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00:00The End
00:24Well there you are, Agarn.
00:26Your share of this month's profits.
00:27Gee, Sarge, this is the most money you ever paid me.
00:30Well, after all, you've been a hard-working, loyal employee of O'Rourke Enterprises
00:34and this saloon has turned out to be a gold mine.
00:36Knock on wood!
00:37Sarge! Somebody's after us!
00:40A note on that thing.
00:42I don't need no note. I got the message from the knife.
00:45I am in the alley next to the saloon, come quick, your cousin Pierre.
00:51I ain't got no cousin Pierre.
00:53But I do. He's a fur trapper in Canada.
00:55Fur trapper?
00:56Yeah.
00:57Psst!
01:04Cousin Landon! C'est moi!
01:06Who is he?
01:11Can he be trusted?
01:13Oh, sure. He's my best friend. This is Sergeant O'Rourke.
01:17Sarge, this is my cousin, Pierre Eganyar. Otherwise known as Lucky Pierre.
01:24Glad to meet you. Glad to meet you.
01:27Pleasure, Sergeant. Excuse me. I cannot be seen. I must stay out of sight.
01:33Listen, if you're so lucky, why are you hiding in an alley?
01:36I'm being pursued by crooks. They want to steal my furs. Voila. These are worth our fortune.
01:43I never saw that kind of fur before.
01:45Ah, you are right, monsieur. I developed this myself. Through careful crossbreeding, I mated a lynx with a marmosette. What do you call it? Minx.
01:57Oh, that's very clever of you, Lucky. Crossbreeding, huh?
02:01I'm also thinking of mating a fox with my mink. You could call it a fink.
02:09Very good, cousin. Very good. Or you could even cross a lynx and a fox and you'd have a lox.
02:16Never mind the crossbreeding. Now listen, if you're worried about somebody getting at those pelts, why don't you leave them with our friends of Hakawis?
02:22But they're Indians, no? They are Indians, yes. But they're our friends. We do business with them.
02:27Yeah, you'll be safe up there. Now listen, you go up and tell them we sent you. Their camp is just about three miles off the road up near the lake.
02:32Very good. I go there after dark.
02:35All right, we'll see you tomorrow, Lucky. Come on, Egan.
02:37Au revoir, mes amis. That means goodbye in French.
02:40Ah, Egan, your cousin Lucky Pierre has really brought us some luck.
02:47He has?
02:48Well, don't you get it? We're going in the fur business with him. He's got the pelts, we got the Hakawis squaws to make them into fur coats.
02:54Sarge, you're right. We'll make a fortune off those minks, finks, and lox.
02:59Not you, Dobbs.
03:10Dobbs was just trying out his new bugle.
03:15Ain't it a beauty? Captain requisitioned it for me. Listen to this.
03:18Now we know what happened to the old one. It committed suicide.
03:24Now Dobbs just has to practice with this new...
03:29Tramp, tramp, tramp along the highway. Tramp, tramp, tramp, the road is free.
03:36For crampers and Canucks, Virginians and Canucks, Captain Dick's own infantry.
03:43Captain Dick's own infantry.
03:48Sergeant Ramston, Royal Canadian Mounted Police. We always get our man.
03:55Welcome to Fort Courage, Sergeant.
03:58Hey, look here. He's got wheels on this thing.
04:02Just a clever innovation of mine. A first for the Mounties. A sled with retractable wheels.
04:09We'll bring you to Fort Courage, Sergeant.
04:11I am looking for a fugitive from justice. A notorious fur thief.
04:16I'm gonna... I'm gonna... I'm gonna... What's his name?
04:19They call him Lucky Pierre.
04:23I'm gonna...
04:28You'reissimo.
04:33Prydough.
04:37Howlativetire.
04:43You're Given National Breast Air.
04:46You make anyutter and Friend Mangездques.
04:51Sarge, I'm sure my cousin can explain this.
05:20Ah, you and your crooked relatives.
05:21Wait a minute, Sarge.
05:23My relatives are as honest as the day is long.
05:26Oh, yeah?
05:26What about that cousin of yours down in Mexico, that bandit El Diablo?
05:30Well, the days are shorter in Mexico.
05:34Maybe we could make as much on the reward as we could at the fur coat business.
05:37Reward?
05:38Sure.
