Post by Bagpipedisaster on Oct 22, 2007 0:26:41 GMT 1
Jane Doe: Now you see it, now you don't
SYNOPSIS
At the United Metropolitan Bank, a high rise monument to man’s architectural genius, a line of people makes its way through the atrium to a large Plexiglas display case containing the Declaration of Independence. Among the sightseers are Cathy Davis (Lea Thompson) and her two teen kids Susan (Jessy Schram) and Nick (Zack Shada). Nick knows all about the historical document. Susan finds her brilliant little brother annoying. Nick explains that the Declaration is kept in a special titanium encasement containing a little helium. The paper it’s written on is two hundred twenty-nine years old. If it wasn’t protected like that, it would have disintegrated by now.
Clarence (Timothy Bottoms), a bank security guard, sits near a bank of surveillance monitors. One camera zooms in on the display case. It is 5:00 a.m. and the Declaration is there. But when a CSA Agent (Wiley Pickett) walks through the room on his hourly rounds, he’s stopped dead in his tracks. The display case is empty!
Later, Frank Darnell (Joe Penney), CSA case officer Helen Morrison (Tamlyn Tomita), director of bank security William Joyner (Robin Thomas) and the NSA Agent gaze at the empty case. They discuss how it seemingly just disappeared. The encasement hasn’t been compromised. It is still locked. Joyner fills them in that a physician from the National Archive has the only key and the case is wired to an alarm that would have gone off if it was tampered with. They decide to put a release out to the public that the exhibit is closed for a few days. Darnell and the others review the security tapes. The Declaration is there one moment and then … it just disappears!
In the Davis home, Cathy and her husband Jack (William R. Moses) are in bed when the phone rings. Cathy says her game company needs her to come to work. Jack notes that it is 4:45 a.m. Cathy says they think someone is trying to steal the game she is developing.
At the bank, Cathy joins all the agents looking at the display case. She is annoyed that someone would steal the Declaration of Independence. She meets Helen Morrison (Tamlyn Tomita). Helen is dating Darnell, whom Cathy used to date, so Helen doesn’t like her. She is jealous that Darnell thinks Cathy is so brilliant that they need her on the case.
Cathy also meets Joyner, the bank security director. She asks if anyone ever stopped to think that maybe the document wasn’t stolen out of the case – it was never there to begin with!
Cathy yanks the display case open and removes the document’s protective encasement. At CSA Headquarters, they examine it and discover a plasma screen inside, powered by a battery and controlled by remote. The Declaration of Independence everyone had been looking at was just an image!
Cathy is convinced that the document was stolen when it arrived, before going on display. The thieves have a four day head start. She advises the group to expect a call soon. “Whoever stole the Declaration of Independence isn’t planning on selling it on eBay. They’re obviously holding one of America’s most cherished documents for a very large ransom.” She then leaves, explaining that she thinks she’s done her part.
At school, Cathy picks up Nick, who tells her that Susan is fawning over her boyfriend “Dr. Jekyll” a.k.a. Phil (Jason Maves). “He seems like a nice enough boy,” Cathy says. Nick replies, “Just wait until you see his Mr. Hyde.” Phil opens the door for Susan and is so sweet to Cathy. Driving home, Susan and Nick bicker about Phil. She likes him. He doesn’t. Cathy tells them to knock it off.
At home, Jack arrives to Cathy’s fallen soufflé and two annoyed children. He can tell the kids have been difficult. He says his old friend Norman Klein (Ken Michelman) just moved to town with his son Brent (Logan Bartholomew), who is Susan’s age. Norman’s wife died a year earlier and Jack wants to have them over for dinner. Cathy answers the phone. “Telemarketer.” Then she accidentally-on-purpose spills the milk and rushes out to buy more.
At the supermarket, Cathy pretends to shop next to Darnell. The CSA needs help. They haven’t had a ransom call and don’t have any leads. Cathy’s back on the case. At home, Jack and Cathy talk about work and how busy they are. She struggles with the fact that she’s lying to her husband about her whereabouts.
At the bank, Darnell talks with Clarence, the security guard, who claims he saw nothing out of the ordinary. Helen tells Darnell how annoyed she is about Cathy being back on the case. She’s the case officer; she can handle it. Darnell says it’s called teamwork.
Cathy and Joyner review the video showing the Declaration being handed to an CSA Agent, who places it in the display case. It also depicts Donald Henkel, the bank’s security system installer, who supplied the display case, the alarm system and the additional monitoring devices. Joyner says that Henkel is a nice quiet guy and an electronic genius. Cathy and Darnell agree they should go to Henkel’s office. Helen comes in with the same idea, but two steps behind Cathy.
