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00:00To be continued...
00:52ORGAN PLAYS
01:13Oh, girls, girls, watchin' wild.
01:46ORGAN PLAYS
01:51Oh, Mr. Scott Eccles.
01:53Oh, Mr. Garcia.
01:55I'm sorry, I did not recognize you at once.
01:57Please allow me to carry your case.
01:59I still love you. Thank you very much.
02:02I'm sorry the weather has been unkind for your visit.
02:05Ah, well, unkind for you, perhaps,
02:08but we British, you know,
02:10we're hardy souls.
02:20The county of Surrey
02:21is particularly interesting,
02:23as far as the maps are concerned.
02:32I'm looking forward to showing you
02:34my entire collection
02:36of sunny maps.
02:37I mean, there's Maul and Oglebay.
02:39I've got one or two here I can show you.
02:47He used to draw...
02:48I've got one or two.
03:17Oh, this is your house, is it?
03:19Yes, please.
03:20You're welcome.
03:21It's very nice.
03:24I suppose, Watson,
03:27we must look upon you
03:27as a man of letters.
03:30How do you define the word
03:32grotesque?
03:34Grotesque?
03:36Oh, strange?
03:39Remarkable?
03:39No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
03:40Surely there's more to it than that.
03:43Some underlying suggestion
03:45of the tragic,
03:47the terrible.
03:49If you cast your mind back
03:50to those narratives
03:51with which you've inflicted
03:52a long-suffering public,
03:54you will see
03:56how often the word
03:58grotesque
04:00has deepened into the criminal.
04:07I suppose
04:07the affair
04:10of the red-headed men
04:11was grotesque enough
04:12at the outset.
04:15Oh,
04:16all that
04:16most grotesque affair
04:19with the five orange pips.
04:21Yes, which led straight
04:21to a murderous conspiracy.
04:23Now, the word
04:25puts me on the alert.
04:27Oh, haven't you there?
04:30I've just had
04:31the most incredible
04:33and grotesque experience.
04:36May I consult you,
04:38Scott Eccles?
04:40Post office,
04:41Charing Cross.
04:42Oh.
04:44A man or a woman?
04:45A man!
04:47No woman
04:48would send a reply
04:49paid telegram,
04:50she would have come.
04:52Did you see him?
04:54Oh, my dear Watson.
04:58You know
05:00how bored
05:01I've been
05:04since we locked up
05:05Colonel Carruthers.
05:08Life
05:10is commonplace.
05:13The newspapers
05:14are sterile,
05:16audacity,
05:17and a man
05:17seem to have passed
05:18forever from the criminal world.
05:20Of course,
05:21I'll see him.
05:23But as I've been
05:23very much mistaken,
05:24this is our client.
05:26Mr. Holmes.
05:27Thank you, Mrs. Hudson.
05:28Well, are you, Mr. Holmes?
05:29Certainly.
05:29Yes, Mr. Holmes,
05:30I have just had
05:31a most singular
05:32and unpleasant experience.
05:34It's never in my life
05:34have I been subject
05:35to such embarrassment
05:37and been placed
05:38in such a position.
05:41Please sit down,
05:42Mr. Scott Eccles,
05:42my friend and colleague,
05:43Dr. Watson,
05:44now in the first place,
05:45may I ask
05:45why you have come
05:46to me at all?
05:48Oh, well, sir,
05:49it didn't appear
05:49to be a matter
05:50which concerned the police.
05:51Yet,
05:52when you've heard the facts,
05:53you must admit
05:53I couldn't just
05:55leave it where it was.
05:56Now,
05:57private detectives,
05:58they're a class
05:58with whom I'm absolutely,
06:00I have no sympathy.
06:01Sit!
06:01Mr. Scott Eccles.
06:10Nonetheless,
06:12having heard your name,
06:13I decided...
06:15Now, the second place,
06:16why did you not
06:17come to me at once?
06:18What do you mean?
06:19Well, it is now
06:20a quarter past two.
06:23The telegram is dispatched
06:24about one.
06:25No one could glance
06:27at your toilet in that hour
06:28without seeing
06:29that your disturbance
06:29dates for the moment
06:30of your waking.