05:38Sarge, you can't turn in lucky Pierre.
05:40He's my cousin, son of my Aunt Charlene, who was married to my Uncle Harry,
05:45who was my mother's favorite, next to Habertha Seymour,
05:47who's married to the lovely Lily Farquart of the Mosaic Farquarts,
05:51who lived in the big house on the hill next to the Langtons,
05:53whose daughter, Shirley, married...
05:55Hey, Bart.
05:55Walensky.
05:56Walensky?
05:57Yeah, Shirley married Irving Walensky, whose son, Malvin, I mean...
06:01I won't turn your cousin in until I talk to him.
06:05But, he better have a good explanation.
06:20Now that you've got a new bugle, why don't you requisition new lips?
06:24Hoop!
06:27Seed, hut!
06:28F-2-4, President, counterforce, hut!
06:30Thank you, Sergeant.
06:31At ease, man.
06:32At ease.
06:33Now, today, I would like you all to meet Sergeant Ramsden of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
06:41We always get our man.
06:44That's good.
06:45That's good.
06:46And as a matter of fact, that's what has brought him to Fort Courage.
06:49He is looking for a notorious French-Canadian fur thief named Lucky Pierre.
06:56Now, I want you all to cooperate and be neighborly to our good neighbor from the north
07:01while he's here in the neighborhood.
07:04Uh, Sergeant Ramsden, could you give the men a description of this thief?
07:07I have found my man.
07:10Oh, the legard?
07:11Oh, no, he can't be the man.
07:12Oh, Sergeant, you must be mistaken.
07:14I'd know this face anyplace,
07:16even though he has cleverly shaved off his moustache and beard.
07:20You're cunning, Pierre.
07:21Now, wait a minute.
07:22Didn't you say this fur thief was a French-Canadian?
07:25Corporal Agarn speaks English as well as anyone from New Jersey.
07:29In the three years I've been tracking him, it has possibly lost his accent.
07:33But I will give him a test.
07:35A test?
07:36The French have great difficulty pronouncing the letters T-H-thuh.
07:42Get after me.
07:44Thoughtful thinkers think thoughtful thoughts through thick and thin.
07:46Thoughtful thinkers think thoughtful thoughts through thick and thin.
07:49Ah, you see there, Sergeant?
07:50Yeah.
07:51And if Peter Piper picked a pack of pickled peppers,
07:53how many pickled peppers did Peter Piper pick?
07:56Very good, Agarn.
07:58I always have trouble with that.
08:00Peter Piker pick...
08:01I still say he's French.
08:04How long have you been in the cavalry?
08:05Ten years.
08:06How long have you been in Fort Courage?
08:07Four years.
08:08When was your last furlough?
08:09A year ago, last March.
08:10Where'd you go?
08:11Canada, to visit my cousin Pierre.
08:12Help them!
08:13Throw this man in iron.
08:15Now, wait a minute.
08:16He hasn't done anything.
08:17Sergeant O'Rourke is right.
08:18Corporal Agarn is not his cousin's keeper.
08:21He may be his accomplice.
08:23I suggest you confine this man to quarters.
08:25I know his cousin is in this area,
08:27and I'm sure Lucky Pierre will make some attempt to contact him.
08:30Well, under the circumstances,
08:32I guess it's the only thing to do.
08:34I'm sorry, Corporal,
08:35but I'm going to have to confine you to your quarters.
08:37I understand, sir.
08:39Sergeant, dismiss the troop.
08:41President!
08:41Troop!
08:42Piss!
08:43Piss!
08:45Hey, Hagar,
08:46are you really in cahoots with your cousin Lucky Pierre?
08:48Do you think you'd get me a fur coat wholesale?
08:51No, I'm not in cahoots,
08:53and I'm not going to get you a fur coat!
08:54Piss!
09:03Hi, Wilton.
09:04Hi, Jane.
09:05Sergeant Ramsden,
09:06I'd like you to meet Wrangler Jane.
09:08This is Sergeant Ramsden of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
09:10We always get our man.
09:13And we, uh,
09:14get our woman, too.
09:21I dream of Wrangler
09:24with the light yellow hair
09:27floating like a vapor
09:29If he sings any higher,
09:30those dogs will tear him apart.