While waiting for Helen to arrive with a search warrant, Cathy and Darnell bicker. He says he and Helen are “just friends.” Cathy replies, “Frank, when I first came aboard 20 years ago, we became ‘just friends.’ Then you went on that assignment to Ireland with Lorraine Brownell and became ‘just friends’ with her. You’re no better a liar today than you were then.” “Cathy,” Darnell protests, “I’m not the same guy I was then.”
Helen, Darnell and Cathy enter Henkel’s office. Cathy notices 27 messages on his answering machine – the first beginning on Monday. Henkel hasn’t been there all week. When they go to his home, they discover it also empty and note that his home phone also has messages beginning on Monday. “Ingenious,” Darnell says. “He rigged the fake document so that no one would know it was gone for almost a week. He could be anywhere by now.” “Well,” Helen replies, “sure looks like he’s our man.”
At the Davis home, Brent and Norman are over for dinner. Brent is good-looking but comes off as arrogant because he’s shy. In the kitchen, Cathy tries to get Susan to agree to show Brent around. “He’s conceited, egotistical and definitely monosyllabic. Besides, I don’t want Phil to get the wrong impression.”
The phone rings. Cathy says it’s a wrong number. She intentionally drops the “welcome” cake and rushes out to buy another, telling Susan to stall. At CSA headquarters, Cathy meets with Darnell and Helen. They listen to a ransom request of five million dollars. Helen is smug as she points out that the voice on the ransom message matches the voice on Henkel’s answering machine. “You don’t need to be a puzzle expert to see that.” “Congratulations, Helen,” Cathy says. “Now all you have to do is pay up or locate Mr. Henkel before he destroys the Declaration of Independence.” Clearly annoyed, she leaves. As she steps outside, an CSA Agent hands her a replacement “welcome” cake to bring home.
Cathy is at the bank with Joyner, going over Henkel’s personnel file. She doesn’t understand why he would do the robbery. Joyner says he feels bad because he hired and trusted him. Cathy notes that Henkel had an ex-wife. Joyner says he’ll locate her.
At home, Phil is over doing homework with Susan. Nick comes home after hanging out with Brent. He makes it clear that Brent is cool and has a cool car. He’s trying to make Phil jealous. Jack comes home, once again, to bickering kids and a wife who rushes out the door after getting a phone call.
Cathy and Joyner meet Fran Henkel (Pamela Reed,) who hates her ex-husband. He cheated on her. He was cold. He had a lot of money from investments, so she didn’t think he needed to rob a bank. She doesn’t know where he is – and doesn’t care.
They return to Henkel’s place. Why didn’t he take any of his things? It seems odd to Cathy. She finds a prescription for migraine medication. She calls the pharmacy. They say the prescription is being picked up that day.
Cathy and Joyner stake out the pharmacy. A Man (Todd Bridges) with dreadlocks picks it up, claiming he’s Henkel. Cathy follows his car. He picks up that he’s being followed. After playing cat and mouse, the Man rams Cathy’s car from behind. Just as he’s about to hit her again and force her car into the cross traffic of a busy intersection, Joyner’s car races down the street and nudges the Man’s car, causing it to miss Cathy and shoot into the intersection. The Man manages to zigzag through the traffic and disappear.
Darnell reprimands Joyner for taking Cathy out without backup and almost getting her killed. “If I ever, ever hear that you did something like this again, I’m coming straight for you.”
Jack, in his pajamas, waits with an open bottle of wine for his wife. She’s in the shower. When he raises his hand to knock on the door, it flies open and Cathy, numb with exhaustion, staggers and flops into bed, falling fast asleep. So much for romance. The next morning, Jack suggests that maybe she should quit her job. Cathy reminds him that the kids will be going to college soon. Nick and Susan fight over Phil again.
Cathy goes to Fran’s house. She’s missing. A cell phone rings. Cathy answers. It’s an electronic voice saying the price for the Declaration just went up to six million dollars. Cathy returns to CSA and reports the call. She wonders how the ransom guy knew where she was and she’s worried about Fran. Her cell phone rings. It’s the electronic voice telling her to go to a pay phone at a subway stop and answer the ringing phone. She needs to go alone.
