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  • 2 days ago
First broadcast 24th March 2005.

Havers and Lynley have taken different paths to Cornwall, but end up at the same destination - a barn containing an apparent suicide and a lot of money.

Doug Rollins - Stephen Fenner
Sally Leonard - Moira
Nathaniel Parker - DI Thomas Lynley
Kelly Hunter - Judith Lynley
Adrian Bower - DC Tremayne
Doug Allen - Lachlan
Sharon Small - DS Barbara Havers
Gabrielle Drake - Lady Asherton
Stella Gonet - Lady Sarah Keach
Bernice Stegers - Denning
Nick Dunning - Lawrence Chilcott
Alex Blake - PC
Paul Ireland - Connor
Devon Black - Mrs. Tremayne
Phil Cheadle - Chilcott's Solicitor
Nick Turner - C.I.D.

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TV
Transcript
00:00:00SILENCE
00:00:02SILENCE
00:00:03SILENCE
00:00:06OLD
00:00:16SILENCE
00:00:18SILENCE
00:00:23SILENCE
00:00:24Leave me alone, Stephen.
00:00:38Get off me!
00:00:54Get off me!
00:01:24Get off me!
00:01:54After London, it's good to breathe Cornish air.
00:02:18How long are you staying down for?
00:02:20I haven't decided yet.
00:02:22Is Helen joining you?
00:02:24It's, uh, it's rather complicated.
00:02:26Tommy!
00:02:26Well, about Helen.
00:02:28Please, not a word to Mother.
00:02:30You know, the more you keep her in the dark, the worse her suspicions are going to be.
00:02:36Well, just until I'm ready to face the barrage of questions, Sister's Honour, please.
00:02:40What?
00:02:41I just made that up.
00:02:42Promise me?
00:02:43I promise.
00:02:45You said on the phone Mother's been struggling looking after the estate.
00:02:48She seems perfectly fine to me.
00:02:50Yeah, that's because she does a very good impersonation of a swan.
00:02:54She has beautiful feathers above the water and madly paddling feet below.
00:02:58Do you know, Penelan hasn't been here for a month.
00:03:00Yes, looking after his father.
00:03:03We spoke.
00:03:04But when he comes back...
00:03:06When?
00:03:06Well, if.
00:03:07Increasingly, if.
00:03:08His father has Alzheimer's.
00:03:12Oh.
00:03:13Well, even so, you know.
00:03:17I wonder what that's...
00:03:18Lord Asherton.
00:03:36Please, Inspector Lindley.
00:03:38B.S. Jermaine, Houston CID.
00:03:40A bit galling you got here quicker on horseback than I managed in the motor.
00:03:44I was riding nearby with my sister when I saw the squad cars.
00:03:46The officer who was first on the scene asked me to take a look.
00:03:50How long would you say he'd been hanging there?
00:03:52I tend to leave that kind of thing to the path, boys.
00:03:56If you had to put a tenner on it, based on your experience in London...
00:03:59Well, if I had to put a tenner on it, I would say not more than 24 hours.
00:04:05That's cheating.
00:04:06My constable just told me the green I saw him 24 hours ago.
00:04:09It's not cheating, Tremaine. It's called prudence.
00:04:14I knew he had money problems.
00:04:16But what did you say...
00:04:18Judith?
00:04:20I'm just going over there. I'll be back in a minute.
00:04:25Detective Sergeant Tremaine, my sister Judith.
00:04:28She's in terrible shock, handing her boss like that.
00:04:32What is this? A suicide?
00:04:34We don't know yet. We haven't got anything to go on.
00:04:36With all due respect, sir, we haven't got anything.
00:04:40I've got a corpse with a cut forehead hanging by a beam in his stable.
00:04:44Yes.
00:04:44Of course, I'm sorry.
00:04:46Who was he?
00:04:48Stephen Fenner, small-time trainer.
00:04:50Was on a winning streak a few years ago when he bought this place.
00:04:53But according to his groom, things haven't been going too well round here in recent months.
00:04:57Sir, we found something.
00:05:04Flesh and blood and a bit of skin by the look of it.
00:05:06Would appear Mr. Fenner was rather a fan of Japanese whiskey.
00:05:14Yeah.
00:05:15So what? He tanked himself up on Dutch courage, stumbled and banged his head on the table.
00:05:20Hence the gush in his forehead.
00:05:21But if he succumbed to the booze in here, he's hardly learnt to make it all the way to the far stable,
00:05:26rig up a nuisance stool and dispatch himself so cleanly, isn't he?
00:05:30Unless the nuisance stool were already in place.
00:05:32Then all you'd have to do is get down there and climb up.
00:05:35I suppose his determination to do the deed could have allowed him to manage that.
00:05:40Some people only have to look at a wine gun before feeling tipsy.
00:05:44Others can manage the high wire on a litre of vodka.
00:05:47So, suicide, isn't it?
00:05:49Well, it certainly looks that way to me.
00:05:53OK.
00:05:58What?
00:05:59Well, it's...
00:06:00Sorry.
00:06:01If it was my investigation, I think I'd still treat it as a crime scene anyway.
00:06:07For now.
00:06:08Until the pathologist says otherwise.
00:06:11It's, uh...
00:06:12It's always easier to scale down later than it is to scale up.
00:06:18Inspector.
00:06:19OK.
00:06:29OK.
00:06:30So I'm inebriated enough to be very wobbly on my feet, particularly after the fall in there.
00:06:35But I'm still hellbent to self-annihilation.
00:06:39So I stagger out of the house and head straight towards...
00:06:43...the stable block.
00:06:46Hopefully leaving some nice, muddy footprints.
00:06:47Well, there's been a lot of traffic through here.
00:06:52What about these?
00:06:55Yeah? Yeah, possibly.
00:06:58So, I veer slightly en route to the stable.
00:07:01Not surprising, considering the condition I'm in.
00:07:04And on I go.
00:07:08What is it?
00:07:10Looks like I had a second stumble.
00:07:14Looks like a humprint.
00:07:17Yeah.
00:07:18Stumble put my hand out, break the fall.
00:07:21I didn't notice either of Fenner's hands being muddy.
00:07:25Well, could have worked on something in the stable.
00:07:29There's nothing in that stable, apart from Fenner and a knocked over stool.
00:07:32Have you used his clothes?
00:07:34Fenner's clothes were clean.
00:07:36All right, well, then we can move on to the next possibility.
00:07:40Cheers.
00:07:41Not Fenner's hand?
00:07:42Must be someone else's.
00:07:48Hey, Judith, how is she?
00:07:50Well, she's perked up now that her boyfriend Lackland's arrived.
00:07:53Listen, you couldn't do me a favour, could you?
00:07:56Take the horses home.
00:07:58Tommy!
00:07:59I know, I know.
00:08:00A man has seen Mother, but, you know, it would be stupid to be on the scene and not try and contribute something.
00:08:05The police down here can do perfectly well without me.
00:08:09I'd, uh, like to have a word with the groom.
00:08:11You wouldn't sit in, would you?
00:08:12I'd value your opinion.
00:08:14Yeah, of course.
00:08:16Thanks.
00:08:27Just a couple of questions, Moira, and then you can go.
00:08:30We'd better stay there some other time.
00:08:33For Moira, probably, but not for us.
00:08:35Sorry, love.
00:08:36I'll be all right, Lackland.
00:08:37Are you sure?
00:08:38Mm-hmm.
00:08:40Right, so, Moira, as Stephen Fenner's head groom, you probably saw more of him than anyone else.
00:08:45I suppose.
00:08:46Can you think of anything in his business or personal life that would have led him to take his own life?
00:08:50Not really.
00:08:53I mean, he had money worries, but then he's had money worries as long as I've worked for him.
00:09:02Which is how long?
00:09:04Two years.
00:09:05Would you happen to know if they've got worse recently?
00:09:09Well, I haven't been paid in a month.
00:09:11I've told Moira she's stupid for staying on, but working with horses is her life.
00:09:15Well, if there's anything else you can think of, however trivial it may seem to you,
00:09:18He was pretty upset about Artemis.
00:09:23Artemis?
00:09:25He was a national hunt horse he bought about two weeks ago.
00:09:28Stephen thought it would be the answer to his prayers.
00:09:31Cheltenham, we hoped.
00:09:33And much like the man himself, it wasn't all it was cracked up to be.
00:09:37How so?
00:09:39Turned out I had navicular disease.
00:09:42Come again?
00:09:43It's a severe inflammation of the navicular nerve and the area surrounding the home.
00:09:47Some horses never recovered from the lameness.
00:09:50It would have been catastrophic in Fenner's game.
00:09:53That's brilliant, Moira.
00:09:55Now, I want you to think one last time.
00:09:57I know you're only doing your job, but he already asked her one last time.
00:10:01Is there anything else you can think of that might have been troubling him?
00:10:05No, look, I'm sorry. I just want to go home.
00:10:15Okay. Thanks, Moira. You've been a lot of help.
00:10:18I'll go and wait in the car.
00:10:28The image of him hanging there is going to be with her for the rest of her life.
00:10:31If she thinks of anything else, can you ask her to give me a call?
00:10:41You know, Fenner treated his staff like the muck they spent most of their time shoveling.
00:10:47I'm not paying the wages, you mean?
00:10:48Not just that.
00:10:49What then?
00:10:51Nothing.
00:10:52No, no. Speak your mind.
00:10:54If you've got something to say, Lachlan, now's the time to say it.
00:10:57Well, what type of people tend to like working with horses?
00:11:00Young women.
00:11:02Young women like Moira.
00:11:04Are you suggesting...
00:11:05Fenner was an unpleasant, dirty old man.
00:11:08Probably topped himself in a moment of sudden self-awareness.
00:11:11I've got a job to get to.
00:11:14Can I go now?
00:11:16You're always free to leave, Lachlan.
00:11:18We were interviewing Moira.
00:11:20I'll give you your time.
00:11:22Inspector Linley.
00:11:24Moira.
00:11:26Look, Lachlan said he told you about Fenner being a bit of a lech.
00:11:29He mentioned it and passed away.
00:11:32I'm sorry.
00:11:34I'm sorry.
00:11:36I'm sorry.
00:11:38I'm sorry.
00:11:39He mentioned it in passing.
00:11:41Yeah, well, I just wanted to let you know that, um...
