Death In Paradise (2011) s04e05 Episode Script

Series 4, Episode 5

1 So don't tell me that I'm wasted Cos she's my saving grace Bang, bang, like a bullet from a gun Bang, bang Let's rave unto the song So get your sexy shades on like you're full of it And party like a boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo bullet Boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo-bullet Ah, boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo-bullet Boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo-bullet A bullet! ~ Yeah! Oh, mint, man! That's a top chord! Yeah! ~ ELECTRONIC SQUEAK ~ Whoa, whoa, whoa! ~ Oh, dear! Oh Well, I mean, a few small tweaks aside, we're done! ~ Ha-ha-ha! Ha-ha! ~ Great! Sweet! OK, so, I know it's been a long journey Tell me about it(!) Two planes, a boat.
Ah, she didn't mean to the island, you But but this album this album makes it all worthwhile.
~ It has "hit" written all over it.
~ What I said! Party, man! Yeah, we are going to break America.
Speaking as someone who lives there, I think you'll find America's already broken.
Now, if you'll excuse me, it's time for my dip.
Vince? Were you happy with the drums on that? Well, er Why don't you ask the drummer if he was happy with the drums? Well, were you? Yes.
Well, I was.
Laters.
Stevie? Is everything all right? Yeah, I'm all right.
Why wouldn't I be? Oh, I don't know, I was just wondering Cheryl, I haven't changed my mind.
You're going to have to accept that.
~ Course, yeah.
~ Yeah, right.
We can have another pass if you want.
~ Yeah, I'll do a pick-up on the bass as well.
~ Hey! I'm the bass player.
Yeah, course you are, mate.
Course you are.
And what's that supposed to mean? You never wondered why it sounded better on record than it did live? Hey, Stevie redid all your drums He did all your bass! Because you play like you're wearing a boxing glove! All right, all right, all right! If Stevie redid both your parts, it's not each other you should be having a go at.
Is it? HE STRUMS SHAVE AND A HAIRCU ~ Fair enough.
~ Yeah, whatever.
HE PLAYS DRUMS That's sounding great.
I'll keep the tape running, if you're happy to carry on.
There you go.
Signed, sealed and delivered.
Thanks, Pete.
Pete, what was the name of that bar we were in on Sunday night? ~ The Bullet Bar.
~ That's the one.
~ Oi, oi, oi! What's going on? ~ Oh, come on! I'll check the fuse box.
Well, it's not going to be the fuse box, is it? It'll be another bloody power cut.
~ Right, I'm going for a fagarette.
~ Bloody Caribbean.
Can't wait to get back home.
What, to the wind and the rain? Nutter! Yeah, working electricity and sanity.
What? Stevie! No! The electricity's live! Good afternoon, sir.
Er sorry.
Nobody's in the station, so I thought I'd make myself useful out here.
Watering the flowers.
They looked a bit dry.
~ JP.
~ JP, yes, of course.
Of course.
It's today, is it? Yeah, well, of course it's today.
Yeah, um sorry.
Er we were up late, er solving a case last night, and and, um and and Oh, I'm so sorry, sir.
~ Little bit wet.
~ Yes.
~ I'm so sorry about that, sir.
~ Don't worry.
Don't worry about it, JP.
~ No, I'll find Yes, no, no, no.
~ It's just a wet shoe.
~ I've got that, sir.
~ I just need to get my shoe off.
And I will be fine.
OK.
Get it dry, I can do that.
I can do it, thank you.
~ Give me your socks.
Lot of water, sir.
~ I will deal with my socks.
~ Honestly, no, you're tickling my foot! ~ The water, it's everywhere.
~ Good afternoon, sir.
~ You must be JP.
~ Oh, yes, of course.
You've not met.
Er allow me to introduce you to, er PC Hooper.
~ Hi.
~ HE CLEARS THROA Um this is the bit where people usually say hello.
~ Oh, yes.
Er hello.
~ Hello.
Er PC Hooper, this is, er Sergeant Sorry, Detective Sergeant Cassell.
Huh.
Yes, well, it's a new day for all of us, isn't it? You a PC.
You a DS.
~ And you? ~ Me? Yes, well, I've got a I've got a new pen PHONE RINGS.
.
somewhere.
~ Honore Police Station? ~ I should have answered the phone, shouldn't I? Oh, don't worry about it, JP.
I'm sure we'll find plenty of things for you to do, other than watering flowers.
That was Dwayne.
We have a death.
At the Scorpion Lounge recording studio.
Gosh.
Right, we'd better get down there.
Er after you, JP.
We'll see you down there.
I'm really sorry, sir.
Er Florence? Yes? Er er I think it'll take us a while to find our rhythm.
Er ha-ha.
As it were.
Er what I'd like to say is that, er if you'll agree to be patient with me, er then I will agree to try and not be too much er well yeah, well, like myself, really.
You know what I think? I think we should not worry about it.
Just focus on the case and see how we go.
I say, that sounds like a splendid idea.
Er shall we? Yeah, er Ahem! I can't believe I'll be working with the legendary Dwayne Myers.
I've heard so much about you at police college.
~ VEHICLE DRAWS UP ~ Er all good, I hope? Why wouldn't it be? Never mind.
Chief? So, what have we got so far? A band from the UK, here to record an album.
~ So, what's the name of the band? ~ Um If you have to look it up, it's clearly no-one we'll have heard of.
~ Yes, well, I may have.
~ You don't seem the type to have your finger on the pulse of popular music.
Especially Flowers Of Progress.
~ Never heard of them.
~ Me neither.
~ Mean anything to you? ~ Er no, sir.
