Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 4 hours ago

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:08Out of the blue, this handsome, gorgeous man appeared.
00:11So now you're living the fairy tale?
00:13To the happy couple?
00:14Cheers.
00:15Well, you know our Tommy.
00:16Can't say no to a pretty face.
00:18Unless they're trying to tie him down.
00:19So you need to get out of the strip club and call me back?
00:22You can't just ignore me, Tommy.
00:23It's not funny.
00:25You said there were certain things that happened in your childhood
00:28and your parents didn't want to know about.
00:30Do you feel that's what's happening here?
00:31I have tried to kill myself in the past.
00:33I just need to know that you're not using me.
00:35I wouldn't do that.
00:36Things seem to be getting much faster between the two of you.
00:38I think you may be planning to propose when we're in France.
00:41Mum was saying you're buying a place in the Cotswolds.
00:43He's always had an excellent head for business.
00:45Sorry, so the cottage is for your mother?
00:47Loony bin, Jane.
00:48I'll just jump in the river, shall I?
00:49It'll solve all of your problems, won't it, Tommy?
00:51You're in sight.
00:52If we were married, you wouldn't treat me like this.
00:54But you would rather just keep stringing me along
00:56as long as Tommy gets what he wants.
00:58You are sick.
00:59Do you know that?
00:59Shut up!
01:00Will you shut up?
01:02There's something deeply wrong with you.
01:04What is it you want the police to do?
01:06I would like someone to stop us from hurting each other.
01:08If you don't have somebody here soon, somebody is.
01:10We're three days into a national manhunt
01:12and we're still no closer to bringing her in.
01:14If she's taking risks,
01:15maybe she intends to be dead before we can get to her.
01:34They found the car.
01:36Local Bobby spotted the license plate from the road.
01:38Is she in it?
01:39We don't know yet.
01:40Parked in a lay-by, no signs of movement.
01:43He's asking if he should approach?
01:45Yeah, tell him yes, but with caution.
01:58Jane?
02:01Jane Andrews?
02:05You OK?
02:06Can you open this door?
02:09Jane?
02:11Jane?
02:17Jane Andrews?
02:39I'm Detective Chief Inspector Keith Douglas,
02:42attached to the Serious Crime Group.
02:44The other officer is?
02:46Detective Sergeant Case Mott,
02:47also attached to the Serious Crime Group.
02:50We are in the interview room
02:52at Bloomsbury Police Station.
02:53I'm interviewing.
02:55Please, could you state your full name?
02:59Jane Dawn Elizabeth Andrews.
03:06Whatever happened between them,
03:08it couldn't have been deliberate.
03:10I mean,
03:11Jane, he can't have been in her right mind.
03:13Cut there.
03:14Just one moment, Francesca.
03:15Was that not...
03:16That was great.
03:17We just need to check your mic for sound.
03:19Oh, OK.
03:20Yeah, we're all good.
03:21So, if you can go back to before Tommy's death,
03:23did you ever think he might be in danger?
03:29You have to remember, she really did love him.
03:34She was a woman scorned, and she took her revenge.
03:38I think she was telling the truth.
03:41She was prepared to say anything to save her skin.
03:44You've told us that after Thomas Cressman's call to the emergency services,
03:50the arguments continued.
03:52And then you decided to leave the house.
03:57You drove around for a while,
03:59and following a phone conversation with Mr. Cressman,
04:03you decided to return.
04:05Is that right?
04:07Yes.
04:09He said to come home, so I did.
04:11And when you got back, there was another big row,
04:14and you went up to bed.
04:17Yes.
04:19And I tried to go to sleep.
04:23But he called up next to me
04:26and said,
04:30but come on.
04:32I want to have sex with you.
04:34You know you like it.
04:37And then he
04:39sort of grabbed me.
04:42And, well, I was frightened, so I went down.
04:47And I
04:48got the cricket bat
04:51just to place next to the bed
04:54to protect myself.
