Malloy confronts Elizabeth about Roger being
behind the steering wheel of the car that hit a man that killed him instead of
Burke but she isn’t willing to accept that. She hides behind the verdict even
if “evidence” presents itself that might condemn Roger. Liz’s banker, John
Harris, stops by to settle a trust fund for David and tells her of another
banker interested in buying up all of the Collins Port assets/debt to secure
all properties and business. When Carolyn tells him of her dinner with Burke,
meeting a banker by the name of James Blair, the very one interested in buying
Collins Port businesses associated with Elizabeth and her family, Harris must
inform them of Devlin’s intentions. The question is what Elizabeth and her
family plan to do about all of this? Will this revelation, spilt out of Carolyn’s
mouth, ruin Burke’s devious plans to get revenge over the family that wronged
him? It is funny that Carolyn, just in Bangor to eat dinner with a man she’s
infatuated with, could be the catalyst in the end of Burke’s nefarious quest
for revenge. Malloy demands to see Roger about the Burke conviction…what will
Roger do when confronted with a new rival? I think Malloy may be walking into
danger as Roger is a desperate man capable of using violence to keep his ass
out of a sling.
Burke interrupts what could have been a decent dinner between Maggie, her father, and Vicky, and he's sore, agenda-driven, and pointed in defending himself, while also demanding answers...answers Sam is willing to flee to protect. Sam's only link to Burke at all, besides Roger himself, is the letter he wrote to Maggie. He escapes out the back door while the others were in the living room and heads to Collins Port Inn where the letter is kept but the owner will not give it over to him. The letter is Maggie's and she will have to give permission before Sam can get his hands on it. Malloy's death looms large and will not go away--especially as long as Burke steamrolls throughout Collins Port, pissed off and unrestrained. He wants to know Sam's connection to the wrongful conviction and isn't about to just forget his presence at the meeting that night. Maggie just cannot believe that her father had anything at all to do with Malloy's death; Sam and Malloy were fr...
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