美剧纸牌屋第1季第12集台词
(2016-11-09 13:57:23)
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美剧台词 |
Hey. Excuse me. I'm Paul Capra. I'm here to see Christina.
Oh, right this way, Mr. Capra. She's expecting you.
Paul.
Hey, Christina.
Hi. It's good to see you.
Yeah, you too.
Can I get you anything?
Nah. I grabbed some
breakfast on the way
down.
Okay. Have a seat.
All right. Thank you.
I asked you
down here because I spoke to D-Trip and the
D.N.C. We'd like you to run for Peter's seat.
As you probably know, the election's been set for
the first week of February.
You want me to run?
With your stature in the community, your grass roots organizing experience
Christina, hold on.
I know it's a lot to consider.
It's only been
a month.
Well, we still have to govern, Paul.
I thought you asked me down here because you wanted to talk or
something.
I do. About the election.
I mean about Peter. How come you didn't go to the funeral?
I couldn't.
How you been holding
up?
I'm all right. It's been hard keeping the office on
track.
Jesus. Screw the office. What about you? You're allowed to
grieve, Christina.
Paul there are 600,000 people counting on us. I can't let my feelings get in the way of
that. Will you hear me out about
running for Peter's seat?
Well, you've passed the vetting process with flying colours. Is there anything we might have missed? (with distinction)
No, sir.
Tell me about your experience as the chair of the oversight reform
committee.
It's been very rewarding.
What are the biggest challenges you've had to face?
Partisanship.
Well, I suppose a room filled with 435 big egos isn't the
most hospitable
place for oversight. Do you want to be Vice President,
Tabitha?
It would be a great honuor, sir.
We'll be in touch.
That's all?
Mm-hmm. For the time being.
Thank you, Mr. President.
We have to cross her off.
I agree. She could put a crack addict to
sleep.
Then what is she doing on the goddamn list?
Tabitha's a very gifted legislator.
I don't want people who make sense on
paper. I need at least one viable
option. The two of you created this list and have
proceeded to cross off every name you've put on it.
It's just a
first pass, sir. We need time to fully vet all
Jim is gonna win this thing in Pennsylvania, and
we're no closer to naming his replacement than we were a month
ago.
Let us take
another crack at it and give you a few more names to
consider. (an attempt to gain or achieve
something)
I just want one name.
We'll have something for you by tomorrow morning.
Thank you, Mr. President.
He's ready to say yes to anything.
Yeah, for this
to work, I don't think you can be there. Not when I first mention it.
I agree. You bring it up in your morning brief, and when I
show up, I'll act
surprised. Assuming he's open to the idea. Look, all we have to do tomorrow is plant the notion in his
head. I'm sure you'll be persuasive.
Hello? Mr. Capra?
Yeah. Who's this?
Janine Skorsky from Slugline. We spoke when I wrote the piece about
Congressman Russo's passing.
I'm done giving
interviews about Peter, okay? He was a troubled guy.
End of story.
This is not about his death. I'm calling you because my sources at the D Triple
C are telling me that you might be running for his seat.
I'm not talking about that.
But you did have a meeting this morning with Christina Gallagher,
correct?
I'm driving right now. I really shouldn't be on the phone.
If you do run, I would like to know about your involvement in the
closing of the Philadelphia shipyard.
That decision was made in Washington. The association wasn't consulted.
Forgive me. I find that hard to believe. I read all of the transcripts from
the BRAC commission. Congressman Russo didn't give any
testimony. So are you saying that he didn't consult with you
once before you
somebody was strong-arming him,
okay? It was politics.
Do you know who would've pressured him?
Look, I don't know. He just said people up the food
chain.
Did he say anything more specific about
you know what? There's traffic. I gotta go.
Mr. Capra, I would
Should I be prepared to do press?
If he's amenable.
What do you think our chances are?
Better than 50-50, if I had to say.
We won't announce until after Matthews wins,
though.
I hate to admit it, but I'm nervous.
So am I.
It's just the last time, we found ourselves
that's my fear too.
All right. You call me, either way.
In no more than nine hours.
Linda's been in there far too long. If the President takes this much convincing, it doesn't bode well. I can feel it his hesitation on the other side of that door. I know it's pointless to worry until I know what cards I'm holding. Perhaps he just got interrupted by some
He wants to tap Raymond Tusk.