00:11:44It's nothing to make a big deal about.
00:11:46No?
00:11:47No, I mean, he'd slap you on the bum occasionally or...
00:11:50You know, you'd catch him looking or whatever, but...
00:11:53Well, you never felt threatened.
00:11:55Sexual harassment can build over time, you know.
00:11:57Yeah, I know, but this was just more pathetic than anything.
00:12:00I guess what I'm trying to say is, um...
00:12:03Well, you just got used to it.
00:12:05Okay. Please face it.
00:12:09Lachlan, just shouldn't have mentioned it.
00:12:12Well, thank you for coming over and tearing that up.
00:12:14Okay.
00:12:39Very impressive.
00:12:40How much did you see?
00:12:41Well, I'll treat you with much more respect next time.
00:12:42Well, I'll treat you with much more respect next time.
00:12:43Well, as long as loving the text, we're faster than the tortoise, and...
00:12:45I'm...
00:12:46I'm...
00:12:47I'm...
00:12:48I'm bloody lethal.
00:12:49Well, considering you've only been training for two weeks, you're remarkably accomplished.
00:12:52Well, mostly thanks to this place.
00:12:53Well, mostly thanks to this place.
00:12:54Money well spent.
00:12:55I'm glad it's been of use.
00:12:56Of use?
00:12:57Of use?
00:12:58I'm thinking of getting someone to shoot me again, so I can't do it.
00:12:59Well, I'll treat you with much more respect next time.
00:13:00Well, as long as loving the text, we're faster than the tortoise, and...
00:13:01I'm bloody lethal.
00:13:02Well, considering you've only been training for two weeks, you're remarkably accomplished.
00:13:03Well, mostly thanks to this place.
00:13:05Money well spent.
00:13:06I'm glad it's been of use.
00:13:07Of use?
00:13:08I'm thinking of getting someone to shoot me again so I can stay.
00:13:09I'm so happy.
00:13:10Well, I guess you're so happy.
00:13:11Well...
00:13:13Who's coming from?
00:13:14Who's coming from?
00:13:15Who's coming from?
00:13:16Who's coming from?
00:13:17I'm sure who are coming from?
00:13:18Yeah.
00:13:19Who's coming from?
00:13:20Who's coming from?
00:13:21But I don't know why.
00:13:22Who'd be on the beste?
00:13:23Who's coming from?
00:13:24Yeah.
00:13:25I don't know.
00:13:26Who's coming from?
00:13:27Who's coming from?
00:13:28Ow, no.
00:13:29Who's coming from?
00:13:30I don't know.
00:13:31The retreat has been amazing, sir.
00:13:41Thanks for recommending it.
00:13:43No thanks required, Haylors.
00:13:45How did you know about it?
00:13:47My mother's been there.
00:13:48She read a book on holistic medicine.
00:13:50Now she can't stay away from the place.
00:13:52So it'll be right up your street.
00:13:54How is your mum?
00:13:56Annoyed with me.
00:13:57Working when I should be on leave.
00:13:59Working?
00:13:59Well, something's come up at the neighboring estate.
00:14:02I'll tell you about it later.
00:14:04I don't want you running yourself ragged.
00:14:06No, it sounds interesting.
00:14:08What I could do with the challenge to get me back into the swing of things.
00:14:14It was very nice for your mum to invite me back to the family pile for a few days.
00:14:18Oh.
00:14:19Well, she thought it would be the perfect way for you to end your time in Cornwall.
00:14:24One thing.
00:14:25She doesn't call it a pile.
00:14:26It's a house.
00:14:27So we tend to call it a house.
00:14:30Right.
00:14:33How have you been keeping?
00:14:34Me? Fine.
00:14:37And Helen?
00:14:38Fine.
00:14:41So everything's just basically fine?
00:14:43Everything's basically fine.
00:14:47Word of advice, sir.
00:14:48When your mum asks you that question, you better make up a better line than that.
00:14:51Come.
00:14:52How are you?
00:14:53How are you?
00:14:54Oh, God.
00:14:54You better make up a better line than that!
00:15:03You better make up a better line than that!
00:15:04Fucking detection!
00:15:05I'd work out a better line than what I wanted you to do.
00:15:06Behind me!
00:15:06I'm sure you Pin empresa!
00:15:06Just shut the line!
00:15:08I'm here!
00:15:09Where are you?
00:15:10I'm here!
00:15:10You better make up a better line than I've got to be.
00:15:12Sergeant Hazel, lovely to see you again.
00:15:24Me too, Lady Ashton.
00:15:26Judith, this is DS Havers. Havers is my sister.
00:15:29Hello. Have you got a first name?
00:15:31Spent his formative years at boarding school. Tommy doesn't hold much truck with them.
00:15:34Ah, Barbara.
00:15:35Hello, Barbara.
00:15:36Oh, thanks. Is Peter here?
00:15:39Er, no, he's still not well.
00:15:44He's in rehab. Mother doesn't like to say that.
00:15:54Tommy's great-grandfather. Fine-looking chap, isn't he?
00:15:57Yeah, he is.
00:15:58Unfortunately, something of a pig went alive.
00:16:01Really?
00:16:02Mm.
00:16:03Two people attended his funeral, including him.
00:16:06The other was the officiating pastor.
00:16:10I've always kept him there to remind the children it's not who you are that counts, but what.
00:16:16How's your room?
00:16:18Oh, um, very comfortable, thank you.
00:16:22I imagine that working so closely together, you and Tommy must share a few confidences.
00:16:28Um, well, we're pretty stretched, time-wise.
00:16:31But you do know his wife lost the baby?
00:16:34Yeah, of course.
00:16:36How is Helen? Do you know?
00:16:39Um...
00:16:39It's just that whenever I ring the house, all I get is that infernal answer machine.
00:16:44It's as if she's completely disappeared.
00:16:46Well, as I say...
00:16:47I'm sorry. I'm putting you in an awkward position.
00:16:50No, not at all.
00:16:51Yeah, I don't know any more than you do.
00:16:54And if you did, you wouldn't tell me.
00:16:58Probably not.
00:17:00Well, I appreciate your loyalty to my son.
00:17:02Look, uh, do you think you could amuse yourself while I get on with supper?
00:17:07Yeah, of course.
00:17:08Oh, can I help you with anything?
00:17:09No, no, no, it's fine.
00:17:10You sure?
00:17:12My dear girl, in my heyday, I used to knock up a banquet for 20 without breaking sweat.
00:17:17So I think I ought to be able to manage a little supper for five, don't you?
00:17:20Thank you, sir.
00:17:30Barbara.
00:17:31Um, right, you know Judith, and this is Lady Keech, Barbara Havers.
00:17:34Hello.
00:17:35Nice to meet you.
00:17:37Unless you want me to call you Lord Asherton all evening, my name is Sarah.
00:17:40Oh, I'm sorry, of course.
00:17:42I don't think of anything worse than being called Lord Asherton all evening.
00:17:44I can't think of anything worse than having to.
00:17:47Another drink, Sarah?
00:17:49Yes, a small one, please.
00:17:51Yeah.
00:17:52I'm still in shock over Stephen Furner.
00:17:54Do you know, even though his house borders ours, Mother hardly ever knew him.
00:17:59He kept his cards pretty close to his chest.
00:18:02Um, did you know him well?
00:18:04Our mutual interest in horses brought us into contact at local events,
00:18:08and our paths crossed socially from time to time.
00:18:11Uh, would you say that he was the, uh, suicidal type?
00:18:14Is there such a type?
00:18:17Oh, well, he wasn't one of those people who radiated Joie de Vivre,
00:18:20but not everyone has to.
00:18:21I go on with him perfectly well,
00:18:23though I can't see the same for everyone else round here.
00:18:25Huh?
00:18:26How do you mean?
00:18:27He wasn't exactly endearing.
00:18:29He was plain spoken, didn't suffer fools,
00:18:31and he showed very little interest in joining in,
00:18:35which in a small community like ours can be a bit of a problem.
00:18:37Apparently he had terrible money problems.
00:18:40Your drink, Sarah.
00:18:41Ah.
00:18:43Would you like to come through?
00:18:44As they say in the best tennis clubs, dinner is served.
00:18:48Mother, that was terrible.
00:18:52Sarah found it mildly amusing, even if you didn't.
00:18:55Barbara's smiling?
00:18:56Oh, I thought it was hysterical, Lady Ashton.
00:18:58Thank you, dear.
00:19:01Come along.
00:19:03You're too polite.
00:19:11You know, she'd never say it to your face,
00:19:13but your mother's extremely anxious about your visit.
00:19:15I gathered that.
00:19:16She thinks you and your sister have come down
00:19:18to find fault with the way she's running the estate.
00:19:21We haven't.
00:19:21We're just concerned for her.
00:19:23She's a very independent woman.
00:19:25I do know that about Mother.
00:19:27Well, your concern implies
00:19:29that her days of independence might be numbered.
00:19:31That's ridiculous.
00:19:32One just has to look at her
00:19:33to see she's a million miles from that.
00:19:35Still, it's frightening when your children
00:19:36no longer consider you to be immortal.
00:19:40I realise that you're Mother's friend
00:19:42and you are adamantly protective toward her,
00:19:44but neither Judith nor I
00:19:46want to see her overreaching herself.
00:19:50That's all.
00:19:50Of course, if you were to come back to Halstow,
00:19:54your fears would be eliminated in a stroke.
00:19:58Unfortunately, it's not as simple as that.
00:20:01Shame.
00:20:03Come on, you two.
00:20:04No stragglers.
00:20:12Very interesting woman.
00:20:14And attractive.
00:20:16I hadn't noticed.
00:20:17Of course not.
00:20:18Just bear in mind, Tommy,
00:20:23that the grass isn't actually greener
00:20:24on the other side of the fence.
00:20:26Just a trick of the light.
00:20:36Isn't there somewhere else you'd rather be?
00:20:38Mm-hm.
00:20:39Special brunch in five years.
00:20:41Which is why they want to miss a trick now.
00:20:42Fine.
00:20:44No, well.
00:20:46You do not forget naked ambition in this part of the world.
00:20:49Rather refreshing.
00:20:50Well, not too naked, I hope.
00:20:52I like to think of it as ambition with at least its pants on.
00:20:55Good for you.
00:20:57Ever watched one of these before?
