Rose and Maloney (2002) s02e04 Episode Script

Katie Phelan: Part 2

1
[tense music]
- Give me a nice, big push.
[Davina groaning]
Good.
Now pant, pant.
There, feel that?
That next contraction, I want
you to pant.
[Davina panting]
Good.
- The baby's coming, the baby's
coming.
[Davina screaming]
- Yes, there you are, there you
are.
- She's here!
- It's a girl!
She's fine.
- It's a girl!
- She's fine, Davina.
- Oh, hello sweetie.
[people chattering]
- Where's Rose today?
- She's around.
Nipped to the loo, I think.
- Everything all right?
- Oh yes, fine.
[people chattering]
[door creaks]
Rose?
- I think you'll find this is
the ladies facility, Maloney.
- Are you planning on
staying in here all day?
- The only place you get
any peace around here.
Take a pew.
I think we might've screwed
up in a serious way.
- Yes.
- We got someone out of jail for
murder
on the basis of genetic
evidence that doesn't exist.
- Right.
- My dad always says if
you're gonna make a mistake,
it's best to make a big, bold
one.
- He says that, does he?
- Yeah.
What are our options?
What are you doing?
- Getting out my list of
options.
- Oh, Jesus.
- What, you wanna hear this or
not?
- I wanna hear them.
- Right.
We can keep quiet and take the
credit,
and if someone did kill Will
Campese,
hope they don't feel like
killing anybody else.
We can go to our bosses and tell
them
we made an honest mistake,
and hope they remember
all the wonderful things
we've done in the past.
- How many more?
- Well, we can work out
whether the baby was murdered,
and if he was, we can
work out who killed him.
- You got anything else?
- No.
- Right.
We go back to the beginning.
Who's available?
Who could've harmed that baby?
Who's been lying to us?
[Davina sighing]
- There you are, you're home
aren't you?
Yes!
- Thanks.
Thanks for everything.
- Well if you need
anything, you just shout.
- I'll be fine.
I've got everything I need,
haven't I?
- Oh.
- I'm sorry, I didn't mean
- No it's all right, it's all
right.
Got a wonderful
goddaughter, that's enough.
I love you.
Go on.
- Thanks, chap.
- Oh, I do want to meet her dad,
Davi.
If only so I can freeze
him out a little bit.
- Martin?
Bloody useless twat.
Maybe.
I'll see you later.
- See you later.
Bye-bye darling, bye-bye.
Aww.
[eerie music]
I'll go over later.
- Marsha, let her be.
Rose, Mr. Maloney, what a nice
surprise.
Thought we'd seen the last of
you.
- How can we help you?
- Why'd you lie about your
child?
You didn't tell them, or us
that Will wasn't your biological
child.
I don't understand.
Marsha, we talked before the
appeal
about a possible genetic
pattern in your family,
and you didn't say anything.
- It was private.
It was private, okay?
I never hurt my child!
- What do you think caused
Will's death?
- Well, we don't know.
Nobody knows.
He's gone, so I'd like
you to leave us alone now.
- That won't do.
We need to know about this.
- After William died in 1994, I,
I did something foolish.
I was so upset, I can't explain.
I wanted to make sure it
could never happen again.
- You had a hysterectomy.
- It was a terrible, terrible
mistake.
We thought we could manage
without children, but we were
wrong.
We moved, and tried to start
again
but there was a lot missing.
And then things changed.
- I'll have a baby.
- I'm sorry, I don't
- Well, if it means that much,
I'll have a baby for you.
Christ sakes, how difficult can
it be?
Well why not?
I mean, Bill wouldn't have
to actually, you know.
We could have a delivery system.
- Davina, that's probably the
nicest thing
anyone's ever said to me.
But I can't see how
- Marsha, love.
Live a little.
It doesn't have to be all
punishment.
- Yeah, let's do it.
Yeah.
- Only took three days.
A bit embarrassing, but
we were friends, you know.