06:32What?
06:34You're right,
06:35Mr. Holmes.
06:36Yes.
06:37I never gave a thought
06:38to my toilet.
06:40I was only too glad
06:41to get out of such a house.
06:43Oh, no.
06:45No, thank you.
06:46You see,
06:48I've been running around
06:49making inquiries
06:50before I came here.
06:52I called at the house agents,
06:54you know.
06:54Oh, yes, yes.
06:55And they said,
06:56they said that,
06:57that Mr. Garcia's rent
06:59was paid up all right
07:00and that everything
07:02was in order
07:02in Mysterio Lodge.
07:04Oh, no, come, come.
07:05Come, sir.
07:07You know, you're like
07:07my friend Watson
07:08who has the bad habit
07:09of telling his stories
07:10wrong and foremost.
07:11Now, please,
07:12please,
07:13arrange your thoughts
07:14and let me know
07:15in their due sequence
07:17exactly what
07:18those events are
07:19which have sent you out
07:22unbrushed and unkempt
07:24with your dress boots
07:25and waistcoat
07:26buttoned awry
07:27in search of advice
07:29and assistance.
07:31Well,
07:32I'm a bachelor
07:34and being of a sociable turn,
07:38I cultivate a large number
07:40of friends.
07:42At the table of one of them
07:43recently,
07:44I met a young fellow
07:45named Garcia,
07:46a pleasant chap
07:47of Spanish descent,
07:49connected in some way
07:50with the embassy.
07:52We discovered
07:53a common interest
07:54in cartography.
07:56Or so I thought.
07:57That's the study
07:58of old maps.
07:59The plan was
08:00to retrace Surrey
08:01as Thomas Moule
08:03engraved it
08:03some 50 years ago.
08:05Well,
08:05as soon as I arrived
08:06yesterday evening,
08:08I knew something
08:09was wrong.
08:10The atmosphere
08:11of the place.
08:12The house
08:13was tumbled down
08:14and depressing.
08:16Garcia told me
08:17he had a wonderful cook,
08:19a half-breed
08:20he'd picked up
08:21on his travels.
08:22But the dinner,
08:24it was so ill-prepared
08:25and served
08:26with such bad grace
08:27that it was barely edible.
08:30I can assure you
08:32that there were
08:33many times
08:33in the course
08:34of the evening
08:35I wish I could have
08:37invented some excuse
08:38to leave.
08:38What did you say?
08:39Well,
08:39the roots.
08:40It's fascinating.
08:41John Rogelby.
08:42Across the heaths,
08:43lad.
08:43Ah,
08:43it wasn't just the heath,
08:45and it was all
08:46over the county.
08:48Say,
08:49are you feeling
08:49all right?
08:51Yes,
08:52sorry.
08:54Luis,
08:54Luis,
08:55someone want
08:55for a guest?
08:56Bien.
08:59Hombre,
09:01¿qué pasa más?
09:02Cálmate.
09:03¿Qué te pasa?
09:04Escucha.
09:06¿Qué te pasa?
09:08Mira,
09:09¿qué te pasa?
09:10Cálmate,
09:10cálmate.
09:11SÃ.
09:12Está llamando la atención.
09:15Entonces,
09:15espera.
09:16Ahà viene algo,
09:17ya.
09:17Ander la puerta.
09:22¿Qué pasa?
09:23¿Qué pasa?
09:27¿Qué pasa?
09:29¿Qué pasa?
09:30I would like
09:30a drink of that
09:31if it's possible.
09:37No.
09:48And he made no
09:49remark as to the
09:50contents of the note?
09:51None.
