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08:17but I said you should even see me under suspicion of murder
08:21and still stand by me.
08:23And you did.
08:24And that's the end of the story, Bella, my love.
08:27No, not quite, dear Mrs. Boffin.
08:29I think I've got something to say to Mr. Boffin.
08:32The last time I saw Mr. Boffin, I said that he was a miser,
08:36worse than dancer and the rest.
08:38But I don't believe you were, not for a single second.
08:42Only when you saw what a greedy wretch I was becoming,
08:44you thought you'd show me how riches could spoil people.
08:47Did you or didn't you?
08:49Well, my dear, I thought to myself,
08:50if I'm to be a brown bear to join,
08:52I might as well be a brown bear all round.
08:55You were the roughest old bear that ever was.
08:57But there is one thing I don't understand.
09:00Mrs. Boffin knew you were only pretending, didn't she?
09:02She did.
09:03Yes, but I remember it making her very unhappy.
09:06Why, you were very distressed indeed.
09:08You're right, Bella, love, I was.
09:09She nearly blowed us to shivers and smithers many a time.
09:14It's a weakness in me, old lady,
09:15to tell the truth and nothing but the truth.
09:18And she'd think so I and me,
09:19she couldn't abide to see me coming out of the regular bear.
09:22We was in everlasting danger with her.
09:24That day, the best I've ever done.
09:26When I says,
09:27Mew, says the cat,
09:28and Bow,
09:28she's the dog,
09:29she come here to run in after you
09:31when you went off and let it all out.
09:33And now, Nick,
09:33as this is Mr. and Mrs.
09:35John Armand's house,
09:36we'd better leave them to get over all their surprises.
09:38Help me up.
09:39Evo, me ought it.
09:41Oh, that's it, old lady,
09:43oh, dear, oh, dear.
09:44Mew, says the cat,
09:46quack, says the dog.
09:51However did I think of it?
09:53Will you partake, Mr. Wegg?
09:59Aye.
10:00Course I will.
10:01Will I partake?
10:02Would any man not partake?
10:04He's been driven out of his senses
10:05by an everlasting dustman
10:07going shovel, shovel, shovel,
10:09morning, noon and midnight.
10:10Oh, you don't seem in your usual spirits, Mr. Wegg.
10:13Oh, come to that,
10:14you don't seem in your usual spirits neither.
10:16You're uncommon lively.
10:18Yeah, you, you, you, you, you had your hair cut.
10:20Quite right, Mr. Wegg, quite right.
10:22And you, you had the plates cleaned up.
10:24By the hand of an adorable female.
10:27Why, you,
10:27you ain't going to get married, are you?
10:29That's right, sir, I am.
10:30What, to the old party?
10:32Mr. Wegg, the lady in question
10:33is not the old party.
10:35I meant the party as formally objected.
10:37It is the lady, sir,
10:38not the party as formally objected.
10:41Well, when's he going to come off?
10:42Next Monday.
10:43And the lady's objections have been met, have they?
10:45They have.
10:46Miss Pleasant Riderhood has withdrawn her objections.
10:48Two very good friends of mine
10:49threw out the suggestion to her
10:50that if, after marriage,
10:52I should confine myself to the articulation
10:54of men, children and the lower animals,
10:57then maybe I might no longer be regarded
10:58in the bony light
10:59to which she so much formally objected.
11:01It was a happy thought, sir,
11:02and it took root.
11:03Oh, it seems, Mr. Venus,
11:04that you are flush with friends.
11:06Pretty well, sir, pretty well.
11:07Well, I wish you joy.
11:08One man spends his fortune one way,
11:10the other another.
11:10You're going to try matrimony,
11:12I'm going to try travelling.
11:13Indeed, Mr. Wegg?
11:14Yeah, so the hour has struck, Mr. Venus.
11:17Them mounds is no more,
11:18and the time has come for Boffin to stump up.
11:20Would ten o'clock tomorrow morning
11:21suit you by finally getting
11:22Boffin's nose to the grindstone?
11:24Oh, I think that would suit me
11:25as well as Eddie, Mr. Wegg.
11:26You kept him under observation, I hope.
11:28Oh, pretty well every day.
11:29Ah, yes, well, I should think you just have.
11:33Well, then, what about tomorrow morning,
11:36coming round, coming round,
11:38and seeing that he does stump up?
