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π₯ EP 7: The tension reaches its peak as everything begins to unravel. π¨ Choices made now will change everything.
π₯ EP 7: The tension reaches its peak as everything begins to unravel. π¨ Choices made now will change everything.
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TVTranscript
00:09Are you nervous?
00:11Hmm?
00:12It must be a bit delicious being fought over.
00:15What are you talking about?
00:18Don't be coy.
00:20How are you going to respond to Inspector Boxer's proposal?
00:24If it was a proposal.
00:26I really have no idea, Fanny.
00:28I haven't thought of it.
00:31You have.
00:39Where are you going this interrogatory morning?
00:42Buying ribbons?
00:44That's what you told Mother.
00:46Where are you actually going?
00:47None of your business.
00:56He's going to report Miss Folly.
00:57He's drowning from within.
00:58You there.
00:59No, no, no, no, no.
01:12Stand back.
01:14All of you.
01:15Come on.
01:46Oh, my God.
02:01Now, it's not safe for you here.
02:05Is it cholera?
02:08Yes.
02:10The devil's elbow.
02:24The Duke tells me you swindled him into buying land he shouldn't have when he was drunk.
02:30No, I don't swindle.
02:33Especially not from Dukes.
02:36I can't believe his lordship would be untruthful with you.
02:39You mustn't have been confused.
02:41You see, I sell to the best people in town, Sir Gideon Hawkes, Elizabeth Maxwell.
02:46Elizabeth Maxwell?
02:48Yes.
02:49All respectable, all above board.
02:52That Β£20,000 wasn't his to spend on Fagin and Son's land.
02:56It was the East India's money, meant for something else that we have a pressing need of.
03:02I must insist you return this money to me immediately.
03:06No, no, no.
03:07A deal's a deal.
03:08And besides, that money's already snarled up.
03:10You're a commercial man.
03:11Now, I respect that.
03:13But I need that cash.
03:16Or a head in a barrel, pickled, so my employers can balance the books.
03:22Now, that head can be mine.
03:25Very unlikely.
03:27It can be the Duke's.
03:29That's much more complex.
03:31Or it can be yours.
03:35Simpler.
03:37Well, see, I don't like them choices.
03:41We don't need to be each other's throats.
03:45You see, I reckon we're cut from the same cheesecloth.
03:48Yes.
03:49I suspect we share an humble history.
03:52We both reached up from the gutter and touched the dirty hems of the stars.
03:58Oh, yeah.
03:59Oh, yeah.
04:01So don't make me your enemy when I could be your friend.
04:05Now, you mentioned something that your employers have a pressing need of.
04:10Perhaps I could help with that.
04:12That's a gesture of goodwill between friends.
04:15What is it?
04:17A saltpeter nitrary.
04:19A nitrary?
04:21Well, what did you say?
04:23You know of one?
04:24Oh, I've got one.
04:26I've got one.
04:27It's been finessed as we speak.
04:29If only the Duke had asked.
04:32They don't trust us, do they?
04:33Well, you see, you understand me, but a tough would never think that Norbert Fagin of Clark and World Green
04:39could have his own dietary.
04:42They underestimate us because we're humble.
04:45They do.
04:46And at their own peril, eh, Uriah?
04:48May I call you Uriah?
04:51You may.
04:52How soon can you fill my ships with saltpeter?
04:54Oh, end of the month.
04:56I need it tomorrow.
05:00Well, if I put my best people on it, it could be done.
05:04But, you know, give it a pinch of time and the greater value of this thing, this nitri,
05:09nitri, I'd have to have 50% of the profits plus 15,000 pounds cash for me disbursements and expenses.
05:17Impossible.
05:21Well, nice to natter.
05:23Wait.
05:29Done.
05:31Tomorrow, then.
05:33Or I will have to take your head.
05:44What was all that about?
05:46Who's saltpeter?
05:48What the bloody hell's a nitri?
05:53We need more clothes in Turpentine Street, sister.
05:58We need more caramel.
06:04You are more viable after your surgery, please, Belle.
06:07You have to go.
06:07Leaving Jack, you should know that.