00:21:01I was present at the birth of both of my kids, if that counts.
00:21:04No.
00:21:04Suicide by hanging?
00:21:07Certainly looked that way when we cut them down.
00:21:10Had my gut full of those during the foot and mouth outbreak.
00:21:13One a week at least.
00:21:14Often more.
00:21:16So, let's introduce ourselves to our new best friend.
00:21:21How do you feel about large, hypodermic needles?
00:21:26As a rule, not good.
00:21:28Well, I should look away.
00:21:31Now.
00:21:39What is it?
00:21:40Yes, Venner's path report has just come through.
00:21:47Leave on my gas.
00:21:51Brief change of plan.
00:21:54If you want him revived,
00:21:56you'll need Dr. Frankenstein from next door.
00:21:59Can we save this cast as is?
00:22:03Close.
00:22:05No cigar.
00:22:07In fact, not even a cigarette.
00:22:09A development?
00:22:10Just a little.
00:22:12I'm sure you can manage without me down here.
00:22:15I'll give it my best shot.
00:22:16No longer assume suicide.
00:22:17I never assume anything.
00:22:21I didn't say you can't cope.
00:22:24Judith, do I say Mother couldn't cope with running the estate?
00:22:26No.
00:22:26I wouldn't expect you to be so crude as to put it into actual words, Tommy.
00:22:31But the inference is plain for all to see.
00:22:33No.
00:22:34I don't agree.
00:22:36I'm simply asking you to allow that it takes more to run the estate than you can manage alone.
00:22:40But I'm not alone.
00:22:41John does 90% of the estate business.
00:22:44And when he's not here, he does 0%, leaving you to do it all.
00:22:48Yes, well, most of the time he is here.
00:22:51The situation as it is now, John is away with no idea of when he might be returning.
00:22:57So, given that situation, you're running the place single-handedly.
00:23:01And we're suggesting that that's too much.
00:23:04Don't you think you're underestimating your mother?
00:23:08I'm doing no such thing.
00:23:11Sounds exactly like that to me.
00:23:13I'm simply looking at the bigger picture.
00:23:16But from your side of the gallery?
00:23:19From your mother's side, the bigger picture might look significantly different.
00:23:22Ah, I see why you invited her now, Mother.
00:23:25She's an advocate.
00:23:26That's very clever.
00:23:27Not an advocate.
00:23:28A friend.
00:23:30What on earth is that?
00:23:32My mobile.
00:23:33Excuse me.
00:23:34Tommy, I have told you before, I don't allow mobile telephones at the dinner table.
00:23:38Mother, I'm just trying to...
00:23:39I don't care what you're trying to do.
00:23:40It's incredibly rude.
00:23:42Go on.
00:23:42Tremaine, I'm sorry.
00:23:46Yes.
00:23:49Yes.
00:23:51All right, I'll be there.
00:23:53Oh, Tommy, you can't...
00:23:55I shouldn't, I know, but I'm afraid I'm going to.
00:23:58Mother, apologies.
00:24:00Sarah, I have to go.
00:24:05Alone.
00:24:05If he didn't have this damn job, he might have a marriage worth the name.
00:24:19Sorry to bother you at this hour.
00:24:20That's all right.
00:24:21I was going to say your call came at just the right moment.
00:24:23Oh, glad to be of assistance.
00:24:26You were right about the hamper.
00:24:28If Fenner had stumbled and put his hand down to steady himself, his would have left a much bigger impression in the mud.
00:24:33Is that why you're called?
00:24:36No, not exactly.
00:24:39I've also been speaking to my chief about you.
00:24:42Ah.
00:24:42Well, we don't get too much of this sort of thing down here.
00:24:45This is a full-blown murder investigation now, and, well, he agreed it would be very useful to have the benefit of your experience, if you were prepared to be involved.
00:24:53He could always square out with your governor.
00:24:54Well, strictly speaking, I'm on short leave to visit the family.
00:24:58I'm a family man myself, so I completely understand your position.
00:25:02On the other hand, if there's a murder that's happened in the next door estate to mine, I am delighted to help in any way I can.
00:25:09Thank you, Inspector. Much, much appreciated.
00:25:11Okay, well, why don't we meet tomorrow morning and compare notes?
00:25:14Nine o'clock, you'll have it.
00:25:15I thought you said we were meeting to remain at nine.
00:25:39Yeah, we are.
00:25:40So why have you got me out of bed at seven?
00:25:42Because a thought occurred to me at half past six.
00:25:45Well, couldn't you have quietly mulled that over to yourself?
00:25:48No. Now, come on, Avis, follow me.
00:25:51Oh, see, now you want my help.
00:25:53That's bye-bye, Barbara. Hello, Avis.
00:25:55Come on.
00:25:56Sir.
00:25:57Oh, don't tell me.
00:25:58This is where you used to play hide-and-seek with Julian, George, Timmy and the rest of the famous five.
00:26:04No.
00:26:04John Pennellen has been aware of some nocturnal activity on our land over the past couple of months.
00:26:09Teenage snogging?
00:26:10Idiots making crops up...
00:26:12No.
00:26:12Alien visitation.
00:26:13Look, Pennellen said he found boxes of foreign cigarettes.
00:26:17And I was thinking this morning, well, Fena, our victim, was drinking Japanese whiskey.
00:26:22So?
00:26:23Well, Tremaine and I looked in his drinks cabinet.
00:26:25There were 20-odd bottles, exactly the same, ready and waiting.
00:26:28What are you getting at?
00:26:29Think, Avis, what is Cornwall famous for?
00:26:33Pesties.
00:26:36Yeah, well, apart from that.
00:26:38Smoked fish.
00:26:39Forget the food.
00:26:40Well, I wish I could, but we came out with that breakfast, remember?
00:26:43Smuggling.
00:26:43Smuggling?
00:26:44Smuggling?
00:26:45Yeah, whenever you've got a coastline like this and a population that are as happy on sea as they are on dry land, you're going to get a thriving black market industry of things washed ashore.
00:26:53Now, John Pennellen suspects a bunch of local lads have been using a track at the end of our estate to go to and form their drop-off point.
00:27:00What, and you think Fena was a customer?
00:27:02Maybe something more.
00:27:04Well, it's a bit early in the day to go all cryptic on me.
00:27:08Keep up.
00:27:08This is all Stephen Fena's land.
00:27:14It's beautiful.
00:27:16Forget about the scenery.
00:27:17Look, it's easy for you to say.
00:27:19You grew up here.
00:27:21If the locals aren't using this place, how unlikely is it they could do so without Fena knowing?
00:27:28The groom, Moira, told me the business was in trouble.
00:27:32Maybe he was letting this place out to get some extra cash.
00:27:35He got greedy.
00:27:36Up the rent.
00:27:38Or even blackmail.
00:27:42Sir.
00:27:45That's Moira's boyfriend, Lachlan.
00:27:48Well, well, well.
00:27:51Just out of interest, how much of this are we passing on to local police?
00:27:54Well, it's pure speculation at the moment.
00:27:56I'll keep it to myself to know anything more.
00:28:02I thought we should be getting out of here.
00:28:08Here you go.
00:28:16He was up at six.
00:28:18How come?
00:28:19Well, he woke up with...
00:28:20An overwhelming urge to go for a walk.
00:28:22An equally overwhelming one for me to go with him.
00:28:24Jermaine, this is my colleague, T.S. Havers.
00:28:27Nice to meet you.
00:28:28Likewise.
00:28:30Pathologist report.
00:28:31He must have been up all night.
00:28:32She.
00:28:32In addition to a large quantity of whiskey in his blood, he also had enough phenylbutazone
00:28:39in his system to make him severely question which way was up.
00:28:42Phenylbutazone?
00:28:43Phenyl who?
00:28:45Known as bute.
00:28:46It's a painkiller for horses.
00:28:47No one in the right mind would bring their drink.
00:28:50Unless, of course.
00:28:51Unless his whiskey was spiked.
00:28:53I said, Phenyl's drink is spiked.
00:28:55It gets carried across to the stable, strung up and made to look like a suicide.
00:28:59Well, carrying Phenyl across the yard would account for the anomalous footprints.
00:29:02Also the handprint.
00:29:03I was roleplaying the wrong person yesterday.
00:29:06Instead of being Phenyl, stumbling under the weight of inebriation,
00:29:08I should have been Phenyl's murderer, stumbling under the weight of Phenyl.
00:29:11We also found this in his office.
00:29:14What is it?
00:29:16Horse passport.
00:29:16Horse passport.
00:29:19Why?
00:29:20Is it playing a short break to the continent?
00:29:22It's like a logbook.
00:29:23A list of details.
00:29:24Pedigree, where it was born, previous owners, when and where it was sold.
00:29:29This one belonged to the lame horse he bought recently.
00:29:33If Phenyl was doped with a horse drug, we should pursue every equine connection he had.
00:29:36I agree.
00:29:37Artemis was sold to Phenyl by Lawrence Chilcott.
00:29:40You know him?
00:29:41Well, by reputation.
00:29:42He's a successful local horse trainer.
00:29:44Well, we pulled Phenyl's phone records.
00:29:45Appears to be a flurry of calls between them in the two weeks prior to his death.
00:29:49Interesting.
00:29:50Chilcott's yard was about ten miles west, so I thought we could make it our first stop.
00:29:55Excuse me.
00:29:59Yes.
00:30:00Right.
00:30:00OK.
00:30:04Socko had found something at Phenyl's.
00:30:06What?
00:30:06Too early to say.
00:30:08Look, I'd better get over.
00:30:09Could you interview Chilcott?
00:30:10Yeah, of course.
00:30:11I mean, there may be nothing in there.
00:30:13Well, there's bound to be some bad blood between them over Artemis.
00:30:15No one likes to buy a donkey, particularly for 80 grand.
00:30:18Let us know, will you?
00:30:19OK.
00:30:20I'll go for you at the house.
00:30:20Oh, don't make me speak to your mum all day.
00:30:40Excuse me.
00:30:40I'm looking for Lawrence Chilcott.
00:30:42Oh, just there.
00:30:43I'm Inspector Lindley.
00:30:53Get out of your way, aren't you, Inspector?
00:30:56Pulled in for directions home, haven't we?
00:30:58Actually, I've come for some advice.
00:31:00Oh, yeah?
00:31:00What about?
