Lewis (2007) s01e01 Episode Script

Pilot

It's bugging me Grating me And twisting me around Two eight one, two eight three - Yo, Bernard.
- Yo.
- Happy, Miss Peverill? - Sure.
I could just be the smartest girl in the world.
I never doubted it, Regan, my love.
I can offer you a choice of luxury accommodation tonight.
Cubicle, two, four, five or seven.
- The others are already occupied.
- I think I will take five.
My lucky number.
Hey, new specs.
You took my advice.
It takes years off, like I said.
Yeah.
Sleep and the world sleeps with you; snore, and you snore alone.
Ladies and gentlemen and friends, I'd like to take a moment to pay tribute to my late brother, Johnny, who we tragically lost two years ago.
Without Johnny's stewardship, Griffon Cars would not be the success it is today.
Hear, hear! Please be upstanding and raise your glasses.
Let us celebrate 100 years of Griffon Cars with the prospect of a new dawn.
A new dawn! And Johnny's unquenchable spirit lives on today in his son.
Daniel Griffon, everyone.
Heritage.
Family.
Heritage.
Family.
You call this a family! If that boy screws up this deal with his behaviour, - we're up the creek without a paddle.
- It's going fine, Rex, you're doing really well.
The trouble with the Japs is, they can say yes, yes, yes, when they mean no, no, no.
Not interrupting anything, am I, Mum? Thought you were spending the evening with your American girl.
I wanted to see the man who's buying my birthright, Uncle Rex.
Talk some sense into him.
Well, you'll have to work with the Japanese when you take Rex's place on the board.
Come on, Mum.
Dad would never have let this happen.
- Everything he built up - All right, Danny? - Not just now.
- All right, Tom Jess.
Come and talk to Mr Tanigaki.
No.
Dad.
He'll be all right.
Weren't you seeing Regan tonight? Has she finished with you? She's poison.
Whoa, whoa, Jess.
What are you doing? I gotta go.
Don't worry about it.
I'm not laughing Must seem all very odd I am constant and true.
I am constant And three and four five Sister, have this seat.
Oh, thank you.
Are you for me? If you're Inspector Lewis, Oxfordshire Police.
I am.
Never ordered a taxi.
You're in luck, sir.
I'm not one.
DS James Hathaway.
Chief Superintendent Innocent sent me.
Very good of her.
Yeah.
Um shall we? Mr Lewis? You left them on board.
- So I did.
Thank you.
Thanks so much.
- No problem.
- Orchids? - They grow wild.
- How long were you on attachment, sir? - Two years.
- Nice work if you can get it.
- Suppose so.
Right, then.
Home, James.
I've always wanted to say that.
Although we'll just make a little detour Innocent wants to see you at ten, if that's all right.
Whoa! Over here.
- Glad to be back, sir? - Mm? Has Oxford changed much since you've been away? No.
It changed before I went.
Hathaway.
Where? Right, I'm on my way, but um Er nothing.
- I've got to go to a shooting.
- Who's your governor? - DI Knox, sir.
- Oh.
- Is this the crime scene? - No, but that is my governor.
- As you can see, the machine is now ready.
- All right, sir? See you there.
Go.
Go! Put your lips around the tube.
With one continuous breath blow into the tube until I tell you to stop.
Blow.
- I don't believe it.
It's immediate suspension.
- I know.
Charles was never that stupid when he was a sergeant.
There was a big retirement do last night.
He must have overdone it.
I'll have to hold the fort for him.
Scene of crime.
Just going in to look at the victim now, sir.
- Hello, sir.
- Hello, Ron.
Taxi's on the way, sir.
If you wouldn't mind taking your Oh, there's no rush.
I'm here now.
Might as well take a look.
- Aren't you tired? - Aren't you? - Ah, the wanderer returns.
- Hello, Doctor.
- Cor, turn down the volume on that shirt! - Good to see you.
- You, too.
Sergeant Hathaway.
- Dr Hobson.
- So, what have we got? - Sir.
Scene suits, sir.
Ah, I'll not bother, thanks.
Uh they're all the rage these days.
You'd better.
Give it here, then.
- Single shot through the neck.
- From? An informed guess, I'd say a handgun from about where you're standing.
OK, folks.
All yours.
I wish the NHS did job attachments to the British Virgin Islands.
Did it help? It was a start.
- What's the new Chief like? - Jean Innocent? Mm.
Dresses well.
He gets on with her.
The deceased was a Regan Peverill, sir, a student volunteer for the experiments here.
The security guard's checking his system to show us anything of note.
There were five in the cubicles last night including Regan.
None of them heard anything? State-of-the-art soundproofing.
Got something.
Look.
Service door two.
Accessed in at 9:23.
- Where were you at that time? - I was on my rounds.
- Where is this service door two? - Back of the building.
- It opens with a keycode.
- How many people would know the keycode? Oh, just the user.
You choose your own unique number when you're authorised.
Out again at 9:36.
- That's too dark to enhance.
- Does that remember - what code was used when? - It does, but you need my password.
Kate Jekyll, Institute Director.
Inspector Lewis, ma'am.
- It was Regan.
- Regan? So, your password, if you don't mind? Of course.
Last entered keycode: 12-47-14.
Authorised to Daniel Griffon another of our volunteers.
A student, too.
Do you have his contact details? - Bernard.
- Do you need some fresh air? Please.
OK on your own for a bit? Fine, sir, thank you.
Our primary area of research is sleeping disorders.
Insomnia, and such? Yes, narcolepsy, Ekbom's - that's RLS, Restless Leg Syndrome.
- Bruxism, that's - Grinding your teeth.
Yes.
It's surprising what you pick up.
Did Miss Peverill have a boyfriend? Not that she talked about.
Was this Daniel Griffon Did he know her? He wasn't a boyfriend as such.
What was he, then? She had slept with him once, apparently.
- Did she tell you that? - No, he did.
But you don't think Danny I mean, he'd know you'd find out it was his code used to get in and out.
In my experience, people don't always think straight.
- Excuse me.
- It's a surprisingly common reaction when people visit a sleep lab.
- Association of ideas.
- Mm.
- Your taxi, sir.
- I said not to bother.
Innocent's been on.
