Death In Paradise (2011) s06e06 Episode Script

Man Overboard, Part 2

1 We can send a small team to the UK to work on the case.
'You are to liaise with Detective Inspector Jack Mooney.
' I think I may have found him.
Like a tiny velociraptor, it was.
Grrr.
Is it good to be back, sir? You know what, Florence? Yes.
We're in London.
So is Martha.
So what do you think you'll do? Go see her? Sorry, drive on.
I promised I'd go and look up my Auntie Lilibeth.
Dwayne? Running back to your mummy again, eh, boy? The suspects got the first flight back to London at 6am.
Good work.
- We've got him.
- Great.
What's going on? Thank God you're here.
He's dead.
OK, here he comes.
Mike Wilson's jet landed at City Airport 20 minutes ago.
- So it's happening? - It's happening.
Dominic, in reception to greet him, take him up to the roof.
Martin, check the caterers know what they're doing for the drinks.
And, Steve, he's a cigar man -- nip across the road to the Whisky Club - and get a couple of their specials for after he's signed.
- Right.
- Welcome to London, Mr Wilson.
- Thank you.
- How was your flight? - It was good.
Whisky, please.
'Hello, this is Martin West.
Please leave a message.
' Martin, you're supposed to be up here now.
Where are you? I'm telling you, I know what a gunshot sounds like, and that was a gunshot! - What the hell was that noise? - The door's locked! - Hold on! - What happened? Get away from the door.
- Oh, God! - What's going on? Keep back.
Argh! Oh, God! He shot himself! - What's going on? - Thank God you're here.
He's dead.
And you're saying the door to the office was locked - when you got there? - That's right.
- Sorry, Miss Baxter? - Yes? You're certain there was no-one inside when the door was broken in? - I couldn't see anyone else, no.
- OK.
Get in touch with head of security.
- Find out who has keys to Frank Henderson's office, please.
- Sir.
Any sign of a key? Yeah.
There was one in his trousers pocket.
So he could've locked the door from the inside, but Why lock your office door in the middle of a working day? Unless you're up to no good, of course.
Yeah, or about to blow your brains out.
Excuse me.
There's something else you need to see.
The single cufflink.
Suggesting that Frank Henderson murdered Tom Lewis in the Caribbean, and now he's taken his own life in remorse.
Clearly not enough remorse to leave a confession.
"Unknown number.
" Should we? Be rude not to.
Hello? Er, no, he's not at his desk.
Actually, he is at his desk, but he's, erm indisposed.
Who's this? Oh, I see.
No, sorry, that won't be necessary.
Thank you.
- A restaurant in Knightsbridge.
- Oh? Frank Henderson tried to book a table an hour ago.
They were ringing back with availability.
An hour before taking his own life, he felt a bit peckish? So he WAS murdered.
OK, thank you.
Sir, that was the bank's head of security.
There are only two keys to this office.
Their copy, which is still in their safe, and the key that Mr Henderson has.
In that case, we have a bit of a problem, because this .
.
was not suicide.
This was murder staged to look like suicide.
Wait a minute, hang on -- so either our killer murdered poor Frank, then left the room with the key locked the door from the outside and then somehow managed to magic the key back through the locked door and into Frank's pocket? Or he committed murder, left the key in Frank's pocket, locked the door from the inside and then somehow managed to magic himself out of the locked room.
Either way, it's impossible.
What crate number's that? That's number eight, sir.
There's some kind of metal box in here, sir.
I mean, it's locked, but it must be important if it was hidden in there, you know? Inspector.
Do you have your man? He was in this room only half an hour ago.
Why would he commit suicide? He didn't.
I'm sorry to say, gentlemen, that Frank Henderson was murdered.
- What?! - No! That's not possible! So, if you can all start by telling me where you were when you heard the gunshot.
Well, I was in the stairwell, heading down from the roof to meet Frank.
He was supposed to be in the reception, but he was late.
Was anyone else with you? No, I was on my own.
Mr West? I'd just been to the toilet on this floor.
Was heading back up to the party when it happened.
