Signed, Sealed, Delivered A Tale of Three Letters Full Movie

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Signed, Sealed, Delivered A Tale of Three Letters Full Movie
Transcript
00:00:00I've climbed the Eiffel Tower, Walked in a London shower,
00:00:17But I get lost finding my way to your heart,
00:00:25And I can't tell you where the big dipper is,
00:00:32Where Cinderella's magical slipper is,
00:00:37I'm a witch, now that you know,
00:00:42I love you so,
00:00:47Hold me and kiss me and show me the way
00:00:54To your heart.
00:01:24Last Tuesday in the afternoon.
00:01:27Let me tell you, nothing exceeds the realization of a great dream of your life such as that.
00:01:33Unless, of course, it is to experience it with the love of your life by your side.
00:01:39I dare say we might be one of the great postal love stories.
00:01:44That's how Shane and I met.
00:01:46Just guessing at the post office?
00:01:48Oh, the dead letter office to be precise.
00:01:51A rather elite task force with wide powers of postal discretion.
00:01:56But I get ahead of myself.
00:01:58I could go on.
00:01:59But please, tell me about yourself.
00:02:02Ladies and gentlemen, we are beginning our descent into Denver.
00:02:06Oh my goodness, the time just flew by.
00:02:09Are we landing?
00:02:10Momentarily, my love.
00:02:12You know, you slept all the way from London.
00:02:15How about you?
00:02:16Oh, my friend here and I had the most marvelous conversation about love in the mail.
00:02:22Every step it took to get us to this moment.
00:02:26The threshold of our new life together.
00:02:29And now it begins.
00:02:31And now it begins.
00:02:34And now it begins.
00:03:04My life's complete.
00:03:07Finally love is here for me.
00:03:15Good morning, Mr. O'Toole.
00:03:17It nearly ran down.
00:03:19Well, how long does it take before it starts?
00:03:22Five days.
00:03:23I had the gardener winding it while we were away, but I forgot he was visiting his mother in Grand Junction this week.
00:03:27Well, we were on our honeymoon.
00:03:30You have a pretty good reason for letting things slip a little.
00:03:33True, but it's ticked continuously for the last 100 years.
00:03:37I'd never forgive myself if I let this clock stop on my watch, so to speak.
00:03:43So, um, how soon till you're ready to leave, my love?
00:03:48It should be really soon.
00:03:50Well, it is our first day back.
00:03:53So, they'll understand if we're out cold.
00:03:59Suppose I am the ranking official?
00:04:02Oh, let me bring this wedding gown upstairs.
00:04:05No, just leave it there.
00:04:07I'm going to take it to the cleaners and have it heirloomized by wedding dress preservation professionals.
00:04:14All right.
00:04:17Oops.
00:04:22Oliver!
00:04:23Yes, coming.
00:04:33They'll be here, Norman.
00:04:35We were, like, getting back from our honeymoon, too.
00:04:37Yeah, but we were coming back from the East Tin Cup family camp.
00:04:41They're in the off-season in Bland, Colorado.
00:04:43They're in Europe.
00:04:44They know all their languages.
00:04:45They could get on the wrong train or eat the wrong cheese.
00:04:47I knew it!
00:04:48Oh, thank heavens.
00:04:49You tell us everything!
00:04:52How was the cheese?
00:04:53Uh, unparalleled.
00:04:54The cheese, the wine, and, of course, the British Museum of Postal History.
00:04:59The wine, and, of course, the British Museum of Postal History was humbling, inspiring, monumental.
00:05:05The breadth and depth of their medieval collection was, it put me in mind to explore the possibilities of a postal museum right here in Denver.
00:05:13I couldn't stop thinking about it.
00:05:14Yes, it was a big topic in the balloon.
00:05:16Oh, you did the balloon!
00:05:18We did!
00:05:19It was so magical, floating over Stockholm in a hot air balloon, sipping champagne with my new husband.
00:05:27Sounds like a lot more fun than donkey rides in East Tin Cup.
00:05:31The zipline was cool.
00:05:32We did love the zipline.
00:05:34Rita, what have we here?
00:05:36It's a welcome home present.
00:05:39No.
00:05:40Oh, yes.
00:05:41The great mailbox breach of 2017.
00:05:44Yep, every letter mailed from Garfield High School.
00:05:46I had given up hope they'd ever be found.
00:05:48Yeah, they were recovered from a street drain and then accidentally sent to the Terminal Annex in Kansas City.
00:05:53And it took seven years to track and return them to Denver.
00:05:56Yeah, not everybody can be us.
00:05:58We've got 25, including that severely damaged one.
00:06:02And I have invented something to remove mold and flakes.
00:06:07It's my four-step desiccation revelation process.
00:06:11It'll only take five to six months for the process to complete.
00:06:14Astounding, Norman.
00:06:15Well, we have plenty to keep us busy until then.
00:06:17Miss McInerney, would you like to do the honors?
00:06:20You're still going by Miss McInerney?
00:06:22We're still working on it.
00:06:25Okay.
00:06:34Water-soluble ink, perhaps addressed with a fountain pen.
00:06:38I can barely read anything.
00:06:41Well, we have obeyed all the postal privacy directives.
00:06:44And we have no other option.
00:06:46Norman?
00:06:47Well, extraction can be tricky.
00:06:50Over here.
00:06:55We've got a whole day planned for you.
00:06:57Lunch at Ramon's new restaurant with Oliver's dad.
00:07:00And Charlie is bringing Eleanor.
00:07:02Perfect.
00:07:03Oh, how's that going?
00:07:05It's not strange having a brand new mom and her baby living in your basement?
00:07:09Oh, no. When I was growing up, we always took people in.
00:07:11And how's Charlie handling single motherhood?
00:07:14Oh, well, a new baby is a lot.
00:07:18But we're helping. And Norman is completely on board.
00:07:21Oh.
00:07:22Like, completely.
00:07:24Well, you'll see.
00:07:26Well, my friends, we have a nearly readable letter.
00:07:29Shall we?
00:07:33Dear Maria, I am shocked, dismayed, and quite hurt by your actions.
00:07:36I feel utterly betrayed by someone I considered to be a stellar student with great potential.
00:07:43And I was proud to be your mentor, and I thought your friend.
00:07:48When the police arrived today, it broke my heart that you broke the law.
00:07:52I'm sorry to say that I will press charges.
00:07:55Life has consequences, Maria, and you must learn to face them.
00:07:58Or this path of anger you continue to choose will become a way of life.
00:08:03And all you have worked for will be overtaken by self-entitlement and bitterness.
00:08:08If you want to play ball for a living, you need to learn how to play ball in life.
00:08:13This is a difficult letter to write, but not all teaching happens in the classroom.
00:08:17And this is one lesson I feel I need to impart to you.
00:08:21Impart? I'm going to go with English teacher.
00:08:24As your theater teacher, I often emphasized that drama belongs on the stage, not ...
00:08:31The rest is missing.
00:08:33But we do know, however, whoever wrote this, clearly a Garfield High School theater teacher seven years ago,
00:08:39addressed this apparently to a student.
00:08:42Ouch. What a letter to send.
00:08:44Or receive.
00:08:45Maria could be a very different person now. Are you really sure we have to deliver that?
00:08:54I didn't hear you say that.
00:08:57She must have done something really awful.
00:09:04We brought them all the way from London.
00:09:07That's from the British Postal Museum.
00:09:09Oh, sealing wax set.
00:09:11It stamps the profile of a corgi.
00:09:13Mailboxes of the 19th century. Limited edition.
00:09:17Oh, there she is! Charlie!
00:09:20Hi!
00:09:21How are you doing?
00:09:22Oh, she's fine. She's a little colicky, but that's normal.
00:09:25Sleeps almost six hours a night, wakes up very cranky.
00:09:28I think he meant Charlie, Norman.
00:09:31Oh, I'm great, but I couldn't do it if Eleanor didn't have two amazing grandparents.
00:09:38Hey, if you want to sit down, I can take her for a walk.