Your ten o'clock meeting Thanks for the moment, then, Professor.
You'll be around later, if I need to talk to you again? Yes, of course.
I thought you'd take it easy for a few days.
- I haven't decided yet.
- I'll e-mail Innocent, tell her you're on your way.
"Commonwealth ties can only be strengthened by such interaction.
We wish Inspector Lewis all the best in the future.
" Very commendable.
- Thank you, ma'am.
- So, there's a senior training post at County - coming up.
- I'm still learning, as I see it.
Well, I like to think we're all still learning.
But um when you get to your Sorry.
Yeah? Yeah, can you get him to call me back in four minutes? Thank you.
- When you get to my age, ma'am? - Your level of experience.
Experience that could offer benefits to the up-and-coming, - if you pass it on.
- Thanks for your confidence, but I can do that on the job.
This murder case last night I'm tasking DI Grainger with that.
I've just spoken to Grainger n the car park.
He says he'll be in court the next three days.
Worst case scenario, yes, but he can touch base with Hathaway, as needed.
You can't let a sergeant run a murder investigation, while I kick my heels! At least let me earn my keep.
- You can head up the murder - Thank you, ma'am.
but only till DI Grainger's available to take over.
How was your meeting? I got promotion, didn't I? Caretaker.
- Daniel Griffon? - Yeah? DI Lewis, DS Hathaway.
Could we have a word? Um l'm working.
So are we, sir.
Oh, maths, is it? Looks complicated.
Yeah, it is.
It's not really a good morning.
I've got a dissertation to get out.
The server's down.
I can't check my e-mails.
Any interruptions are kind of - What's it about? - We need to know where you were last night, - that's all.
- Why? We'd like to know, sir.
I looked in on a family thing and then er I went for a late-night session with Uncle lvor.
Uncle lvor? Yeah.
Sorry - my tutor.
We call him that.
Ivor Denniston.
- Which is where? - At his place.
Summertown.
Is your family that Griffon? Cars? Yeah.
He was my father.
What time did you get to your tutor's? Um eight, eight-thirty.
I don't wear a watch.
- How long were you there for? - An hour-and-a-half.
Do you row? - The Cardinal's Club, isn't it? - So? I used to row a bit myself.
You volunteered for a sleep-research project, at the Pretorious Laing, run by Professor Jekyll.
- So? - Were you wearing that hoodie last night, sir? Yeah.
So you have a unique security code to get in and out? - Is that right? - 12-47-14, yeah.
Have you ever told anyone that number, or written it down? I'm quite good at remembering numbers.
I don't need to write it down.
- Nobody else knows it? - Definitely not.
Look, what do you want? Do you own a gun, Mr Griffon? - Why? - Do you? Yeah.
A.
38 revolver, and no, it's not licensed.
It was my father's.
- Where is it? - Just under Stay there, please.
- In here? - Yeah.
No gun here.
Box of ammunition.
- Of course it's in here.
It was yesterday.
- See for yourself.
I believe you know a Regan Peverill? Regan, yeah.
- When did you see her last? - A couple of days ago.
Is she OK? No, I'm afraid not.
She was shot dead last night at the Sleep Lab.
Oh, my God The murderer used your keycode to get into the building.
We'd like you to come down to the station, please.
I I don't wanna come to the station.
If you won't, I'll have to arrest you on suspicion of murder.
Daniel.
Danny! - You carry smelling salts? - You're all right.
You're safe.
- He's Johnny Griffon's son, the racing driver.
- Yes, ma'am.
I'll keep him in custody till I've checked his alibi.
He had no problem giving us a swab.
He said we'd find powder residue on his hands from his revolver.
Goes out Binsey way, blasting away at bottles and cans to let off steam.
He was there yesterday.
How does he claim this unlicensed gun was stolen from his room? He keeps his key on the top of the door.
It's a reciprocal arrangement with Hal Bose, a pal of his on the same landing.
They swap CDs and books, that sort of thing.
In theory, anybody could have stolen it.
Let's not speculate while we've got a prime suspect in custody.
I remember thinking they'd missed a trick with the father's crash.
It was just before I came to Oxford.
Sporting hero, way over the speed limit, no seatbelt.
Handled sensitively, it could have been used as a tragic example, instead of just being a tragedy.
I suppose so, yeah.
- Is that all, ma'am? - Yeah.
Log everything properly for when DI Grainger comes back, won't you? Right.
I'll get Sergeant Hathaway onto it.
He's good with IT.
Oh.
Perhaps you could pick up some tips from him, then.
And never forget what Euler wrote back to Goldbach.
What did Euler write to Goldbach, Mr Bose? That he didn't give a monkey's if it couldn't be proved, but every even number is the sum of two primes.
- The exact quotation is in footnote 74, page 102, of your bestseller, available in all good bookshops.
And soon to be released on DVD and video, starring Tom Cruise as Christian Goldbach.
Uncle lvor's quizzical quip of the week: On a commemorative plaque on a house in Munich - "Heisenberg might have stayed here.
" Miserable lot.
Skedaddle.
Professor Denniston? Inspector Lewis, Oxford Police.
Ah, yes.
About Regan Peverill.
She was shot.
Is that right? I'm afraid so.
I only knew her in her first year.
She took a pure mathematics course, then computer studies.
It's actually one of your current students I need to talk to you about, Daniel Griffon.
He said he was working with you last night.
Oh, Danny? Um Yes, he was, from 8:30 till 10, certainly.
A bit late for a tutorial.
Not a tutorial, more going through a few problems over a beer.
When they're that into their subject, you go the extra mile.
- What did you make of him? - He's a great kid.
- Bright? - Ish.
- Troubled? - Well, who isn't at his age? It's a bit of a weird setup with his family.
You know his old man died? That's a terrible tragedy.
As far as I can make out, his uncle and his mother It's none of my business.
What about friends? He's great mates with Harry Chandra Bose.
You just saw him.
- Harry.
Would that be Hal on his landing? - Yes.
How well did Danny know Regan? They saw the odd movie together, but she played the field, from my observations.
She's er what one used to be allowed to call "a bit of a tease".
Yep.
No, come in.
- Sorry.
You can reach me through the College.
- Thanks for your time.
Oh, that Heisenberg joke.
