Dissappearance (2019)

1
I didn't choose
to be this way,
a loner, always seeking
the story unfold around me,
fixating on the details,
creating a "What happened?,"
a "Who does what?" circumstance.
It is who I am.
Always been and always will be.
A writer.
Take a look.
They're not going to find him.
I'm sure of it.
Morning, honey.
Good morning.
Is this for me?
It should be good.
It's certainly unconventional.
Look, I'm almost there.
I'm just working out
the final details.
Just tell him I'll need a week.
Hey.
Is everything okay?
Yeah.
Everything's status quo.
Well, it sounded
like you were having
a bit of an issue...
during that phone call.
You look beautiful.
You don't look bad yourself.
I love you.
Come on.
Let's get outta here.
What a day.
I hope you don't mind, honey.
I invited her.
Happy fucking anniversary,
Isabelle.
Blake.
I don't think
we've formally met.
You are exquisite.
But we have met before.
At the caf.
I served you and your husband.
Are you sure you want me here,
or is this some kind of joke?
Cecile, why don't you join us
for our anniversary?
Yes, Cecile. Please do.
The sun is going to keep
getting hotter.
So, when you put your suit on,
you should cover up.
You know, it's true
what George says about you.
You are the most beautiful girl
I've seen with him.
Thank you.
Ever since I saw you
at the caf,
I've been
absolutely mesmerized by you.
It's an illusion, my dear.
He tends to like them
in their prime.
Usually not as sweet
as you, though.
- "They?"
- Well, of course.
You don't think that you were
his only, did you?
George seems
like the kind of man
that can handle
more than one woman.
If that's what suits him,
then who am I to judge
what he does in his spare time?
He'd be perfect.
if not for his needs.
Do you enjoy sleeping with him?
I do prefer older men.
After ten years of marriage,
you tend to get a sense
of what your man likes.
If this trip
goes according to my plan,
maybe I'll like you, too.
I think you already do.
George, is it too soon?
Too soon for what?
My wife likes to drink.
I know that phrase
like the back of my hand.
Well, George,
in honor of our young guest
let's grab the champagne.
Oh, don't worry
about it, darling.
When you're out
here, time doesn't exist.
You can do anything,
be anyone you want.
Because without time,
then it never really happened.
Are you gonna let 'em go?
Nope.
Clear as day, I gotta get more
information from each of 'em.
And certainly not
'til we run some tests.
Right. The shawl.
Not only that. Look at him.
Our young addict just got
his blood drawn this morning.
Oh, but he already
admitted to that.
Just being thorough.
I wonder which one did it?
Which one?
I'm old school.
This is Detective Kenny Park.
K-E-N-N-Y P-A-R-K.
Badge number 817A334,
on November 17th, 2015.
I am interviewing
Isabelle Boulang.
Why don't you just tell me
what happened?
I'm just
his casual weekend friend.
The kind that usually
has consequences
if you're not discreet.
Weren't you concerned
about being out on the ocean
with a jealous wife?
I've been in worse situations.
Do you think
George and Isabelle...
and maybe even Blake,
have done
this sort of thing before?
Like it's a game to them?
I don't really think
about it, Detective Park.
People come and go.
I'm not invested.
These two...
they seem awfully in synch.
And the mannerisms,
their tone,
the creepishly similar looks.
Come on. Cecile and Isabelle?
Isabelle's honest.
Something trustworthy about her.
And this guy,
he has this gorgeous wife
and what, this...
this sex toy on the side?
Or whatever the fuck
they've been saying?
C'mon, let's call this
for what it is.
Some kinky...
Eyes Wide Shut sort of thing,
and... and a fight
between some jealous bitch,
who may or may not be
a closeted lesbian.
Now she,
or someone, or all of them,
they knock this fucker out. Hmm?
He falls
over the side of the boat
and the rest is history.
Now,
you want my personal opinion?
They're all covering for this
as a trio.
Where did you go, George?
What happened?
Talk to me.
They killed him, Park.
And what we have here
is a story of betrayal,
adultery, mind fucking games,
sex, and money.