00:09:40Oh, yes, thank you.
00:09:43Hi.
00:09:53So, Charlie, when are you back to work?
00:09:55Well, it could take more maternity leave, but honestly, it's kind of lonely at Rita and Norman's without them there.
00:10:00Why don't you come hang out with us? Maybe you could bring Eleanor along.
00:10:04Oh, regulations don't...
00:10:06Joe, you could come by and help us set up a crib in the corner.
00:10:09Actually, Norman already has.
00:10:12There's a crib in the DLO?
00:10:14Mm-hmm.
00:10:15I gave him your old one.
00:10:17I'm sorry, babies in the workplace are...
00:10:19Oh, you are the ranking official in the dead letter office, darling.
00:10:23Yes, but...
00:10:24Wait, Charlie, didn't you graduate from Garfield High?
00:10:27Seven years ago, yeah.
00:10:28Did you know a girl named Maria? She either played softball or volleyball, maybe?
00:10:33No, I wasn't really into sports that much.
00:10:35Do you remember your drama teacher?
00:10:37Mrs. Philpott. She's not there anymore. She actually left the second semester of my senior year.
00:10:42No one knows why, though.
00:10:43And the plot thickens.
00:10:45And the salad bar is open.
00:10:47Oh!
00:10:49Please don't get used to...
00:10:52Don't get in the habit of assuming I'm willing to bend the postal rules just because...
00:10:56Because we share the same mailbox?
00:11:00Over here!
00:11:01Ramon!
00:11:02You were both so kind to think of me on your honeymoon.
00:11:06What a thoughtful souvenir, a compendium of recovered mail from the Titanic.
00:11:11Your great uncle was lost on the Titanic, if I recall.
00:11:14Actually, he got lost on the way to the Titanic.
00:11:17A fortunate mix-up.
00:11:19So, how is married life?
00:11:23Grand.
00:11:24Every day, I'm in a hurry.
00:11:26How is married life?
00:11:27Grand.
00:11:28Every day, a revelation.
00:11:32Marriage is like a salad bar, Overlier.
00:11:37A great one brings you back again and again to appreciate all it has to offer.
00:11:44How are your adoption plans coming?
00:11:46Oh, well, there's a lot of paperwork to fill out to even start looking for a baby.
00:11:52But helping Charlie with Eleanor takes up a lot of time.
00:11:56Well, Norman's time.
00:12:09So, you found a letter to Mrs. Philpott?
00:12:11From. It was mailed in the great mailbox breach of 2017.
00:12:17Bomb scare that turned out to be a false alarm.
00:12:20But, in the process, a mailbox was blown up along with most of the mail inside.
00:12:25And then, anything they did recover ended up at the wrong post office for a few years.
00:12:30Until it made its way back to us.
00:12:34Is that all you're going to eat?
00:12:36Oh, I'm not very hungry.
00:12:41Well, not every letter we deliver is going to be good news.
00:12:44Whoever Maria is, she has a letter to read.
00:12:47Norman, have you ever had anything of yours heirloomized?
00:12:50Uh, no, no. I think I would have remembered something like that.
00:12:54Cherry Creek Professional Fabric Preservation.
00:12:56It is the only place that I would trust with preserving my wedding dress.
00:12:59Then it'll be in perfect condition for when your daughter gets...
00:13:03Oh, if you have a daughter.
00:13:05Maybe someday. But what about you?
00:13:08Oh, we're still trying, of course.
00:13:10But we want to adopt, too.
00:13:12If I can just get Norman to finish his application essay on why he wants to be a dad.
00:13:19Hey, maybe he already feels like one.
00:13:22Okay.
00:13:26You know, it's funny.
00:13:27You think you know your soulmate's quirks and thoughts, and then they surprise you.
00:13:31Oh, believe me, after all these years, I have seen all of Oliver's quirks.
00:13:43Well, I'm going to run a search for all the Marias in sports at Garfield High in 2017.
00:13:50I'm just going to need to take a look at that letter again.
00:13:52Oh, I've got it.
00:13:57Where'd it go?
00:13:58Oh, I put it in the pending box, and it's...
00:14:04It's already empty.
00:14:05Uh, that's not the pending box. That's the outgoing box.
00:14:08Oh, and I emptied it onto the main conveyor on our way to lunch.
00:14:11So it went back into the system.
00:14:13Oh, I'm so, so, so, so sorry. I'm just so jet-lagged, and I just...
00:14:18Not to worry. It was a dead letter. It still is a dead letter.
00:14:21It'll find its way back to us sooner or later. We just have to wait.
00:14:24In the meantime, we have plenty of work to do right here.
00:14:41Have you thought about expanding the closet? Or, you know, adding on?
00:14:46Oh, the house is protected by the State Historical Society. Any changes have to be approved by a committee.
00:14:52Wow.
00:14:54That's astounding.
00:14:55There's no postal museum in the state of Colorado, and yet there is a museum entirely dedicated to the unsinkable Molly Brown.
00:15:02I know, to be fair, she did survive the Titanic.
00:15:05Are you feeling a little warm?
00:15:07No, not really.
00:15:12How do you open this?
00:15:14Oh, uh, well, the crank was lost years ago.
00:15:17The Society won't approve a new window because it affects the exterior integrity of the house.
00:15:24It only opens by committee.
00:15:26Oh, well, the review board meets next spring. I'll try and get it on the agenda.
00:15:42You okay?
00:15:45I just feel awful about that letter.
00:15:50On the other hand, would it be so terrible if Maria never got it?
00:15:59Yes, it would.
00:16:02And I have every confidence that we will get another chance to do the right thing.
00:16:07Trust the timing.
00:16:08Trust the timing.
00:16:38Ready? Ready?
00:16:41Oh, good heavens.
00:16:43I'm almost ready. I just have to find my other shoe.
00:16:46Well, I'm sure it's here. There are none left. Upstairs?
00:16:51Oh, got it.
00:16:56Ready.
00:16:58Ready.
00:17:00Ready.
00:17:02Ready.
00:17:04Ready.
00:17:06Ready.
00:17:07Ready.
00:17:08Big day.
00:17:09Big day.
00:17:11Morning, Charlie. You're here early.
00:17:13I bet you didn't want to miss the grand finale of the great mailbox spree.
00:17:17Only two letters left.
00:17:23Actually, three.
00:17:26It's back.
00:17:28Maria's letter?
00:17:29No.
00:17:30Cast your dead letter upon the postal waters and it shall be returned to you.
00:17:38Charlie? You okay?
00:17:42Um, I have a confession.
00:17:47The bomb scare, the great mailbox breach of 2017.
00:17:54That was my fault.
00:18:01You
00:18:09I'm sorry. I don't understand how you could be responsible for a bomb scare.
00:18:14Because it was my idea. Not the bomb part. It's just, um, it's complicated.
00:18:20Well, I'm stunned. No, I'm flabbergasted, actually. I'm more than that. I...
00:18:27You tell us what happened.
00:18:29There were three of us who hung around in high school.
00:18:32It was me and these two guys, Marlon and Barry.
00:18:36Marlon was the sweet one. Barry was the crazy one.
00:18:39We saw the world the same way. We read the same books. We laughed at the same things.
00:18:43Till Barry's thing was thinking up these crazy pranks.
00:18:46Nothing mean. Just creative.
00:18:49Like, um, putting the principal's morning announcements through an app that made him sound like Voldemort.
00:18:55Voldemort.
00:18:57Later. Go on.
00:18:59Anyway, we had this thing about seizing the day.
00:19:02Except Marlon and Barry kept teasing me for always being worried we'd get into trouble if we did.
00:19:07So I decided to do something to prove I was just as creative as they were.
00:19:17That mailman empties that box at 12.05 every day like clockwork.
00:19:24What kind of life is that? Every day, same time, same box.
00:19:29I don't know. Some people like their routines, you know?
00:19:32Some people need their routines. Take that away and he'd be lost.
00:19:37Maybe he'd be released from the monotony of the daily drudgery of constant retrieval and it would rock his world.