04:59But then Tommy woke up,
05:00and he
05:01was going on about how horrible I was.
05:05And he kneed me in the back.
05:09And
05:12I should have just left.
05:16But I went down
05:18and I saw
05:20I saw the knife
05:22on the training board.
05:25And I thought if he did anything,
05:27I'd just say,
05:28look, I've got a knife.
05:31Don't touch me.
05:34And then eventually I went to sleep.
05:40And he just started hitting me.
05:43So I picked up the bat
05:45and I hit him.
05:46And he was lashing out at me
05:48and he was pulling my hair out.
05:50And so I grabbed the knife
05:52and he just came at me
05:53and I
05:54I didn't know what was happening.
05:55I just remember him falling down,
05:56so I ran out of the room.
05:58And then I panicked,
05:59so I got in my car
06:00and I just
06:02I just drove
06:03and drove and drove.
06:11So after leaving the house
06:14you made a number of calls
06:15and sent a number of text messages.
06:19Well, you seemed unaware
06:20of what happened to Mr. Cressman.
06:22Were you trying to convince your friends
06:24that his death has nothing to do with you?
06:26No, I just...
06:36I didn't know he was dead.
06:41Denying it,
06:42claiming it was an accident,
06:44the story was all over the place
06:46from the start.
06:47Now, if in doubt,
06:48play the self-defense card.
06:50But we had what we needed
06:51so we charged her with murder.
06:53The only surprise
06:54was that she got bail.
07:03Janey,
07:04I want you a cup of tea, love.
07:06Thanks, ma'am.
07:09You're settling in then,
07:10that's good.
07:15That, um...
07:16That lady solicitor called.
07:21She wants you to ring her back
07:22about a meeting next week.
07:26OK.
07:27Does that mean you have to
07:28go back down to London?
07:30I guess so.
07:32You said they'd sort somewhere
07:34for me to stay.
07:39Where did Dad put my sewing machine?
07:41Ah, it's on the landing.
07:45She sounded very on the ball.
07:48The solicitor.
07:51I'm sure she'll be able
07:52to sort things out.
07:54That's not really how it works, ma'am.
07:56You can't just sort it out.
08:01But it wasn't your fault, was it?
08:03I mean, it's like you say.
08:05It was an accident.
08:08You didn't mean for it to happen.
08:10No, of course not.
08:13Do we still have that
08:15gingham cotton that I bought?
08:16The pale blue one.
08:19I don't know.
08:20It might be in the airing cupboard.
08:26All right, Jane, love.
08:28This just came for you.
08:39I told her you'd be welcome
08:40to stay with us during the trial,
08:42especially after reading
08:43such diabolical things
08:45in the papers.
08:47I've been trying not to look.
08:49Of course.
08:50I knew there had to be more to it.
08:53All this talk of premeditated murder
08:56simply didn't ring true.
08:58It's not.
09:01I love Tommy.
09:05I never meant to hurt him.
09:09That's what I told the police.
09:12I was just trying to get away from him.
09:15I had no idea he was badly hurt.
09:20I thought I'd just given him a scratch.
09:22A scratch?
09:25Oh, you poor thing.
09:30And did the Duchess really contact you
09:32while you were on the run?
09:35Yes.
09:36Yes, she did.
09:38Well, that's quite something.
09:40Clearly, she still cares about you.
09:42I know.
09:45I'm making matching gingham dresses
09:47for Beatrice and Eugenie.
09:49Are you?
09:50Yes, I thank you.
09:53How sweet.
09:54I'm making a lot of money.
10:24I'm making a lot of money.
10:24Coffee, darling?
10:26Please.
10:29Thank you so much for this.
10:32I really appreciate you both letting me stay.
10:34Well, Roger and I are happy to help.
10:42Pay no attention.
10:44At the end of the day, it doesn't matter what rubbish they print.
10:47No, you're right.
10:49You just tell the truth and it'll all come out in the wash.
