Waking the Dead (2000) s03e05 Episode Script

Breaking Glass: Part 1

For those of you who haven't seen the site before, the archaeological area is on the left.
What we're excavating is a burial ground associated with St Barnabas Hospital.
This is one of the most extensive early-medieval graveyards ever found in London.
Thank you for joining us for today's Barnabas Boy lecture.
It is my pleasure to introduce Dr Frankie Walton, a forensic scientist at the Home Office, who is going to talk about forensic anthropology and comparisons between her field and ours.
Firstly I'd like to say that I'm always humble among professional archaeologists - people who spend even more time on their knees than us civil servants! What we're going to look at in detail is patterns of wounding - what happened to the living as opposed to what happened to the dead.
Sir You won't listen to me because what I'm telling you doesn't fit with how you see the world.
I am a police officer! You can't begin to believe the things I see in your wildest dreams! Don't tell me how I see the world! Sir It's a form of denial.
You waffle about your psychological theories! I told you, a crime has been committed! You cannot open an investigation cos someone mentions a crime committed in the past! How many times do I have to tell you that?! Sirplease.
Mel, this is pointless! I'm going to go higher.
Oh, please do! Please, go higher! Just go somewhere else, cos in here I am the highest! We need to get a grip.
Ms Poole, will you come with me? I'll deal with it.
Sir, you OK? Fine Just fine(!) Thanks for coming.
You're welcome.
Hi.
Where have you been? I've been to a very absorbing lecture given by an extremely talented forensic scientist.
Thank you.
Everything all right? What's wrong? We have a visitor.
A recovered-memory therapist.
I hope you were tactful.
He wasn't tactful.
So you've been waiting for me to come back to sort it out You're both psychologists What Spence means I know what he means.
I'll talk to him later.
Grace.
I need your help.
This is Dr Foley.
Ms Poole has come here from the New Direction Counselling Service.
I'm a qualified psychotherapist with 12 years' experience.
She says that she has a client who is of interest to us.
Your colleague's sceptical and hostile.
She specialises in recovered-memory therapy.
So I propose to leave Ms Poole here to talk to a qualified psychologist with more than 12 years' experience.
All right, Grace.
I'm accustomed to reactions like that.
Reactions to what? My clientis Terence Tanner.
Date of birth 8.
7.
70.
He makes a living as a clerical worker in a credit agency.
In the course of therapy, he has been recovering memories of violent abuse.
Right, well, a lot of people in therapy do "recover memories" He has severely dissociated his experiences and the therapy has helped break down his resistances.
This is a police station.
I know that.
A cold case unit.
Yes.
You asked to see Detective Superintendent Boyd - on what grounds? Exactly.
Terry relived a number of violent assaults Perhaps you didn't hear the question.
I heard.
I was about to answer it.
Terry was the frequent victim of assaults by someone he knew as Papa Doc.
Do you have any evidence? Recovered memory isn't considered reliable without evidence.
He agreed to the taping of some of our sessions.
Do you want to watch? Terrywe're talking about the person who hurt you.
Come on, Terry.
Free yourself.
This is not your fault.
Whose fault is it? It's always dark when he comes and, er I'm not really asleep.
I'm just pretending.
And then you hear these slow footsteps coming down the corridor.
And that's the worst bit cos you never know if he's going to stop at the end of your bed.
Keep going, Terry.
Don't let him silence you.
Come on, Terry.
He says, "Come on, Terry.
You know what Papa Doc likes to do.
" And he's got me like that so I then can't move.
I don't want to do it, you know? Even though I'm supposed to.
I goes, "I don't want to do it.
" What do you say? I say, "Let me go.
Let me go, please.
Let go of me! LET ME GO!" This is not a staged response.
He has a strong abreaction.
How do you know you're not coaching him? That's a very good question, Grace.
How do you know? I said Coaching him? Let me go! I don't want to do it! I don't want to do it.
It's all right now, Terry.
We surfaced more memories that had been repressed.
He gave me this.
What's that? He described the abuse, repeated homosexual rape.
He had a friend.
