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  • 2 months ago
Part 2 of 6 of the 1987 mystery. John Field and Dan Maitland travel to Dinslow Chemicals after noticing that one of the environmental activists protesting there was at a number of companies targeted and suspect he may be a plant paid by someone. The duo are attacked there, but later Field is contacted by the man, Nathaniel Mustard, by a phone call and arranges to meet him, but unbeknownst to Field Nathaniel is ambushed in his car by masked men and carted away. Meanwhile Makepeace's secretary Nina Novotny discovers in one of Makepeace's dictations a recording of a woman accusing him of being a murderer. She contacts Superintendent Thorne, but finding out who the woman is will be only part of the problem - especially when he discovers that the woman has disappeared!

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00:00Merchant banker John Field and his American colleague, Dan Maitland, fighting a big takeover campaign on behalf of Dinslow Chemicals,
00:10are rivals to head their department following the murder of their boss, Charles Makepeace.
00:15Superintendent Lance Thorne, investigating the murder, learns that John had quarrelled with Charles just before his death.
00:23Also high on the list of suspects are Charles' widow Isabel, an ambitious businesswoman, and his mistress, the actress Stella Tyson.
00:33A man has been killed in demonstrations outside a Dinslow Chemicals plant.
00:38As the rioting breaks out again, John and Dan head straight into it.
00:53.
01:00.
01:07.
01:19You'd better stay in the car.
01:44Aye.
01:45A quick kind of way.
01:49No, it's your accent.
01:50I don't want to antagonize the locals.
01:52My dear child, if you get in, I went to an English public school.
02:02Morning, ladies.
02:19You've got no chance.
02:22Get after him!
02:24Get after him!
02:25Oh!
02:26Oh!
02:41Get after him!
02:42Get after him!
02:43After the car!
02:44Oh, my God.
03:14You were fond of Mr. Makepeace?
03:29We were together.
03:31I worked for Mr. Makepeace for 23 years.
03:36I believe you're a widow, Mrs. Novotny.
03:39I really don't see what that has to do with it.
03:41I'm simply trying to establish your relationship with Mr. Makepeace.
03:45Now, you seem to have been quite close to him.
03:47Now, you may have known of any enemies he had.
03:49Someone in the office, perhaps.
03:51Well, he quarreled with Mr. Field shortly before his death.
03:54Did he?
03:56About what?
03:58Mr. Makepeace said he'd make sure Mr. Field didn't get the department
04:01when he retired.
04:03I see.
04:05So you'd say there was a real animosity between them?
04:08Yes.
04:09Yes, but Mr. Field couldn't have killed him.
04:12Excuse me, please.
04:16How can you be so sure?
04:18He's been getting threatening telephone calls.
04:24Someone's been persecuting him.
04:28How long have these calls been going on?
04:31About a year.
04:33Did Mr. Makepeace discuss these calls with you?
04:35Of course not.
04:37Were they on his private light?
04:39Yes.
04:39Then how did you know about them?
04:40I heard his end of them several times over my intercom.
04:43Over the intercom?
04:44Mr. Makepeace was an extremely busy man, Superintendent Thorne.
04:50Sometimes he forgot to switch off.
04:53He was most upset by them.
04:56If you'll excuse me.
05:00If these calls were on the private line,
05:02they must have been from somebody he knew reasonably well.
05:05Not necessarily.
05:06His wife could be careless about giving people his telephone number.
05:10It annoyed him very much.
05:11His private number?
05:12Yes.
05:14Hello?
05:16Diana?
05:17No, not just now.
05:19Look, tell Mr. Field.
05:20I'll send the file along later.
05:21Yes.
05:22Yes.
05:23Goodbye.
05:26Yes, his private number.
05:28But they were not necessarily from people he knew.
05:32Do you have any times for these calls?
05:36Well, I thought they'd stopped.
05:39They weren't only for a while.
05:40Well, and suddenly they started again.
05:45When was the last call?
