- Sister Veronica: Nick... Walker, you said?
- Dr. Richard Kimble: That's right, Sister.
- Sister Veronica: Well, Mr. Walker, you are a splendid mechanic. This car has not run so well since I left the convent.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: This car isn't running, Sister. It's looking for a quiet place to die.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: I don't suppose you made financial provisions for the trip?
- Sister Veronica: Of course.
- [looks in her purse]
- Sister Veronica: $22.35.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: Good.
- Sister Veronica: That's what I had when I started out. Present balance: $1.45.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: A dollar four... that isn't even going to get us to the top of the next hill!
- Detective Sgt. Joe Lane: [Act I. Viewers see Sgt. Joe Lane discussing Richard Kimble with Lt. Craig] For Kimble, Lincoln City is going to turn into a box, barring a miracle.
- Narrator: [Act I Opening Narration. Viewers see Richard Kimble hurrying down a street at night, with police sirens screaming nearby] A miracle is defined as an effect in the physical world which surpasses all known human powers. For Richard Kimble, this has become a world of stark realities, where life is lived in inches, each one possibly the last.
- [last lines]
- Narrator: [Epilog Closing Narration. Viewers see Richard Kimble and Sister Veronica riding down a mountain road in a battered and beaten old car] Two Fugitives, one who has lost faith in her strength to cross a mountain, the other who must cross it in order to live. Sister Veronica turns to Richard Kimble for help. But the road is long and the mountain is high.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: Well I'm in sort of a hurry, Sister.
- Sister Veronica: A man in a hurry would walk across this desert when he has a chance to ride?
- Chuck: There's a funny guy for ya. Not the type you'd expect to be carting a nun around. And in that old heap. I wonder why he doesn't stick to the main roads?
- Sister Veronica: I can still see the pain in your eyes. And whatever the reason, I know you're running. Now maybe it's from an estranged marriage, or a business failure, the reason doesn't matter. The point is, you're running.
- Dr. Richard Kimble: I thought my presence here was due to the long arm of providence?