Grantchester (2014) s01e01 Episode Script

Episode 1

1 (SIDNEY SHOUTING) Whoo-hoo! Whoo-hoo! (LAUGHING) AMANDA: Careful, Sidney! (CHUCKLING) Ahhh! (LAUGHING) I don't think so.
(LAUGHING) Ahhh! (LAUGHING) (SCREAMS) (SCREAMS) Amanda! Ripped By mstoll Amanda! (PANTING) (PANTING) It's not funny! It is funny! - Terrible weather we're having.
- Oh.
(LAUGHING) - Well - Well You may kiss me.
Do something for me.
- What? - Throw away those shoes.
CONDUCTER: The train's about to depart! I'll just pop down to Savile Row, shall I, and have some handmade? (LAUGHING) See you next Friday.
What would Mrs Maguire say? - "What the Dickens!" - "What the Dickens!" (BARKING) Mr Chambers? Sorry, Mr Brant, can't stop! What the Dickens! You know who I blame? Sidney Becket.
(PANTING) It's Bechet, Mrs Maguire.
Bechet.
(SIDNEY BECHET MUSIC PLAYING) (MUSIC STOPS) (CHURCH BELL TOLLS) (BELL CONTINUES) So inconsiderate.
I won't have it.
MRS MAGUIRE: They've got a point.
A man who takes his own life is going straight to hell.
(BELL TOLLS) SIDNEY: Life is a glorious gift.
One that should not be discarded lightly.
But for some, the trials of life can be a terrible burden.
No one can truly understand the depth of another's suffering.
"Verily I say unto you, "all sins shall be forgiven unto the sons of men.
"All sins shall be forgiven.
" Mrs Staunton.
Thank you Mr Chambers.
Thank you so very much.
Such kind words.
MR MORTON: Barely recognise the old bastard.
(CHUCKLES) Sorry, darling.
She's German, you know.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) MR MORTON: This German officer, poker shoved firmly up his arse, says to me, "I will only surrender to a superior officer.
" Was there one anywhere to be seen? 'Course there bloody wasn't.
Annabel, do sit down, please.
So Stephen, bearing in mind he's the same rank as me, marches in there bold as brass, said he was a Major.
Bugger me if the Kraut didn't surrender.
- Pamela Morton.
- (LAUGHING IN BACKGROUND) Stephen was my husband's business partner.
Sidney Chambers.
I know who you are.
You looked rather forlorn, standing over here on your own.
No one knows what to say to a clergyman after a funeral.
They can't relax till I've gone.
Perhaps they think they have to behave as if they're still in church.
Perhaps I remind them too much of death.
Is there Somewhere we can talk? (LAUGHTER IN BACKGROUND) - Drink? - Thank you.
Not sherry? I'm not partial to it.
But you're a vicar.
One of my many clerical failings.
(CHUCKLING) Anything I say is confidential? You can rely on my discretion, Mrs Morton.
I knew that Stephen's marriage wasn't as happy as it had once been.
She is German, you know.
Er Yes.
A few months ago, I was supposed to be meeting my husband from work.
He'd forgotten, of course.
Stephen suggested we go for a drink.
It was the usual chatter to begin with but then something changed.
He said we should run away together.
Begin again.
He said we could go to Nice and the French Riviera.
Dance on warm summer evenings under the stars.
We talked.
We planned.
We made love.
I'm sorry.
I'm embarrassing you.
No.
No, you're not embarrassing me.
We were going to live as we had never lived.
Those were his last words to me.
"We will live as we have never lived.
" So you see why I have come to you, Mr Chambers? I'm not sure I do.
Stephen did not kill himself.
When I heard you speak, I knew that I could trust you.
I can't go to the police.
But you, the human heart, that's your responsibility, isn't it? You can ask any question, of anyone, however private.
I'm sorry.
I I still don't get your meaning.
I mean murder, Mr Chambers.
(BABY CRYING) (CAR HORN) Need a girl? Er Not at the moment.