00:19:43All he needs is something to wake him up.
00:19:47Tomorrow, we seize the day.
00:19:52Okay, we seize the day. Seize the day.
00:19:55High five.
00:19:57Now I must take exception to the characterization of dedicated postal service as drudgery.
00:20:02She was 17, Oliver.
00:20:05Keep going.
00:20:07I had the idea to put something in a mailbox that would surprise the carrier.
00:20:11Just surprise him, that's all.
00:20:13Maybe put a microphone in there and have a voice yelling, let me out.
00:20:16Barry wanted to put a cat in there.
00:20:18A cat? A cat?
00:20:20But we landed on something we thought was pretty tame.
00:20:27We put an alarm clock in the mailbox just to see what would happen.
00:20:35Go, go, go.
00:20:37Go, go, go.
00:20:43Come here.
00:20:45Mrs. Philpot, two o'clock.
00:20:47Good morning.
00:20:49Good morning.
00:21:07Uh-oh. What happened?
00:21:10The alarm didn't go off.
00:21:12What's he doing?
00:21:15Where's he going?
00:21:17Hey, you two, get out of here.
00:21:19Nobody really thinks that's a bomb, right?
00:21:21What do we do now?
00:21:22Nothing. We weren't here.
00:21:25The bomb squad came.
00:21:27Charlie!
00:21:28They detonated the mailbox and the rest is history.
00:21:31You intentionally breached a repository of the U.S. mail with a clock.
00:21:37I'm so sorry. I don't know what I was thinking. All those letters.
00:21:40Charlie, it was a really long time ago. You were just a kid and it was a silly prank.
00:21:46It was a federal offense.
00:21:48But not intentional.
00:21:49A federal offense.
00:21:51But not intentional.
00:21:54You know I love the post office.
00:21:56Yes, we do. But there should be a consequence for this sort of thing.
00:22:02So...
00:22:04Suspension.
00:22:05Oliver!
00:22:10So...
00:22:16You should go home and meditate on what you've done.
00:22:23And we will see you in the morning.
00:22:25Thank you, Oliver.
00:22:28I'm sorry.
00:22:31At least we found Maria's letter.
00:22:40Wait.
00:22:42You asked me about a Maria at my school. I just remembered one.
00:22:45Do you remember her last name?
00:22:46No, but she was supposed to be the lead in the school play and then she just disappeared.
00:22:51Like Mrs. Philpott?
00:22:53Did she play sports too?
00:22:55All I know is that Maria never graduated.
00:22:59I think she got arrested or something.
00:23:10Wow.
00:23:11So Maria went to jail, Mrs. Philpott disappeared, and Charlie violated Federal Postal Regulation 587B, Section E, Paragraph 12.
00:23:21At least we have the letter back. And a real lead now, too.
00:23:25I ran a search in the 2017 Garfield High database for seniors named Maria.
00:23:30I found two. A Maria Haugen was never registered in the drama class.
00:23:36But a Maria Sollinger was.
00:23:38So, Maria Sollinger, next steps?
00:23:41Track down Maria's current address and surprise her with a really awful letter.
00:23:45That is our mandate, yes.
00:23:48I hope that our efforts to deliver the last two letters are successful and bring a modicum of pleasure to their intended recipients.
00:23:55Well, let's get this over with.
00:23:58That's the spirit.
00:24:00Oh, how did your appointment go this morning?
00:24:03Oh, well, the adoption people want us to find a registered family therapist to attest to our fitness as parents.
00:24:08Yeah, they gave us a list of names, but they're all on the other side of town.
00:24:11And I'm not comfortable being that far away from home in case Eleanor needs something.
00:24:15On the other hand, honey, perhaps a good therapist could provide a little perspective on how to raise your children while other people raise theirs.
00:24:24Oh, I've got one.
00:24:25A therapist?
00:24:26Cousin.
00:24:27Oh.
00:24:28Norman and his myriad cousins.
00:24:29Oh, that's right. Calliope. She's perfect.
00:24:32She's a family counselor, she's right in town, and she's really flexible.
00:24:36Well, with our schedule, flexible hours are a plus.
00:24:39I haven't seen Calliope since, um...
00:24:41Oh, five years ago, when she played Santa Claus at the office Christmas party.
00:24:45Oh, that was her coming down the pneumatic tube in the terminal annex?
00:24:49Yeah. Do you really think a cousin is a good idea, though?
00:24:52Of course. I mean, who knows them better?
00:24:59Uh, I'm sorry I interrupted you at lunch.
00:25:02Oh, that's okay. I mean, I get it.
00:25:06You get what?
00:25:08Well, sometimes you just have to weigh in on the conversation with another point of view before I've had a chance to actually...
00:25:15I didn't see it as weighing in on...
00:25:18You just did it, darling. But that's okay. It's just a little quirk.
00:25:23A little quirk?
00:25:26Rita, where are we with that first letter?
00:25:28Well, I'm still missing one digit of the street address and most of the street name, except for the letter Z, but we're getting there.
00:25:36Great. And the search for Maria Sollinger?
00:25:38Well, I found 20 just in Colorado, but only one that matches our Maria's age.
00:25:44And that is where the trail for Maria Sollinger stops.
00:25:49After her arrest?
00:25:51Yeah, I couldn't find anything in the traditional news, probably because she was under 18,
00:25:56but I did find something on the Garfield High chat room from back then. Listen to this.
00:26:01Maria Sollinger could have gone to Vision One, but she blew it. Then this.
00:26:05I heard she was sentenced to 30 days in juvie. Kiss that scholarship goodbye.
00:26:10Wow. Whatever Maria did must be the reason she didn't graduate high school.
00:26:15If she was sentenced, there would be court records, but that would be a tough one.
00:26:19Maybe we can follow a paper trail to somebody who still knows her.
00:26:23Okay.
00:26:32Uh, Norman, I could use your advice.
00:26:38Oh, um, well, personal or postal?
00:26:44Well, for many years I have been your mentor in many areas of life, but now, as a newlywed,
00:26:53pupil has become the teacher, and I have much to learn about the first months of adjustment.
00:27:04Um, well, it's mostly about working out the little things, like who does the dishes or who takes out the garbage,
00:27:15or who thinks my 36-volume collection of South American commemorative stamps doesn't belong on the coffee table.
00:27:22Little stuff.
00:27:24But you do, uh, adjust eventually?
00:27:28Yeah. Well, that comes down to teamwork, compromise,
00:27:35making up every morning and thinking, what can I do to make her happy today?
00:27:41Bingo. Public defender Ed Frank supervised juvenile cases seven years ago.
00:27:49Excellent. Let's make the call.
00:27:50I'm on it.
00:27:52And guess what? I just matched Zipco to half a street name. That's two down, one to go. We're on a roll.
00:28:00Yeah, and Calliope can see us at one today, except I was going to take Eleanor for a walk.
00:28:05Oh, well, you could take a walk with me to therapy.
00:28:08Mm, public defender's booked for today, but there might be an opening for tomorrow.
00:28:12So I think I might just go home and have a nap.
00:28:15Are you okay?
00:28:16Yeah, it's just these long hours are starting to make me...
00:28:18Actually, you reminded me, um, I have an errand to run. I can drop you at the house.
00:28:23All right, everyone. Let's break and regroup at two, shall we?
00:28:26Oh, okay. Come on, Norman. Let's get evaluated.
00:28:31Come on, Norman. Let's get evaluated.
00:28:51I am so ready for this nap.
00:29:01I'm so ready.
00:29:32Oh. Oh, no. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:29:58How are you feeling?
00:30:00Oh, I feel good. Where's my wedding dress?
00:30:04Oh, well, uh, I knew you fully intended to take it to be preserved.
00:30:08So I thought to myself, what can I do to relieve my dear wife of the burden of such a mundane errand?
00:30:14So I took it for you.
00:30:17Wow, how thoughtful. And where did you happen to take it?
00:30:21Oh, Fred's. Swifty Cleaners.