09:54but from that moment he gave up all pretence of conversation he just sat there smoking these
10:01endless cigarettes about eleven i was going to get to bed two hours later he looked in at my door
10:09did you ring did i ring oh please don't wake up it's nearly one o'clock please go back to
10:16sleep
10:17good night and now i come to the amazing part of my tail
10:30when i woke it was broad daylight nearly nine i had particularly asked to be called at eight
10:38so i was very much astonished at this forgetfulness
10:43i say is anybody here i'd like some hot water
10:47i rang for the servant there was no response
10:51somebody
10:57i say is there a servant available
11:05oh this is damnable
11:17i went from room to room all but deserted even my host room the bed had never been slept in
11:25foreign host foreign footman foreign cook all vanished in the night
11:31your experience is so far as i know perfectly unique now what else can you tell me
11:40well i was furious i i i packed my bags and i i banged the front door behind me and
11:49i set out for
11:51and then i i called at allen brothers the land agents and found it was from them that the villa
11:59had been rented rented well you see i i couldn't believe that they'd gone simply to make a a fool
12:08of me i thought you know it must be the rent but i was wrong
12:14see the agent thanked me for my warning but said that the rent had been paid in advance
12:19by the spanish embassy i imagine
12:21i called it the spanish embassy
12:24the man is unknown to them
12:26they also asked my friend who introduced us
12:29and he seemed to know less about garcia than i did
12:31but now this house
12:37we're still in a lodge
12:40i wonder if it's still as you left it
12:45what's troubling you watson
12:47well i fear some mundane explanation for events may await us upon our arrival
12:53it's possible we can thank our lucky fate which has rescued us for a few hours
12:57for the insufferable fatigues of idleness
13:12this gentleman recommends the bull in the village that's if we're to stay overnight
13:23i asked him if he knew garcia or his servants
13:27did he?
13:29no
13:31nothing unusual about the outside
13:33let's see what the interior holds for us
13:37i suppose we can be charged with house breaking can we?
13:49what earth could leave such a mess?
13:52yes indeed
14:03glass around the house
14:05what's
14:15mr holmes
14:19mr holmes
14:20welcome to wisteria lodge mr holmes
14:24inspector baines of the surrey constabulary
14:28this is uh constable downing
14:34and you are mr john scott eckles of popham house lee
14:39i am
14:41mr scott eckles
14:43we've been following you about all the morning
14:46you've traced him for his telegram i presume
14:50exactly mr holmes
14:52we picked up the scent at charing cross post office
14:56but what do you want
14:58uh
14:59i mean why do you follow me
15:01oh we wish a statement mr scott eckles as to the event which led up to the death of mr
15:08aloysius garcia of wisteria lodge
15:11near isha
15:14dead did you say
15:15oh yes he is dead yes
15:18but how an accident
15:21a murder sir
15:22if ever there was one on earth
15:26oh
15:27oh
15:27oh god this
15:31this is awful
15:36and you don't mean that i'm suspected
15:38well sir your note was found on the dead man's body
15:44and from it we learned that you had planned to stay here in this house last night
15:50so i did
15:53oh you did did you
15:54i
15:55oh
15:56wait
15:57baines i mean surely
15:58all you need is a simple statement
16:01yes mr holmes but
16:03it is my duty to warn mr scott eckles
16:07that it may be used
16:09against him
16:10hmm
16:12ah this is my friend and colleague
16:14dr watson inspector baines
16:16yes of course
16:17doctor your detention
16:21oh mr scott eckles you look as if you can do with a drink
16:24i uh
16:25found some brandy in the library
16:26if you think
16:27oh
16:27come on
16:28i don't know
16:30thank you
16:32el vero
16:33esta manjango
16:34tu vestito blanco
16:35no me importa
16:36no me importa
16:37no me importa
16:44el vero esta manjango
17:12eckles
17:13and i'm looking for the
17:15You know, every word I've said, it is the truth.
17:20I'm bound to say, Mr Scott Eccles,
17:23that everything you've said does agree
17:28with the facts as they've come to our notice.
17:32For example, the note that arrived during dinner.
17:36Mr Scott Eccles, what became of the note?
17:39Well, Garcia rolled it up and threw it in the fire.
17:43What do you say to that, Baines?
17:44It was a dog grate, Mr Holmes.
17:48He overpitched it.
17:52I found this unburnt at the back.
17:57You must have made a very careful examination of the house
18:00to find a single pellet of paper.
18:02Oh, I did, Mr Holmes, I did.
18:06It's my way.
18:09The note's written on ordinary cream-laid paper
18:13with a watermark.
18:15It's a quarter sheet, the paper's cut off
18:19in two snips with the short-bladed scissors.