10:52I've always had the utmost faith in British justice.
11:28Everyone had made up their minds, the press, the public.
11:31They cast her as this bunny boiler.
11:35There she was.
11:36On every front page.
11:38Just like when she was with Fergie.
11:40Before she was lapping it up.
11:47Head to toe in black.
11:48Like she was some sort of grieving widow.
11:52I mean, seriously.
12:02Poor thing must have been terrified.
12:10There is no doubt as to the identity of Thomas Cressman's killer.
12:17Jane Andrews wielded the bat and held the knife.
12:23The real question we must consider is why she committed these violent acts.
12:28And on this occasion, we need not look far for motive.
12:31For as you will see, hers was the classic one of the jilted and betrayed lover.
12:36Having learned that Mr. Cressman no longer intended to marry her,
12:39she returned to that house with one thought in mind.
12:43Namely, to take her revenge by ending his life.
12:48Now, the defense will try and persuade you that Miss Andrews was acting in self-defense.
12:54That she was afraid for her own safety.
12:56And in order to support this, they will paint a picture of the deceased
13:02that bears no relation to the truth.
13:07Indeed, the evidence will show you that it was, in fact, Jane herself,
13:12who was the controlling and ultimately violent partner in this relationship,
13:16a relationship that was brutally ended by a cold-blooded, premeditated murder.
13:39The body of the deceased was in a very awkward position, wedged between the bed and the wall.
13:48We could see that he'd been stabbed in the chest and his hands were like this,
13:54almost as if he was trying to cover the wound or extract the knife from his body.
14:00Can you describe the knife that you found at the scene?
14:03It was a kitchen knife with an eight-inch blade,
14:06and it had been taken from the block in the kitchen.
14:09Well, it appeared that Mr. Cressman had also been hit over the head
14:12with a cricket bat and stunned prior to being stabbed.
14:16Was there any sign that Mr. Cressman had attempted to defend himself against the attack?
14:22No, there was not. No defensive wounds were found on his body.
14:27No defensive wounds, suggesting that Tommy was defenseless when the attack came?
14:39Well, I'm sure things will go better this afternoon.
14:45I'm sure they will.
14:55Seeing her in court was pretty unpleasant, as you can imagine.
14:59But someone needed to speak for Tommy.
15:02What did you make of Jane Andrews when she and Tom first began dating?
15:09I was aware of who she was and where she'd worked.
15:13And I think that had maybe impressed Tom a bit.
15:16And I'm sure she was attracted to him.
15:18But I think, ultimately, she was very attracted to his lifestyle.
15:22Did you have any misgivings about the relationship?
15:27It was kind of full-on from the start.
15:30Jane became increasingly possessive.
15:33She basically gave him no space.
15:35And how did Tommy respond when faced with this kind of behavior?
15:40And Tommy was an incredibly gentle kind of guy.
15:45Plus, he was worried about what she would do.
15:58I could have done that for you.
16:00It's fine what it's done, no.
16:07This house is something else.
16:11You'll have to buy Alexander a present to say thank you when all this is, you know.
16:17I shall when I get a chance.
16:21Everything's going to be all right, you'll see.
16:24And tomorrow, you'll tell your side of the story.
16:31Put things straight.
16:37Mum, tomorrow there's going to be things you won't want to hear.
16:44Right.
16:47Things that happened to me when I was young.
16:50Oh, Jane.
16:51So if you'd rather not be there, you and Dad?
16:59No.
17:01No.
17:01No, we'll be there.
17:07You just...
17:08You say what you have to...
17:43Miss Andrews, before dealing with the events of that night, I want to deal briefly with your medical history.
17:54In the spring of 1999, did you undergo a few sessions with a private psychotherapist?
18:01Yes, I did.
18:03Tom arranged them for me.
18:05And what was the particular focus of the psychotherapy?
18:11To deal with my abuse as a child.
18:18And the abuse to which you refer, was it sexual abuse?
