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Kwan-woo gets up to speak for the defense, but Hye-sung changes her mind and holds him back. She uses a puzzle metaphor, saying that with eighty pieces of an elephant puzzle, it doesn’t suddenly turn into a lion without those last twenty pieces. It’s time for closing arguments, and Do-yeon actually uses Mom’s murder case against them, speaking regretfully about how they let reasonable doubt keep a murderer out of jail when the facts were there in plain sight. She panics, thinking he’s here to reclaim the reward money, and shuts him out before he can ask how she reported a person she’s never even laid eyes on. She falls right for the trap and agrees that Su-ha is well-endowed (hahaha) and then Pretty points out that Park Su-ha isn’t a girl. Meanwhile Pretty the Paralegal is still at the fruit stand talking to the ajumma who tipped off the cops, and he gets on her good side by buying two boxes of peaches before making chitchat with her about Park Su-ha being very pretty and glamorous. Hye-sung and Kwan-woo even exchange a furtive high-five. So far so good, and the defense seems happy about the direction of the trial. Onto the knife: Su-ha’s fingerprints are all over it, but the defense argues that Min Joon-gook’s prints are on it too, and he’s the last person seen with the weapon, taken on the night he attacked Hye-sung and Su-ha. The prosecution brings Nice Cop in to testify about Su-ha’s outburst in the station (that he’d kill Min Joon-gook himself if they didn’t do their jobs), and then when the defense cross-examines him about the time he falsely suspected Su-ha of stealing his gun, Hye-sung does this hilarious finger mime at him: Tell the truth or you die. He gets to disappear and be presumed dead, while Su-ha takes the fall. They argue that this case is a copycat one, where Min Joon-gook kills two birds with one stone (er, hand). He’s the clincher in this argument, since the Left-Hand Murder was the case that sent him to prison, and he testifies that he told the story to his prison cellmate Min Joon-gook. They’re forced to defend their stance without introducing any new evidence, but thankfully Hwang Dal-joong is already on the witness roll call.
#I can hear your voice dramabeans trial
The trial resumes and we catch up to the scene that ended the last episode, with Hye-sung arguing that Min Joon-gook could still be alive, and that he’s just as likely to be the culprit behind it all. That’s the kind of person he is, and that’s what promises mean to him. She sets him straight about what a promise means to him-he searched for her for ten years to keep one little promise he made. He grabs Hye-sung’s arm and asks how she can trust him, more than he trusts himself. Meanwhile he’s still having searing headaches accompanied by visions of attacking Joon-gook, and is freaked out to high heaven that he might’ve really killed him. We backtrack a little to the break in the trial, and Hye-sung comes in to tell Su-ha about the change in direction-they’re going to argue that Min Joon-gook is still alive. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. Shin Seung-hoon – “The Words You Can’t Hear” from the OST Īudio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Ratings broke 20% today: Episode 11 recorded 22.1%, which in the current weekday drama climate is the first big hit in months. Like the realization that you just might be all alone in the world… *whimper* Ready for another spin on the rollercoaster? It’s time for our hero to face the music, but it turns out there are more terrifying things than facing a jury when you may or may not have killed a man. 264 JJanuI Hear Your Voice: Episode 11 by girlfriday