Episode Title: Evan

Episode Type: Standalone

Sean introduces Lawley to Evan as his good friend he met through a scouting team in Mikasi. Lawley was initially very optimistic about meeting Evan, since he seemed quite relaxed and relatively ordinary, but as soon as he opened his mouth, he was quick to realize Evan was nothing short of immature loser from New Jersey. Offended by his outward insularity towards him, Lawley challenges Evan to a fist fight, determined to deliver the proper whooping Evan never received before.

Episode Title: Movie Star

Episode Type: Relevant

Lawley decides to make a movie called "Stopař" about two students, one being a straight A student and the other being a truancy, running away from the pressures of going to college into the Idaho region of Yellowstone, but are quick to realize it's nothing like they expected and are forced to escape from a lawless land. Filming the movie itself goes pretty smoothly until Evan, who was cast as the main villan with a walmart bag tied on his head, gets too into method acting- chasing and torturing Sean and Lawley to a ridiculous level, even when the camera isn't rolling.

Episode Title: Rabbit Girls

Episode Type: Relevant, Multipart

The title, “Rabbit Girls” refers to Baruška and Barunka, a maternal heirloom passed down through the female lineage of the Hweizda family. The heirloom is a naos / soul home made of copper and clay depicting a two headed rabbit that was found on the Hweizda rabbit farm in the 1700’s. Rayna, Lawley’s mother, was the last female to receive it, and so it sits in their house in Nebraska. Due to Lawley’s grandma, Lád’a Hweizda, falling ill with whooping cough, Ranya flew back to the Czech Republic to take care of her, leaving Baruška and Barunka “in charge”. Although being purely made of copper and clay, Lawley can’t help but feel like he was truly being watched and listened to by them. Sean assures him it’s just a figure, but Lawley insists otherwise.

Episode Title: We're Gonna Go Down Document Highway

Episode Type: Relevant, Multipart

The Document Highway, the 900 m long super highway that is so long and wide that crime cannot be documented on it has a child fighting ring called "The Sinkhole". The Child Sinkhole was roughly an hour south of Mikasi, and Sean had been forced into fighting at the Child Sinkhole every day for two years; starting in 1995 when Denver had taken custody of Sean, and ending in 1997 when Sean had been kicked out for foul play. It was at this point in late 2001 when Sean had become obsessed with somehow reaching the Child Sinkhole once again. For Sean’s 20th birthday, he insisted that Evan and Lawley take him on a road trip down Document Highway. Evan thought it would be fun, especially since it meant time away from home, yet Lawley was apprehensive. As Sean’s therapist, Lawley knew digging into wounds like that could be harmful without proper approach, but Sean insisted. This segment of the story goes relatively fairly, maybe even ideally as the three of them visit a few recreational centers and a diner to stretch. But the law and order doesn’t last long until they reach the motel.

Episode Title: We're Gonna Go Down Document Highway: Part Two

Episode Type: Relevant, Multipart

The second half of Sean’s birthday; the second half of the road trip continues from the moment they reach the motel, which had ended up being a hot-sheet joint. Lawley was enraged with Evan, who insisted he had no idea that was the case when he called the location earlier that night. Sean dismissed the two’s bickering, and had let himself outside while the two had it out. The quarrel had quickly turned into a physical fight. Evan struck Lawley in the nose a few times, and had pulled out a push dagger that was dropped under the bed when Lawley kicked him in the genital region. Lawley dove after the push dagger, hiding under the bed while Evan ravishly tore the room apart looking for him. As Evan stood at the end of the bed, Lawley shoved the push dagger through his foot. It was at this point when Sean had noticed the amount of screaming and went back inside to see Evan strangling Lawley and was quick to break up the fight. Sean left money (about enough for a Greyhound bus back to Mikasi) on the console table and left, dragging Lawley behind him by the collar of his shirt. Sean and Lawley drove back to Mikasi that night, but what did they see on the drive home?

Episode Title: Rabbit Girls: Part Two

Episode Type: Relevant, Origins

Rabbit Girls: Part Two proves what Lawley believed about Baruška and Barunka was true. While in recovery from the fight he had gotten into with Sean and Evan earlier that month, Lawley had been home alone for a long time. Rayna had passed away a few days earlier from the same case of whooping cough Lád'a had, and left him in a very severe depression. He seized every opportunity to not leave the house and had Daisy do his shopping for him. One day in early November, he had received a sticky note on the outside of his window, as if it had been placed by someone who was sitting in the trees. This note was extremely messy, and written in loose Czech, which had caused Lawley to believe it was Sean who had placed it. Lawley had absolutely no interest in Sean at this point, and had furiously written a violent response and left it on his desk before stomping downstairs to put the kettle on. While he was fixing his tea, Baruška and Barunka emerged from their naos and into the floor of Lawley’s room. The reason they emerged was because they had sensed a true, violent disturbance within Lawley (a phenomenon that sometimes causes swarms of locusts to appear out of nowhere). When Lawley came back up to his room and saw this naked, 7ft tall, two-headed rabbit lady reading his diary, he nearly collapsed right then and there on his floor. What is good about Lawley in this case is that he is very imaginative; possibly schizophrenic by human standards. He didn’t actually put up any fight against Baruška and Barunka, and was actually quite curious about her. Baruška and Barunka were however, very territorial and had been snorting and hissing at Lawley until realizing they were amicable. She explained to him who she was, why she was here, and what she had sensed in Lawley. Lawley explained the death of his mother and how his mother and her mother always fought for all of his childhood and suffering from statelessness, and he suspected that it was part of the reason they had moved to Nebraska, which he had to explain was in America and not Bohemia. Although Lawley and Baruška and Barunka didn't speak the same language (Lawley speaking in Czech and the rabbit girls speaking in Knaaic) there was enough similarities within the language for Baruška and Barunka to understand. Something about Lawley had struck a very maternal chord within her, and so she picked Lawley up and held him in her arms until they had both fallen asleep, and did this every night until the color in Lawley’s face had returned.