What?
He thinks it's a bold idea.
It's an idiotic idea. The man's never held public
office.
That's one of the things the President said he likes about
him.
The President wants to nominate a multibillionaire in a struggling
economy? He'll alienate half the
country.
Which is exactly what I said, but he made it very clear he does not
want me to fight him on this.
So you didn't mention me at all?
I never had the chance. His mind was made up before I could say a
word.
Well, we have to unmake it.
Well, you can try, but if you do, my guess is he's
gonna cut you out of the process altogether. He seemed adamant.
We should go in there.
Mr. President.
Morning, Frank. Will you give us a few minutes, Linda?
Of course.
Linda fill you
in?
I think Raymond Tusk is an exciting, bold
idea.
Well, I'm glad you agree. Linda didn't think so.
He's a proven
businessman. Brilliant, but down-to-earth.
Do you know him personally?
I met him briefly once at a
fund-raiser. Last night when I called him was the first time we
had a
meaningful conversation.
Did he seem open to the idea?
I sensed a good deal of reluctance.
He wanted a few days to consider.
Well, good. That gives us time to start vetting him.
He's clean. I had him vetted last year when I was considering him for
secretary of the treasury.
And did he say why he's reluctant?
No. Didn't give a reason. Just wanted to mull it over.
I want to send someone to St. Louis to speak to him in person, convince him to
accept the nomination.
And who are you thinking about?
I'd send Linda, but there's so much work for her
to do here, and, well, she can be abrasive
at
times.
Yeah, she can be a bit tough.
I want someone
with gravitas. Birch is a possibility, but he's not always been
our strongest ally.
I'm not sure I would trust Bob with something like this.
I would be happy to go myself, sir.
I can use a light touch
and give him the respect he deserves.
Good. I'll let his people know you're coming.
Thank you, Mr. President.
Thank you, Frank.
Tell me, Francis.
It's good we were prepared for anything. I have to fly to St. Louis tonight.
"Somebody was strong-arming him," and when I asked him who, he
said, quote, - "people up the food chain.
It's Washington. Congressmen get strong-armed all the time.
My gut
says it was Frank Underwood. He had nothing to do with Russo before the
shipyard closing, and then suddenly he's propping him
up?
That doesn't mean he was
Let's cut the bullshit once and for all,
Zoe. I know he's been feeding you your
stories. I don't want to screw you over, but
I'm not gonna stop digging on
this.
I won't say he was a source.
But you do know each other.
Show me your notes, and I'll talk to him.
These are the notes from the Capra call. And these are the transcripts from the
BRAC hearing. When they got to the Philadelphia shipyard, Russo
doesn't say anything.
That's fine. Yeah, I would just put both of them in that
file.
Claire, I just got a call from the P.R. office at Sancorp saying they wanted to send
a film
crew to take footage of our
filtration project in Botswana.
Right. They're just using that for promotional
material.
Sancorp fought us on the watershed bill.
They helped us get the filters out of South Sudan.
I thought that was the state department.
No. You remember Remy Danton? You met him in your
office right after you started working here.
The lobbyist.
I asked him for his help. We're just returning the
favour, that's all.
Claire, they're against everything we stand for.
It's harmless. They'll send the video to a few of their investors
and make some commercials.
This makes me very uncomfortable the idea they are sending the film
crew,
Gillian, so please work with them on
that.
One of my colleagues is looking into Peter
Russo. The assumption is you strong-armed him
into closing the shipyard.
Where does your colleague get their information?
I don't know.
Allocating the D.O.D. budget is always a
free-for-all.
Did you pressure him?
There were certain people that were gonna benefit
from the base closing sooner rather than later. I didn't strong-arm Peter. I advised him to trade in a losing hand for
a winning one.
How did he stand to win?
He made allies out of enemies. That's a very valuable thing in Congress. I wish I could give you something juicier, but the shipyard closing was just politics as usual. I assume your colleague is Ms. Skorsky. Does she know we're talking?
No. Of course not.
Be in
touch.
More than you ever wanted to know about Raymond
Alan Tusk the companies he controls, political
contributions. A GQ article entitled
"Backwoods billionaire" is about his humble
Midwestern lifestyle. (Gentlemen Quarterly)
Jesus.