00:31:01Navicular disease.
00:31:04A lot of people in the racing game don't think there's any such thing.
00:31:08A lot of people think it's just a catch-all for any number of conditions.
00:31:12A horse's foot is a complicated thing.
00:31:13Any part of it can become inflamed for any number of reasons,
00:31:16from the individual anatomy to the type of ground they're running on.
00:31:19But you do know it exists, don't you?
00:31:21You sold a horse with navicular disease.
00:31:24Prove it.
00:31:25You sold a horse called Artemis to Stephen Fenner.
00:31:29Artemis was lame with navicular disease,
00:31:31but you disguised that with phenylbutyazone before you sold him.
00:31:34Is that what he's saying?
00:31:35He's not saying anything much, Mr. Chilcott.
00:31:38He was found hanging in his stable yesterday.
00:31:40What?
00:31:41And Mr. Fenner's phone records show a lot of calls between the two of you over the last few weeks.
00:31:45What did you want to talk about?
00:31:47A cricket?
00:31:48Look, I take care of my animals, all right?
00:31:50I noticed Artemis was tender on her front hoof and gave her a drop of view for the pain.
00:31:55I thought it was a twinge from Paris in a week or so.
00:31:58And you told Fenner that?
00:31:59He didn't ask.
00:32:00That wouldn't wash in a Moroccan bazaar.
00:32:03You hid the lameness to make the sale.
00:32:05Okay.
00:32:06Okay.
00:32:07You want the truth?
00:32:08I thought it was refreshing to have the truth.
00:32:09The truth is, there's one born every minute in this game.
00:32:14Fenner was in a hurry to buy.
00:32:15I met his need.
00:32:17He wasn't thorough in his purchase.
00:32:19He didn't have the blood checked, and he didn't bring a vet.
00:32:22What was I supposed to do?
00:32:23Caveat emptor.
00:32:25Buyer beware.
00:32:26Quite right, Inspector.
00:32:27If he wants restitution, he can take me to court for it.
00:32:31Oh, yeah, he can't.
00:32:32He's dead.
00:32:36Are we done?
00:32:37Because this conversation's starting to bore me.
00:32:44I think we should have told Tremaine about seeing Lacklin at the cove this morning.
00:32:48We?
00:32:49You're on leave.
00:32:50There is no we.
00:32:51OK.
00:32:54Well, you are supposed to be assisting Tremaine on his inquiry, not running your own inside.
00:33:00Is that what you think I'm doing?
00:33:02Well, you're withholding information that could be relevant, if not significant, to the case.
00:33:13Listen to me.
00:33:14When I first made Detective Sergeant, I wanted more than anything to prove myself to my peers.
00:33:20Tremaine is no different.
00:33:21I'm not withholding information.
00:33:23I'm giving him a chance to prove himself without my muscling in and throwing up some possible wild goose chases.
00:33:28Sir, you...
00:33:29For all we know, Lacklin went for a walk this morning, the same time we did.
00:33:34It just happened to go to the cove the same time we went.
00:33:37He went into the cottage, which suggests he's using it.
00:33:40Alternatively, he wandered into a derelict cottage to take a call on his mobile out of the wind.
00:33:45Oh, you don't believe that.
00:33:50You're still on leave, remember?
00:33:52That's how you keep saying.
00:33:53Yeah.
00:33:54Then back off.
00:33:55What do you want to do now, sir?
00:34:06I'd say, open it.
00:34:08Yeah, open it.
00:34:09Okay, ladies and gentlemen, place your bets.
00:34:13What do you reckon?
00:34:15Cannabis.
00:34:17Avers?
00:34:19The holy grail.
00:34:21Nice.
00:34:22Mike?
00:34:23Cheese sandwich.
00:34:23And you're all wrong.
00:34:31Because here's, in fact, an absolute bloody fortune in euros.
00:34:35Sir Fenn was actually loaded.
00:34:38This makes no sense.
00:34:41Well, Fenn being loaded is one theory.
00:34:44I expect that Lindley might have another.
00:34:46Mightn't you, sir?
00:34:47Helen's left him, hasn't she?
00:34:56Um, I don't know.
00:34:58Oh, don't give me that.
00:35:00I'm sorry, Mother.
00:35:01We haven't talked about it.
00:35:02Now, that I don't believe.
00:35:05Okay.
00:35:06Yes, I asked after Helen, and I received the same response you did.
00:35:10Helen's fine, everything's fine.
00:35:12And you believed it?
00:35:13Well, but I believe Tommy doesn't want to be pressed on this subject, so I decided not to.
00:35:20You're right.
00:35:21Yeah, tell us when he's ready.
00:35:31Are you sure about this?
00:35:34Well, he saw Lacken at the cove.
00:35:36Saw him at the cottage.
00:35:37When you go in, have a look at his watch.
00:35:38That's real.
00:35:39Very expensive.
00:35:40Well, expensive isn't the same as illegal.
00:35:43Look, if we can make a connection between the money, Fenner's murder, and the smuggling,
00:35:47then we'll start to build a case against Lacken.
00:35:50So we lie a trap?
00:35:51Yeah.
00:35:52I have several possibilities at the moment.
00:35:54If we prime him, he'll lead us to the right one.
00:36:00I know, I know.
00:36:01I'm still on leave.
00:36:03How would you play this in London?
00:36:05Good cop, bad cop?
00:36:06High status, low status, softly, softly?
00:36:09We'd knock on the door first.
00:36:10And then?
00:36:11I bet about you.
00:36:13I thought so exactly.
00:36:18Hello, Lacken.
00:36:20Is Moira around?
00:36:21I could ask you to keep your voices down.
00:36:23Moira's asleep in the bedroom.
00:36:25How is she?
00:36:26I took a couple of sleeping tablets last night.
00:36:28Poor kid.
00:36:29Well, in your line, you're at least given a bit of time to compose yourself before seeing
00:36:33something like that.
00:36:34Moira just walks straight in.
00:36:36We thought we'd drop by, Lacken, in case she thought of something else over now.
00:36:40Great not.
00:36:43Interrupted your work?
00:36:44No problem.
00:36:44I was on a break.
00:36:46What is it you do, exactly?
00:36:47Something mechanical, obviously.
00:36:49I work resorts along the coast.
00:36:51Repairing boats, engines, general patching up.
00:36:54There's a lot of rich people in Cornwall.
00:36:55Driving boats they can't handle on coastline they just cannot navigate.
00:36:59There's always something blowing up or falling off.
00:37:02And along you come with a strong net and a big spanner.
00:37:05I suppose.
00:37:07You must know the coastline at the back of your hand.
00:37:08Backs of my hand are usually covered in engine oil, so I wouldn't know about that.
00:37:12Yeah, I grew up here.
00:37:13I still don't know the half of it.
00:37:14You know there's a cove on Fenner's land?
00:37:16Yeah.
00:37:17With the cottage.
00:37:18I've seen it from my boat.
00:37:20Strange, though, isn't it?
00:37:22What?
00:37:23Well, considering his financial situation, you'd have thought he'd done it up and rented it
00:37:26out to holidaymakers.
00:37:27He had a fortune.
00:37:28Perhaps he couldn't raise the money needed for repairs.
00:37:31Perhaps.
00:37:32The roof is in pretty poor condition.
00:37:33Timbers have rotted.
00:37:35Tars have gone.
00:37:36Has she saw all that from the boat?
00:37:38I must have.
00:37:40So, have you found out why Fenner killed himself?
00:37:43Well, we've found out that he didn't kill himself.
00:37:47He was found hanging in the stable.
00:37:49Moira saw him.
00:37:50She saw the overturned stool on the floor.
00:37:52What she saw was the final tableau, Lachlan.
00:37:54Someone was with him.
00:37:56He was drugged and then murdered.
00:37:57Forensics are tearing the place apart as we speak.
00:38:01Good luck.
00:38:03Lachlan!
00:38:04Are her voices?
00:38:08Go back to bed, darling.
00:38:09Oh, it's you.
00:38:14Sounds just like my wife after a long shift.
00:38:24Yesterday in Fenner's yard, Lachlan, you alluded to Moira suffering some sexual harassment at work.
00:38:29Yeah, and I told you yesterday it was nothing.
00:38:32That must have made you quite angry.
00:38:33What are you getting at?
00:38:35Moira's boss, leering at her all the time, touching her up.
00:38:38You must have felt his presence quite a sexual threat.
00:38:41He shouldn't have said anything.
00:38:43It was nothing I couldn't handle.
00:38:44I told you yesterday.
00:38:46Moira.
00:38:46Shut up, Lachlan.
00:38:47My apologies.
00:38:49I seem to have touched a raw nerve.
00:38:50I didn't mean to start an argument.
00:38:52There's no argument and there's no raw nerve.
00:38:55I handled it, okay?
00:38:56Like I said.
00:38:57Talk about a cool customer.
00:39:06What happened?
00:39:07Your boss looked him square in the face and told him Fenner was murdered and his place is being taken apart.
00:39:12To which Lachlan says, good luck.
00:39:15Did he give anything away?
00:39:16Not a sausage.
00:39:17He's very cool.
00:39:18Too cool.
00:39:19So, we'll just wait for him to come for the money.
00:39:21If it's his, he'll come looking as soon as he thinks the police have packed up and moved out.
00:39:25What makes you so sure he won't leave it?
00:39:27If he's involved in Fenner's murder, he knows he can't afford to have the police come back and have a second look.
00:39:32He needs to retrieve the money immediately.
00:39:35I'm going to see when we can do the pull-up.
00:39:37Okay, visible enough to be noticed, but not so visible as to attract attention.
00:39:41Lights, no bells.
00:39:43You look troubled.
00:39:44Well, I was thinking while you were in there, and he ever spiked Fenner's drink, must have known him well enough to be in a position to do it.
00:39:52You're not telling me anything I don't know.
00:39:53Yeah, I know, but, and I know that this black market's really strong, so, but, well, beauties of the horse world.
00:39:59Lachlan isn't.
00:40:00His girlfriend is, then.
00:40:11I'm not so sure, sir.
00:40:13What are you driving at?
00:40:14Well, I don't think it's as simple as that.
00:40:15Yeah.
00:40:16Fenner was drinking contraband whiskey.
00:40:18He had a quarter of a million pounds in euros stashed away.