06:09You always tell me not to be reckless with my life, but you are doing the same thing with yours.
06:13We did it in London during the outbreak of 32, and it was.
06:16Yes, but a quarantine is a...
06:18A quarantine?
06:20What, is he going to just shut them up in the elbow, away from any kind of medical treatment?
06:24Not here, Dawkins.
06:26Come.
06:31We can't let cholera spread into the town.
06:33Nobody knows how cholera is spread or what causes it.
06:36You cannot justify a quarantine on this flimsy basis.
06:39Well, I don't feel I need to justify myself to an unqualified woman with a hobby.
06:44Now, the poor nest in filth, and the stinking effusions of their cesspits and slaughterhouses,
06:50rot the soil and poison the air with a stench.
06:54Miasma.
06:55You can't prove that a smell transmits cholera. It's just a theory.
06:58Miasmic theory is supported by the Lancet, Lady Belle.
07:01Yes, being poorly read, I was unaware of that.
07:04The Lancet presents miasma as a theory, not scientific proof.
07:07Nevertheless, the theory is supported by the chief medical officer of London and the vast majority of practitioners.
07:13Well, why does it affect their gut, then?
07:15Because if cholera is spread by stinking air, it would attack the lungs, but it's not.
07:19They are vomiting. They are fouling themselves.
07:21It's more likely they've ingested something than breathed it.
07:24You can't quarantine on this basis, Smead.
07:27It's wrong.
07:28No, these people are poisonous.
07:32Their foulness spreads disease.
07:34These people, they're human beings.
07:38Now, I grew up in a place just like Devil's Elbow.
07:41There are children there.
07:42There are people who deserve our care, and we are condemning them like rats in a sodding bucket,
07:47based on some Toff's theory.
07:55We must make a decision.
07:56No, I must make a decision.
08:00Lady Bell, Dr. Dawkins, I've heard your position.
08:04But as head surgeon, I must act to protect the most lives I can.
08:08And the only reasonable option is to follow the medical consensus
08:12and ask the governor to quarantine the elbow.
08:14Christ.
08:15I'll go to the governor.
08:16Yes, so will I.
08:18Just tell him it's ridiculous.
08:26Salty Pete?
08:27He'll be a sailor, a cook.
08:32Anyone?
08:35I don't mind telling you, Fanny.
08:37I am now lumbered with a somewhat perspicuous conundrum.
08:40How am I going to find out what his nitrate is,
08:42if no one's ever heard of Salt Peter?
08:45Oh, my sainted twitches.
08:46I have.
08:47You have what?
08:48Heard of Salt Peter.
08:49There's been a bill tinkling in my mind,
08:51and I thought he was a pirate.
08:53But he's someone Uncle Dickie's talked about.
08:55Magnificent.
08:56Go and ask him.
08:57Well, it's just,
08:58Uncle Dickie's rather angry with me
08:59after helping to take all that money.
09:01I have no doubt you could charm the budgies from the trees, Fanny.
09:06Lifehawk.
09:16I have seen cholera ravage London, Governor.
09:19And if we don't contain it in Devil's Elbow,
09:22it will spread into the town.
09:24Quarantining?
09:25It seems extreme.
09:26Yes, it is.
09:27We need to find the cause
09:28before we lock people up with that medical treatment
09:30just for having it.
09:31Well, if the professor is right,
09:32delay will cost more lives.
09:33Yes, and it's not just me.
09:35It's the view of the medical journals
09:36and most senior men in the profession.
09:39Is he lying, Belle?
09:40No, but that doesn't mean they're all correct.
09:42But you are.
09:44And we should listen instead to your, well,
09:46what should we call it?
09:48A guess or hubris.
09:50I am suggesting we don't turn our backs
09:52on our own people when they're sick
09:53because they happen to be poor.
09:55Yes, but you're rather biased there.
09:58This is immoral.
09:59You'll hardly want to talk of morality.
10:01Give the order, Edmund.
10:13Based on the medical consensus,
10:15we will quarantine the elbow,
10:17but just as precaution
10:18until we understand
10:19how the disease is caused and spread.