There's also a copy of the financial disclosure requirements and
details of the blind trust.
I think the trust is where you want to
focus. Could Linda be behind all this?
To what end?
To get you out of town for a few days while they
continue the search without your interference.
The President has no reason to mistrust me.
Unless Linda told him you want the vice presidency.
No. She's in way too deep.
We misjudged
her on the secretary of state nomination.
That was different. She blindsided
me. (hit or attack someone on their blind side (a
direction in which a person has a poor view, esp. of approaching
danger)) Now she knows my eyes are wide open.
Do you want the Gaffney bag or regular
business?
Regular business. Tusk can dress down if he
wants to, but I'm representing the White House. Oh, and get Walter Doyle onto
Tusk. Let's see if we can dig up anything.
I'll call him right now.
And keep your eye on Janine Skorsky while I'm away.
She's been prying into
Russo.
What does she know?
She knows the right questions to ask.
I want to make sure she doesn't get the right
answers.
I'm on
it.
McCuddin. McCuddin.
What was that?
Mccuddin Air Force Base. BRAC hearing. Was there on April 12th. David Rasmussen stepped down less than a week later. Womack takes his place. So maybe
Wait. Slow down.
McCuddin is in his district.
Is that the shipyard thing?
Janine, call me back. I think it was Womack who pressured Russo. Russo was probably just earning a favour he could cash in later. I'm around. Did you ever have to fight her to kill a story?
Janine?
Yeah. When she worked for you.
Only when I knew she was wrong.
She's trying to draw up this whole
conspiracy thing with Russo and Frank Underwood and the
whole shipyard closing. But I'm pretty sure she's wrong.
Pretty sure isn't the same as certain.
No. I am certain.
How do you know?
I have sources.
Underwood?
No. No. Never mind. I'll figure it out.
Mrs. Tusk?
Jean, please. You must be Frank. Come in.
So nice to meet you.
The guest room is this way.
It is very kind of you to have invited me to stay here.
Why waste the taxpayers' money on a hotel when we have a perfectly
good bed?
Well, both they and I are very grateful.
I'm sorry Raymond isn't awake to greet you. He goes to bed at
I know he's an early
riser. I understand.
Would you like a wake-up
knock?
No. I have an alarm on my phone.
Sleep
tight.
Thank you so much.
I would say good morning, but it's the middle of
the night. It's a pleasure to meet you.
And you too.
Was I making too much noise?
No. I smelled bacon.
Here. Coffee? Booze? At 2:00 A.M.
Just water for now.
It's filtered. Your wife would approve. You ever been to St. Louis before?
Just the airport.
What do you
think so far?
Well, I've only seen your neighborhood and
whatever I could see out the window on the
interstate.
Good enough. It's all pretty much the
same.
Excuse me. Listen, um, I still haven't
showered. My mind is on China here. Uh, what do you say you
get a few more
zs and we try this again in a few hours with our clothes
on?
Sounds like a plan.
Meet me at my office at 9:30. I'll have a driver pick you up. Can I ask why you do that?
Do what?
Tap your ring like that. I've seen you do it on TV. Two taps every time you get up from a table or
leave a lectern.
Something my father taught me. It's meant to harden your knuckles
so you don't break them if you get into a fight. It also has the added benefit of
knocking on wood. My father believed that success is a mixture of
preparation and luck. Tapping the table kills both birds with one
stone.
Your father was a peach farmer?
Yes, he was. Not a very successful one.
Lack of preparation or lack of luck?
Lack of both. He was better at giving advice than following
it.
Hmm.
Miss? Miss, your card.
Thank you.
Ms. Gallagher, my name's Janine Skorsky.
I'm a reporter at Slugline. I wrote the profile on
Congressman
I remember.
Do you have a minute?
If this is about Peter, I
No. It's about Paul Capra. We know that he might be running for Congressman
Russo's old seat.
I can't comment on that.
We're just trying to do some background on the shipyard closing
last April.
Listen, I just want to eat my breakfast.
We have sources that are saying that the Congressman was being
pressured by someone to not fight the closure.
Who?
That's what I'm trying to figure out.
This is completely off the record, I
promise you.
Hi, Christina.
Doug, hi.
How you holding
up?
