Camille: So?
Kirsten: Context, please.
Camille: Liam, what did you tell him when he proposed?
Kirsten: I told him I needed to think about it.
Camille: Smart move. No sense at all in committing to the one guy on the planet who loves impossible you exactly as you are. What do you think you're going to tell him?
Kirsten: I'm not sure, and assuming you haven't blabbed to everyone here, don't say anything. I haven't told anyone else that Liam proposed.

So we're bringing someone who worked with deadly viruses and died under mysterious circumstances into the lab? What could possibly go wrong?

Camille

Kirsten: [to Cameron] Thank you.
Cameron: For what?
Kirsten: For not being a nobody.

Cameron: Don't worry, I gave Kirsten a safe word. [pauses] Help.
Camille: Oh perfect, they won't know what she means.

Now it's time to play, 'how is this my fault?'

Cameron

Linus: Is there a problem?
Kirsten: No, I'm just having a hard time understanding something.
Linus: You've come to Dr. Linus for advice. Well, I'm flattered.
Kirsten: Cameron's busy.
Linus: Oh.

Kirsten: What are you doing in my bed?
Camille: What are you doing with a Walkman?

Kirsten: Are you OK?
Cameron: Why do people do that?
Kirsten: Do what?
Cameron: Ask if you're OK, when they know you're not.

Marta: The stitchers program destroys people. It almost killed me!
Kirsten: I heard you stayed in too long, didn't bounce in time.
Marta: Right, it's my fault. Cameron tell you that? Typical, he couldn't possibly have made a mistake.
Kirsten: How do you know what you're feeling isn't residual...
Marta: [interrupting Kirsten] Residual emotion? What I'm feeling, what I know is real. I know they'll use you like they used me until something goes wrong, and it will, and when that happens they'll try to make you disappear.
Kirsten: The stitchers program was created to help people.

Kirsten: Who's them, Marta?
Marta: Stitchers, they're evil. They have to be stopped.
Kirsten: So you leaked the algorithm to Justin to stop stitchers?
Marta: Exactly, and when that didn't work, I tried to kill Maggie. How is that lying bitch?
Kirsten: I don't think she's gonna make it.
Maggie: Good, otherwise I'd circle back around and finish the job.

If you call 911, if you call anyone, I will kill you!

Maggie

Cameron: You're OK with co-workers dating?
Kirsten: Yeah. I'm not OK with Linus wearing my sweatshirt.

Stitchers Quotes

Kirsten: how long have I been in this room?
Maggie: Answer the question.
Kirsten: I'm trying to. How long have I been in this room?
Maggie: Guess.
Kirsten: An hour?
Maggie: One minute. [smiling and leaning in] You really don't know, do you?
Kirsten: I have this condition, it's called temporal dysplasia. I have no time perception.
Maggie: I've read about this condition. I thought it was made up.
Kirsten: I wish, cause then you could unmake it up; it really sucks. I use memory, logic and math to approximate time difference, but I don't know what time feels like.

Kristen: Why is he here? Are you guys coroners?
Cameron: No. He's here to share his memories with us.
Kirsten: But he's dead.
Cameron: Hmm. Fun fact: After death, consciousness lingers for 30 seconds. After that, 10 minutes and the brain starts to degrade. If we get a sample in here fast enough, we can start a protocol that will slow down further deterioration for days.
Kirsten: Sample? You mean corpse?
Cameron: Tomato/Tamato.
Kirsten: You're getting this guys dead, deteriorating brain to talk to you? How?
Cameron: By inserting a living consciousness into those memories. We call it stitching.
Kirsten: That's impossible.
Cameron: Is that so, doctor I've never studied neuroscience unlike Cameron. The brain is a bioelectrical device with emphasis on electrical. Even after death the wiring, the synapses are all still in there, for a while anyway, and that means so are the memories, but it takes a living consciousness to access them and interpret them and that's where you come in.