Can anyone confirm that? No.
What about you, Mr Thomas? Where were you when the gunshot went off? I was in this room, trying to get everything straight - for the contract signings.
- I see.
So, none of you have an actual alibi for the time of the murder? But we don't need one, do we? You didn't get to sign the big deal, then, after all, did you? - No.
- Pity.
Can only imagine how much work you put into that.
Terrible shame.
What was this deal again? We're supposed to be buying a property portfolio from - Mike Wilson's company today.
- Property? £24 million worth of residential and commercial units.
- Oh.
- Look, whatever happened to Frank, it had nothing to do with us.
And that's where you're wrong.
Because common sense tells me that the murder of Frank Henderson has to be connected to the murder of Tom Lewis.
And there are only three people in the whole world who I can place both in the Caribbean for the time of Mr Lewis's murder and here for Frank Henderson's murder today.
You three.
He has a point, fellas.
See, I know one of you is the killer.
It's just a question of working out who.
Dwayne, get our three suspects out of their jackets and shirts.
I want their clothes bagged and tested for evidence of gunshot residue, and I want swabs taken from their hands as well.
Thank you.
Yes, Chief.
The murders have to be linked.
Absolutely, they are, but trying to connect a huge property deal in the City of London with a fishing trip in the Caribbean Not going to be easy.
Or working out how it's connected to smuggling.
Maybe the commissioner and JP can help us with that.
Where is the key to open this? Where did you find that? Amongst the crates of bootleg rum and the bag of cash you and Mr Lewis stashed in the secret compartment of your boat.
It's a little, silver key on the main ring of keys for the boat.
I had nothing to do with that side of the business.
It was all Tom.
How very convenient for you.
It's the truth.
He wouldn't listen to me.
He said it was harmless.
So, he smuggled tobacco, alcohol? Sometimes.
It was why Tom went back to the boat the night he was killed.
He was taking delivery on the crates of rum that you found.
'We'd get 500 if we delivered them to a bar in St Lucia.
' Ms Boyd, is this the key? Yes.
It's all there, everything you want to know -- names, numbers, addresses.
No, no, that's perfectly clear.
Thank you.
Now, that's interesting.
If I understood the financial mumbo jumbo properly, it seems that Mike Wilson's company was selling his property portfolio to City Met to solve a huge cash flow problem.
Mike Wilson and Frank Henderson were friends.
Now, the feeling was he'd only deal with him, nobody else.
So with Frank Henderson dead, the deal's off? Yeah, well, that seems to be the case, but this deal was due to earn the bank a fortune.
Now, why would any of our banker friends kill him before it was signed? Yeah Is there anything more on our three suspects? Well, Chief, I've been looking through their e-mails, trying to find any links to the Caribbean, but nothing at the moment.
I may have found something.
Steve Thomas's HR file.
This is his initial application to join the bank.
Look -- there's a handwritten note on the side.
Frank has known Mr Thomas for years.
He's his preferred candidate.
So Steve Thomas knew Frank Henderson before he joined the bank? Now, why has he not told us that, do you think? That's very deceitful.
Frank was a family friend when I was a teenager.
How did your family know him? Well, it was my mum, really.
Er, Frank was our neighbour.
It was years ago now.
Frank lost his licence for drink-driving.
Anyway, my mum was out of work, so Frank employed her to be his driver until he got his licence back.
Do you mind me asking, Steve, how old were you at the time? And I liked him.
And when I didn't do that great at school, he offered me a job here and I've been working here ever since.
I should've told you this sooner, shouldn't I? It's just, I didn't think it was relevant.
But you have to believe me, pretty much everything that is good in my life now, I owe to Frank Henderson.
Are you sure it was murder? Well, how do you mean? Only we had to break Frank's door down to get into his office, and there was no-one else in there when we got inside, so if it was murder rather than suicide, how did the killer get out of a locked room before we'd even arrived? Yes, it's something of a puzzler.
And it was Frank who was missing his cufflink.
The one you were looking for.
- How do you know that? - How do I know what? That Frank only had one cufflink.
