The twins coordinate a “family emergency” to lure both parents to Napa. Hallie (as Annie) tells Elizabeth that Nick is “sick, maybe serious.” Annie (as Hallie) tells Nick that Elizabeth “wants to sign divorce papers in person, finally.”
Elizabeth admits she left because she couldn’t reach Nick through his grief. Nick admits he let her go because he thought she deserved better than a man who “broke” after his brother’s death. The twins reveal they know about their late uncle. “You didn’t lose him,” Hallie says. “You just stopped talking about him.”
Nick and Elizabeth walk in. They don’t scream. They freeze. Then Nick says, “You cut your hair.” Elizabeth touches hers. “You grew a beard. It’s… gray.” parent trap.1998
Meredith backs down but warns, “You’re not half as clever as you think, little girl.” The twins realize their parents haven’t just been apart—they’ve been lying to themselves . Elizabeth still wears her wedding ring on a chain. Nick still has Elizabeth’s old voice mails saved on a burner phone.
“So is yours.”
Annie finds Nick warm but distracted. Meredith is a nightmare: cold, performative, and already measuring curtains for “when we sell this old place.” Worse, Nick has changed—less playful, more corporate. Annie discovers Meredith has forged a contract to sell the Parker Hotel to her chain. Annie blackmails Meredith with a hidden microphone (planted during a fake “spa day”): “Either you call off the sale and leave my father alone, or this recording goes to the board. Also, your ‘organic’ skincare line is 70% petroleum jelly.”
Chaos ensues. Elizabeth accuses Nick of kidnapping. Nick accuses Elizabeth of manipulation. Meredith arrives to cause trouble but is escorted out by hotel security (the twins tipped off a journalist, who films Meredith’s tantrum for the internet). In the storm, the power fails. Forced to wait out the night, the four of them sit by a fireplace in the unfinished lobby. The twins coordinate a “family emergency” to lure
They arrive at the hotel on the same rainy night. The twins have redecorated the grand ballroom with photos from their childhoods—both coasts, both parents, all missing pieces. A table set for four.