR, slightly open, lifts his gun.

DOUG
(calling out)
Fergie, come on out.

The door opens and Fergie comes through in his sweatpants, holding a BOSTON HERALD in one hand and a .45 in the other he stands seven or eight feet from Doug.

FERGIE
Prick.

They start SHOOTING at one another.

Rather than sexing it up-- the feel should be of watching people shoot one another on surveillance video: wide, detached and oddly pedestrian.

Doug has the clear advantage of a VEST and after five or six shots Fergie BUCKLES and DROPS to the floor abruptly.

Doug walks over to him, unsteady, now realizing he has been hit once or twice himself. He replaces his empty clip with a new one, chambering a round.

He kneels next to Fergie who lies on the floor (now we see blood coming from Doug’s neck) and puts his gun in the florist’s CROTCH.

DOUG
Fergie, remember who clipped your nuts for you-

BOOM-

151

EXT. YAWKEY AND BOYLSTON INTERSECTION - TEN MINUTES LATER

Frawley listens to a COP give his SHOOTING STATEMENT to an INTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICER, exaggerating his role.

COP
At that time, I believe the suspect was holding the weapon like so-

Shows a gun held in front of the chest pointing skyward.

COP (CONT’D)
To reload, at which point I fired, struck the suspect. I believe at least once in the clavicle...

Frawley tunes this guy out

Then a flurry of activity among the cops nearby. A passing cop’s police radio drones:

POLICE RADIO (V.O.)
... repeat, all units, 529 Main Street, Charlestown...

Dino and Frawley look at each other.

FRAWLEY
That’s the Florist.

Dino hails a passing plainclothes DETECTIVE he knows.

DINO
Hey! Bobby!
DETECTIVE
Looks like somebody got Fergie.

Frawley steps forward into the rain.

FRAWLEY
Jesus Christ, that must be MacRay.
DINO
Slow down, Frawl.
FRAWLEY
(moving)
Claire Keesey.
152

INT./EXT. CLAIRE’S CONDO - ENTRANCE - MINUTES LATER

Doorbell RINGS. Through the door glass, Claire sees the outline of a policeman. She cautiously opens her door.

The cop raises his head. Claire sees Doug’s face -- and the dirty, bloody hand at his neck.

Her hand goes to her mouth, eyes wide.

153

INT. CLAIRE’S CONDO - MOMENTS LATER

Doug is LOWERED slowly onto the floor, then we see he is resting on her leg- she is holding him there, trying to be careful with him.

He is dying.

Doug looks up at Claire, consciousness starting to come and go

DOUG
Its okay.

She is holding his hand, trying to keep pressure on his neck.

CLAIRE
I’m gonna call an ambulance, Doug.
DOUG
(seems distant)
No, stay here.

Frawley arrives at the open door. Seeing the blood trail on the floor, he draws his SIG-Sauer and moves inside --

-- finding Claire kneeling beside a dying Doug MacRay.

Frawley comes up on the other side -- tugging the Beretta from Doug’s holster. Doug just watches him take it.

CLAIRE
(seeing Frawley)
GET AN AMBULANCE!

Frawley finds and grabs a telephone.

FRAWLEY
They’re on their way, Claire.
CLAIRE
(at Frawley, crying)
Did you do this?

He sighs, why is he always the bad guy? Shakes his head, ‘no.’

DOUG
(to Frawley)
She dimed me?
FRAWLEY
That’s right.

The feeling this gives Doug is worse than dying.

DOUG
Why’nt you take us at the hotel?

Frawley looks at Doug and Claire, confused.

FRAWLEY
You’re talking about Coughlin’s sister, right?

Doug’s eyes fix on Frawley, then he nods. Something seems to have come free from its moorings in him.

FRAWLEY (CONT’D)
You got the Florist, huh?
(beat)
Rusty, too?

The smallest of smiles- mostly in his eyes. His pupils start to PIN.

DOUG
(looking at Claire)
I’m sorry.

MUSIC CUE

She eases Doug’s head into her lap, and begins stroking his hair as though comforting him to sleep. She sees his hands are covered in dirt, as if he’d been digging. She studies him -- as he studied her when she was blindfolded. For a passing moment, she is overwhelmed with grief. Then -- as if responding to some inner voice -- she straightens her back, composing herself.

CONTINUED: (2)

CLAIRE
Shhh. Walk to the water. Until you can feel it on your toes.

Doug’s eyes fix on something in the distance -- she rocks him a little, slowly enough that we see just the smallest movement in the frame to match our

CUT TO:

MOVEMENT INSIDE A CAR. THAT SAME RHYTHMIC MOTION

We’re tight on something, not clear what it is, light is flaring and something is moving. We realize now we are in CLAIRE’S P.O.V. IN HER BLINDFOLD.

154

INT. MINIVAN - FLASHBACK

Doug is riding next to Claire in the back of the minivan. Gloansey is driving and Jem rides shotgun. Claire’s blind fold is wrapped tight around her face. She is silent. Doug is pressed close to her.

Doug looks out the window and sees the BEACH as they approach. He whispers in her ear so that no one else can hear.

DOUG
I know you’re scared. It’s almost over. You’re gonna to be fine.
CUT TO:
155

EXT. BEACH - MOMENTS LATER

Claire has been released from the car but still wears her blindfold. She walks forward on the beach toward the water nervously, unable to see where she’s going. Over this we hear the words Doug has just spoken to her.

DOUG (O.S.)
Don’t be afraid. Just walk to the water. Until you can feel it on your toes.

Her toes touch the water. She pulls at the blindfold, yanking it loose.

Looking up she sees a giant AIRLINER FLYING OVERHEAD as it TAKES OFF.

Black.