DO NOT READ BELOW THIS LINE UNLESS YOU WANT TO SEE A SCENE BY SCENE BREAK DOWN OF THIS EPISODE OF BREAKING BAD!!!
Scene 1: Hank comes out of the bathroom. He hides the book in Marie’s purse. He’s clearly upset and says he’s not feeling well and he and Marie leave. On the drive home he’s getting more and more agitated, until he swerves off the road into someone’s yard. When they get home, Hank gets out his case files and compares Gale’s handwriting to the inscription in Leaves of Grass.
Scene 2: He described this one in a separate comment, and for some reason uneddit won’t recover it. But from what I remember, it shows Lydia going to the car wash and trying to get Walt to come back and cook, making up something about a drop in quality.
Scene 3: Hank calls in sick to work but has the office drive over all the files on Gus Fring, Heisenberg, everything.
Scene 4: Jesse hanging out with Badger and Skinny Pete. Badger explains his Star Trek idea. Jesse leaves and goes to Saul with all his money. He tries to get Saul to give half to Mike’s granddaughter and half to the parents of the kid Todd shot.
Scene 5: Saul calls Walt to tell him what Jesse did. Walt is getting chemotherapy. Walt shows up at Jesse’s and returns the money to him. He gives Jesse one of his patented pep talks, and he asks Jesse why he wanted to give the money to Mike’s granddaughter. Jesse says he thinks Walt killed Mike, so someone needs to look out for her. Walt tries to convince Jesse that he didn’t kill Mike.
Scene 6: Dinner with the family. Walt excuses himself and throws up in the bathroom. He notices the book is missing. He looks a couple other places for it and then goes to bed. Then he wakes up in the middle of the night and finds the GPS tracker on the car.
Scene 7: Jesse gives a bundle of cash to a homeless man. Then he drives around throwing more cash on people’s doorsteps like a paperboy.
Scene 8: Walt shows up at Hank’s. Hank has to hide his files quickly. Walt confronts him about the tracker. Hank PUNCHES him, and says, ‘It was you all along.’ Walt more or less says, ‘Those are some wild accusations, and also you can’t prove anything.’