Flowers Of Progress? Flowers Of Progress are here on Saint-Marie? Ooh! Stevie Smith, habitual wild child and lead singer.
Lived life on the edge.
And died the ultimate rock'n'roll death, electrocuted in a swimming pool.
HE SIGHS OK, merci.
So, whereabouts in the pool was the body discovered, Dwayne? Well, he was found floating just there, Chief.
If he was this end of the pool, he can't have knocked the lights in himself.
But why were the lights left on in the daylight? They weren't, but the power supply to them was.
This was all set for tonight, an end-of-recording party, to thank local musicians, hotel employees, people like that, you know? All organised by the band's manager.
So, the question is, how did the stage lights end up in the swimming pool? I think I can help you with that one, Chief.
You see, pin needs to be in, to keep the leg in position.
Mm-hm.
But look here.
It's worn and weathered.
I think the pin snapped and the whole thing fell into the swimming pool.
~ Then where's the other half? ~ Here it is.
No, don't touch it.
I need a Ah, er thank you, Florence.
If you ask me, Chief, the poor guy just took his swim at precisely the wrong time.
Yes, it does seem incredibly unfortunate, doesn't it? You don't think it was an accident? This pin didn't break, not of its own accord.
It's been deliberately cut.
Really? And with some sort of hacksaw, as far as I can tell.
Yes, look.
The blade slipped, marking it there.
And the end has burrs.
It's not been sheared off clean.
If this was a pin that just snapped after years of wear and tear, the break would be smooth.
But this isn't.
It was deliberately sawn in two.
So, what? You think someone pushed the tripod into the pool, intending to kill Stevie? And then cut the pin to make it look like an accident.
Yes.
~ So it was a murder? ~ I'd say so, JP.
I need a bag.
Er Ah, thank you.
Ha.
Ah.
That's funny.
Elateridae family, more commonly known as the click beetle.
The click beetle? Yes, so named because if they happen to find themselves upside down, then they can click their backs to throw themselves in the air and land the right way round.
Amazing little things.
~ It's evidence? ~ Yes.
Yes, well, the thing is, this specific breed of click beetle, Achrestus fortunei, has never lived on Saint-Marie.
They're endemic only to Martinique.
So, how did it get here? Quite.
How indeed? Dust for prints, photograph and bag anything of interest.
~ Sarge.
~ Thanks.
~ HE CHUCKLES ~ He is amazing.
I mean, that was just amazing.
He's got a lot better tricks up his sleeve.
Just wait and see.
~ This was your first album? ~ PETE: It was our only album.
~ Sorry, you want to talk to us because? ~ Yes, um Stevie's death may not have been an accident.
You what? Murder? Razor-sharp as ever there, Jimbo.
We're not ruling anything out at the moment.
Who discovered Stevie's body? Ah, er er we did.
~ Pete Thunders.
~ Yes.
Hey.
And? And this is Jim Smith, bass player and was Stevie's brother.
I'm sorry for your loss, Jim.
What's your role in the band? ~ HE COUGHS ~ I'm the guitarist.
And vocalist, and er songwriter.
Co-writer.
Yeah, co-songwriter.
And you are? Er Disco Biscuit, the drummer.
Or, as most people know me these days, Duncan Roberts.
HE SNIGGERS And you are? Hello? Erm erm Cheryl.
Er Cheryl Moore.
I'm the band's manager.
~ Oh, yes, you organised the party? ~ That's right.
That was all me.
OK, not all me.
Um The beer company was footing the bill.
But, er yes.
~ FLORENCE: And you are? ~ Vince, the producer.
This is my place.
~ What time did you find Stevie? ~ After 12.
That's when the power tripped out.
Thank you.
And when did you last see Stevie alive? When he left the studio to go for a swim.
~ HUMPHREY: Regular thing, was it? ~ He liked to be in the pool at 12.
Mad dogs and Englishmen and all that, you know.
Yes.
And what time did he leave the studio? ~ Some time round 11, 11.
30? ~ Yeah, around that time, yeah.
I can find the exact time for you on the control desk, if you'd like.
Er and did any of you see Stevie alive after he left the studio? Hm.
Why did you decide to record here in Saint-Marie? Um yes, in, er in 1991, The Flowers Of Progress recorded their first album in this ~ Our only album.
~ Yeah, in this very studio.
So, we've returned to recapture the anarchic energy that fuelled that debut No-one in Britain would have Stevie record in their studio.
The band had We'd just got back together Yes, thanks to Grand Central Beer.
There's a song on the first album called ~ Grand Central.
Track two.
~ Yes.
Um and a a beer company in America with the same name heard the song and wanted to use it for a commercial.
If the advert goes the way that we hope it will, then it could be a really great opportunity for the this band.
HE CLEARS THROA Where were you all at the time of Stevie's death, when the power tripped out? We were all in the studio.
At 12 o'clock, when the lights fell in the pool and Stevie was electrocuted, you were all there, all of you, inside the studio? Mm-hm.
Yeah.
~ Mm-hm.
~ Yeah.
OK.
So, all five people in there claim they were together in the studio when the lighting rig entered the pool and electrocuted Stevie.
There's a security fence around the whole place.
The only way to get out here is to come through the villa.
Then someone who was allowed in.
The band didn't set up all this.
I already checked.
The catering company and the stage crew did it all last night.
Everyone was signed in, then signed out, and no-one's visited since.
Yes, well, best to check, anyway, just to be on the safe side.
So, the killer's intention was for us to believe that a worn pin and a badly timed swim led to the unfortunate death of Stevie Smith.
And you don't believe it, Chief? No.