00:30:23Not Terry Creek Professional Fabric Preservation?
00:30:27No, Fred. He was very excited. In fact, he said he's always wanted to work with real lace.
00:30:38I thought you'd be pleased.
00:30:39I just wish you'd asked me first.
00:30:41Oh, well, it would be just another decision for you to make when you have so many here waiting for you already.
00:30:49Well, I've been making decisions my whole life, darling. Just not in historical landmarks.
00:30:56Oh. Do you think you'll feel well enough to go back to work?
00:31:04Yep. Why don't you go on ahead and I will meet you there.
00:31:10Okay.
00:31:17Bye.
00:31:20Exquisite craftsmanship.
00:31:231898. Yes, I can restore this.
00:31:27Yeah, fabulous.
00:31:28Two months. Maybe three if you want it restored to its original beauty.
00:31:32Three months? No, that's impossible.
00:31:34I'm not fixing a can opener. My craft is one of precision and detail.
00:31:38It's a crank. What if we swap out original beauty for original function?
00:31:44Please. My marriage is riding on this. New husband, family heirloom.
00:31:52Six weeks.
00:31:53Four days.
00:31:54Three weeks.
00:31:55Four days.
00:31:58I am pleased to inform that Norman and Rita Hayworth-Dorman exemplify the highest parental standards,
00:32:03and I unreservedly recommend them as candidates for adoptive parents.
00:32:07The highest parental standards. I bet all my practice with Charlie and Eleanor helped, don't you?
00:32:12Oh, yes, absolutely, darling.
00:32:15I know, I know, I'm late. I'm sorry.
00:32:18No, no, just in time. Rita believes she's about to make a breakthrough on her next last letter.
00:32:23Oh, I did it! I made a match!
00:32:25The only possible combination of zip, street, and name is addressed to...
00:32:31Oh, wow.
00:32:39Hi. You're not drunk.
00:32:41You're not drunk.
00:32:43We are here on official business. The second letter from 2017.
00:32:49We believe it's addressed to you.
00:33:00Rita Cross referenced the address to one previously listed for you.
00:33:06So? Is it really for you?
00:33:09Now, Charlie, don't feel pressured to reveal the contents of a personal letter to us.
00:33:17Dear Charlie, I know this sounds crazy since we've only been friends up to now,
00:33:23but the truth is, I have feelings for you.
00:33:27Oh, wow!
00:33:29They start at the day we met, and they've just gotten deeper,
00:33:32and if I don't say something now, we could graduate,
00:33:36go our separate ways, and miss out on the best thing that could ever happen to us.
00:33:40So it's time for me to seize the day and just say it.
00:33:46I think I love you.
00:33:49And if you think you could feel the same way, then maybe after we graduate,
00:33:53even if it's not the three of us anymore, it could still be the two of us.
00:33:57Just think about it, please.
00:33:59It's poetic, but to the point.
00:34:02It looks like he signed it L-O-something.
00:34:06Probably loved Barry.
00:34:08Barry? I didn't realize he liked me so much.
00:34:11So that's Barry's handwriting, it's not Marlon's?
00:34:14Yeah, see how C is spelled with I-E instead of E-I, and separate has three E's?
00:34:19Common mistakes, sadly.
00:34:21Not for Marlon. Barry was a terrible speller.
00:34:24Barry wrote this.
00:34:26We just had fun together. If one of us had feelings for another one of us, it would have been weird,
00:34:30but I guess Barry liked me.
00:34:33I always liked...
00:34:37Doesn't matter now.
00:34:39Have you kept in touch?
00:34:40With Barry?
00:34:41Or Marlon?
00:34:42No, we all lost track of each other after graduation.
00:34:44Maybe Barry's still interested.
00:34:46In a single mother?
00:34:47Yes!
00:34:48But besides, it's been like seven years, I wouldn't even know where to start.
00:34:51Well, that's what we do. We could help you find Barry.
00:34:54But we are not in the business of locating lost crushes.
00:34:58Our official duties require us to focus on Maria Sollinger and delivering...
00:35:03Why can't we do...
00:35:06Sorry to interrupt.
00:35:09Oh.
00:35:11Sounds like Eleanor needs her mama.
00:35:15Well, our...
00:35:19therapist helped me to see that focusing on Eleanor was getting in the way of focusing on starting her own family.
00:35:27Wow. You got all that in an hour?
00:35:30She seems pretty special.
00:35:32Well, she is my cousin.
00:35:35Can you guys stay for dinner?
00:35:37Thank you, but we have a date with a pasta maker.
00:35:40With a wedding gift from Hazel.
00:35:43Assuming we can find it.
00:35:45Lots of gifts still on the dining table.
00:35:48And on the floor and in the closet.
00:35:52Yep, lots.
00:35:53Lots of gifts.
00:35:55Lots of friends giving lots of gifts.
00:35:59I was thinking if you prefer to go out for dinner, we could...
00:36:03You smell something?
00:36:04Yeah. It's like...
00:36:06Something's on fire.
00:36:08That would explain the sirens.
00:36:10It sounds like it's coming from over there on Gaylord near...
00:36:15Red Swifty Cleaners.
00:36:17No.
00:36:18No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no!
00:36:23Ahem.
00:36:31I know what you're thinking.
00:36:33Oh, I don't think you do, Oliver.
00:36:37I suppose, um...
00:36:40To, um...
00:36:42Wear it, uh, before...
00:36:44Before?
00:36:46Before you took it to the wrong cleaners and it was cremated?
00:36:51By Fred's Swifty Fire Center?
00:36:53Perhaps we should discuss this later.
00:37:01What are you doing?
00:37:02Winding the clock.
00:37:04But it doesn't have to be wound for another three and a half days.
00:37:07Oh, I, uh, wind it every other day.
00:37:10Keeps the mechanism soft.
00:37:12It's not there?
00:37:14I broke it.
00:37:16I was trying to open that stupid window upstairs and...
00:37:20I took it to a repairman and he said there's a chance it'll be ready before the clock winds down.
00:37:26I'm so sorry.
00:37:28I'm sorry, too.
00:37:30How about I make you some linguine and clams with a nice cabernet?
00:37:36Thank you. Uh, I'm not very hungry.
00:37:50I mean, who never opens the window in their bedroom?
00:38:04Did you try using a three quarter inch Allen wrench?
00:38:06The point is that the window should have worked, but it didn't, so I found a way to fix it.
00:38:10But you didn't.
00:38:11Well, the sacred O2 o'clock that hasn't stopped chiming in a thousand years is going to stop.
00:38:17If Arthur doesn't find the right piece of wood to fix the thingy in time and my wedding dress is dead.
00:38:23Did you guys apologize?
00:38:26I said I was sorry. He said he was sorry.
00:38:28Did you forgive each other?
00:38:31Well, I felt it would be a thoughtful surprise to have her dress waterproofed and mothproofed professionally as a, you know,
00:38:38lasting heirloom and save her the chore of delivering it herself.
00:38:42Yeah, gets it out of the hallway.
00:38:44I did that, too. So I took it to Swifty Cleaners.
00:38:47Actually, the former Fred's Swifty Cleaners after six o'clock last night.
00:38:54So the wedding dress is now essentially toast.
00:39:00And the clock crank?
00:39:01It's not cranking.
00:39:03Norman, I'm not sure what I'll do if I let the family clock run down after all these years.
00:39:12What's the worst that can happen?
00:39:14Coffee break.
00:39:16Here's your usual.
00:39:18Just like you like it.
00:39:21What is that?
00:39:22Oh, that's my father brought it in.
00:39:25The O'Toole family rocking chair.
00:39:27It's nearly 100 years old.
00:39:29Oh, good heavens. It's like I've married a museum.
00:39:32Oh, Shane.
00:39:33The public defender returned your call.
00:39:35He leaves tomorrow on a two week vacation.
00:39:38Oh, great. Just great.
00:39:40What if I go now? Camp outside his office and he'll have to see me.
