- 1 hour ago
Beyond Paradise S04E02 (2026)
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00:00You
00:36Let's go.
01:04Let's go.
01:36Um, what's your name?
01:38Adam Walsh.
01:39What were you doing in that man's shed?
01:42I came to save a mate last night, but we fell out.
01:44Just needed to get my head down, but then I woke up and that old crank had locked me in.
01:48Am I going to get done or what?
01:51I don't think they hand out custodial sentences for stealing biscuits.
01:57Custodial.
01:58As in custard creams.
02:00Forget it.
02:01Where do you live?
02:02Exeter.
02:03Okay, straight on the train.
02:04Go on home.
02:05Don't want to see you around here again.
02:06I just want to get home.
02:07I have a shower and some food.
02:08I'm starving.
02:10Oh.
02:12Mums, cheese and homemade pickle sandwiches.
02:15Take it for the journey if you like.
02:16Oh, cheers.
02:17Okay.
02:18Go on.
02:21Oi!
02:22Is that it?
02:23You won't be having any more trouble from here, Mr. Franklin.
02:26I'll hold you personally responsible if I do.
02:29Just so you know, Mr. Franklin, both imprisonment is also a criminal offence.
02:38Humphrey.
02:48Oh, Humphrey and I appreciate that.
02:51Thanks.
02:52Bye.
02:53That was Hannah.
02:55Checking on us after our meeting the other day.
02:58Pausing fostering still feels like the right thing to do.
03:01Yeah, it's probably for the best.
03:02Especially now we're back living with your mum.
03:04Exactly.
03:06Green or blue?
03:07What do you think?
03:09It was a bit formal for a Tuesday morning.
03:11The WI ladies are taking me out tomorrow evening.
03:13Again?
03:14Oh.
03:15Between us.
03:16They've become slightly suffocating since I've become councillor.
03:21Oh, they're both nice.
03:23Uh, the green one then.
03:25You're just saying that to shut me up.
03:27Humphrey.
03:28Green to match your eyes.
03:30My eyes are brown.
03:32So are they all.
03:36Sorry.
03:40Hello.
03:43Right.
03:44I'm away.
03:45Saved by the bell.
03:57Hiding from the paparazzi.
04:00Pardon?
04:02Well, don't get me wrong.
04:03They're very stylish.
04:05Not a criticism.
04:07Is it an image revamp?
04:10No.
04:11It's a tension headache from a cricked neck and no sleep.
04:15But thanks for the compliment.
04:19Rosewood Cottage.
04:20Where are you?
04:23Are you the police?
04:26Hello?
04:28Mrs Harris?
04:32I've been hiding in case they came back.
04:39Oh, darling.
04:39Oh, darling.
04:40I am so sorry.
04:42I was with a client.
04:43My phone was off.
04:45Clyde Harrison, June's husband.
04:47D.I. Goodman.
04:47This is D.S.
04:48Williams.
04:48I'm sorry we weren't here earlier, too.
04:50It's slightly tricky to find.
04:52We are tucked away here.
04:54It was much easier to find when the woodwork was pink, albeit slightly garish.
04:57Uh, shall we go inside, Mrs Harris?
05:08Look at it.
05:09They've wrecked the place.
05:20Sorry, Mrs Harris.
05:21What exactly did you notice was wrong?
05:28The whole place was upside down.
05:31They turned the drawers out.
05:33This chair was on its side.
05:35It was all a mess.
05:39It was all a mess.
06:00How are you so good at it?
06:02A what?
06:03Adulting.
06:04I mean, you make it look so easy doing ten different things at once and you're not even stressed.
06:09I'm just good at hiding it.
06:11Besides, stress isn't always a bad thing.
06:13We wouldn't get what we wanted without it.
06:15But what if you don't know what you want?
06:17Like, I really like what I do here, but I'm just worried that it's not what I want to do
06:22long term.
06:23I should hope not.
06:24I don't want to see you go, Zoe, but you've got a whole life to live.
06:27Doing what, though?
06:29You're 18.
06:30You've got bags of time.
06:31Takes six years to train to be a vet.
06:33Do you want to be a vet?
06:34No, I won't.
06:35I'm just making a point.
06:37How did you decide?
06:39I didn't.
06:40I went travelling.
06:42Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and the Caribbean.
06:45That must have been incredible.
06:47It was the best thing I could have done.
06:48I went alone and it took me more than any course ever did.
06:51Really?
06:52Weren't you frightened?
06:54Sometimes, but that's life, isn't it?
06:56My advice is to have all the experiences you can, good and bad.
07:00Take risks.
07:01Choose adventure, Zoe.
07:05Finger!