I think our killer seized their moment when Stevie wasn't looking, pushed the lights into the pool, then covered their tracks by staging the scene, to make the whole thing look like it was an unfortunate accident.
But, sir, if the only five people who could have done it were in the studio at the time that it happened well, how would they have managed that? That, JP, is the question, and at the moment, I don't have the faintest idea.
So, first of all, the hotel where the band are staying.
Er I want you to go into Stevie's room and see if there's anything of interest.
~ Er Chief? ~ Yes? ~ This is a taxi company.
~ Oh.
Really? Um er Right.
Florence Let's see how Vince is getting on with our time line.
Mind your head, sir! .
.
Bullet Boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo-bullet A bullet! Sorry to disturb you.
We were just listening to the tape.
Ahem.
Er could we have a quick word, Vince? Yeah.
In private.
Oh.
Of course.
Yes, course.
Right, well, er if you'll I'll just I can wait out Er no.
Er probably best if I I'll go back to the hotel.
Thank you.
Not the most organised manager I've ever worked with.
Do you know her well? She pretty much keeps herself to herself.
Yeah.
~ Yeah, and the band? Um, do you know them well? ~ No.
I produced their first album back in the day and I've just done their Well, their last album, so Do they work together well? The first week or so, it was a bit patchy.
But this last week, things have really come together.
Stevie was excited, reenergised.
So, yeah, I guess so.
Er did you find out when Stevie left for his swim? It was about here.
STEVIE: 'Were you, er were you happy with the drums on that?' That's Stevie? DISCO: 'Why don't you ask the drummer if he was happy with the drums?' ~ STEVIE: 'Well, were you?' ~ DISCO: 'Yes.
' ~ DISCO: 'Well, I was.
' ~ STEVIE: 'Laters.
' And that was about 11.
28.
play us a little more, just before the power cut out? Sure.
DISCO PLAYS DRUMS 'That's sounding great.
'I'll keep the tape running, if you're happy to carry on.
' ~ That's Disco Biscuit.
~ Ah.
PETE: 'Signed, sealed and delivered.
' CHERYL: 'Thanks, Pete.
' JIM: 'Pete, what was the name of that bar we were in on Sunday night?' ~ PETE: 'The Bullet Bar.
' ~ JIM: 'That's the one.
' ELECTRIC WHOOSH And that was the end of the session, when the power went.
Right, and that's everyone's voices we heard? Er yourself, Jim, Cheryl Yeah, all of us.
We were all there.
~ Can we have a copy of it? ~ Yeah, sure.
Thank you, Vince.
HE CLEARS THROAT Right.
~ It's exciting, isn't it? ~ What? ~ Looking through a rock star's room.
~ I'm not so sure about that.
If this guy's the hell-raiser everyone says he is, we could have quite a heavy task on our hands.
~ I suppose so.
~ Hey, this is the one.
What the Wow.
It's really tidy.
OK, so, we look for anything out of the ordinary.
Itemise and bag whatever we find.
Absolutely.
Right, I'll leave this with you.
~ Oh.
~ I'll see you in about an hour, OK? Aren't we supposed to do this together? Yes, but while you're in here, I'm going to go and see the hotel manager and see if she knows anything.
Look, I'm more than happy to swap with you, you know.
But it's the hotel manager.
She goes on and on and on.
I wouldn't want you to have to go through that.
No, sir! Not on your first day.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Dwayne Myers.
OK.
Let's do this.
So, I tried to find anything from when the band were here last.
So, The Saint Marie Times are doing a search through their clippings archive ~ and will send over anything of interest.
~ Brilliant.
So, suspects? Pete Thunders.
After the band split, he became an artist.
Having done initial financial checks, hasn't been very successful.
He has a few cautions on his file, all for assault.
Prone to violence? OK, and Disco Biscuit? He retired from music, invested in property and he's now a millionaire several times over.
So, he's not in this for the money.
Next, Jim Smith.
Had a tempestuous relationship with his brother.
Long history of their bust-ups.
Insisting on separate hotels when touring.
COMPUTER BINGS Usual rock-star stuff.
HE CLEARS THROA Er an e-mail from The Saint Marie Times.
~ Anything? ~ An attachment.
I'll print it off.
Just leaves us with Cheryl and Vince.
I couldn't find a great deal online about Cheryl.
But, considering she knew Stevie the least, well, she appeared to be the most upset, so I'll keep looking.
Vince? Um producer and owner of the recording studio, ~ originally built by his father in the '60s.
~ The family business.
Personal life a bit of a mess.
Ex-wife lives in London.
Which just leaves us with this little chap.
Why was he found expired at our crime scene, rather than enjoying life amongst his fellow click beetles back on Martinique? ~ Sir? ~ Yes? You should see this.
~ It was Vince's studio.
~ Right.
HE SIGHS Beer's warm, the food's gone off and the ice has melted.
What a party, eh? We were wondering if you had a minute, Mr Thuram.
If that's all it is.
The catering equipment's being flown back early.
I need to get all this lot ready.
Hopefully it won't take too long.
Your studio burnt down.
July '91.
The Flowers Of Progress were recording here.
Hm.
It wasn't the greatest of times.
According to the reports, it was Stevie who caused it.
He was at the height of his drinking.
He was reckless.
He wouldn't listen to anyone.
He didn't care about anyone else.
So, why did you let them back in? I didn't want to, believe me.
But I'm not in a position to turn work down, so ~ This was your father's studio, wasn't it? ~ Built it himself.
Must have been particularly upsetting when the insurance didn't pay out.
It's not been easy, I admit.
But I got through it.
It was three years after the fire until you were able to reopen the studio.
That's a long time.