00:40:21Lachlan appears to have been using the cove, probably running a smuggling operation.
00:40:25Now, you make the connections.
00:40:26Yeah, but what about the connection with horses?
00:40:28Fenner was immobilized by Bute.
00:40:30Only someone who knows horses would be familiar with its effect.
00:40:33So your question would be, who from the local horse world would want Fenner dead?
00:40:37Well, that would be my second question.
00:40:39My first question would be, who from the local horse world knew Fenner well enough to have a drink with him?
00:40:43Maybe Sarah Keech can help us with that.
00:40:48What?
00:40:50Go.
00:40:50Oh, you're stunning.
00:40:58You could do with a spot of varnish.
00:41:00You know, against the rain.
00:41:01It's driftwood, Pavers.
00:41:04Maybe the wood's natural response to the element that brings out its sense of vitality.
00:41:10Yeah, well, it won't be very vital if it's rottenly.
00:41:14My late husband had it made for our wedding anniversary.
00:41:19Connor, I'll leave your tea over here.
00:41:24Thanks.
00:41:31How long were you married?
00:41:34He died in our tenth year together.
00:41:40It's a beautiful house, Sarah.
00:41:42Once the front garden's completed, it will be my vision of perfection.
00:41:47But I'm sure you haven't come here to discuss aesthetics.
00:41:50No.
00:41:52Pity.
00:41:56We now know that Stephen Fenner's death wasn't suicide.
00:41:59And we also know before he was killed, he was drugged with horse painkiller.
00:42:05You intimated the other evening at dinner that Fenner put a lot of people's backs up in the local equine society.
00:42:12I was wondering if anyone in that group that you thought might have a sufficient agreement...
00:42:16You're laughing.
00:42:17I'm sorry.
00:42:19The idea that the local horse brigade might be lining up to bump off Stephen Fenner.
00:42:23But he was drugged with bute.
00:42:25He wasn't light, but that's a million miles away from saying that someone hated him so much they wanted to kill him.
00:42:33Yes, I appreciate that.
00:42:36You also said that your paths cross socially?
00:42:40On occasion.
00:42:41Well, did he ever have anyone back?
00:42:43You know, entertain at his home?
00:42:44I don't know.
00:42:47I expect so.
00:42:49Do you know if he had any enemies?
00:42:51Not really.
00:42:53I'm sorry I can't be any more helpful.
00:42:56On the contrary, Sarah, you've been more than helpful.
00:42:58I think we should probably take up no more of your time.
00:43:00Oh, one more question.
00:43:01No, we've finished, Havers.
00:43:02I said we've finished.
00:43:04Inspector.
00:43:06Havers.
00:43:07Sarah.
00:43:07That looks beautiful.
00:43:13Excellent work, Connelly.
00:43:14One more question, Lady Kitch.
00:43:16Um, sorry.
00:43:17Lawrence Chilcott, do you know him?
00:43:19He's a local personality.
00:43:20Why?
00:43:21Well, two weeks before Fenner died, Lawrence Chilcott sold him a horse, which Fenner believed would dig him out of a financial hole.
00:43:28I don't understand why this is relevant.
00:43:31Well, he sold the horse knowing it was lame.
00:43:33Well, in your dealings with Lawrence Chilcott, was there anything of a similar nature?
00:43:38You know, um, threatening in any way?
00:43:41No.
00:43:43He had the reputation of being a slippery customer, but I could honestly say I never found him to be anything other than entirely pleasant and businesslike.
00:43:52Okay, thank you.
00:44:03I'm sorry.
00:44:12But Fenner was doped with Bute.
00:44:14He isn't taking us anywhere except up a blind alley, which is possibly where it was meant to lead us.
00:44:20Until further notice, let's set that aside and focus our minds on Lachlan and the money.
00:44:26Bute was, after all the means.
00:44:28The money, nine cases out of ten, is the motive.
00:44:31Yes?
00:44:33Yes, sir.
00:44:36My people will be ready to ostentatiously pull out of Fenner's in a couple of hours.
00:44:40Excellent.
00:44:43Sir, that's Connor, Lady Kitche's gardener.
00:44:51Gardener's only allowed to have a lunchtime pint at their local, I guess.
00:44:54Just making the observation.
00:44:57Well, you don't get a pint like this in London.
00:44:59You're telling me.
00:45:02Your name, Jermaine?
00:45:05Cornish.
00:45:06Well, that much is apparent.
00:45:07What is also apparent, though, is...
00:45:09My accent?
00:45:11Yes.
00:45:12Manchester?
00:45:13My parents moved up there when I was eight.
00:45:15But you came back again.
00:45:17Well, wherever we moved when I was a kid, my roots would always be here.
00:45:20I wanted my kids to have their roots here, too.
00:45:23You're a tradition, Mr. Jermaine.
00:45:25I just think it's important to know who you are.
00:45:27Sir.
00:45:28Great.
00:45:29It's lovely.
00:45:42Sir?
00:45:42Come on, then.
00:45:54This morning, it came around there, and then it went into the cottage.
00:45:57We didn't take a closer look in case we alerted them.
00:46:00But I'd suggest they're using the cove for land in the contraband,
00:46:02and the cottage for storing it.
00:46:04You think this is where they'll rendezvous with the money?
00:46:06Maybe.
00:46:07But if we aim to catch them at Fenner's, we'll catch both them and the money.
00:46:20If instead of grabbing them straight away, we followed them to the rendezvous,
00:46:24we'd stand a chance of catching the whole lot of them from top to bottom.
00:46:28I admire your ambition, but I think it's a bit risky.
00:46:31It would be almost impossible to follow them unnoticed by daylight as soon as they spot us.
00:46:36Well, they'll head anywhere but the rendezvous.
00:46:39You haven't seen me in stealth mode.
00:46:42I'm sure you're preternaturally discreet, Jermaine.
00:46:45Nevertheless, I...
00:46:46I think we could do it.
00:46:49And I think it's worth the risk.
00:46:52All right.
00:46:53Well, it's your call.
00:46:55Nine-tenths of this job is knowing your own mind?
00:46:57I think I do on this one, sir.
00:47:02He's a bit determined, isn't he?
00:47:05He's got the scent now.
00:47:13Yeah.
00:47:13He's got the scent.
00:47:35The butte in Fenner's whisky puts Chilcott near the frame, if not completely inside it.
00:47:49Yes, but we know that Lackland's involved in the smuggling.
00:47:52I just sense there's more to him than meets the eye.
00:47:55With due respect, sir, you're sensing that Lackland's behind us all.
00:47:58Isn't this the same as evidence that he actually is?
00:48:00Fair point.
00:48:02But, you know, his guise of boat mechanic is perfect cover for going up and down the coast all day,
00:48:08and then at night, he's a black marketeer.
00:48:10Word spreads pretty soon he's a major player.
00:48:15Quiet as a grave down here. Anything your end?
00:48:19You'll be the first to know to me.
00:48:21That's why we have walkie-talkies.
00:48:23Keeping you informed, Inspector.
00:48:30Sarge.
00:48:31You have guests, Lily.
00:48:33Repeat, you have guests.
00:48:37Okay, we've got a Land Rover.
00:48:39What car is Lackland Drive?
00:48:40A Land Rover.
00:48:43Okay, he stops outside the stable.
00:48:45He's getting out. He's moving directly to the target.
00:48:51Sorry, it's not Lackland.
00:48:53What?
00:48:54It's Connor.
00:49:00Okay, he's going into the stable.
00:49:02Let's go.
00:49:04What's that smoke?
00:49:06The cove!
00:49:07And that car comes.
00:49:08Stop it!
00:49:09I thought the order was to follow!
00:49:10The order's changed!
00:49:11Tell everyone to stop the car!
00:49:13Yes, sir!
00:49:14There's smoke coming from the cove.
00:49:15I'm going to take a look.
00:49:16Wait for backup.
00:49:17Wait for backup, Tremaine.
00:49:23Tremaine!
00:49:24Tremaine!
00:49:25He's coming at the stable with the box.
00:49:26What do you want to do?
00:49:27Tremaine, talk to me!
00:49:34Tremaine!
00:49:36Tremaine!
00:49:39Wait for backup, Tremaine.
00:49:40Wait for backup!
00:49:41There's someone in there!
00:49:42Tremaine!
00:49:43You go!
00:49:44Leave coming to me!
00:49:45Help me!
00:49:46Help!
00:49:47Hold on!
00:49:48Lackland!
00:49:49Hold on!
00:49:50Hold on!
00:49:51You go, please. Come to me.
00:49:59Help me!
00:50:01Help!
00:50:02Hold on!
00:50:04Blackland, hold on!
00:50:21Right! Help, come on!
00:50:39Bye!
00:50:40Let's in!
00:50:45AJ!
00:50:46Get the cuffs out of me, quick!
00:50:48Are you all right?
00:50:49Yeah, fine.
00:50:51Get out!
00:51:16Tremaine!
00:51:17Tremaine!
00:51:17Tremaine!
00:51:28Sir!
00:51:29Tremaine, get an ambulance.
00:51:32Request ambulance immediately manned down!
00:51:34Tremaine, listen to me.
00:51:35Roger, ambulance request for food on its way.
00:51:37Come on, Tremaine, you'll be all right.
00:51:39Come on.
00:51:39Hey.
00:51:59You all right?
00:52:00um the pathologist thinks that Lachlan received a blow to the head prior to the fire
00:52:12how humane the killer render his victim unconscious before the execution
00:52:18well whether it was enough to knock him out we'll never know
00:52:21if he was conscious it would explain Tremaine's efforts to get him
00:52:30so if Lachlan killed Fenner in a dispute over smuggling who killed Lachlan
00:52:42Connor in an attempt to take over the racket I mean money is usually the motive
00:52:48you sell it yourself why sell for half well that's assuming with Fenner out of the way
00:52:52it was just a two-way split someone else seems likely
00:52:56come on we should get to the hospital
00:53:00yeah
00:53:01has he regained consciousness yet?
00:53:11no
00:53:11I know this is no consolation but
00:53:15I think your husband's a very fine police officer
00:53:19thank you
00:53:21be it right it's no consolation whatsoever excuse me
00:53:26no don't
00:53:29no don't
00:53:30no don't
00:53:31no don't
00:53:32no don't
00:53:42no don't
00:53:55I meaning nothing
00:53:59no don't
00:54:02no I
00:54:03know
00:54:05Why were you so keen to play down the way Fenner treated you?