We used a pipette from Marsha's
school laboratory in the end.
We laughed about it.
- Must've been hard to give
up a baby and live so close.
- Ah, not so hard.
I'd help Marsha out a bit,
babysit.
Cook, hang out.
That was enough.
I didn't really want children
back then.
But Bill and Marsha, they needed
it.
When I was four months pregnant,
Marsha took early maternity
leave and we went to Italy.
We stayed with Bill's aunt,
and when we came back?
Marsha had her baby.
And I, I liked the name they
gave him.
- That must have been terrible.
You lost him too.
- Yes, I lost him too.
And you let that girl go.
Why did you do that?
Nobody's ever died of
cot death in my family.
It was that girl, and you let
her go, why?
- Is this a good idea?
- We need advice, Maloney.
We don't even know for sure
that Will Campese was murdered.
She knows the facts, she's a
member
of the bollocks up club
too, and she'll keep schtum.
- [Diane] Yes?
- Diane, it's Rose Linden from
the
- [Diane] Oh, go screw yourself.
- Seems a little edgy.
- Well you got her fired
and ruined her life.
I'm guessing here, but
there's an outside chance
she hates your guts.
- [Diane] Look, I told you
- Come on, Diane.
We need some help.
What else have you got on?
[Diane sighs]
Hi.
Thanks for seeing us.
- Who's this, Robin the boy
wonder?
- It's Maloney actually,
though I have my moments.
- What do you want?
- Like I said, a spot of
advice from an expert.
- Well, I'm not an expert.
I'm a dangerous charlatan
these days, thanks to you.
I'm having a very large
vodka and cranberry.
Would you care to join me?
- No, thank you.
- Yes, please.
That would be lovely.
[ice clinking]
So what are you doing with
yourself?
- Oh, reevaluating.
They're checking every case
I gave evidence on in the last
five years.
- Anything to worry about?
- Cheers.
So,
there's a problem in that?
- In that Marsha Campese
could not have been
the mother of Will Campese.
She had a hysterectomy before he
was born.
They lied.
- I beg your pardon?
- They lied.
- Right.
And you smashed my career to
pieces.
- No, you did that yourself
when you gave evidence
on a pathology report that
you hadn't read properly.
- Oh boy.
Well it's nice to know that
you're in the shit, too.
- Well, we will be
when we tell people.
- Well, I'll drink to that.
- The pathology report
found a bacterial infection
in Will Campese's throat.
We need to know if that
could've killed him.
If it really was a cot death.
- You want me to help
you get off the hook?
- Well, if you wouldn't mind.
[Diane laughs]
- Come on, Diane.
Was the baby murdered?
[Diane sighs]
- It's hard to tell.
So you look at the external
circumstances.
- Like?
- Like, signs of trauma.
Like a carer who's already
admitted
she's harmed other children.
Like, I was right all along
and you're a bunch of
arrogant incompetents.
- We could form a club, Diane.
- Oh dear.
You got the girl acquitted,
so she can't be tried again.
[Diane tsks]
You have done well, haven't you?
- Christ.
- Oi, Ray.
- This isn't good, Rose.
- What else can we do, Maloney?
Didn't you call the police?
- You always say that!
The police think I'm a killer
who got off, everyone does!
I can't do anything, I can't go
out,
it's worse than prison!
Nobody believes anything I say!
- Oh Katie, darling.
I never said I thought
you did it, I swear.
I was just upset.
- You were pissed, you're always
pissed.
- You'll get compensation.
Maybe go to college, learn
something new,
something you like doing.
- I like to look after kids.
And why have you come here, eh?
'Cause it ain't to see how I am,
is it?
- Hey, hey, hey, don't talk like
that!
They helped you!
- Katie, you were acquitted,
and that means that nobody
can ever accuse you of that
crime again.
But we're starting to think Will
Campese
may have been injured
deliberately after all.
- Katie, did you harm Will?
We need to know.