His friend was also abused, he says, and then he told me his friend was killed.
Terry was traumatised.
He gave me the name of the boy.
I went to the Missing Persons Helpline.
Kevin Pearce disappeared at the age of 16.
He produced the name of a boy that went missing.
Now, if you paper over this, I'm going public.
Threatening the police isn't very prudent at this stage.
I've had 10 kinds of hostility and abuse from the police.
Now you're going to have to take notice.
Why didn't you make Superintendent Boyd aware of all this? He never gave me the chance.
You should have shown me this when you came in.
Now you're interested! Do not play games with police officers.
Not these officers.
And not in this office.
.
.
Spence.
You don't believe in psychogenic amnesia and the ability to recover repressed abuse experiences? We're not here to discuss what we believe in.
Sorenson and Arkwright, Out of 100 women interviewed retrospectively, 38 were amnesiac about abuse experiences which were well-documented elsewhere.
Byron and Harper, 1994.
Now, here's an American report.
And the same author wrote a whole book on the subject.
Can we just slow down for a moment? I want to speak to your client.
In my presence.
Well, I'm afraid I won't have him intimidated.
And erif you do nothing, then you're playing games, not me.
I'm going to say this just once.
You do not make the rules for what my team does or how it does it or when it does it.
Or indeedif it does anything.
Yeahthank you.
Bad news or bad news, people? Kevin Pearce absconded from local authority care in 1986.
What's the other bad news? Terence Tanner, date of birth 8.
7.
70, doesn't exist.
He says, "Come on, Terry" There we go - research for them that wants.
Nobody wants, Grace.
If we could do it, we wouldn't need you.
So, Dr Foley Yes? What do you think about recovered memory? There's little hard evidence.
You either believe in it or you don't.
But what do YOU think? Recovered-memory therapy depends on a theory of psychological dissociation.
No.
Keep it simple.
OK.
Individuals sometimes find trauma so unbearable that they split their personality to avoid processing it.
Along comes the therapist and gently walks you back into it.
Yeah.
So how do you distinguish between hypnotic suggestion and the recovery of authentic memory? I've got some bad memories, but I haven't split my personality.
How do you know? I'm sorry.
No.
That's a good point.
How do you know? What suddenly makes you aware that you're walking around in two halves? Recovered-memory therapy.
Exactly.
I'll tell you something else you get from recovered-memory therapy - alien abduction.
You'll be interviewing ET next.
We need to interview Terence Tanner.
I wish he'd phone home.
We want to speak to Tanner without Ms Poole.
She can ask for an adult to be present when we talk to him.
Doesn't have to be her, though? No.
If he was a credit clerk, so we need to find out where he worked.
Right! There was a Papa Doc investigation in 1991.
- What kind of investigation? - An internal inquiry.
- By whom? It was run by the head of the local authority social services, Oliver Gill.
- Inconclusive.
The Met were informed and the papers are on file.
- What was the inquiry based on? A member of Gill's staff committed suicide and left a note.
A Peter Murdoch threw himself under a train.
Was he Papa Doc? I don't know! - Didn't you ask? - Yes.
They're sending the file over.
Is there a local authority report on Kevin Pearce? They can't find anything, but I'll follow it up.
You're going to have to open an investigation.
I never said I wouldn't, did I? You just don't like being told what to think by Ms Poole.
I don't like anybody telling me what to thinkexcept you, Grace.
So do you think we have got something now? Well We've got this.
OK.
Thank you.
.
.
Kevin Pearce was transferred to local authority residential care at the age of six.
- Any other details? - No, but they're sending files over.
And I couldn't find a credit agency in London with an employee called Terry or Terence Tanner.
What about the coroner's report on Murdoch? No history of depression.
A sudden aberration.
The coroner concluded he took his own life on the balance his mind was disturbed and his suicide note.
This isn't the original, is it? No, it's a copy.
Murdoch says his nickname was Papa Doc.
Papa Doc.
And the reason he committed suicide was because it was bound to come out ".
.
Was impossible to restrain, and now these desires mean that my life must end.