10:22Yes.
10:22Afra, devil's elbow is to be quarantined.
10:26Send the order at once.
10:27Meridian.
10:29And Belle, you'll stay here,
10:30not risk your health in that hospital.
10:32I'll do nothing of the sort.
10:45What's happening in there?
10:47Oh, plague of the poor or some such.
10:51Come to strindle me again, you little vixen?
10:54No.
10:55To apologise for my recent antics.
10:58I've come to believe you're right
10:59about Mr Fagan and his miscreants, uncle.
11:02I should have listened to you.
11:04I'm very sorry.
11:06I feel rather silly.
11:08Well, we can all err.
11:12Perhaps I was rather terse in my own way.
11:16No matter.
11:17The money is no longer my concern.
11:19Mr Heap will manage it from here.
11:21Well, these look ever so complicated.
11:23You must be very clever to read them.
11:25Well, yes, as it happened.
11:28Who's Saltpeter?
11:30Is he a pirate?
11:33No, my dear, bless you.
11:35Saltpeter is bat excrement.
11:38Liquefied and mixed with ash.
11:40Oh.
11:41What for?
11:42To produce potassium nitrate,
11:44which, when mixed with sulphur and charcoal,
11:48goes...
11:49Oh.
11:51Fireworks?
11:51No, gunpowder.
11:53Which we use to blow our enemies to kingdom come.
11:56Unless, of course, they pay more.
11:57In which case, we sell it to them.
11:58It means we win all the wars, one way or another.
12:01Golly.
12:02Hmm.
12:03How wonderful.
12:04And how lucrative.
12:06At least, it would have been
12:09if I still had the Β£20,000 that I was meant to use
12:12to establish a Saltpeter nitrate.
12:13Oh, dear.
12:15I feel terribly responsible.
12:18Will we lose the war?
12:21My dear.
12:23There, there, there, there, there.
12:26Who among us hasn't lost a war or two?
12:30No, I must say, I commend you, Fanny.
12:33Taking responsibility for your mistakes
12:34is a sign of real maturity.
12:37I do so love to learn from you, Uncle.
12:39I'll try to be better.
12:51Inspector?
12:53Forgive me, Constable.
12:55You all right, sir?
12:58I've made a grave error of judgment in this case.
13:00Inspector!
13:02Inspector!
13:03It's the elbow.
13:04There's a cholera outbreak.
13:06We've been ordered to lock it down.
13:24This isn't right.
13:26We should protect them, not condemn them.
13:28Governor's order says to lock him up,
13:30so we lock him up.
13:31Right out of the quarantine zone, men.
13:34Please, my daughter.
13:35She needs to see a doctor.
13:36You come in, please.
13:38No.
13:38You can't leave us here to die.
13:39We need yourself.
13:40Someone needs to stay to ensure there isn't a riot.
13:42Save yourself.
13:43No!
13:44No!
13:46No!
13:47No!
13:48No!
13:49No!
13:53No!
13:55No!
13:56No!
13:57No!
13:58No!
13:59No!
13:59No!
14:00No!
14:01No!
14:02No!
14:03No!
14:04No!
14:04No!
14:04No!
14:04I need to get past the quarantine line to find the cause of the outbreak.
14:08Well, I can get you in, but you can't go.
14:10It's far too dangerous.
14:11It's absurd.
14:11I'm not a hothouse flower.
14:12I cannot risk the extra pressure on your aorta if you catch this.
14:15It's not your concern.
14:16It bloody is my concern.
14:17You are my only concern.
14:19If anything were to happen to you, I...
14:20We need to start the intersections.
14:21They helped reduce the congestion of blood in the last outbreak.
14:24No, I'm going to find the source.
14:25If you go near that place, I'll consider you infected and you won't be permitted to return
14:29him.
14:30I'm going to.
14:31Dawkins, no.
14:33I need you.
14:34All we are doing here, Sneed, is delaying the inevitable.
14:37Belle is right.
14:38We need to have doctors there so we can find the cause and save more lives.
14:42This is reckless and cowardly.