09:32...summer air
09:33Many were the wild notes
09:35her merry voice would pour
09:37Many were the blithe birds
09:38that warbled them all
09:40Sarge, what are we going to do about my cousin?
09:42Don't worry about it.
09:43I'll go up to the Hakawi camp
09:44and see if Pierre is telling the truth
09:46and, well, then I'll figure out what to do.
09:47Boating like a paper
09:49Thanks, Sarge.
09:50...on the soft
09:52summer air
09:55Oh, that was just beautiful, Sergeant Ramsden.
10:00Don't be formal, my dear.
10:02My friends call me
10:03the
10:03Singing Mountie.
10:06Jane, I think you'd better go.
10:07Sergeant Ramsden has a lot of work to do.
10:09Yes, I'm going to run down
10:10a couple of leads on the case.
10:12Would you, uh,
10:13care to join me
10:14in the sled, my dear?
10:16My dogs are waiting
10:18with wagging tails.
10:20I'd rather be thrilling.
10:22Bye, Wilton.
10:24Jane, I thought we were going riding.
10:25See you later, Captain.
10:26Marsh!
10:28Tramp, tramp, tramp
10:29along the highway
10:31Tramp, tramp, tramp
10:33the road is free
10:34Oh, uh, Captain,
10:35I want to go search the area
10:36and see if I can find this lucky Pierre.
10:38I think the only tail
10:39that's wagging is his.
10:41What's that, sir?
10:42Oh, uh, nothing, Sergeant.
10:44Nothing.
10:44Well, what is it?
10:45Uh, I said I'd like to go see
10:47if I can find lucky Pierre.
10:48Oh, uh...
11:14Voila, mes amis.
11:20You're about to have the pleasure
11:21of tasting a gourmet's delight.
11:31You taste first, Crazy Cat.
11:33No, not to you.
11:35You're the chief.
11:36If you want to be like chief,
11:38you taste first.
11:39If you taste first,
11:40maybe I be chief.
11:41Duc-duc-duc-duc, please.
11:42I will taste first.
11:50Oh, la, la, Pierre.
11:53You've done it again.
11:56Hey, Wild Eagle, Crave.
11:59Listen, lucky Pierre.
12:01Where is my cousin?
12:02He's under house arrest,
12:03thanks to you.
12:04But I would never do anything
12:06to cause the arrest
12:07of my cousin Randolph,
12:09the son de ma tante Becky,
12:11who was married to Uncle Freddy,
12:13who was my mother's favorite brother,
12:15whose sister Zelda...
12:16All right, Pierre.
12:18...Wilensky.
12:19So you're a crook.
12:20I'm a crook?
12:21Well, all I know
12:22is that the Mounties
12:23never go after the wrong man.
12:25Please, Sergeant,
12:26you must believe me.
12:27Sacre bleu.
12:31I should have thought of it before.
12:33Thought of what?
12:34This must be the work
12:35of the most infamous fur thief
12:37in all Canada.
12:38Who's that?
12:38The burglar of bamf.
12:41The burglar of bamf.
12:43So clever he once stole
12:45a beaver coat.
12:46Well, what's so clever
12:47about that?
12:48It was still on the beaver.
12:49Yeah, well, I don't think
12:51there is a burglar of bamf.
12:52Come on.
12:53All right, Sergeant.
12:54Au revoir, crazy pussy.
12:59Wild eagle.
13:00My only regret
13:01is that we could not
13:02go into the fur coat
13:03business together.
13:04It would have made
13:05a fortune for you,
13:06for the tribe,
13:08for Sergeant Orore,
13:09for all of us.
13:11Uh, just a minute here, Pierre.
13:14I'd like to hear
13:15a little more
13:16about this burglar of bamf.
13:24What happened, Sarge?
13:36This cousin of yours
13:37is a pretty persuasive fellow.
13:39Now, he keeps telling me
13:39he's innocent.
13:40Oh, you can believe him, Sarge.
13:42He may be a crook,
13:42but he's not a liar.
13:45Pierre tells me
13:46that this Mountie
13:46may be looking for
13:47another fur thief
13:48altogether.
13:48Somebody called
13:49the burglar of bamf.
13:50Captain,
13:52I assure you
13:54I am closing in.
13:57I am tightening the noose
13:58on lucky Pierre.
14:00Well, I don't think
14:01you'll ever take him
14:02by surprise.