" Grace? Coming! This letter was sent to his work.
Where's the envelope? They don't have it.
So we don't know when or from where it was sent.
So we can't prove who sent it? No.
Grace! Yes? Sorry.
This is Murdoch's suicide note.
It's strange cos it's typed - even the signature.
Wouldn't you expect that to be handwritten? Yes.
I'll find out if Murdoch has got any relatives.
Peter MurdochPapa DocTanner Kevin Pearce .
.
Laurie Poole.
Psychotherapist.
Is she in breach of her professional code of conduct by disclosing to us what Tanner tells her in therapy? Yes.
Why would you do that? She'd breach her guidelines if she thought that Tanner was a danger to himself or others.
Right.
So he could be out of control? So Laurie Poole, psychotherapist.
.
Hypnotists do it.
When you Regressed.
She regresses him, but it hasn't worked.
He's in pieces and she can't put him back together.
What are you saying? She could be in a state of panic.
Because one of the objects of psychotherapy is Grace, you taught me this.
Steering patients away from feelings of revenge.
So that could be her concern.
The thing that she hasn't told us is her concern that Terence Tanner, the abused, might seek revenge against whoever he believes is Papa Doc.
He's MY patient.
And there are issues of patient confidentiality.
But there weren't issues when you showed Dr Foley a video of his interview.
How many tapes are there? Do you want my co-operation? I would love that.
Ms Poole, please.
We want to speak to Terence Tanner.
He hasn't been back in contact since the interview I described in your office.
You will have kept files on his progress.
Perhaps we could see those? Our files are confidential.
I'd need consent.
It'll take us next to no time to get a warrant.
Why did you come to see us? I thought there was a criminal matter involved.
In the past or in the future? Or both? Did Tanner tell you what he intended to do, if or when he found Papa Doc? I've warned you before about playing games, Ms Poole.
It's not up to you how much information you share with us.
It becomes a matter for the court.
Or is that another institution too politically uncongenial for your tastes? Excuse me.
I will put it on record that you said you'd return with a warrant.
On that basis, I am forfeiting my client's confidentiality.
Very sporting.
I offered you co-operation.
The way to Terence Tanner was through me.
The way to Terence Tanner? Well, perhaps he never told you when he was confessing everything that his real name isn't Terence Tanner.
Buckfast Road - is it next right? You'd have been a minicab driver if you hadn't lost your way in life.
That's if it's the right address.
Not this one.
That's interesting.
What? Why didn't Ms Poole mention that Tanner had been on the streets for two years before returning to work? You expect too much of people.
It's touching.
OK.
I think it's this one now.
If you don't want to know the score Look away now.
Hello? Does anyone actually live here? I think so.
T Tanner - this address.
Extremely neat.
Very unusual.
Oh! Boyd! We're going to need a warrant.
Take a look at that.
"To Jonno, from Papa Doc".
The Catcher In The Rye.
A boy who secretly saves people from killing themselves.
Let's get Frankie.
OK.
Hi, this is PC Silver, can you sort me out a warrant? Computer's full of hard-core.
That's why it's a "hard drive".
Tell Grace to come in here.
She's here.
Is this victim behaviour? Or perpetrator? I need to know.
Sometimes it's two sides of the same coin.
PHONE RINGS Boyd.
It's me.
We're calling YOU.
Where are you? I'm in the squad room.
We need you here.
Boyd, I've got something really odd here.
We've got something very odd here too.
an hour? It'll take you 10 minutes.
Well, whatever Mr Tanner's main interests in life are, he's read a lot of psychology.
Existential psychology, identity, family dynamics.
Has he been rehearsing his role in Poole's therapy sessions? That's speculation.
I'm allowed.
In fact, I get paid to speculate.
Sir! He logs on to chat rooms.
He's password protected so I tried it.
His password is Papadoc.
Look for something unusual.
Not that we haven't got anything unusual.
We should test for drugs.
Do your sniffer-dog routine.
We need something to shed some light on our man here.
Bark if you find anything.
Well, woof woof.
Cos I already found something to shed some light on our man here.