We just need to know so that we
can decide
whether to stop all this.
- Get out.
- It's a simple question.
- A simple question?
- Look, did you kill the baby?
Answer her, for Christ's sake.
- I wanted to.
[Will crying]
[chimes tinkling]
- Put him down.
He'll sleep if you put him down.
- I think he's overtired.
- I think he's fine, just do it
Katie!
I've got to mark this course
work.
There's stuff for lamb
casserole in the fridge.
- Come on, sh, come on.
Will, please.
- What were you thinking?
- That it weren't fair.
Marsha, she always hid at the
end of the day when he cried.
Will, please.
Please just stop.
[Will crying]
Stop!
Please stop, please just stop.
- You did something, didn't you?
Something you haven't
told anyone about before.
[ominous music]
[Will crying]
- It was a big house.
I was tired, too.
I just wanted to get away from
that sound!
I needed a rest, that's all.
A few minutes.
Didn't think it could hurt
anyone.
Something woke me up, and he was
quiet.
I thought everything was fine,
so I watched "Richard
and Judy" for a while.
I think maybe I slept a
bit more, I don't know!
It was a while.
Then I went to see how he was.
I thought he was all right.
He wasn't.
He wasn't.
- What was it woke you up,
Katie?
- The back door.
It used to slam shut
when there was a draught.
Will liked the wind chimes in
the kitchen,
so I used to leave it open.
- I've never read anything
about this in your statements.
- I didn't tell no one.
- Why on earth not?
- I didn't want them to know I
fell asleep
watching the telly when
I was supposed to be
looking after Will, did I?
- Katie, they wouldn't have
sent you to prison for that.
Why'd you lie?
- It made it my fault.
I didn't want it to be my fault!
It was all right for Marsha to
have a sleep, but not for me!
Why is that, huh?
Why is it?
- I don't know, Katie.
That everything, the whole
truth?
- All right, you've asked
her, she's told you,
now it's time for you to go,
okay?
- I liked them.
I really liked going there.
It was nice, you know?
I was happy there, really happy.
And then my brother's came home.
Never get another chance, do ya?
- Do you believe her?
- I want to.
Everybody involved in this case
has lied to us one way or
another.
Katie Phelan is a very disturbed
kid.
- Yes, and who else have we got?
- Marsha Campese's been in
charge
of two children who have died.
- So has her husband.
- We've got a witness statement,
he was in the pub after work,
came home to find the
ambulance already outside.
- Well what about the real
mother, Davina?
She was in and out of the house.
- She was having dinner
with friends in Brixton.
Bill calls her at seven
p.m. with the news.
She goes straight over.
This is old stuff, Maloney!
- Well, maybe it's a cot
death, a genuine tragedy,
and we're just trampling
over everybody's feelings.
- There's more, I know it.
We keep putting pressure on,
something or someone will crack.
- We should go to Wendy
and let her decide.
- She'll have our bollocks!
Or she'll have yours, anyway.
- Oh well, you're always
offering up
my bollocks, aren't you?
- Who else you gonna work with?
- I've had offers.
- Who from?
- Never you mind.
I've had offers, that's all.
[phone ringing]
- Hello.
- Rose?
- Marsha!
It's nice to hear from ya, how
are things?
- We're having a christening.
Davina thinks it's a load of
bull,
but if she wants me to be
godmother,
she just has to have a
good Catholic baptism,
don't you agree?
- Yeah, I suppose.
- Anyway, we're having it at
our house tomorrow evening,
and we'd like you to come.
You and Mr. Maloney.
About six?
I hope you don't think it's
strange.
You don't think it's strange, do
you?
- But the baby's only a
few days old, isn't she?
- I know, but I don't
want to waste any time.
It's important she's
baptised, very important.
- Is it?
- Of course, it's essential.
Can't you see that?
Just in case, well you know.
They don't
go where they should,
if anything happens.
- Okay, we'll come.
Thanks, Marsha.
Bye.