Well, it's obvious, isn't it? If Frank committed suicide, it would be because he killed that guy in the Caribbean, for whatever reason.
In which case it must've been Frank who left one of his cufflinks on the boat.
OK.
Thank you very much for your time.
- We've got no more questions.
- I'm free to go? Yeah, unless there's anything else you'd like to tell us.
- No, no.
I've told you everything I know.
- Thank you.
Slip of the tongue? Oh, it was that all right.
The question is, whether he thought it through like he said or because he's our killer.
I don't know why yet, and I'm not even sure how but I think he's our man.
OK, this is your bail document relating to the smuggling charge.
We need to know where you're staying each night until the court hearing.
I understand.
Please, catch his killer.
OK, will do.
Well, that was the Inspector.
He's pretty sure we've found our killer.
We have, sir? Great! He wants us to concentrate on Steve Thomas, find anything that links him to the victim, so I suggest we start working through Mr Lewis's papers and phone records.
If the Inspector's right, - we may find a reference to him somewhere in here.
- Yes, sir.
I'll start with this.
You do the rest.
Yes, sir.
OK, financials have come in.
There's nothing suspicious in Steve Thomas's bank statements.
Has no major debt, as far as I can see.
But there's something interesting on Frank's bank statements.
Dwayne? - Huh? - Are you listening? Frank Henderson has a standing order every month of £280 that goes to a company called Beaumont Street Health Clinic.
I just looked them up and they offer psychiatric counselling.
He was in therapy? Maybe Frank wasn't as together as everyone thought.
You think maybe he did kill Tom Lewis, then shot himself? I'd better tell the Inspector.
Good idea.
OK, thanks, Florence.
Call the clinic, see what else you can find out.
So what do we do now? We wait.
Tea, man.
Cheers.
- Are you all right, Dwayne? - Me? Why shouldn't I be? No reason.
You just seem quiet.
Well, they've got me working underground like a rabbit, what do you expect? Is that all it is? No, there's also the fact that it's freezing cold outside.
Oh, I checked -- 14 degrees! How do people live here?! It's noisy, it's smelly and the air is so polluted, you can eat it! Sorry, Sarge.
Missing home, then? What do you think? Maybe you should go see your Aunt Lilibeth.
That might cheer you up.
I don't think I'll have time, you know.
Sergeant Cassell.
So, er, your daughter Does she have any brothers or sisters? No.
Just the one.
- I'd've liked more, but - Ah, it's never too late.
Nah, my wife, she was ill for a long time, you see.
We lost her last year.
I'm so sorry.
Ah, no, don't be sorry, no, no.
No, I was a lucky man, to have had her for as long as I did.
She was an amazing woman.
Putting up with me for a start.
No mean feat, I can tell you.
That's a great way to think about it.
There's no other way.
She had a good heart, you know? Kind.
What about you, Humphrey? You married at all? Not any more.
It's for the best.
Nobody since, no? One.
Oh? Sort of a holiday romance, I suppose.
- In the Caribbean? - Yeah.
She was travelling.
She stayed on in Saint Marie for a while.
She came back here to London, only a few weeks ago.
Have you been to see her? Ha! That's everyone's worst nightmare, isn't it? Someone you met on holiday turning up on your doorstep when you get home? "Surprise!" Do you love her? My grandfather told me a story once, about these two wolves fighting inside all of us.
And one of them is anger, envy, self-pity, regret.
The other one is love, truth, faith, hope, that sort of thing.
And I asked him, which one of the wolves would win? And do you know what he said? "The one you feed.
" For all you know, she's thinking, why would you want to see her? You know, when you've got this marvellous life out in the Caribbean.
Look, if he moves, I'll call you straight away.
It's a promise.
Humphrey? Hello, Martha.
What are you doing here? Do you mean "here" as in what am I doing in the UK or do you mean "here" as in talking to you? Both! I mean, the second one.
Well, erm Erm, look, erm, why don't you come and sit over here? I'll I'll get you a drink and, erm Have you have you eaten? - No.
- Right.
Erm, OK, I'll I'll sort you some food and then, when it's quiet, we can talk.