Is it really, though?
I mean, on the surface, yeah.
It is.
But there's always more.
Why have Blake and Cecile there?
What's the point?
So, I guess
you're used to being alone.
Are you lonely, Cecile?
I may be young, but...
I've already learnt
that life is lonely, Detective.
Are you happy
now, George?
When are you going
to sleep with her, George?
Relax, Isabelle.
It's not always about you,
and what you think
people ought to do.
I get it.
Stop telling me
to relax, George.
God.
Show me a goddamn emotion,
you know, something. Anything!
Sometimes you are
just so fucking detached.
Honey, I have a book to write,
and you know what that entails.
This wasn't supposed to be
a weekend for your writing.
This is our ten year
anniversary! This is about us!
And apparently Cecile.
Okay, look, I get it. I'm sorry.
Just remember these ideas
pay for our lifestyle.
You just want control.
And for us to be grateful
for the things that you give us.
But everything comes attached
to an expectation.
Honey...
Do you like having
everyone need you? Is that it?
Why don't you
take a seat upstairs,
okay?
I get it. I'll stop.
What's that?
It's a fishermen's buoy.
Helps the fishermen mark
where their nets are.
But, uh, it's also
so that I don't hit them.
Are they always like this?
Not usually.
Think it might be, uh...
Me?
I get it.
So, he's writing a book, then?
He always has a book to write.
I didn't know he was a writer.
Have you read any of his books?
Are they any good?
Well, I'm always in 'em.
In one form or another.
George likes
to put people in situations,
and then see
how things play out.
I guess four people
on the sailboat fits the bill.
Speak of the devil.
It's Hemingway.
I'll read it
as soon as I get to the beach.
Seagulls.
A Seagull in the Water.
Yes, it's going to be
his best one yet,
isn't it, George?
Now, who needs
a drink like I do?
Here, have a glass.
Scavengers.
They take things.
They wait,
and when the moment strikes,
they fight for whatever's
available to them.
If you would've told me
I'd be sipping champagne
on a sailboat
across the Pacific Riviera
with a beautiful woman,
I would've thought
I'd died and gone to heaven.
We have a lot to talk about.
So, George is an author?
When I met him,
I was drawn
to his strength, his...
unpredictability.
He's the kind of man
that can own you with a look.
Control...
manipulation.
And this is
attractive to you, yes?
The man
that plays with each of you
like you're a pawn
in his mental game of chess?
I like games.
I like playing them
and I like being in them.
Do you like role-playing,
Detective?
I'm married, ma'am.
I like to avoid games.
The spirit of choice.
What people do,
and why they do it...
If, in fact, they had to make
a decision in the moment,
if motivated,
would they react...
would they hesitate?
Is this yours?
I was wearing it.
Isabelle asked me to.
To cover you up?
Or to dress me up. Like a doll.
Is this George's blood?
So you're the sober one
on this boat trip?
Nineteen months.
Just curious.
How does one
get heroin on a boat?
By bringing it.
To each his own.
I screwed up.
Have some coffee.
Do you honestly believe...
after coming down from heroin,
that I'd want a cup of coffee?
Blake, what happened out there?
Now, as you get older,
you come to realize that meaning
is what gets you
outta bed in the morning.
To catch a fish.
Not just a fish,
the biggest fish.
And that was
the old man's purpose.
What happens
when you catch that fish?
I don't know.
See, Blake, that's the point.
Life's not black and white.
If it was, we'd have no purpose.
We need uncertainty.
We need something
to... to need, to possess,
to give reason to all this...
this beauty,
this nothingness
that surrounds you and I.
Context. Right.
And once the fisherman gets it,
a shark comes along
and devours the old man's catch,
the universe correcting itself.
The old man's purpose,
spend your whole life learning
to accept the lack of control.
Irony.
The basis
by which all art exists.
Some bullshit that was.
Blake...
I need to understand the day.
Why George has disappeared.
Not his philosophy,
nor his little
parenting anecdotes.
In order to give you
a goddamn understanding,
you have to know the background
of how it all happened.
Sorry.
Please, proceed.