07:10I know what I saw.
07:13You're sure there's nothing missing?
07:15I've checked.
07:16Everything appears to be where it should.
07:19Understanding attachment disorders by Dr. Clive Harris.
07:22I'm a clinical psychologist.
07:24And a published one at that.
07:27I'm sorry, what happens now?
07:29Without any evidence of a break-in, then I'm afraid there's nothing much we can do.
07:33I am not mad!
07:35No one's suggesting that, Mrs. Harris.
07:37You don't need to.
07:38Clive is diagnosing me as we speak.
07:40June, that's not true.
07:46Yeah, thank you both for your time.
07:48I'm sorry if I've wasted it.
07:49Of course not.
07:50You're very welcome.
07:52Nothing to apologise for.
07:54Have there been any causes for concern with June recently, psychologically?
07:59Nothing.
08:00I'm as perplexed as you are.
08:02Yes, well, you know where we are.
08:04Yes, Sergeant.
08:10Might be the start of something to do with our mental health?
08:13Yes.
08:15Well, there's a buck coming.
08:17I believe her.
08:19You think someone trashed the place, then immediately put everything back exactly as it was?
08:25Not exactly as it was.
08:27Dr. Harris' book was upside down.
08:28It's odd.
08:29Don't you think?
08:30And the rest of the shelves were so neat.
08:40I've got a profile here on the eminent Dr. Clive Harris in the Times last month.
08:45I became a psychologist because I care.
08:48Oh, the burglary on Millstone Lane.
08:51I give my right arm for a burglary at the minute.
08:54Honestly, if I get one more call out about kids doing wheelies in the high street or eating people's custard
09:01creams, I'm going to scream.
09:02Well, it wasn't actually a burglary, so you didn't miss out on anything.
09:07But I took the call.
09:08Poor woman was hysterical.
09:10House was immaculate.
09:11What's going on, then?
09:13Not sure yet, but she certainly seemed convincing.
09:16Maybe it's like that old film where the husband gaslights the wife into thinking she's gone doolally.
09:23Oh, what's it called now?
09:25Um, gaslight?
09:28That's the one.
09:30Oh, I just hear they fostered, too.
09:33Dr. Harris's interest in attachment theory inspired him and his wife to foster children from troubled backgrounds.
09:40Doesn't sound like a manipulative gaslighter.
09:42Mum, I did an online quiz about this.
09:45Apparently, I've got an anxious attachment style.
09:50Oh, I don't buy into all that nonsense.
09:54That's because you're an avoidant.
09:57The only thing I'm avoiding is cod psychology.
10:00And this headache, if I can.
10:03See?
10:04You're masking the pain with pills when you should be pinpointing the root causes.
10:09I can pinpoint one of them right now, actually, Margot.
10:12Stress.
10:13That's what's going on here.
10:15Cortisol flooding the nervous system.
10:18I bet I know what started it and all.
10:21Or should I say, who started it?
10:24Yeah, all right, Margot.
10:24Thanks for the insight.
10:25But I slept badly, that's all.
10:27You should both try positive affirmations.
10:30Now, every morning, I look in the mirror and I say,
10:34I am enough.
10:36Out loud.
10:37Here.
10:39You try it.
10:41I am enough?
10:42No, no, no, no.
10:43It's a statement, not a question.
10:45Say it like you mean it.
10:48I'm enough.
10:49Less mumbly.
10:51Punctuate each word.
10:53I am enough.
10:56I am enough?
10:58All right.
10:58Don't blow me ears off.
11:00Now, you do that every morning and feel the difference it makes.
11:07Good.
11:15Yeah.
11:18Oh.
11:23Shipped and have a police station.
11:25Hold the line for me, please, Mr. Smith.
11:30Apologies, Mr. Smith.
11:32He's just popped out.
11:35Would you care to leave him a message and I'll get him to call you back?
11:41Will do.
11:42Goodbye.
11:46Didn't have the good grace to say goodbye.
11:49He wants you to call him back, ACP.
11:51He says he's keen to know your decision.
12:06Dr. Harris, sorry to bother you.
12:09Can I just check?
12:10Our next session is Tuesday, isn't it?
12:12Ten o'clock, yes.
12:13See you then, Amy.
12:51There's another liar before someone's tried to remove it.
12:55That tumour's right then.
12:57It's odd, but I feel rather relieved.
13:00Have you had any run-ins with anybody recently, Dr. Harris?
13:04No.
13:05There's nobody you know who might be inclined to call you a liar?
13:09Not at all.
13:10See, I did a bit of research after I left you earlier, and I found this.
13:18A fellow psychologist, Roger Franklin, accused you of plagiarising one of his research papers last year.