OK.
Thank you.
I-I'm sorry, I should've rung, let you know I was coming.
No, it's all right.
It's it's lovely seeing you even if it is a little unexpected.
There's a case.
People from London.
Well, whatever it is, I'm glad you're here.
Me, too.
I'm so sorry I didn't say goodbye properly.
It was just .
.
difficult.
Have you heard the story about the two wolves? I don't think so.
One's full of doubt and regret, and the other's full of love and hope and stuff.
And, well, they're fighting and the one that wins is the one you feed.
Oh.
Does that make any sense? - None at all.
- Right.
Maybe if you just said it, you know, whatever it is - Without the wolves? - Probably best.
- Right.
When I bumped into you, you'd just travelled the world, deciding what you wanted to do with your life, and this is what you chose.
The thing is Or, rather, the point is Or the thing is .
.
I really, very much hoped you'd have chosen me.
You're right, this is what I chose.
- And, in my heart of hearts, it's where I want to be.
- Excellent.
If things were different, I would've loved to have seen where it went, but I could never ask you to give up Saint Marie.
It's where your friends are.
Your job.
- Where you're happy.
- Yeah.
So if you're happy there and I'm happy here then anything else will always have 4,100 miles in between.
That's very precise.
I looked it up.
And we can't change that? I don't see how.
At least this time I can say to your face what I should've said last time.
- We can stay friends.
- Yes, of course.
- Go on, you say it first! - (No, you say it.
) Goodbye, Martha.
Goodbye, Humphrey.
Bingo.
- Good morning.
- Good morning, Chief! - Morning.
- Any news from Inspector Mooney on the stakeout? Yes, Steve Thomas hasn't moved from his flat.
Any joy from the clinic? No, they won't release their patient case files without a court order.
- I've applied for one.
- Oh, good.
Anything else? Well, we went through all the financials last night.
Martin West and Dominic Green each paid £100,000 to a company called London Equity Trading five weeks ago.
- And? - I called London Equity Trading.
Mr West and Mr Green gave them the money to go short on Mr Wilson's company.
I-I'm sorry, Dwayne, what does this mean? Turns out it means they bet their money that the share price of Mike Wilson's company was about to go down.
They bet £200,000 on this? - Yep.
- That doesn't make sense.
Cos it was going to go up when they'd signed the deal, surely? Exactly, sir.
But since the deal fell through, the share price of Mr Wilson's company has collapsed, just like Martin and Dominic bet it would.
So maybe Steve Thomas isn't our man after all.
There is more.
Forensics.
The gun used to kill Frank Henderson was wiped clean, or whoever killed him tried to wipe it clean, but it looks like they only did the handle.
There were three clean fingerprints on the barrel.
Belonging to Martin West! - We'll be in touch.
- Wonderful, thanks very much.
Why don't you say what you came here to say so we can get this over with? Very well.
Martin, can you tell us why we found your prints on the gun that was used to kill Frank Henderson? I told you they'd find out.
What is this? OK, I can explain.
The gun belongs to me, although it was my father's, originally, from the Second World War.
I took it into the office years ago, you know, to impress the lads.
It's been in the drawer of my desk ever since.
Was it kept under lock and key? So anyone could have taken it? Anyone with a motive.
It's interesting you say that, Mr Green.
Detective Sergeant? You each bet £100,000 that the share price of Mr Wilson's company was going to go down, even as you were putting together a deal to save his company.
Can you explain that? OK.
Wilson had always said that he'd never sell any portion of the company.
Not to anyone.
Martin and I never thought it would happen, so we decided to place a little side bet.
And the moment the deal was signed, you'd both stand to lose £100,000.
So? That's how it goes in the City.
The smart guys always hedge their bets.
That's all that we were doing.
It's standard practice.
And do you really think that Martin would be so stupid as to use his own gun to commit murder and then fail to wipe the prints off afterwards? Good point.
So maybe the real killer used Mr West's gun to frame him? Look, I know that I'm innocent, so maybe you should be looking elsewhere.