18:24It's been folded twice
18:27and sealed with scarlet wax.
18:31It's addressed to Mr Garcia, Wisteria Lodge.
18:35And it says...
18:37Our own colours, green and white.
18:43Green open, white shut.
18:47Main stairs, first corridor.
18:52Seventh right.
18:54Green bays.
18:58Godspeed.
19:00D.
19:02It's in a woman's writing,
19:04done with a very sharp-pointed pen.
19:08But the address
19:09is either done with a different pen
19:12or by someone else,
19:14because it's thicker and bolder,
19:17as you may see, Mr Holmes.
19:21It's a remarkable note.
19:23I really must congratulate you
19:25on your attention to detail.
19:27There are a few trifling points
19:31which might perhaps be added.
19:33The seal is a sleeve link.
19:36What else is of such a shape?
19:39The scissors were bent, nail scissors.
19:43Short as the two snips are,
19:44you can distinctly see
19:46the slight curve in each.
19:49Oh!
19:53I thought I'd squeezed it dry, Mr Holmes.
19:59But I see there was some
20:00still left over after all.
20:07I'm bound to say
20:08that I make nothing of the note,
20:11except that
20:14something's on hand
20:15and a woman,
20:16as usual,
20:18is at the bottom of it.
20:22Oh.
20:26Well, I...
20:27I'm very glad you found the note, Inspector,
20:30because it corroborates my story.
20:32But, you know, I...
20:33I do beg to point out
20:35that I haven't yet heard
20:37what has happened to Mr Garcia
20:39or what has become of his household.
20:42As for Mr Garcia,
20:44that's easily answered.
20:46He is, uh...
20:48He was found dead
20:49on Ockshot Common
20:51this morning.
20:54His head
20:55had been beaten to a pulp
20:58by a sandbag.
20:59Oh!
21:00Some such object.
21:03With a crush
21:04rather than wounded.
21:06Apparently,
21:07he'd been first
21:09shook down
21:09from behind,
21:10but his assailant
21:12went on
21:12beating him
21:14long after he was dead.
21:15It was a very
21:17furious assault.
21:19Ah.
21:20I mean,
21:20this activity
21:21that we saw
21:21as we approached the house,
21:23were there any footsteps
21:24or clues
21:24as to the criminal?
21:25None.
21:26As yet.
21:28Had Garcia
21:29been robbed?
21:30No.
21:31No sign of robbery.
21:32No.
21:34Well,
21:35our tenants
21:35seem to have left
21:36little or nothing
21:37behind them.
21:38Apart from the clothes,
21:40some pipes,
21:42a few novels,
21:42two of them
21:43in Spanish.
22:19One of them
22:20is missing.
22:27Yeah.
22:28We might assume
22:30the G stands
22:31for Garcia.
22:33Family heirloom,
22:34perhaps.
22:35Hmm.
22:36The other
22:36was not on the body,
22:38nor has it been
22:39found in the vicinity,
22:41though my men
22:41are still looking.
22:42Do you wish
22:43to look around
22:43the house?
22:44A brief look.
22:47Am I with me?
23:02Holmes.
23:06Holmes!
23:09Holmes!
23:10Holmes!
23:53What have you seen?
23:58Could have been the devil
23:59for all I know.
24:01Staring eyes
24:02at the window.
24:03Negroid features,
24:04mulatto-like.
24:05He's gone away
24:05across the fields.
24:06Maybe just as well,
24:07I don't think I could
24:08have laid hands on him.
24:10Ah, look at this.
24:12If he is all the same
24:13scale as his foot,
24:15then he is certainly
24:17a giant.
24:18Well,
24:20whoever he was,
24:22whatever he wanted,
24:23is gone for the present.
24:25And we have more
24:26important things
24:27to attend to.
24:36Downing,
24:37you stay here,
24:39and you, sir,
24:41shall come to the station
24:42with me.
24:43Yes, sir.
24:43And let me have
24:44a written statement.
24:45Yes, certainly.
24:46I'll come at once.
24:47I hope you don't mind
24:47collaborating with you,
24:48Inspector.
24:48Oh, highly honoured,
24:50Mr. Holmes.
24:51Highly honoured.