Anything involving George
cannot be easily explained.
He's unpredictable.
Unreasonable.
Yet completely logical
and without any emotion.
Like a genius.
Or a sociopath.
Let me paint you a Rembrandt.
Time spent with George is
like time spent with a master.
On one side,
you feel for the guy.
On the other hand,
is it some brilliantly woven
manipulation of your emotions?
It's a compass?
It is.
It's quite nice.
Is it?
It's broken.
I can see that.
What about George
are you protecting?
Why do you think
I'm protecting George?
Because you just said
he was your master.
You misinterpreted.
He isn't my master. Nobody is.
I needed a place to live,
and George took me in.
He gives me what I need
and I give him what he needs.
Simple as that.
He's my friend.
But I'm not protecting
anybody but myself, Detective.
If he's gone...
do you get his boat?
You think
that I would help Isabelle
off her husband
and then get to keep his boat?
What's my endgame?
If I was stupid enough
to do something like that?
Only someone
who truly hated being controlled
could find
that kind of motivation.
Maybe it was you.
Maybe it was Isabelle.
Maybe it was you and Isabelle.
I'm my own master.
I had nothing to gain.
Each day, I wake up
and I try to survive.
George gave me more than enough,
and I would never take from him.
At least not without his giving.
I know you're an addict.
I know you relapsed.
And I'm sorry.
But I have got
two women in the other room
and a man who's disappeared.
So you have got
to give me something
to work with here.
You want something to work with.
I didn't do the heroin
that's in my system.
I don't know how it got there.
I went to bed sober
and I woke up like this.
It was definitely mine...
but it was around my neck
when I went to bed.
How's that for something?
You know
what I love about this compass?
It's perfect to its design.
There was a problem
and a man came up with an idea
to solve that problem
and this is it.
Now, it can be a, uh,
paperweight or a doorstop,
but that's not
what it's meant to be.
It's not
what it's designed to be.
But what it does best is
show us the way.
That's simple,
but it has value.
What were you boys doing
downstairs for so long?
Organizing the cabin
and packing for the beach.
I showed Blake what you got me
for our second anniversary.
Mm.
I bought this for George
when we went to Morocco.
I sat in a flea market
for three hours
while he
tried to talk the price down.
He practically stole it
from that poor little man.
He was
a third-generation fisherman.
Got it off
his grandfather's boat.
He hated boats, so I was
practically doing him a favor.
Right.
Don't worry.
She likes to do this to me.
She likes to see me beg.
This time I'm really
gonna do it, George.
It's not worth it, Isabelle.
Oh, but it's
so much fun, though.
Hey, guys, Three Arch Bay's
coming right past that cove.
We should anchor soon.
This wasn't
the first time
we'd gone to Three Arch Bay.
We've become very familiar
with the area...
and we knew which times
to enjoy the beach privately
with no other boats.
We took
the smaller boat to shore...
and had a perfect day.
The thing about Three Arch Bay
is it's secluded.
You can climb the rocks,
scale the hill,
traverse the underwater coral.
It's the type of place
you'd expect
a couple like George
and Isabelle to go to.
It's heaven on Earth.
George and I
walked along the beach,
talked about life, art,
and the idea of finding peace,
which was something
that we talked about often.
Cecile and Isabelle
were laying on the beach,
continuing to drink champagne
while bathing under the sun.
Everybody was getting along.
This place,
how can you stand it?
It's just so beautiful.
I'm used
to living out of a suitcase.
Ever since I was a kid,
all alone.
Along the way
I got comfortable...
wandering,
knowing that...
it was just me.
Just me,
alone.
When I was your age,
I left home.
Abusive father,
an emotionally unavailable
mother...
And a wild nature
I just had to explore.
That's how I met George.
At first, he scared me.
He was
the first man I couldn't resist.
I knew I was going to marry him.
I needed something to ground me.
Someone who made me feel safe.
Someone who made me feel
less alone.
But now I've come to learn...
sometimes it's better
not to feel safe.
Leave him.
Look.
Something I took from my mother
before I left home.
This isn't right. You...
you don't know me.