00:54:18What were you trying to hide?
00:54:21Lachlan did a bit of stuff with his boat out of Fenner's Cove.
00:54:25Called it important.
00:54:26Drink, fags, DVDs.
00:54:29I helped him with storage and flogging it.
00:54:32I told him about the cottage in Fenner's Cove.
00:54:39We didn't make much, but we got by and that was fine.
00:54:43Fine for me.
00:54:44But not for Lachlan?
00:54:47Money equals independence, he said.
00:54:51So, once a month, he'd take a box out to a boat offshore and exchange it for another box.
00:54:57A box?
00:54:58Mm-hmm.
00:55:00He did this for who?
00:55:01I don't know.
00:55:04And this box was stored underneath Fenner's stables, yeah?
00:55:09Most of the other stuff was kept to the cottage.
00:55:12But Lachlan said the boxes from the boats needed something more secure.
00:55:16Did Fenner know?
00:55:18He was being paid for the use of the Cove.
00:55:21He was just desperate for cash, he just took the money and shut up.
00:55:23So, Fenner was being paid for the use of the Cove and for storing the boxes underneath the stable?
00:55:27Well, Lachlan didn't want anyone to know about the boxes.
00:55:30Fenner didn't know about the hole.
00:55:32I made it one night with Lachlan.
00:55:36Do you know what these boxes contained?
00:55:40No.
00:55:42Did he nothing?
00:55:43I don't know.
00:55:45I don't think so, he just did the drop.
00:55:48He knew the identity of the person he did the drop for?
00:55:50Yeah.
00:55:53Who was it?
00:55:55I said I don't know.
00:55:58Come on, Myra.
00:55:59I swear.
00:56:01Was it Lawrence Chilcott?
00:56:03Chilcott?
00:56:05Was it?
00:56:06Or why'd you say Chilcott?
00:56:14Do you believe that she doesn't know who Lachlan was working for?
00:56:16Well, with Lachlan dead, she has no reason to conceal what she knows.
00:56:20What, unless she's involved?
00:56:21In which case, she's playing the part of a grieving girlfriend impeccably.
00:56:25Well, someone ordered those boxes to be shipped out.
00:56:28Conor makes an unlikely ringleader.
00:56:31Yeah, but he must know something.
00:56:35I don't know.
00:56:37I just helped him move them.
00:56:39I think you're lying.
00:56:41I think you know full well what was in the box you collected yesterday.
00:56:44A quarter of a million pounds.
00:56:46A quarter of a million.
00:56:48Where were you planning to go with that?
00:56:51Nowhere.
00:56:52The person whose money it was would have come after you.
00:56:54I don't know whose money it was.
00:56:55I didn't know it was money till you just told me.
00:56:58Lying again.
00:57:00I think you knew about the money.
00:57:02I think you killed both Fenner and Lachlan to get hold of it.
00:57:06I've told you I didn't kill them.
00:57:09Did Lawrence Jilcott pay you to do it?
00:57:12Who?
00:57:13We have the plaster cast of a handprint we found at Fenner's yard that matches your hands.
00:57:19Doesn't prove anything.
00:57:20I knew Fenner.
00:57:22I'd been to his yard.
00:57:23And you'd be amazed how much forensic evidence can be retrieved from the sight of a fire.
00:57:29Now, if we find anything, anything that suggests you've been to that cottage, it's not going to look good for you, is it?
00:57:36We'll be able to place you at the scene of both murders.
00:57:40Of course, it's surprising how many years come off a life sentence for full confession.
00:57:46Of course I've been to the cottage.
00:57:48That's where we kept the stuff.
00:57:51Who was in charge of the smuggling, Connor?
00:57:53Who paid you to exchange those boxes?
00:57:57I don't know.
00:58:00I was bought with a chain.
00:58:02That's the way Lachlan worked.
00:58:03Said it was best if I didn't know certain things.
00:58:06Safer for us if everything went through him.
00:58:10I trusted him.
00:58:11I told you before, if you're looking for London, turn right.
00:58:34Keep going till you're knee-deep in agents.
00:58:36Mr Chilkert, I'm resting on your suspicion of conspiracy to murder.
00:58:40Do not have to say anything, but it may help your defence if you do not mention when questioned something you later rely on in court.
00:58:45Anything you do say may be given in evidence.
00:58:48You heard.
00:58:48Let me know when he's brief arrives, yeah?
00:58:56Okay.
00:58:56Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:05No, no.
00:59:05I'll do it.
00:59:06Do you want to say how desperately sorry we are?
00:59:22Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:23Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:24Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:25Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:26Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:27Do you want me to talk to her?
00:59:30Your husband is an extremely good officer.
00:59:31Very brave.
00:59:32I don't know for certain I got there too late, but I understand he was trying to get into the cottage when he was hit by the blast.
00:59:41I think he knew there was someone trapped inside.
00:59:43Did he get them out?
00:59:44No.
00:59:45In which case he died in vain.
00:59:46No.
00:59:47In which case he died in vain.
00:59:50It's that we try that makes us heroes, not that we necessarily succeed.
01:00:12Your husband was a credit.
01:00:15An example to us all.
01:00:20He really relished working with you.
01:00:23Transferring to London was his dream.
01:00:26He did an extremely well wherever he went.
01:00:30My right home.
01:00:33Tell me, Inspector Lindley, how do I tell my children that the daddy they had breakfast with yesterday has gone forever?
01:00:45I don't know.
01:00:48No.
01:00:49Neither do I.
01:00:52Keep me an hour, Havers.
01:01:06What about Lauren's two?
01:01:07Come up.
01:01:08Let him stew till I'm good and ready.
01:01:09Lindley!
01:01:10Lindley!
01:01:11You've no right to hold me!
01:01:12Lindley!
01:01:13Lindley!
01:01:14You've no right to hold me!
01:01:16Lindley!
01:01:17Lindley!
01:01:20And then, you've no right to hold me!
01:01:22Lindley!
01:01:23In here.
01:01:24And then, you've no right to hold me!
01:01:26Lindley!
01:01:27Mother?
01:01:35In here.
01:01:40I'm just fixing some pins for us all.
01:01:43Us all?
01:01:44Sarah popped round to say thank you for the other evening.
01:01:47Aren't those flowers lovely?
01:01:49Splendid.
01:01:50Shall I make enough for you too?
01:01:52By which I mean, are you actually going to grace us with your company?
01:01:57I need to talk to you.
01:01:59Are you sure you've got the right word, dear?
01:02:02I mean, I was under the impression that you'd given up talking,
01:02:06unless it was to that wretched mobile of yours.
01:02:08Okay, okay. Point very much taken.
01:02:10Look, if you want to talk to me about the estate again...
01:02:13Mother.
01:02:18I should have said something earlier.
01:02:21But I wasn't sure how much I wanted people to know about Helen and me.
01:02:28I'm not people, Tommy. I'm your mother.
01:02:31I know. I didn't mean to exclude you.
01:02:33It's just, with Peter Eck in rehab and you looking after the estate alone,
01:02:39I didn't want to burden you.
01:02:41I know how much you worry about us.
01:02:43You must have realised I'd worry much more not knowing.
01:02:46I'm sorry.
01:02:56Perhaps my reticence to talk
01:02:59was also a question of damaged pride.
01:03:07Or guilt, even.
01:03:09In reality, I have
01:03:13a sense, a very real sense
01:03:16that I failed Helen.
01:03:22She's left you.
01:03:25We're temporarily separated.
01:03:28Oh, Tommy.
01:03:30I think we both need time
01:03:33and
01:03:34space
01:03:36to get over the loss of the baby.
01:03:44It was her decision
01:03:45to go.
01:03:48And I'm prepared
01:03:49to wait as long as necessary
01:03:52for her to come back.
01:03:53Do you think she will come back?
01:03:54I have to hope so.
01:04:00Thank you for telling me anyway.
01:04:05Sorry it took so long.
01:04:07These things take
01:04:08as long as they take.
01:04:11Now,
01:04:12can you take this tray out for me?
01:04:14There's a good boy.
01:04:15I'm sorry.
01:04:16I'm sorry.
01:04:20Of course, Mama.
01:04:24Judith and I
01:04:29were just wondering
01:04:30if you needed a hand, Dorothy,
01:04:31but I see you have
01:04:32the long arm of the law
01:04:33to assist you.
01:04:34I thought I'd grab him
01:04:35while I could.
01:04:36Are you staying for a drink, Tommy?
01:04:38I'm afraid not.
01:04:39No one ever went to their grave
01:04:41wishing they'd spent
01:04:41more time at the office,
01:04:43remember?
01:04:44Yes, true.
01:04:44Unfortunately,
01:04:45they're most important
01:04:45to having a murder inquiry
01:04:46in the first couple of days, so...
01:04:48Just when I thought
01:04:48we were finally going
01:04:50to spend some time with Tommy,
01:04:51we get Inspector Lindley.
01:04:53It was the same
01:04:53when he was at Eton.
01:04:54He'd come home
01:04:55for his holidays,
01:04:55wouldn't know
01:04:56who we were going to get.
01:04:57Carefree Tommy
01:04:58or bookish Tommy.
01:04:59My husband was
01:05:00an old Etonian.
01:05:02Was he?
01:05:02Which house?
01:05:04Don't ask questions like that.
01:05:06He'd go on about the place
01:05:07for hours at a time.
01:05:09I stopped listening
01:05:09after a while.
01:05:10Was he in college?
01:05:11That's right.
01:05:13Always admired the scholars.
01:05:15Don't think you could
01:05:15ever call Peter a scholar.
01:05:17Really?
01:05:17He could never sit still
01:05:19for more than an hour.
01:05:20Don't think I ever saw
01:05:21him finish a book
01:05:22and the entire time
01:05:22we were together.
01:05:23Well, I'd better be off.
01:05:25Bye, Mum.
01:05:26Bye, Tommy.
01:05:36Sir.
01:05:37Good to see you.
01:05:39I thought I'd lost you
01:05:39for a minute.
01:05:40Are you all right?
01:05:42I'm fine.
01:05:44How's Chilcott bearing up?
01:05:45Oh, stewing nicely.
01:05:47And you?
01:05:48Are you bearing up?
01:05:50Yeah.