13:25How he was allowed to stay in the profession all those years is beyond me.
13:31That's the paper in question.
13:34Breaking the cycle of insecure attachment.
13:36Roger's under the impression that he invented Bowlby's theory of attachment.
13:40It's ridiculous.
13:42It's jealousy.
13:43Plain and simple.
13:44Good idea to start with him, then.
13:46Maybe, but I'd be amazed if he had the gumption to pull this off.
13:51Anything else?
13:53Unusual interactions?
13:55Who was the last patient you saw?
13:57Well, I bumped into one of them just before I arrived earlier.
14:01Amy Riley.
14:02She was outside the office.
14:03I wouldn't call it unusual, though.
14:05So she didn't have an appointment?
14:06No, not today, but I have a good rapport with all of my patients, Detective.
14:12Amy has a complex diagnosis, but she deals with it admirably.
14:17I've never had any cause to be concerned.
14:24Thank you, Doctor.
14:26Hi.
14:27I'm brief.
14:29Esther.
14:29Hi.
14:30Hi.
14:30Hello, Archie.
14:32You're here to see Doctor...
14:33About some wine.
14:35Dr. Harris wanted some advice.
14:38I'm so sorry to keep you.
14:40Unfortunately, I'm going to have to postpone our session.
14:52Good to see you, Archie.
14:59So, someone trashes the house, then puts everything back and cleans up after themselves,
15:04then goes and does the same thing to Doctor Harris' office.
15:07Any thoughts?
15:09Huh?
15:10Why would somebody commit a crime, then try to undo it twice within a couple of hours?
15:22Esther?
15:24Sorry, um...
15:25What was that?
15:26Are you okay?
15:28I'm fine.
15:30Yes.
15:31It's odd.
15:32Some sort of psychological game, maybe?
15:34Well, yes.
15:35It's a move.
15:36In any case, I'm pretty sure it'll happen again.
15:37So, uh...
15:38We should submit an urgent request for access to his patient files.
15:41And, uh...
15:42Let's pay a visit to Roger Franklin.
15:55Hi, Margot.
15:56Got a call from the manager at the train station.
15:58Fight's broken out there on Platform 1 between a couple of, uh...
16:02Don't tell me.
16:04Kids.
16:05Now, don't scream.
16:07Remember, you are enough.
16:11I've definitely had enough.
16:13Know that much.
16:18Kids.
16:19Kids.
16:20Kids.
16:31When the brief is cold
16:35When the brief is cold
16:55Oh, I'm so sorry.
16:56I was miles away.
16:58In Dolphin Cove?
17:00Have you been?
17:02Oh, I wish.
17:03I just said there.
17:04Sorry, I wasn't snooping.
17:06It just caught my eye.
17:07Yeah, it's like paradise.
17:08Doesn't it?
17:10You planning a holiday?
17:12Thinking about going travelling?
17:14Seeing a bit of the world?
17:15That sounds amazing.
17:16Who are you going with?
17:18Not sure yet.
17:20Probably by myself.
17:21Well, that's brave.
17:23That's what life's about, isn't it?
17:25Having those different experiences, taking those risks.
17:28Well, good for you.
17:29As long as you take care of yourself.
17:33Kelby, I haven't told my mum yet,
17:35so please don't say anything for you.
17:49Mr. Franklin?
17:50Yes?
17:52I'm D.I. Goodman.
17:53This is my colleague, Detective Sergeant Williams.
17:55Oh, glad to see it's been passed up the ranks.
17:58Trust you'll be throwing the book
17:59at that little tow rag who's been squatting in my shed.
18:02They sent a young lad this morning,
18:04barely out of his teens by the looks of it.
18:07If you're referring to PC Hartford,
18:10then he's a highly competent police officer
18:11and a fully grown adult.
18:13Yes, we're actually here to talk to you
18:14about Dr. Clive Harris, Mr. Franklin.
18:17What about him?
18:19And his Dr. Franklin?
18:21Dr. Franklin, my apologies.
18:23Can we have a quick chat?
18:24Now?
18:25Yes.
18:26Is there somewhere a little more private we could go?
18:34But that is what Dr. Harris said.
18:36Absolutely preposterous.
18:37But you have called Dr. Harris a liar in the past.
18:39Because he is one.
18:40He stole my work and got away with it scot-free.
18:43Oh, and you wanted revenge?
18:45Don't try and trick me, Detective.
18:47For a start,
18:48I can't be in two places at one time, can I?
18:50And if one of your own officers
18:52isn't enough of an alibi,
18:54then I don't know what it is.
18:55I suppose that depends on what time
18:56you arrived at the allotment.