05:47Um, just before I went home on the night he was killed.
05:56Do you have an exact time for that particular call?
05:59Is 525 exact enough for you?
06:03Well, I know.
06:03Is 525 exact enough for you?
06:05Anything in the will, sir?
06:34About what you'd expect.
06:36Bulk of the estate to the wife, substantial sum to the mistress.
06:39Doesn't that confirm the mistress's story?
06:41Oh, not really. The will was dated last year. He may just have forgotten to change it.
06:45What did the doctor say?
06:47He last examined Makepeace on April the 10th
06:49and told him that if he didn't give up drinking it would kill him.
06:52Makepeace said he'd make a big effort.
06:55The doctor was under the impression that he meant it.
07:04Diana, have a look at this.
07:11What's the significance?
07:13Something I picked up at the demo.
07:15John thinks it might be the name of the man responsible.
07:17Nathaniel Mustard.
07:19That's right. He might work for Phantom Browning.
07:22And you want me to do some detective work.
07:24That's right. Tall order I know, but would you try? And we need it quickly.
07:28I went back to the office to pick up a file about five o'clock. I'd left it there. I needed it.
07:43Is this really important superintendent?
07:45I'll be the one to decide that, sir.
07:47Evie?
07:52Can I work with Charles Makepeace, did he, sir?
07:57Not many people did.
08:02The man was a bastard.
08:06But I didn't murder him, superintendent.
08:12And what did you quarrel about in the afternoon of his death?
08:20Well, my, you had been doing your homework.
08:27He has no alibi for either the time of the phone call or the time of the break-in.
08:34We'll talk about it over lunch.
08:36Put it in there.
08:47You better check in with the office.
09:06Yes, I'll tell him.
09:07Fine.
09:15The lab confirms the break-in to the Makepeace flat.
09:18Very likely. Not by a professional thief.
09:21The window wasn't locked, but it was very stiff.
09:24The intruder used an old trowel.
09:27Fingerprints?
09:28None.
09:31So, what about Field?
09:33It's very odd that he returned to Carl Silman on the night of the murder
09:37because he'd forgotten a file.
09:39So he said.
09:41Then there's Sir Max's astrologer, the Indian guru.
09:46According to Field, he and Makepeace had a running feud.
09:50Then there's the wife and the girlfriend.
09:54You know what we have here, Sergeant?
09:56We have, as the French say, an embarrassment of suspects.
10:00Oh, yes, sir.
10:03There was a message that your wife had called.
10:06Something about the weekend.
10:09Oh, yes. I, uh, I promised I'd, uh, help her buy a few sticks of furniture.
10:14So, my weekend goes.
10:18Yes, I'm afraid it does, Sergeant.
10:20And next year, Carl could harvest the wheat.
10:40Tomorrow is Christmas with oyster stew for dinner.
10:43There will be no presents, and no candy, but Laura could not think...
10:55His blue eyes shone up now.
10:58And Carlisle.
11:00Oh, yes.
11:01I'm so impressed.
11:02My family's blue eyes shone up.
11:08Then, Carlisle, the chief, he said.
11:10He said, hey, go, go green.
11:12I'm so impressed.
11:13He said, this is how to talk about the world.
11:16He said, well, you're in love.
11:18He said that you're asking me to do everything.
11:19He said, well, you're like, I said, what's wrong?
11:22If you're going to the moon?
11:25You're thinking about it.
11:26I'm extremely happy.
11:27Just don't call me during working hours, Millie.
11:36Is that clear?
11:38Yes, I'm sorry.
11:41You didn't set out to buy a house this morning.
11:43I know, but it just turned out to be such a good buy.
11:48Anyway, I couldn't just plonk down half a million pounds
11:51without knowing whether or not you liked it.
11:54Oh, honest, Lance, it will make the perfect weekend cottage.
11:58I haven't time for weekends in the country, Millie.
12:01I wish you could resign yourself to just being a policeman's wife,
12:05because I can't settle down to being a...