14:44And you call yourselves doctors, do you?
14:49And?
14:50Saltpeter isn't a pirate at all.
14:52It's an ingredient in gunpowder.
14:54I could have told you that, Fagin.
14:56But you never come to me, do you?
14:58Apparently, bats unpleasant trees are glorious for making explosions and all the countries
15:03want saltpeter because everyone is at war.
15:05Isn't it wonderful?
15:07And look, I happened upon Uncle Dickie's plans for a night tree to make it.
15:12Fanny.
15:14You are a criminal mind of pure and potent genius.
15:19Right, listen up.
15:21From now on, Fagin and son are in the saltpeter business.
15:25Now gather round.
15:26Time is of the essence if we're going to make this by tomorrow.
15:29Tomorrow?
15:29Have you been smoking hair too?
15:31I only did that once and it was a very emotional time.
15:34Why, how long did it take?
15:35About three months.
15:37Three months?
15:37Once I ain't got three months, I'm about to have me bones knocked off and pickled.
15:41Oh, why don't we all play a game of pretend?
15:43Yeah, there's a lovely notion, Fanny, but we ain't got any time for that now.
15:46No, we'll just pretend to have a factory.
15:51Oh, that could work.
15:53If we all muck in together and start now.
15:56Flash it.
15:58You said you didn't trust me.
15:59You threatened to blow me up.
16:03Look, why don't we just spit on palms and shake on it like Hobie's.
16:09We'll need a vat.
16:10Go and get a vat.
16:11And you need to be nicer to me.
16:13I'm nice?
16:13What's not nice about me, you cabbage?
16:16Roddy?
16:17Last time I helped in a Fagin and Son land scam, I got no coin and trouble from the East
16:21India Company.
16:22Farton, we lost Β£20,000, but Uriah's got a very strong need for this knightery.
16:27So we can either form a potentially lucrative partnership with him, or I'll lose me head.
16:32I'll think on it.
16:34Either outcome benefits me.
16:39Oh, Roddy.
16:40That is chilly.
16:42Even for you.
16:43Well, I'll tell you what, when you find the time in your bloody pine pulling shed, you'll let me know.
16:48Till then, Flashy, piss off and get me that vat.
16:51Please?
16:53Please, piss off and get me that vat.
17:02You all right?
17:03Fine.
17:05You?
17:06Yeah, fine.
17:09Fine.
17:10I'm glad we're together doing this.
17:12You're walking into a plague.
17:14How sure are you that it's not spread by stinking air?
17:17Reasonably sure.
17:18Logic doesn't hold.
17:20As if we're wrong, and we're not coming back from Devil's Elbow.
17:23Then let's hope we're right.
17:32Before, in the hospital,
17:35did you really grow up in a place as difficult as Devil's Elbow?
17:38Yeah.
17:40Worse.
17:42Sorry.
17:44Why?
17:45Don't be.
17:45It's not like it's your fault.
17:48I didn't know any different.
17:49I mean, it's just life.
17:51You know, it was hard.
17:53Toffs didn't make it any easier.
17:55We're shoving us down,
17:56stopping us from making a crust,
17:58kicking us off a street corner for begging.
18:01No one will give you an honest job,
18:02so we just...
18:04nick what we needed.
18:06I'm beginning to see why
18:07flaunting the law feels more natural to you.
18:11Yeah, well, you're doing it now.
18:19Um...
18:20What?
18:20No, nothing.
18:21There's just, er...
18:22There's a rather large bar of platinum down here somewhere.
18:25Oh, for goodness sake, Jack!
18:27What?
18:27The platinum, that was you!
18:29No, I can understand
18:31breaking laws that are arbitrary and unfair,
18:33but stealing just for greed, Jack...
18:35No, no, no, no, it wasn't for greed, it was for you!
18:37I don't need platinum!
18:38No, you might do, Belle.
18:39I am...
18:41I am so scared
18:43that the surgery I did to you
18:44is not gonna hold.
18:47And Tim is close to perfecting a galvanic autoree
18:49that can fix you if your location fails,
18:51but for that, we need...
18:52Platinum!