18:23Yes.
18:25At about what age, so far as you were concerned?
18:33About eight years old.
18:35Am I right in saying you do not wish to say who was involved in that?
18:40That is correct.
18:41But am I right that we are not talking about a parental abuse?
18:46That's right, yes.
18:47So, during your relationship with Thomas Cressman, you were still dealing with the effects of that abuse.
18:54This left you with a heightened perception of threat, is that right?
18:58Yes.
18:58And in a high-stress situation, you would find yourself less able to make rational judgments.
19:04Instead, finding yourself in a sort of grey mist of helplessness.
19:10Is that right?
19:12Yes, that's true.
19:15Can you now tell me about your relationship with Mr. Cressman?
19:19Tommy and I were together for nearly two years.
19:22I was devoted to him.
19:25But, in terms of your sex life, would it be correct to say that you were relatively innocent and straight
19:34-laced sexually,
19:36whereas Thomas was relatively adventurous?
19:39Yes, that's true.
19:41In what ways, Miss Andrews, was Thomas relatively adventurous so far as you were concerned?
19:49He would want to have anal sex with me.
19:55And he wanted me to dress up in kinky clothing.
20:00You also discovered sexually explicit emails on Mr. Cressman's computer, did you not?
20:09Did you take these to imply that Mr. Cressman was no longer committed to your relationship?
20:15What was his attitude to your future together?
20:18He was committed.
20:24But he had periods of confusing moments on his part, where he would say that he needed space.
20:34And this caused rouse between you?
20:36Yes.
20:39Because I would push him to find out where our future was going.
20:45And are we talking merely about rouse where people shouted at each other?
20:49Or was there, on occasion, more than that?
20:52Yes.
20:54In the sense that...?
20:58That he hit me.
21:00And, on another occasion, when we were arguing, he pushed me down the stairs.
21:09Well, we'd been warned that things were probably going to get pretty nasty.
21:14And, er, so it began.
21:16Well, now we come to the rouse between yourself and Tom on Saturday the 16th of September last year.
21:24Yes.
21:25The Saturday morning, he calls and tells me things with Jane were just awful.
21:33He sounded stressed.
21:35And hassled.
21:37I told him if they got married, this is how it would be.
21:42She was just...
21:43too hysterical.
21:45I asked him what had started the argument, and he said that she wanted to know if they were getting
21:50married,
21:50and he told her that she wasn't...
21:55stable enough to be the mother of his children.
21:58Was there one aspect of those rows which you did not tell the police about?
22:03What?
22:09On Saturday morning, he put a pillow over my head and tied me to the bed.
22:21His full weight was on top of me.
22:29And he anally raped me.
22:40I mean, they basically threw everything at it.
22:43But to say she was raped, you know, and like that, I mean, to be honest, it was just disgusting.
22:52Vile.
22:55Despicable lies.
23:01I don't know.
23:03Miss Andrews, when you placed a knife by your bed, what exactly did you fear might happen?
23:11I was afraid that he was going to rape me again like he had that morning.
23:15And when he began to attack you, you tried to ward him off.
23:19First with a blow from the cricket bat, and when that failed, you took up the knife.
23:26Yes.
23:27Did you, however, intend that Thomas Cressman be stabbed with it?
23:33No, not at all.
23:37We just came together, and the next thing I knew, he was on top of me.
23:43And that's the point the knife went in?
23:51And at that stage, did you know how badly injured he was?
23:57No.
24:00I just panicked.
24:03I crawled out from underneath him, and ran out of the room.
24:10I was terrified that he was going to come after me.
24:16So I took my dressing gown cord, and tied the door.
24:21I couldn't think.
24:22So one might say you were in a grey mist?
24:26Yes.
24:28And as you left the house, was there any sight of you?
24:31Was there any sight or sound from Tom?
24:34No.
24:38No, there was nothing.
24:44That's when I realised he must be dead.
24:48Well, you see, that's when her story really began to change.