12:06Rich girl's plaything?
12:09You smug bastard.
12:12Money never hurt anyone's chances.
12:18All right, I'm sorry.
12:22I'm sorry.
12:24Come on, girl.
12:29Tell me about our new country cottage.
12:32Is it bigger or smaller than Versailles?
12:39You haven't forgotten.
12:41I know.
12:43Shopping.
12:44I'll get it.
13:04How did you get this number?
13:27I know.
13:29What?
13:31No, tonight, no.
13:33No, that's impossible.
13:34Doctor's orders.
13:37No, I am interested.
13:40Yes.
13:43Yeah, well, just tell me where.
13:44Yes.
13:51Yeah, I'll try.
13:54Look to...
13:54Look to...
14:04Oh.
14:14I...
14:14PIANO PLAYS
14:44Who's that?
14:53Nathaniel Mustard.
14:55Cheers.
14:56Who's he?
14:57Is that something out of the Bible?
15:00He's the bloke we think set up those demonstrations.
15:05He wants to meet me.
15:07You going to?
15:09Yeah, it could be useful.
15:14No!
15:15No!
15:16No!
15:17No!
15:18No!
15:19No!
15:20Stop it!
15:23No!
15:24No!
15:25No!
15:26No!
15:27No!
15:28No!
15:29No!
15:30No!
15:34Get out!
15:36Stop it!
15:38No!
15:39No!
15:40No!
15:42Stop!
15:44Stop!
15:46Stop!
15:47Dad!
16:17I don't know.
16:47Oh, hello, Jack.
17:12Why are you in?
17:14We got so behind, I've got to catch up.
17:16How long are you going to be?
17:17I want to see the cricket.
17:19I'll just finish this tape, all right?
17:21Give me a nod when you leave her.
17:23Will do.
17:23Which precludes car silver from exerting any pressure, not that we will.
17:31The entire stock of assets taken into account.
17:37The entire stock of assets taken into account, then, can be transferred into a new trust.
18:05You're a murderer.
18:07You'll never even be a bloody murderer.
18:09If you won't think...
18:10So it's taken into account, then, can be transferred into a new trust.
18:22You're a murderer.
18:23You'll never even be a bloody murderer.
18:25If you won't think you will be alive today.
18:27Oh, for God's sake, Mrs. Titt.
18:29What I'm saying is that even if they are very...
18:31Do you like Persians?
18:39They're called Iranians now, I think, dear.
18:42No, Persian carpets.
18:45Because those three we saw today, I think they'd look right in a new house.
18:56I wonder if they'd be delivered in time.
19:00For the housewarming?
19:01Should we invite the commissioner?
19:14The commissioner?
19:15To a party given by a superintendent?
19:17Why the hell not?
19:19It'll be the best damn party old commissioner Plod's ever been to.
19:24Millie, have you ever heard of Wieblin?
19:28The racing driver?
19:29The philosopher.
19:31He wrote a seminal book called The Theory of the Leisure Class.
19:35It was about you, Millie.
19:37Or people like you.
19:45Even poor people have parties.
19:48Not with marquees and caterers and guest lists of hundreds.
19:51But I'd handle everything.
19:53Now, we've never had a proper party.
19:55And it'd be a birthday party for you.
19:56And a housewarming for the little Versailles.
20:00It's only six weeks to my birthday.
20:02But I'll make it.
20:03You'll see.
20:04Millie, the legal formalities of I have...
20:06Bullshit, Lance.
20:08I'm rich.
20:09Remember?
20:12Anyway, I...
20:13I couldn't commit myself.
20:14My work must come first.
20:15Oh, I understand.
20:17The higher you get, the bigger the load you carry.
20:19I know that.
20:23So don't promise anything, all right?
20:26I'm going to give a great party.
20:28If you can turn up for a drink, well, we'd all love to see you.
20:39Hello?
20:39Yes, just a moment.
20:44Sergeant Ballantyne?
