Peaky Blinders (2013) s02e02 Episode Script

Series 2, Episode 2

What happened to the pub is Irish business.
Shut your gypsy mouth and listen to your instructions.
Eamonn Duggan? My son and my daughter were taken from me when they were very small.
We're planning an expansion.
I'm taking premises in London.
The Italian gangs and the Jewish gangs have been at war in London.
The Jews have had the worst of it.
They need allies.
We take the opportunity to show our hand.
That arrived an hour ago.
There's no name on it, but it comes from Camden Town.
Well done, Tommy.
Now you're at war with Sabini.
~ Ada Shelby? ~ No.
~ Your brother broke the rules.
Sabini.
My face is the last thing you'll ever see on earth.
See if the bastard's still alive.
Please don't reproach me For, for how empty My life has become I don't know what really happened I watched your disappointment At being misunderstood I-I-I Forgive you.
It's all right, Miss Shelby.
We work with Tommy.
We're Peaky Blinders.
My name is not Shelby! Ready for a visitor, Mr Shelby? No.
I'm here on the King's orders.
I'm afraid I must insist.
Ah, you paid extra for daylight.
The racketeering business must be booming.
Are you not going to thank me for saving your life? Pass my cigarettes? Three nights ago, at the co-operative stables in Montague Street, there was a murder.
A man named Duggan.
The Oxfordshire constabulary found his body in a shallow grave.
I need to piss.
Nurse? I know that it was you who carried out the murder of Mr Duggan.
Oh, by the way Grace, she went to New York.
A place called, er Poughkeepsie.
She's married now.
To a banker.
He's rich.
I am sure she is very happy.
You have been under my microscope for some weeks now.
I have been observing every move you make.
That is why I was on hand to save your life.
I imagine being shot by a woman hurts the same as being shot by a man.
Just a bit more shameful.
You know, Mr Campbell, when I got shot they gave me a medal.
Yeah.
(No medal for you I bet.
) Mr Shelby our reunion .
.
is part of a very carefully worked out plan, which has been in place for some time now.
Every time you lean on that stick I bet you see her face.
As a result of the information in my possession, I can charge you with murder at any time and provide two impeccable crown witnesses whose testimony will lead you directly to the gallows.
You are on my hook, Mr Shelby.
And from this moment forward .
.
you belong to me.
So, get well quickly.
I'll be in touch the moment I hear you can piss standing up.
Then I will send you your instructions.
Curly, you left the gate open? No, I locked it.
I pinched myself when I did it.
Get this stuff under cover.
Hey! Who goes there? Tommy? Curly, get that oil you put on the legs when they go lame.
Are you fucking mad, Doyle? The yellow stuff.
Go on.
They said you'd be in for another three weeks.
I need to get on a boat to London.
Tonight.
You discharged yourself? I'm a fucking sitting duck in there, Charlie.
Sabini could send a man at any time.
I need to get some things done.
You're burning up.
~ Here.
~ Oh, Tommy! That stuff's for rubbing into fucking horses.
Ha! I am a horse.
If you were a horse, they'd shoot you with this many broken bones.
Get the black powder, Curly.
Go.
The black powder.
You pay for a bloody hospital and you're using witchcraft? I need to sleep in the open air and feel the boat under me, Charlie.
Oh, Tommy.
You're just like your mother.
Do you have a boat here? Only the January.
She's heavy.
London will take four days.
That'll do.
Can you spare Curly? He'll be my doctor.
Then God help you.
You have tobacco, Curly? And tea and whisky.
We'll have you running around like a colt.
Get him aboard.
I'll fill her up.
If I sleep all the way, it's Camden Town we're heading for.
What business do you have in Camden Town, Tommy? Tell Polly she's in charge while I'm away.
If I don't come back, tell her she's in charge for good.
The ceiling is moving Moving in time Like a conveyor belt Above my eyes When under ether The mind comes alive But conscious of nothing But the will to survive Something's inside me Unborn and unblessed Disappears in the ether This world to the next Disappears in the ether One world to the next Human kindness.