Uncertainty Principle, right? I'm not sure.
Oh, very good.
Well, his alibi checks out.
The PNC turned up juvenile form on Daniel Griffon.
- Did it? - Nothing serious.
Just a caution for criminal damage when he was 15.
The investigating officer was a DCI Morse.
You were his bagman, weren't you? Morse? Juvenile criminal damage? Are you sure? I'm quite sure.
Why? Never mind.
Yeah, we're just going through her room now.
Yes, ma'am.
Thank you.
They've notified the embassy.
They're getting the Connecticut Police to inform the parents.
Ivor Denniston.
Isn't he Danny's alibi? Ah, his famous book about Goldbach.
He won the Fields Medal for his work.
Like winning a Nobel Prize for Maths, according to this.
The lion prays the eagle keeps her beak shut.
Posted in Oxford last week.
American eagle, maybe? And a British lion.
Eagle and lion, though.
That's what a griffin's meant to be, if I remember.
Half-eagle, half-lion.
Danny Griffon.
Check that against his handwriting.
You don't remember Morse getting involved with a juvenile case five years back? Not unless there were bodies.
Why? Background.
It's unusual, that's all.
I was on my inspectors' course.
Well, I've sent the bullet off to Forensic.
If you need something to go on, I'd say a.
38.
Timings? Earliest eight, latest ten.
Best I can offer.
You're more fed up than tired, aren't you? Oh, it's just Why bother, you know? Innocent wants to put me out to grass.
I might as well jack it all in tomorrow.
And you wouldn't know what to do with yourself.
No.
Are the Met making any progress on Val's death? Hit-and-run.
No witnesses.
Fat chance after this time.
Unless the bastard driver develops a conscience.
We've got cracking shops in Oxford.
Why did she have to go to London? I'm coming! It's all so different.
I checked Danny's handwriting.
It wasn't him that wrote that card to Regan.
He's off the hook, anyway.
Ivor Denniston says he was at his place at eight-thirty till ten.
What's the window of the time of death? Eight to ten, but I assume the killer's whoever used the keycode to get in and out of the Pretorious Laing at 9:30.
- So it wasn't Danny.
- You think that's a safe assumption? Well, clearly, it's someone trying to look like him.
Fine.
No, no.
You obviously think different.
Tell me.
We can't account for Danny between the hours of 8 and 8:30.
He says he was with his family.
Surely we should check that out.
What's that? Oh, er the case file on Danny's criminal damage.
- Oh? - It seemed important to you, so I ran it down.
Yeah, thanks.
Tampered with the brakes of a car belonging to his uncle, Rex Griffon.
Here's an inquest on Johnny Griffon.
Morse.
Still see the stain from his glass.
Polo Not King After All.
Now that is a partial anagram.
If we can find out how many letters Oh, not you and all.
Sorry? I don't get this.
There has to be more to it than just a kid vandalising a car for Morse to have taken an interest.
Let's go and see the family.
Danny isn't the only Griffon, is he? - Pull! I'll call our solicitor.
- He says he doesn't want one - Nonsense.
It's his right to refuse.
What would help him more is if we could eliminate him from the enquiry.
We know he was with his tutor the latter part of the evening.
Well, he was here from eight, something like that.
We had a business event.
He was gone by about quarter past.
And the dead woman, Regan Peverill He brought her here once, two weeks ago, for a party - Jessica's 16th.
This is your daughter? No, she's Tom Pollock's girl.
He's Griffon Cars' Financial Director.
They live here, too.
They have the old servant flat.
Were Regan and Danny seeing each other? Not seriously.
At least, I hope it wasn't serious.
You didn't take to her? She was um arrogant.
Danny wouldn't hurt anyone, Inspector.
There was an incident.
Danny and a car belonging to Mr Rex Griffon.
My late husband's brother, yes.
Just I noticed it was looked into by my old boss.
Your old boss? Yeah.
He was very understanding.
Morse.
What's his first name? I don't think he told me.
- No, he wouldn't have.
- How is he? He died, sadly.
Oh.
He was a man you could talk to.
Jessica.
You saw Danny before he left last night.
- You were talking to him.
- Is he OK? He's fine, Miss Pollock.
We're from the local police.
Can you confirm what time Danny left here last night? About eight-fifteen.
Do you mind telling us what you were talking about? I'm going for a music scholarship tomorrow.
He just wished me luck.
Is that your dad outside? Yes, he and Rex are entertaining.
It's business.
If you must talk to them, Inspector, please arrange another time.
I'm afraid we might have to interrupt business, Mrs Griffon.
Pull! Our arrangement depends on the support of your whole family.
Daniel won't be a problem, I prom Pull! Pull! He drove the car right into the marquee.
Why? He was angry.
This way, Sergeant.
Why was Danny angry, Mr Pollock? We're looking to the Japanese for a massive injection of capital.
Frankly, our survival depends on it.
But Danny thinks his uncle is selling up for a fast buck.
He gets these ideas sometimes.
He's a good lad, just impetuous.
Very nice place here.
Unusual setup.
Not many people tend to live with their employers.
I'm almost family.
My father worked for John and Rex's dad as his bookkeeper.
When I was orphaned, he gave me a home.
- Adopted you? - Not officially, but he brought me up.
I inherited my dad's way with figures.
He gave me a chance with the firm and now I'm Rex's right-hand man.
- Yours, Mr Pollock? - Yes A little indulgence when times were good, before we had to go kowtowing to Tokyo.
Can you tell me where you were last night, say around nine-thirty? Nine-thirty, uh He was looking for me.
I'd gone for a walk.
I was worried about the scholarship tomorrow, and Dad had to drive around looking for me.
And I did.
Yes, yes, round about that time.
Silly girl, you'll sail through.
It's the Endeavour Award, Inspector.
I'd better go in and practise.
Does your wife live here, as well? No, we're separated.
Take a look at this, Mr Pollock.
Do you recognise the writing? It's not Danny's, if that's what you mean.
Danny was cautioned for damaging your car brakes five years back, Mr Griffon.
Why was that? - He was trying to kill me.
- Eh? It's not as bad as it sounds, honestly.
- He wasn't serious.
- Danny got it into his head that I'd fixed the brakes on Johnny's car when he crashed.