11:41That would have to suit me as well as any.
11:43It will.
11:44Yes.
11:46Tomorrow morning, then,
11:48we shall be round there,
11:51and see that his cash and papers
11:53and accounts are ready
11:54by ten o'clock tomorrow morning,
11:55see that, go round to his house
11:56and tell him tonight,
11:57from me, orders from me.
11:59Very well, Mr. Wegg.
12:00Just to make sure,
12:01shall we just take one more glance
12:03at our giant property?
12:14Are you quite sure
12:15you wouldn't like me
12:16to bring this round with me tomorrow morning?
12:18Oh, quite sure, Mr. Wegg.
12:19I wouldn't dream of putting you
12:20into that trouble.
12:20Oh, yes, but I wouldn't have it lost,
12:22no, not for nothing.
12:23Oh, it won't be lost.
12:24Well, then, I suppose
12:25I shall have to take my leave.
12:27Ten o'clock tomorrow morning, then.
12:28Ah, ten tomorrow.
12:29Goodbye, Mr. Wegg.
12:31Goodbye, Mr. Wegg.
12:32Goodbye, Mr. Wegg.
12:44Be your pardon, Governor.
12:46What place may this be?
12:50This is a school.
12:52Be your pardon again,
12:53learning, Governor.
12:54Are you the master, eh?
12:56Yes, I am.
12:58Are you see, uh,
12:59blackboards for writing, all of it?
13:01You can see very well that it is.
13:02Yeah.
13:03I hate a learning character myself.
13:05I like to see learning in others.
13:08Would you be kind enough
13:09to write your name on that board?
13:14Learning, Governor.
13:15Governor.
13:15Well, can any of these young lambs
13:28what you are learning on?
13:30Read that their name?
13:31Bradley Headstone.
13:33Bradley Headstone.
13:34Rule for another turn.
13:36Bradley Headstone.
13:37Bradley Headstone.
13:38Well, now,
13:39I've learned it a wonderful thing.
13:42Bradley Headstone, eh?
13:44Chris named Bradley,
13:45same as mine's Roger.
13:47Surname Headstone.
13:49Sounds like a churchyard.
13:50Might you be acquainted
13:54with a person
13:56about your own hearts
13:57and breadth?
13:58I'd think your name
13:59sounded like, uh,
14:01Tetherist.
14:03I think I know the man you mean.
14:04I want that man.
14:06I want him to come and see me.
14:08You clash with a weird lock
14:09up the river.
14:10I shall tell him so.
14:10Do you think you'll come?
14:12Yes, I'm sure he will.
14:12Well, perhaps you'd be kind enough
14:15to tell him
14:16that he don't come precious soon.
14:20I'll look him up.
14:21I shall tell him, sir.
14:22Now, if you'll look...
14:22And you can tell him
14:24that when I was fishing
14:26in the river,
14:28I used up a suit of clothes
14:30because I think
14:31they would belong to him.
14:33Why do you think
14:34they might belong to this man?
14:35Because I've seen him
14:36wrap him up
14:37and fling him in.
14:38Well, I'll take up
14:43any more of your time here.
14:45You lads have a
14:46first night, Spockford.
14:48I'll take me
14:49leave the lambs
14:50and the learning,
14:52Gavaday.
14:53Good day, Gavaday.
14:54School is dismissed.
15:08Boffin at home?
15:15Mr. Boffin is at home.
15:16Oh, he'll do,
15:17but it ain't what I call him.
15:18Have you an appointment?
15:18I'll tell you what,
15:19young fella,
15:20this won't do.
15:21I don't want many.
15:21Yours, I want Boffin.
15:22Come along in, Mr. Venus.
15:23Tell Mr. Boffin you're here.
15:24Hey, look sharp about it,
15:25young fella.
15:26There's two persons to see you.
15:27Now, Boffin.
15:29Here, what is it?
15:30Just be careful
15:31what insolent liberties
15:32you take with this gentleman
15:33or I'll throw you
15:34after your hat.
15:35So you're still here, right?
15:36Look here,
15:36I gave orders for you
15:38to be dismissed.
15:39You ain't gone, I see.
15:40No, no, I ain't gone neither.
15:41You've seen me often
15:42digging away at them mans
15:43when I wasn't watching them.