20:50It's Mrs. Novotny, sir.
20:52Charles Makepeace's secretary.
20:54She's found something.
20:55Sounds worth a visit.
20:57Yes, sir, on my way.
20:58Could someone call me Alpha 8?
21:00I want to go to Carr-Silver.
21:01I'll wait downstairs.
21:02I want to go to Carr-Silver.
21:32Do you know who that was?
22:01No.
22:03When was the recording made, do you know?
22:06Yes, it was the tape he was using the day he died.
22:09I see.
22:11Well, if you'd let me have the tape, Mrs. Novotny will get it over to our acoustics lab.
22:15Yes, of course.
22:19I thought you might like this.
22:22You heard the name, the beginning of the name.
22:25Well, I've made a computer list of all clients and contacts whose names begin with T.
22:33Thank you, Mrs. Novotny.
22:34I wish you'd told me what you were doing.
22:41I mean, something might have happened to you.
22:42I told you nothing happened.
22:43He never showed up.
22:45There's never any bloody room in here.
22:47Don't change the subject.
22:49Look, it's getting dangerous.
22:51Look at you.
22:51Where are my cigarettes?
22:52Where are my cigarettes?
22:53They're probably where you left them.
22:54Where you left them, you mean?
22:56Look, I just wish you wouldn't play detective.
22:58I want to find out who did this to me, all right?
23:00Oh, grow up.
23:25Jero.
23:25I wish you'd take another day off.
23:29All right.
23:31Couldn't you get the American to hold the fort till tomorrow?
23:33No, I can't.
23:33He's useless.
23:34He's useless.
23:55I wish you'd take another day off.
24:25Let me have a look at the log for Tuesday, the 15th of June,
24:43the day Makepeace died.
24:55Mr. Maitland, do you want this back, or shall I keep it?
25:00Any luck?
25:01Yes.
25:02I said I was calling from the DHSS, and it worked.
25:05I got through to Fain and Browning's personnel department,
25:08and you were right, Mr. Maitland.
25:09They confirmed that Mr. Mustard is a former employee of theirs.
25:12He took early retirement two years ago.
25:14What about his van?
25:15Did the police trace it?
25:16Tricky number, please.
25:18Now, what about this?
25:19The past performance of Fain and Browning does not justify the current market price,
25:23which will fall substantially of our offer lapses.
25:25Well, do you want me to stay on this evening and type up the offer document?
25:28Yeah, if you could, Diana, thank you.
25:30We would then drastically reduce our own holding.
25:33We do not consider the shares to be worth our offer price.
25:36Unless under our control.
25:39Unless we take control.
25:42Yeah.
25:44Sir, you'll let me have a draft of the offer document tomorrow morning?
25:47What's your first thing?
25:49I'm up to Norfolk to see if I can find this fellow I've mastered.
25:51Norfolk's address.
25:53What part of Norfolk?
25:54North Dalling.
25:56Dalling.
25:57Local pronunciation.
25:59It's a couple of miles north of Tyndall's Pond.
26:02What's that?
26:03Don't you remember?
26:04A couple of years back, terrible stink.
26:05It's an industrial waste dump.
26:07A bog of toxic chemicals.
26:09They say it's the worst in Europe,
26:10and it'll be about 20 years before they can reclaim the area.
26:12Thank you, Richards.
26:15My moustache.
26:19The entire stock of assets taken into account, then,
26:22can be transferred into a new trust.
26:26You're a murderer!
26:27You're nothing but a bloody murderer!
26:29If it weren't for you, we'd be alive today!
26:31For God's sake, Mr...
26:33What the hell was that?
26:34Did you recognise the voice, sir?
26:36No.
26:37A woman's voice.
26:39Hysterical.
26:39You may have heard it before in a calmer mood.
26:42I don't think so.
26:44I'll listen to it again.
26:45Sorry.
26:46Assets taken into account, then,
26:48can be transferred into a new trust.
26:51You're a murderer!
26:52You're nothing but a bloody murderer!