You hungry yet, Tommy? You know what, Curly? I think I am.
Where are we? Heathrow.
One more day and we'll be there.
I'll put something in the pan.
Can you steer? Give it a go.
You're almost there, too, Tommy.
Fucking hell, lads.
Calm down.
Put him down, Ollie.
Put him down, mate.
He's only little.
You on your own? Seems so.
You're a brave lad, ain't you? You want to take a look at my bakery? We bake all sorts here mate, yeah.
Did you know we bake over 10,000 loaves a week? Can you believe it? We bake the white bread, we bake the brown bread.
We bake all sorts.
Would you like to try some? Bread? Yeah? All right.
What would you like, brown or white? Try the brown.
Brown, right.
Not bad "Not bad," eh? "Not bad.
" It's fucking awful, that stuff.
The fucking brown stuff is for the workers.
The white stuff, now that IS for the bosses.
Come look.
I've heard very bad, bad, bad things about you Birmingham people.
You're Gypsies, right? So what, do you live in a fucking tent or a caravan? I came here to discuss business with you, Mr Solomons.
Well rum's for fun and fucking, innit? So, whisky, now that That is for business.
Let's talk first, eh? Suit yourself.
They say you had your life saved by a policeman.
I have policemen on my payroll.
I don't like policemen because policemen, they can't be trusted.
Mr Sabini uses policeman all the time.
That's why he's winning the war in London and you are losing it.
A war ain't over until it's over, mate.
You were in the war? I once carried out my own personal form of stigmata on an Italian.
I pushed his face up against the trench and shoved a six-inch nail up his fucking nose and I hammered it home with a duck board.
It was fucking biblical, mate.
So don't come in here and sit there in my chair and tell me that I'm losing my war to a fucking wop.
That war was a long time ago.
You need to be more realistic.
"Realistic", yeah? Realistic? Well, if you weren't losing the war, then you wouldn't have sent me the telegram.
Really? You forget your fucking telegram.
The telegram just said, "Hello.
" Very simple, you want to sell me something.
What? ~ We join forces.
~ Fuck off.
No! Categorical.
Fucking ridiculous.
Mr Solomons.
Your distillery provides one-tenth of your income.
Protection is another 10%.
And the rest you make from the race tracks.
I know you keep a gun in the drawer.
I know you keep it beside the whiskey.
I know you offer a deal or death.
I know what I'm saying makes you angry.
But I am offering you a solution.
You see, Mr Sabini is running all your bookies off your courses.
And he is closing down the premises that take your rum.
And people don't trust your protection anymore.
You're the bloke who shot Billy Kimber, right? You did, you fucking shot him.
That's you.
You fucking betrayed him, mate.
So it'd be entirely appropriate to do what I am thinking in my head to you right now.
I can offer you 100 good men.
All with weapons.
And a new relationship with the police.
Intelligence.
Intelligence is a very valuable thing, innit, my friend? And usually it comes far too fucking late.
Let's say I shot you already, right, in the fucking face.
And the bullet goes bone, mush, bone, cabinet over there.
Which is a shame, innit, cos that cabinet's fucked now and I got to get shot of it.
So, what I'd do is this It's fucking simple, mate.
I cut that cabinet in half, don't I? I do I just literally I cut I cut the cabinet literally in half, mate.
And I take one half of the cabinet, all right, and put it into a barrel and I take the other half of the cabinet in all its pieces and I put that into another barrel, right? And I send this barrel off to Mandalay.
And the other barrel off to somewhere like I don't know Timbuktu.
~ You ever been? ~ No.
No? Would you like to go? No.
You know, I always thought that you'd have a great, big, fucking gold ring in your nose.
I'm sorry, go on.
Tell us your plan.
Ada.
How the fuck did you find me? What, are you reading Polly's letters? Polly showed me the letter.
Look, you think you're safe because you moved flat, but you're not.
~ Polly thinks the same.
~ When will you understand? ~ I just want you all out of my life.