Cathy goes from pay phone to pay phone with the ransom man watching her every move. He sends her on a wild goose chase all over town. Finally, he tells her to look at the bottom of a pay phone where she finds an envelope with pictures of her at every location. She also sees a parked black SUV. She goes to the car. Helen is at the wheel. She’s been following her! “He said come alone,” Cathy says, tossing the Polaroids in Helen’s lap. “You just about blew the whole thing.”
At CSA, Cathy and Helen complain about each other to Darnell. Suddenly, a guy in a gorilla suit shows up and hands him an envelope. Inside is a photo of Henkel holding the Declaration of Independence. The young guy inside the gorilla suit doesn’t know anything about it. “I got a call from the service for a pick up and delivery.” “Where did you pick it up?” “The Wilshire Hotel.” Helen assures Darnell, “I’m on it.”
Cathy picks her kids up from school. At home, she has Nick blow up the photo. They see a fire truck, numbered 42, reflected in Henkel’s glasses. Cathy finds the firehouse. Across the street, she notices a small house with an overgrown lawn and a “For Rent” sign. She goes inside. It’s not a lived-in house but it is dirty and littered. The Man with the dreadlocks comes in. Cathy hides in a pantry. When he leaves, Cathy cautiously steps into the living room where she finds Fran, bound and gagged.
CSA Agents scour the house. Helen gets mad at Cathy for going there alone and manages to antagonize Fran, as well. The two women begin to bicker again. Darnell pleads, “I need both of you working with me – and with each other.”
At the Davis house, Susan is annoyed at her dad for wanting her to take Brent to the mall. She doesn’t want Phil to be mad. At the supermarket, Cathy and Darnell shop. He needs her to interview Fran. Cathy is the only one she likes. Fran tell Cathy that her ex-husband was a womanizer who used the money he made from his security business to buy houses and condos for his love nests. Each property was put under the name of a new corporation – the name of his current girlfriend. “You don’t happen to remember the name of his last girlfriend, do you?,” Cathy asks.
The Davis’ have dinner with Brent and Norman. Afterward, Brent impresses everyone as he plays the piano brilliantly. He asks Susan out. She accepts. The next morning, Cathy notes that Susan came home early from her date. Susan is upset because her friends heard that Brent has been bragging around school that she let him fool around with her.
Cathy asks Clarence, the security guard, to use the bank computer to search for a company called Cynthia, Inc. He finds a property under the name Don Henkel. Joyner arrives and tells Cathy to leave it alone. He doesn’t want to get in trouble again with Darnell. She convinces him to accompany her to the house, where they find Henkel dead. Suddenly, someone starts shooting at them. Cathy hides in a closet. Joyner fights back. He is shot. At the hospital, Cathy talks to Joyner. He’s fine, just a flesh wound. They discuss how Henkel must have been working with others until they decided they no longer needed him. Darnell shows up, annoyed again at their little shoot out.
At NSA Cathy, Darnell and Helen listen to the electronic voice on the recorder. The caller tells them to meet at 3 p.m. for the ransom exchange. On the drive to the location, Cathy gets a call from Susan. It was Phil who talked about her, not Brent! Cathy consoles her.
Inside a vacant house (the exchange site) is an envelope with a list of addresses – a puzzle. Cathy figures out that all of the locations bear the name of a president who was the first to do something. At Hamilton High School, she finds the original Declaration of Independence hanging on the library wall and realizes that the hunt for the Declaration of Independence was a diversion.
Cathy comes home and consoles Susan, who says that sometimes people are not what you think they are. This gives Cathy an idea. She has Nick blow up the streaming video of the bank and sees the second hand jumps a few seconds. There is a splice in the tape!
Cathy learns from a hospital nurse that Joyner has been released. His wound was superficial – and suspicious. Powder burns indicate he inflicted the wound himself!
Cathy runs out of the hospital and calls Darnell, telling him to go to the bank with backup. She gets there in the midst of a robbery by Joyner! He pulls a gun on her. He tells her that Clarence was the computer genius who rigged the Declaration. And they are replacing the money they’re stealing with fake money. No one in the bank will realize the switch for a long time.
CSA Agents barge in and save Cathy. Outside the bank, reporters show up. Cathy disappears. At home, she watches the news report on the robbery with Jack and Nick. Susan is out with Brent. Phil is history.
Cathy is pleasantly surprised to learn that Jack has made dinner. “You prepared everything?” “Especially dessert,” he whispers in her ear. “It’ll be served later.” But when later comes and they’re snuggling in bed, the phone rings ...