He's been dead for 600 years.
That's why I wanted some more time.
What? Hi, Frankie.
Hi.
Anything? Aside from the fact that the clothes are the same size, there is a possibility we might get some DNA off them.
Then we'll know if this is one or two people.
It's one person.
With 2 identities.
Multiple personality? 2 dress styles doesn't mean multiple personality.
None of my wardrobe goes together.
There you go, then.
Is there a test to tell us whether the owner's been dead for 600 years? I'm going back to see the archaeologists first thing.
I think Tanner's got a gun.
Oh.
It's probably gun oil.
So he could be armed.
Yeah.
OK.
Roll up your sleeves for me.
I'm clean, man.
You been in this shelter before, ain't ya? I got straight, didn't I? Things didn't work out, eh? One little drink.
Well, you know what happens if you have one little drink in here.
No flasks or bottles on you? Mate, I done my can on the bridge.
I just want a good night's kip.
All right.
That's all we offer.
You missed your tea.
You piss the blanket, you lose your tag.
Right, come on lads, let's 'ave you! Move it! C'mon, 'aven't got all day.
C'mon.
Yes, thank you(!) Come on move it, c'mon let's 'ave you.
There we go.
BOY MUTTERS C'mon, Terry, back to your bed.
(Nine o'clock, nine o'clock, lights out, no talking, no talking, lights outshh!) (Shh, shh) (8.
55, brush your teeth, 8.
55, brush teeth, shh, no talking!) C'mon He might not even come tonight.
(.
.
Shh! No talking) MUFFLED SOBS (Shh 8.
55) (Teeth, teeth) (Nine o'clockquiet.
No talking.
) (No talking.
Brush teeth.
) (8.
55, wash your face, brush your teeth) 'Wash face, brushteeth.
' What's going on here? Something.
He dresses up and goes out.
What does he dress up FOR? How do you know what's dressing up and what's normal? I don't.
That's why I employ you.
I hate this case.
Because you don't know if you're looking for a criminal or a victim.
I'm not a social worker.
I'm a policeman.
Do you mind if I say something? Go on.
Don't let Ms Poole dictate the emotional temperature of this case.
Is that what I've done? FOOTSTEPS ECHO Back then Yeah.
Dug him up, then.
Dug him up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How did you find me? NW10.
Yeah, I know But how did you know where I lived? Do you follow people around? Yes.
Yeah? Have you followed anyone else around? Have you followed Papa Doc? Papa Doc.
Have you seen him? I, um I think I've spoken to him in a chat room.
A chat room It's like the phone, you know? Only it's not.
Spoke to him too.
What do you mean, you spoke to him? You don't just mean a voice in your head? In my head.
And when he talks to me for real.
When have you seen him for real? Don't look at me, please.
No, OK.
Please.
I need you to help me.
Cos I know how you remember things.
Hmm? I only remember .
.
little bits.
Help you? Yeah.
Help me find him.
Hmm? Find him.
Yeah.
Papa Doc - find him.
Yes.
'I'm not really asleep, I'm just pretending.
'And then you hear these 'slow footsteps coming down the c-corridor' Hi.
Hiya.
Want a glass? No, thanks.
The two wardrobes - the two sets of clothes - there were skin and hair residues on the collars, around the jackets.
One person? One DNA profile.
So yeah, definitely one person.
'.
.
stop at the end of your bed' Is it what I think it is? Probably.
Identical twins.
One of whom is Terence Tanner.
And the brother was dug up and incorrectly identified as the medieval boy.
Mmm.
POOLE: 'Don't let him silence you.
' Umhello.
There was a message the police want to talk to me.
Am I too early? .
.
Mrs Murdoch? Eileen Murdoch yes.
DC Silver.
Thank you for coming in.
Er, can you just give me a minute? We were married 13 years, and I had no idea he felt that way about boys.
Did he have? A normal sex life with me? Yes.
But that proves nothing, does it? I mean, these days, how can you be sure of anything? Mmm.
I appreciate this is difficult for you.
He left a note.
Not with me.