15:44You never knew
15:45I could sleep standing, did you?
15:46Many a time I've had
15:47a peaceful sleep
15:48while you was twisting
15:48and turning
15:49waiting for me
15:49to start digging.
15:50So you're still here too?
15:52Why, now look here, Boffin.
15:53I want the room
15:54clear to these two scum.
15:55Here.
15:56That ain't gonna be done, Wig.
15:57Oh, well,
15:58we'll see about that.
15:59Mr. Venus,
16:00would you be so kind
16:02as to hand me over
16:02a certain document?
16:03Why, certainly, Mr. Wig.
16:05And now, sir,
16:06having finally parted
16:07with this document,
16:08may I make a small observation?
16:10Silas Wig,
16:11you're a rascal.
16:13I?
16:13I took the liberty
16:14of bringing Mr. Boffin
16:15into our little concern
16:16as a sort of sleeping partner.
16:17Why, true?
16:18Oh, yes,
16:18Mr. Boffin's been in the business
16:19since very early days.
16:21I'm afraid my hands
16:21weren't too clean
16:22for the first few hours,
16:23but I hope I've made amends.
16:24Venus, you certainly have.
16:25Thank you, sir.
16:26Thank you very much.
16:27I have a great deal
16:29to thank you for,
16:30and Mr. John Harmon also,
16:31and especially
16:32for the influence
16:33that you brought to bear
16:34in my behalf
16:35with Miss Ryderhood.
16:36What's this, ho?
16:37The John Harmon?
16:38And now, sir,
16:39that our little business
16:40is finally concluded,
16:41may I venture to repeat
16:42what I said before?
16:44Silas Wig,
16:45you're a precious
16:46old rascal.
16:47You're a precious old fool.
16:48I can have got rid of you
16:49any time I saw my way.
16:50Well, go and welcome.
16:52Now, look,
16:52I'm worth my price
16:53and I mean to get it.
16:55So, Boffin,
16:56buy me or leave me.
16:58I'll leave you, Wig.
17:00Oh, I see.
17:02See ya.
17:02So there's a Mr. John Harmon
17:04turned up after all, Asda.
17:06That puts your nose
17:06out of joint, doesn't it?
17:08Boffin, I dropped you
17:09as beneath my notice.
17:11But this Mr. John Harmon
17:12is quite another thing.
17:13Have you got any idea
17:14what this is I have in my hands?
17:17It is a will of my father's
17:18of a later date
17:19than the one proved
17:19by Mr. Boffin.
17:20Hey, what does the will say?
17:22It leaves the whole
17:22of his property
17:23to the crown.
17:24And how much is it worth, eh?
17:27Nothing.
17:28You damn scum!
17:29Here I am.
17:30Oh, ow!
17:31Oh, oh!
17:33Look here,
17:33you're banging my head
17:35against the sofa.
17:36Yes, I mean to.
17:37I give a thousand pounds
17:38to knock your brains out.
17:39Now, listen to me.
17:41What's that?
17:42The Dutch bottle.
17:43Yes, the Dutch bottle
17:44containing the last
17:45of my father's many wills,
17:48leaving the whole
17:48of his property
17:49to Mr. Boffin
17:50and excluding me.
17:51Oh, I don't believe it!
17:52Mr. Boffin found it
17:53when he took possession
17:54and he buried it
17:54in his own dust mound.
17:56But when he discovered
17:56who I was,
17:58he told me of it.
17:59And I urged him
17:59to dig the paper up
18:00and have it legally established.
18:01That has been done
18:02and consequently
18:03the paper that you have
18:04in your hand
18:05is worth nothing.
18:06Oh, no!
18:06Nothing at all.
18:07You supposed me just now
18:10to be the possessor
18:11of my father's property.
18:12So I am.
18:13But through any act
18:13of my father's
18:14or any right I have,
18:15no.
18:16I owe everything I possess
18:18quite a lot,
18:19quite a lot,
18:20to the generosity
18:21and goodness
18:22of Mr. Boffin.
18:24He insisted
18:24that I should take
18:25my fortune
18:25and that he should
18:26take his mound
18:27and no more.
18:28And when I saw you
18:29in this house
18:29trying to rise against him,
18:30it's no wonder
18:31I didn't screw
18:31your ugly head off.
18:32Oh, don't!
