Say the Word

"Say the Word" is the fifth episode of Season 3 of The Walking Dead (TV Series). It originally aired on November 11, 2012 at 9/8c on AMC.

Synopsis
The residents of Woodbury enjoy a midday barbecue while Andrea shares a cold drink with Milton. She fishes for details about the evening's festivities but he says that "Mere words cannot adequately describe what lies ahead".

Meanwhile, the Governor brushes a young girl's hair in his living room. When he accidentally tears a chunk from her scalp, we see that she's the Governor's undead daughter Penny. "It's alright," he coos, gently stroking her head as she snarls. "Daddy still loves you." After restraining her, the Governor looks out his window, where he sees Michonne glaring up at his room from the sidewalk.

In the prison yard, Rick reels with grief over Lori's death. Grabbing an axe, he strides into the cell block and begins slaughtering Walkers.

Hershel informs the group that the baby is healthy but requires formula in order to survive. Daryl and Maggie hop on the motorcycle to scavenge for supplies.

Back in Woodbury, the Governor leads the townspeople in a toast. "We've built a place we can call home," he says. "Today, we celebrate how far we've come." Andrea smiles as everyone cheers.

As the party continues, Michonne sneaks into the Governor's apartment to retrieve her katana. She rifles through his journal and discovers a list of names, the last of which, "Penny," is underlined. She hears thumping in an adjacent room, but before she can investigate, the Governor's return forces her to hide. She overhears Milton begging the Governor to hold off the evening's event so he can run an experiment, but the Governor refuses.

Later, Michonne wanders into an industrial courtyard near Milton's lab, where she discovers a cage full of Walkers. She releases the Walkers and slaughters them. She's standing there smiling at the carnage when a Woodbury resident carrying a bucket of slop catches her.

Back at the distribution center, the Governor admonishes Michonne but also praises her fearlessness, inviting her to join his Research Team. She makes a guess and confronts him about Penny.

"You know about Penny?" he says. "Then you know I loved her."

"Bet you say that about all the girls," Michonne replies. She snatches her katana out of his hands and holds him at swordpoint, before slipping out the front door. Afterward, the Governor instructs Merle to retrieve more "grist for the mill."

In the prison yard, Axel and Oscar assist Glenn in digging three graves. "Three of our group in one day," Glenn mourns privately with Hershel. "Because of one asshole," Hershel adds. Glenn wonders if they should have killed off all the prisoners at first sight.

Meanwhile, the Governor informs Andrea that Michonne is frightening residents, and mentions the slaughtered Walkers. When Andrea questions why he's keeping captive Walkers, he says he has reasons but won't explain further.

Andrea discovers Michonne, who is urgently packing their bags. Michonne insists that they depart Woodbury. "No one who comes here leaves," Michonne notes. Andrea argues that Michonne has the wrong idea about Woodbury.

Inside of the prison, Glenn follows a trail of dead Walkers until he finds Rick standing in a daze. Glenn gently urges Rick to join them outside, but Rick slams Glenn against the wall and stalks off without a word.

Milton, Merle, and the Research Team drive a tow-truck to an off-site pit, where they hoist out a net full of Walkers. Merle taunts the Walkers, then holds one down before pulling it's teeth out with pliers.

Elsewhere on the road, Daryl and Maggie locate an abandoned daycare center, where they scavenge for bottles and formula.

Back in Woodbury, Andrea and Michonne approach the perimeter gate, bags in hand. Merle stops them and confers with the guard, then agrees to let them through. Andrea points to the open gate as proof that Michonne is being paranoid about Woodbury.

"Are you coming or not?" Michonne asks, and then proceeds through the gate alone when Andrea is unsure about the offer.

Later that evening, the Governor consoles Andrea and proposes a drink and something to take her mind off losing her friend. She takes his hand and they stroll down the street.

Back at the prison, Daryl and Maggie rush into the cell block with the baby supplies. Daryl cradles the baby and gives her a bottle. Carl suggests naming his sister after one of their deceased, but can't decide from among all of the names. The group laughs at Daryl's alternate suggestion: "Ass-Kicker".

Rick discovers the boiler room where Lori died and collapses to his knees. Her body has vanished, but he follows a blood streak until he finds a bloated Walker that's in a stupor from having overeaten. He shoots the Walker in the mouth, before repeatedly stabbing it's full belly, crying out for Lori.

That night, the Governor escorts Andrea to the main event: a gladiator fight between Merle and Martinez, surrounded by chained Walkers. Residents fill risers around the makeshift arena, cheering wildly. "What the hell is this?" Andrea asks, calling it barbaric. The Governor reassures her that the fight is staged, and explains that it helps residents blow off steam.

The next morning, Daryl lays a Cherokee Rose on Carol's grave.

Rick, meanwhile, sits slumped on the floor of the boiler room, exhausted and numb. In his dazed mind, he distantly hears a baby wail, then suddenly the ringing of a nearby phone. Stunned, he picks it up and answers, "Hello?"

Co-Stars

 * Vincent Ward as Oscar
 * Lawrence Kao as Tim

Uncredited

 * Travis Love as Shupert
 * Kylie Szymanski as Penny
 * Lindsay Abernathy as Rowan

Trivia

 * First Appearance of the Governor's daughter, Penny. Robert Kirkman hinted that Penny might appear in the beginning of this episode.
 * The title may refer to Daryl's willingness to go on a supply run for the baby, as Hershel says the baby needs formula, Daryl offers to get it immediately, as well as Maggie.
 * The title may also refer to the end of the episode when Rick says the word "Hello?".
 * The Governor's list that Michonne stumbles upon contains the names of several key characters in The Walking Dead: Rise of the Governor novel. The first three show the names of Brian, Bobby and Nick, and the last name is Penny. This suggests the television show is at least partially following the canon history of the Governor established in the novel.
 * "Glenn...told Hershel that he wished they'd just killed all the prisoners...Another interesting aspect of the Rick/Governor duality is how different their philosophy is with regards to newcomers. Since Rick is nominally the hero and the Governor nominally the villain, you'd expect Rick to be a humanist welcoming new people while the Governor would turn them away. But that's not really true. The Governor welcomes new people, unless -- like the soldiers or Michonne -- they seem like they could overpower him. Rick just doesn't welcome anybody."