Your wife left you during that period, didn't she, all because of Stevie? How did you feel, seeing him after all this time? Look, the guy's changed.
He's dry now, doesn't touch a drop.
I guess I felt I shouldn't hold it against him.
He's grown up, I suppose.
Huh.
I'll get those CDs.
DWAYNE SPEAKS CREOLE Er Um OK, madam, thank you very much.
You've been very helpful.
Now, if you wouldn't mind excusing us, please.
Look, I really wanted to come and help you with the search, you know.
But I couldn't get away.
That woman could talk a glass eye to sleep, you know.
So, I itemised and bagged whatever I can find.
Good.
HE GRUNTS ~ Come now.
~ Dental floss.
Small toothbrushes.
~ Mouthwash.
Teeth whitener.
~ JP.
Contact lenses.
Contact lens solution.
JP! ~ Did you itemise and bag everything? ~ Yes, like you said.
But this is just the bathroom, sir, so Look, this is all very good and very thorough, but did you actually find anything relevant to the case? ~ What? ~ This.
Stevie's browser history's particularly interesting.
Oh! MUSIC PLAYS OVER HEADPHONES Boo-na-na-boo-na-na-boo-bullet Boo-na-na-mm-mm-mm-mm-mm! ~ MUSIC PLAYS ~ Well? ~ HUMPHREY HUMS TUNE ~ Well? Mm? Well er MUSIC STOPS .
.
the tapes confirm that the last time anyone is heard leaving the studio, apart from Stevie, is ten o'clock, and that was Pete, two hours before our victim was killed.
~ So, how did the killer do it? ~ No idea.
But I did come across something of interest.
Listen to this.
~ Er this is from ten o'clock.
~ JIM: 'Two! One, two! ~ JIM: 'One, two, two' ~ STEVIE: 'Three?' DISCO: 'Oh, yeah, funny, Stevie.
VINCE: 'OK, rolling.
' Jim, Stevie and Disco were in the studio and Pete and Cheryl were in the control room with Vince.
CHERYL: 'Pete, calm down.
It's fine.
' ~ VINCE: 'Where are you going?' ~ PETE: 'For a smoke! ~ 'It's like Cardiff, all over again!' ~ Cardiff? Mm-hm.
~ What does it mean? ~ He doesn't sound very happy, does he? ~ Interesting.
~ Hm? The band split up in Cardiff.
HE CLEARS THROA "September 12th 1992.
" So, were the band about to split again? And if so, why? I might be able to help you with that, Sarge.
JP GRUNTS So, while JP was searching Stevie's room, I was hard at work interviewing the hotel manager.
Now, a porter was sent to Stevie's room last night after complaints of a fight.
~ Between Stevie and who? ~ We don't know.
The porter isn't on duty yet.
They're going to let us know when he is.
~ Also, JP came across this.
~ Yes, er It was uploaded last week by Stevie.
COMPUTER BEEPS STEVIE: 'Grand Central Beer? 'I'm no sell-out, especially not that stuff.
It's crap! 'If I fell off the wagon tomorrow, 'and Grand Central was the last beer left in the world, 'I still wouldn't touch it, you know what I mean?' Stevie put that up himself? Stevie may have been off the booze, but he clearly hadn't lost his rebellious streak.
Grand Central is the company that wanted to use one of the band's songs in a commercial.
A deal that would net the songwriters half a million dollars.
Half a million dollars? We picked up the contract from the manager, Cheryl.
Who are the songwriters? Stevie and Pete? The inspector wins a cigar.
There's a clause that states that the contract will be terminated, if any of the band defames the product in print or online.
And this clip is everywhere.
So, Pete stands to lose his share of half a million dollars.
All thanks to Stevie.
You know, if memory serves, the band used to have some sort of a fanzine, Packet Of Seeds or Bunch Of Flowers or something like that.
What? Do you think we should be honest with each other, now we're working a little closer? Yes, absolutely.
What's on your mind? This band don't appear to be, as you say, your cup of tea? That's very perceptive of you, DS Cassell.
Yes, well, I bought their album because Well, er someone persuaded me.
A girl? ~ Angela Matterson.
~ Angela Matterson? She was a very forceful girl, Miss Matterson.
If she told you to buy a record, you bought that record.
I studied that record.
~ And you didn't like it? ~ Hated it.
No, I I like happy songs.
I like a nice melody, you know? SHE CHUCKLES We've looked at your financial records.
Things haven't been easy.
Look, I'm not going to pretend that a massive payday wasn't an incentive for the band to reform.
So, the band split up in ~ '92.
~ '92.
~ We were doing a gig and there was this guy in who had this massive music show, and he wanted us on.
We were going to sell a lot of records, you know? So, we're up there, Stevie's knocking back a bottle of whisky on stage and halfway through the set he just starts gobbing off at him.
I mean properly, telling him he's no sell-out.
Well, we tried to smooth it over after the gig, but it was too late.
He'd blown it for all of us.
So, you decided to split up.
PETE SNORTS And what? You reached that decision calmly, rationally? Me and Stevie had a little set-to, nothing too serious.
Apart from you were cautioned for assault.
Yeah, er OK, but, look, that was just band stuff, you know? I've changed.
We all have.
And this This is ancient history.
But history does have a habit of repeating itself.
See, we got hold of a contract between you, Stevie and Grand Central Beer.
You and Stevie are to earn half a million dollars plus whatever doors the ad would open for you.
But then Stevie bad-mouthed the beer.
We've seen the clip.
As has everyone at Grand Central Beer.
Stevie destroyed your chances, by opening his big mouth once again.
You'd think so, wouldn't you? But no.
The beer company love the clip.
What? PHONE RINGS It's Dwayne.