(source: Hallmark Channel)
Stars:
Lea Thompson
Joe Penny
SYNOPSIS
At the United Metropolitan Bank, a high rise monument to man’s architectural genius, a line of people makes its way through the atrium to a large Plexiglas display case containing the Declaration of Independence. Among the sightseers are Cathy Davis (Lea Thompson) and her two teen kids Susan (Jessy Schram) and Nick (Zack Shada). Nick knows all about the historical document. Susan finds her brilliant little brother annoying. Nick explains that the Declaration is kept in a special titanium encasement containing a little helium. The paper it’s written on is two hundred twenty-nine years old. If it wasn’t protected like that, it would have disintegrated by now.
Clarence (Timothy Bottoms), a bank security guard, sits near a bank of surveillance monitors. One camera zooms in on the display case. It is 5:00 a.m. and the Declaration is there. But when a CSA Agent (Wiley Pickett) walks through the room on his hourly rounds, he’s stopped dead in his tracks. The display case is empty!
Later, Frank Darnell (Joe Penney), CSA case officer Helen Morrison (Tamlyn Tomita), director of bank security William Joyner (Robin Thomas) and the NSA Agent gaze at the empty case. They discuss how it seemingly just disappeared. The encasement hasn’t been compromised. It is still locked. Joyner fills them in that a physician from the National Archive has the only key and the case is wired to an alarm that would have gone off if it was tampered with. They decide to put a release out to the public that the exhibit is closed for a few days. Darnell and the others review the security tapes. The Declaration is there one moment and then … it just disappears!
In the Davis home, Cathy and her husband Jack (William R. Moses) are in bed when the phone rings. Cathy says her game company needs her to come to work. Jack notes that it is 4:45 a.m. Cathy says they think someone is trying to steal the game she is developing.
At the bank, Cathy joins all the agents looking at the display case. She is annoyed that someone would steal the Declaration of Independence. She meets Helen Morrison (Tamlyn Tomita). Helen is dating Darnell, whom Cathy used to date, so Helen doesn’t like her. She is jealous that Darnell thinks Cathy is so brilliant that they need her on the case.
Cathy also meets Joyner, the bank security director. She asks if anyone ever stopped to think that maybe the document wasn’t stolen out of the case – it was never there to begin with!
Cathy yanks the display case open and removes the document’s protective encasement. At CSA Headquarters, they examine it and discover a plasma screen inside, powered by a battery and controlled by remote. The Declaration of Independence everyone had been looking at was just an image!
Cathy is convinced that the document was stolen when it arrived, before going on display. The thieves have a four day head start. She advises the group to expect a call soon. “Whoever stole the Declaration of Independence isn’t planning on selling it on eBay. They’re obviously holding one of America’s most cherished documents for a very large ransom.” She then leaves, explaining that she thinks she’s done her part.
At school, Cathy picks up Nick, who tells her that Susan is fawning over her boyfriend “Dr. Jekyll” a.k.a. Phil (Jason Maves). “He seems like a nice enough boy,” Cathy says. Nick replies, “Just wait until you see his Mr. Hyde.” Phil opens the door for Susan and is so sweet to Cathy. Driving home, Susan and Nick bicker about Phil. She likes him. He doesn’t. Cathy tells them to knock it off.
At home, Jack arrives to Cathy’s fallen soufflé and two annoyed children. He can tell the kids have been difficult. He says his old friend Norman Klein (Ken Michelman) just moved to town with his son Brent (Logan Bartholomew), who is Susan’s age. Norman’s wife died a year earlier and Jack wants to have them over for dinner. Cathy answers the phone. “Telemarketer.” Then she accidentally-on-purpose spills the milk and rushes out to buy more.
At the supermarket, Cathy pretends to shop next to Darnell. The CSA needs help. They haven’t had a ransom call and don’t have any leads. Cathy’s back on the case. At home, Jack and Cathy talk about work and how busy they are. She struggles with the fact that she’s lying to her husband about her whereabouts.
At the bank, Darnell talks with Clarence, the security guard, who claims he saw nothing out of the ordinary. Helen tells Darnell how annoyed she is about Cathy being back on the case. She’s the case officer; she can handle it. Darnell says it’s called teamwork.
Cathy and Joyner review the video showing the Declaration being handed to an CSA Agent, who places it in the display case. It also depicts Donald Henkel, the bank’s security system installer, who supplied the display case, the alarm system and the additional monitoring devices. Joyner says that Henkel is a nice quiet guy and an electronic genius. Cathy and Darnell agree they should go to Henkel’s office. Helen comes in with the same idea, but two steps behind Cathy.