01:05:51I'm fine.
01:05:53I'm fine.
01:05:55You will tell me
01:05:56if you're not, won't you?
01:05:58Yeah.
01:05:59Um, look,
01:05:59we should speak to two car.
01:06:01I think it's time
01:06:02to bring him to the boil.
01:06:02I don't know what you're
01:06:08talking about.
01:06:09I think you do.
01:06:12TSA was here.
01:06:13He's convinced of it.
01:06:15You can think
01:06:16of what you like.
01:06:18You got hold
01:06:19of Stephen Fenner,
01:06:20a small,
01:06:21struggling train
01:06:22in comparison
01:06:22with yourself,
01:06:23but competition,
01:06:25nonetheless.
01:06:26On his land
01:06:27is a nice
01:06:28hidden away cove
01:06:30with an empty cottage.
01:06:31Perfect for landing
01:06:33and storing
01:06:33whatever it was
01:06:33you're bringing in.
01:06:35Things get complicated
01:06:37when serious money
01:06:38gets involved,
01:06:39don't they,
01:06:39Mr. Chilcott?
01:06:41Whatever you say,
01:06:42Inspector.
01:06:44You never really
01:06:44liked Fenner.
01:06:46You sold him
01:06:47a lame horse.
01:06:48Tried to mask
01:06:49the lameness
01:06:49with bute.
01:06:50And when he realizes this,
01:06:52well,
01:06:52he wants reparation,
01:06:53doesn't he?
01:06:54He asks for more money.
01:06:55To keep quiet
01:06:56about your smuggling operation.
01:06:58But then he gets greedy
01:06:59and asks for too much.
01:07:00So you drugged him
01:07:01with bute again.
01:07:05And then you killed him.
01:07:07Made it look like suicide.
01:07:09Rubbish.
01:07:11But I know you think
01:07:12the police might be on to you.
01:07:15So you arranged
01:07:15to meet the one man
01:07:16who knows the whole truth.
01:07:18Lachlan.
01:07:19You arranged to meet him
01:07:20at Fenner's cottage.
01:07:23Where you kill him.
01:07:25Try and burn the cottage.
01:07:28But it wasn't just him
01:07:29you killed.
01:07:31Detective Sergeant Tremaine
01:07:33also died in that fire.
01:07:36That's three murders
01:07:37you were responsible for,
01:07:38Chilcott.
01:07:39Three murders.
01:07:40That's very good.
01:07:42I advise you to say nothing.
01:07:43No, no, no, no.
01:07:44I want to congratulate the inspector
01:07:45on his storytelling.
01:07:46It's marvellous.
01:07:47And completely and utterly incorrect
01:07:49in almost every detail.
01:07:52Almost?
01:07:53I mean,
01:07:54I didn't even really sell out
01:07:55to Mr. Fenner.
01:07:56The horse's passport
01:07:57says you did.
01:07:59Do you know
01:08:00how many Eastern European horses
01:08:02sneak into this country
01:08:02on one of those passports?
01:08:03You're all right.
01:08:04I didn't smuggle anything
01:08:05and I didn't murder anyone.
01:08:07All I did
01:08:08was sell a horse
01:08:09as a favour
01:08:09to a friend.
01:08:11A friend?
01:08:13Lady Keech.
01:08:14She wanted to give someone
01:08:15a horse
01:08:16without it looking like a gift.
01:08:17Lady Keech?
01:08:18She gave me a little help
01:08:20to Doctor the Passport
01:08:22so that her name
01:08:22wouldn't appear on it.
01:08:23For tax reasons,
01:08:24she said.
01:08:25Well, how much help
01:08:26does she give you
01:08:27to Doctor the Passport?
01:08:28You tell me
01:08:28how much you earn,
01:08:29I'll tell you
01:08:30how much I do.
01:08:31You're in no position
01:08:31to be cocky,
01:08:32Chilcott.
01:08:33How much?
01:08:34Nothing so vulgar
01:08:35as cash
01:08:35with Lady Keech.
01:08:37If not cash,
01:08:39she has a rather
01:08:40fantastic statue
01:08:41in her front garden.
01:08:44She promised it to me.
01:08:45Lawrence,
01:08:46I really must insist
01:08:47you have said nothing.
01:08:48I'm cooperating
01:08:48with the police.
01:08:49Not like this.
01:08:50I've nothing to hide.
01:08:51I'm sorry,
01:08:51I don't understand.
01:08:52Why would she give you
01:08:53a treasured anniversary present
01:08:56from Lord Keech?
01:08:57There is no Lord Keech.
01:08:59Yeah,
01:08:59not anymore,
01:09:00I know.
01:09:00Not ever.
01:09:07You really don't
01:09:08know anything,
01:09:08do you?
01:09:15Give me a copy
01:09:16of DeBrett's period,
01:09:17will you?
01:09:17He said she was
01:09:18a friend of my mother's.
01:09:19My mother took her
01:09:20under her wing
01:09:20when she came down here.
01:09:22She took her
01:09:22at face value.
01:09:24Just get me that book.
01:09:25Yes, sir.
01:09:25There was something
01:09:32that she said
01:09:32at my mother's
01:09:33this afternoon.
01:09:34What?
01:09:34She said her husband
01:09:36was in college
01:09:37at Eton.
01:09:38Was that a crime?
01:09:39Except, of course,
01:09:39against the working
01:09:40classes.
01:09:40she said her husband
01:09:44was in college
01:09:45and I said
01:09:45how I'd always
01:09:46admired the scholars.
01:09:49Okay.
01:09:51But then she said
01:09:52her husband
01:09:52wasn't a scholar.
01:09:54Barely read a book
01:09:55in his life.
01:09:55Okay, now you're
01:09:56losing me.
01:09:58At Eton,
01:09:58if you're an
01:09:59academic scholar,
01:09:59you're said to be
01:10:00in college.
01:10:01Only the true
01:10:01scholars are in
01:10:02college.
01:10:03So she made a mistake.
01:10:05That's not a mistake
01:10:06anyone who'd be
01:10:06married to an old
01:10:07Etonian for ten
01:10:07years would make.
01:10:08Unless she was
01:10:09winging it in the
01:10:10moment.
01:10:11Exactly.
01:10:14Here we go.
01:10:15Lord Khan,
01:10:16Lord Castleman.
01:10:17Well, well.
01:10:19No Lord Keech.
01:10:21So, no Lord Keech,
01:10:23no Lady Keech.
01:10:24And if no Lady
01:10:25Keech.
01:10:25Then who the hell
01:10:26was at dinner
01:10:26the other evening?
01:10:28I'll get her
01:10:29and find out.
01:10:29No, no, you stay
01:10:30here and put pressure
01:10:31on Chilcot.
01:10:32I'm going to find
01:10:32out where she bought
01:10:33her title and then
01:10:34pay her ladyship
01:10:34a visit.
01:10:45Can I fix you
01:10:46a drink, Tommy?
01:10:48No, thank you.
01:10:49I'm on duty.
01:10:51So it's not Tommy
01:10:52or even Lord
01:10:53but Inspector.
01:10:58Don't you find,
01:10:59Lady Keech, that most
01:10:59of the time a title
01:11:00just gets in the way?
01:11:01And yet occasionally
01:11:02it can help to keep
01:11:04things clear.
01:11:06It certainly doesn't
01:11:07hurt when I want to
01:11:08reserve a table in
01:11:09London.
01:11:09Do take a seat.
01:11:13And if you call me
01:11:14Lady Keech one more
01:11:14time I shall be forced
01:11:15to bop you over your
01:11:16head until you stop.
01:11:17I'm sorry.
01:11:19Apology accepted.
01:11:21At the school I
01:11:22attended there were
01:11:22quite a few titled
01:11:23boys.
01:11:25It wasn't anything
01:11:25anyone made much
01:11:26of a fuss about
01:11:26which was a blessing
01:11:27for me really
01:11:28because it meant
01:11:29I grew up not making
01:11:30much of a fuss about
01:11:31it either.
01:11:32How about your school?
01:11:33School wasn't a problem.
01:11:36And when you got
01:11:36into the big wide world
01:11:37it must become an issue.
01:11:40In what way?
01:11:42Well I always find
01:11:43that people think
01:11:44that having a lord
01:11:45or a lady involved
01:11:46in whatever it might
01:11:47be brings added value
01:11:50whereas in reality
01:11:51of course if it were
01:11:52the person behind
01:11:53the title then the
01:11:54opposite would usually
01:11:55be true.
01:11:57I take it you don't
01:11:58have much time
01:11:58for London society.
01:12:01Hmm.
01:12:02I decided when I was
01:12:04in my early twenties
01:12:04that it was rather
01:12:06like a treadmill
01:12:07with canapes.
01:12:08So consequently
01:12:09not for me.
01:12:12It's not easy
01:12:13is it though
01:12:13just being one self?
01:12:15People often expect
01:12:17the role
01:12:18rather than the person.
01:12:20I don't believe
01:12:20people have just
01:12:21one self
01:12:22Inspector Lindley.
01:12:25Good point
01:12:26Lady Keech.
01:12:28Sarah.
01:12:30Okay.
01:12:32Sarah it is.
01:12:35But it's not
01:12:36really Keech
01:12:37is it?
01:12:38And if we're
01:12:39being brutally honest
01:12:39it's not really lady.
01:12:42Is it?
01:12:44How long have you
01:12:45known her true identity?
01:12:47So you've done
01:12:48your homework then?
01:12:49So?
01:12:50You do know it?
01:12:51I know who she is.
01:12:53Because you ran
01:12:53the operation together?
01:12:55I've told you before
01:12:57I'm not and I never
01:12:58have been involved
01:12:59in any kind of
01:13:00smuggling.
01:13:01So she ran it alone?
01:13:03I've no idea.
01:13:04I don't know who she is.
01:13:06Okay.
01:13:07But from what you know
01:13:08of the real person
01:13:09behind the facade
01:13:10do you think
01:13:11she's capable?
01:13:11That's for you
01:13:12to find out.
01:13:13How did you find out?
01:13:15When we came over
01:13:16you mentioned
01:13:17Lord Keech.
01:13:18I've subsequently
01:13:19discovered
01:13:19there was no such person.
01:13:22And then this afternoon
01:13:23you said your husband
01:13:23had gone to Eton.