~ Ada, look at us, eh? ~ And it'll happen again.
~ Yeah, well, next time I'll be ready.
In fact, I want them to try again cos I'll shoot their balls off! ~ Ada, put the fucking gun away.
~ Get away from me, I'm late for work.
All right, fine.
Fine.
Just take this.
Take it.
Where you're living now is right on the edge of Sabini's territory and all the coppers round there work for him.
I've got a lot of money coming in that I can't put through the banks.
My accountant says the best thing is to buy property for cash and put it in the name of a family member.
A house? A whole house? It's all yours.
Four storeys, eight bedrooms, kitchen, scullery Rooms for a maid, if your political conscience will allow.
At least go and have a look, eh? Shoot the fucking lot of them.
Mr Sabini? The police are here.
Tell them to wipe their feet.
So why do I have to tell YOU everything? We can't search every train that comes into London.
They don't use trains, they use boats.
The boatmen are all Gypsies.
He's a fucking Gypsy.
Why do we have to tell them everything? OK, we can't search every boat.
Lucky for me I have a boy in the Jews' rum house.
The Gypsy went to meet Solomons.
And after, they drank whisky and shook hands and then Alfie gave him some salt or some such kike thing that means peace.
What exactly d'you want us to do, Mr Sabini? Did you bring dog shit in here on your shoes? Check, have a look.
I can smell something.
You've got photographs of this Tommy Shelby, though, right? We have military ID photographs from his time with the Warwickshire Yeomanry.
Shelby won medals.
OK, so you've got his fucking photo.
If he shows his face in Camden Town, your coppers lift him.
All right? You know .
.
sometimes when I smell something, it's something that's not real, it's something more like a Like a premonition.
It's like sometimes I smell something, but it's not a smell, it's just .
.
something isn't right.
Mr Sabini, we'll do everything we can to deal with this man.
Deal? Did you say, "Do a deal"? I didn't mean that.
Fuck.
Fuck.
~ You've been fucking got at.
~ No, you're being ridiculous.
Somebody's fucking sat you down.
Somebody's fucking sat you down and talked to you! ~ Mr Sabini ~ We should go.
This fucking Gypsy has sat down with the fucking coppers! ~ Mr Sabini.
~ You fucking .
.
and you're taking with both fucking hands - off of me and off of him! OK.
So now YOU fucking follow Shelby.
You fucking follow him and you finish him! Oh Oh, shit! I told yous, boys, 'ere she is.
What the bloody hell is going on? When did you get back? I didn't want to miss your birthday, Pol.
Back to work.
How d'you know it's my birthday? Nobody ever knows.
Ah, it's different this year.
John, Finn, bring the car round.
~ Where are we going? ~ To unwrap your birthday present.
After you.
Good morning! ~ You said you were gonna buy Ada a house.
~ Yep, that's right, I did.
Just had a bit of cash left over.
This is ours? No, Polly .
.
this is yours.
Cos you deserve it.
What would I do with all these rooms? Well, you couldrelax for one.
Come here at weekends.
It has a garden, eh? You love gardens.
You can grow roses, Pol.
I don't know, have a piano.
Have people round, they can have a singsong, eh? ~ God help the bloody neighbours(!) ~ Fuck the neighbours.
Welcome home, Pol.
Arthur, why don't you take the boys outside and wait by the car.
Pol I know you haven't been happy for a while.
And I know why.
Esme is all right, you know? She's got a good heart, she has.
I've spoken to her .
.
and she told me.
Told you what? She told me what it is that would make you happy.
I've spoken to our contacts in the police.
They have contacts in the council, and they have contacts with the people who keep the parish records.
Records of adoptions .
.
and of confidential forced removals.
Now, with your permission .
.
I'd like to grease a few palms and take a look at the records they never showed you.
Pol I am going to find your son and daughter and I'm gonna bring them home.
That's what this house is for.
So that YOU can bring your family home where they belong.
We're moving up, Pol.
Go have a look what you think.
Can you hear that? 'Gah!' Silence at last.