00:39:44Perhaps Norman and I should take over from here.
00:39:48The two of you take over?
00:39:51You've been tired and this may end up being a very sensitive meeting.
00:39:56Sensitive?
00:39:58Silly me.
00:39:59Hey, Shane.
00:40:02I found the Garfield yearbook.
00:40:06We are looking for anything about Barry.
00:40:11Senior class.
00:40:15Oh, look. There's Charlie.
00:40:18Charlie Reddick. Most likely to have a happily ever after.
00:40:21We'll just have to make sure that we get her one.
00:40:25I understand the irresistible urge to locate this fellow on Charlie's behalf.
00:40:30But as I said, personal interests cannot exist in the postal environment.
00:40:35Come on, Oliver. If this is for Charlie, you heard her yesterday.
00:40:40I did.
00:40:41Just in my experience, there are countless ways in which meddling in another's affairs can backfire.
00:40:46Agreed.
00:40:47There are a myriad of ways that meddling in many one's stuff can backfire or just end up on fire.
00:40:56You mean myriad ways.
00:40:58It's a common misconception to use the article A in the preposition of.
00:41:03Oh, look. Fast talking Barry. Most likely to own a car dealership.
00:41:09Are you seriously giving me a grammar lesson right now?
00:41:12My only intent was to clarify the use of myriad as an adjective.
00:41:16Now, if it had been employed as a noun.
00:41:18Oh, then I would use a myriad of other ways to stop you from correcting me.
00:41:23That would be technically correct if used as a noun.
00:41:26Right now there are a myriad of nouns coming to mind.
00:41:29Just as there are myriad ways to open a window without employing the one tool never intended to open the window.
00:41:36And there it is.
00:41:37Forgive me. I thought we were supposed to keep personal interests out of the office environment, Mr. O'Toole.
00:41:43Exactly. My point, Miss McInerney.
00:41:46Is anyone hungry?
00:41:47No.
00:41:48No.
00:41:51Hi. Sorry we're late.
00:41:53We've got a lead on Barry.
00:41:55Oh.
00:41:56Might be selling cars.
00:41:57He sounds a little sketchy, but if you do decide to, check him out.
00:42:01Whatever you do, don't do it on postal time.
00:42:28She's gone.
00:42:30She's not gone.
00:42:33She just needs some air.
00:42:38So do I.
00:42:41Go find her. Rita and I can talk to Mr. Frank. You just go.
00:42:45Norman, I don't know where to look.
00:42:48Of course you do.
00:42:51Where do you go when you need to feel like yourself again?
00:42:55Home.
00:42:57Home?
00:43:00Damn.
00:43:06This is Clyde. He's numbered.
00:43:08She made time for us right away, so just, uh, think about it.
00:43:18Think about it.
00:43:41Here I was, wondering if you know me at all.
00:43:49I know you're unhappy.
00:43:50Because you are.
00:43:53And you are because I am, and I don't know how we got here.
00:43:58Where we go now.
00:44:05Remember how it felt when we were sitting on my porch swing?
00:44:13Everything made sense when we were there, going in the same direction.
00:44:19Yeah.
00:44:28Maybe we need some help.
00:44:40So Rita and Norman turned in their application, huh?
00:44:42Yeah, all they have to do is wait now, I guess. Could take a year.
00:44:46Well, the good stuff is always worth waiting for.
00:44:51You found that old high school friend of yours yet?
00:44:54You know about that?
00:44:56You know those Dark of Night awards over behind Oliver's desk?
00:45:00One of those is mine.
00:45:02You don't get one of those without paying attention to details.
00:45:06So?
00:45:07Yeah. Yeah, I just found him. Turns out he really is a car salesman right here in town.
00:45:13Then what have you got to lose?
00:45:15Give the guy a call.
00:45:19You were so kind to find the time to help us, Mr. Frank.
00:45:22Well, you don't give me much choice.
00:45:24Federal postal officials with badges beat local public defenders every time.
00:45:28But this is very federal, and very postal.
00:45:32I'm sorry, but my hands are tied here.
00:45:35Maria's juvenile records are sealed.
00:45:37Now you can try to get a court order, but that might take months.
00:45:40And there's no guarantee that we'll grant access.
00:45:42The post office just wants to know about her current whereabouts.
00:45:45The people I represent are in the habit of sending annual Christmas cards.
00:45:49Well, if you do think of anything you can tell us, please give us a call.
00:45:55Well, this may not help your search, but I'll tell you one thing.
00:45:58Maria was a really good kid who had some issues she needed to deal with.
00:46:02She regretted what she did, and she deserved a second chance.
00:46:07I tried to give her one, and I hope she took it.
00:46:13We're never going to get through all that red tape. We've got to go to Plan B.
00:46:16Should we run it by Oliver?
00:46:18They're in therapy. We've got this.
00:46:24Wait. Thank you.
00:46:26Plan B is Mrs. Philpott?
00:46:28Yeah, we ran into a dead end with Maria.
00:46:30But we found Mrs. Philpott's address in an old faculty directory, and that led us here.
00:46:35There's only 1.5 people named Philpott in every hundred thousand.
00:46:40Even less in Denver, so it really wasn't that hard.
00:46:44Come on. It's going to be okay.
00:46:51Mrs. Philpott?
00:46:53Yes?
00:46:54We're from the post office.
00:47:00Yes, I wrote this to Maria Solinger.
00:47:03But I thought it was destroyed in the explosion.
00:47:05It's my fault, Mrs. Philpott.
00:47:08Barry Rogers, Marlon Carter, and I dropped a clock in the mailbox as a stupid prank.
00:47:12We had no idea how far it would go.
00:47:14Of course you didn't.
00:47:15I'm just thrilled that this was never delivered.
00:47:18Oh, well, that's the thing.
00:47:21Once that letter entered a U.S. mailbox, it became the property of the U.S. Postal Service.
00:47:27So we have no choice but to deliver that to Maria now.
00:47:30Oh, dear, no, please.
00:47:32I wrote this at a very weak moment when I was really struggling.
00:47:35And what Maria did was just the last straw.
00:47:38What did Maria do?
00:47:39Maria was a talented, very promising senior.
00:47:45She could act on stage and lead a team on a softball field.
00:47:49And the rule was, if her grades went down, she couldn't play.
00:47:54So when she failed her final exam, she was benched on the very game that a college scout was attending just to see her.
00:48:02Now, she begged her coach to look the other way, but he wouldn't.
00:48:07And so she begged me to raise her grade, and I wouldn't.
00:48:12She just busted, smashed her bat into my windshield.
00:48:15No one was hurt.
00:48:17But by the time it was all sorted out, I had missed a very consequential doctor's appointment.
00:48:23It was my first day of chemo.
00:48:25Maria was arrested for vandalism and expelled from school.
00:48:30Not long after, I left school to work on my recovery.
00:48:34And, well, here we are.
00:48:36Do you have any idea where she is now?
00:48:38No.
00:48:39But I couldn't bear it if this letter makes things worse now.
00:48:46We have to deliver that letter to Maria.
00:48:51But there's no reason we couldn't deliver two.
00:48:59We just need to find her.
00:49:01Uh-huh.
00:49:06So, let me see.
00:49:08Well, when I was looking for Maria, I'd usually find her making out under the bleachers with a boy named Toby.
00:49:16Toby, uh, Toby Seckham.
00:49:19Couldn't act, couldn't throw a ball.
00:49:22The only talent that kid had was being crazy about her.
00:49:26I hope she didn't lose that, too.
00:49:37And then I read this kitchen hack on Instagram that said you waste more water by rinsing every plate and every piece of silverware one at a time before you put it in the dishwasher than if you just put a small load into the dishwasher.
00:49:52Everything gets clean and it's more ecologically sustainable.
00:49:58That's why I do it.
00:50:00How do you feel about that, Oliver?
00:50:02I'm afraid I don't know what an Insta hack is.
00:50:05Graham, Instagram.
00:50:06Would it be fair to say that each of you having lived alone before getting married for how many years?