I'm okay. I'm I'm good.
I saw you sitting over here. You mind if I
No. Please.
Ms. Skorsky, right? I believe we spoke a few times
when you used to work at the Herald.
Whenever I could get past the press office
gauntlet to you.
We do like to run a tight
ship.
Mm.
So what brings you to the capitol?
I was just asking Ms. Gallagher who's running to fill the vacant seat in
Pennsylvania's 1st.
Well, the honest answer is we don't know.
Thank you for your time, Ms. Gallagher.
Anyone starts harassing you with questions you don't want to
answer, you let me know. I'll handle them. You got enough on your plate right now.
Thanks, Doug. I appreciate that.
Hang in
there, okay?
Yes.
Ah. Uganda, Peru, Nepal, Indonesia Nicaragua.
Well, you are quite the well
travelled man.
No. I'm the man who stays at home. Jean brought those back for me.
Mr. Tusk,
I am, First names. After all, we have broken bacon
together. We can safely assume that we're familiar.
Raymond, I realize that you are a very busy man, so I'm gonna
cut right to
the chase. The President sincerely would like you to become
the next Vice President.
That part I already knew.
And I'm here to convince you to say yes.
Another thing I already knew.
Well, I don't know that I can tell you anything you don't already
know. But perhaps you can tell me what your hesitation
is.
Speak. Yes.
Now, I understand you might have some concerns about the financial
disclosures leading
Speak. No. I have eight people representing me at eight
simultaneous meetings in six time zones right now.
I sit here and answer their questions, provided
they come in the form of a single yes or no proposition.
Well, then, let me give that a
try. Would you like to be the Vice President? Yes or
no?
Hold on a minute. I am very sorry. Let me have 20 minutes to wrap up these
meetings. And then what do you say we
get out of the office and away from this damn phone? Meet me at my
car.
Betty can tell you where it's parked. Go ahead.
He's deflecting.
What I can't tell is whether it's because he's
inclined to say no or wants to be wooed to say
yes. Either way, I'll have to ease him into the
conversation, not be so blunt. This trip may take longer than I
thought.
We've looked through all
the file cabinets.
They're not on his computer?
Not with the Congressman's handwritten
notes.
All right. I'll check his office.
Ah. There is a comfort to these
woods. Like they're my backyard. Well, they are my backyard, in a way.
I own them.
How much land?
Six thousand acres.
You think I could get a tour of
your Fulton plant while I'm in
town?
If you'd like. But I don't know why you'd want to be there when
you could be out here.
I've never seen a nuclear plant.
Not much to see. Steel, concrete, a lot of steam.
The President hasn't exactly been a big supporter of nuclear
power. Is that, uh, part of your hesitation that fear
that the administration
He's just being savvy.
Nuclear energy is a tough sell after
Japan. But it's the only option we have right now that
doesn't completely trash the
planet. The argument against nuclear power is an emotional
one.
And you don't make decisions based on emotion.
Decisions based on emotion aren't decisions at all.
They're instincts, which can be of value.
The rational and the irrational complement each
other. Individually, they're far less powerful.
And which category do your thoughts on the vice presidency fall
into?
Do you hear that song? It's a hermit thrush.(隐士夜鸫) Can't see him. "Solitary, the thrush" "The hermit, withdrawn to himself, avoiding the settlements, sings by himself a song. " Do you know the poem?
No, I don't.
It's Walt Whitman. It's about the death of Abraham Lincoln.
He's over there somewhere.
Yes, I know the damn poem. We studied it at the Sentinel. I said to my Professor, "why mourn the death of
Presidents, or anyone for that matter? The dead can't hear
us. " And he asked me if I believed in heaven.
I said no. And then he asked if I had no faith in God.
I said, "you have it
wrong. It's God who has no faith in us."
Deeper into the woods.
I think you're being paranoid.
He came up right after I sat down. It was creepy.
I'm telling you, it was womack.
Is that what Underwood said?
He didn't name names.
But who else? What's the big deal?
Congressmen trade
favours.
One of these congressmen committed suicide.
I think you're
stretching here, Janine.
To try and connect I have gone after big fish
before. I know what it feels like to be watched.
Underwood's education bill went to the floor
just three days after Womack became majority leader. You leaked the education bill. And then there was the Kern article.