- Bye.
- Well, do we go?
- Well, why not?
- Well, I think it is strange.
She might be warning us
that something's gonna happen to
the baby.
I think we should talk to
Wendy, there's a risk here.
- Come on, I like her.
I wanna know more before I turn
her in
for harming her children.
You can stop me from doing
or saying anything rash.
- Fat chance.
- And if there's an issue,
we speak to Wendy and
get fired, obviously.
What do ya say?
- Yeah, all right, we go
to the christening, but
You can do something for me,
as your judgment's so
infallible.
- Right.
- Do you think that Joyce
- Joyce?
- You think she might
thought of being with a,
do you think Joyce has
a little thing for me?
- Maloney, have you got
a little thing for Joyce?
- For Christ's sakes, what do
you think?
- No!
- Why did you invite her?
- Oh you don't mind, do you?
I like her.
There we go.
You invited what's his name to
come?
- His name's Martin, Marsha.
I was thinking about it.
I don't really want him
involved.
- I told Father Keith you were
married.
- You did what?
- Oh don't be a bore, Davi.
It was just a little white lie
so he'd do things right, okay?
[baby crying]
[tinkly music]
[eerie music]
- Maloney?
You all right?
- Yes, yes I'm fine.
- You look bloody worried.
Has Rose got you up to
something?
- Well nothing I can't handle,
I'm fine.
- Okay, just don't let
her drop you in the shit.
She isn't right about
everything, you know.
- No.
Will you have dinner with me?
- Yes.
- Like a dinner date thing?
- Yes.
- Yes?
- Yes.
Are we having a yessing
competition here, Maloney?
- No.
Well, tonight?
- Sorry.
Tomorrow night.
- Well, I'm supposed to, um.
No, actually, sod it.
Yes, tomorrow night, that'll be
fine.
- Okay.
- Okay.
[people chattering]
Yes!
- [Diane] Rose!
- What's so urgent that I
have to drop everything?
- Just come in, will ya?
Bar just opened.
- [Rose] Diane, 9:30 in the
morning?
- Do you want ice?
- [Rose] Yes, please.
- Well, I can honestly say
that meeting you has
changed my life, Rose.
- [Rose] Going somewhere?
- Yes, I'm leaving in the
morning.
To do GP training in New
Zealand.
- Wow!
- Thought I'd skip the country
before the judicial review comes
out.
It's gonna be a stinker.
Apparently, I've been a
little too opinionated.
They don't like that in a girl.
- Oh grow up, Diane.
Of course they don't.
- Anyway, thanks for
polishing off my career.
- Mine's been polished off a few
times.
You can come back.
- Cheers.
[glasses clink]
- Cheers.
- Got something for you.
I went through the Campese case.
All the labs, pathology,
everything.
- It's what you should've
done the first time around.
- I lost my job.
I think justice has been done,
don't you?
- No.
- I dug out the core temperature
figures.
Will Campese was dead
before help got there.
Now I can reasonably
propose a time of death
to a tolerance of 45 minutes.
16:30 to 17:15.
Two hours before the paramedics
arrived.
- There've been two trials
on this case, Diane.
Why am I only hearing about this
now?
- It didn't register at the
time.
I didn't explore it, okay?
Nobody did.
The mother said she saw
the child being harmed.
- Right, so you're saying
that the time of death
was about an hour and a half
before the rich middle class
woman
claims she saw the
underprivileged
working class nanny
smothering her child?
Neither the lazy defence lawyer,
nor the negligent expert witness
registered this, not even at
appeal?
- The significance is in
the blood in the lungs.
I spoke to the medics.
They've got 30 years
experience between them,
and they swear they didn't
even intubate the child.
He was suffocated.
- For sure?
- I keep telling you, nothing's
for sure.
It's just an opinion.
Probably carry about as much
weight
as testimony to the second
coming.
- How did this happen, Diane?
- Jumped to conclusions.
Sorry.
- Okay.