18:58Oh, here we go.
18:59Okay.
19:00I got here about eight o'clock,
19:03unlocked the shed,
19:04and saw some layabout sleeping on the floor.
19:06End of story.
19:08If it's padlock from the outside,
19:09how do you get in?
19:11Well, I was here late last night, too.
19:13About 1am?
19:17I'm an insomniac later in my life.
19:19I hadn't locked up when I left earlier that day,
19:21so he must have gone in then.
19:24I put the padlock on
19:25and then came back this morning and found him.
19:29Happy?
19:31And where were you at about 10am?
19:33Still here.
19:35Obviously.
19:36And there'll be other people who can vouch for you?
19:38The other allotment holders?
19:40Well, they've not long arrived.
19:42I mean, I was alone
19:44for much of the time, as it happens.
19:49Right.
19:50Well, thanks very much for your time, Mr. Franklin.
19:52Beg your pardon, Doctor.
19:53Watch out, share the seats.
19:55Broken.
19:56Yes, I noticed.
19:57Take a little heads up.
19:59I don't mind that.
20:00I just skimmed that coat of varnish.
20:04So you have.
20:08Technically, Roger Franklin could have broken into the Harris's,
20:11trashed it, regretted it, tidied up,
20:13and come straight here.
20:15Uh, technically, yes.
20:18Although, judging by the state of his shed,
20:20he doesn't strike me as being a particularly fastidious cleaner.
20:23Yeah.
20:24So, what now?
20:26Any ideas?
20:26Yep.
20:27Piece of cake.
20:28You know who did it?
20:29No idea.
20:30I mean, I want a piece of cake.
20:35This stuff is ridiculous.
20:39Two lemon drizzles,
20:40two Americanos,
20:42a large milk,
20:42and a double espresso.
20:44For Lady Gaga.
20:46Hardly surprising I'm stressed,
20:48considering the amount of stick I have to put up with.
20:51Oh, no, I can't take any more or I'll be rattling.
20:55They're useless anyway.
20:56Sounds like you need a massage.
20:58You should try this new place.
21:00Apparently, the masseuse is incredible.
21:02No, thanks.
21:03Can't bear anybody touching me,
21:05let alone when it's accompanied by
21:06bare feet and pan pipes.
21:08Mum, you should take some risks.
21:10Get out of your comfort zone.
21:11Hardly class a neck massage is risk-taking.
21:15Great.
21:20What are you doing?
21:24Hi.
21:24I was wondering if you had any availability
21:27for a massage lately today.
21:29Zoe, no.
21:32Are you okay?
21:34Yeah.
21:36No.
21:41Mr. Smith from Hub.
21:44He's chasing me for a decision
21:45on who I'm letting go of.
21:47There must be another way
21:48to deal with these cuts, surely.
21:51Show them how well you can operate
21:52on a strict budget.
21:54Yeah, possibly.
21:57Can I get a refund on the lemon drizzle?
22:00I'm not sure that equates to someone's yearly wage.
22:03It's a start.
22:08Oh.
22:11I knew it.
22:13The lad fighting at the train station before
22:15is the same one from the allotment this morning.
22:17Some angry old man found him kipping in his shed.
22:21Roger Franklin.
22:22How do you know that?
22:24Because we interviewed him earlier
22:25about the breaking of the Harrises.
22:26He's an odd fish, that man.
22:28I know his wife.
22:30She's a siren he's short of a picnic hamper
22:32and all, truth be told.
22:33Kicked him out a few weeks ago.
22:36That explains why he spent so much time
22:37at the allotment.
22:39Apparently, they had a huge row
22:41because he got suspended from his work.
22:43Oh.
22:44What happened here, then?
22:45Well, it was all over by the time I arrived,
22:48but the station manager thinks
22:50it was something to do with drugs.
22:51Uh, he heard the other lad shouting,
22:54we've got a deal you can't pull out.
22:57Very good.
22:58So, two crimes,
23:02two attempts to undo those crimes.
23:05What would an eminent psychologist
23:07have to say about that?
23:09Oh, that reminds me.
23:11Email from Dr Harris's receptionist arrived
23:14with his patient records attached.
23:15I've just sent it to you.
23:17Excellent.
23:26I've just discovered something else
23:28very interesting.
23:30About Roger Franklin?
23:31No, Amy Riley.
23:32The patient Clive mentioned this morning.
23:35The one he saw just before he discovered
23:37his office had been broken into.
23:39He was right about her complex diagnosis.
23:44Dissociative identity disorder.
23:47Yeah, it's a psychological condition
23:49where a person switches between
23:51different identities.
23:52Each identity or altar
23:54has their own name, age and history.