26:55If it weren't for you, we'd be alive today!
26:56For God's sake, Mrs...
26:58What?
26:58No.
27:00No, I'm sorry.
27:00I don't understand.
27:03This is a list of the Vanks clients
27:05whose names begin with the initial T.
27:08Is there anyone on that list
27:09who you think may have borne Charles' make-piece of grudge?
27:14We only have the one syllable.
27:16Our acoustic lab thinks the name might be something like
27:18Timpson or Tinley.
27:20Does that name ring any bells with you, sir?
27:23Without checking the records,
27:24I really couldn't say, are we?
27:28Right.
27:29Thank you for your time, Mr. Field.
27:31It's a pleasure.
27:32Sorry, I couldn't have been more help.
27:35Tell you what, though.
27:38Something to do with Charles,
27:39but I was talking to one of our clients this morning,
27:42and he mentioned this place up in Norfolk.
27:45It's a chemical waste dump
27:46by the name of Tyndall's Pond.
27:50No, I want to speak to Dan Maikland, please.
28:11Dan Maikland.
28:12Oh, splendid.
28:14Can you bring it up?
28:15Right.
28:17Right.
28:30So where's the bloody boobs?
28:34Oh, hey.
28:35Oh, hey.
28:36Wow, John.
28:37Well, I wasn't expecting you, but you're welcome.
28:40This is Phyllis Davenport-Wright.
28:41Wright's Davenport.
28:42That's right, right.
28:43Davenport-Wright.
28:44That shareholder's file.
28:46Oh, it's in my briefcase.
28:49If you'd have phoned, I would have brought it around.
28:50I've been phoning for the last two hours.
28:53I can't get any sense out of these silly bastards.
28:56I want that file.
28:57It's in the boot of my car.
29:00Those papers are highly confidential.
29:02They should never have let the building.
29:04Come on, this is business.
29:05Over.
29:05All right, look, I'm sorry.
29:07Why don't I, uh, draw on some clothes and I'll get it for you.
29:14I wasn't too desperate to get laid.
29:17But Phyllis isn't really an easy lay.
29:19She's an inescapable one.
29:21I don't care how many tarts you screw.
29:23Well, I do.
29:24And I don't consider that any of your goddamn business.
29:27For God's sakes, removing confidential papers?
29:30Having sex romps in the middle of what should be a working day?
29:32It is a working day.
29:34I threw a party for dear old Marty Gannett, who was at Westminster with me.
29:38And dear old Marty, who can't control his bladder, now controls Granite.
29:42And Granite, as you doubtless know, is a substantial shareholder in Fane and Brownie.
29:46Excuse me.
29:52Silly old point.
29:55And I thought he was just living it up.
30:00This is the complete rundown from the Department of Environment.
30:02Put it in a nutshell for me, Sergeant.
30:05Tindall's Pond got its name from the haulage firm of Charles Tindall, which was prosecuted
30:09for illegal dumping and closed down five years ago.
30:12Its founder and managing director was sent to prison and the company was fined.
30:16What's the connection with Makepeace?
30:18Officially, none.
30:20But according to my sources...
30:22Get on with it, Sergeant.
30:24It seems that Makepeace on holiday in Norfolk noticed a Tindall lorry dumping illegally.
30:29It tipped off the police and they staked out the area.
30:32It was warned by the department to keep it quiet for fear of publicity.
30:36Obviously, it got out somehow.
30:37So the voice on the tape may have been Charles Tindall's wife.
30:43Why would she call him a murderer?
30:45Possibly, sir, because Tindall hanged himself in Parkhurst two years ago.
30:48So the בע mars' people are cackled.
30:55The love was executed in Nioch Slipper with the
30:59Slipper's life's armas is a miss shaken to forget.
31:08DRAMATURS
31:10Pretoriam
31:13He's a ma�� Move
31:15In respect of his holding of ordinary stock unit,
31:38I'll give you a bleak down mate London and tell him to come in here right away.
