When do jim and callie first kiss
But then it turns out she's got a kid. She turns out to be pretty intelligent, and she's a Floridian. So he can bounce stuff off of her. At the same time, he thinks she's pretty hot. He didn't realize what he was getting himself into. It's a fine line. We're talking about a married woman with a child.
You don't mess around with a single mom [whose husband is in prison]. She's completely devoted to her studies and to her year-old son, Jeff, who she's been raising on her own ever since her husband, Ray, was sent to prison.
Attractive and intelligent, she quickly catches the eye of Jim Longworth, for whom she continues to have complex feelings. This cast instantly became friends. When Kiele first came down to test for the role of Callie and Matt read opposite her, the sparks were just flying.
Still looking for pix! Last edited by jules; at PM. I love them too. It's nice to know that I'm not the only one. I can help you out with the pics, jules. Here's some more Yay PIX! I couldn't find any! Hopefully, we can add a banner or something like that to the OP soon.
I can't believe that the mother in law in the recent new episode basically kicked Jim out! I already don't like that woman!
It's none of her business. Plus, her son is the one who broke the law and ended up in jail. So I don't get why Callie has to be suffering for that. I'm done spamming for now. Originally Posted by jules View Post. Love them! I didn't know there was a thread I was starting to think I was the only one watching this show. Find More Posts by Evil Poptart. Even more pix and nice commentary. And I agree, their chemistry works so nicely!
I'm going to add some pix to the OP. Thanks again! Best Answer. Study guides. Q: Does Callie kiss Jim on the glades season 1? Write your answer Related questions. What song plays at the end of The Glades season 4 episode 1? What kind of phone does Jim Longworth use on The Glades? Is callie stardoll a boy?
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What were the most yards Jim Brown rushed for in a season? Who dies in ghost whisperer season 4? She reasons that she didn't want to fire Kevin, but that his demons sometimes got the best of him.
Longworth asks what she means and Patricia explains that once Second Chance won the Gator Derby, Kevin balked under all the attention, refusing to play along so she decided she could do a better job herself and ended it with Kevin on good terms with a generous severance. Longworth asks if the terms were good enough that Kevin had become her official property manager and Patricia remarks that she was in Ocala so much of the time that she didn't care if Kevin made himself at home.
As a worker puts a hobble on a mare, Patricia apologizes for the horse, being that it's in heat during their conversation. Longworth asks what the hobble does and Patricia explains it's used to keep the mare from kicking the stallion during the breeding process, which Patricia explains is dangerous for the stud.
Longworth remarks that he is starting to understand that. Callie drops off Longworth back at the station, lingering there a moment to enjoy their final moments together. Longworth offers up an awkward kiss, before realizing he's been busted as Sanchez approaches.
Sanchez hands Longworth a file which explains Kevin Kehoe's liver was singed due to electrocution, pointing out that the electrocution is what triggered the cardiac arrest. He adds that whoever did it knew what they were doing. He shows Longworth a photo of a round mark on Kevin's back, a burn mark between his shoulder blades, explaining Kevin was wearing something around his neck when he was electrocuted, perhaps some sort of medallion.
Sanchez continues that the tox screen on the horsehair from the pool showed that the horse had been juiced up with Winstrol, an older steroid still used by bottom feeding horse racers. The trick is they buy a gimpy horse, pump him up with cheap steroids, and run him in a claims raise.
Purses are small so nobody tests the horses. At the station, Longworth and Sanchez find Green punching numbers into a desk phone. Green tells them that phone company has just given him the code to Kevin's voicemail. He hits speaker and a series of anxious messages are played. The messages are from Bill, telling Kevin they need to talk.
The messages get more and more threatening as they play. The last message says, "Hey man, call me by tomorrow or I'm coming after your ass, got it? Longworth and Sanchez arrive at Glades Ranch breeding barn at night and find a pickup parked under a security lamp outside the barn with a shadowy figure at the wheel.