23:57Oh.
23:57It might explain the attempts
23:59to undo each crime.
24:01What?
24:02Because it was two different altars
24:05belonging to the same individual?
24:08Possibly.
24:09Oh.
24:11Okay.
24:13Shall we go and talk to her?
24:15No, no.
24:15Sorry, Sergeant.
24:16As your senior officer,
24:18I'm asking, no, ordering you
24:20to please stand down
24:22and go and have the massage
24:23your daughter booked for you.
24:24Oh, no.
24:25Honestly.
24:25It's for purely selfish reasons,
24:27believe you me.
24:28Because I'm honestly not sure
24:29how many more of those strange noises
24:30I can listen to you make.
24:31Okay?
24:32So please, off you go.
24:36Enjoy.
24:39Right, Kelby, you're with me.
24:57Have a lovely day.
24:58All right.
24:59Hello.
25:00Hiya, can I help you?
25:01Amy Riley.
25:03Can I have a quick chat, please?
25:07I was a kid when it started.
25:10Seven, maybe?
25:11Nobody took any notice, really.
25:14My parents just thought
25:14I had imaginary friends.
25:16It's not unusual when you're little,
25:18is it?
25:20But they weren't friends.
25:23They were me.
25:25Or part of me, anyway.
25:27Did you mind telling us
25:28a little bit about
25:29the other identities?
25:31Past couple of years,
25:32it's been mainly Becky.
25:34Right.
25:35Sixteen.
25:35Always acting out.
25:37Can't stand authority.
25:39Authority meaning Dr. Harris?
25:42Apparently she gives me
25:43a bit of a hard time.
25:44What, apparently?
25:46I can't really tell you
25:47what my alters are like.
25:49You're best off asking other people.
25:51Dr. Harris says that
25:52Becky is
25:53always taking the mick.
25:56Calls him Clive.
25:58Which is embarrassing.
26:00He doesn't mind,
26:00but I do.
26:02What does Amy
26:03think about him?
26:05I think that he is
26:07a brilliant,
26:09kind man.
26:10I just can't believe
26:11I did this.
26:14Wait,
26:15so you're admitting
26:16it was you?
26:17Not me as such.
26:19It sounds like
26:20just the sort of
26:20stunt Becky had pulled.
26:22Why might Becky
26:23call Dr. Harris a liar?
26:25Well, she doesn't reckon
26:25there's anything wrong with her.
26:27She tells him
26:27that he's talking rubbish.
26:28So if Becky
26:30is responsible
26:30for both break-ins
26:31and then you, Amy,
26:33put things right,
26:35then,
26:36well,
26:38wouldn't you remember
26:38doing that?
26:40Not all the time, no.
26:42Especially if I go back
26:43to Amy in the middle
26:44of doing some
26:44silly Becky stuff.
26:47Sometimes I remember.
26:49Sometimes I don't.
26:52Can you tell us
26:53where you were
26:53between eight and nine
26:54this morning?
26:55At home.
26:56I think
26:57my memory gets
26:58a bit fuzzy.
27:01Sorry,
27:01I'm not being very
27:02clear on it.
27:03No, no, no, no.
27:04You've been really helpful.
27:05I mean, thank you.
27:09Dr. Harris said
27:10he saw you
27:11this morning.
27:12I was on my way
27:13to work.
27:15So is it possible
27:16that you
27:18might have
27:19switched
27:19to Becky
27:20and then
27:21back to Amy
27:22just before you
27:23saw Dr. Harris
27:24this morning?
27:26It could have
27:27happened.
27:28Could have
27:29easily happened.
27:32Your words up?
27:34Yes.
27:35Circumstantially.
27:37She pretty much
27:38confessed, though.
27:38That's more than
27:39circumstantial.
27:39Well, a lifetime
27:40of not being
27:41in control
27:41of your own
27:42actions
27:43has to take
27:43its toll,
27:44Kelby.
27:45Amy strikes me
27:46as someone
27:46ready to take
27:47the blame
27:47for anything.
27:49Unlike
27:50Roger Franklin.
27:51Yes.
28:04Have you had
28:05a heartstone
28:05massage before,
28:06Esther?
28:07Uh,
28:08I've had a brick
28:09thrown at me.
28:09if that counts.
28:10Sorry?
28:12How's it
28:13of the job?
28:14I'm a detective.
28:16A detective?
28:17Wow.
28:17Well, no wonder
28:18you're stressed.
28:19Now, it's
28:20perfectly normal
28:21to feel a little
28:22nervous the first
28:23time.
28:23I'm not nervous.
28:25Good.
28:32Okay.
28:36How's that
28:36pressure?
