SERVILIA: Welcome back to the studio, gentlemen, for what will be our final conversation. Here you are, you have Brutus on the run. Your forces are winning. And you're catching up to his armies. And Brutus, there with them, dead.
OCTAVIUS: I want them to know they won't be in danger anymore. They can serve me moving forward. How did Brutus die?
SERVILIA: Let's see. Strato tells you that he was the one to hold Brutus's sword. So that he could run on it. Brutus killed himself. So there it is. Your bitterest enemy, dead.
ANTONY: Bitterest enemy? No. Brutus was the noblest Roman of them all. All the other conspirators lived in envy of Caesar. That's why they killed him. Only Brutus, out have a real concern for the good of Rome, did it. He was the model of nobility. The elements in his soul were so perfectly balanced that—that nature might stand up and say to the entire world, this was a man.
OCTAVIUS: Well said. His body will rest in my tent tonight, and he will be buried honorably. The war is over. So call the field to rest, and lets away. To part the glories of this happy day.
SERVILIA: Thanks again for taking the time. You two make sure you get along, all right?
ANTONY: Of course.
OCTAVIUS: Why wouldn't we?
SERVILIA: You're right. Why wouldn't you?