31:46He's playing tennis.
31:48He's what?
31:50Sorry, I thought you knew.
31:52Sir Max has given him permission to practise whenever he wants.
31:56What's he playing?
32:08Excuse me, if you mind. I'd like a word.
32:29What's the problem?
32:34What do you mean, what's the problem? What do you call this? Work?
32:37Come again?
32:38I'll meet you in the office. I'm not poncing around out here.
32:42I'll be ready in a couple of minutes.
32:44Yes, you'd better be.
32:51Okay.
32:53I didn't know you were a tennis fan.
33:05Don't look so alarmed. I'm not chasing you.
33:08I thought we agreed that we weren't going to meet.
33:10Oh, for God's sake.
33:12We were conspiring to rob the Bank of England, not just having a little affair.
33:16Bloody silly.
33:18Can I buy a book and beer?
33:20Cheers.
33:21Catch you later.
33:24You haven't got time for a beer.
33:26I'll see you in the office if you can make it.
33:31Hi. Who are you?
33:33I'm Kate McCrenney.
33:34Friend of John's?
33:35Er, no. We've met professionally.
33:38I'm a stockbroker.
33:42I'm Dan Maitland.
33:45Pleased to meet you.
33:46You've joined Carson.
33:48That's right.
33:50Have my dinner tonight.
33:53You don't waste any time, do you?
34:09Whoop!
34:16You know, it seems to me, Maitland, that you don't give a damn about banking.
34:23You know, on Wall Street we have a saying.
34:26The battle's often won when you're having fun.
34:30So I wouldn't jump to any conclusions.
34:34You know, you ought to loosen up.
34:36You'll end up just like my dad, at a coronary by the time he was 40.
34:39Thank you for your concern.
34:46I want you to go over those offer documents again.
34:48Check them out for me.
34:50Sir Max thinks I've gone over the top.
34:52He wants to see me at 3 o'clock this afternoon,
34:54so I would appreciate it if you could get a move on.
34:57No problem.
34:58Are you seeing that girl?
35:03Who?
35:04Who?
35:34Come in.
35:42Detective Thorne.
35:44Superintendent Thorne and Sergeant Ballantyne.
35:46Please sit down, gentlemen.
35:49It's very good of you to see us at such short notice, Mr. Mandel.
35:53Tell me what I can do for you.
35:55You worked for Mr. Charles Tindall before you joined the Department of Environment.
36:00Is that correct?
36:01Yes, it is.
36:03Did you tell Mrs. Tindall that the information which led to her husband's conviction
36:07came from a Mr. Charles make-piece of Carr-Sillman?
36:11I assume you're jesting, Superintendent.
36:14I am perfectly serious, Mr. Mandel.
36:17Someone told her and you, in your position as Deputy Head of Industrial Pollution,
36:21were in a position to do so.
36:23And risked my job, my career, for a few hundred pounds.
36:27I take it you're suggesting I was bribed?
36:29No, not necessarily.
36:32Mr. Mandelville, I cannot promise that this rumour might not reach your Head of Department.
36:41But I'm not, at the moment, especially interested in you.
36:45I'm conducting a murder inquiry.
36:48A murder?
36:49I informed Mr. Tindall, not his wife.
36:57Why?
36:59Superintendent, I have a degree in geography, and another in law.
37:04Very impressive, sir.
37:05Yes.
37:07And with these impressive qualifications, the only job I was offered in three years searching
37:13was primary school teaching.
37:15Then Mr. Tindall took me on.
37:18In personnel, I believe?
37:20Initially, but with the understanding that I would rise if I proved my worth.
37:24He kept his word, and within a year I was made Head of the Contracts Department.
37:31When I was offered the job here, he wrote me an excellent letter of recommendation.
37:36So you had reason to be grateful to him?
37:40I also believed what he said.
37:42And what was that?
37:43He maintained that he was the victim of a miscarriage of justice.