28:38Uh,
28:39fine,
28:40thanks.
28:41Good.
28:46I don't
28:47normally
28:47enjoy
28:48this sort
28:49of thing,
28:49but
28:49oh,
28:51that feels
28:51amazing actually.
28:53My boyfriend's
28:54the same.
28:54Uh-huh.
28:55It's early days
28:56though,
28:57so perhaps
28:57I can convince
28:58him.
28:59Most people
29:00will be delighted
29:01to have free
29:02massages on tap.
29:04not Archie Hughes
29:06though.
29:07Ooh.
29:08You are dense,
29:09aren't you?
29:11Let's get in those
29:12shoulders.
29:16Clive!
29:18Becky!
29:19Girl on shift with Amy
29:20said she had a visit
29:21from the police before.
29:22Is that what happened?
29:23I'm sorry,
29:24Becky,
29:24but I'm afraid
29:26I can't have this
29:27conversation now.
29:28I'll see you at our
29:29next session.
29:31You know I never do
29:32anything like that,
29:33don't you?
29:34Clive!
29:36Clive!
30:03No shades?
30:05Can I assume
30:06that's because
30:07the massage
30:07did the trick?
30:08You can assume
30:09it's because
30:10I was so desperate
30:11to get away
30:11from Archie's
30:12new girlfriend
30:12that I left
30:13them behind.
30:15What?
30:49Oh, so, um,
30:51background search
30:52on Franklin
30:53is pretty revealing.
30:54Apparently his
30:55behavior towards
30:56Clive Harris
30:57was erratic,
30:58bordering on
30:59unhinged.
31:00Hundreds of
31:01abusive emails
31:02and phone calls.
31:04I mean,
31:05it's a pretty
31:05solid case
31:06for a disciplinary
31:07action.
31:07No wonder
31:08his wife
31:09gave him the
31:09elbow.
31:10Even more
31:11of a motive.
31:12He accuses
31:13Clive Harris
31:13and his whole
31:14life is unraveled.
31:15It makes sense.
31:17Yes,
31:17apart from
31:18the undoing.
31:19Oh,
31:20and that
31:20Mr. Smith's
31:21been on again.
31:22He's like a
31:23terrier with a
31:23bone, that man.
31:24What's he after?
31:26Oh, well,
31:27I suppose he's
31:28just new to the
31:28role.
31:29He wants to make
31:30sure he's
31:31communicating
31:32regularly with
31:32everyone.
31:33Well, he's
31:34certainly doing
31:35that.
31:35I don't speak
31:36to my next
31:37of kin as much
31:38as I speak to
31:38him at the
31:39moment.
31:39And as for
31:40communicating,
31:42I can't
31:42understand half
31:42of what he's
31:43on about.
31:44I mean,
31:44what's a KPI
31:45when it's at
31:45home?
31:46What?
32:17Tune?
32:22Tune?
32:36Humphrey,
32:38you're asleep.
32:39Yes.
32:41Are you?
32:46A few days
32:48ago,
32:48Hannah told me
32:49that Rosie
32:50had something
32:51she wanted
32:51to send us.
32:52And?
32:53Nothing's
32:54arrived.
32:56I keep
32:56rushing to
32:57the door
32:57every time
32:57the post
32:58comes.
33:11Why didn't
33:11you mention
33:12it sooner?
33:13Because you've
33:14got so much
33:15on your mind.
33:17Speaking of
33:17which,
33:19talk to me
33:19about work.
33:20I know that's
33:20why you're
33:21still awake.
33:29Mr. Smith
33:30is still
33:31hounding me
33:32for a decision
33:32on who I'm
33:33going to let
33:33go.
33:34The guys
33:35are still
33:36oblivious,
33:37and I'm
33:37still desperately
33:38trying to think
33:38of a solution.
33:39I've thought
33:40of myriad ways
33:41to save money,
33:41and none of
33:42it comes
33:42close to a
33:42yearly salary.
33:44I can't
33:45stave him
33:45off for much
33:46longer.
34:00hello?
