Daisies - Season 1 | Pushing
Chuck looked at Ned. Her eyes said: Don’t you dare.
In that frozen moment, Ned broke his own rule. He didn’t ask about the murderer. He told Chuck to run. She did—straight into a life that had ended just minutes before. And Ned, for the first time in twenty years, let the minute tick by without a second touch. Pushing Daisies - Season 1
Ned grew up lonely, hiding in plain sight, working as a pie-maker. His only companions were a blind, agoraphobic former private investigator named Emerson Cod—whom he’d secretly partnered with to solve murders (Ned touches the corpse, asks who killed them, then collects the reward before the minute runs out)—and his beloved, sentient dog, Digby, whom Ned had once resurrected and never touched again. Chuck looked at Ned
Together—Ned, Chuck, and Emerson—they became an unlikely trio of detectives. They solved murder after murder: the mummified real estate agent in a basement, the poisoned honey from a spiteful beekeeper, the ventriloquist who’d been silenced by a jealous dummy (no, really). Each case forced Chuck to confront the life she’d left behind, and Ned to wrestle with the ethics of resurrection. He didn’t ask about the murderer
The emotional core of the season belonged to Chuck’s father. He hadn’t died years ago, as she’d believed. He’d faked his death to escape a criminal past. And worse: he was now being hunted by a shadowy, cyclopean figure named Dwight Dixon, a man with his own dark history tied to Ned’s mother’s death and the aunts’ lost love.