18:53And I'm sorry for involving Fanny in all this,
18:55but...
18:56when it comes to you, I just...
18:58I don't...
18:58I don't think rationally.
19:05Same.
19:10Where do we go from here?
19:15Why don't they be so scripty with me
19:17when they know me noggins on the block
19:19and I'm offering them a share of the price?
19:20Well, I suspect Rottie's upset
19:21because you've taken advantage of her hospitality.
19:24Taken advantage?
19:24And I think Flashbain wants a hug.
19:26A what?
19:26He wants to be included.
19:27He is!
19:29Appreciated.
19:29Right.
19:30So in the face of the East India Company
19:32coming for my head with a pickling barrel,
19:33I'm supposed to just stop everything
19:35and soothe the feelings of a pair of old knacker bags?
19:37When Belle's been unkind to me,
19:39which is quite a lot,
19:40she leaves me flowers or a book on my table.
19:43But I don't really want that.
19:44I just want her to say sorry
19:46and would I like to be her friend?
19:49Just be nice to them.
19:50Nice?
19:53I find all this very irregular.
19:56We'll give it a go.
19:58My dear Smyke,
19:59when we arrive at my lodgings,
20:00would you please be so kind
20:01as to keep your oculus peeled
20:03for a sign of Mr Heap?
20:04Thanks ever so.
20:05Much obliged.
20:06How's that?
20:06I think that's lovely, Mr Pagan.
20:09Gives me the shimmers.
20:32If they're all dying here,
20:33there must be a common factor.
20:42Sorry, um...
20:44Yes, so, um...
20:46If they're not dying from breathing in the stench,
20:48then what is it?
20:49Food?
20:50Drink?
20:53The arsenic poisoning.
20:55There were articles of it being in the wallpaper.
20:58I can assure you
20:59these people do not have wallpaper.
21:01They are lucky to have walls.
21:11Lady Belle.
21:13Dr Dawkins.
21:15Inspector, what are you doing here?
21:17People need to know the law will protect them.
21:19Quarantine or not.
21:20You and I clearly have a different experience with the law.
21:22Yes, I suspect we have.
21:25I've been recording the deaths here
21:26to make sure everyone has accounted for.
21:30There are almost no deaths on the butcher's side of the street,
21:32but there are very many on the side of the Wailer's pub.
21:35See, if cholera was in the air,
21:36that disparity would be impossible.
21:39We need to find the reason.
21:40I'll take the Wailer's side.
21:43Are they company Lady Belle on the butcher's?
21:45Lady Belle doesn't need a company.
21:48They'll split it up.
21:51Dr Dawkins.
21:57I misjudged you.
21:59I apologize.
22:02Will you shake my hand?
22:19Be careful, Jack.
22:22You too.
22:37Are you all right, darling?
22:38Yes, fine.
22:40Something at breakfast didn't agree with me.
22:43Oh, dear.
22:43Not the kippers.
22:45I thought they tasted a bit iffy.
22:48Mr Heep of the East India Company.
22:52Forgive me, excellencies,
22:54for the temerity to approach my betters.
22:57If you speak plainly,
22:58we're in the middle of something.
23:00Of course.
23:02Did I hear a port quarantine had been ordered, Governor?
23:06Yes, my husband closed the port.
23:08Oh, did I?
23:09Yes, darling, remember?
23:11Your opinion was that as there's a communicable disease in the streets next to the docks,
23:16well, it would be unconscionable to allow anyone else to be exposed.
23:19Yes, quite right.
23:21Yes, port's closed, Heep.
23:22But surely not for the East India Company.
23:24I have three ships arriving on the tide,
23:27and if I can't dock them,
23:28I can't process gunpowder for the realm,
23:31and then we give the enemy an advantage.
23:35Yes.
23:37Well, given those circumstances...
23:39Nothing changes.
23:41Because you were very firm,
23:43no exceptions could be made.
23:44Yes.
23:45Yes, firm.
23:48You'll just have to wait like everyone else, Heep.
24:01Hey, hey, what's going on?
24:03Hey!