~ And it belongs to us.
~ 'Gah' 'Mummy' What's in there? MUSIC: Pull A U by The Kills Black magic and your two dollar Black magic and your two dollar All right Oh Uh Ooh.
Still here? Well, there's a lot coming in and a lot going out.
Well, as long as there's more coming in, we're all right.
This came for you today.
It's all the way from America, New York.
Somewhere called Poughkeepsie? And the decorators doing The Garrison want paying.
Arthur forgot and pulled a gun when they asked, so they've stopped and everything's green.
All right, well, just pay it.
Oh, and we need to put an advert in the Mail - "Garrison: Grand Reopening.
" Oh, and you said there's a letter that had to go today.
Special delivery.
I wrote it in the diary.
Yes I haven't written it out yet.
Well, you can just tell me and I'll write it down.
I've learnt shorthand.
Fair enough.
Dear Mr Churchill Has your pencil broken? No.
No, do go on.
Dear Mr Churchill I've been approached by an agent of the Crown to carry out a task, as yet unspecified.
'His name is Major Campbell and I believe he reports to you.
' 'Therefore, I decided to make direct contact with you 'to make sure that certain things are clearly understood.
' ' "Mr Churchill, you should know that I am a former British soldier ' "and if you look at my war record, ' "you will see that I fought bravely at Verdun and at the Somme' "Also, you will see that my actions at Mons "saved thousands of Allied lives.
"I know that you resigned your ministerial position "and the safety of an office "to go and fight on the front line with the men.
"I read that you fought bravely, Mr Churchill.
"Therefore, I hope I will be treated in any dealings we have "with a degree of respect, soldier to soldier.
"My demands are slight and my sacrifice in service of my country "will no doubt once again be great.
"Yours sincerely, Thomas Shelby.
" Military Medal and the DCM Distinguished Conduct Medal.
Hands up in this room, those who were at the Somme.
Those who were at the Battle of Verdun? Thomas Shelby was a tunneller.
His demand is rather amusing.
He has asked that the Colonial Office grant him an Empire export licence.
Specifically a licence covering India, Malay Peninsula, Canada and Russia.
He plans to transport certain manufactured goods from Birmingham to the Poplar Docks.
And you plan to agree to this demand? Dear God, Major Campbell We will be asking this man to carry out an assassination on behalf of the Crown, once more risking his life.
These demands by comparison are slight and easily met with a few quiet words over lunch with the appropriate ministers.
Sirwith the greatest respect Thomas Shelby is a murdering .
.
cut-throat, mongrel, gangster.
And yet, the tunnels were dug beneath our feet to silence the guns pointed at our heads.
Get Thomas Shelby's details from Campbell and get some kind of royal appointment stamp.
Temporary.
~ Temporary? ~ Just until the deed is done.
Agreed, Major Campbell? And then I can proceed as discussed? Agreed, sir.
Come on, let's go in.
Here, pass the ball! Come on.
'Come on in, boys.
Did you have a good game?' 'I'm starving, have you done anything for lunch?' It'll be on in a minute, in you go.
Go in and wash your hands, boys, all right? 'Come on, mister.
' Mrs Johnson? Yes.
Who are you? I'm from Birmingham Council, Bordesley parish.
No-one wrote to me.
What d'you want? I would like to talk about your son, about Henry.
Can I come in? I'd rather you didn't, he doesn't like to talk about this.
I see.
So what does Henry know about his real identity, Mrs Johnson? I only deal with Mr Ross from the agency and he only ever writes, so Why are you here in person? Well, the boy is approaching his 18th birthday.
This isn't right! You're not from the council, something isn't right.
Hmm.
What does he know, Mrs Johnson? He knows his mother couldn't cope.
She drank too much, she used opium she used to beat him.
But that isn't the truth, is it? Look, I think you should come back when my husband's here.
Does he know what his real name is? His real name is Johnson, Henry Johnson, now I would like you to go away and come back when my husband's here.
The truth is he was taken from his mother without her permission.