14:02It's pretty hard
14:03to sneak up on a man
14:04when you're singing
14:05tramp, tramp, tramp
14:06at the top of your voice.
14:09Captain,
14:09I never have to worry
14:10about that
14:11with my new techniques
14:13and criminology.
14:14Do you realize
14:15that I can sift
14:16the ashes of a campfire
14:18and know exactly
14:19how long the fire
14:20has been burning,
14:21what food the man
14:22was eating,
14:23and how tall he is?
14:25You can tell all that
14:26just from sifting the ashes?
14:27On a good day,
14:28I can even tell
14:29the color of his eyes.
14:31If you can do all that,
14:32how come you've never
14:33found lucky Pierre?
14:34I've never found
14:35his campfire.
14:38Then how do you know
14:39he's in this area?
14:41I've been following him
14:42by the broken twig method.
14:47Come in.
14:48Oh, I'm sorry, sir.
14:52I didn't realize
14:53you were busy.
14:54No, no, no.
14:54Come in, O'Rourke.
14:55Sergeant Rampton
14:55was just giving me
14:56a lecture on criminology.
14:58Well, that must be
14:59very fascinating.
14:59Of course,
15:00I didn't mean to interrupt.
15:01As a matter of fact,
15:02it is fascinating, Sergeant.
15:04For instance,
15:06do you know
15:06I can take one look
15:07at you and tell
15:08exactly where you've
15:09been this morning?
15:10You can?
15:11A little clay dust
15:12on your boots.
15:14You've been off the fort.
15:15Oh, yeah, well,
15:16I went into town, sir.
15:17Your pants
15:18a bit shiny.
15:20You've been riding
15:21some distance.
15:23Oh, yes,
15:23well, I was out
15:24looking for Lucky Pierre.
15:25Gravy stains
15:26on your uniform.
15:27You had pork and beans
15:28for lunch.
15:29Uh, right again, Sergeant.
15:32What do we hear?
15:34Hmm?
15:35Captain Parmenter.
15:36Come take a look.
15:37What is it, Sergeant?
15:39Look for yourself.
15:39What do you see
15:42under this magnifying glass?
15:44A big, fat thumb.
15:46Captain,
15:46what am I holding
15:47with that thumb?
15:49A big, fat finger.
15:51Captain,
15:51don't you see?
15:52It is a hair
15:53of a fur-bearing animal.
15:55Oh, yes.
15:56I guess it is at that.
15:57Ah!
15:58Well, when I was out
15:59in the woods, sir,
15:59you see,
16:00this squirrel
16:01ran right up my arm.
16:03I just...
16:03This is not the hair
16:05of a squirrel,
16:06Captain Parmenter.
16:07This is a hair
16:08of the fur
16:09of the rare
16:10and valuable mink.
16:12A fur that is known
16:13to be in the possession
16:13of Lucky Pierre.
16:15Well, maybe that squirrel
16:16was playing around
16:17with a mink.
16:19Yeah, well,
16:20I certainly don't have
16:21any idea how that hair
16:22got on my shirt, Sergeant.
16:23I mean...
16:24Well, I do.
16:25So?
16:25Is it not true
16:26that you sleep
16:27in the same barracks
16:28with Corporal Agarn,
16:29the cousin of Lucky Pierre?
16:30Yes.
16:31Well, it's obvious
16:32that a big, healthy man
16:34like you must sleep
16:35with the windows open.
16:36Oh, sure.
16:37What are you getting at, Sergeant?
16:38I submit to you
16:40that Corporal Agarn
16:41has made contact
16:42with his cousin
16:43and the wind
16:45from the open window
16:46blew the fur
16:47from his uniform
16:49to O'Rourke's.
16:52Oh, I can't believe
16:53this of Agarn.
16:54It proves conclusively
16:56Lucky Pierre
16:58is in this area.
17:00I'm going to make
17:01a reconnaissance.
17:03I'll be back
17:03by sunset.
17:09Oh, and I must
17:10ask both of you
17:11not to reveal
17:12these findings
17:12to Corporal Agarn.
17:14You have our word.
17:15Good.
17:19I really can't
17:20believe this, Sergeant.
17:21Well, I admit
17:21it looks pretty bad
17:22for my buddy, sir,
17:23but I...
17:24for my files.