01:13:25I made a mistake
01:13:27didn't I?
01:13:28I'm afraid you did.
01:13:30I panicked in the moment
01:13:31and gilded the lily.
01:13:34I haven't done that
01:13:34for ages.
01:13:37Must be you
01:13:38making me nervous.
01:13:40Policemen often
01:13:40make people feel like that.
01:13:42When I buried my husband
01:13:44I decided to buy myself
01:13:45a new life.
01:13:47A new life
01:13:48meant a new identity.
01:13:50I thought about it
01:13:51for a while
01:13:52and decided it would be
01:13:52fun to be titled.
01:13:53Is that so terrible?
01:13:57If you have the means
01:13:58and the temperament
01:13:59why not?
01:14:01I play the role
01:14:02of a baroness
01:14:03and to all intents
01:14:03and purposes
01:14:04I am baroness.
01:14:06We are who
01:14:06we pretend to be
01:14:07Lord Asherton.
01:14:08You play the role
01:14:09of a police officer
01:14:10and voila
01:14:10you are a police officer.
01:14:13I don't play the role
01:14:14Sarah.
01:14:16I really am
01:14:17a police officer.
01:14:18Given how much trouble
01:14:19I can bring to your door
01:14:20for doctoring
01:14:21a horse's passport
01:14:22I suggest you help me
01:14:23find out sooner
01:14:24rather than later.
01:14:27Her name is Sarah Marlow
01:14:28married to Duncan Marlow
01:14:30up to his death
01:14:31on the Costa de Rada
01:14:32six years ago
01:14:33stabbed outside a nightclub
01:14:35a consequence
01:14:37of his lifelong career
01:14:38in serious fraud.
01:14:40Why are you here?
01:14:41You haven't actually said.
01:14:45I'd like to know more
01:14:46about your husband
01:14:46your late husband.
01:14:51Anything in particular?
01:14:53Why don't we start
01:14:54with how much
01:14:55you learnt from him
01:14:56about fraud
01:14:57and money laundering
01:14:59and then we could move on
01:15:01to how you took over
01:15:02from him
01:15:02where he left off
01:15:03after his rather
01:15:04gruesome demise.
01:15:07Why did she give
01:15:07Artemis to Fenner?
01:15:09When Sarah first
01:15:11moved into the area
01:15:12she believed
01:15:12he was a friend
01:15:13who could be trusted
01:15:13with her real identity
01:15:14only he wasn't.
01:15:17And he saw how important
01:15:19a new life was to her
01:15:19and being the piece
01:15:20of scum that he was
01:15:21he tried to blackmail her
01:15:22to keep him quiet.
01:15:23So he wasn't
01:15:24blackmailing you?
01:15:25No.
01:15:27My husband was very good
01:15:28at what he did.
01:15:29He once told me
01:15:30he could take the dirtiest
01:15:31ten pound note in the world
01:15:32and make it pristine
01:15:33in an hour.
01:15:34That's all he did.
01:15:36He serviced crime.
01:15:37He didn't do crime.
01:15:38Not a semantic difference
01:15:39the law recognises.
01:15:41He processed money.
01:15:43They taught you how?
01:15:46Wasn't difficult to absorb
01:15:47his technique over the years
01:15:49and if you know
01:15:49the right people
01:15:50it's not exactly rocket science.
01:15:52And you knew
01:15:53the right people.
01:15:53businessmen
01:15:55bankers
01:15:56lawyers
01:15:57they were our friends.
01:15:58We holidayed together
01:15:59dined together.
01:16:01After my husband was killed
01:16:03they were only too
01:16:04eager to help me
01:16:05reestablish myself.
01:16:06Yourself
01:16:07and your late husband's
01:16:09operation
01:16:09here in Cornwall.
01:16:11I made one mistake.
01:16:14I trusted Stephen Fenner
01:16:16with my identity.
01:16:17She told me
01:16:18what Fenner was trying to do.
01:16:20I told her to ignore him
01:16:22but she couldn't.
01:16:23She paid him for a while
01:16:25and then decided
01:16:25she'd had enough.
01:16:26She asked what could
01:16:27settle things once and for all.
01:16:29He said he needed
01:16:30a top quality horse.
01:16:31That's where I come in.
01:16:33But you gave him
01:16:34a lame horse.
01:16:35He was a lame human being.
01:16:40Was Fenner trying to expose you?
01:16:44Was he blackmailing you?
01:16:45Did you have Fenner killed
01:16:48because he was trying
01:16:49to expose you?
01:16:50Well no one was meant
01:16:51to die.
01:16:53Lachlan was only
01:16:53to scare Stephen
01:16:55into leaving me alone
01:16:55once and for all.
01:16:57The butte was just
01:16:58to disorientate him.
01:17:01And if Lachlan
01:17:02hadn't delegated to Connor
01:17:03that would have been
01:17:04the outcome.
01:17:05But Connor messed up.
01:17:07I had no choice.
01:17:08I had to draw
01:17:09every stump on the pitch.
01:17:10Why waste a pearl
01:17:11on a swine?
01:17:12But if you had
01:17:13he might still be alive.
01:17:14As with the two other men
01:17:15who died as a consequence.
01:17:16As your boss said
01:17:18let the buyer beware.
01:17:21You're a real piece of work.
01:17:24No.
01:17:27I'm a businessman.
01:17:29Is that how you see Lachlan?
01:17:30A drawn stump?
01:17:32Is that how you see
01:17:33Sergeant Tremaine?
01:17:36Tremaine was in the wrong place
01:17:38at the wrong time.
01:17:39I can't tell you
01:17:40how sick I felt
01:17:41when I heard.
01:17:43But Lachlan wasn't
01:17:44was he?
01:17:45Lachlan was in
01:17:46precisely the right place
01:17:47at precisely the right time.
01:17:48Exactly where you
01:17:49told him to meet you.
01:17:50Well I wish it could
01:17:50have been any other way
01:17:51but Lachlan knew everything
01:17:52and I have learnt
01:17:53that it is
01:17:54sometimes necessary
01:17:56to read a situation
01:17:57without compassion.
01:18:02You know
01:18:03we think Lachlan
01:18:04was still conscious
01:18:05when he was consumed
01:18:06by that fire.
01:18:08Feelings obscure
01:18:09clarity Inspector.
01:18:12I did what I had to do.
01:18:14Do you really think
01:18:21that is going to
01:18:22stand up in court?
01:18:25I have no intention
01:18:27of finding out.
01:18:28It's over Sarah.
01:18:48The minute you get
01:18:49on that boat
01:18:50I call the customs.
01:18:52Then what?
01:18:53Come on
01:18:57Chilcott is talking
01:18:58to Havers
01:18:58down the station
01:18:59right now.
01:19:01Lawrence Chilcott
01:19:02says crooked
01:19:03as a pint arm.
01:19:04Judge a person
01:19:05by the company
01:19:05they keep eh?
01:19:09If only Stephen Fenner
01:19:10would let me be
01:19:11who I wanted to be.
01:19:12Put that gun down Sarah.
01:19:15If only people
01:19:16would leave
01:19:16other people alone.
01:19:18You made a decision
01:19:19a long time ago
01:19:20from the wife
01:19:21the money launderer.
01:19:23Do you really think
01:19:24that entitled to you
01:19:25to great wealth
01:19:27and peace of mind?
01:19:29My husband
01:19:30was a financier.
01:19:32He took money
01:19:33soaked in human misery
01:19:35and rinsed it out
01:19:36for profit.
01:19:37My husband
01:19:38was a wonderful man.
01:19:39Death cancels out
01:19:42everything but the truth
01:19:43and strips a man
01:19:45of everything
01:19:45but genius and virtue.
01:19:48But of course
01:19:49your husband
01:19:50had no genius
01:19:51did he?
01:19:52Or virtue.
01:19:55He was just
01:19:55a ruthless criminal
01:19:56like you.
01:20:00You don't know me.
01:20:02I know everything
01:20:03I need to know
01:20:04about you.
01:20:05I could kill you.
01:20:09This place's been
01:20:11a long time
01:20:12coming for you
01:20:12Sarah.
01:20:13My advice
01:20:14let it come.
01:20:29Where's she going?
01:20:39Thank you so much
01:21:01Lady Ashton
01:21:02you couldn't have
01:21:02made me more welcome.
01:21:04You couldn't have
01:21:04been a better guest
01:21:05my dear.
01:21:06I just wish we'd
01:21:06seen more of you.
01:21:07Well perhaps next time
01:21:09I'm on leave.
01:21:10Oh Barbara
01:21:10you're one of the
01:21:11family now.
01:21:11You know that.
01:21:13Take care of yourself.
01:21:15Farewell.
01:21:17Bye.
01:21:18We're all packed.
01:21:19I hardly feel
01:21:19you've been here.
01:21:20I'll come
01:21:21hang on soon
01:21:21properly.
01:21:23With Helen?
01:21:24If I can.
01:21:26See you Judith.
01:21:27Bye.
01:21:29How long
01:21:29are you staying on for?
01:21:30Just until John
01:21:31comes back.
01:21:33Look after the old
01:21:33girl.
01:21:34I heard that.
01:21:36You were meant to.
01:21:36Now you remember
01:21:39you're a husband
01:21:40first and a
01:21:41policeman second.
01:21:42Yes.
01:21:44Be happy.
01:21:45Bye mother.
01:21:46Bye Tommy.
01:21:47Bye Tommy.
01:21:58Lisa if you want
01:21:59a few more days
01:21:59at the retreat
01:22:00I can drop you off.
01:22:03No sir.
01:22:06I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:08I'll see you.
01:22:09I'll see you.
01:22:09I'll see you.
01:22:10I'll see you.
01:22:10I'll see you.
01:22:10I'll see you.
01:22:11I'll see you.
01:22:11I'll see you.
01:22:12I'll see you.
01:22:12I'll see you.
01:22:12I'll see you.
01:22:12I'll see you.
01:22:13I'll see you.
01:22:13I'll see you.
01:22:13I'll see you.
01:22:14I'll see you.
01:22:14I'll see you.
01:22:15I'll see you.
01:22:15I'll see you.
01:22:16I'll see you.
01:22:16I'll see you.
01:22:16I'll see you.
01:22:16I'll see you.
01:22:17I'll see you.
01:22:18I'll see you.
01:22:18You
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