While waiting for Helen to arrive with a search warrant, Cathy and Darnell bicker. He says he and Helen are “just friends.” Cathy replies, “Frank, when I first came aboard 20 years ago, we became ‘just friends.’ Then you went on that assignment to Ireland with Lorraine Brownell and became ‘just friends’ with her. You’re no better a liar today than you were then.” “Cathy,” Darnell protests, “I’m not the same guy I was then.”
Helen, Darnell and Cathy enter Henkel’s office. Cathy notices 27 messages on his answering machine – the first beginning on Monday. Henkel hasn’t been there all week. When they go to his home, they discover it also empty and note that his home phone also has messages beginning on Monday. “Ingenious,” Darnell says. “He rigged the fake document so that no one would know it was gone for almost a week. He could be anywhere by now.” “Well,” Helen replies, “sure looks like he’s our man.”
At the Davis home, Brent and Norman are over for dinner. Brent is good-looking but comes off as arrogant because he’s shy. In the kitchen, Cathy tries to get Susan to agree to show Brent around. “He’s conceited, egotistical and definitely monosyllabic. Besides, I don’t want Phil to get the wrong impression.”
The phone rings. Cathy says it’s a wrong number. She intentionally drops the “welcome” cake and rushes out to buy another, telling Susan to stall. At CSA headquarters, Cathy meets with Darnell and Helen. They listen to a ransom request of five million dollars. Helen is smug as she points out that the voice on the ransom message matches the voice on Henkel’s answering machine. “You don’t need to be a puzzle expert to see that.” “Congratulations, Helen,” Cathy says. “Now all you have to do is pay up or locate Mr. Henkel before he destroys the Declaration of Independence.” Clearly annoyed, she leaves. As she steps outside, an CSA Agent hands her a replacement “welcome” cake to bring home.
Cathy is at the bank with Joyner, going over Henkel’s personnel file. She doesn’t understand why he would do the robbery. Joyner says he feels bad because he hired and trusted him. Cathy notes that Henkel had an ex-wife. Joyner says he’ll locate her.
At home, Phil is over doing homework with Susan. Nick comes home after hanging out with Brent. He makes it clear that Brent is cool and has a cool car. He’s trying to make Phil jealous. Jack comes home, once again, to bickering kids and a wife who rushes out the door after getting a phone call.
Cathy and Joyner meet Fran Henkel (Pamela Reed,) who hates her ex-husband. He cheated on her. He was cold. He had a lot of money from investments, so she didn’t think he needed to rob a bank. She doesn’t know where he is – and doesn’t care.
They return to Henkel’s place. Why didn’t he take any of his things? It seems odd to Cathy. She finds a prescription for migraine medication. She calls the pharmacy. They say the prescription is being picked up that day.
Cathy and Joyner stake out the pharmacy. A Man (Todd Bridges) with dreadlocks picks it up, claiming he’s Henkel. Cathy follows his car. He picks up that he’s being followed. After playing cat and mouse, the Man rams Cathy’s car from behind. Just as he’s about to hit her again and force her car into the cross traffic of a busy intersection, Joyner’s car races down the street and nudges the Man’s car, causing it to miss Cathy and shoot into the intersection. The Man manages to zigzag through the traffic and disappear.
Darnell reprimands Joyner for taking Cathy out without backup and almost getting her killed. “If I ever, ever hear that you did something like this again, I’m coming straight for you.”
Jack, in his pajamas, waits with an open bottle of wine for his wife. She’s in the shower. When he raises his hand to knock on the door, it flies open and Cathy, numb with exhaustion, staggers and flops into bed, falling fast asleep. So much for romance. The next morning, Jack suggests that maybe she should quit her job. Cathy reminds him that the kids will be going to college soon. Nick and Susan fight over Phil again.
Cathy goes to Fran’s house. She’s missing. A cell phone rings. Cathy answers. It’s an electronic voice saying the price for the Declaration just went up to six million dollars. Cathy returns to CSA and reports the call. She wonders how the ransom guy knew where she was and she’s worried about Fran. Her cell phone rings. It’s the electronic voice telling her to go to a pay phone at a subway stop and answer the ringing phone. She needs to go alone.