17:32Sir, I heard
17:33some fur traders
17:34over at the saloon
17:34talking,
17:35and they said
17:35that the real culprit
17:36that you should be
17:37looking for
17:37was a notorious fur thief
17:39known as
17:40the Burglar of Banff.
17:42Burglar of Banff?
17:43Oh, no, I think
17:45that's just a name
17:46that Lucky Pierre
17:46uses to throw
17:47people off the track.
17:48No, no,
17:48I don't believe
17:49that, Captain.
17:50You know, Sergeant,
17:50I may not be able
17:51to sing,
17:52but I am a bit
17:53of a criminologist
17:53myself.
17:55You are, sir?
17:56Fur thieves
17:56steal furs
17:57from people
17:58who trap furs,
17:59right, Sergeant?
18:00Right.
18:00Now, Sergeant,
18:01who around Fort Courage
18:02goes in
18:03for trapping furs?
18:05Well, I don't know
18:05who?
18:06Indians.
18:07Oh, sure.
18:08We are going
18:08to look for Lucky Pierre
18:10in the Hikawi camp.
18:14Captain, I tell you
18:14we're on a wild goose chase.
18:16No, we're on
18:17a wild mink chase.
18:21You can be a criminologist
18:22with a sense of humor,
18:23too.
18:24Well, listen,
18:24you better let me
18:25talk to Wild Eagle.
18:26I mean, he might not
18:27talk as freely
18:27in front of you.
18:28No, no, no.
18:29I'm just going
18:29to explain to the chief
18:30that all we're looking
18:31for is a little information
18:32on Lucky Pierre.
18:33Hey, Wild Eagle.
18:34Hey, how are you?
18:35Listen, Captain Parmenter
18:37here is looking
18:37for some information
18:38about Lucky Pierre,
18:39who he thinks
18:40is a fur thief.
18:41Of course, I told him
18:42that you hadn't seen
18:43Lucky Pierre
18:43and that if Lucky Pierre
18:44was here,
18:45that he'd be hiding
18:46in a teepee.
18:47Sergeant O'Rourke
18:48speak truth, Captain.
18:50We not see this man
18:51Lucky Pierre?
18:52Well, how do you know
18:53you haven't seen him?
18:53You may have seen him
18:54and not know it.
18:55I mean, I don't think
18:55you'd walk into camp
18:56and say,
18:57Hi there, chief Wild Eagle.
18:58I'm Lucky Pierre,
18:59the fur thief.
19:00No, no, you don't
19:00understand, Captain.
19:01Now, you see,
19:02Wild Eagle knows
19:02all about fur thieves.
19:03Why, he could recognize
19:05you're a mile away.
19:06Nevertheless, Sergeant,
19:07I think the chief
19:08should have some idea
19:09of what he looks like.
19:10Now, he can best
19:11be described as
19:12Corporal Agarn
19:14with a French accent.
19:16No man like that
19:17been around
19:18our colleague camp.
19:20Chief Wild Eagle
19:21ready to taste
19:21delicious bouillabaisse?
19:23Oh, bouillabaisse.
19:24Bouillabaisse?
19:25That's a French dish.
19:26No, no, that's
19:27an Indian dish.
19:28You see, the French
19:29took it from the Indians.
19:30Now, bouillabaisse
19:30means bark of tree
19:32and baisse
19:33means soup.
19:33So bouillabaisse
19:35is soup
19:35of bark of tree.
19:37Chief.
19:39No, go ahead, Chief.
19:39Don't let us
19:40interrupt your meal.
19:41Just take one taste.
19:47Ooh la la.
19:48That's good.
19:49Ooh la la?
19:50That's an old
19:51Indian saying, yes.
19:52You see, ooh
19:52means hot
19:53and la means very.
19:55So ooh la la
19:56means very,
19:57very hot.
19:58What?
19:58I suppose
20:08that fur coat
20:09is squirrel.
20:10Lucky Pierre
20:11is around here
20:12someplace
20:12and I'm going
20:13to find him.
20:14Now, Captain,
20:14really, I, uh,
20:16listen, you've got
20:16to find Lucky Pierre
20:17and get him out of here.
20:18I not know
20:19where he is.
20:19I know where he is.
20:22I've got him, Sergeant.
20:24You should never
20:25cook with garlic.