00:50:12Every day since I graduated college.
00:50:15And Oliver was...
00:50:17Married, very briefly.
00:50:19Prior to that I lived in a home alone in which we currently reside.
00:50:23Really a lovely Victorian that's been in my family forever.
00:50:29So, each of you over the years have developed your own daily routines.
00:50:34Dishwashing, cleaning, etc.
00:50:36And that worked for you then as a single person but not necessarily now as a couple.
00:50:41Well, one might argue irrespective of one's marital status that a freshly made bed is more aesthetically pleasing with crisply folded hospital corners.
00:50:50We don't live in a hospital.
00:50:51We don't live in a college dormitory either.
00:50:54I'd like to end there for today.
00:50:56I'd like to see you back in two days but in the meantime I have some homework for you.
00:51:03She gave us homework too.
00:51:04Lots of bubble baths.
00:51:06What about you?
00:51:07Something about not building another fire this week until the flue is open.
00:51:11I think it's a chimney sweep reference.
00:51:12Oh, yeah.
00:51:14I think I might have a way to find Maria.
00:51:18Mrs. Philpott said that Maria had a boyfriend, right?
00:51:23What if that boyfriend became husband?
00:51:29I'm going to do a search for Maria Seckham.
00:51:32Oh.
00:51:36This is highly irregular.
00:51:39We follow protocol.
00:51:43You were the first ones to make contact.
00:51:45Perhaps you and Rita should follow through.
00:51:47No.
00:51:48Charlie's having coffee with that Barry guy so we're watching Eleanor.
00:51:51And when we find Maria, well, you and Shane should do this together.
00:51:56Okay.
00:52:02You know, I really hope Barry is everything that Charlie is hoping for.
00:52:06I keep wondering, if Barry thought that letter was blown up, why didn't he write Charlie another letter?
00:52:12Oh, I don't know.
00:52:16Yes!
00:52:21We found her.
00:52:27Ms. Seckham?
00:52:29Yes.
00:52:30My name is Oliver O'Toole and this is my colleague, Shane McInerney.
00:52:34We're from the post office and we'd like a moment of your time.
00:52:37Sure, I only have a moment though. Come on in.
00:52:39We run the dead letter office and we have a letter addressed to you several years ago.
00:52:45You were at one time Maria Selinger, right?
00:52:47Yes.
00:52:48Apologize that we had to go to some lengths to locate you.
00:52:51It involved contacting the writer, a Mrs. Barbara Philpott.
00:52:56Needless to say, she remembers you and she remembered Toby.
00:53:02So finally we put two and two together and discovered you'd married.
00:53:06We were concerned that receiving this letter after so many years might cause some distress.
00:53:11Although you seem well, working here and not-
00:53:16In jail.
00:53:20The letter was written not long after the incident.
00:53:24We're required to deliver this to you, but you are not required to read it.
00:53:30And we do have another letter that she wrote to you just yesterday.
00:53:37Dear Maria, I owe you a long overdue apology.
00:53:41And with all my heart, I hope you are in a place where you can accept it.
00:53:45You were angry that day and I should have handled it better.
00:53:48But I'd just discovered I had cancer.
00:53:50I was scared and angry.
00:53:52I didn't know what to do.
00:53:54I didn't know what to do.
00:53:56I didn't know what to do.
00:53:58I didn't know what to do.
00:54:00I didn't know what to do.
00:54:02But I'd just discovered I had cancer.
00:54:04I was scared and angry with the world too.
00:54:07And you paid the price for my anger.
00:54:10I'm so sorry.
00:54:11Forgive me.
00:54:14Can you-
00:54:15Right here.
00:54:16Of course.
00:54:18I'm so grateful that my letter was found in time to help me reach out to you.
00:54:22I have a new, far less traumatic life growing flowers of all things.
00:54:26I hope you have found a happy life too.
00:54:29Fondly, Mrs. Philpott.
00:54:33Mrs. Philpott has been in remission for quite a few years.
00:54:38Until recently.
00:54:45For the record, I am happy.
00:54:47I mean, it took a lot of time and I had to start over, but-
00:54:50Sorry, I will read this again. I just-
00:54:53Oh, we've taken up too much of your time.
00:54:57No, thank you.
00:55:00I wished we could keep talking, but I just got thrown a curve today.
00:55:03You do seem pretty busy.
00:55:04It always is in adoptions.
00:55:06We thought we had a couple to adopt a little girl being born in a few months, and they have just backed out.
00:55:11So, I'm scrambling here.
00:55:17This isn't the same as meddling.
00:55:19This is just passing on information.
00:55:21Information that could change their lives.
00:55:23I know, I know.
00:55:24Blurring the lines between official business and personal life.
00:55:27Not unlike keeping a nursery in the DLO, I suppose.
00:55:31It was going to take Norman and Rita at least a year, maybe longer.
00:55:35Precisely.
00:55:36Come on, Oliver, why can't we just-
00:55:38Wait, what are you saying?
00:55:39No, you first.
00:55:40No, you.
00:55:42I was just gonna say maybe Dr. Callis would give us an A for our homework.
00:55:49That's what I was thinking.
00:55:54We might be having a violent agreement.
00:56:08Hi.
00:56:09Hey.
00:56:11Look at you.
00:56:12You look wonderful.
00:56:13Oh, you too.
00:56:15Look at you.
00:56:16You look wonderful.
00:56:17Oh, you too.
00:56:19I was so glad to get your message.
00:56:23There's just so much for us to catch up on.
00:56:25I just- I wish I had time for more than a cup of coffee.
00:56:28My wife just called.
00:56:29I gotta go pick up my kid from preschool.
00:56:31You're married.
00:56:32And you have a kid.
00:56:34Yeah.
00:56:35Yeah.
00:56:36This is my little buddy.
00:56:38Three.
00:56:39Doctor said he's smarter than a six-year-old.
00:56:42Anyway, let's try to make the best of the time that we've got.
00:56:46Yeah, you know, I'd love to, but I just realized my babysitter leaves early today, so I gotta rush off soon, too.
00:56:52Oh, that's too bad.
00:56:55So you're a mom?
00:56:56Yeah.
00:56:57Little girl.
00:56:58I'm your dad.
00:56:59I'm loving it.
00:57:00Can you believe that?
00:57:01Crazy, wild Barry is now a solid citizen.
00:57:05Well, we all grew up, I guess.
00:57:07Did you ever see Marlon?
00:57:09No.
00:57:10No, he got all serious, too, and he went to college and lost touch after that.
00:57:16We should try for a reunion someday.
00:57:18Yeah.
00:57:19Yeah, sure.
00:57:20Sorry, I do have to leave.
00:57:22What's that?
00:57:30Do you remember the mailbox and the alarm clock?
00:57:33Are you kidding me?
00:57:35That was our best prank ever.
00:57:37That was your idea.
00:57:38That was your idea.
00:57:40Well, they found some of those letters, and this one is from you.
00:57:47Oh, wow.
00:57:49I forgot about this.
00:57:56Is this why you called?
00:57:57Well, I didn't think that you'd still.
00:57:59Why would you?
00:58:00It was a long time ago.
00:58:01I wasn't really—
00:58:02There's something that I should have told you a long time ago.
00:58:06This letter that you got from me, I wrote this, but the signature that's missing, that doesn't say, Love, Barry.
00:58:16I don't understand.
00:58:19I wrote this as a joke, and I signed it, Love, Marlon, because he had, like, a major crush on you, and I was always teasing him about it.
00:58:27And when I mailed it, he got pretty upset, and then it got trashed, so I figured, you know, all's well that ends well, right?
00:58:39So Barry wrote the letter and signed it for Marlon?
00:58:43Ouch.
00:58:44Big ouch.
00:58:45Oh, it's okay.
00:58:46I mean, a few days ago, I didn't even know this existed. It's not like I spent years wondering if Barry loved me.
00:58:51So how long are you going to wonder if Marlon still does?
00:58:54We're back.
00:58:56And we have great news.