Suit yourself.
Thank you for the kind offer.
Sorry to keep you waiting er Mr Chambers.
Inspector Keating.
You behave yourself, Annie.
Piss off, Geordie.
Sorry about that.
I've heard far worse, believe me.
ANNIE: Bugger yourself sideways, Geordie! Murder? Yes, Inspector.
You have a source? An anonymous source.
Anonymous.
Of course.
Look, I've got two on-going fraud investigations, a spate of burglaries.
I've got a black market fellow selling dodgy mutton that gives his customers the terrible runs.
(SIGHS) As far as I'm concerned, the case is as clear as crystal.
Sometimes things can be rather too clear, don't you think? No.
Not really.
- Oh.
- Oh? He drank.
That's what the Irish do of course but he was in debt up to his eyeballs.
Took from his firm.
He was on the verge of being discovered so he stays on in the office, sets about a decanter of whisky and he blows his brains out.
Did he leave a note? - Yes.
There was a note.
- Well, may I see it? No, you may not! Why don't you go back to church and pray for the wicked.
It's murky waters you're sticking your toe into, Mr Chambers.
I'd steer well clear if I were you.
(SIGHS) (TYRES SQUEALING) Mrs Staunton.
What game were you playing, going around in circles? Oh, er I just I came to see how you're getting along.
My husband gave that to me.
We met in Berlin after the war.
He said he'd take me to Carrickfergus.
That we'd live by the sea and walk by the shores of Lough Neagh.
He said a lot of things.
And I used to believe all of them.
Do you believe your husband was depressed? He was from Ulster.
I've known a few Ulster men, not all of them are depressed.
Yes, but sometimes the alcohol and Of course.
Jameson's.
That's all he drank.
In the end, like water.
I think what you're asking is, did it come as a shock, him taking his life? At first.
But when you've lost most of your family in war, then things don't shock for long.
Did you fight, Mr Chambers? I did.
Then I think you understand.
You're always welcome in my congregation, Mrs Staunton.
I'm afraid I'm returning to Berlin.
There's no money so Your husband left no will? Not that I know of.
Well, perhaps it's at his office.
I I could enquire on your behalf? You took his funeral when no one else would.
You've done enough.
(TYPEWRITER KEYS TAPING) (TYPING) You've been busy I imagine, Miss Morrison? My job is half what it was.
Less than half, if I'm honest.
Mr Staunton needed looking after? He was not the most methodical of people.
He was a horror to keep tabs on.
A horror to work for.
I miss him terribly.
(TRAIN PASSING) So you wouldn't know whom he met on the day he died? For example.
He had a few meetings.
Nothing out of the ordinary.
There was an argument.
There were arguments most days near the end.
MAN: Say that again, you son of a bitch! MR STAUNTON: Go home Miss Morrison.
Please go home.
The next morning when I came in there he was.
Make an appointment with the Midland.
It's a bloody mess.
Mr Chambers is just enquiring after Mr Staunton's will.
On behalf of his wife.
He didn't have a will.
That's er Odd, isn't it? We lawyers are a bit like doctors.
Neglect our own lives because we think we're immortal.
- Sherry? - Err Whisky, perhaps? I had you down as a sherry man.
Most people do.
That's Mr Staunton's.
Hardly be needing it now, will he? Stephen drank far too much.
Most of us did, of course.
Came home reached for the bottle.
We were all living under the shadow of it.
- Thank you.
- Still are if we're honest.
You were a padre, I imagine.
I fought, Mr Morton.
With the Scots Guards.
Good for you.
So I understand he was siphoning money from the firm.
MR MORTON: What could that possibly have to do with the clergy? Mrs Staunton is penniless.
She'll be all right.
The wife gets the money, will or no will.
So, there's no will.
Wasted journey, I'm afraid.
Oh, Christ on a bike.
It wasn't the right whisky.
In the decanter on Staunton's desk.