Those were two completely different stories.
Wait. What was the guy? Uh, what was his name? He's the
one who told that Kern wrote the article for the school
paper.
Roy Kapeniak.
You should go talk to him.
There's no link.
Except you. Underwood's been using you, Zoe.
Don't you want to know why?
Hi. Remy Danton's on line two. He says it's important.
Hello, Remy.
Hey, Claire. I got a call from the P.R. team at Sancorp. They said Gillian Cole isn't being
cooperative.
Hasn't gotten back to them, you mean?
No. Told them point-blank she doesn't want the film crew there. (direct and blunt) I'm looking at an e-mail. She wrote that they would be disruptive to the project and local community. Is that her, or is that coming from you?
No. I made it very clear that I wanted her to work
with them.
Well, it seems like she's doing the
opposite.
I will speak to her, and then I'll sort things out with
the P.R. team personally.
Thank you, Claire.
You
bet. (you may be sure, certainly)
Is Gillian at lunch?
She didn't come in yet today. She's not feeling well.
Let me know when she gets here.
What time is your flight?
6:40.
We should get
going. There's gonna be traffic.
Almost ready.
I've been thinking. The, uh, older man you were with.
Was it Underwood? So, what this is really about is
covering your
own ass.
That is not true.
You don't want anybody to know you were sleeping with him.
Not exactly objective reporting, is it? Don't
fucking lecture
me on journalistic ethics.
How many of the stories you brought me at the Herald were because you were
I'm not gonna have this conversation.
Fine. Maybe you should take a cab to the airport.
Don't punish me for being honest.
You haven't been honest. I had to ask. And you still haven't given me a straight
answer.
Yes. It was him.
I I don't know if I can do this, Zoe.
Do what?
You fucked a Congressman to get ahead.
I'm not the first person to ever do something like that,
Lucas.
But I'm not sleeping with those other people, am I?
What, so you just hate me now?
No. I probably love you. That's the fucking problem. Let's go. I'm parked illegally.
So I hear you went stomping through the
woods today.
We did, and then Raymond was kind enough to arrange a tour of
the Fulton plant.
And I'm sure you were wondering, "when is this old fool gonna
get around to
brass tacks?" (start to consider the basic facts or practical
details)
I'm here to simply answer questions.
I figured that you would make up your mind when
you're ready.
There are two minds here.
We know all about the blind trust.
Does it concern either of you?
The words "blind" and "trust" are not among my
favourites in the English language. But I have no problem with it in theory.
Not managing our assets for a few years could unburden us from a great
deal of stress.
Well, then, what does your reluctance stem from?
Why do you think the President wants me?
Well, I can't speak on his behalf, but if I were to
Aren't you here to do just that, speak on his behalf?
If I were to speculate, I think the President would prob
Speculation is a poor form of investment and an
equally poor form of politics. Tell me what you know.
I don't know what you mean.
Well, what do you think I should do? You, personally, Frank
Underwood?
My opinion isn't what matters here.
It does to me. Should I do it? Yes or no?
Well, there's a great number of things to consider And
I'm sure you've considered them all. Yes or no, Frank?
No, I will not answer that question.
Because you think I shouldn't.
Because it's not relevant.
All right, then. Let me ask you another way. Would you take the job?
It hasn't been offered to me.
What if it were?
I have a distaste for
hypotheticals just the same as you have a distaste for
speculation.
All right, all right. That's enough business for now. We can discuss it more tomorrow.
Oh! Get in. Get in there, Bruce. Sorry.
Sorry to bother
you, ma'am. Um, I'm looking for Roy Kapeniak.
I thought his trailer was over here.
Am I in the right place?
You're in the right place a month ago.
He got evicted.
He was shootin' off his gun too much in the
yard.
Do you know where I can find him?
Why?
I'm a relative. His his niece.
Skipped
town is what I heard. Had a girl livin' with him. Maybe she knows. Name was Echo.
Echo?
That's what she went by, at
least. Works at the titty bar over
on 40.
Highway 40?
Mm. Across from the Burger King.
Okay. Thank you.
Girls get in free.
Oh. I'm looking for Echo.
Who?
Echo.
Roy was a fucking wacko.
I was stupid to live with him as long as I
did.(mad, insane, a crazy person)
Do you know where he is now?