24:52Inspector,
24:53is there a clue
24:54as to the exact hour
24:55to the man's death?
24:56One o'clock.
24:57It rained about that time,
24:59and the death
25:00certainly occurred
25:01before the rain.
25:04No!
25:04No, no!
25:05That, that,
25:06that is perfectly
25:07impossible,
25:08Mr. Baines.
25:09No, no.
25:09His voice is very
25:10unmistakable.
25:11I, I could swear to it
25:12that it was he
25:13who addressed me
25:15in my room
25:15at that very hour.
25:17Well, he spoke to me
25:18in, you know,
25:19that funny accent of his.
25:20He said he's, uh,
25:21nearly one o'clock.
25:23Remarkable,
25:23but one must
25:24not confuse
25:25the unlikely
25:26with the impossible.
25:27Ha!
25:28Ha!
25:28Ha!
25:29Ha!
25:30Ha!
25:30What does he mean
25:30with that?
25:32Certainly some strange
25:34people occupied
25:35that house,
25:36Mr. Holmes.
25:37One of them is dead.
25:39Did some of his
25:40companions follow him
25:41and murder him?
25:42If so,
25:43we should have them,
25:44for every report
25:45is watched.
25:46But my views
25:48are different,
25:48Mr. Holmes.
25:50Yes, sir.
25:51My views
25:52are very different.
25:53Do you have a theory?
25:54And I'll work it myself,
25:56Mr. Holmes.
25:57Your name
25:58is already made.
25:58I get to make mine.
26:00And I should like
26:01to be able to say
26:02afterwards
26:03that I solved it
26:04without your help.
26:07Then do you
26:08follow your path
26:08and I will follow mine.
26:09Goodbye, Mr. Scott Eggles.
26:11Goodbye, Mr. Holmes.
26:12Scott Eggles.
26:14Well, let us consider
26:15this note.
26:16Is there a woman
26:17involved,
26:18a jealous husband?
26:20Godspeed.
26:21Godspeed, Dean.
26:22That must be our guide.
26:25The man was a Spaniard.
26:27I suggest that the D
26:28stands for Dolores.
26:31It's a common
26:31female name in Spain.
26:33Hmph!
26:34A Spaniard would write
26:35to a Spaniard
26:35in Spanish, Watson.
26:40A Spaniard,
26:43a Spaniard.
26:44Get up there.
27:01Siéntete.
27:05Okay.
27:10Silencio, niñas.
27:44Henderson.
27:46I can't wait.
28:04Mr. Holmes, look what I found in a gorse bush.
28:14Excellent.
29:23Come on, come on, come on.
29:40Oh, I'm terrified.
29:41I'm terrified.
29:42Sorry, I see you.
29:42Ah!
29:45Hey, hello, Nino.
29:46¿Qué es?
29:47Estaba espiando.
29:48Si, si, fuera, fuera.
29:49Me ha entrado jugado.
29:51¿Por qué lo dejaste entrar?
29:53¿Qué pasa aquÃ, señor?
29:54You are trespassed.
29:55Ah, I'm terrified.
29:56I see you have lost my direction.
29:57Is it your custom to wander?
29:59Ah!
29:59Dr. Rayfield.
30:01my friend and fellow cartographer.
30:05Yes, indeed.
30:06You know, we were so engrossed
30:08in trying to chase the bridle path
30:10to the now-vanished hamlet of Ogdor, St. Mary,
30:14that we mislaid each other.
30:16And since we were late for Mr. Henderson,
30:18I thought I'm so glad you found your way here.
30:20I very much regret that Mr. Henderson is too busy to see you today.
30:24No, Lucas.
30:27I will see you.
30:52And I will see you soon.