He said I'd done it so that Trudi and I could He thought we were having an affair.
Thinks we still are.
Which we're not, and never were.
- But you do live together? - This is a huge house, Inspector.
Trudi has one wing, I have another.
- Are you married yourself, sir? - I never found a woman - who found me interesting enough.
- Oh, Rex.
It's true.
Johnny was the one with a certain dash about him.
You see, we were twins, only he happened to pop out before me.
My grandfather, when he drew up the company articles, made sure the controlling interest always passed onto the first-born.
So, Johnny was the heir by 20 minutes.
And I was always very much the spare.
So, the company came to Danny when his father died? He'll have a controlling interest next year, when he's 21.
- And you? - I assume I'll be dispensed with.
- I'm merely the caretaker.
- Always tricky, that.
- Mrs Griffon.
- Would you excuse me? Of course, Mrs Griffon.
Regan Peverill was killed at the Pretorious Laing Institute.
- Have you ever been there, sir? - No.
Where were you last night, around nine-thirty? I was taking our Japanese friends back to the Randolph.
I dropped them off at about nine-fifteen.
- And then came straight back here? - Yes.
- Can anyone confirm that? - No.
Have you ever seen this card? Well, sir? - I sent it.
- What does it mean? We um I mean, it was nothing.
It was just a one-night stand.
- She made the first move.
- Who else knew? - No-one.
- Not Danny? - Well, not unless she told him.
- So that's what the card means - the eagle keeping her beak shut.
Danny's pretty unstable, Inspector.
It could tip him over the edge, if he knew that I'd slept with Regan.
It still could, if he finds out.
Tom and I can only clinch this deal if the Japanese know they'll get an easy ride from him when he joins the board next year.
It's as simple as that.
If he dropped the Japanese off at the Randolph, he'd only have been two minutes away from the Pretorious Laing at the time of the murder.
What about Mrs Griffon, though? Say if she discovered Rex was two-timing her with Regan? Do you reckon Danny's right, then? Rex and Trudi having rumpy-pumpy? They'd hardly admit it to us, would they? - I can go? - Yeah.
You know, Danny, Accident Investigation went through your dad's crash with a fine toothcomb.
There was nothing suspicious about his death.
- And his brakes were in perfect order.
- That's what's suspicious.
He'd been round that bend hundreds of times.
Fast, too, with me, when I was a kid.
He was one of the best drivers in the world.
He'd never have got that wrong.
Rex killed him.
- Why doesn't anyone believe me? - Danny, people do just die.
Every day for no good reason.
It's never fair.
No.
Can I go? Yes? I've got something to tell you.
Don't hate me for it.
- Did you know Rex was screwing Regan? - Keep your voice down.
- There's a meeting - Did you know? Who Rex sleeps with is up to him.
Mum, he's humiliated you.
He's taken everything - the money, Dad, and you're letting him do it.
- Get through the week.
I'll explain - He's killed Regan! He's trying to make it look like me because I know he killed Dad! - So he took the gun - For God's sake, Dan! Just stop it! What's happening? This can't go on.
No.
The gun was taken from his room, I suppose.
As you share a landing, did you see anything? I told him he was stupid to keep it there.
Stupid to keep it full-stop.
- And he leaves his key above his door? - We all do.
If the door's locked, it usually means you're having sex.
- When was this? - Yesterday.
I was at my parents'.
Just got back.
You know he goes to this Sleep Lab? - Takes part in their research? - Weird.
Why? What's his particular problem with sleep? He doesn't want it.
He'll go three, four days straight without sleep.
He says it brings on like an altered state.
He thinks it helps make connections in his work, with his numbers.
What do you think? I think he's barking.
- Hi, Dan.
- All right, Hal.
Is he still up there? Yeah, should be.
- Sorry I couldn't make it in time.
- No problem under the circs.
You're in no state to crunch numbers, are you? I don't really feel in a state to do anything.
Hey, hey, come on.
Tell your Uncle lvor.
Danny? Danny? I still can't get it.
Polo Not King After All is not a clue to this crossword.
Was he the kind that would make up his own clues just for fun? Oh, yes.
Fancy a pint, sir? Why not? So, what were you doing before you joined the force? Studying.
- At university? - Mm.
Cambridge, theology.
- Theology? - I was gonna be a priest.
You're joking! No.
I even did a year in the seminary.
You'd know all about the meaning of life, then.
"God moves in a mysterious way, wonders to perform" mumbo-jumbo.
It's not my fault you lost your wife, sir.
Yeah? Yes, ma'am.
No, ma'am.
I'll come back now.
- DI Grainger wants an update from me.
- Ah, right.
- Can I help you? - Yes, I'm looking for Daniel Griffon.
- Police? - No.
- Family.
- I see.
- Is he here? - No.
Are you his uncle? No.
Stocking up on the pierce-and-ping, like me? Eh? Pierce lid, three minutes.
Ping, done.
Eat.
Oh.
- Wife away? - Ah I'm a widower.
- Three years nearly.
- Sorry.
I noticed your ring.
- Oh, that's just - Habit? No, a bit more than that.
- Oh, God, I didn't mean - Oh, no.
You're OK.
Sorry.
Do you have children? Yeah.
One of each.
- How old? - Oh, grown and flown.
My son went to Australia, when Val died - finding himself.
And your daughter? She's nursing in Manchester.
Boyfriend's a physio.
She followed him up there.
What about your pierce-and-ping? I'm single.
Oh, that's what I need.
A shirt.
I've got nothing clean.
It's better than the one you were going for.
- Trust me.
- If you say so.
Any news about Regan if you can say? Well, I can tell you, we've let Danny go for the moment.
Good.
What was Regan's thing? Her disorder? She suffered from sleep apnoea.
- Where your breathing stops? - Yes.
Where with Danny, it was deliberate sleep deprivation, is that right? His mate told us, Professor.
Strictly speaking, it's beyond my experimental brief.
But he begged me to bring some structure to this obsession of his.
He can be very charming when he wants.
It's Kate.
Have you found a cure for insomnia, Kate? I've been awake for nearly 28 hours.
My body doesn't know if it's breakfast or teatime.
Try one of these.
It's strong.
Robert.
It's Robbie.