Where? Steve Thomas.
You know that he's been seeing a psychiatrist for years.
Is this the psychiatrist Frank Henderson pays for each month? Steve said that Frank paid for it.
So why is Steve in therapy? Why don't you ask him? Now if you'll excuse us, we've got to get back to work.
Officer Hooper? Officer Hooper! Commissioner! Commissioner.
I wasn't sleeping on the job.
- You weren't? - No, sir.
Although maybe I was.
But I came back to the office yesterday evening and I found a memory card hidden in the bottom of Mr Lewis's cashbox.
It turned out that it was a copy of his old hard drive from the 1990s, before he fled the UK, when he was still working in the city of London.
So, erm, I printed out everything I could find on it.
Yeah, old e-mails, correspondence, photos.
There's even a contacts list.
Any mention of Steve Thomas? Well, I was going through it, sir, when I Fell asleep? But we don't need to mention that on my appraisal.
Do we sir? I suggest we crack on.
Don't you? There you go.
Thought you might be in need of a little sustenance.
Oh, that's very good of you, Humphrey.
Thank you.
So.
Anything? Still in there.
I think.
He hasn't moved all night.
So how did it go? Go? Oh, right, erm Er good.
Good.
We got some closure.
I think that was important.
I'm glad I went.
Thank you.
There he is! Stop! Right, you are under arrest.
It looks like he was planning to do a runner.
I've also been through his mobile phone.
No calls of any significance since yesterday -- just a few to his mum, that's it.
So, Mr Thomas Where were you off to this morning? I was just going to get a train somewhere.
Anywhere.
Get away for the weekend.
If it was that innocent, why did you run? I don't know, I just panicked.
I've done nothing wrong.
Even though you hid the truth of your relationship with Mr Henderson? Just like you hid your weekly therapy sessions from us.
And the fact that Mr Henderson pays for them.
- Does he? - Mmm.
Well, that's going to take some explaining.
Listen, when I first met Frank, I wasn't just doing badly at school, like I told you, I was seriously messed up.
And I just lost it one day.
Couldn't cope.
Took an overdose of pills and vodka.
But it was Frank who found me and took me to hospital.
He saved my life.
And he's been helping me with therapy as well.
That's why I'd never harm him.
If it wasn't for him, I wouldn't even be alive today.
Sir! Inspector.
The gunshot residue results are in.
There was no gunshot residue found anywhere on Frank Henderson's hand.
That's not surprising as we don't believe he killed himself.
There was no gunshot residue on Steve Thomas's hands, either.
Or on his shirt or his jacket or anywhere on his clothes, in fact.
He didn't fire the gun? It gets worse.
There was no gunshot residue on Mr Green or Mr West's clothes or hands.
None of them fired that gun.
Can I go now? - You're not going anywhere except to our cells.
- But I didn't do it! Dwayne, to the cells.
Thank you.
Come on.
How did Steve pull the trigger without touching the gun? How'd he get out of a locked room afterwards? Er, Florence, get onto that cleaner - who was first on the scene.
What was her name? - Katherine Baxter.
Yes.
Let's speak to her again.
Go over her statement.
Maybe she'll remember something about where Steve was or - or what he was doing just before she arrived.
- Yes, sir.
And we still need to work out why Steve Thomas would want to kill the man who once saved his life.
And how on earth that murder is linked to the murder of Tom Lewis in the Caribbean.
Yes! This is it! Sir, I just rang Katherine Baxter on the contact number she gave us and it doesn't exist.
So I looked up the address she gave in her statement and that doesn't exist, either.
- It doesn't? - No.
So I called the HR department of City Met Bank and they said the strangest thing.
Wait.
There's no Kath Baxter working as a cleaner on the payroll, right? Thank you, sir.
Chief! - Yes? - The Commissioner's on conference calling.
- Says he's got something.
- OK, Commissioner.
- Inspector? - Yes, sir? - Are you there? - Yes, what have you got for us? It turns out we found a memory card hidden in a box on Mr Lewis's boat.
Officer Hooper has e-mailed one particular photo over to you.