18:33I thought well
18:34of you at first,
18:35Wig,
18:35I'm sorry me
18:36and my old lady
18:37can't have a better
18:38opinion of you.
18:39However,
18:40I wouldn't like to leave you
18:41worse off than I found you.
18:42What'll it cost you
18:43to set up another stall?
18:45Mr. Boffin,
18:45when we first met,
18:47I got together
18:48a collection of ballards,
18:49as was,
18:50I may say,
18:51above price.
18:52Then they can't be paid for.
18:53Look, pardon me, sir.
18:54I was putting the case
18:55to Mr. Boffin
18:55and then there was likewise
18:56a new set of gingerbread.
18:58I won't say no more,
18:59but I would prefer
19:00to leave it to you.
19:01Yeah, well,
19:01I don't know what's right.
19:02And I also had
19:03a very good errant
19:04connection
19:05in which I was held
19:06in very great respect.
19:07I don't not wish
19:08to see him
19:08with cocoviches,
19:09Mr. Boffin,
19:11but I do leave it to you.
19:12But there was also,
19:13likewise,
19:14a pair of tramps
19:14and a stool
19:15and an umberbread
19:16and a clothes sauce
19:18in a tray.
19:18But as I say,
19:19I do leave it to you.
19:20Come, Wig,
19:21here's a couple
19:22of sovereigns.
19:22Oh,
19:23that out of respect,
19:25I could not accept that.
19:26Nobody wants you.
19:27Get out here,
19:28where are you going?
19:29No,
19:29no!
19:30No!
19:30Stop it!
19:34Oh,
19:38put me down!
19:39Put me down!
19:40Put me down!
19:41Oh!
19:41The violence!
19:55Well, dear little Pa, now you've seen everything.
19:58Except my two boffins, and they've gone out.
20:00I'm sorry, my dear, I would have liked to have seen them.
20:02Such noble generosity is rarely found, my love.
20:06Soon you'll be able to see them every day.
20:08I'm stunned already with what you told me.
20:10You must forgive me if I don't understand you.
20:13How can I see them every day?
20:15Well, they've asked me to ask you,
20:17and I want to say this before Ma and Lavi come,
20:20to be their secretary.
20:22Or rather, John wants you to be his secretary.
20:24So you'll just have to give notice to that horrid old firm
20:26that's overworked you for years.
20:28But, my dear, I...
20:29Don't bother, there's Ma.
20:32Ah, how do you do, Mrs Wilford?
20:34How do you do?
20:35How are you, Ma?
20:36Oh, I'm telling her, my dear.
20:38Give me a kiss, Lavi.
20:40Hello, George.
20:41My child, I trust, as well.
20:43She looks fine.
20:44So does the men.
20:45Would you come in, Mrs Wilford, and sit down?
20:48You were so kind as to send an equipage
20:51to fetch us from our humble abode.
20:53It was a pleasure.
20:53Please, please sit down.
20:55Now, let us all have a glass of wine.
21:00Mrs Wilford?
21:02Mrs Wilford.
21:03Come here.
21:03Marbella.
21:07Thank you, sir.
21:07Drink with me.
21:09To your father, whom I know well,
21:11and to your mother, whom I hope to know better.
21:17I wish to goodness, Ma, that you'd lol a little.
21:20How lol?
21:21Yes, Ma, lol.
21:23I hope, Lavinia.
21:24I am incapable of it.
21:25I'm sure you look so.
21:27So why won't you go to visit one's daughter or one's sister
21:29as if one's under petticoat was a backboard?
21:31I do not understand.
21:32Neither do I understand how in company a young lady
21:35can mention such a garment.
21:37I blush for you.
21:38Well, after all, ma'am, we know it's there.
21:40You know it's there?
21:42Merely, George.
21:43I don't understand your illusions.
21:45I think them personal and indelegate.
21:47Lavinia, I did you...
21:48George Samson, I cannot permit you to misrepresent
21:51the intentions of a child of mine.
21:53Leave him alone, Ma, for goodness' sake.
21:55Dearest Lavinia, I adore you.
21:57If you can't do it in a more agreeable manner,
21:59I wish you wouldn't.
22:01Nevertheless, George, I am still you.
22:03My...
22:04My dears, my dears,
22:05you could just be a little less wearing now
22:07within Bella's house.
22:08Ah, darling, you...