Thanks for the drink.
- You know, in another world?
Might have liked you.
- Best of luck in New Zealand,
Diane.
- [Maloney] Rose, I'm sorry,
I can't make it tonight.
Something's come up, yeah.
And it needed immediate
attention,
and anyway, I'll catch you
later.
- Oh for Christ sakes, Maloney.
Where are you?
- And then there was this guy,
Steven,
who wanted to marry me.
Worked in the foreign office.
- Right.
- He was nice, but those FO
types,
they're not exactly ethnically
ofay.
I took him to Southall and he
acted like he was on safari.
Do you wanna get that?
- No, no no, it's fine.
- What is it with you and her?
- Who?
- It's Rose, isn't it?
She's rung you three
times since we got here.
Doesn't she ever leave you
alone?
- Well, you know Rose.
She finds it difficult to relax.
Anyway, there you go.
[people chattering]
- Oh, Rose.
You missed the christening.
- I'm sorry.
- Isn't she beautiful?
Where's Mr. Maloney?
- He sends his apologies.
He's um,
oh this is quite a crowd.
- Well, they're mostly
Davina's funny friends.
I don't think half of them
have ever seen a baby before.
You know, I keep thinking,
I wish Katie could be here.
I suppose that sounds a bit
crazy to you.
- Maybe a little.
- Well, I miss her.
We had such a time with Will.
And I know she'd love
this one, wouldn't she?
- Actually, I was wondering
if we could have a chat
about that, Marsha.
- Yeah, sure.
I'll get back to you.
I've got to change this one's
nappy first.
Make yourself at home.
[people chattering]
- Okay, so the thing is,
I'm not in the habit of dating
people
when I don't know their first
name.
- Well, I'm not very keen on it.
Everybody calls me Maloney.
- How bad could it be?
Do you think I'd really care
- It's Marion.
- Marion?
- Yeah, my mum, you know.
[phone buzzing]
- God's sake.
Either speak to her, or turn it
off.
- Joyce, I'm really sorry,
but I'm gonna have to go.
- Go!
Jesus.
Give her my sodding love.
[people chattering]
[ominous music]
- Katie?
- I ain't doin' no harm.
I was happy there.
I like to come back, that's all.
They got another baby.
- You can't do this, Katie.
People won't understand.
- 'Cause I'm a killer?
- Come sit in the car, come on.
[eerie music]
- When I have a baby, I'm
gonna have a party like that.
I didn't hurt Will.
I did hurt my brothers,
and I'm sorry for that.
I just, I just wanted some,
some
- I know.
We all want some.
Come on, I'll drive ya home.
[people chattering]
- Who are you?
- I'm just a friend of
Marsha's, who are you?
- I'm the sodding father,
apparently.
- Right.
- Bloody stupid facade.
I mean, Davina doesn't want me
around,
but I still had to be here for
the priest.
Davina's a bloody atheist!
Christ knows what's going on
here.
- So you're not so friendly
with Davina anymore?
- I don't mind her.
I do mind getting my nuts
screwed off once, and once only
so she can get her baby.
And I don't even know if I am
the father.
Sorry, I'm a bit pissed.
- It's okay.
Tell me.
[door slams]
[chimes jingling]
What was that?
- What?
- Ah, it was the draught.
- You too, thank you
Father Keith, thank you.
- Lovely.
- Bye-bye now.
[people chattering]
[eerie music]
- [Maloney] Hello?
- Maloney, shit, where are you?
- I got Katie home.
Okay, I'll ask.
I'll call you back, yes.
[people chattering]
Katie, Rose wants to know
if you were absolutely sure
what was on the television
when you woke up the night Will
died?
- "Rich and Judy."
- What time did it start?
- Five-ish, why?
- Because that's the time
whoever hurt Will was leaving
the house,
if you're telling us the truth.
- You want my dad's chow mein?
[Ronald snoring]
[people chattering]
[eerie music]
- Bill?
- No, no.