Ask Cheryl.
Check with the company.
Ask anyone.
I thought, yes, him gobbing off had ruined it for all of us again.
But she was on the phone to 'em this morning.
They think it's hilarious.
Proper rock'n'roll.
Pure Stevie.
No such thing as bad press.
You know what I mean? Go figure.
Right.
Er well, thank you for your time, Mr Thunders.
Right, we need to check with the beer company.
But if Pete's telling the truth about their reaction to the footage, then we've just lost ourselves a motive.
Then you'll be pleased to know we might have found another one.
Dwayne heard from the hotel.
The porter's arrived for work.
We know who Stevie was arguing with in his bedroom.
Who was it? Oh, yeah.
Hang on.
I do remember some little busybody porter banging on Stevie's door, mouthing off about summat.
HE GRUNTS Did you threaten to kill Stevie? Oh, right.
Er I don't know.
Might have, yeah.
Well, we say it all the time, right? I mean, I wouldn't actually kill him.
He's like a brother to me.
~ He IS your brother.
~ Yeah, it's right, that.
What were you fighting about? I can't remember.
Summat and nothing, I suppose.
~ Going out? ~ I'm not.
Neatly pressed shirt.
Boots mid-polish on the table.
Must be going somewhere you want to make an impression.
I'm just going around and about.
Soak up a bit of the Caribbean vibe and that, yeah? So, if you've got no more questions ~ DWAYNE: ~ You think he's hiding something? Yes, possible.
He clearly didn't want us to know what his argument with Stevie was about.
And he was very cagey about where he was going tonight.
Hang on a minute.
On the recording, Jim was asking something about a bar.
Bullet Bar.
Maybe that's where he's going.
You want us to head down there and see what he's up to? A little light surveillance might not hurt at all.
Thank you, Dwayne.
~ Sir? ~ Yes? Er the postmortem reports have come through.
They've confirmed Stevie suffered sudden cardiac arrest due to electrocution, and they're not disputing the time of death.
So, we now know for definite that he was murdered at 12 o'clock.
Right, you'd better get changed and head over to the Bullet Bar.
Chief.
HE CLEARS THROAT Stevie was killed at noon.
The recording we have confirms that our five suspects were all together at that time.
But someone had to have been by the pool to push the stage lights in and electrocute Stevie.
Who was it and how? And what about you, little fella? How did you get there? ~ Sir? ~ Mm-hm? I found the fan magazine you were talking about online.
~ The Flower Seeds.
~ Oh! Good work, Florence.
There's quite a few editions.
Shall we take half each? That's almost a very good idea.
~ Almost? ~ Yes.
In order to make it a truly brilliant idea, you might have added that we take half each, decamp to Catherine's bar, and read them there.
~ What do you say? ~ I'd say THAT is a much better idea.
Excellent.
MUSIC PLAYS We're not allowed to drink on duty, are we? It's so we can blend in.
I'm very dedicated to my undercover work, you know.
I mean, very, very dedicated.
Raise them high, drain them dry.
DWAYNE COUGHS Only I'm not really a big drinker, sir.
You you know how it is.
Er No, I don't.
Now, get it down you.
JP GASPS Soothe your throat with your beer, the man! ~ JP COUGHS ~ Look.
No, don't look.
He's meeting someone.
~ What do we do now? ~ Bide our time.
If they separate, I'll tail the woman.
You follow Jim.
OK? HE SCOFFS AND LAUGHS Edited by Daisy Buttercup.
Photography by Daisy Buttercup.
Articles on the band by - Who's Daisy Buttercup? - Oh, she's not real.
It's a song on the first album, and not a particularly good one at that.
It was clearly a one-nutty-fan operation.
You're a fan.
Are YOU Daisy Buttercup? Yes, I am not a fan.
Just following Angela Matterson's orders? ~ Oh, yes.
~ And was it worth it? Did anything ever happen between you and Angela? Oh, gosh, no, no, no.
We we never even held hands.
Ah, perhaps it wasn't a bad thing.
Life would have spun me off in a different direction.
I certainly wouldn't be here.
~ I know what you mean.
~ Oh? You have your own male Angela Matterson? Not quite.
My five brothers.
If ever I brought a boy to the house, they always managed to scare him off.
~ So, what did you do? ~ Simple, really.
I stopped taking my boyfriends back to meet my brothers.
HE CHUCKLES Touche.
MUSIC PLAYS JP! Jim's on the move! You'd better follow him.
JP! Ah, man! What am I meant to do now? Ah.
Er excuse me, miss.
My young and, er very inexperienced friend here has had a little too much to drink.
But I must finish these before I leave.
Would you be so kind as to help me with them? ~ Are you planning a trip? ~ Er a trip? Oh, I see.
Er well, yes, a kind of a trip, although not for me.
And it's, erm sort of already happened.
Our friend, the click beetle.
Trying to work out whether it's possible he could have made the journey between Martinique and Saint-Marie.
And? Well, it's a good 70 miles between the two islands and, while click beetles can fly, it it's really only at night and really rather rare.
Maybe he ended up on a boat or a plane and got carried over.
Yes, well, I've also looked into that.
Um all planes leaving the Caribbean are sprayed with insecticides before departure.
Well, he would have been dead before he left Martinique.
Well, you've certainly been very thorough.
Do you think maybe we should Oh, yes, yes.
Yes, of course.
Quite right.
HE CLEARS THROA Don't even think about it.
So, we know the night before his murder, Stevie was fighting with Jim.
The two of them have always had a stormy relationship, but we don't know specifically what this argument was about.
Vince.
Stevie burnt his studio down.