00:58:58Oh! Everything went okay with Maria?
00:59:00Better than okay.
00:59:03Charlie?
00:59:04I must admit, the consequences of your high school prank have yielded one remarkable, perhaps even miraculous, development.
00:59:11Maria's good. She has a great job that she loves, and it's placing babies with adoptive parents.
00:59:17And...
00:59:21There's a baby, due soon, that needs a family, and she's looking for a couple, just like you.
00:59:31Oh.
00:59:33What?
00:59:34What?
00:59:47So, Barry isn't so sketchy and wild anymore.
00:59:50No, he even volunteers for Neighborhood Watch.
00:59:55Guess I was wrong about that guy.
00:59:58Did you ever think you were wrong about Oliver?
01:00:05I've never stopped loving him.
01:00:09How's therapy going?
01:00:11Uh, it's, um...
01:00:12It's going.
01:00:18Dark of Night Award, presented to Joe O'Toole.
01:00:23Remember how I got that?
01:00:24Going the extra mile, and driving through that blizzard to...
01:00:28To deliver a wedding dress.
01:00:35What do you think?
01:00:43So here's a question for you both.
01:00:46What is the first moment you knew you'd be together?
01:00:51I think it was the swing.
01:00:54I think it was the swing.
01:01:01I gave her a porch swing to remind her of a happy memory.
01:01:06It's in the garage.
01:01:07I keep meaning to set it up.
01:01:09And I procrastinate.
01:01:11I just haven't found the perfect place.
01:01:13Because it's so her, and the house is so...
01:01:16So you.
01:01:19I share that beautiful home.
01:01:21It's her house. It's not mine.
01:01:23You share a house with the State Historical Society.
01:01:25I can't even move a chair.
01:01:26Or set the clock.
01:01:27It's a crank!
01:01:29A hundred year old irreplaceable crank.
01:01:31Oliver.
01:01:33What's the worst that could happen if the clock rang down?
01:01:37Without the dress, without the crank, do you believe that she would still be married?
01:01:42Well, of course we would.
01:01:43I take great umbrage at your question.
01:01:45He says things like that.
01:01:48Because you know him.
01:01:49I do.
01:01:51And all that you know, the history, the habits, the quirks.
01:01:56Did you marry him because of all that or in spite of it?
01:01:59Because I love him.
01:02:01I love her.
01:02:05Tell me.
01:02:06How much time passed between the first time you said I love you and the day you married?
01:02:11A few weeks.
01:02:12Ten weeks, four days.
01:02:13Ten weeks, four days. From I love you to forever.
01:02:18There's no time at all.
01:02:19But we were ready.
01:02:20We knew what we wanted.
01:02:22Of course we were.
01:02:24We're not children.
01:02:26Love can make children of us all, Oliver.
01:02:29But children must learn how to grow up.
01:02:32And lovers must learn how to become husbands and wives.
01:02:43We have great friends.
01:02:44Really happy friends who can write a recommendation.
01:02:48At some point.
01:02:50When they're even happier.
01:02:53My cousin Spike is our accountant.
01:02:55He just sent over our tax returns.
01:02:57Yeah, I got it right here.
01:02:59Okay, we can expedite this.
01:03:01And if the mother approves the application, which I think she will, we can get you cleared by early next week.
01:03:06Oh.
01:03:09There is just one more thing.
01:03:12And we understand if you feel you can't proceed.
01:03:19Good morning.
01:03:21I am ready and I am even on time.
01:03:39So how did that feel?
01:03:41Strange.
01:03:43Sad.
01:03:44Sad.
01:03:45I guess I've never seen the clock so still.
01:03:52It'll be fixed soon, I hope.
01:03:55So the clock will keep time once again.
01:03:58But perhaps you won't expect quite so much from it now.
01:04:02Or from yourself.
01:04:05No.
01:04:06How does that feel?
01:04:11Like starting over.
01:04:15Shane.
01:04:17Well, the dress is gone.
01:04:20But it's not like I was planning on wearing it ever again.
01:04:24I just thought I needed to hold on to it to-
01:04:27To what?
01:04:31To remember the happiest day of my life.
01:04:35So far.
01:04:38Hmm.
01:04:41Now, I have one last assignment for you.
01:04:45I want you each to do something to surprise each other this week.
01:04:50Something that leaves behind the old things and makes way for a new thing.
01:04:55Two surprises to create one new vision.
01:04:59I have no idea what you're talking about.
01:05:04We'll think of something.
01:05:06Wait, did you just say our last assignment?
01:05:08Yes.
01:05:09This is your last session.
01:05:12This is not a marriage in trouble.
01:05:14This is a six month old marriage.
01:05:16The honeymoon is over and now it's time to get down to the business of being married.
01:05:22The good news is you've been friends for so long.
01:05:26You don't need me to save your marriage.
01:05:29You just needed a little help to get it started.
01:05:34Sorry.
01:05:37I'm sorry.
01:05:39It's a 911 from Norman Rita.
01:05:49So this sounds like wonderful news.
01:05:54Except-
01:05:55There's something wrong, isn't there?
01:06:01There's a reason they had trouble finding her a family.
01:06:06She has a congenital heart condition.
01:06:10They said she could be in NICU for a few weeks before we would even take her home.
01:06:17And then she'll probably need surgery at some point.
01:06:21Oh wow.
01:06:23So what are you thinking?
01:06:25We don't want to say no, but-
01:06:29We just keep asking ourselves if we have what it takes to help her.
01:06:33It's a lot to take on.
01:06:36Well-
01:06:38Perhaps the question is-
01:06:41Are you worried you're adopting the wrong baby?
01:06:45Or that she's getting the wrong parents?
01:06:48Because we can't imagine anyone better than the two of you-
01:06:54To breathe love into a child every day of her life.
01:07:07She's so tiny.
01:07:11You can see her little tiny nose.
01:07:14It's right there on her face.
01:07:18So when do they need an answer?
01:07:21I think-
01:07:22I think you already have one.
01:07:30Then-
01:07:32I guess we're having a baby!
01:07:33I think we're having a baby!
01:07:36I think I'm gonna cry.
01:07:42Well, I certainly hope it's been worth all your trouble, Norman.
01:07:46Yeah, after all this, it'd be a real bummer if-
01:07:50This turned out to be somebody's gas payment.
01:07:52I doubt anything could tarnish a day such as this one.
01:07:55In fact, I believe we should break out the U to celebrate your impending parenthood.
01:08:00Two babies in the house? Are you sure we won't be in the way?
01:08:03Absolutely not! You and Eleanor are family.
01:08:07Have you ever thought about calling Marlon? I mean, I bet he'd be thrilled to hear from you.
01:08:12I don't know. I just feel sort of pathetic now, you know?
01:08:15Calling around, asking guys if they ever had a crush on me.
01:08:17But Marlon really did have a crush on you.
01:08:19According to Barry, but who knows what's really true.
01:08:22That's my point. You don't know until you give him a chance.
01:08:26Truth is, I used to imagine running into Marlon someday.
01:08:31Then I had a marriage that lasted about 30 seconds.
01:08:35And to Eleanor, that's going to last a lifetime.
01:08:39That chance is gone.
01:08:43She has been fuzzy for two days no matter what I do.
01:08:46Well, when I was little, my mom used to put me on the tractor and drive me around the commune until I fell asleep.
01:08:51Couldn't hurt to try.
01:08:53Do you want to go for a ride with Mommy?
01:08:57I feel so bad for her.
01:09:01I have an idea.
01:09:03Uh-oh.
01:09:04I think we should find Marlon.
01:09:06Oh, I don't know.
01:09:07Charlie just seems so down.
01:09:09She needs something to close this chapter one way or the other.
01:09:15Can't we just order her pizza?
01:09:27Mrs. Philpott?
01:09:31It's Maria.
01:09:39Ladies and gentlemen, the great mailbox breach of 2017 approaches its end.
01:09:44Twenty-five ill-fated missives were savagely launched into likely oblivion,
01:09:49and yet, with the perseverance of this office, each has been given a second life.