24:08They all leap from the same stalls,
24:10drink the same beer,
24:11breathe the same air.
24:13Yet half the street's dead while the other half lives.
24:15Why?
24:18Are you all right?
24:21Yes.
24:23Just Jack.
24:26You've called him Jack twice now.
24:29How are I...
24:33A habit, I suppose.
24:36Then I have my answer.
24:41You must follow your heart.
24:45It's not so simple.
24:48It doesn't seem like it sometimes.
24:51Death has shown me that love is simple.
24:54It defeats all our attempts to rationalize or master it.
25:00That's why you're still in mourning for her,
25:02seven years old.
25:07I'm still in love with the ghost.
25:12I'm still in love with the ghost.
25:12I'm in love with Jack.
25:20She would have been proud of you.
25:25She would have liked you.
25:28She would have liked you.
25:52I'm in love with Jack.
25:54I'm in love with Jack.
26:00Get out of here, please and wife, Lash.
26:03Right, hurry along, my sweetlings.
26:06Riches saw the pickling battle awake.
26:11Now that is what I call craftsmanship.
26:16I've also bought these lovely dust coats for the girls to greet Mr. Heap officially.
26:23Now you know what that's doing.
26:24And he's very nearly bringing a tear to me eye.
26:27And I thought it might be rather jolly to have these pretend nightry documents to get into the spirit of
26:32it.
26:32I took my father's government seal to make them look special.
26:35Is that fun or not fun?
26:37This is a lot of fun.
26:39We might just make this scam work.
26:41If we can stop these two from killing each other.
26:43Stop the bleeding box!
26:44Why don't you stop telling me what to do?
26:46Why don't you stop calling me a...
26:47You can do it Mr. Fagan. Remember, with kindness.
26:50Yeah, right.
26:51Oi! Oi! Oi! Oi! Oi! Oi!
26:53We haven't got time for all this discord.
26:55Just be bloody harmonious, you hear me? Harmonious!
26:58Not quite like that.
27:00When Belle and I were small and fighting, our nanny would make us sing the forgiveness song.
27:05Shall I teach it to you?
27:07No!
27:08No!
27:08No!
27:09Dogs! Teeth! Right, listen.
27:10Flashy!
27:12What the devil are you up to now, Fagan?
27:17Shut your suit holes.
27:19Take them together.
27:22Understood.
27:23Agreed.
27:24Come on.
27:26Yes!
27:27Well done, Mr. Fagan.
27:28That was a lot coarser than the forgiveness song.
27:31With a bit more bribery.
27:32But it was similar in substance.
27:35Oi, boxer.
27:37You said they were all dead on the pub side.
27:39Yes.
27:40Yeah, well they're not dead in the pub.
27:42I thought that was evident.
27:45One common thing in there is beer.
27:47Again, evident?
27:49They don't drink water.
27:50They don't drink water.
27:50What, not at all?
27:51No, they don't even serve it out of principle.
27:53That lot shut themselves in there as soon as the bodies started dropping.
27:55They don't let anyone back in if they leave.
27:57That's why that fellow's so angry.
28:00So if they are the one dwelling on this side of the street where everyone is still alive
28:04and they only drink beer...
28:05The cholera must be in the water.
28:09Exactly.
28:10The next question is why the difference between the two sides?
28:12Different supplies.
28:14We need to find out where people are getting their water from.
28:15Yes, I'll accompany Dr. Dawkins this time.
28:17Keep you out of trouble.
28:20Yeah, if you like.
28:30has stopped.
28:30I can't wait to put that on.
28:30We will see it!
28:31I'll go to the right, put it!
28:33Hey!
28:34Hey!
28:35Hey!
28:36Hey!
28:37Hey!
28:37Hey!
28:38Hey!
28:39Hey!
28:40Hey!
28:41Hey!
28:46Hi!
28:47Hey!
28:47See me right out of the sunset!
28:51Go higher!
28:53To the left!
28:55To the right!
28:56And higher!
28:56Good work!
28:56Good work, ladies!
28:58And flashing.