I don't know, and I don't care.
He ever talk about the article I wrote?
All the time. He had it
framed. Bet it's still in the trailer if it's not in
a
junkyard right now.
Did he say why he called me? Did he ever tell you?
I was there.
Where?
When the guy showed up.
Who?
I won't name names.
Fuck Roy Kapeniak. You don't owe him
shit.
Some guy who said he was a Congressman.
Was it Him?
No. He was younger, tall, not much hair, pretty
good-looking.
Yeah, that was him.
You're absolutely sure?
He brought bourbon, blow, stayed the
whole night. The whole thing was his idea.
What, to say that Kern wrote the editorial?
That guy didn't write anything. It was all Roy. Okay, look, I know I said that I wouldn't name
names, and I won't if that's what you want.
But you could be famous overnight. Talk shows, TV, the whole country
No way.
You wouldn't have to dance anymore. You could do whatever you want.
Don't use my fucking name, okay? I already said more than I should
have.
Stamper, it's midnight.
Two things, boss. First, Janine Skorsky ambushed Christina
this morning. I intercepted her before she could ask too
much.
Should we be worried?
I can keep this contained,
sir. I just wanted you to know.
All right. What's the other thing?
Doyle came back with his research. I just e-mailed it to you. The President told you he and Tusk didn't know each other, right?
Yeah. He said they met once, I think, at a
fund-raiser.
That would appear to be a lie.
All right. I have it in front of me now.
Doyle catalogued all the
instances he could find in which the two of them were in the
same city at the same time. Items in red are events that they both
attended. And he found something else. Back in Walker's private sector
days, he was the C.E.O. of Pioneer Airlines. Guess who owned a third of the stock when it was
sold to United?
Raymond Tusk.
My guess is that he and Walker know each other quite well.
All right. Let me look this
over. I'll call you back. I'm being played. But why?
Did I wake you again?
No. I'd like to talk.
Give me a moment.
Carolina Parakeet.
You're wrong, but you're close. This is the Sun Conure. They look very similar, but the Carolina Parakeet
is extinct. Was killed off because
it was considered a pest. Interesting species, though. Voracious appetite. And he was poison. Cats who ate him died. This bird is not the only thing you've
misidentified
since you've been in St. Louis.
You and Walker are old friends. I wasn't sent here to vet you.
Very good.
Tell me why I am here, then.
So I can vet you.
For the vice presidency?
The President values my advice, and he tends to
follow it. Like when I advised him not to make you Secretary
of State.
That was very bad advice.
Yes, it was. One of the larger mistakes I've made, and I very
rarely make mistakes of any
size. You've proven yourself to be quite
difficult. Kern, the teachers' strike, now Matthews.
You attribute all that to me?
If I had to guess.
A smart man once said to me that speculation is a poor form of
politics. Why don't you stick to what you know,
Raymond?
What I know is you are extremely effective at
what you set
your mind to. That is valuable to me, and I've already told
Garrett that it could be valuable to him, somebody at his side with one foot in the executive
branch and one in the legislative. He is very open to the idea.
My turn to speculate. Your recommendation comes at a
price.
Fact. I have something that you want. You have something that I want. Have I said something amusing?
Oh, I've just sat too many times on your side of
the table not to enjoy the irony of finding myself on this side of
it.
Would you like to hear what I want?
I don't shackle myself to
people I don't know.
What I want is one favour. One and only one.
Which is?
I need to be certain you'll grant it before I'll
take the risk of being more specific.
A blank
check.
Of
sorts.
You would never grant anyone a blank check.
No. But I'm not sitting on that side of the
table. We still believe in handshakes where I come
from. Do they still mean anything in Washington? Who are
you calling?
Car service to get me to the airport.
Frank, I will tell the President that I want until Friday to
think things
over before I make my recommendation. Let me know if you change your mind.
And let me arrange the car for you.
Hi. I'd like to arrange a car,
please.
How are you feeling?
Better than yesterday. But I might take off early if,
uh, the nausea comes back.
I find it interesting that you stay home the day after you
blow off
the Sancorp people. You weren't feeling sick, Gillian.
(fail to keep an appointment with
someone)
I find it extremely offensive that you'd accuse me of hiding behind my
pregnancy.