You should have had a decaf.
Hi, Dad.
Sorry, I said I'd try and get to the airport, but I couldn't change my shift.
Anyway, Tim's car's had it this time.
Totally out of action.
I'll call you.
Love you.
Bye.
Love you.
No.
Good morning.
I'm so sorry, Rex and Tom aren't here.
Can I help at all? Can we go inside, please, Mrs Griffon? Why? Oh My baby Not not my boy? My beautiful, beautiful boy.
Is there anyone you'd like to be with you? No, I just want to be on my own, please.
Well, if there is anything, I'll give you the number of the Family Liaison Officer.
Thank you.
- I'm very sorry.
- Er We'll see ourselves out.
What's happened? I'm afraid we have some very bad news, Miss Thank you, Inspector.
Um Danny's dead, Jess.
- No.
- They um - No.
- They found him by the river.
I I loved him.
- I know.
- You don't.
You've never thought I was good enough for him.
- That's not true.
- It is.
Jess, look, it's time you knew some Danny's dead.
Why the hell did you release him? He killed the girl and now he's killed himself.
Hang on a second.
Danny was alibi'd.
Of course his family are gonna protect him.
It wasn't just his family, ma'am.
Inspector Lewis established that Danny was with his tutor far past the time she was killed.
The only suspect in the vicinity of the girl's death was Rex Griffon.
- Why is he a suspect? - Well They'd had a one-night stand and he didn't want her to let on about it.
It's to do with pushing through this deal, before Danny turns 21 and takes over the company, but there's something dodgy somewhere.
You give me the men.
They'll trawl through Griffon Cars' dealings with Tanigaki Corporation - No.
I won't throw that sort of money after it until we check the gun.
If it's the gun that killed Regan Peverill, I'd say that was case closed, Inspector.
Yes? Yes, Jean Innocent.
Yeah.
Have you shaved this morning? She hasn't.
Come on, then.
You're the expert.
Which end of this thing is the back and which end is the front? And which way did it come? Well, that's the stern, and er Hang on a minute.
You've got something there, sir.
Have I? Yes He must have been in some state.
The bowside's in the strokeside gate, and vice versa.
In English we say what? The oars are the wrong way round.
Not a natural athlete.
Pretty poor technique.
Prone to rush the slide.
It's why he favoured macons.
Type of blade on the scull, sir.
The oar.
Macons put less strain on the back, if your technique's not so hot.
Most people use cleavers now.
Thought I recognised you.
Hathaway, isn't it? Cambridge No.
7 in '98.
"Attaway Hathaway.
" It was our downfall.
We stuck with macons, while Cambridge elected for cleavers.
Silly you, sir.
What time did you close up? Depends on the light.
But Danny had his own key, so Will you excuse me a moment? Oi! That costs money, you know.
- "I used to row a bit"! - Yeah.
You're in.
I've bagged up the lock, but the combo's set to four nine six, for future ref.
Thanks.
No suicide note in here.
Just for the record, what were the sculls on Danny's boat? Cleavers.
- And he favoured macons? - Mm.
Wrong oars, the wrong way round? He wasn't rowing, was he? Even his squiggles have got squiggles.
- No note that I can see.
- It's my bet he was killed somewhere else, then dumped in the boat by someone that doesn't know his nearside cleaver - from his offside What is it? - Macon.
Listen, last night.
I might have been a bit snappy about God.
- He won't mind.
- Is it true? - Come on, out of it.
Sorry, sir.
It's all right, Constable.
He's fine.
He was meant to meet me in the uni bar.
I texted him.
Nothing.
I waited till about eleven, but he never showed.
Did he ever talk about his family? His dad and the crash.
You know he thought his uncle had something to do with it.
Why was that, do you think? He said He said his dad appeared to him and told him.
- You what? - Yeah, I know, but it's what he said.
One of the connections he made when he was on a high from not sleeping.
What would you say his relationship with Regan was like? He was jealous.
He was a bit of a plodder, to be honest; she was naturally brilliant.
She's only done pure maths in her first year and she was still better than him.
It It couldn't have been an accident, could it? You see, it wasn't just shooting bottles.
He liked to beat the odds, Danny.
How many bullets were in the gun? Scene of Crime didn't mention if the bullet chambers were empty? Russian roulette? He had been known to, apparently.
An interesting theory, but no, sorry.
Three live, three spent.
Three? Have we got the bullet? Still trying to find it.
It was a through-and-through.
Time somewhere between midnight and 3am.
No splatter pattern of blood or tissue, just some local pooling beneath the exit wound.
Looks as though you were right, though It didn't happen where he was found.
- What's this? - I matched the text and voicemail on Danny's mobile to his speed-dial list.
Three messages last night.
- Hal Bose.
- Yeah, I know about that.
J - call me.
I'm guessing that's Jessica, Pollock's kid.
And then a voicemail from his mother.
- Good work, that.
- Darling, it's me.
I just wanted to make sure you're all right.
It'll be all right, somehow.
That was 1:24.
Then 9:25, lvor Denniston.
Are you coming? Time waits for no man.
And then finally his mother again.
Darling, please call me.
Please let me know you're all right.
The bullet that killed Regan came from Daniel Griffon's gun.
It's been sitting at the main desk for two hours.
Do you know how much a fast-track ballistics report is, - plus special courier? - Sorry, that was me.
I asked Sergeant Hathaway to get stuck into these timings, said I'd pick up the ballistics.
Jet lag, I suppose, ma'am.
DI Grainger will be back by end of court tomorrow.
The CPS got their skates on.
- Thank you, sir.
- No skin off my nose.
I could bring in Jack the Ripper and she'd not give me the time of day.
He killed himself.
What else is there to say? We don't think Danny died where his body was found.
It's possible he was murdered.
You called Danny last night, Mrs Griffon.
Late, very late.
And then again this morning.
Why was that? She was concerned for him, for God's sake.
- He'd just been arrested.
- Danny's death takes the pressure off you where this Japanese deal's concerned, doesn't it? Don't be ridiculous if you're saying what I think you are.
What of Danny's controlling interest, now he's dead? - It reverts to me.
- So, where were you last night? Here.
- Both of you? - Yes.
We were here together, alone.
Yes.