Cathy goes from pay phone to pay phone with the ransom man watching her every move. He sends her on a wild goose chase all over town. Finally, he tells her to look at the bottom of a pay phone where she finds an envelope with pictures of her at every location. She also sees a parked black SUV. She goes to the car. Helen is at the wheel. She’s been following her! “He said come alone,” Cathy says, tossing the Polaroids in Helen’s lap. “You just about blew the whole thing.”
At CSA, Cathy and Helen complain about each other to Darnell. Suddenly, a guy in a gorilla suit shows up and hands him an envelope. Inside is a photo of Henkel holding the Declaration of Independence. The young guy inside the gorilla suit doesn’t know anything about it. “I got a call from the service for a pick up and delivery.” “Where did you pick it up?” “The Wilshire Hotel.” Helen assures Darnell, “I’m on it.”
Cathy picks her kids up from school. At home, she has Nick blow up the photo. They see a fire truck, numbered 42, reflected in Henkel’s glasses. Cathy finds the firehouse. Across the street, she notices a small house with an overgrown lawn and a “For Rent” sign. She goes inside. It’s not a lived-in house but it is dirty and littered. The Man with the dreadlocks comes in. Cathy hides in a pantry. When he leaves, Cathy cautiously steps into the living room where she finds Fran, bound and gagged.
CSA Agents scour the house. Helen gets mad at Cathy for going there alone and manages to antagonize Fran, as well. The two women begin to bicker again. Darnell pleads, “I need both of you working with me – and with each other.”
At the Davis house, Susan is annoyed at her dad for wanting her to take Brent to the mall. She doesn’t want Phil to be mad. At the supermarket, Cathy and Darnell shop. He needs her to interview Fran. Cathy is the only one she likes. Fran tell Cathy that her ex-husband was a womanizer who used the money he made from his security business to buy houses and condos for his love nests. Each property was put under the name of a new corporation – the name of his current girlfriend. “You don’t happen to remember the name of his last girlfriend, do you?,” Cathy asks.
The Davis’ have dinner with Brent and Norman. Afterward, Brent impresses everyone as he plays the piano brilliantly. He asks Susan out. She accepts. The next morning, Cathy notes that Susan came home early from her date. Susan is upset because her friends heard that Brent has been bragging around school that she let him fool around with her.
Cathy asks Clarence, the security guard, to use the bank computer to search for a company called Cynthia, Inc. He finds a property under the name Don Henkel. Joyner arrives and tells Cathy to leave it alone. He doesn’t want to get in trouble again with Darnell. She convinces him to accompany her to the house, where they find Henkel dead. Suddenly, someone starts shooting at them. Cathy hides in a closet. Joyner fights back. He is shot. At the hospital, Cathy talks to Joyner. He’s fine, just a flesh wound. They discuss how Henkel must have been working with others until they decided they no longer needed him. Darnell shows up, annoyed again at their little shoot out.
At NSA Cathy, Darnell and Helen listen to the electronic voice on the recorder. The caller tells them to meet at 3 p.m. for the ransom exchange. On the drive to the location, Cathy gets a call from Susan. It was Phil who talked about her, not Brent! Cathy consoles her.
Inside a vacant house (the exchange site) is an envelope with a list of addresses – a puzzle. Cathy figures out that all of the locations bear the name of a president who was the first to do something. At Hamilton High School, she finds the original Declaration of Independence hanging on the library wall and realizes that the hunt for the Declaration of Independence was a diversion.
Cathy comes home and consoles Susan, who says that sometimes people are not what you think they are. This gives Cathy an idea. She has Nick blow up the streaming video of the bank and sees the second hand jumps a few seconds. There is a splice in the tape!
Cathy learns from a hospital nurse that Joyner has been released. His wound was superficial – and suspicious. Powder burns indicate he inflicted the wound himself!
Cathy runs out of the hospital and calls Darnell, telling him to go to the bank with backup. She gets there in the midst of a robbery by Joyner! He pulls a gun on her. He tells her that Clarence was the computer genius who rigged the Declaration. And they are replacing the money they’re stealing with fake money. No one in the bank will realize the switch for a long time.
CSA Agents barge in and save Cathy. Outside the bank, reporters show up. Cathy disappears. At home, she watches the news report on the robbery with Jack and Nick. Susan is out with Brent. Phil is history.
Cathy is pleasantly surprised to learn that Jack has made dinner. “You prepared everything?” “Especially dessert,” he whispers in her ear. “It’ll be served later.” But when later comes and they’re snuggling in bed, the phone rings ...
(source: Hallmark Channel)
Stars:
Lea Thompson
Joe Penny