Scott Mccall Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Scott Mccall. Here they are! All 5 of them:

Melissa McCall: I have to ground you. I am grounding you. You are grounded. Scott McCall: What about work? Melissa McCall: Fine. Other than work. And no TV. Scott McCall: My TV's broken. Melissa McCall: Then no computer. Scott McCall: I need the computer for school. Melissa McCall: Then no... uh... [Glances at Stiles] Melissa McCall: No Stiles. Stiles: What? No Stiles? Melissa McCall: NO STILES!
Stiles Stilinski Jeff Davis
Stiles: [Discussing who could be controlling the Kanima] Hey. What if it's Matt? I mean, this whole thing comes back to the video, right? Scott McCall: Danny said that Matt was the one who found the two hours of footage missing. Stiles: Exactly! He's trying to throw suspicion off himself. Scott McCall: So he makes Jackson kill Isaac's dad, one of Argent's hunters, and the mechanic working on your jeep? Stiles: Yes! Scott McCall: Why? Stiles: Because... He's evil. Scott McCall: You just don't like him. Stiles: The guy - Bugs me. I don't know what it is. Just look at his face.
Stiles Stilinski Jeff Davis
His only son was dead and buried. They had never bonded, Mack McCall and his son. Clark had bonded with his mother; Mack had bonded with money. He reached into his inside coat pocket and removed and opened his billfold: not a single photograph of his son or either of his wives, but thick with the faces of Benjamin Franklin and Ulysses S. Grant. Money and power had been Mack McCall’s lifelong companions, not a wife and son. Now he would use his money to buy the presidency of the United States of America. He
Mark Gimenez (The Color of Law (Scott Fenney #1))
Scott’s eight novels, published under the pen name Sidney McCall, were well received in their day, and her poetry, often centering on flowers, was published in newspapers across the country. The article under consideration here, titled “Affika Town,” was also published widely. It includes the only interview conducted with Noah Hart, who as Timothy Meaher’s houseboy had a front-row seat to the Clotilda story. Scott wrote the breezy feature after her “pretty New York cousin,” came to town and asked to visit “an African Village near here. I have heard it spoken of so often.” It
Ben Raines (The Last Slave Ship: The True Story of How Clotilda Was Found, Her Descendants, and an Extraordinary Reckoning)
Life can’t ever be all bad or all good. You know, eventually, things have to come back to the middle.
Scott McCall