20:25Mais mon, Captain,
20:26I'm going to serve.
20:27Captain, listen,
20:28I've got to be honest
20:28with you now.
20:29I knew that Lucky Pierre
20:30was here all the time
20:31but police convinced me
20:32that he is not
20:33the fur thief
20:33and I didn't want
20:34that smug Mountie
20:35to be getting
20:35the wrong man.
20:36Sergeant, I don't like
20:37that singing Mountie
20:38any more than you do
20:39but the evidence
20:40is clear.
20:40The singing Mountie?
20:42But he's my friend.
20:44I taught him
20:44to sing Frère Jacques.
20:47That's the only song
20:48he hasn't sung.
20:49That is his favorite.
20:51He goes around
20:52always singing.
20:52Frère Jacques,
20:54Frère Jacques,
20:55dormez-vous,
20:57dormez-vous.
20:58Sonnez les matines,
20:59sonnez les matines,
21:01dindon, dindon, dindon.
21:04Sergeant,
21:05this man is guilty.
21:07How can you tell
21:07that, Captain?
21:08Because he is
21:09imitating a baritone
21:10and the singing Mountie
21:11is a tenor.
21:12Mais mon Captain,
21:14the singing Mountie
21:14is a baritone,
21:15I swear!
21:17He is?
21:17Captain,
21:18just a minute here.
21:19If Lucky Pierre
21:20is right,
21:21then Sergeant Ramsden
21:22is not the real
21:23singing Mountie.
21:24I mean,
21:24unless his voice
21:25is changed.
21:26And who could he be?
21:28The burglar
21:29of Banff.
21:34I dream
21:36of Wrangler
21:36with the light
21:37yellow hair
21:39floating like a vapor
21:41on the soft summer air.
21:46Good work, Captain.
22:11You've captured
22:12Lucky Pierre.
22:13I'll take him back
22:14to Canada
22:14to stand trial.
22:17In the dog sled,
22:18you blackguard!
22:23One last song
22:24before I leave,
22:25my dear.
22:26Just a minute, Sergeant.
22:27Lucky Pierre,
22:28is this the singing Mountie?
22:29No.
22:30This man is
22:31an imposter.
22:33Would you sing
22:33Frere Jacques, Sergeant?
22:35You mean you believe
22:36this fur thief?
22:38Would you just sing
22:39Frere Jacques?
22:43I believe that's
22:44your key, Sergeant.
22:47Frere Jacques,
22:48Frere Jacques,
22:49dormez-vous, dormez-...
22:51Stop!
22:52Stop the music!
22:53I accuse this,
22:54this tenor
22:56of being the burglar
22:57of Banff.
23:00Being the burglar
23:01of Banff.
23:02This man is mad!
23:04Afraid I'm going
23:05to have to place you
23:05under arrest,
23:06Sergeant Ramsden,
23:07or whoever you are.
23:09Not on your life,
23:09Captain.
23:10You'll never take
23:11the burglar of Banff
23:12alive!
23:14Merch!
23:29Dabs!
23:29Dummy!
23:30Let's put this
23:32canary in the cage.
23:33Yes, sir.
23:35Oh, Wilton,
23:36I'm so proud of you.
23:36You weren't
23:37taken in by him
23:37a minute.
23:38No, but you were.
23:39Yeah, he's right.
23:40You were dazzled
23:41by his pitchfights.
23:42Oh, I think
23:42you're both awful.
23:46Did you hear that?
23:48Why, he's escaped
23:48already.
23:49No, look!
23:50Dabs and Dick's
23:54own infantry.
23:55Rocky Pierre.
23:59Allo,
23:59there singing
24:00Mountie.
24:01Sergeant Ramsden,
24:02Royal Canadian
24:02Mounted Police.
24:04We always get
24:05our man.
24:06I'm Captain
24:06Parmenter.
24:07This is Sergeant
24:08O'Rourke,
24:08and this is
24:09Wrangler Jane.
24:10Wrangler Jane.
24:11I dream
24:16of Wrangler
24:18with a light
24:19yellow hair
24:20Born like a vapor
24:22on the summer air
24:24I see her
24:27tripping
24:28where the bright
24:29streams play
24:30I see her
24:32I hear her
24:34I hear her
24:52anything
24:53I see her
24:55I see her
24:57I hear her
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