01:09:54As we prepare to dispatch the last of them, may we never lose sight of the high purpose to which we, as postables, have been called.
01:10:03Mm.
01:10:20Let's see.
01:10:22Address is still unreadable.
01:10:26Uh, um, sorry. I should change her.
01:10:30Norman?
01:10:33Well, it's intact.
01:10:42It's smudged. I can barely make out the handwriting.
01:10:46I concur. Sadly, we may have our last letter be unreadable.
01:10:53Would have been so nice to be able to have delivered them all.
01:10:57Norman, are you sure you can't think of something?
01:11:00Not unless they invent a device to decipher poor penmanship.
01:11:08Hello? May we help you?
01:11:11Hi. Yeah. I'm looking for Charlie Reddick. I'm Marlon Carter.
01:11:15Mr. Carter. I'm Jane McInerney. We spoke on the phone.
01:11:18Right. Thank you. Is she here?
01:11:22She is. Charlie?
01:11:26Great.
01:11:27What is going on, Miss McInerney?
01:11:30It's okay.
01:11:36Charlie.
01:11:38Marlon?
01:11:39It's good to see you.
01:11:41Um, how did you—
01:11:43I got a call about an old letter that came through here. Barry wrote it and forged my name.
01:11:48It's a federal offense, you know.
01:11:51It's really good to see you.
01:11:53You too.
01:11:55I feel bad about Barry's letter. I'm sorry you had to read it.
01:11:59It wasn't your fault.
01:12:00It's just a shame that that's the one that survived.
01:12:03What?
01:12:04Yeah. There was another that, uh—
01:12:07Sorry.
01:12:11I think that's it there.
01:12:16What?
01:12:17Yeah. I mailed one that day, too, and it was on green paper just like that.
01:12:25Wait, you wrote that letter?
01:12:27I did. To her.
01:12:30Oh, I love my job.
01:12:32Goodness, perhaps we should deliver that letter?
01:12:35Oh, yes.
01:12:42Oh, um—
01:12:43This must be Eleanor.
01:12:46Yeah. Oh, sorry. She's been fussy.
01:12:54Oh, yeah. This is definitely from you.
01:12:58You can read that?
01:12:59She's the only one who's ever been able to read my handwriting.
01:13:04Dear Charlie, about an hour ago, Barry wrote a stupid letter to you and signed my name and mailed it.
01:13:10It's embarrassing.
01:13:11So if you open this letter first, please just throw Barry's away.
01:13:15But if it's too late and you've already read his, then I hope you ignore it.
01:13:21Don't get me wrong. He's right about me.
01:13:23I do have feelings for you, but I'm working on how to say that in my own way, in my own time.
01:13:28So please don't feel like you have to answer this.
01:13:31Just remember, somebody's always writing about love, but I think the best love just gets lived.
01:13:37I hope I live long enough to find a way to tell you that someday, face to face, the way you deserve.
01:13:43Love, Marlon.
01:13:46I don't remember exactly what I wrote, but I haven't forgotten how I felt.
01:13:53And you're supposed to get over your crush, you know, but...
01:13:59Oh, look how sweet she is.
01:14:03Finally.
01:14:07So, I guess being a mother and everything, you don't get out much.
01:14:12Being a mother and everything, you don't get out much.
01:14:16Not much.
01:14:18I do a lot of take out.
01:14:21I love take out.
01:14:26He's in law school. Top ten percent of his class.
01:14:30And he's never missed a car payment. Solid guy.
01:14:33So, you must have broke a few rules to find him that fast, huh?
01:14:37Does a hacker hack on the internet?
01:14:42What do you think that letter said?
01:14:44Why?
01:14:47Enough.
01:14:54Um, Marlon said he'd drive me home. Do you mind if we order in from Angela's?
01:14:58Oh, I...
01:14:59Oh, I love Angela's. Best crust in Colorado. I'll tell him about the cheese.
01:15:06See? A happy ending and pizza.
01:15:12Yay!
01:15:24I know you're upset.
01:15:28But, Oliver, I want you to know that I...
01:15:32I wouldn't have brought Marlon here if I didn't think that he was a really nice guy who genuinely wanted to see Charlie again.
01:15:43I'm not upset.
01:15:46It's just that, after all we've learned in therapy, I still don't understand your preoccupation with matchmaking.
01:15:55Of course you do.
01:15:57I know you and you know me. That's what we've learned.
01:16:02I'm a romantic and you are too.
01:16:05But I use laptops and you use...
01:16:08Logic.
01:16:13Okay.
01:16:19Not everyone could have navigated these past few days the way we have.
01:16:26Agreed.
01:16:32For going the extra mile.
01:16:38I would go just about anywhere with you, Mr. O'Doul.
01:16:50Except right now I've got to do something.
01:16:54Ah, so do I. I'll meet you at the house?
01:16:57Deal.
01:17:07Okay.
01:17:31Oliver, I'm back.
01:17:37Ah.
01:17:42What on earth?
01:17:44Are you ready to be surprised?
01:17:48I think I already am.
01:17:52What is all this?
01:17:54These are the seashells I collected on that island the Christmas my grandfather died and I wondered if I'd ever be happy again.
01:18:04That's the pen you borrowed and wouldn't return. You used it to draw.
01:18:09A picture of what jazz looks like on the night we first kissed.
01:18:13I kept that right here for months until you came back to me.
01:18:19And that I did.
01:18:24And the letter opener I gave you for your birthday.
01:18:28Hmm?
01:18:32The last rose of summer.
01:18:39Did I marry a pack rat?
01:18:43No.
01:18:48You married a man who believes that everything you touch in his life becomes a rare and sacred thing.
01:18:57But it would mean nothing if I didn't have you to share it with.
01:19:01Anywhere. Any place.
01:19:06And any old home.
01:19:10Or perhaps in a new one.
01:19:20It seems the State Historical Society is willing to accept the O'Toole Mansion as the site of the Colorado Museum of Coastal History.
01:19:29I'm just hoping you're willing to consider the possibility of moving.
01:19:36Because, um, because I want to start over.
01:19:46Shane.
01:19:51Will you marry me?
01:19:54All over again.
01:19:56All over again.
01:20:01Love is patient and kind.
01:20:04Love bears all things.
01:20:06Hopes all things.
01:20:08Endures all.
01:20:19I've always been in love with you.
01:20:21Always.
01:20:23I have thanked God every day that you came into my life.
01:20:29But I realize now that having you in my life doesn't mean expecting you to change and fit into it.
01:20:40I'm asking you to forgive me.
01:20:45And I'm asking you to build a new life with me.
01:20:51Not mine.
01:20:53Not yours.
01:20:56Ours.
01:21:00Will you do that?
01:21:04If you'll forgive me for expecting the same thing.
01:21:07I absolutely will.
01:21:11We've both lived alone for so long and we are so very much ourselves.
01:21:20But you are the only man that I could ever live with and truly be myself with.
01:21:31And yes, I ended that with a preposition.
01:21:36Wherever we live, you, Oliver, are my home.
01:21:48And I am yours.
01:21:52I love you.
01:22:03This was quite the surprise.
01:22:07I guess I have a few left in me.
01:22:09This is going to be hard to top.
01:22:12There's no pressure, of course.
01:22:15Trust me.
01:22:18I've got this.
01:22:22Oh?
01:22:29You know, I'll have to find a new hiding place for this when we move it to the new house.
01:22:35You think so?
01:22:37Someplace high where she can't reach it.
01:22:41She?
01:22:43Or he.
01:22:47Well, now in a few weeks, probably.
01:22:49Plenty of time to find a spot for that swing.
01:22:52It'll be great.
01:22:55It'll be like a rocking chair built for two.
01:22:59Or...
01:23:03Actually...
01:23:06Three.
01:23:08No.
01:23:10Surprise.
01:23:11Oh, my God.
01:23:17Three.
01:23:18Really?
01:23:19Three.
01:23:21Oh, my God.

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