Hold on, sir.
Let me get that up.
Now, where are we? Where are we? Have you got it yet? Hang on, it's Tom Lewis with his wife and his son? Not just his one son.
According to his records, he had two sons.
And look who the younger one is.
That's Steve Thomas.
He's Tom Lewis' son? Florence, can you get hold of his birth certificate? Yes, sir.
Because this is it, isn't it? The link between Steve Thomas and Tom Lewis that we've been looking for all this time.
And we know that Frank Henderson is a friend of the family.
So Steve Thomas is the only link between these two men.
But There was no gunshot residue on Steve Thomas' hands.
He didn't fire the gun that killed Frank Henderson.
And even if he did, we still don't know how he got outside the locked room.
- Yeah.
- Assuming, of course, it was actually Oh, my word.
Get away from the door.
Ah! 'You're certain there was no-one inside when the door was broken into? 'I couldn't see anyone else, no.
' Frank has known Mr Thomas for years.
How does your family know him? It was my mum, really.
Tom was a brilliant sailor.
But one day, he went out when a storm was forecast.
And he took his son I was seriously messed up.
- Took an overdose.
- When there is no possible way for something to have happened, it probably didn't.
But that's not possible, is it? What? Er hang on.
I'm not sure I'm following.
That's it! What is? You get it? Of course! That's very clever.
That's very devious.
But if Steve Thomas isn't our man, then what's the best way of using that information to bring Frank Henderson's killer out of the shadows? Exactly.
Steve's phone.
Steve's phone, where is it? - Shall I? - Be my guest.
I have no idea what's going on.
You? "Police know everything.
Meet me at the office in half an hour.
" I like it.
And send.
Have you got eyeball on our suspect yet? Yes, Chief.
The eagle has landed.
The eagle has landed.
Ah, Florence! OK, so what is it you want us to see? I thought you might be interested to meet Frank Henderson's killer who is coming up in the lift right now.
Sorry.
Went to the little boys' room.
What's going on? I don't understand.
If Frank's killer's in the lift and the three of us are already here Katherine Baxter, our mysterious cleaner.
Arrest her, Florence, for murder.
So, what's as big as an elephant, looks like an elephant and weighs nothing at all? Well, the answer is, of course, a shadow -- if it's the shadow of an elephant.
Well, because there's been a shadow in this case all along.
That was you, Ms Baxter, wasn't it? Because it was you who killed Frank Henderson.
Why would an office cleaner want to kill Frank? Well, because, Mr Green .
.
she's not really an office cleaner.
She's Steve's mother.
Here we have all the evidence we need.
Steve's mother's listed as Katherine Thomas and his father, Tom Lewis.
I suppose you took your mother's surname after your father - left the country.
- Yes.
You might want to see this.
- Where did you get? - Because it turns out Mr Lewis couldn't leave his past entirely behind.
But now we can finally understand why Tom Lewis had to die.
Because back in the day he and his family were great friends with a fellow broker, Frank Henderson.
That's when you first got to know him, wasn't it? You and your older brother.
Then one day tragedy struck.
I remember Frank made a slip of the tongue when he told us the story.
And they were both swept overboard.
It sounded like he meant that both Mr Lewis and his son were swept overboard.
But what he really meant was that both Mr Lewis' children were on board the boat that day and both of them were swept overboard.
Isn't that right, Steve? You and your brother were swept into the sea.
Your father must have been faced with every parent's worst nightmare.
He could only dive in and save one of his children.
So who did he choose? Wasn't you, was it? Tom should never have gone out that day.
He knew there was a storm forecast.
You're both brilliant sailors.
It's amazing.
We're going to go out as far as we can go.
When it all happened, he tried to save John, our eldest.
But it was no good.
He drowned.
- Tom thought Steve had drowned as well - Steve! Steve! .
.
that he'd lost both of them.
Steve was picked up by a lifeboat a little while after.
Said when he saw Steve and realised he was alive he should've been happy.
But he knew what Steve was thinking .
.
that his own father hadn't tried to save him.