They figure it's their guy and sneak up to the truck. With his gun trained on the driver, Longworth yells for the man to get out of the car with his hands up. Equine vet William Meadows steps out and Longworth puts him on the ground and cuffs him. In the interrogation room, Longworth grills Williams Meadows about his threatening messages. Meadows explains that he has known Kevin since he was five and that Kevin's mom was a groomer who ran off to Mexico with a jockey when he was a baby.
His dad was a stable hand with a Vicodin problem who overdosed when Kevin was sixteen. Meadows tells Longworth that they all got him jobs but the kid loved to party.
Meadows continues that he keeps an office at Dosher Ranch: the biggest breeding barn in Ocala where they are hosting the annual Blood Stock Auction this weekend which auctions breeding rights to the best studs in the world. Kevin asked Meadows to get him in so he could network. That night, Meadows explains, somebody broke into his office and stole Valium, Ketamine, Boldenone, a steroid, and Butorphanol, a synthetic narcotic. Meadows explains he has a DEA audit next week and that if he didn't report the theft, he'd lose his license.
Longworth asks if he thought Kevin robbed him. Meadows tells Longworth that Kevin was broke and the stuff he stole is gold on the street. He says he tried to call Kevin but Kevin blew him off, so naturally he got mad and called Agent Dyson at the DEA, adding that he didn't want Kevin to get in trouble.
Longworth buys his story for the moment. In the lab room, Longworth finds Green taking apart a robot pool skimmer. Green tells Longworth he's taking apart a solar powered robot skimmer from Patricia's pool but it's jammed. Longworth solves the problem by smashing it open with a rubber mallet. He reaches in and finds a silver chain in the gears. He pulls it out and finds a gold coin hanging on the end.
It's a sobriety chip for being clean for two years. In the autopsy room, Longworth watches as Sanchez lays the chip on the mark on Kevin's naked back. It fits like a puzzle piece.
Sanchez concludes that it must've fallen off when Kevin was electrocuted. Green comes in and tells Longworth the DEA confirmed the theft and reckons it looks legit.
Longworth suggests it sounds too legit and Kevin wouldn't swim with a sobriety chip around his neck unless he was actually sober. Sanchez suggests that perhaps he was sober and just sold the drugs on the street like Meadows had said. Green adds in that Kevin was in a lot of debt and the collection agency was coming for his car any day.
He hands a file to Longworth, who notes that Kevin had a brand new Mustang and believes that if he had actually sold the drugs, he would have paid off his car.
Longworth and Sanchez speculate that maybe Meadows is a dirty vet who's lying and blaming a dead guy to scrub his scripts. Longworth reads a credit card statement. He sees forty-two dollars to "Lyle Diagnostics. Green postulates that maybe Kevin was getting tested to prove he was clean, but Longworth suggests that he was looking for something else; something that killed him. Callie and Longworth walk through a cheap apartment complex inhabited by Ocala's working class horse people.
Longworth asks Callie how someone would fix a horse race. Callie tells him there are a million ways: vets use steroids, stimulants, and dope the horses with EPO, a kidney hormone that increases red blood cells so they can run faster and longer. Longworth comments that it explains how a long shot won the Gator Derby and why Meadows was really threatening Kevin. Callie tells him the problem is that the state tests for EPO before and after a big race.
She suggests maybe Kevin knew something the state didn't. Longworth asks what would happen if he could prove Second Chance's blood was dirty and she tells him Meadows would lose his license and Patricia would lose a lot of money. Longworth and Callie stand outside Kevin's apartment with the manager's key ring. He unlocks the three deadbolts. Longworth finds a digital frame that loops pictures of Kevin with friends, including one of Callie's friend Darcy and puts it in his evidence bag.
Callie tells him that the people on top and the barn rats usually don't mix and that Darcy must have been slumming while she was hurt. She mentions that Darcy fell in a race in Maryland a few years ago and shattered her shoulder and confidence, but that she's healthy again and was a rising star at one point. Longworth steps into the kitchen and sees a newspaper clipping, a car ad stuck to the freezer door with a magnet.
He flips it over to find a newspaper article about Second Chance winning the Gator Derby. He suggests somebody knocked it off when in a hurry. Longworth opens the freezer and removes a plastic freezer bag filled with cylinders of dry ice, which Callie speculates was used to keep something cold if he had to run.