His wife specifically told me he only drank Jameson's which as you probably know, has a distinctive nutty flavour.
The whisky in the decanter was a cheaper variety.
Which leads you to conclude That it was placed on his desk to give the illusion of Dutch courage.
- Which leads you to conclude - That there was a third party at his death.
Which leads you to conclude That he was murdered, Inspector.
- Because it wasn't the right whisky? - Because it wasn't the right whisky! You told me to steer clear of murky waters.
Well, sometimes, they come to me.
England lost to Hungary last night, 6-3.
Beaten by a team no one has ever heard of.
At a game that we invented.
So, I was already in a bad mood, Mr Chambers.
Go on.
"I can't tell you how sorry I am that it has come to this.
"I know you will find this upsetting "and I wish there was something I could do to make things right.
"I can't go on any more.
"I'm sorry, so sorry.
"You know how hard it's been and how impossible it is to continue.
"Forgive me.
S.
" It's his handwriting? - All authenticated.
- By whom? By me, Mr Chambers.
It's suicide.
The coroner says so, my boss says so, even the poor bugger himself.
Jameson's or no Jameson's.
- Case closed? - Case closed.
I could have you arrested.
- Really? What for? - Wasting police time.
But frankly it was a nice diversion after the whole Hungary debacle so I don't watch football.
Generally leads to disappointment.
Always leads to disappointment.
Backgammon.
Now there's the game.
Backgammon? Cricket.
Bit of rugby.
Good God, man.
Next it'll be bloody badminton.
I'm sorry to have troubled you.
Don't be ridiculous, Mr Chambers.
Backgammon.
It's the game, Inspector.
It's the game.
I saw it myself.
It was from his hand.
Was there a date on it? Not that I recall.
Then it could've been written months ago.
Mrs Morton, it was a suicide note.
Do you know he kept a private diary? That would tell us who he met that day.
- Mrs Morton - We have to find the truth.
I have neglected my duties long enough.
You didn't give a damn about your duties yesterday.
Your eyes positively lit up.
Some intrigue to liven up your humdrum little life.
It was m Mr Chambers, I believe it was my husband.
I will remember you in my prayers, Mrs Morton.
(DOOR OPENS) (DOOR CLOSES) AMANDA: Sidney! (CHUCKLING) I wasn't expecting you till Friday.
Mrs M said you'd be here.
She was very disapproving.
She's always disapproving.
Come.
- Looking elegant as always.
- So I've simplified my wardrobe, lilac in town, brown in the country.
Makes life so much easier.
Grantchester is hardly the country.
Sidney, Grantchester is not Cambridge and Cambridge is most certainly not London.
Look at your lovely new shoes.
They're ruined already.
Let's have a picnic.
(CHUCKLING) Your shoes are ruined, let's have a picnic.
How your mind works, Amanda! No, it's freezing.
How's my sister? Oh, did I tell you? She's seeing a jazz man.
- No.
- (CHUCKLING) (LAUGHING) My mother will be over the moon about that.
Yes, it's quite the scandal.
(LAUGHING) You know you look just like that Modigliani we saw at the National.
I don't think so.
My nose is, look - Disappointingly Roman.
- It's wonderfully Roman.
(AMANDA CHUCKLING) Do you know what we should do? We should run away together, you and I.
We could go to Nice, the French Riviera.
We could dance on warm summer evenings under the stars.
Sorry.
Don't know where that came from.
I, er I have some news.
(LAUGHS) That That's fantastic.
His name's Guy.
- Extraordinarily good looking, no doubt.
- Of course.
- Incredibly charming.
- Absolutely! Terribly wealthy.
After several years of painstaking research, I've finally got my man.
- Well - Well You may kiss me.
I want to meet him.
You will.
Of course, you will.
Come up to London.
I'll wear lilac just for you.
(TRAIN WHISTLING) Promise me you're not lonely, Sidney.
Don't worry about me.
(TRAIN WHISTLING) (VACUUM CLEANER) Only you could make cleaning look like an act of war, Mrs M.
