- Dr. Spencer Reid: You've been quiet.
- Kate Callahan: Sorry.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: You know, a disaster of this magnitude is really hard to wrap your mind around, let alone your feelings.
- Kate Callahan: You don't need to worry about me. What, are you are gonna profile me now?
- Dr. Spencer Reid: It's hard to turn it off sometimes.
- Kate Callahan: Look I guess, I just should tell you this... Hotch and Rossi already know. My sister and brother-in-law died in 9/11. They were working at the Pentagon.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: So sorry. I imagine this must obviously bring back a lot of painful memories.
- Kate Callahan: Yeah. Anyway I don't wanna do that weepy agent with a tragic past. You don't have to walk on eggshells around me.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: My girlfriend was killed in front of me and my mom has schizophrenia... since we're sharing.
- Kate Callahan: Thanks for letting me know. After my sister died, I adopted all ten of her kids.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: Wow!
- Kate Callahan: I'm kidding.
- [Both laugh]
- Kate Callahan: They had a baby girl, Meg. We took her in... actually Chris and I moved into their house. Anyway, she is thirteen and the light of my life.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: She sounds terrific.
- Kate Callahan: Yeah, she is. Maybe I could bring her by so you can meet her sometime.
- Dr. Spencer Reid: I would really like that.
- David Rossi: [closing quote] "We knew the world would not be the same: some people laugh, a few people cried, most people were silent" - J. Robert Oppenheimer
- Aaron Hotchner: [opening quote] "If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky that would be like the splendor of the mighty one" - from the Hindu holy book, the Bhagavad Gita
- Commander Jumilla Reardon: He knows who did it, but he won't tell us. The guy's a wackadoodle!
- Aaron Hotchner: Well, unfortunately we can't dismiss him yet.
- Commander Jumilla Reardon: The fact is no one else has come forward with a similar statement.
- Aaron Hotchner: That's because the population is so sparse out here. We should be grateful for that.
- Commander Jumilla Reardon: Alright. Can you get him to talk?
- Aaron Hotchner: I can try, but I should probably do it alone. I think he has a problem with you.
- Commander Jumilla Reardon: My race or my gender?
- Aaron Hotchner: Probably both.
- Aaron Hotchner: Wonderful. As long as you can get some answers, be my guest.
- Aaron Hotchner: Mr. Petosky, I'm starting to lose my patience.
- Galen Petosky: One more question: Edgewood Arsenal. What happened there?
- Aaron Hotchner: From 1955 to 1975, the U.S. military conducted research into psycho-chemical agents by testing them on human subjects.
- Galen Petosky: You pass.