22:09Stop.
22:09I was not a bear.
22:11She's so delicious.
22:12She is my mother, after all.
22:14I can never believe that you're hers.
22:16I can believe that you're your father's daughter.
22:17I can never believe that you're hers.
22:19She always looks as if she's about to mount the scaffold.
22:22John, I shall scold you in a minute if you're not quiet.
22:25I want to talk to you.
22:26Let's go outside for a minute.
22:29Pardon me, R.W.
22:35Oh, what is it here?
22:37Well, John, since I've known all the details
22:40of the awful things that happened to you since you landed,
22:42it seems to me that a lot of people
22:44have been involved in this through no fault of their own.
22:47People who are, well, not as well off as they might be.
22:50Well, who are you thinking of, my darling?
22:52Well, there's Lucy.
22:53Had a lot of fun, I had a day.
22:55Eugene's slowly improving, she says.
22:56Isn't it wonderful what she's done for him?
22:59Do you know, couldn't we invite them to come and stay,
23:02when he's well enough to scan the journey?
23:03Of course, my darling.
23:04And the boffins, they must never leave us, John.
23:07They shall stay as long as you like.
23:08And they're sloppy, of course.
23:10We mustn't forget him or Mr. Venus.
23:11We won't forget anyone.
23:13My dear sweet girl.
23:15Then may I write to Lizzie and invite them?
23:17You may do anything and everything you want forever, my dear.
23:23You've spent a good many weeks here, Eugene.
23:25Must seem like home to you.
23:27Well, it is my home for the time being, at any rate.
23:29We don't know yet where we shall live, do we, Lizzie?
23:31Anywhere, as long as you get well, Eugene.
23:33Well, aren't I doing famously?
23:35Would you believe it, Mr. Lightfoot?
23:36On our wedding day, he said the best thing he could do
23:39would be to die.
23:40Well, I didn't.
23:41It's all your fault.
23:42You'll live to regret it, my girl.
23:43You're getting better.
23:44Don't you believe him, Lizzie?
23:46He's the best fellow in the world.
23:47Well, there's no need to tell her that.
23:48The poor girl believes it already.
23:50I'll go and get tea ready.
23:51I expect you two want to talk.
23:53Don't get too tired, did you?
23:56Here.
24:00You must see, Mortimer, what a wonderful girl she is.
24:04I do?
24:05She's quite right.
24:06I do want to talk to you.
24:07First of all, I want to thank you for your kind care and attention
24:10when I was lying here.
24:11Oh, my dear old fellow.
24:12Then for arranging the marriage and extricating my money affairs
24:14so I'm straight for once.
24:16Well, you needn't only thank me for that.
24:17Our old friend Ryer was invaluable.
24:19I'm thinking of giving him a stool in my office.
24:21I hope I may treat him better than the abominable fledgably.
24:23Are you doing so well that you can afford to take on a clerk?
24:26Well, it's all due to the indefatigable boffins,
24:29or Harmon, or both.
24:30The number of people on whom they settle annuities
24:32and the business connected with that
24:33and the investigation of all these wills
24:35seems to have attracted other business.
24:37But, Eugene, what are your plans?
24:39Oh, I don't know yet.
24:42I did have some notion of taking my wife to one of the colonies
24:44and working out my vocation, whatever it is.
24:47I shall miss you.
24:48But you may be right.
24:49No, not right. Wrong.
24:50Wrong?
24:51I only thought about it.
24:52It didn't take me long to see just how wrong it would be.
24:55Shall I turn coward and sneak away with her
24:57as if I were ashamed of my Lizzie?
24:59But would you not rather start a new life with you
25:01somewhere far from society?
25:04Society?
25:04Society?
25:05I've done with society.
25:07The Lammels, the Fledgbys, the Veneerings,
25:10the Podsnaps and all their hangers-on.
25:12Little Twemlow was the only decent one among them.
25:14He's one of my new clients, by the way.
25:16He doesn't know it, but John Harmon eased his position too.
25:19What became of Mr. and Mrs. Lammel?
25:20Oh, they were sold up and had to leave the country.
25:22You see?
25:23They are the kind that have to run away and hide.
25:26Do you ever think of Headstone?
25:27Never, nor do I wish to.
25:31I know.
25:32He's a dangerous man.
25:33I don't think he should be at large.