A day before I left home,
I was on a train...
and I looked out the window...
there were sunflower fields
as far as the eye could see.
Come on.
Let's go play in the water.
Aw, I swear
I can do it five times.
Like this.
It doesn't work for me
like that!
- Can you hear that?
- What?
No, seriously.
- You can hear that?
- What is it?
It's a whole orchestra
of violins
playing just for you.
There you go.
- That's real funny, George.
- No, I'm serious! Hey, guys,
guys, come back!
He wants you to play for him.
- Seriously. He does.
- George!
- Come back!
- What?
The joke
is already getting old.
I don't need anybody's sympathy.
The girls look
like they're having a good time.
You ever, uh,
build a sand castle, Blake?
Of course.
I mean a sand castle,
with a moat,
a labyrinth of tunnels, and...
and a maze
to protect your queen.
I'd have to find a queen first.
Those two. They're dangerous.
Why would you say that?
You know,
when I was seven years old,
I saw the most beautiful girl
I'd ever come across.
And so, uh,
naturally, I ran to the store
and I got her
a 12-dollar diamond necklace,
and wrote
the most professing poem,
and even pulled down two flowers
from my mother's garden.
So, when I saw her next,
I gave her
all those things, the gift,
the poem, and the flower.
What happened?
They tore the poem to pieces.
They ripped the necklace apart,
and the flow...
and the flowers, well, they, uh,
they were already dead
by the time I got them to her.
Things don't get better, Blake.
They just get bigger.
I bet I could do it six times.
Hold on!
- Enjoying the day?
- I am.
I love it here.
I can relate.
Do you wanna talk about it?
Do you still love him?
I ask myself that every day.
And?
And I'll let you know
if I come up with an answer.
He really believes in me.
Maybe he has
to believe in something.
One day...
I wanna have a girl like you...
and a boat like that.
My own queen...
to build a sand castle for.
What do you think of Isabelle?
I think she's exquisite.
Do you feel self-conscious?
I just want you to be happy.
I don't know
why you'd choose me instead.
Why do I have to choose?
Why can't I have both of you?
And there's Blake, too.
Well,
everyone likes having a pet.
Come on, George.
You don't always have to be so...
I'm... I'm just
messing with you. Okay?
I'm just playing. I like Blake.
He's a good kid. He's...
You know, I'm teaching him
how to be a man.
What makes a man, a man?
A woman.
Or two.
Hey!
Where's my journal?
I didn't bring it.
Why not?
You asked me
to pack up stuff for a picnic.
I didn't think
it included your journal.
George, let it go.
It's none of your business.
I'll go get it.
Forget it.
I'm done with the beach.
I'm going for a swim.
He's in a rare form today.
George got upset
about his journal,
leaves, swims back to the boat.
What time
would you say that was?
Four o'clock.
You sure?
I'm sure.
Anyone who spends days at sea
can look at the sun
and know the time.
So George
would often leave mid-afternoon?
This wasn't
our first trip.
One gets
quite familiar with patterns.
What happened next?
Cecile and I
went for a hike to sober up.
Mm-hmm. And Blake?
He stayed at the beach
to read the book
George gave him.
With George
leaving so often,
were you ever
concerned about him
just one day disappearing?
If we do find him...
would you be disappointed
if he were dead?
Do you still love your husband?
Isabelle?
Let me tell you
a story, Detective.
Every morning a man wakes up
and he makes
a bowl of oatmeal for his wife.
He cuts up a banana
and puts it on top
and he puts it
on her bedside table.
She wakes up.
She finds the gesture
kind and loving.
But after a month,
she starts to hate it.
She feels obligated.
The thing is, she hates bananas.
So, one evening,
she tells her husband,
"When you make
my breakfast in the morning,
could you add strawberries?"
And he smiles and goes to bed.
She wakes up,
looks at her bedside table
and there's a bowl
of freshly made oatmeal.
And what do you think is on top?
Bananas.
So, you asked me
if I love my husband,
and the answer is yes and no,
because he thinks
he gives me what I need,
but I asked
for fucking strawberries!