31:00gentlemen
31:11the purpose of our visit is to inquire into the history of high gable which we believe has an
31:19intriguing and bloodthirsty past i mean since the days of the english civil wars i would have no
31:26knowledge of that i'm only a recent invader ah but there are local records in the library
31:39there are no records of any past violence in this house
31:49i see
31:55then i will detain you no more
31:59good day
32:22i thought you were in
32:25your list henderson and high gable well the others are prosaic respectable people far
32:31aloof from romance but this man henderson he's a very singular creation yes indeed
32:39as you may have noticed no tea for me the house is double-winged one side the servants the other
32:45side of the family there is one single connecting door for the henderson family meals
32:51oh you're sure he couldn't observe all that the short time we were there homes oh there are no better
32:55instruments for gossip than discharge servants and i was lucky enough to find one who had been sacked
33:00by his imperious master henderson in a fit of violent temper now the henderson girls whom you
33:07encountered have a governess a miss burnett an english woman here is a very singular fact
33:15she has not been seen since the night of the murder she has utterly vanished i've seen her
33:22of course i've seen her and she is alive i saw at the window at high gable my god a
33:30prisoner
33:32she slipped my mind the moment those awful gorgons descended upon me she is alive i've seen her
33:46that's the man i saw i'm chased baines has arrested the wrong man
33:51that was
34:13this man is the murdered man's cook who disappeared on the night of the crime we believe
34:19there were valuables left in the house and that their abstraction was the most the man had been
34:25seen in the vicinity of the house once before the second time the second time we left an ambuscade for
34:39him we shall be applying for remand when the prisoners brought before the magistrates that will do
34:46for now for now gentlemen thank you very much was it on the way where did you capture
34:52i am not convinced that you are on the right line mr holmes doesn't want you to commit yourself
34:56too far unless you're sure oh you're very kind gentlemen but uh we did agree to work on our own
35:07lines
35:09and that's what i'm doing you're welcome always to uh my news this fellow is as strong as a cart
35:19horse and fierce as the devil he nearly bit off constable downing's thumb before they managed to master him
35:28he speaks hardly english and we can get nothing out of him but grunts
35:34and you think that you have evidence that he murdered his late master
35:40i didn't say so mr holmes
35:44i didn't say so
35:48we all have our own little ways you will go yours and i will go mine that was the agreement
36:04i think baines is riding for the fall i'd have to agree with you there
36:28you appreciate our difficulty watson there's nothing upon which we can apply for a warrant
36:34and with our worthy inspector making his arrest our theory would seem fantastic if laid before the
36:40magistrate and yet you think the lady is in danger of her life yes i'm sure of it watson therefore
36:47we must take the law into our own hands
36:59we must take the law into our own hands
37:00top left bay
37:01uh-huh we could reach it from that outhouse
37:29uh
37:30uh
37:31uh
37:32Let's go.
38:08They're making for the station for five o'clock to London.
38:11Right.
38:59So, let's go.
39:05Dome, ma'am.
39:06Dome, ma'am.
39:07I'm waiting.
39:29I'm waiting.
39:31Stop it!
39:32Stop it!
39:34Stop it!
39:57I'm Mr. Holmes.
39:58You have given me the very evidence I wanted.
40:01We were both on the same scent from the start.
40:05You went after Henderson too.
40:06Why, sir, well, you first and then, uh, Dr. Watson here came crawling through the undergrowth at High Gable.
40:15I was up a tree observing you both.
40:17It was just a question of who got the evidence first.
40:22Why did you arrest the mulatto?
40:25Why did you arrest the mulatto?
40:50Can we?
40:51I shall be able to give you that in a moment.
40:54But tell me, who is this man, Henderson?
40:56He's Don Murillo, known as the Tiger of San Pedro.
41:00One of the most dangerous men out of Central America.
41:05Oh, indeed.
41:06A most lewd and bloodthirsty tyrant.
41:09Who imposed his odious vices upon a cowering people for almost twelve years.
41:18Was it the San Pedro colors, green and white, that first put you onto it?
41:24That and my visit to London.
41:25To the Spanish Embassy in the Foreign Office.
41:27No, please, this is your case, Inspector.
41:31Oh.
41:32Five years ago, there was a rising against the tyrant.
41:38But it was an empty palace they stormed.
41:41Don Murillo, his secretary, two children, and all the wealth.
41:46And escaped by ship.
41:49And from that moment, they disappeared from the face of the earth.
41:53His identity has been a subject of constant comment in the European press.
41:59We discovered him a year ago.
42:03Miss Burnett.
42:06How came you into this matter, Miss Burnett?
42:09An English lady in such a murderous affair.