I can't even begin to think how you felt every time you looked at your father and knowing you were the one he left to die.
Leave him alone! I was the one that killed Frank Henderson.
You got that exactly right.
I know.
But you killed Frank because he was going to tell us who killed Mr Lewis out in the Caribbean.
Wasn't he? That person being your son -- Steve.
And in the cruellest coincidence of all, on an island in the Caribbean, you recognised the father who left you to die but he didn't recognise you.
And once Steve realised who the local boat captain was, this man who left them with nothing, who left him to drown .
.
all those years of hate boiled up, didn't they? And later that night you followed your father back to his boat.
And is that where you saw him open the secret compartment to take delivery of the smuggled rum? You confronted him.
And things escalated, didn't they? Remember me? Because if your father was prepared to leave you for dead all those years ago, well, then you were prepared to return the favour.
But once you'd wreaked your revenge you were stuck with a bit of a problem -- the dead body of your long-estranged father and a partner, Sophie, who was coming back to the boat at any moment.
Which is when, I assume, you remembered a storm was coming in.
I bet you thought it was fate.
Just as your betrayal had happened on a boat in a storm, so your revenge would be the same.
You took the boat out to sea and when the storm had blown through you set the scene.
Pulling down the rigging, dropping the boom.
You dressed your father to make it look like he'd wrestled with the storm all night.
But your masterstroke, absolute masterstroke, was to do the one thing that no killer ever does.
And that was to stay at the scene of the crime.
Oh, it's brilliant.
Knowing that if you could hold your nerve, well, you could employ some pretty novel accomplices to get you back to shore.
Namely the Saint Marie Police Force.
Then, once the coast was clear, just leave at your own convenience.
But you made one mistake.
When you were fighting your dad, your cufflink tore off.
Which meant we came looking for you in London.
And the moment Frank Henderson learned that Tom Lewis had been the man who'd been killed that day well, he knew there was only one person it could've been.
I mean, this was a man who made a living out of making deals.
I'll wager he tried to convince you to hand yourself in, to get a reduced sentence for doing so.
But that's not how you saw it.
It's not how your mother saw it, either.
It it's just, I think she then set in motion a plan.
Only to be enacted if Frank refused to back down, mind.
- Frank's got to see reason! - Come in! But unfortunately, Frank couldn't do that, could he? You must confess.
If you don't confess - Look, I can't confess.
- I'm ringing them now.
- No! Don't touch that phone.
- Come on, you're not going to use that.
- I will.
- You won't use it.
I'm not being silly.
Touch that So you shot him dead.
Yeah.
In cold blood.
Leaving your son to set the scene to make it look like a suicide.
I imagine that's when Steve took Frank's cufflink.
But your plan required one final flourish.
After all, why would a passing cleaner say that a room was locked when it wasn't? The door's locked! And who'd be looking if she only engaged the lock after .
.
after the door had been bashed in? Oh, God! He's shot himself.
It was an apparently impossible murder.
It only made sense once you realised the real identities of the two people involved -- a son who killed his father and a mother who'd already lost one son and wasn't prepared to lose another.
Well, we got there in the end, Officer Hooper.
Yes, we did, sir.
You'll maybe want to see this.
What is it? What is it? Your appraisal.
Oh.
Exceptional? You were the one who stayed up all night, who found the memory card, the photo, who cracked the case wide open.
You didn't give up.
And when you don't give up, you've always got a chance.
Oh, thank you, thank you, sir! Thank you, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Ah, come in, son.
I'm not here to play happy families, you know.
I don't need this.
Well, I do.
Then let's hear it.
I was six when you left.
No big deal.
A lot of kids have to cope with their parents breaking up.
Then, what's your problem? My problem is that you and me had nothing to do with you and Mum splitting up.
How could it? You came to see me every other Saturday for about -- what -- six months? You remember that? I remember.
And do you remember us talking about the dog you were going to buy me? And what we'd do when I grew up? You weren't there every day but I had a dad.
I knew you wanted me because you came.
Then one Saturday you never turned up.
Then three months later you turn up drunk, shouting and screaming and asking Mum to sell some of our furniture to give you half.