Do you want to know what people are saying? Not particularly.
They're saying you should get yourself a wife.
- Miss Kendall is a friend.
- I know that.
Won't catch the likes of her with the likes of you.
Mrs Morton again.
That thing she does with her hair.
Dangerous woman.
Say I'm with the church warden.
Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord.
I'll say you're taking Bible study.
(SIGHS) (CHATTER ON RADIO) MRS MAGUIRE: What the Dickens! God help me.
My three brothers died in the First World War.
My Ronnie disappeared for no good reason in the second.
I'm forced to do for other people.
Clean their unhygienic water closets.
But this This is the worst indignity yet.
- SIDNEY: We can't have a dog.
- We cannot have a dog.
I don't know the first thing about dogs.
We cannot have a dog! Black labs are the best for conversation, I find.
- A dog, Amanda.
- AMANDA: I can't see you Ionely, Sidney.
I'm not lonely.
AMANDA: Well, what are you going to call him? What about Brutus? No, look, be serious now.
It'll need walking, feeding I wanted to give you something.
I won't be able to see you as often as I used to.
AMANDA: I'm sorry.
You know how hard it will be for me but GUY: Darling! It's impossible.
It's impossible to continue.
AMANDA: I'm so glad you understand.
Hello? Sidney? I've been thinking about the circumstances of the crime, the people involved and the nature of love.
- Oh, God - It wasn't a suicide note.
Dear, dear God.
Listen to the wording.
"I'm sorry it has come to this.
I know you will find this upsetting "and I wish there was something I could do to make things right.
" A little restrained for a suicide note, don't you think? "You know how hard it has been and how impossible it is to continue.
" He was ending a relationship.
Not his life.
Let's just say, for a minute, that's true.
Who was the letter intended for? His wife, the German? Or a A lover? You know something.
People feel they can tell me things.
You're lucky.
No one feels they can tell me anything.
Needless to say there was an affair.
Case like this, jealous wife, always suspect number one.
Number two, Pamela Morton.
If it is her, she's playing a dangerous game, don't you think? Or a very clever one.
Lover tries to ditch her, she does him in, tries to pin the blame on the hubby she can't stand.
Two birds, one very large stone.
Or it really could be the husband.
Finds out about his wife and his army pal and Have I won? Yes, you have.
Well, how about that.
(CHUCKLES) Mrs Morton said there was a diary.
His personal diary.
Maybe that could tell us something.
People talk to you, you say.
Tell you things? Rather too much sometimes.
Hmm.
I'm sorry for last time.
I was in a dream when you came round.
I didn't think you were in a dream.
Sometimes when I'm sad, my English disappears.
MÃchten Sie Tango tanzen? (LAUGHING) Ja, sehr gerne.
I very much would like to dance the tango.
- Sie sprechen Deutsch? - Ein bisschen.
- Very badly, I'm afraid.
- Nein, gar nicht.
Not at all.
I, er I believe the police returned your husband's effects.
Effects.
I didn't know that word before.
I haven't brought myself to look through them.
Well, we, er We could do it together perhaps, if you'd wish.
I'd like that.
MRS STAUNTON: Sometimes I think he could come back and I should leave the house as he left it.
He would go out late.
Go for a walk.
I think he preferred the nights where there was no one to trouble him.
Sometimes I think that's where he's been.
Just for a walk.
I should've been a better wife.
Why would you say that? You have a very kind face.
I just broke the eighth commandment.
Hmm.
Which one's that? The one about the ox? You beauty.
Germans.
Absolutely no sense of decorum.
She said I had a kind face.
That's all.
Still.
She's attractive.
For a Kraut.
Don't you think? Meetings, birthdays, train times.
That's it.
Nothing! You didn't answer the question.
I'm aware of that.
Well Sidney, this is what we in the force call a bloody bugger of a dead end.