24:52This was quite different to the tale I'd been told.
24:55Then I realised that I had made a dreadful mistake.
25:00There are one or two things that are a bit confusing.
25:06What do you mean?
25:09Well, you said yourself you told differing versions to different people.
25:15Yes, because I was confused.
25:19And scared.
25:21Right.
25:27It's just you told me that you thought you'd given him a scratch.
25:31But then today, you said you knew he was dead before you left the house.
25:36Yes.
25:43I know. I just...
25:47Couldn't even admit it to myself.
25:55You know, Roger and I have been talking and he feels, we both feel, that actually it might be more
26:04appropriate for you to move into a hotel for the remainder of the trial.
26:10Maybe tomorrow.
26:12I see.
26:14It's just simpler all round.
26:17Don't you think?
26:40Can you use here?
26:43Maybe not.
26:51Would you like me to give me a second place to see you in a hurry?
26:51It's still a few days after I sit down.
26:52Try keeping up here, I guess.
26:55Love you guys.
26:56There's so many people in my house.
26:57What did you think?
26:57You know, I had a question.
26:57I'm going to ask you.
26:59You know, I'm going to ask for a minute .
27:05You know, I'm going to ask for an hour for a minute,
27:24Oh, hey.
27:27Don't make a joke.
27:50Don't make a joke.
28:11So, Miss Andrews, you left the house in the early hours of Sunday morning and spent
28:20the next two and a half days driving around the country, during which time, as far as
28:27you knew, nobody had found Tom's body.
28:32Why not tell someone?
28:33Even as you were keying in messages and speaking to people on your phone, why did you not say
28:38this man was lying there, dying?
28:43I didn't want anybody to think I'd fled the scene.
28:48Left Tom to die in that room.
28:50Oh, so the messages were calculated to mislead?
28:54No.
28:58I know it's absurd.
28:59It doesn't make any sense.
29:00No, no.
29:01It makes perfect sense.
29:03This was no grey mist.
29:05Uh, whatever that may be.
29:07Rather, you were deliberately attempting to mislead your friends and former husband.
29:12And now you've told this court that you'd been admitted to Charing Cross Hospital after falling
29:17down some stairs.
29:18Tommy pushed me down the stairs.
29:20I was very upset.
29:21But you never told that to any doctor, to any police officer, did you?
29:24Just as you never told anyone about the occasion you say you got a bruise on your head because
29:30he hit you.
29:32No, because I was too ashamed.
29:33When you're talking to the police, this is not a time for shame, is it?
29:37I just wanted to get the interview over and done with.
29:39But what was the reason that you failed to mention something that you now rely on in this
29:44court?
29:45Namely that earlier that day, he had had sexual intercourse with you by force.
29:51Because I was totally ashamed and embarrassed.
29:56You were seen three times by a woman doctor at the police station.
29:59It was a private examination.
30:00You could have drawn attention if you wished to anything that had happened to you that
30:04you felt might be relevant to the trouble that you were facing.
30:06But you did not draw anyone's attention to it, did you?
30:09I was too dramatized by the whole thing.
30:11Well, you were in a fit state to be interviewed and to explain all you did to the police.
30:16Why not explain to the doctor?
30:18I've been raped.
30:19And there will be physical signs of that if you have a look.
30:23I physically could not.
30:25You didn't tell anyone about it because it's completely invented.
30:28You invented that story.
30:30In fact, both stories about anal rape, both in the morning and the alleged second attempt
30:34that evening, just completely invented, are they not?
30:36No, not at all.
30:37Ever since your arrest, you have fabricated a succession of contradictory stories in a
30:42blatant attempt to escape blame for Thomas Cressman's death, have you not?
30:46No, it's not true.
30:47Even now, the evidence you've presented here in court is riddled with inconsistencies.
30:52You claim that Mr. Cressman attacked you that morning, and as a result, you left the house
30:56for several hours, but then you chose to return.