~ Henry, go back inside, please.
~ Who are you? ~ Please, Henry, go on! ~ Your real name is Michael Gray.
~ No! ~ Your real mother wants to see you.
Her address is on the back of this card.
She just wants to talk.
~ Go away.
~ She just wants to talk.
Go away and leave us alone.
Go away! Come on, let's go back inside.
Come on, I'll get you something to eat.
Come on, Henry.
Come on Come on.
Call yourself a Shelby? Fucking hit him, Finn.
Hit him, that's right.
All right, Isiah, your turn.
Finn! Call yourself a Shelby? Fucking hit him, for fuck's sake! Hit him.
Get him out of there, get him back! Get him back! Arthur, for fuck's sake! Get him out of there! Rockfair is down to sixes Right, what happened? ~ It was a fair fight.
~ Yeah.
Arthur just caught him with a good 'un.
I saw the body, don't fucking lie to me.
I saw the body, what fucking happened? I'm not family, I'm saying nothing.
Arthur .
.
he's blown a few times lately.
Six, seven.
It's like he's not there in the head.
He can't even hear "stop".
Even his own name.
And then he cries.
Right, listen to me.
That's two fucking stories.
Your brother killed a boy.
There were witnesses, there will be questions, get your story straight, it was an accident.
Fuck off.
I spoke to the doctor, he said the kid .
.
probably had a weak heart.
We'll look after his mother.
It'll be fine.
Polly said I should have stuck with the medicine.
I said that you know best.
It's like a fucking boat, Tommy.
Full of heavy cargo, like coal or iron.
Sometimes it slips to one end.
And the boat tips.
I can feel it slipping.
And I canfeel the boat tipping.
But there ain't nothing I can do about it.
It's like me fuckin' head's just like this fuckin' black fucking barge! And it just fuckingdrifts in and out, in and out Well, we're home a long time now, Arthur.
We've home a long time.
~ I thought you were all right.
~ Yeah, well I-I-I don't think I am Tommy.
Take this fucking thing away from me.
Just fuck off, Arthur.
You know what? I've had enough.
I've fucking had enough.
Just fuck off.
(What?) I'm supposed to treat you like a fucking kid again, eh? Keep you away from guns and fucking rope, is that it? You think I haven't got enough on?! ~ Stop it, Tommy.
~ Arthur? ~ You think I haven't got enough on?! ~ Stop it.
~ The war is done! Shut the door on it! ~ Stop it.
~ Shut the door on it, like I did, eh? ~ Like you do? Can you do that? Yeah? ~ Like I fucking did.
~ I'm not fucking you.
~ Shut the fucking door, eh? ~ But I'm not fucking you! Iam not fucking you! Everyone fucking knows it! God! Look at yourself.
Eh? Look at yourself.
Take a long, hard, fucking look at yourself.
Time for lunch, sir.
I thought we could eat at the desk, like the old days.
You remembered.
Tongue and pickle, sir.
But it's the single stroke of mustard, that's the thing.
~ Hmm.
~ The fine detail.
Speaking of detail How much is Thomas Shelby paying you in bribes per week? Hm? Actually, I already know - £2 a week, £8 a month, plus extras for specific favours.
When I left, you were an honest man.
And now you're on the Peaky Blinders' payroll.
Shelby is a worm and feeds off the rotten parts of your mind.
He gets in through your ear, with a whisper.
He crawls in over your tongue as you lie to the judge and the pastor.
Mr Moss We are entering a bloody phase of a bloody war with no quarter asked or given.
But as of this moment, you are now back on the side of the angels.
Shelby thinks you work for him, but in truth, you work for me.
And I will use you mercilessly.
Polly, these are the files for Michael and Anna Gray.
As you can see, one is white .
.
and one is black.
What you saw in your dreams .
.
was right.
Your daughter is dead.
Um You do it, I can't read it.
After Anna was taken from you, she was put with a With a family of a railway station master in Stafford.
Shenever settled.
So she kept running away.
She got on a train to Birmingham once Eventually they sent her to Australia .
