In this episode, Lucy Butler is on the verge of obtaining that which she so greatly desires from Frank. And her path to that goal is a very convoluted one.
Art Hindle plays John Saxom, a politician with designs on a governorship. His wife "Una", played by Susan Hogan, is very tired looking woman, mother to a sickly child named "Divina-" A little girl who's health seems to improve after a strange encounter with Lucy Butler.
In the middle of a conference at the FBI, Frank Black is suddenly inundated with photographs that appear to be jumbles of the word "Antipas"- which eventually brings Frank to the politician's mansion and another encounter with Lucy Butler.
And it is a very strange encounter indeed, what we believed to be a fever dream of Frank's were actually real time events, but events that only Frank could see.
Enter the great character actor Jay Brazeau as Lucy Butler's interestingly demented lawyer "Selwyn Wassenaar", who has some improper things to say to Agent Hollis that are on the very edge of racism, as well as his famous line to Frank which is the title of my review. It is worth sitting through this entire episode just to watch this very realistic Performance. Jay was also the guy in Stargate SG-1 who turns them all into robots, "KamTrai-ah"! Plus at least one X-Files episode.
We learn a few things about Lucy butler in this episode, but the most important thing that happens here is the set up to the eventual showdown between Lucy and Jordan Black, which will happen in "Saturn dreaming of Mercury"- see my review for that episode.
And I have to agree with the other reviewer in here, that this is the best "spiritual" episode of Millennium, although I would say it is a tie between this one and "Saturn dreaming of Mercury", but as you know the lines between pure spirituality are blurred between Franks' gift and his perception of things that happen on a different plane that other people do not see, but he does. For example, refer to the season one episode "Lamentations", where Frank witnesses a confrontation between the Al Pepper a.k.a. "Legion" and the other entity posing as a kid named "Sammael"- who claims that being in this plane causes him great pain, and that his helping Frank wasn't really about helping Frank. But where everyone else saw Sammael shooting Al Pepper, Frank "didn't see it that way"- and something very similar happens here between him and Lucy Butler.