There goes the General, his family and Saul’s great plan for peace in Syria – and $10m in cash, of course. ![]() ![]() Has she been double-crossing Saul after all?īut before anyone has time to think any more about that, bang! Uh oh, the private jet explodes in the skies over Berlin. There’s one number in Quinn’s evil burner phone Carrie calls it – and gets through to Allison Carr. His answer – “Relax, we’re going to be rich” – doesn’t exactly inspire confidence, and when he tells Douchebag Backwards: “I’m not stupid,” you really get the feeling he’s not going to be able to cut a good deal with the Russian hood who just wants to be able to “trust people”. She’s dating Korzenik: where is he?Īs we know from last week’s shady deal, Korzenik double-crossed Douchebag Backwards. Cue a quick scene in Gratuitous But Convenient Webcamland to talk to one of the bikini-clad web-cam operators. Sabine alerts Douchebag Backwards to the situation: Laura’s been palmed off with an empty flash drive and she’s not happy. Not sure what the hackers in Mr Robot would make of their hacking skill here, but anyhow. It’s a mutual appreciation society (“We know your work”) and, even though Sabine is under house arrest and not allowed to talk to journalists, she’s happy to put in some time on the dark web rooting around for our pal Douchebag Backwards. Laura tracks down Sabine, another hacker who goes by the name of “Savigeslut” when she’s online. “I’m flattered,” says the General over a smoke with Saul as he takes it all on board, though even he doesn’t seem that convinced it is “the best solution for Syria”, and there’s a real note of cynicism as Saul mentions the “full support of the United States”. He’s in town with a sick daughter – the perfect opportunity to proposition him: $10m loaded on his jet for bribes, the promise of free elections, and the full support of the United States. Allison and Saul team up to engineer a meeting with General Youssef, a prime candidate to replace Assad (no matter what Saul is promising the Israeli ambassador). ‘It’s the best one on the table’Īnd so to Saul’s masterplan for peace in the Middle East. Must be tough when you’re a spy and you have a fling with someone and then try to find them and they really don’t want to be found. Once they’ve got all that clear (or as clear as anything really gets in Homeland), there’s just enough time for a quick nod to what might have been between them. It’s “fall back time” and he’s going to help her disappear. ![]() “Believe it – now play fucking dead,” Quinn growls, plastering her face with blood and staging a “proof of death” photo. It’s a fair question: fine, Carrie’s name is “on a kill list” and, according to Quinn’s intel, it’s Saul who put it in the box but if Quinn is faking it and hasn’t been planning on listening to his boss why did he have to truss her up with zip-ties while she was asleep? Anyhow, Quinn fans can relax: even if Saul has thrown her under that CIA bus, Quinn is still on Carrie’s side.
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