:49:05
	Between the Family at night
and you in the daytime...
:49:08
	shooting at anything that moved,
man, we had to stay low.
:49:11
	I had to stay alive.
:49:30
	The mad bomber himself.
:49:32
	And I see you got the mad scientist.
:49:35
	- You know me?
- And about your work.
:49:37
	My work?
:49:41
	Biowar pathology perimeters
in urban and semi-urban environments.
:49:45
	Journal of Military Medicine, June, 1974.
:49:47
	Incremental effects, countermeasures to
toxic agents, and liquid systems delivery.
:49:51
	Microbiological Letters,
January, 1975. Remember?
:49:56
	That's a nice recitation.
You know what it means?
:49:59
	I was a med-school senior
when they scratched the world.
:50:02
	As a matter of fact, I was gonna apply
to Biowar Labs for my post-doc...
:50:06
	- But the next term never came.
- Sorry you didn't make it.
:50:10
	Sorry the world didn't make it.
:50:11
	Come on. Let's go see about Richie.
:50:14
	Lisa's brother. He looks like
he's about to go over.
:50:19
	You've only seen the tertiary cases,
Matthias and his people.
:50:23
	We're not that far gone,
but we're on the road.
:50:26
	The yellow brick road.
We're off to see the wizard.
:50:29
	When it hit, the older people either died
or went to the third stage fast...
:50:33
	you know, blindness in light, albinism...
:50:36
	psychotic illusions, occasional stages of
torpor, like Matthias and the things there.
:50:41
	- What about you? Why didn't you get it?
- I don't know.
:50:45
	Some of the younger people
have a kind of...
:50:49
	resistance.
:50:50
	I don't know, we just hold out.
:50:55
	Some of us are a bit light-sensitive,
otherwise, we're all right.
:50:58
	But Richie's definitely going.