28:59when Uriah turns up tomorrow this will be glorious. Mr. Fagin, you said to tell you when Mr. Hink
29:05was arriving? Yeah, that's right, it's my guy did, yes. Well, he's arriving. Bloody hell,
29:11you clod, next time lead out with that! Clashy, grab the rest of that dirt out,
29:17put some gunpowder on top of it. I thought it was meant to be fake. It is, it is. We've
29:21got to show him something. Can't we use some of these whiz-bends? Yeah, but these are my favourites.
29:26I don't doubt it, you see? I knew I could rely on you now. Come on, go, go, go, go!
29:30Everyone, look lively!
29:51You're as good as your word. Uriah!
29:58You're early. I mean, we're very nearly ready. Allow me to test your product? Of course, yes.
30:04Now, obviously, we are in the saltpeter business, but my colleagues and I always keep a sample
30:09of gunpowder, you know, for the client to test the potency.
30:19Where did you get your sulphur? Ah, well, you know, here and there. Round the corner. Look, I can't be
30:30giving away my trade secrets, can I, before we've reached an agreement?
30:40It's gritty. It's gritty. It's got a good pungent taste.
30:47Pungent is our stock in trade. Of course, I'll need to see it. Boom.
30:52Goes without saying. Happy to oblige. It's just we did say we'd be ready tomorrow, you know, and today's today.
30:58Looks like you're ready. No, no, no, no, no. Well, I wouldn't be doing me artisanship.
31:03Justice if I was to present you with a less than cracking banger.
31:07Now, tomorrow we can make a noise so loud it'll loosen your bowels.
31:12In the nicest possible way. Tonight all the deal's off.
31:15Good tonight, then, yes. Right.
31:27Can you do it, Flashy?
31:30Absolutely bloody loot, Lee.
31:33I think.
31:36They get their water from the pump.
31:39Rainwater tank. Same as all the others on this side.
31:42Ah.
31:45Mary, Dolly's here.
31:49Hello there. Where did you come from?
31:53Hello.
31:57I'm Belle.
31:59I'm Elizabeth. Mary won't wake up.
32:06You poor darling.
32:08Where are your mummy and daddy?
32:11Inside. They won't wake up neither.
32:52There's no tank in there.
32:55They must have used the pump water too.
32:58Do you drink the water from the pump, Elsbeth?
33:00No.
33:02Mary does, but it's better.
33:04So mummy gets me water from Mr Cobb across the street.
33:11I'm going to take you someplace safe, Elsbeth.
33:15Will you come with me?
33:17What about mummy, daddy and Mary?
33:20We'll come back for them, alright?
33:22Just let them sleep for a while.
33:27Come on.
33:30One more question, Mr Cobb.
33:32The charnlers get their water from you.
33:34Do you let anyone else use your tank?
33:36It'll help with our inquiry.
33:38No, I just see him and the professor.
33:40The professor?
33:43He doesn't live here?
33:44No, he visits his old brother.
33:45Out in the pastures on yonder.
33:48Why does he come to you?
33:50Don't know.
33:51Elbows on the way, I suppose.
33:53He buys him his vittles from my shop and I give him some of me water.
33:58His brother's not well and mine's got a sweeter taste.
34:03When does he come here?
34:05Strange house.
34:06Late at night.
34:11Tell me exactly where his brother lives.
34:13Jack, wait!
34:14No time, they're drinking bloody poison.
34:17Where are you going?
34:20Jack, what's wrong?
34:21Just talk to me.
34:22Tell me what you're doing.
34:23The pump water must come from the gallows.
34:24Square pipes in the tunnel.
34:26And they're flooded recently.
34:27Yes, I heard.
34:28Well, I felt it.
34:29I was here.
34:30It stank.
34:31There was sewage in it.
34:34What if they got into the pump water?
34:36It must be in the sewage.
34:38I suspect it passes through the bowels into waste water and it gets transmitted by infection.
34:44Oh my God, my father turned that water on.
34:47Bloody hell, no.
34:53Tell your father to turn off the water at the gallows square pipe.
34:56And to lift this bloody quarantine so that anyone left alive can get to hospital.
35:00Come on, Alice, but we need to run.