Now, women are complicated.
We like being loved.
We need to be touched.
But sometimes,
we need something more.
We need to be heard,
and we need to laugh.
George is a beautiful man,
and he has great intentions,
for the most part.
He's very broken.
Of course I would be devastated.
You okay?
She wants full custody.
Well, that seems pretty harsh.
Nah, I work too much.
And the alcohol?
Nah, I haven't had
a drop in four weeks.
That's a good start.
What do you think
about that kid?
- What, the addict?
- Mm-hmm.
I think he's broken.
He's broken, agree,
but does that make
a young man guilty of murder?
Maybe he snapped.
Question is, why?
What about the English girl?
You know, something about her,
in her eyes,
something mysterious.
You know, like she almost seemed
like she was too innocent.
She's a young girl
trying to find her way.
Wrong place, wrong time,
wrong company.
On the flip side,
what about George?
I mean what if he's
the one in charge, in control?
It was his boat,
and he separated himself.
Four people alone.
The jealous wife,
a young man who presumably wants
what his mentor has,
a young English courtesan
and George.
I love it.
I love these people.
Sir?
There' a man here.
He's a fisherman.
He needs to speak with you.
They found
something in the ocean
they think you should see.
Anyone hungry?
Yeah. I'll get everything ready.
I'll help.
You guys run along.
I'll help George set the table.
You need some water.
You're drunk.
Fuck you, George.
Mm.
This quinoa salad
is amazing, Blake.
Yeah.
You've come a long way
from burning those steaks,
that's for sure.
That was one time.
So, how often do you go sailing?
Oh, well...
what is it honey?
Whenever you have
to get some writing done
we spend the weekend
at sea? Hmm?
Don't let her fool you.
We got the boat
so we could get away.
I promised Isabelle I'd buy her
a home in the middle of nowhere,
but, for now,
this will have to do.
So this just happens to be one of
the weekends when you're working?
Honey, it's not the time,
nor the place, okay?
Oh, when is it ever
the time or the place
to call you out on your
megalomania bullshit, George!
Enough, Isabelle.
Fuck you!
I hate this boat!
And I'm sick of all
your unfulfilled promises!
I said that's enough!
Yes, master.
May I remind you,
I didn't force that fucking ring
on your finger, okay?
You gladly accepted it
because you had
no other choices.
You know, in fact,
none of you would have shit
without me!
So if ever any of you express
anything other than gratitude,
I'll fucking
throw you overboard!
Do you understand me?
All of you want freedom,
yet here you are, resenting me,
as if I'm taking it from you!
Is this not freedom enough, huh?
Huh?
Sorry. Excuse me.
You're the fisherman?
I'm a captain.
Captain.
I'm Detective Park.
Uh, what do you have for me?
Lost and Found wanted this,
but I insisted
a detective look at it.
Have a seat, Captain.
So,
what brings you here?
On the boat?
No, silly.
America.
California. Laguna Beach.
George and Isabelle, and...
yes, the boat.
What brings you here, Blake?
I'm just
trying to find my way...
pick up a thing or two
from the Boulangs.
They have
the type of life that I...
that I see in magazines.
Do they?
At least on the surface.
That's why I like you.
Underneath
all the layers of crap...
you're pure.
That's gotta be the nicest
insult I've ever gotten.
You never answered my question.
I love the black sky.
The white little dots.
It's massive.
We're so insignificant.
We have no idea
what's really out there.
It's heroin.
You wear heroin?
Is...?
You know,
it's like the guy
who keeps a gun
in his safety deposit box.
That's his way out.
This is my way out.
I don't expect to relapse...
and I don't expect
to stay sober.
I saw you watching
Isabelle and I on the beach.
It's okay.
I don't mind.
I... I got a routine.
I check my pots in order.
The day before yesterday
was Tuesday.
I was checking my first pot
and I saw on my third buoy
that there was a boat anchored.
And so I figure
I'll just go check that pot
on the way back.
And when I came back,
the boat was still there.
So, I figured I'll just check
that pot next time I'm out.
Sometimes it's best
to just let a pot soak.