25:34You're to do nothing, do you hear?
25:35You promised me, Mortimer.
25:37Yes, yes, I promised.
25:38Calm yourself, Eugene.
25:40I'll keep that promise.
25:41Could you open the door for me, Mr. Lightwood, please?
25:51I hear some news of old little friend Jenny.
25:53It seems that she's somewhat taken up
25:55with a young man called, um, Sloppy.
25:57Oh, well, I hope he's good enough for her.
26:00She's always had a rather grand idea
26:01that one day a Prince Charming would come along to play with her.
26:03Well, I wouldn't call him a Prince Charming, exactly,
26:05but he's as honest as the day.
26:07It seems that Jenny was making some rather small garments
26:10for Mrs. John Harmon, and Sloppy was sent to fetch them.
26:12Now he's making some really exquisite furniture for her dolls.
26:16Dear Jenny Wren.
26:18Amen to that.
26:19Milk and sugar, Mr. Lightwood.
26:27You don't need to be told again that I'm here.
26:30Who's to begin?
26:31I'll begin.
26:33Here it'll finish me pipe.
26:35Well, what do you want with me?
26:38First of all, you watch.
26:42I haven't got it with me.
26:42I want it, and I mean to have it.
26:47Then, I want money.
26:50Anything else?
26:51Everything else.
26:53Well, don't have me like that,
26:55or else I can't talk to you at all.
26:57Instead of talking, I'll bring my hand down upon you
26:59with all this weight, and smash you.
27:02Go on.
27:02I'll go on.
27:04Don't you fear.
27:05Well, look here, Bradley Edgestone, schoolmaster.
27:16You might have spit young Raybond at ships and witches
27:18without me caring.
27:20Perhaps to come on you for a glass or two now and again.
27:24But when it comes to copying my clothes,
27:27and my neckature,
27:28and taking care to spill blood on me,
27:31you've done something I'll be paid for,
27:33and paid heavy.
27:35If it had been thrown up on you,
27:37you'd have thrown it up on me all right.
27:40Look to the lockkeeper at Plushwater, you'd say.
27:44See if he ain't dressed in clothes with blood on him.
27:47Oh, you're sliding off.
27:49You're wasting your breath.
27:50You can prove nothing.
27:50Oh, but I can see.
27:53I apologize.
27:55I've seen you throw them clothes in the river.
27:57And I hucked them out.
28:00All tore from their struggle.
28:02And I've got them.
28:04And I've got you.
28:05I can't get blood out of a stone.
28:06Oh, I can get money out of a school monster.
28:11I mean, I have every article you've got.
28:13Every stick in your ass.
28:14Every penny you can beg,
28:16borrow or get trusted with.
28:17And when you've ended up with everything.
28:19Everything, mind you.
28:20Then I'll leave you, not a fool.
28:23What do you mean, leave me?
28:26I mean, I'll keep you company, wherever you go.
28:31Let the lock take care of itself.
28:33Oh, no better way of living now.
28:35Righterhood, listen to me.
28:37This is all the money I've got in the world.
28:39Say I let you have this,
28:40and say I let you have my watch,
28:41and say every quarter when I get my salary,
28:43I'd like to have a part of that.
28:44Say, no, no, no, no, fine.
28:46You've got away with me once.
28:47I'm troubling about it, I'll find you.
28:50I want me to have one settlement for good and all.
28:52You're asking what's impossible.
28:55You're much better accessible.
28:57May I bear my mind to it.
28:59Well, stop here that night.
29:02I've only done many a time before.
29:04And in the morning,
29:06we go together
29:07to collect my little jewels.
29:11I've got nothing more to say.
29:15Why, I've got to
29:16I've got to say just as well walk in this setting.
29:20Yeah.
29:22You'd better buy half
29:31be a reasonable headstone mill
29:33so I'll drain you all the dryer
29:35when we do settle.
29:36Let me go.
29:38I'll slash you whatever I can.
29:41Let me go.
29:42What are you doing?
29:42I'm...
29:43You...
29:44You...
29:45Let me go.
29:48You can't find me.
29:50I can't be doing.
29:52I can't be.
29:56And I will be.
29:57I'll hold you living
29:58and I'll hold you dead.
30:00Yeah.
30:01Come down.
30:02No.
30:03No.
30:03No.
30:20No.
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