~ And, as we know from insurance checks, he wasn't covered.
~ Quite.
~ Morning, all.
~ Morning.
How did you get on last night? Oh, pretty good, Chief.
Exactly like you thought, Jim turned up to the Bullet Bar, where he met and had a drink with a woman.
Right.
Did you manage to find out who she was? More than that, Chief.
~ HE CLEARS THROA ~ Her name was Marie Etner.
She was a girl Jim knew from the last time the band were on the island back in 1991.
Er she and Jim had a bit of a thing, you know? ~ Ah, interesting.
Go on.
~ Well, that's only the start.
Turns out she fell pregnant and had his kid.
~ So, Jim abandoned her? ~ Oh, no, no, no, no.
Jim never even knew he was the father, not until the day before yesterday.
~ I I don't understand.
~ Look.
When Marie found out she was pregnant, she called Jim.
But she could only get hold of Stevie and he promised to pass the message on.
And what? He didn't? ~ No.
~ So, let me get this right.
Stevie was never going to tell his own brother he was going to be a dad? Exactly.
He only found out about it two days ago.
That must be why they were arguing in Stevie's room.
~ Good work, Dwayne.
~ Thank you, Chief.
Florence, I think you and I need to go and speak to Jim.
~ I am really sorry, everyone ~ Nothing to report, JP? Er Jim's still in his room, yeah? Er good work.
Right, Chief? Yes.
Come on, Florence! ~ Sarge.
~ I I overslept.
I was going to come clean and And I covered for you.
It's what they don't teach you at police college.
We are a team.
So, I'll be counting on you to do exactly the same thing for me next Thursday when I'm recovering from Domino Club and a few large rums.
Now, get yourself an aspirin and get to it.
We got a lot of work to do.
Chop chop! HE GRUNTS You didn't get on well, you and Stevie? We had a couple of fallouts and the press built it up, yeah? It was nothing serious.
~ No? ~ No.
Even when he kept things from you? Like you becoming a father? SPOON CLINKS You spoke with Marie? HE SIGHS It was Vince who told me that I had a son.
He thought I knew about it and I just didn't care, that I was being, you know, same old Jimbo.
When I told Stevie, I said I couldn't believe I'd had a kid all these years and never knew about it, and that's when he come clean.
Told me that he'd known all along.
That's what you were fighting about in his hotel room? ~ You must have been furious.
~ That's one word for it.
You know, people dream about the lifestyle that we used to lead.
Partying all night.
Girls on tab.
It was crazy.
But if all you actually really want is to meet someone and settle down ~ .
.
it's not exactly the right environment, if you know what I mean.
~ Is that what you wanted? I'd have loved it.
A wife.
A kid.
A family.
Just never seemed to happen.
Well, it did.
~ Just nobody told me.
~ So, why didn't Stevie tell you? Because we'd had a big fight about something and we weren't talking.
He kept it from me to spite me.
He admitted it! Apologised, even, which Stevie never does.
Said that he'd messed up years ago and wished he'd have done things differently.
~ Said he wanted to put things right.
~ Did you let him? ~ Did you forgive him? ~ No.
I couldn't.
Maybe in time I might have.
But So, what did you do? Hey, hang on.
You don't seriously think I had anything to do with his death, do you? ~ Did you? ~ Look, I hated Stevie for what he did.
But he was my brother! I wouldn't kill him! Look, you want a suspect to talk to, you've so got the wrong guy.
There's members of this band who've got a real axe to grind with my brother.
MUSIC PLAYS Merci.
It's a little, er down at heel for a millionaire.
I like it.
It's real.
When we were recording the first album, me and Stevie used to hang out in places like this.
Jam with the locals.
Ah.
Great days.
Well, they were, until Stevie got drunk and wound everyone up.
Jim tells us you started legal proceedings against Stevie? It's nothing.
Loads of bands end up in courtrooms.
And those cases are usually for huge amounts, whereas your claim is For a pound.
~ You sue Stevie for a pound? ~ Pound of flesh'd be more appropriate.
I didn't want people thinking I was doing it for the money.
Why are you doing it? Credit.
Aside from one or two tracks on that first album, we all contributed to the writing AND recording.
But you look at the writing credits for every track and it's Lyrics by Stevie, music by Pete? ~ Smith and Thunders, yeah.
~ It's a fairly normal arrangement, isn't it? I wrote specific lines.
I wrote verses for songs that I took to Stevie.
He said they wouldn't work, and then, a day or so later, they'd crop up again in another song that HE'D written.
I just want to set the record straight.
I want my credit.
There's nothing wrong with wanting that, is there? Now, if you'll excuse me I spoke with Disco's lawyer, who said it would have been hard to prove ~ Mm? ~ .
.
that he co-wrote the songs, and that instead he should have appealed to Stevie's goodwill.
Mm, I wonder where that got him.
Apparently, Stevie told Disco he'd amend the credit listing on any reissue of the first album.
But then the record company just sent this over.
It's the design for the reissued album artwork, and, as you'll see, no mention of Disco Biscuit.
Has Disco seen this? All band members were sent an early copy for approval two days ago.
So, Disco Biscuit knew that Stevie was shafting him? Which is fine, is fine, but while he may have had a motive, he didn't have the opportunity.
See, from the recordings, we know that Disco was in the studio when the power went out.
~ As was Vince.
~ Yes, I know.
~ And Pete and Cheryl.
~ Yes, thank you.
~ And Jim.
~ Yes, I know.
None of them had the opportunity.
HE SIGHS "Lee Vale Productions".
Lee Vale.
Lee Vale.
Where have I heard that name before? Who is this Lee Vale? No, Lee Vale isn't a person.