42:13Because there is no other way in the world by which justice can be gained.
42:19What does the law of England care about the rivers of blood
42:23shed so many years ago in San Pedro?
42:27Or the shipload of treasure that this man has stolen from us?
42:32To you, they're like crimes committed in some other planet.
42:39We know.
42:44My real name is Signora Victor Durando.
42:48My husband was the minister of San Pedro in London.
42:53He met and married me there.
42:59A noble man never lived upon the earth.
43:05Unhappily, Murillo heard of his excellence
43:11and recalled him on some pretext.
43:17And shot him by a stroke of premonition.
43:24My husband had refused to take me with him.
43:29Then came the downfall of the monster.
43:31He escaped, as you have described.
43:34But the many whose lives he had ruined,
43:36whose loved ones had suffered torture and death at his hands,
43:39would not let the matter rest.
43:40We banded ourselves into a society
43:42which would never be dissolved until the work was done.
43:46It was my part to attach myself to his household
43:49and keep the others in touch with his movements.
43:51I secured the position as governess.
44:00He little knew that the woman who faced him at every meal
44:03was the woman whose husband he had hurried to eternity.
44:06I smiled on him, did my duty to his children,
44:11and bided my time.
44:17An attempt was made in Paris and failed.
44:20We zigzagged here and there swiftly over Europe
44:24to throw off our pursuers
44:26and finally returned to High Gable.
44:30Garcia had been waiting there for nearly a year
44:32with two trusty companions,
44:33all fired with the same reasons of revenge.
44:37Who was Garcia?
44:41The son of Fernando Garcia,
44:44one of the former highest dignitaries of San Pedro,
44:47who was murdered.
44:50Like your husband.
44:53This note you sent,
44:56you say it was intercepted?
44:58During the day, Murillo took every precaution
45:01and never went out save with his satellite, Lucas.
45:06Even at night,
45:07the man was forever on the alert
45:09and continually changed his room.
45:12We had arranged that I would send Garcia final instructions.
45:16The doors would be open
45:17and the signal of a green or white light in a window
45:20which faced the drive
45:21was to give notice if all was safe
45:23or if the attempt had better be postponed.
45:45To whom were you writing this letter?
45:47Jack!
45:48Ah!
45:49Ah!
45:54Who is your confederate?
45:58Who is your confederate?
46:01What is your real name, Miss Burnett?
46:06My name is Giorando.
46:11Giorando, sweet'o.
46:16In my house.
46:19You can go to my children.
46:27You can kill me now.
46:32What is my life worth?
46:34You have destroyed everything that I love.
46:37Who are you writing to?
46:39Tell me.
46:41Senor Giorando?
46:42Who?
46:43It's a name you fear.
46:45He is waiting for you.
46:51You are waiting for me to do.
46:53Giorno?
46:54Giorno?
46:56Giorno.
46:58Giorno.
47:03Giorno.
47:06Where?!
47:10Giorno.
47:13He's waiting to dispatch you to hell, you fiends.
47:18I knew the boy well.
47:19His father was once my dearest friend.
47:23You murdered him!
47:25He betrayed me.
47:30And so did your husband.
47:37And now they send the wives and sons.
47:41Will you never learn?
47:45I am indestructible.
48:00At first they were of a mind to let him enter the house and kill him as a detected burglar.
48:05But they feared the inquiry might publicly expose them.
48:22I'm not sure how I got them, but it's not a matter of fact.
48:29The jokes were associated with it as a friend.
48:29And this is the end of the movie.
48:30He does not to affect his wife's wife's wife and daughter.
48:39And of course the sex with all his children.
48:40And this is our baby boy.
48:41So his baby has the chambers.
48:54One for all, all for one.
49:17One for all, all for one.
49:41One for all, all for one.
50:11One for all, all for one.
50:50One for all, all for one.
51:40One for all, for one.
51:51One for all, for one.
52:17In the provinces we stagnate, a case like this gives a man a chance.
52:39One for all, for one.
53:06One for all, for one.
53:23One for all, for one.
53:54One for all, for one.
53:57One for all, for one.
54:07One for all.
54:09One for all.
54:11One for all.
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