Were Mr Pollock and his daughter here? I assume so.
We don't keep tabs on everyone after dark.
- Are they here now? - Tom's out, with the Japanese.
Jessica will be in Oxford for her scholarship.
It wasn't really your one-night stand you wanted Regan to keep quiet about, was it, Mr Griffon? I don't think Danny was that involved with her.
So what was the hold she had over you? Had she learnt something not quite right about your Japanese dealings? No.
Inspector, if there was something shady going on, Tom would have brought it to my attention.
I'm as much part of the company as Rex is.
Come on, Mr Griffon.
By tomorrow morning I can have a dozen officers crawling all over your company accounts.
I was impotent when I was with her which she found very amusing.
She thought Danny would, too.
Hence the card.
I didn't want Danny laughing at me.
Well, he's telling the truth.
Would you offer up impotency as an explanation, unless you had to? Why are they suddenly claiming to be lovers, when before they denied it? Unless they're trying to alibi each other.
- Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.
- Hey? It all sounds a bit like Hamlet, doesn't it, sir? Hamlet? "To be or not to be", "Alas poor" whatsit? Why? Hamlet's uncle killed his brother, Hamlet's father and then had rumpy-pumpy with the widow.
Hamlet wanted revenge.
So, a bit like Danny.
So, how did your Hamlet work this all out? His father's ghost told him.
Did he? That's sort of what Hal Bose said.
Yes, Lewis.
Yes, Mr Denniston? Ah going up, first floor.
Lingerie, lawnmowers linos and ladies' loos.
Hold very tight, please.
Straight home, mind you.
The wife gadding off to the day centre, as is her wont.
What er Oh, motor neurone.
You've plenty of support, though.
I had an aunt, so I know what it can be like.
And did she "make a good end", as they say? No, she lost her faith.
That won't happen to Annie.
She's a militant atheist.
Thank God.
No, we've arranged things between ourselves.
Er You wanted to see us, sir.
Only we are in a I'm terribly sorry.
Yes, um inside? Just down on the left.
I'll be with you in a second.
I'll just um tidy up.
That's his Fields Medal.
Transire suum pectus mundoque potiri Mundoque potiri.
Rise above oneself and grasp the world.
Why, I try, honest, guv.
So, then, sir? Poor Danny was here last night.
About ten o'clock the doorbell rang and there he was.
I thought you should know, under the circumstances.
What did he want? The thing is, I'd seen him earlier at College, when he said - I don't know if this is true or not - that his uncle had sex with Regan Peverill.
Did he say how he found out? I got the impression that somebody had told him.
- How long did he stay, sir? - An hour.
Just sat there, very strange.
Hardly said anything except the usual about his father, uncle and mother.
I offered to put him up, but he said he had things to do and lit out about eleven.
We left it that he'd come this morning for a tutorial.
- And when he didn't turn up, you texted him? - We checked his mobile.
- Yes.
When you say he left here at eleven o'clock last night, - was that by this clock? - Yes.
It's the best part of three-quarters of an hour fast.
I know it gains a bit, but three-quarters of an hour? As good as, sir.
When did you last check this was telling the right time? Days a week.
I don't keep on top of everything in this house as I should but Sorry, I hope that's not important.
Not important? If Danny left three-quarters of an hour earlier than we thought when Regan was killed, bang goes his alibi.
What more do you want? His alibi for the girl's murder doesn't stand up any more.
Denniston was clearly wrong about the time he left.
And his gun killed her.
You know Don't grasp at straws to prove yourself to me.
I know you're a good detective but Yes? Sorry, ma'am.
Jessica will be here for her scholarship.
Oh, thanks.
Ma'am? Yeah.
Er Do stay outside, won't you? Of course.
The Endeavour Award.
It's a good name.
Isn't it? One of our anonymous bequests.
The only stipulations were that the recipient must give solace to the soul with their playing.
Very beautiful, what you played.
I mean you played it beautifully.
Who wrote it? Hummel.
I'll keep an eye open for him.
Why did you text Danny last night? I didn't.
At twenty past midnight, asking him to call you.
No.
Last time I was in touch was when I called him after you'd let him go.
And what was that about? Nothing.
Just touching base.
I think you told him something.
Was it about Rex and Regan? When you were at the house, I was on the terrace.
I heard.
How did Danny take it? He just went quiet.
She wasn't his girlfriend, she wasn't.
He was just seeing her for her mind.
They were sort of clever together.
Did you hate Regan, Jessica? Won't miss her.
The um"call me" text message to Danny from J - we thought was Jessica I've checked her mobile records.
It's not her number.
It's not J for Jessica.
It's J for Jekyll.
I texted Danny, to put him off.
He left a message on my voicemail earlier, to say he was coming round.
As it was, he never did.
What did he want to talk to you about? He said, "What we were talking about earlier - you're wrong.
" Then he said he was coming to show me the proof in black and white.
- Proof of what? - He kept a video diary in his sessions here.
I seem to be functioning reasonably well.
Um Whenever I feel like I'm about to go, I start counting primes.
Kate Kate, I saw Dad again.
He spoke to me this time.
He told me Rex killed him.
He told me.
He said everything.
I saw Dad again.
Have I said Have I said that? I spoke to Dad again.
He told me everything.
Now I just need a way to prove it.
Rex killed him.
I saw Daddy.
Last thing we talked about, he thought his uncle killed Regan, too.
That he was trying to implicate Danny, because he was getting too close to the truth about his father's death.
Did you believe him? I thought he was heading for a breakdown.
We argued.
He said he'd prove it.
From his message, I took it he'd found something.
You seem to have been quite close, Professor.
Sleep deprivation can affect the subject's perception of reality.
He needed to trust me, and trusting someone is being close.
All I'm saying, she could have mentioned the tape earlier, when Danny was alive, instead of producing it like a rabbit out of a hat now.
Professional confidentiality, maybe.
Right up your street, that.
The seal of the confessional.
She's not a priest and she's not a doctor.
She didn't realise it was important until we asked about the text.
No, I don't buy it.
Danny was under suspicion of murder from the start.
- Why would she try and hide it? - Maybe they had something going on.
Oh, come on.
She's a sophisticated and an attractive woman.
He was a Well, it's pretty unlikely.