It's, er some kind of record company.
Lee Vale Productions.
They're behind the reissue of the album.
Lee Vale.
~ Is there an address? ~ Yes.
Er 17 Lee Vale, Marston, Oxford Of course.
Flower Seeds.
~ Here.
~ And here.
"Edited by Daisy Buttercup".
Her address is "17 Lee Vale, Marston, Oxford.
" So, Daisy Buttercup is Lee Vale Productions? ~ The one and the same.
~ So, who is this notorious Miss Daisy Buttercup? I know.
MUSIC PLAYS Thank you for your time, Cheryl.
Or do you prefer "Daisy Buttercup"? I'm sorry.
I'm going to have to go and, erm change.
Oh, no, don't worry.
It will soon dry in the sun.
Care to bring us up to speed about how Daisy, the number-one fan, became the band's manager? Disco Biscuit bought my house.
That's, er how we met and And according to our research, you've been in the music business for three months.
I know I'm not exactly what you'd call, er qualified, but I have very good organisational skills and when I set my mind to something, I make sure it happens.
I got the band back together again.
I did the deal with the beer company.
I mean, even yesterday Stevie was saying he wasn't going to sign the contract.
But, you know, then, when it came to it, he did.
I mean, I I made that happen.
This must be a dream come true for you.
Sorry? Managing the one rock band you've spent your life following.
Adoring.
Yeah, I guess I'm very fortunate.
And who in the band knew that as well as their manager, you're actually their biggest fan? None of them.
So, what exactly were you up to? Sorry, I don't know what you mean.
Well, I mean, come on.
Your behaviour is verging on that of a stalker.
That That is not true.
I I just wanted to try something new I just with my life.
You know, try something different.
You did it to get close to Stevie, didn't you? ~ SHE SCOFFS ~ What? That necklace, I've seen it before.
'Grand Central Beer? I'm no sell-out, especially not that stuff.
'It's crap!' It belonged to Stevie, didn't it? He gave it to me.
Seems quite a personal kind of gift.
Were you and Stevie having a relationship? I fell for him.
I'd always had a crush on him since I was a a kid, but I thought I was over it, and then, you know, we met, and he just swept me off my feet.
And then? He, um he he ended it.
He'd fallen in love with the band again, you see, and, you know, he needed to concentrate on that.
HUMPHREY: 'And were you OK with him ending it?' No! I was NOT OK.
~ SHE SIGHS ~ Yeah, OK, I admit it.
I was in love with him.
And that's exactly why I wouldn't have killed him.
HUMPHREY: The answer has to be here, somewhere.
Stevie Smith had a fling with Cheryl Moore, number-one fan.
Breaks her heart.
Disco Biscuit's suing Stevie for not crediting him.
Jim Smith could have been a father, had Stevie not hushed it up.
Vince.
Stevie burnt his studio down.
All of them have a motive.
But none of them had the opportunity.
At 12 o'clock, Stevie was having his daily swim.
One of the suspects pushes live stage lights into the pool, electrocuting him.
They then sawed one of the support pins in half, in an attempt to make it look like it had, after years of use, finally broken, meaning Stevie's death looked like an awful accident.
But but for that very reason, we know he was actually murdered and the only five people who could have done it were all together in the studio when it happened, thus presenting us with what is, it would seem, an impossible murder.
We are getting nowhere! Oh! Argh! Let's take a break, clear our heads.
HE SIGHS And you're not helping matters.
I mean, why were you there? Why were you at our crime scene? ~ Sir? ~ Yes? ~ You're talking to a dead beetle.
~ I know I am.
Do you think maybe you should get some fresh air? That's probably a very good idea.
Ah, sir? It will soon dry in the sun.
HUMPHREY: 'Why were you at our crime scene?' Maybe he ended up on a boat or a plane and got carried over.
I think the pin snapped and the whole thing fell into the swimming pool.
Ha! Right.
Of course.
The last time anyone is heard leaving the studio after Stevie is ten o'clock.
Stevie was excited, reenergised.
Said he wanted to put things right.
Yesterday Stevie was saying he wasn't going to sign the contract, but when it came to it, he did.
STEVIE: 'Grand Central Beer? 'No way.
I'm no sell-out, especially not that stuff.
It's crap!' ~ Good Lord! ~ You've got it? Yes, I think I have.
We need to get everyone together.
But first I need to check something in the studio.
~ Oh.
And, Dwayne, catering.
~ You want me to bring food? The company who provided the catering equipment at the studio, dig out their details.
Come on, JP! Got it.
Bag it.
Good.
TABLE SCRAPES Yes.
Ahem! OK.
First off, apologies for bringing you all out here to the scene of Stevie's murder.
Now, I know he was a good friend to all of you, a brother to some of you.
So, why would any of you want to kill him? ~ Cheryl ~ I didn't do it! .
.
AKA Daisy Buttercup.
Number-one fan.
Editor of the fanzine Flower Seeds.
~ That was you? ~ Responsible for reuniting the band.
~ I'm no killer.
~ But you are Stevie's biggest fan.
And his lover, briefly, before he broke your heart.
Vince? You strike me as being a very patient man, biding your time, waiting for Stevie to return, the man who burned down your studio and ruined you.
I couldn't kill Stevie.
I couldn't kill anyone.
And Disco Biscuit.
I'd prefer it if you call me Duncan.
~ Why would you want to kill Stevie? ~ I wouldn't.
Even though your contribution to the band has never been recognised? Stevie still ensured the reissued CD didn't credit you.
I was in the studio when Stevie was killed.
Of course you were.
Rock-solid alibi, same as everyone else.
HE SIGHS And Jim.