35:28Come on, Alice, but we need to run.
35:40Are you Ernest McGregor?
35:44Yes.
35:51Who are you?
35:53The law.
36:01Are you all right, sir?
36:05Yes, I'm all right.
36:07Forgive me, but you don't look all right. You seem ill.
36:10Did you drink from the pump in the elbow?
36:12No, no. It's...
36:15I have cancer.
36:18My brother tells me he'll be ready to operate soon.
36:23Professor McGregor.
36:26There's your cause of death, sir.
36:27No, why take the pains to stitch if it's a simple nighting in the door?
36:30Another body with a blue stitching, Inspector.
36:33The killer is surgically trained and obsessive.
36:38I wonder, could it be a botched operation?
36:40A surgeon.
36:41Those stitches are appalling.
36:43That doesn't rule out a surgeon conclusively, does it?
36:47He's bloody practising.
37:07I hate to say this, Fleshy, but I am relying on you completely.
37:16No, no, no, Warren.
37:17I don't think we need to do that.
37:19No, no, no.
37:20Of course.
37:23I thought maybe you'd need a...
37:24No.
37:25No, I didn't.
37:26Right.
37:26Yeah.
37:28I brought my pickling barrel.
37:30In case.
37:31Yeah.
37:32Well, I think we will meet with your approbation, Mr. Heap.
37:36If I may present Fagin and son's chief chemist, Dr. Fleshford Bang.
37:42A unique last name.
37:43I followed my destiny.
37:46Before we begin, Mr. Heap...
37:48Oh, no, sweetly.
37:49I'll sign when Mr. Fagin proves the saltpeter works.
37:54Yes.
37:56Well, Dr. Fleshford, bring on the bang.
38:04Here.
38:05Thanks.
38:07Thanks.
38:35Thanks.
38:36Thanks.
39:18Where do I sign?
39:34Take these blood basins outside, would you?
39:36I'll do this just to live and see.
39:47Rest now and go forth from this world.
39:50Into the arms of thy loving father.
39:54Into the arms of thy loving father.
39:59We found the cause for cholera.
40:01What?
40:02Where?
40:03It's in the water, the sewers.
40:07Surely not.
40:08Well, you will have your proof in a couple of hours if I'm not dead.
40:11But if you're right, the quarantine was utterly pointless.
40:16Yes.
40:18But all the literature said...
40:24Jack, I thought all for the best.
40:31I know.
40:32I know.
40:34Not your patients, they need you.
40:52Clara?
40:54Let's give her food and clean clothing.
40:56She's not infectious.
40:57Stay with Clara for a moment.
40:59She's very kind.
41:01Belle, darling, are you all right?
41:04Good lord.
41:06Who's that young lady?
41:11Belle, what is this?
41:13Pump paddle from Devil's Elbow.
41:14What?
41:15How did you even get in there?
41:16Mother, listen to me.
41:17Please.
41:18Cholera is not in the air.
41:19It is in the water, spreading because the sewers don't work.
41:22How do you know?
41:23We've seen this plague in tooth and claw,
41:26and it is carried from the gallows square pipes
41:28to the pump in Devil's Elbow.
41:30People in there are dying.
41:33I brought a little girl with me.
41:35She became an orphan in a day.
41:40They need doctors and nurses.
41:43They need you and father to protect them.
41:49Tell father to lift the quarantine.
41:52No, stay back.
41:54Mother, you're not listening.
41:55I'm not infected.
41:56No.
41:57I fear for you, not for me.
42:01Mother.
42:02Yes?
42:04Your lips.
42:06They're blue.
42:10I feel...
42:12I feel well.
42:27I feel well.
42:28I feel well.
42:41I feel well.
42:42I feel well.
42:43I feel well.
42:44I feel well.
42:44I feel well.
42:44I feel well.
42:45I feel well.
42:46I feel well.
42:47I feel well.
42:47I feel well.
42:48I feel well.
42:48I feel well.
42:50I feel well.
42:51I feel well.
42:51I feel well.
42:51I feel well.
42:52I feel well.
42:52I feel well.
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