If you say so, sir.
What do you think Danny meant by "proof in black and white"? You don't really believe all that stuff? His dead father talking to him, like Hamlet? It's what he believed that counts.
- Have we got his computer? - Yes.
I bet it's on there, whatever it is.
Try his Sleep Lab keycode.
No.
I'll try Daniel turned into numbers using the alphabet.
No.
So Theology, then.
What's that about? Well, broadly speaking, it's the study of religion.
I know what it means, but what's it about? How does it connect to being a copper? You know, like sin? Punishing evil? It's a career choice.
Coppers get paid more than priests.
There is that.
I had to think of something to do after they chucked me out of the seminary.
I don't think this is a crossword clue at all.
Look where he's written it.
It's more like something he was thinking about the case.
Not King After All.
King to a crossword mind is Rex.
That's what it means.
"Rex" - a king.
So, "Polo" could be Pollock.
No, no, no.
There's two Ls in Pollock.
Morse would never get that wrong.
Oi! Oi! Single shot at close range, which penetrated his aorta.
And he was washing his hair, taking a shower.
- Calibre? - .
38.
Same as the Peverill girl, same as Danny Griffon.
As for time of death night before last? Around the same time as Danny? Give or take.
And now you're gonna ask me which of them died first.
Sorry I can't tell.
But it's possible Danny died first? It's possible, yes.
CCTV from Oxford mainline overflow, where Pollock's car was taken from.
Trying to see when it was left there.
Pollock was shot with the same calibre bullet as Regan and Danny.
And all of them from Danny's gun.
Ballistics, sir.
Which would explain why the three spent cases - one for Regan, one for Pollock and one for himself.
Dr Hobson says it's possible that Danny died before Pollock.
But in any case, why would Danny phone Professor Jekyll and say he's coming round to see her, then go off and shoot Pollock? It's his uncle he had the grudge against.
Oh, I'm going for a walk.
Try to think.
Orange or raspberry? - Oh.
- I saw you from over the road, thought you could do with a sugar rush.
Trouble is, you always think of Magdalen Bridge without the traffic, or I do, in my head.
And when you get there, you can hardly hear yourself think.
Anyway, what about you? Skiving off? The only think I had in my diary was a session with Danny.
I was very fond of him.
In what way? He had passion.
He was driven.
He knew what he wanted, even if it was misguided.
He was special.
Ah.
Oh, not in that way, Robbie.
He was just a boy.
Oh, I know.
That's what I know that.
What did you want to think about? The case? - My wife.
- What happened? Hit-and-run, London.
One minute you're Oh, no good reason, you know? Finished me with religion, I can tell you that.
Now I'm working with a God-botherer.
It's enough to make you weep, give the whole lot up.
Would you feel like this if the case was going well? Probably not.
Well"To thine own self be true.
" Don't tell me - Shakespeare.
- Hamlet.
- Yeah, would be.
Polonius says it, the King's right-hand man.
His counsellor.
Good advice, "To thine own self be true.
" Polonius? One L? Yes.
P-O-L-O Sorry.
Thanks.
Give us a call.
I'd like you to.
Excuse me.
See, "Polo" is Pollock and "King" is Rex.
But it's Polonius Polo's short for, not Pollock.
It's typical bloody Morse.
Why couldn't he just say what he meant? Polonius was the king's right-hand man, just like Pollock.
Morse had found out the family's secret.
Danny had got it all wrong.
It wasn't Rex that had taken Johnny's place in his mother's bed, it was Tom Pollock.
Whoa, whoa, whoa! Wind that forward again.
Rex Griffon.
Why would I want a solicitor, Inspector? First, you have no alibi for the murder of the girl you slept with.
Then Danny dies, leaving the controlling interest in Griffon Cars to revert to you.
And finally, the company's finance director is found dead in the boot of his car, which was left at Oxford Station car park by you.
Had Mr Pollock discovered something you didn't want him to, sir? No.
Honestly, he didn't know.
Know what? I I was taking a commission on a confidential basis, from Mr Tanigaki.
A sly backhander, you mean.
If you want to call it that, yes.
Why shouldn't I? My grandfather started this company.
God knows what sort of a mess Danny would have made of it, if he'd been in the driving seat.
I just wanted to get something out for myself before that happened.
That still doesn't explain this.
I'd er been out with the Japanese till about eleven-thirty.
I stopped off at the factory to tidy up some paperwork.
At about midnight, I got a call from Trudi.
She was hysterical.
Danny had killed Tom.
Danny? She'd been in bed when she heard a shot.
She went into the bathroom and found Tom in the bath.
She saw Danny running away.
Is she sure it was Danny? She didn't see his face.
It was dark.
But he was wearing one of those hoodie things he always wore.
When you say the bathroom, I take it you mean Mrs Griffon's, not Tom Pollock's own? - They were lovers, weren't they, sir? - Yes.
How did you know? I only found out when Trudi had to explain what Tom was doing.
You both assumed that Danny thought it was you behind the shower curtain that he was killing, not Tom Pollock.
- So, you dumped his body - I had to get it away from here.
I'm a manager so I managed.
OK, just keep Mrs Griffon at the hospital, till I get there.
How's the girl? Right, thanks.
Jessica tried to drown herself.
If Rex and Trudi concealed Pollock's murder, why couldn't they have covered up where Danny died, too? Yeah, but why not just bung them both in the boot of Pollock's car? Why go to all the bother of carting Danny up the river? And even if it was Danny who shot Pollock, what motive could he have for killing Regan? Morse listened to Danny.
He didn't just dismiss him out of hand.
He recognised a troubled boy.
How did he find out about you and Tom Pollock? I told him.
We were We were very close for a short while.
He was a very decent man who understood the important things about people.
His colleagues must miss him.
We do.
Why did you never tell Danny about you and Tom Pollock? Because I would have had to have told him the whole truth.
Tom wasn't just my lover.
He was Danny's father.
Johnny never knew.
At least, not until the day he died.
We were having a terrible argument and I told him Danny wasn't his.
And he stormed out drove away like I'd never seen him, screamed off.
That's why he crashed.
Danny worshipped Johnny.
He'd have never forgiven me.
Huh.
Not even your Morse guessed that.
