- Group Leader: Jesse, last time, you seemed down about your job at the Laundromat. Let me ask something, if you had the chance to do anything you wanted, what would you do?
- Jesse Pinkman: Make more green, man. A lot more.
- Group Leader: Forget about money. Assume you have all you want.
- Jesse Pinkman: I don't know. I guess I would make something.
- Group Leader: Like what?
- Jesse Pinkman: I don't know if it even matters, but... work with my hands, I guess.
- Group Leader: Building things, like carpentry or bricklaying or something?
- Jesse Pinkman: I took this vo-tech class in high school, woodworking. I took a lot of vo-tech classes, because it was just big jerk-off, but this one time I had this teacher by the name of... Mr... Mr. Pike. I guess he was like a Marine or something before he got old. He was hard hearing. My project for his class was to make this wooden box. You know, like a small, just like a... like a box, you know, to put stuff in. So I wanted to get the thing done as fast as possible. I figured I could cut classes for the rest of the semester and he couldn't flunk me as long as I, you know, made the thing. So I finished it in a couple days. And it looked pretty lame, but it worked. You know, for putting in or whatnot. So when I showed it to Mr. Pike for my grade, he looked at it and said: "Is that the best you can do?" At first I thought to myself "Hell yeah, bitch. Now give me a D and shut up so I can go blaze one with my boys." I don't know. Maybe it was the way he said it, but... it was like he wasn't exactly saying it sucked. He was just asking me honestly, "Is that all you got?" And for some reason, I thought to myself: "Yeah, man, I can do better." So I started from scratch. I made another, then another. And by the end of the semester, by like box number five, I had built this thing. You should have seen it. It was insane. I mean, I built it out of Peruvian walnut with inlaid zebrawood. It was fitted with pegas, no screws. I sanded it for days, until it was smooth as glass. Then I rubbed all the wood with tung oil so it was rich and dark. It even smelled good. You know, you put nose in it and breathed in, it was... it was perfect.
- Group Leader: What happened to the box?
- Jesse Pinkman: I... I gave it to my mom.
- Group Leader: Nice. You know what I'm gonna say, don't you? It's never too late. They have art co-ops that offer classes, adult extension program at the University.
- Jesse Pinkman: You know, I didn't give the box to my mom. I traded it for an ounce of weed.
- Group Leader: Jesse? Jesse? What about you? Face looks better. How's it all going? Anything you wanna tell us about?
- Jesse Pinkman: What, like my interesting life? Uh, one day pretty much bleeds into the next. Been working a lot. Got a job.
- Group Leader: Job is good.
- Jesse Pinkman: It's... it's in a laundromat. It's totally corporate.
- Group Leader: Corporate laundromat.
- Jesse Pinkman: It's, like, rigid. All kinds of red tape. My boss is a dick. The owner, super dick. I'm not worthy to meet him, but I guess everybody's scared of the dude. The place is full of dead-eyed douche bags, the hours suck and nobody knows what's going on, so...
- Group Leader: Sounds kind of Kafkaesque.
- Jesse Pinkman: Yeah. Totally Kafkaesque.
- Badger: I can't believe you had to crush the RV. Must've been depressing.
- Skinny Pete: For real. That's a stone loss.
- Jesse Pinkman: No one misses it more than me. Free to cook anytime, anywhere. No quotas, no one to answer to. What's the point of being an outlaw when you got responsibilities?
- Badger: Darth Vader had responsibilities. He was responsible for the Death Star.
- Skinny Pete: True that. Two of them bitches.
- Badger: Just saying. Devil's advocate.
- Jesse Pinkman: I gotta pay taxes? What's up with that? That's messed up. That's Kafkaesque.
- Skinny Pete: Church.
- Badger: Right.
- Walter White: My brother-in-law, moments before he was attacked, someone called to warn him. I believe that same person was protecting me. Those two men - the assassins - I believe I was their prime target, but that somehow they were steered away from me to my brother-in-law. Because of this intervention, I am alive, and yet, I think that this person was playing a much deeper game. He made that phone call because he wanted a shootout, not a silent assassination. In one stroke, he bloodied both sides, set the American and Mexican governments against the cartel, and cut off the supply of methamphetamine to the Southwest. If this man had his own source of product on this side of the border, he would have the market to himself. The rewards would be enormous. We're both adults. I can't pretend I don't know that person is you. I want there to be no confusion. I know I owe you my life, and more than that, I respect the strategy. In your position, I would have done the same. One issue which troubles me: I don't know what happens when our three month contract ends.
- Gus Fring: What would you like then?
- Walter White: You know why I do this. I want security for my family.
- Gus Fring: Then you have it. Three million for three months, that was our agreement. Extended annually, twelve million a year. Call it fifteen. Open ended. Would that be agreeable?