So, you found this, then, today?
Yeah.
Its protocol
to regard the buoys
that we have at sea.
That boat either didn't know
what it was doing,
or it had no regard
for my business dealings.
I found that book
this morning in my lobster pot.
In my lobster pot.
Well,
I appreciate you bringing it in.
Oh, I brought it in, Detective,
because it's
so perfectly preserved
in a watertight bag.
It... it wanted to be found.
I've seen this before.
This is one of the story plots
from his last book.
I'm sure you could find
three more of those if you ask
around the docks, Detective.
If one is found,
you can bet
it was George and his big plan.
It has his signature
all over it.
Did you help your husband
with his writing, Mrs. Boulang?
Every once in a while,
George would get stuck.
Get writer's block,
gets too close to it.
He told me once
it was like walking through fog.
Whichever direction you go,
however fast you try,
it's just white.
He would get to his last page
and just start from scratch.
Throw his book out.
And I hated that about him.
Do you have any idea
what that can do to a man?
Actually,
I'm more curious
about what that
might do to his wife.
Do you think
I killed my husband?
I think something's happened
to your husband
and I'm trying to figure out
what that something is.
So, how can you
sit here all day long
and just stare daggers at me?
I'm trying to help you,
and you're telling me,
after he disappeared
that this is all
some part of a master plan
by George Boulang.
What I am saying is
that if there was a fisherman,
and I mean "if,"
then George would know
that it was on this man's route.
He would study
the patterns, the protocols,
and he wouldn't ever allow
our boat to be anchored there.
George doesn't do anything,
and I mean anything,
without forethought.
George
came back from his swim.
He seemed very determined,
almost manic.
For the first time
in having spent time with him,
I was actually concerned.
He was always so calm.
But there was a change in him.
George came back
like he had a plan.
A mission.
There was something
very, very off about him.
I thought
he might hurt Isabelle.
Perhaps
he'd had enough of her drinking.
Or maybe he was gonna hurt
Cecile and me.
He'd had a rough childhood.
From what I gathered,
he had it in him.
"Feed on the dead or injured,
they have a job to do.
They purge the Earth of garbage.
If you look at the abyss
long enough,
the abyss looks back at you.
Nietzsche.
If you look
at the abyss long enough,
the abyss looks back at you."
Every once in a
while, George would get stuck,
and he would get
to his last page
and start from scratch.
I hated that about him.
Anything involving George
cannot be easily explained.
He's unpredictable,
yet completely logical.
Control,
manipulation.
To be honest,
I like games.
Without any emotion.
Everyone likes having a pet.
Seagulls scavenge.
Like a genius or a sociopath.
Seagulls scavenge.
There was a big bang
downstairs in the cabin,
like someone fell.
It got really
uncomfortable really quickly.
There we were, on a boat
in the middle of the water.
What was he gonna do?
"Most people live a lie,
I strive for truth."
People live a lie.
I am truth.
What did they do to you?
Lab results
for the blood on the shawl.
Matches Blake's.
Not George's.
Nothing on the boat
matches George.
It's clean as a whistle.
Okay. What about
the, uh, spot on the boat?
Blake.
What the hell
happened to you, George?
How did your blood
get on the shawl?
I guess
Isabelle was really drunk.
After George
got back from his swim,
he went down into the cabin.
Cecile and I stayed on the deck.
We heard some commotion.
George raised his voice,
and there was a loud bang.
I got up to go check it out.
But by the time that I got
to the front end of the cabin,
I got hit square in the head.
And I must've passed out,
because the next thing I know
I'm waking up bloody
with that shawl around my head
and Cecile over me.
That's the last thing
I remember.
I tried to intervene,
but George told me
to mind my own business.
Blake was lying
on the floor, bleeding,
and Isabelle was drunk
and she was visibly scared.
George
came back from his swim,
found a bottle
and accused me of being drunk./
And he told me
I should go to bed.
I hate it when he babies me.
I stumbled, I hit my head,
and he started to scream.
At that point I, uh,
I reached for something,
the, um, compass, maybe.
And that's the last thing
that I remember.