37:48That his lorries were dumping illegally because the drivers were cutting corners,
37:53not on his instructions.
37:55He asked me for the name of the man who shopped him because he thought it might help him make a better defence.
38:01In the event, his solicitors decided against using the information.
38:07I see.
38:09Well, thank you, Mr. Mandeville, for your cooperation.
38:11Not at all.
38:13Do you happen to know the current whereabouts of Mrs. Tindall?
38:17Yes, of course. It's Blackheath.
38:20No. No, not for you now.
38:22Oh. I didn't know.
38:25In that case, I... I have no idea.
38:32Right. Now I'm off.
38:35You won't try any heroics, will you?
38:38We tried all that last night.
38:41I'll see you.
38:44I'll see you.
38:45What have we got here?
38:46Come along.
38:47See, fire, foe, farm, I smell the blood of an Englishman.
38:48Hey.
38:49What are you doing in there? Come on.
38:50Come on.
38:51Come on.
38:52Daddy's got to go in a hurry. Come on.
38:54Come on.
38:55Come on.
38:56Come on.
38:57Come on.
38:58Come on.
38:59Come on.
39:00Come on.
39:01Come on.
39:02Come on.
39:03Come on.
39:04Come on.
39:05Come on.
39:06Come on.
39:07Come on.
39:08Come on.
39:09Come on.
39:10Come on.
39:11Come on.
39:12Come on.
39:13Come on.
39:14Come on.
39:15Daddy's got to go in a hurry.
39:16Come on.
39:17Come on, Evie, darling.
39:18It's not a pleasure trip.
39:19Have you come.
39:20That's it.
39:21Good one.
39:22Well, it will be a pleasure trip for me.
39:24Oh, I know.
39:25But come on, darling.
39:26Come on.
39:27Daddy's got to go.
39:28It's not fair.
39:29I know it's not fair.
39:30Next time.
39:31Give Daddy a kiss.
39:32Go upstairs.
39:33Happy breakfast.
39:34I'll go off in a minute.
39:35OK?
39:41What are you gonna do tonight?
39:42Anyone come over?
39:44No.
39:45Why?
39:46No, nothing.
39:48Anything good on the box?
39:51Oh, yes.
39:52There's the second part of that documentary.
39:55The one where they take all your lungs out and then your liver.
39:59Yeah, that's the one.
40:00Great.
40:01Pity, really, because we could have watched it together.
40:08I will.
40:09Don't forget to lock up.
40:15Will you be careful?
40:17Hmm?
40:19Yeah.
40:21There, there.
40:22Oh, no!
40:25I don't know.
42:25Are you Mrs. Mustard?
42:29No, of course not.
42:31I'm his housekeeper.
42:33Everybody in the village knows that.
42:35Is there no way I could contact Mr. Mustard before fire?
42:49I'm afraid not.
42:50He's out praying with the sick.
42:52Sick?
42:53There can't be that many sick in such a small village, can there?
42:57The ghost is sick in all the villages round about.
43:01Brings comfort to the dying.
43:04It's more respected round here than the vicar.
43:06Yeah.
43:08Oh, well, that's really excellent.
43:11Well, I'll come back at five o'clock.
43:15All right?
43:15Well, I'll be right back.
43:45Good morning.
43:52Good morning.
43:55Fill her up, please.
43:56Do you know a place called Tindall's Pond round here?
44:01What's that then?
44:02It's a dump.
44:04You know, chemical products, waste, that kind of thing.
44:06Oh, the stinking barb.
44:08You can't get in there.
44:09There's a big fence around it.
44:11Two boys climbing there last year nearly died from the stink.
44:15It's like poison gas here, see?
44:18Where is it?
44:19You've got to go four, five miles, might be a little more along this road.
44:26Turn left till you come to a track.
44:30You'd be best walking from there.
44:34How far along is that then?
44:36Don't write any note.
44:37Never been there myself.
44:38That'll be £9.50.
44:46What cards do you take?
44:47What cards do you take?
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