We'll tell her soon.
- [Davina] Please, I can't stay
here.
I think, I think maybe she
killed him.
- No, she wouldn't.
- Now she's parading my baby.
- It's okay.
Listen, I promise I've got her.
I've got her.
[both whispering]
[intense music]
- Rose?
What are you doing up here?
- No, Marsha.
We should go down.
- I love you.
- Bill?
What's going on?
Dav, Davi?
No, don't do this to me.
- Marsha, we need to talk.
- You bastards.
You bastards.
This is my son's room.
- He wanted to be with me,
Marsha.
He doesn't want to be with you.
- I couldn't help it.
I wanted to tell you.
- You bitch.
You bitch, how dare you?
Get out, go on, get out of my
house!
He's mine, he's my husband and
you can't give him anything!
- Yes, I can.
[eerie music]
- Oh god, oh no, don't say that!
- Give me my baby.
- No!
Ah!
- Tell her to give me my baby!
- No!
- I don't want her dead, I don't
want her to touch our baby.
[baby crying]
[Marsha sobbing]
[sombre music]
- God.
[emotional music]
- Bloody hell.
Shall we just dispense with
the usual disciplinary guff?
I think I might've lost the will
to live.
So what does it mean?
- Well, the witness statements
account for their
movements at seven o'clock,
but not at five o'clock
when the baby actually died.
- The case is over.
Why the hell did you
have to go on fiddling?
- Come on, Wendy, because
the truth isn't out.
- The truth is gonna
blow us out of the water.
They've just asked me
if I'll accept an MBE when
the review's complete.
- Oh, congratulations.
- It's closed, Rose.
And while it's closed,
you've got 24 hours of which
I will have no knowledge
to get to the bottom of it.
Then I disown you and throw
you to the dogs, okay?
[sombre music]
- How are we supposed to check
all these witness statements in
a day?
- I dunno, just note the names
and we'll just keep at it.
- You know, technically
we could go to prison
for withholding evidence.
- Stop being a drama queen.
How's your love life?
- Oh, shut up.
- Just asking.
- Marsha Campese has
abducted her friend's baby.
She's been missing for 40
minutes.
- Christ sakes, Maloney.
You're the one with the
logical mind, where's she gone?
- I can't think.
Look, can we do inspiration?
Because I reckon the only chance
we've got
at keeping our jobs is to find
Marsha
before anybody else does.
- Go get the car.
- Where are we going?
- Just get it!
[Rose sighs]
Come on, Marsha.
Tell me where's safe.
Tell me where you've gone.
[tense music]
Okay.
- Where?
- Who helps Marsha look after
babies?
[engine revving]
[Rose pounding]
- Hi.
- Mr. Phelan, I need to speak to
Katie.
- She's not here.
[baby crying]
[Ronald sighs]
- What were you planning to do,
Marsha?
- I don't know.
- Oh no, we wouldn't do that.
We promise, would we Marsha?
- Annie has to go back
to her mother, Katie.
Do you understand?
You can't have this baby.
- We'll look after her.
Katie and I can watch her all
the time,
take it in turns.
Make sure nothing happens to
her.
- Marsha, it's gone beyond that.
The police are going to want
to question you about Will.
- Question me?
- Will didn't die in his sleep.
Somebody smothered him.
Whoever it was made the back
door slam
and woke Katie up.
Was it you?
They're going to want
to know if it was you.
Oh Marsha, are we never going
to know the truth about this?
- I never hurt my baby.
I, I fell asleep.
I woke up.
I thought something seemed
strange,
and I went upstairs to ask you
why you hadn't called me for
supper.
- I hadn't done it.
I fell asleep, too.
- But you told me that supper
was set out in the
kitchen when you woke up.
- Yeah, I left stuff in the
fridge for Katie to cook.
- That weren't me.
I forgot, I fell asleep.
- So who cooked that meal?
[ominous music]
[radio crackling]
Rose?