George got back to the boat,
noticed Cecile
and Blake together
at the front of the boat,
realized he was losing control.
Found a drunk Isabelle,
tried to put Isabelle to bed,
she resisted,
someone threw a compass, or not,
and Blake got his
one way or another.
So, the shawl
and the journal are useless.
The compass is just ridiculous.
And all we've got are
three alibis that all add up.
Yeah, this is Bailey.
Accounts have all been drained.
When?
Midnight, all of the money
was transferred
into Mrs. Boulang's accounts.
Offshore, untraceable.
Okay, we need to get creative,
start thinking
like a writer would.
What grounds us?
What is our foundation?
George is
obviously the foundation.
Okay, let's start once again.
Uh, they wake up, uh,
George says good morning.
He gives her some flowers,
yada-yada-yada.
What else? What did George do?
He makes a call.
- I'm almost there.
- Get his call logs,
check
his credit card statements.
Was she a cosigner
on his accounts?
Yeah, tell him I need a week.
I just need to work out
the final details.
Should be good,
certainly unconventional.
George doesn't do anything,
and I mean anything,
without forethought.
We would find the money wired.
Isabelle
wouldn't be that obvious.
It's so perfectly preserved
in a watertight bag.
The fisherman.
When was the wire made exactly?
Was it timed? Who sent it?
Why go on a trip
with your wife
if you're planning
on taking off?
Maybe he hadn't made
his decision yet.
Really?
Can't rule it out, Bailey.
Then, what are you thinking?
Maybe this is much broader.
Okay, get to the boat,
Cecile, cast off and then?
Then it's
a beautiful day to sail,
except there's a fight
below deck
between George and Isabelle.
It's not always about you,
and what you think
people ought to do.
Relax, Isabelle.
What were they
really fighting about?
Was she mad at him
because he wanted to leave?
Was this whole thing
a staged performance?
I mean, but was their marriage
really on the rocks anyway?
I mean, what if she kills him?
Throws him over
because she's sick of it.
The pressure,
the writer's block,
the bullshit,
the unfulfilled promises.
Not sure I buy it. Next?
The, uh, the compass toss.
It's Blake.
Blake would do anything
for George. Or Isabelle.
And Cecile.
She was brought into this whole
thing to be the one final piece.
Is she their alibi?
Then, there's the beach.
All was fine,
then George decides to write?
He found inspiration,
or was all part of his plan?
So, he contacts
the fisherman
to hand off the journal.
He knows that,
that way, if he disappears,
he's got the journal
as a good clue.
If Isabelle's telling the truth,
then he did do this on his own.
Blake said he never does
anything without a plan, right?
He staged everything.
He is, or was,
a writer after all.
But I don't buy it.
They killed him,
they throw him overboard.
Then everything we've heard,
all of these stories,
they're just that,
just a string of stories.
Well conceived, mind you,
but conceived nevertheless
by our three witnesses.
Fuck!
Our case file should be called,
"The Disappearance of George
at the hands of Cecile,
Blake and Isabelle."
So if, and I mean if,
they did do it,
then we have to consider
that they're all lying to us.
Okay?
Let's have one more chat
with them.
That's a beautiful necklace.
Thanks.
It's been
in my family a long time.
My mother gave it to me
before she left.
She said it reminded her
of being wild and free.
Take me through
the last part of the night
one more time...
and the last thing you saw.
Blake had a pretty nasty cut.
I went back to check on Isabelle
and she asked me
to lay in bed with her.
I crawled into bed and held her.
The last thing I remember
George standing at the cabin,
watching us.
- He was watching you?
- Mm-hmm.
What about the morning?
Isabelle woke me up.
She told me
that George was gone.
We were hoping
that he was out in the dinghy
or that he had gone
to the beach for a swim.
- That's it?
- Yeah.
That's the last thing
I remember.
If George were to disappear,
would he do it like this?
He's refined.
There's too many mistakes.
I don't know
what happened out there,
but would he just leave us?
No, not his style.
You seem to know George
pretty well, Blake.
More so than his wife
and his girlfriend.
