Audio problem: When Mitchell Stephens goes to the Otto's, Hartley offers him some tea just as the teakettle comes to a boil and starts whistling. Unfortunately, the kettle shown on the stove was the normal, non-whistling kind.
Mitchell Stephens: I can help you.
Billy Ansell: Not unless you can raise the dead.
Billy Ansell: Mitchell Stephens, Esquire. Tell me, would you be likely to sue me if I was to beat you right now? I mean, beat you so bad you piss blood and couldn't walk for a month. Because that's what I'm about to do.
Mitchell Stephens: No, Mr. Ansel. I wouldn't sue you.
Billy Ansell: You leave us alone, Stephens. You leave the people of this town alone.
Nicole: As you see her, two years later, I wonder if you realise something. I wonder if you understand that all of us - Dolores, me, the children who survived, the children who didn't - that we're all citizens of a different town now. A place with its own special rules and its own special laws. A town of people living in the sweet hereafter.
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