34:10they were all in black did you hear them speak no i collapsed straight away
34:18and the most thing i remember i woke up in the ambulance i was at my sister's
34:26i will never forgive myself for leaving him alone in the house come on now journey it's okay
34:31okay it's not okay clive this has to be dealt with once and for all
34:39is there something else we should know dr harris
34:44clive
34:48i bumped into amy riley yesterday or rather her main altar becky she told me you'd spoken to her
35:03the ambulance who called for it
35:09i've no idea no me at the hospital found when he was admitted
35:24it doesn't look like anything was damaged nothing obvious stolen either laptops out on the desk in
35:30the office
35:38woven polyester mix from cargo pants but this is gray clive harris said the intruder was all in black
35:47gray could be mistaken for black in the dark though they've caught themselves on something when they
35:53ran out all right so nothing damaged this time nothing taken
36:00but something left behind
36:07amy does the name edith mean anything to you
36:11edith
36:20it's mainly becky who is more than enough
36:26uh dr harris said he saw becky yesterday do you remember that
36:33beg pardon can i have a quick word
36:38recording of the 999 call from last night just came through from emergency services
36:42i knew you'd want to listen to it straight away right thanks marco
36:46hello can you send an ambulance to the house with the paint to rosewood cottage on millstone lane
36:53right so it's fair to assume it's the intruder making the call and yet another attempt from them
36:58to reverse the damage they've done they sound genuinely upset and definitely male
37:03puts amy riley in the clear plus the caller started to refer to it as the house with the pink
37:08woodwork
37:08remember clive mentioned it used to be pink
37:19hello i just popped back to pick up a few bits for clive the doctors are being very positive so
37:24that's
37:24good good good um sorry uh mrs harris do you recognize this
37:36i've never seen it before it says edith on the back does that name mean anything to you nothing
37:45and i'm sorry what about this sorry
37:55oh clive uh mentioned that the woodwork on the house used to be pink that's right well
38:01i don't suppose you remember how many years ago it was painted white
38:04they do as it happens it was ten years ago he just finished painting it when he had his first
38:09heart attack i told him not to do it that it would be too strenuous but he wouldn't listen
38:15and that's when we had to give up fostering yes of course you fostered i read it
38:24my wife and i do although we've had to put it on hold for the moment it's a wonderful thing
38:29to do
38:30but hard not to get too attached yes we actually had a placement when clive fell ill
38:36a gorgeous boy he'd been with us for months we talked about adoption but social services were
38:41worried about clive's health we just didn't know what the future held and how much care clive would
38:47need the last thing i wanted was for adam to feel sidelined again he deserves so much more
38:55it must have been hard it was the hardest decision we ever had to make i can't say i don't
39:01regret it
39:05no sorry how old would adam be now he'd be what he'll have just turned 18 18 18 18 pink
39:21and now
39:22they're white 18 thank you kelby what was his name your boy from the allotment the one who was
39:36fighting at the station what was his name uh adam i divorce
39:44edith is not a person it's a place specifically her children's home
39:56edith house in exeter is for young people aged 16 to 18 on the cusp of leaving care
40:02yep i just spoke to the unit manager this key ring is included in a leavers pack
40:07he also sent me over a photograph of the most recent residence look adam
40:14yep he left there a few days ago the manager said that once they turn 18 then there's little support
40:19from social services what's his connection to clive and june harris he was their last foster placement
40:2410 years ago they wanted to adopt him but clive had his first heart attack and and then the social
40:29services removed adam because they became concerned about the harris's ability to care for him long
40:34term so he went back into the system until he left last week and came straight back to shipton abbott
40:40why target them if they were so close for that exact reason imagine thinking you'd found a family
40:45at last and they send you away they couldn't help that i'm not sure a vulnerable eight-year-old would
40:50see
40:50it that way but adam was locked in roger franklin's shed when the first break-in happened it
40:57it couldn't have been him hold on look there's that lad he was fighting with at the train station
41:07the deal the deal the station manager heard the other boy say we've got a deal you can't pull
41:15out is that right kelby yeah i don't think it was a drug deal so what if the other boy
41:21targeted the
41:22harris is in return for adam doing something for him but adam got cold feet exactly and tried to
41:27reverse the damage each time the other boy broke into the harris's first and trashed the living room
41:39this is what june saw when she came back from her power walk that morning
41:54after june left to go and get help adam entered the house at around 9 15.