30:58You claim that you feared further sexual assault, yet in the next breath, you're saying you happily
31:02took off your clothes and got into bed beside him.
31:04Why would you do that?
31:08Tom wanted me to sleep in his bed.
31:12I couldn't say no.
31:13So, you are afraid for your safety, yet you left the bedroom multiple times, went up and
31:20down the stairs, first to fetch a bat, later to arm yourself with a knife, which means
31:24that at any point, you could have left that house again, but you chose not to.
31:28Now, that makes no sense, does it?
31:30I was afraid of what Tommy might do.
31:31Meanwhile, your description of the attack has changed.
31:36When talking to the police, you said that Mr. Cressman said that he was going to hurt
31:39you.
31:40However, as soon as you reached court, you're claiming that he shouted that he was going
31:42to fucking kill you.
31:44You claimed initially you thought you'd just given him a scratch, but now you say you were
31:47so covered in blood that you assumed he must be dead.
31:50Not one word of it rings true.
31:57It's hard to remember.
32:01Everything just happens so fast.
32:05We earlier heard that Tom had arranged for you to see a psychiatrist to help with your
32:11problems.
32:12What problems were they again?
32:16My child abuse.
32:17Oh, yeah, the child abuse that you've now chosen to reveal in court.
32:20No, thanks.
32:20And about which you refuse to disclose any details.
32:23I don't want to.
32:23Which is entirely your right, but you must agree it seems convenient, does it not, to present
32:27us with an allegation which has never been officially made, nor legally proven.
32:37Do you want a break?
32:44Ten minutes, members of the jury.
33:07Jane, are you all right?
33:32Antibiotics.
33:37Doctor says it's just a low-grade infection.
33:41You must have been feeling poorly for days.
33:45A bit.
33:48Bless you.
33:49Us women just soldier on, don't we?
33:52We have to.
33:57We have to.
34:10Yes, sir.
34:18I want to.
34:21I want to.
34:22I want to.
34:23I don't know.
34:59Would the foreman of the jury please stand?
35:03Have you reached a verdict?
35:05Yes.
35:06On the count of murder, do you find the defendant, Jane Andrews, guilty or not guilty?
35:15Guilty.
35:26I think she honestly thought she'd get away with it.
35:49Jane Andrews.
35:52In killing the man you love, you ended his life and ruined your own.
35:59It is evident that you made your attack on him when you were consumed with anger and bitterness.
36:07But nothing could justify what you did.
36:11Even if you were feeling wronged and were emotionally vulnerable, you were attacking an unarmed man who had possibly been
36:20asleep only a few minutes before you attacked him.
36:24You then left him to die without rewards.
36:29Therefore, as your counsel recognizes, there is only one sentence I can place according to.
36:39And that is life imprisonment.
36:47People don't believe her, but that doesn't mean Jane isn't telling the truth.
36:55It just means people don't want to believe her.
36:57There's no excuse for what she did.
37:01And I know no one wants to speak ill of the dead, but Tom wasn't an angel and Janey wasn't
37:07a monster either.
37:10The whole thing is just terribly, terribly sad.
37:16The fact is, she's a murderer, however you want to look at it.
37:20She was a woman scorned and she took Thomas Cressman's life in anger.
37:24And even that wasn't enough for her.
37:26She had to try and destroy his good name.
37:29But, you know, at the end of the day, we didn't let her get away with it.
37:36Any other personal items?
37:41I know you can keep that.
37:42Well, unless it's valuable.
37:45No.
37:46No.
37:48It's just...
37:49It was a present from the Duchess of York, actually.
37:52No one asks for your life story, love.
37:58Follow me.
38:09Hey, up.
38:10It's Fergie's bed.
38:11No!
38:12No!
38:13Come home, Your Majesty.
38:48So, how have you been this week?
38:52Pretty much the same.
38:55Jane, as we discussed last time, I think your earlier diagnosis of depression was correct.