- Just let me do this my way,
Maloney.
- How's the baby?
- Annie's safe.
Marsha didn't harm her.
Police will give her a warning
if you drop the charge.
- No.
- Yeah.
- She took Annie!
- Marsha would never harm a
baby.
- No.
Davina, I need to ask you
something.
Did you make dinner for
Marsha the night Will died?
- What, why do you ask?
I was always happy to help
Marsha.
- It matters who was in the
house
at five o'clock, so I'm asking.
You didn't get back 'til seven,
did you?
- Well, actually I did
come home early that day.
- [Rose] Why?
- Davina wouldn't leave me
alone.
But I knew I had to tell her
that we couldn't be together
no matter what we felt about
each other.
She'd given us Will.
And now she had to let me and
Marsha be his mum and dad.
What are you doing?
- Why won't you answer me?
[ominous music]
- [Bill] What's going on?
- It's my turn to cook.
- You have to pull
yourself together, Davi.
I told you, it was a mistake.
We can't do this anymore.
We just got too close, and
- You said you loved me.
You told me you loved me before
Italy.
- I'm sorry, I'm really sorry,
Davina.
But we love Marsha, don't we?
We can't!
- But I can give you what you
want.
- No, we can't.
You gave us Will.
I can't leave him.
You're, you're just feeling a
bit down.
I know it's hard.
- Yeah, yeah, I'm sorry.
I'm just losing it.
I didn't think I'd care
this much about you.
[Davina sobbing]
- Davi, don't.
This is too much.
- But you love me.
- No.
I'm gonna go to the pub.
I can't go home.
- Yeah, yeah, you go and get a
drink.
Everything's gonna be okay.
- It was chaos.
I couldn't work out what was
happening.
Everything was so messed up.
I had to think.
So I went to the pub for a few
hours.
I'd ended it.
Well in my head it had ended.
After Marsha had Will, I
couldn't do that to her.
- It's hard to end things
in your head, isn't it love?
- So when did this start again?
- After Will died.
I just couldn't keep away.
- Okay, but I need to know
more about what happened.
- Oh, I just went to the pub.
- And you cooked a meal for
Marsha?
- Is this relevant?
Katie Phelan killed Will, Marsha
saw her.
- No, because that wasn't when
he died.
He died between 4:30 and 5:15.
You went across there, you took
the food.
I don't know exactly what
happened,
but you found everyone asleep.
[chimes tinkling]
[eerie music]
- Shit, shit,
shit!
[Will crying]
[intense music]
- Is that it, Davina?
Is that why you killed him?
So that you could
persuade Bill to love you?
- This is ridiculous, you
can't prove any of this.
- You were there.
You didn't say anything.
- What was there to say?
Bill.
- Did you kill my son?
- Bill!
- Did you kill my son?
- No.
- No, get away from me.
- Bill, this is all lies!
- Get away.
- You can't prove any of this.
They'll let me go.
- We'll see, won't we?
[sombre music]
- I can't go in.
- Yes you can.
Come on.
- Aren't you lovely, Annie?
Yes, you're all right.
[Annie cooing]
Yes you are!
- Marsha, I didn't know.
I promise.
- No.
- Perhaps you should give
Annie back to her dad.
- Yeah.
- Thank you.
Aww.
- I could stay for a while,
and help out for a bit.
- Yeah, we'd like that.
Bill and I need to talk.
- Yes.
Katie, will you show us out?
Will Davina get off?
- Oh, probably.
There's not enough real evidence
to sustain a conviction.
- So what did we achieve?
- The truth's out.
That's all we can do.
Probably did enough to keep our
jobs.
- You reckon?
I liked them.
- Yeah, so did I.
Come on.
- Terrible thing, jealousy.
- Yeah, it does things to ya.
How's your love life progressing
with the lovely Joyce?
- Not so good.
- Any particular reason?
- No.
- Good.
She's not right for you.
- No.
[tinkly music]
[tense music]
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