So by rights, Rex should have inherited the controlling interest in Griffon Cars when his brother died, not Danny.
Now he will.
Did you and Tom know that he was taking backhanders from the Japanese? We thought it might prove a useful bargaining tool, if he ever discovered the truth about Danny.
Did you tell Jessica about Danny? I just wanted her to understand, that's all.
But I think that's why she tried to um Finding out the boy she loved was her half-brother.
Now I've got to tell her that he killed her father.
What are you doing, Mr Bose? Tidying up.
A last act of friendship from one geek to another.
It wasn't great work.
There's no need to let the college think meanly of him.
Did you know Danny's keycode for the Pretorious Laing? No.
Can you think of anybody who might have I don't know, worked it out? You see, it's just random digits to me, but it might have meant something to him.
- Well, what was it? - 12-47-14.
- What's funny? - Danny.
It's not 12-47-14.
It's 1, 2, 4, 7 and 14 the sum of which is 28.
A perfect number.
A number whose positive divisors sum to itself.
No, you've lost me.
Six is the smallest perfect number.
That's easiest to show you.
- What divides into six? - Two and three.
Two and three and? One, if you count that.
We do.
So Two plus three plus one equals - Six.
- Six.
The next perfect number's 28.
Danny's keycode was one, two, four, seven and fourteen.
Which are the only digits that divide into 28, and when you add them up you get 28.
Got it.
But they're quite rare, actually, perfect numbers and they always end in a six or an eight.
Well, there's six, then 28, 496, 8128 Did you say 496? Yeah? Combination of the lock.
Thanks.
What was the next perfect number? Thanks.
8128 We're in.
Recent documents We'll try it.
What is it? Proof.
- You've put your clock right, Mr Denniston.
- Yes, must try harder.
It's lucky you invited us in when we were here before, otherwise you might not have noticed it and nor would we.
As it was, it's scuppered Danny's alibi for the time Miss Peverill was murdered.
Oh, really, so you do think Was that why he killed himself? The night he died, sir, you said he came round here unexpectedly.
Yes, that's right.
Why? Professor Jekyll had a voicemail from him.
"What we were talking about earlier," he said.
"You're wrong and I'm coming round to show you the proof.
" Mm.
Proof of what? The Professor thought he was talking about proof that his uncle had killed his father, but I don't think he was.
I don't think the message was for her at all.
I think it was for you.
Why me? Well, your names are next to each other in his speed-dial list.
I for lvor, and then J for Jekyll.
I think he meant to phone you, but he pressed her number by mistake.
Oh, that's You see, if Danny had proof that his dad had been murdered, he'd have had no need to go and shoot someone.
He'd have come straight to the police.
I think he was talking about a different sort of proof altogether.
A mathematical proof.
Goldbach's Conjecture, could it be? The same problem for which you won your Fields Medal? Only where you'd made inroads, somebody else had cracked it.
Danny hadn't come round here to talk about his father or his uncle.
He'd come to show you the proof that Regan had sent him.
He'd probably mentioned previously she thought she was getting somewhere with it.
She had an interest in Goldbach, certainly, but what bright kid doesn't? You're out of your depth, I'm afraid.
Um Ah, there's my sergeant.
Just stay here a minute, sir.
I need to turn Annie.
She gets uncomfortable.
And to put her radio on.
It's pretty clean.
It was too dry for tracks out at Binsey assuming he got the boat and the body out there in this.
Is the SOCO team on its way? Yeah.
There'll be blood traces on the back seat.
They'll find them.
Yeah, and gunpowder residue on any gloves he wore.
- Is he rattled? - Oh, yeah! You were saying, Inspector? I think you killed Regan Peverill.
- Why would I do that? - To pass her proof off as your own.
She e-mailed it to you, didn't she? Only she also sent a copy to Danny, by way of insurance.
- Jim.
- The mail record on her PC confirms it.
Unlike you, Danny used the College network for his e-mail.
Their server went down.
He didn't get it until after you'd killed her.
And then when it did arrive, Danny wondered if, just possibly, you could be her murderer.
He understood obsession and he guessed that if anybody could work out his keycode to the Institute, you'd be top of the list.
Did he come round and accuse you? So, you shot him, using his gun, which you'd taken from his room to kill Regan, mocked it up to look like a suicide and then tried to kill his uncle, reckoning that everybody would assume that Danny had finally flipped and taken his revenge.
- "Tried" to kill Rex Griffon? - Oh, yeah.
You got the wrong man.
It was Tom Pollock in Trudi Griffon's shower.
Not quite top marks.
Alpha minus.
Regan hadn't cracked Goldbach, arrogant little tart.
But she'd picked up on something no-one else had seen for 18 years.
Her so-called proof demonstrated a critical flaw in my published argument.
Do you know what her e-mail said? "I'm the smartest girl in the world, you sad old man.
" My academic standing would have been Apart from Annie, that's all I've got.
Ivor Denniston, I'm arresting you for the murders of Regan Peverill, Daniel Griffon and Thomas Pollock.
You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned anything you later rely on in court.
Anything you do say may be given in evidence.
Yes.
We'll get social services here for your wife before we go.
Do you want to say goodbye to her? I have.
Don't bother with social services.
We shared everything.
Denniston! You've got this covered.
I won't be long.
Thank you, Inspector.
At least she'll know Danny didn't take his own life.
Or her father's.
Well, fingers crossed for her scholarship, eh? If it was down to me, she'd walk it.
I'll tell her.
A good result.
Thanks, ma'am.
I was telling Hathaway that DI Grainger needs a bagman.
- They'll do very well, ma'am.
- Well, that's my view, but Hathaway's asked me to give you first refusal.
- Ma'am? - It's your choice, but you'll need someone.
Did they really chuck you out of the seminary? I was considered too frivolous for the priesthood.
You, frivolous? One Friday I did a huge fish pie with mashed potatoes on the top, gave it a mass of decorative piping, swirls and curlicues.
Father Chisholm said it was frivolous.
It wasn't just the pie.
I was supposed to do a meditation on Thomas Aquinas Listen, you grab a table.
I'll get them in.
Thanks, sir, mine's a pint.
Mine's a pint, Sergeant.
You're driving.
Orange juice, or what?
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