39:02Right.
39:04But, now that I'm getting to know you better, I think it possibly doesn't explain everything you're dealing with.
39:13Have you ever heard of borderline personality disorder?
39:20No, I don't think so.
39:23Well, a person with BPD often has a long-standing pattern of thoughts and feelings that probably began when they
39:30were very young.
39:31They experience certain recurrent impulses and ways of being in relationships, which often cause them a lot of distress, and
39:39which often involve self-damaging behaviours.
39:42So, things like recurrent suicidal threats.
39:48Does any of that feel familiar to you?
39:53I don't know.
39:57Maybe.
39:59Okay.
40:01Well, we often find that there are other common behaviours too.
40:06People with BPD feel deeply entrenched shame.
40:11So, whenever they make mistakes or have weaknesses, they try very hard to avoid admitting it.
40:18And sometimes that means they lie, so they don't have to face it.
40:25Right.
40:28But, that doesn't mean they're trying to deceive.
40:32But they're a way of coping when you're feeling a lot of pain.
40:36It's a bit like going out in the sun when you're already sunburned.
40:41If you're already feeling emotionally raw, you can't begin to make healthy emotional connections.
40:52So, I need to stay out of the sun?
40:54For now.
40:56Well, that shouldn't be a problem.
40:59Jane, with the right support, you can begin to learn to control your behavioural triggers.
41:05Right, it'll take work.
41:07But I really think this could be a whole fresh start for you.
41:17How are your sessions going with Dr Chowdhury?
41:20Yeah, good.
41:22They're doing a lot of work on my triggers.
41:25Identifying behavioural patterns, you know.
41:28Working through why I do the things that I do.
41:31I think it's really helping.
41:34And...
41:35Has there been any more news about the appeal?
41:39Mum, I told you, they said it'd be ages before we hear it.
41:43But it should make a difference, shouldn't it, this diagnosis?
41:47It changes everything, really.
41:50And the new solicitor thinks there are new avenues that we can explore.
41:54That's really good, Jane.
41:56Mm.
41:58Can't believe it's Christmas already.
42:03We had a card.
42:05Sorry?
42:07We had a Christmas card from Mr and Mrs Cressman.
42:13They said they knew it would be a difficult Christmas and...
42:16They sent their best wishes and...
42:21That was...
42:23That...
42:24That was kind of them, wasn't it?
42:27I wondered if we...
42:29Listen, Mum, I've got to go soon.
42:31No, no, of course!
42:32Er, Jane?
42:34Jane, will we, erm...
42:36Will we speak to you on Christmas Day?
42:37I hate to think of you all alone in that place.
42:41Actually, I've made a new friend.
42:44Oh!
42:46Well, more of a pen pal.
43:03The way she's been portrayed as completely hard and unfeeling,
43:08that's not Janie.
43:10If anything, she feels things much too deeply.
43:15She had all these...
43:18lovely dreams of a great fairytale romance,
43:21and when that fell apart, so did she.
43:24The fact is that woman...
43:27never showed any remorse.
43:31Not to me.
43:35Or to my family.
43:38So, if you ask me, they should never let her out.
43:42And...
43:43Any man...
43:44who gets involved with her...
43:48should be very...
43:50very careful.
43:58I miss Tommy every single day.
44:04Ah, the sound of his voice.
44:08The way he laughed.
44:11Silly jokes.
44:15He had this incredible gift...
44:18for living.
44:23He was my...
44:25my beautiful boy.
44:28And now he's gone.
44:39I just want to keep my brother's memory alive.
44:41I just want to keep my brother's memory alive.
44:51Can we stop there?
44:54Of course.
44:55And now he's gone.
44:56I'm sorry.
45:08I'm sorry.
45:13I'm sorry.
45:16I can't...
45:17you're gonna tell me about that.
45:18No one else.
45:21I'm sorry.
45:23I want you...
45:24I want you...
45:25I want you...
Comments

Recommended