god almighty, what's going on here?" >> my cellphone rang, and he was like, "hey, christina! it's nick!" and i was like, "oh, my god.ou know, it was just surreal, right? and it was just surreal, right? and he was like, "i'm on my way home!" so it was a great moment. >> my parents and i ended up taking a six-hour drive from greene county prison back to philadelphia. along the way, i realized that my parents in this very sweet, innocent way couldn't stop holding hands in the back seat. no matter what they went through, they never stopped being close. and i thought i damaged them. i thought the judicial system broke them. but they didn't. they still were in love, right up to the end. >> mr. and mrs. yarris, can we have a quick word with you? >> come on, nina. >> terry. >> come on. >> today, nick lives with his wife and two daughters in rural oregon. in 2008, he was awarded $4 million for the time he spent on death row. >> yeah. hey, laura, wrestle time. >> no one's ever gonna know what it's like to be the monster, not in the eyes of society, but of your own self. and to somehow come back and find a way to love yourself