You knew what I wanted.
The Botswana project is mine.
Under my
umbrella, using money I raised.
You promised me autonomy.
Um, excuse us
for a moment, please. I promised to empower you. That's not the same thing as you doing as you choose
without consulting me.
I'm not gonna allow a project I've put almost three years of my
life into
your project wouldn't be happening if it weren't
for Sancorp.
I didn't ask for their help. How about consulting me before you struck a
deal?
Let's get something very clear. I run the organization. You work for it.
Our agreement is an affiliation, Claire. Worldwell isn't your vassal.
Yes, it is, entirely, if we're going to be blunt about
it.
That's not what you proposed six months ago.
It's what you signed up
for when
you signed the contract.
There was a good faith understanding that And
you dissolved that good
faith by disobeying me.
Disobeying you?
Yes.
I threaten you, don't I?
Nothing about you threatens me. But maybe you should take a leave of
absence.
Are you firing me?
That's up to you, but right now you should
leave.
Did you get her on record?
No. She wouldn't talk to me otherwise.
We need hard
proof that Underwood was behind it.
This whole thing is making me really nervous.
That you'll be exposed?
Not that. It's Francis. If this really goes as deep as we think, and he's already watching you
You think he's dangerous?
I know he is.
Then that's why we have to keep going.
He crushes
people
Hey, Callum.
Hey.
Look, if you weren't afraid, you wouldn't be doing your job.
The only articles that I have ever written that
truly mattered scared the shit out of me. We need to know about anything that might've
happened with Russo. Something Underwood could have held over him.
We have to go back to Christina Gallagher, see if she'll give us
something.
It can't be me. If I go back for a second time
I'll do it.
You honestly had no idea that the President and Tusk were close?
He never showed up once on any call sheet,
phone
log or schedule during the campaign or since we've
been in
office.
I'd love to
believe you, Linda, but I'm finding it very difficult.
What would I gain by keeping you in the
dark? I am as shocked as you are, Frank.
Well, don't let
on that you know.
Of course not.
What's the President saying?
He wants to meet with you Tuesday to get your
report on Tusk.
That's a
farce.
Should I come
up with a reason to delay the meeting?
No. Maybe we'll learn something. What time?
2:00 P.M.
All right. I'll be there. Thank you, Linda. We have one week.
To accomplish what exactly?
To force Tusk's hand. He wants me beholden to him? No. We have to make him come crawling to me. What's his weakness? (owing thanks or having a duty to someone in return for help or a service)
His fortune. Wouldn't you say that's his strength?
Not if it's slipping away.
How do you make 40 billion disappear overnight?
We can't. But maybe we can create the illusion that it's in danger. The brief you gave me on his assets. How much of his total net worth is in nuclear power?
About a third. Sixteen reactors here in the states, 37
worldwide.
Well, that's what we hit him with. We go after his nuclear
interests.
Even so, he's got 25 billion in other investments.
Doug, this is a man who built his fortune from
nothing. The money doesn't mean anything to him.
It's what it represents.
Which is what?
His life's work. Get Remy Danton on the phone. Set up a meeting as quickly as you can.
You got it.
Tusk understands the difference between power and money.
That's precisely what makes him dangerous.
He doesn't measure his wealth
in private jets but purchased
souls. I've worked too hard to get within arm's reach of
the prize only to have my hand cut off just before I seize
it.
Zoe Barnes, here to see
Christina Gallagher.
I'm sorry. I don't see an appointment.
Oh, there must be a mistake. I have an 11:30.
One second.
My name is Zoe Barnes. I work at Slugline. You spoke to my colleague Janine Skorsky.
Miss
Oh, we're fine, thanks.
You can't just come in here
there are things you don't know about
Peter. I wrote the article about Roy Kapeniak.
Please leave. Right now.
It was Peter who convinced him to talk to me.
What? I don't I don't understand. Why would he
Somebody pressured him to do it. The night of January 24th. That's when he went to speak to Kapeniak. Do you remember anything strange around the time of the inauguration? Anything that could have been held over him?
No, I don't.
If he was mixed
up in things that in any way contributed to his suicide,
wouldn't you want to know? 'm not trying to cause you any more
pain. I just want the truth. And you deserve that more than anyone.
What was the date?
The 24th of January.