(GUNSHOT) (DOG GROWLING) (DOG WHINING) (GASPS IN PAIN) Talks about you non-stop, you know.
Geordie! It's that vicar of yours.
- Sidney.
- Take a look at this.
You're worse than the children.
No more splashing.
- Go on.
- Oh! Have you got the diary? You must know we need more to go on than this.
Oi! What did your Mam say? I mean, take your Jesus.
He didn't settle for one or two miracles.
He went on till people believed him.
Till there was proof.
- I think we are quite a long way from Jesus.
- I think you might be right.
What? I know who did it.
I know who killed him.
- (SIDNEY SIGHS) - GEORDIE: Don't trouble yourself.
It'll work.
What if it doesn't? Then I'll remind you that it was your plan.
And a dicey one at that.
(DOOR OPENS) You ready? Mr Chambers.
- Still no sign of the will? - You're beginning to test my patience.
SIDNEY: If I'm being an inconvenience MR MORTON: Not at all.
- It was your wife I was hoping to speak to.
- On Mrs Staunton's behalf, of course.
- Do you know where I might find her? - Why would you need to speak to my wife? It was she who asked to speak to me.
She has Mr Staunton's diary.
SIDNEY: Apparently it contains some new information.
What new information? She believes he was murdered.
- The man put a bullet through his head.
- She thinks otherwise.
She travels to London, Friday, the 10:17.
The same train Mr Staunton used to get to his meetings? That's right, isn't it? - That's my wife you're talking about.
- I'm sure there was nothing untoward.
I'll speak to her on her return.
Thank you for your time.
(CHILD CRYING) (TRAIN APPROACHING) (TRAIN WHISTLING) (SCREAMS) It was your fault, you bitch! He was mine, you meant nothing to him.
He was mine! He loved me! He loved me! He loved me! You told her? About Stephen and me.
SIDNEY: I let her make an assumption.
You betrayed my confidence.
They were having an affair.
AM and PM.
Not morning and afternoon, but initials.
Annabel Morrison and Pamela Morton.
Used to being invisible, she hardly dared believe it.
(ANNABEL GASPING) SIDNEY: You were right, it wasn't a suicide note.
He was ending an affair.
Morning.
(GUNSHOT) SIDNEY: A drinker, a gambler, depressed after the war.
All she had to do was set the scene.
Recreate the suicide so vividly, even the police would fail to question it.
A half-drunk decanter of whisky, a hastily written note.
(CRYING) Somebody, please help! Please help me! (CRYING) Somebody please help me! He said he loved me.
No one has ever said they love me.
SIDNEY: We cannot erase our pasts however hard we try.
Instead we must carry them with us into the future.
We must carry them with us and look forward with hope.
We must look forward because to look back is to waste precious time.
Someone recently said to me, "We should live as we have never lived.
" And we must all of us take heed and live as we have never lived.
For we are all mortal.
We are all fragile.
And we all live under the shadow of death.
What the SIDNEY: Dickens! (DOG BARKS) How'd he have the energy? That's what I want to know.
- The energy for what? - Staunton.
Carrying on with two, you know - Lovers.
- Exactly.
Here's one for you.
Found a body outside the Five Bells battered to death Hang on.
Hang on, is this gonna involve murky waters? Give over.
I'll buy you a pint.
- You'll buy me a whisky.
- Backgammon? (LAUGHING) You're obsessed.
It's the game, Sidney.
It's the game! MRS MAGUIRE: Your sister's here.
Johnny.
SIDNEY: So, this is the famous Johnny Johnson.
We were all in love with Sidney.
Do you remember? A man of God.
Such a shame.
Guy.
SIDNEY: Why are you marrying him? Leonard.
This is Sidney Chambers.
DAPHNE: Where's the ring? How about if everybody empties their pockets.
Oh, here we go.
SIDNEY: Two crimes, one night.
Same circle of friends.
Isn't this illegal? And highly immoral? GEORDIE: Yes! SIDNEY: No! Ripped By mstoll
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