Stevie deprived you of the one thing you wanted in life.
A family.
I told you, Stevie was my brother.
I wouldn't have hurt him.
No.
No, but Pete would.
We know you attacked Stevie in Cardiff when the band split, and we also know that Stevie potentially costing you the beer commercial money was "Cardiff again".
And now we know you murdered him.
What? You what? Grand Central Beer brought you all back together and it pushed you all apart again, didn't it? It was an accident! What are you going on about? Stevie may have initially been seduced by a quick payday .
.
but then things changed for him.
No way.
I'm no sell-out, especially not that stuff.
I told you, the beer company are delighted with that little clip.
But there was a bigger problem than the bad press that clip might have brought you, wasn't there? Stevie, the new Stevie .
.
didn't want to sell out.
He was still a man of the people .
.
and because of that, he refused to sign that contract.
But I told you, he did.
He did sign the contract.
And you saw Stevie sign it? No.
- Pete did.
- The date on the contract indicates that Stevie signed it yesterday morning.
HUMPHREY: He was pretty adamant in that recording.
I think he had no intention of changing his mind and signing that contract, and that is why you had to kill him .
.
so you could forge his signature and collect the half a million dollars you so needed.
This is ridiculous.
How would I forge his signature? Oh, it's not that hard.
I mean, not if you had the means.
Just place this under the contract where Stevie's signature should be, and just trace it over.
The thing is, if you had done it that way, then you would be able to see the indentations where you went over Stevie's signature.
Erm there.
Half a million dollars split between you and Stevie.
Plus the prospect of capitalising on the advert, and touring.
How are we going to tour without a singer? This band is nothing without Stevie! Oh, I don't think you believe that for a second.
That's why you made sure that Stevie died in such an iconic way.
Electrocuted in a swimming pool.
Legend! I mean, the publicity and the attention would be enormous.
You would clean up.
But Pete was with us in the studio when Stevie was HUMPHREY: Was murdered, yes.
DISCO: Oh, come on! That was the clever part.
How could someone be at the pool to push the stage lights in when all of you were in the studio the entire morning? All except for you, Pete.
It was around ten o'clock when you popped out - perfect time to set your trap.
Your intention was for us to assume that the whole thing was an accident, a worn pin snapping after years of use.
The pin snapped and the whole thing fell into the swimming pool.
And that's how we knew it was murder all along.
The pin had been very clearly cut with a saw.
Which brings us to .
.
the click beetle, who was an unknowing accomplice to murder.
You see, when we first arrived on the crime scene, it bothered me that there was water in the planter that was sitting in front of the fallen lighting stand, but not in any of the others.
The supply company Cheryl used for the party - we checked it.
Some of the gear came from Martinique.
It was the same island our clip beetle came from.
You know, I think he hopped into the catering equipment, a freezer, to be specific, and got shipped over, and so our little beetle here .
.
ended up encased in a block of ice.
In fact, the one particular block of ice you used to kill Stevie Smith.
'Earlier in the morning at ten o'clock, 'knowing that Stevie would take his daily swim at noon.
'you used one of the caterer's blocks of ice 'to rest one of the legs of the lighting stand on, 'and as the sun was at its midday height '.
.
the ice would melt, the support would fail '.
.
Stevie would be electrocuted.
'And with the planter placed at the front of the stage,' you'd even planned a place for the melted water to drain off, leaving no trace.
Well, er almost no trace.
Hats off to you, Mr Thunders.
You really gave us a run for our money.
Very entertaining.
But what a load of rubbish.
Is it? No.
You you don't do that to me.
No, you don't do that to me! That man! That idiot! I'm the artiste! Every bad thing that ever happened to us was because of him! Urgh! Aargh! Can't can't swim! Hold your feet down! MUSIC PLAYS Chief! JP seems to have fitted in well.
Well, yeah, er yes, Florence.
He's not the only one, though.
I I have to say that you have been absolutely, unquestionably, brilliant ~ over the last two days.
~ Thank you.
No, I I mean, the way you handled Cheryl.
Spotting the necklace.
Her affair with Stevie.
It's just phenomenal.
And then there's, well well, everything else, really.
Every time I've lost the plot or couldn't find a piece of evidence, or literally have nowhere to turn, there you were.
I I mean, it's like we've been partners for years.
What? What is it? I have a confession.
I received a letter from Camille.
~ Oh? ~ With very detailed instructions on how to deal with you.
THEY CHUCKLE So, if there's anyone you should thank, it's her.
Well, even so, very well done.
Congratulations on completing your first case as a DS.
~ To you.
~ To Camille.
~ To you both.
Although although you are already a great DS, and I'm sure will become an even better DS, there are many, many more things you need to learn before becoming a truly amazing DS.
I know.
I know there's so much work to do and I'm not talking about work.
Every good detective should have their dancing shoes on, and this is a good and happy tune.
Come on.
~ No.
~ Come on.
SHE CHUCKLES Thank him for the grass that grows on the land Even the birds, with such sweet songs Ah-ah-ah-ah, ah-ah-ah-ah Get it together Ah-ah-ah-ah, ah-ah-ah-ah Can you dig it? Boom shaka lacka lacka Boom, boom, boom Boom shaka lacka lacka Boom, boom, boom Hey DWAYNE: It's been 15 years since we were last in the final.
It's been going on for generations.
I'm not completely ignorant when it comes to international sports, you know.
Honour and sportsmanship is the nature of the game, not always the nature of those that play it.
~ This is Anton Borr-idge.
~ Er Burr-age.
He is an odious little toad.
BANG! AIDEN: There is nothing Hank wouldn't do to win that trophy.

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