Have you ever heard
of the trials and death
of Socrates?
Socrates believed
that he was
the smartest man in the world.
The prosecutor asked,
"Why do you believe this?"
Socrates said,
"I know I am
the smartest man in the world,
because I know
that I know nothing."
What's the last thing
you saw, Blake?
George standing over me.
And?
That's it.
Tell me what you remember
from this morning?
I woke up with
a terrible headache, of course.
And I went outside to get
some fresh air on my face.
I notice Blake passed out.
He had his heroin necklace
crushed open.
There was a bandage on his head.
I looked around for George.
He was nowhere.
I waited up on the deck for him
for about an hour or so.
I thought maybe
he would pop up out of the water
like he always did before.
But he never did.
So, I woke up Cecile
to help me look for him
on the beach, or in the water.
But he was gone.
So, we called the harbor patrol.
He's just disappeared.
We woke up and he was gone.
George has disappeared before.
This time's different?
He's done this before, yes.
But never quite like this.
Thank you, Isabelle.
You're free to leave.
One more thing, Detective.
If I know George the way I do,
then he'll show up...
in one form or another.
George likes
to put people in situations
and then see
how things play out.
I guess four people
on the sailboat fits the bill.
If you would've told me
I'd be sipping champagne
on a sailboat
with a beautiful woman,
I would've thought
I'd died and gone to Heaven.
You just want control.
We have a lot to talk about.
One day I wanna
have a girl like you
and a boat like that.
Irony, the basis
by which all art exists.
George doesn't do anything,
and I mean anything,
without forethought.
It's just not his nature.
If this trip goes
according to my plan,
maybe I'll like you too.
I've already learned
that life is lonely, Detective.
You misinterpreted.
I'm just
his casual weekend friend.
...just his casual
weekend friend.
Isn't my master. Nobody is.
Nobody is.
We need uncertainty.
We need something
to... to need, to possess.
To give reason to all this
nothingness that surrounds you and I.
Yeah?
Still working?
Check your email.
- Why?
- Just check.
Okay, I'm looking
at 'em right now.
There's two things worth noting.
What are they?
First, the attachment
in the email,
I want you to listen to it.
It's a voice memo recording
from his phone,
and it's dated at 10:56 p.m.
You're kidding.
What's the second thing?
The phone call
he made that morning
was to J and E publishing.
We're getting it
transcribed now.
But I can tell you this.
It was about the delivery
of his next novel.
The publisher demanded it.
Thank you, Bailey.
- Good work.
- Night, Kenny.
Testing.
Testing. One, two, three.
Isabelle, are you okay?
He thinks
he's gonna throw me overboard?
He can hear us right now.
I will throw his ass overboard.
Blake,
what are you thinking? You can't...
You know what? I have an idea.
We should get rid of him.
- No!
- We could...
What if all three of us...?
What if we three...?
No!
I'd leave him if I could.
I feel trapped.
I could kill him.
It's a possibility.
I don't know.
We're not gonna kill him.
We shouldn't be talking
about this.
I know you think about it, too.
Yeah, I know,
but he's... He is... I just...
Cecile, you can't...
You don't agree with this,
do you?
Do you?
Look, he's...
He's like a father
to me. He's...
Blake, can you help?
No!
No!
You could have the boat.
I'm not doing this.
Blake, Blake!
Fine.
I'll do it.
Look, I mean,
if he's getting the boat,
and you're getting the money,
what's left for me?
Cecile, I'll give you the world.
I just
don't even know what I want.
How are we gonna do that?
We don't know
where he is.
Do you hear him?
Oh, here he comes!
Hey, when you get in
tomorrow morning,
I'm gonna need
you to double check
if there's
a Captain Cody on file
at the Dana Point Harbor, okay?
I think I figured it out.
When I begin a new story,
I start
with choosing a location.
It must have a compelling
and suggestive component to it.
Time and space
need to be defined
by its own
unique characteristics.
I didn't choose to be this way.
It is who I am.
Always been. And always will be.
I am...
a writer.
Moving from place to place.
Shifting from idea to new idea.
Looking for my next book.