:13:00
	I was going to break your neck.
Lucky you spoke.
:13:04
	Yes, it certainly was.
:13:06
	All right, he's asleep now.
:13:09
	You used to live here with your mother,
didn't you?
:13:11
	Yes. We live in town now
and rent this place.
:13:14
	Come on, get up.
You can make it if you go quietly.
:13:17
	My ankle is so swollen now,
I couldn't walk five yards.
:13:20
	Why does everything happen to me?
:13:24
	What will you do?
You can't stay here.
:13:27
	You're still the prettiest girl
in Lochester.
:13:31
	Now, look. This escape was insane.
You haven't been convicted yet.
:13:36
	Go on back.
Maybe they won't convict you.
:13:40
	The first day I saw the faces
of those 12 citizens on the jury...
:13:43
	...I knew my goose was cooked.
:13:47
	They don't like me.
:13:48
	What do you suppose they think
after this jailbreak?
:13:51
	That you're guilty.
:13:53
	It's possible I am, don't you think?
:13:57
	Maybe, maybe not.
:13:59
	As far as I know, you're capable
of anything, even burning a factory.
:14:04
	You were the wildest kid that ever went
to a Lochester school.
:14:09
	You wore pigtails then.
I was in love with you.
:14:12
	Always collecting a bad reputation,
even after you grew up.
:14:15
	Speeches on street corners, petitions.
:14:18
	Any kind of a squawk,
Dilg's right in the middle of it.
:14:21
	This was bound to happen.
What's wrong with you, anyway?
:14:25
	It's a form of self-expression.
:14:27
	Some people write books, some music.
I make speeches on street corners.
:14:35
	This is no time for nonsense.
:14:39
	You're even prettier now.
:14:41
	What about Yates?
Does he know what you've done?
:14:44
	- Yates?
- Sam Yates, your lawyer.
:14:47
	Don't you know your own lawyer?
:14:51
	The state gave me a lawyer.
:14:53
	If anybody can help, it's Sam.
:14:56
	I'll call him,
and that's the end of it for me.
:14:59
	Whatever Yates decides,
he's got to get you out of here by dawn.