I didn't see you again after that, huh? That was 46 years ago.
You see, old man, that little boy waiting for his father to turn up is still inside here somewhere.
I'm here for him -- to tell you that he didn't need you.
That he grew up, took care of his family, buried his mother.
That he's got a home, a life, friends, people who care about him.
That he survived you.
Is there any food in this country that isn't fried? Hi, Dad.
Ah, here she is.
Siobhan, this is Humphrey and Florence.
Very pleased to meet you.
- Hello.
- Dad's told me all about you.
Yeah, only the good stuff.
So, you're Dad's unofficial taxi? You know, whenever Dad needs to get home from the pub.
- What'll I get you? - Lemonade, please.
Not seen him smile like this for a while.
Yes, he told us about your mum.
I'm so sorry.
Bet he didn't tell you it was only a month ago.
No.
No, he didn't.
He thinks if he makes it sound like it's a long time ago, people won't feel so sorry for him.
So, how did you end up being a detective in the Caribbean? It's a very long story.
With a happy ending, I hope.
I think it's still in the balance.
- Chief, Sarge.
- Where did you get to? No need to know.
This mine? - There we are, love.
- Thank you.
Dwayne, this is for you.
Rum.
Oh, thank you very much.
So, back to paradise for you lot tomorrow, is it? Yes, yes.
Yes, it is.
Yes.
I'll drink to that! Although, strictly speaking, paradise is a state of mind.
You know that, right? I mean, the dung beetle -- very different idea of paradise, doesn't he? And then you have the dust mite.
You know what, Jack? You're absolutely right.
I am? Chief? I'm terribly sorry, it's my mistake.
Humphrey? I just wanted to say Well, I suddenly realised it's all a matter of perception, really, some of us are dung beetles, some of us are butterflies or parrots.
The thing is, paradise is very much what you make it or, more to the point, who you make it with.
The honest, simple and very plain truth is that there's no point me being in the Caribbean if you're going to be over here.
Because where you are is where my paradise is and where you are is where I want to be.
I love you.
Not quite love you or rather love you, but massively, heart-pumpingly love you and I'd like to stay in London with you.
Forever.
If you'll have me, of course.
Did I say I love you? Yes.
And the staying bit? I think this is the bit where you kiss me.
You mean? What about your job? Don't worry, I've got a plan for that.
Wow! Look at this.
It's amazing.
It's incredible.
Very kind of Humphrey to let us have his house like this.
I told him you needed a holiday.
Well, I have to say, a change of scenery is very nice indeed.
- There you are.
- Ah, cheers.
Oh, there's a pet lizard we should tell you about.
- A lizard? - Harry.
So, how will we recognise him? He's green.
Right, that narrows it down a bit, thank you.
Hello.
Commissioner.
Sir, this is Detective Inspector Jack Mooney and his daughter, Siobhan.
Inspector Goodman has told me all about you.
Ah.
Humphrey's a great fella.
I was just saying how nice of him it was to offer us his house for a couple of weeks.
Though I understand he's not entirely sure when he'll be back, so who knows, you could take a little longer.
You don't know my boss.
He's one fierce individual.
I spoke to Chief Inspector Harris this afternoon.
Did you? He wasn't rude to you, was he? I mean, he genuinely is a terrible man.
He spoke very highly of you.
He wasn't drunk, was he? He said that you should take all the time you needed.
And if necessary we could call it some kind of exchange programme.
Really? Well That was very considerate of him.
Yeah.
So, on behalf of the Saint Marie Police Department, Detective Inspector, Siobhan, welcome to paradise.
- Welcome to paradise! - Welcome to paradise.
This festival I keep hearing about Saint Ursula's Day.
You drink a lot of rum and party wildly in the street.
Ay-yay-yay! I have some very important information about a murder of Julie Matlock.
You got the wrong person.
Inspector, you answered the call to arms, I see.
- So what do we do now? - Reopen the case.
If every police officer looked like you, I wouldn't mind being arrested.
Unfortunately, Tony, most police officers look like me.

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