42:00straight from the allotment where kelby had just seen him exactly he then placed everything back as
42:06it should be apart from one book which you put back on the shelf upside down
42:17the same thing happened in clive's office adam tried to put it right again
42:21but before he could finish the job he heard clive opening the door
42:28and escaped through the window adam then tried to leave shift and abut but the other boy stopped him
42:34and a fight broke out what are you doing get off me man
42:47so during the last break-in the other boy framed him a piece of cloth torn from adam's cargo pants
42:52during the fight was left there deliberately along with the kiwi i don't think it was his intention to
42:59harm clive june but the other boy certainly didn't want the risk of being accused of possible murder
43:13adam went back to the house to put things right again but this time it was far worse than he
43:18could
43:24have imagined hello can you send an ambulance to the house with the pink to rosewood cottage on millstone
43:32lane we first went to the harris's we were looking for rosewood cottage but couldn't find it clive said
43:37it used to be easier to find when it was painted pink so whoever made that call must have had
43:44a history
43:44with the house i do yes and i think i know where to find it
44:03adam can you tell us who this is sam we met in care and became mates same boat nobody wanted
44:11us
44:13a few days after we left edith house sam showed me this thing you found online clive in a newspaper
44:19a profile piece in the times talking about how much he cared about helping people
44:26didn't seem like he cared much about me when i went back into care it must have stunned reading that
44:32i know it was stupid but i wanted to hurt them like they hurt me not properly just shake them
44:40up
44:40so that's when you and sam made the deal he would go after the harris's for you and what do
44:47you want
44:47you to do for him in exchange set up his mom's dealer boyfriend get him arrested a revenge swap i
44:56told
44:56sam i changed my mind but he wasn't having it so you tried to stop it yeah but that stupid
45:02bloke locked
45:02me in a shed by the time i got to the house it was too late then sam started blackmailing
45:09you if he
45:10didn't keep your side of the deal he'd frame you it all got so out of hand
45:19i never meant them any harm but nobody told me anything one day i'm living with clive and june
45:27thinking i've got a family again and the next i'm back in care you understand
45:34no you don't no you're right
45:39i don't understand what it was like for you but i do have experience from the other side
45:50my wife and i fostered a little girl rosie not so long ago i thought we might have a future
45:58together as a family but we had to say goodbye to her it was hard it still is
46:12clive and june didn't reject you adam they loved you letting you go wasn't their choice
46:25adam
46:28can you take us to sam
46:31i can't he's not a bad person he's just been through this isn't about punishment adam
46:38we want to help both of you i promise but we can't do that if we don't know where sam
46:44is
47:00finally seen some sensor took your time i'm sorry sam
47:18it's okay
47:19i never laid a finger on him i swear
47:20we know that we know that we just want to help yeah whatever sam
47:25it is all right
47:30the sun's gone down
47:34like a king to rest
47:36you're okay
47:37yeah
47:38thank you
47:50thank you
48:17thank you
48:20thank you
48:49i'll get my stuff
48:50oh thank god
48:56amy
48:58i hope this doesn't sound passionizing but
49:02i think you're really brave
49:05the way you handle your disorder the way you're so honest and open
49:10everyone has their stuff don't they yeah true but not everyone handles their stuff like you do
49:18thank you
49:21take care of the sun
49:36thank you
49:39thank you
49:39thank you
49:46thank you
49:51what should we do
49:52hello
49:54esther
49:55zoe hi
49:56uh sorry this is amelia i know we met hi hi esther i came in for a massage oh
50:03how's the headache
50:04gone
50:04i feel like a brand new woman oh i'm so pleased well let me know when you want to book
50:08in again oh no need
50:10i'm fixed you're a miracle worker tell him that will you she is it's true
50:15see you sort yourself out mister yeah i'm trying
50:21well we best be going hadn't we zoe nice to see you both great to see you esther yeah well
50:27you
50:27know where i am if you need me i do cheers right um okay
50:36oh my god mum you're so amazing well we're all adults apart from you obviously you'll always be
50:43my little baby girl go on anyway what was it you want to talk about can't think now no you
50:51were chatting to martha something exciting kind of forgotten already uh yeah she was just saying
50:57how much she appreciated me working at the cafe see
51:02i don't know how much you can do without you
51:06i'm very proud of you yeah yeah thanks
51:11thanks mum
51:19it came this morning
51:28aren't you gonna open it yes why am i so nervous
51:32i don't know how much you can do you think she knows how much we cared about her how much
51:55we still care
51:56about her of course she does she knows humphrey
52:04wonder what you think about the lily bond though i think it was my fault
52:09no it wasn't
52:11was it
52:16well we couldn't live on a boat forever speaking of which i think we should put an
52:21offer in on that oh it's so much work martha not too much money yeah but we take our time
52:28do it bit by bit remember what we said it's the two of us and whatever else happens it will
52:36always be the
52:37two of us this is our adventure humphrey and there's nobody else i choose to be on it with
52:50it's the two of us that's it come on ladies let's get this side and i'll get us all a
52:54drink
53:02listen to this
53:11this is dark morris someone help him hurry so if someone did trigger the allergy that just so
53:17during the dance but we were all watching so what did we miss is that the allergy is that mr
53:21smith
53:22was talking about that on the golf course so not just me you ignore but your staff too she doesn't
53:27know about mr smith don't be close at that i'm not i'm angry at him i'm here for one reason
53:32and that's
53:32to save your cinnamon glass you can't help you fall in love with you can't decide what you do about
53:38it
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