There's also Styrofoam, the kind used to transport stored blood. Longworth finds a piece of stationery on the floor by the side of the fridge and inside are two tickets to the Ocala Blood Stock auction. On the stationary, there's a simple note which reads "See you Saturday. Dying to catch up. Longworth arrives at the auction barn at Dosher Ranch.
Wallace Dosher is an older Southern gentleman. Longworth shows him the note found in Kevin's apartment. He asks what he was dying to catch up on and Dosher tells him simply horse talk. Dosher leads Longworth through the auction barn hallway where workers set up for Saturday's Blood Stock Auction. Longworth tells Dosher that Dr. Meadows said Kevin robbed his drug safe. Dosher tells him it's Meadows' safe. He adds that Meadows' grandfather was his grandfather's vet and Longworth remarks that Dosher keeps it all in the family.
Dosher counters that blood is all you can trust. Longworth asks if Dosher built all this, referring to the fancy barn and ranch. Dosher points to a trophy case with a saddle and bridle next to a painting of a magnificent horse telling Longworth, "No sir, he did. The Sire of Sires," telling him that the horse, Kingmaker, won ten million in races, sired twenty stakes winners and made twenty-five million in fees in one year, a record that will never be broken.
Longworth browses through a horse catalogue, asking Dosher if he made more money in breeding than racing. Dosher explains that a good horse wins a big race and may win a million dollars, but after he turns four, when he's done, you can put him out to stud and sell his cover for fifty thousand a pop.
A good stallion can cover a hundred mares a year. A true stud, like Kingmaker, can make three-hundred thousand a cover.
Dosher gets a little emotional over the animal's loss and explains he was out of the country when he left them and never got to say goodbye and that Second Chance can't stand in Kingmakers shoes. Longworth finds Second Chance's name in the catalogue and sees Patricia's asking price is three-hundred thousand a cover. Dosher tells Longworth that Second Chance will lose and true champions are born and not made. Dosher continues that Second Chance's sire was Miami Joe who got sold for dog food, noting again that blood doesn't lie.
Longworth adds, "Unless it's doped," reminding Dosher that he'd lose a lot of money if Second Chance cheated at the Gator Derby. Longworth asks if that's what Dosher and Kevin were going to catch up on. Dosher smiles at him, telling Longworth he talked to an old cop friend of his and heard Longworth got shot in the ass, reminding him of his view that character is everything.
Longworth counters that he thought Dosher was just a rich old blowhard but a guy like him doesn't check out a guy like Longworth unless he's hiding something. Dosher tells them they're through talking. Callie hangs up her phone as Longworth walks over. Longworth tells Callie he thinks Dosher is involved in the murder but doesn't know how. Callie tells him that she just had Darcy on the phone and they made plans to go riding tomorrow at 4 a.
Longworth can't believe she'd go so early and Callie tells him it helps get the horses warmed up for the day. A truck drives by carrying a large shape draped in a tarp. Longworth looks at the shape, remembering what Patricia said to Meadows in the breeding barn about Dosher losing another horse.
He asks Callie if it's possible to insure a racehorse. Callie tells him that most owners have mortality insurance, just in case something happens. Longworth asks if there is ever insurance fraud and Callie says she's heard rumors but that you'd have to be really evil to kill a horse for the money.
She adds that it would have to look like natural causes and asks if he wants to know how, warning that it's pretty gross. Longworth waits as a miserable, smelly Sanchez emerges from the autopsy room. Longworth and the lab workers cover their noses with their t-shirts. Sanchez tells him he's a bastard for making him exhume a horse from the back of the rendering truck, however, he was right, the horse didn't die of colic.
He was electrocuted, like Kevin Kehoe. In the interrogation room, Longworth grills a smug Dosher, telling him that while his farm went public two years ago, since Kingmaker died he has had no winners which means his stocks are worth almost nothing. He hands Dosher headlines from a trade publication, noting that his last three, now four, best horses finished out of the money in stakes races which means they're worthless to stud.
Two weeks later, each died of colic but "luckily" they were heavily insured, meaning they were worth more dead than alive.
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