.
where she died of something called spring fever.
So my little Anna .
.
travelled all the way back across the world to be with me in my dreams? She came all by herself.
Wellthat's one train they couldn't get her off.
But, Pol .
.
Michael is alive.
He's in England .
.
and I know where he lives, I went there.
~ But, Pol ~ And? OK, Polly, listen to me.
Just listen to me, please.
Pol! The woman that he calls "mother" will never let him come here.
Just tell me where he is, Tommy.
Polly, if you go there and you get mad and she gets mad and she calls the police, they will never let you anywhere near him and the boy will get scared.
That's what will happen, Pol.
Polly.
~ Polly ~ You just tell me where he is, Thomas.
~ Tell me where he is, Thomas! ~ Polly Pulling the gun Pulling the gun is why I can't tell you.
Pol, I'm sorry, you're going to have to wait till he's 18.
Till he's old enough to make his own decision.
Wait?! You tell me where he is! If you shoot me, you'll never know.
MUSIC: I Want Some More by Dan Auerbach You got the tenderness that I been searchin' for Oh, oh, oh, I want some more Mickey! Hurry up, the party's starting.
~ Good, carry on.
~ Finn, where you going? ~ To talk to Arthur.
~ Right.
~ Arthur? ~ Go away.
~ What's wrong? Why aren't you ready? ~ For what? The Garrison.
The reopening of your pub.
It's tonight.
~ Tommy don't want me there.
~ It was Tommy who told me to get you.
He says it's your name above that door, ~ so you've got to be there.
~ No No, look at me.
I'm staying away.
Go away.
Get out.
I told you to go away.
Sometimes .
.
when we boys are feeling blue This is what we do.
It's called Tokyo.
It's good stuff, Arthur.
It'll help you.
For special occasions.
Oh, boys! My fucking Garrison! Take that.
Take that an' all.
'Ere you are, Lizzie.
Let me get you a light.
There you go, my darling.
Jeremiah, I'll be with you in a second.
Oh! Look at the place! ~ You all right? ~ Busier we are, the faster time passes.
Yeah? Arthur Tokyo, it's fuel for races, eh? ~ But you've seen a doped horse after a race ~ Oh, yeah.
Grand openings and race days only, brother.
~ All right? ~ 'Go on then, Tommy!' ~ 'There you go, come on, drink up.
' ~ Boys.
All right, Mick? ~ Tom.
~ Finn! Gimme that.
Keep him off the whisky, John.
Pol.
~ Ada! I didn't know you were coming.
~ There's Aunt Polly.
~ Aww ~ Hi! Hey, who's that? ~ D'you want a cuddle? ~ Polly, that's right.
~ Take him.
~ Polly ~ Oh, Ada, why don't you think about coming home? ~ Hello, Ada.
Say you'd Tommy ~ So what do you think, eh? ~ It's very ~ Gold? ~ Yeah.
~ Hello, Ada.
~ Hello, trouble, how're you doing? ~ Mmmm ~ Oh, you'respilling my drink! Hey, Arthur, look who it is.
So what d'you want me to say to her? Just talk to her.
No-one can get through to her.
Tell her I had no choice.
I appreciate this.
~ Hello, brother.
~ Ada, come here, you! You big bear! Polly? Why don't you come and join us? ~ What? ~ I'm not an idiot.
He asked you to come, didn't he? I don't want conversation, I want an address.
Until I have that .
.
I've not got anything to say.
~ Now, it's a party! ~ Yeah It is! Oh! ~ And I'm going to enjoy myself.
~ No, Pol, don't be silly.
Excuse me? Would you care to dance? It'dbe my pleasure.
My love, pleasure hasn't even begun.
Excuse me? I'm looking for someone called Elizabeth Gray.
I was told she lived here at number 17.
I came last night but there was nobody here.
So I waited.
What do you want with Elizabeth Gray? I think she might be my mother.
On a gathering storm comes a tall, handsome man In a dusty, black coat with a red right hand.

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