No, that just turned up at work.
No, he said nothing to me.
Justleft.
Like that.
Would you have expected him to have TYPED a note like this? Well, he hadn't TYPED that many suicide notes in the last few years(!) No, sorry, I meant there's no signature.
No.
See, I thought it was just shame.
That was the only possible explanation I could think of.
I appreciate this is difficult.
Um Was your husband ever violent towards you or anyone you knew? Violent? Yes.
Peter? He was the gentlest man you could ever hope to meet.
(Sorry!) You can't imagine how how painful this is.
I'm so sorry.
Well, why has it all come up again? I don't understand.
Is? Is there a possibility that Peter's confession isn't genuine? I'll let you know if there are any developments.
'.
.
She came in early,' on her way to work.
I couldn't ask her to wait.
No, you did the right thing, don't worry.
I left a note for Grace.
She observed as soon as she came in.
Yeah? What do you think? Well, no hard evidence, of course.
No, but what's your hunch? OK, well if Peter Murdoch had a paedophile habit, his wife had no suspicions.
Suicide? If he had suicidal stress, he certainly hid it from his wife.
I'll need a f Full transcript.
Frankie.
Hi.
I'm sorry about this.
Detective Superintendent Boyd - DS Jordan from my unit - Dr Paul Blackstone.
Hi.
Glad you're interested in our project.
I'm not sure you'll think that when you know why we're here.
My God! What do you think it means? Well it might mean a genetic connection between the young man in the photo and the Barnabas Boy.
Now, I presume you carbon-dated the Barnabas Boy before you reconstructed the face? No, the facial reconstruction was paid for by the publishers.
But that was just a gimmick, wasn't it? Since you put it that way, there was no ARCHAEOLOGICAL reason.
But did you carbon-date the bones? We don't usually carbon-date bones.
It's expensive and time-consuming.
Like facial reconstruction(?) As I said, that wasn't strictly an archaeological procedure.
Frankie, I don't understand this.
Are you suggesting this is a modern body? Can you, er, show us where you found it? This is the find-spot.
Excuse me.
Do you think you could get everybody to stop working for just? Yeah.
.
.
Guys - a couple of minutes.
Sorry - so this is where the skeleton was found? Yes.
The majority of this area is a medieval graveyard.
But the Barnabas Boy was a marginal burial.
Um, sorry, I'm afraid you're going to have to explain that to me.
Um He was buried outside the graveyard.
If he was a pauper, it would account for it.
A pauper buried within sight of consecrated ground but not within it? That was the hypothesis.
What kind of soil was the skeleton found in? That's the peculiarity.
Over here, you have regular London clay.
That's the major dig site.
But this side of the wall is an area of lime.
At first, we thought it was an old plague pit.
Lime will dissolve flesh quickly.
There's no point in investigating here? There won't be anything left.
But I would like a look at what's in their store.
OK, well, they can carry on.
OK.
.
.
.
Thanks, guys.
Spence.
Yeah? Find out what this building was used for in 1986.
Sure.
You're saying that the Barnabas Boy can't be a medieval skeleton because of this photograph?! Yes.
That's what we're saying.
The boy in the photograph's missing? Yes.
Since when? A week.
We excavated that six months ago.
The reconstruction was done from a cast? We made the cast, the publishers took it from there, yes.
Unusual.
There seems to be no sign of dental repair.
Not unusual from OUR point of view.
There was no amalgam.
Look, you have to understand - we expected to find a medieval body.
I have to get this back to the lab before I can say anything.
Can you say anything about how old it is? Between 15 and 18.
No, I meant How long in the ground.
We need to know how decalcified the bones are.
If this "medieval" ground was limed, why didn't the archaeologists notice there was a lot of bone left? Once you're down to a skeleton, it can take a very long time to get further.
What, 500 years? There's nothing that's inconsistent with the archaeological evaluation, which was contextual, after all.
The coroner was satisfied with what he saw.
We're not trying to blame anyone.
We just need to be clear.
Let me take this to the lab.
It needs a DNA check anyway.
Will there be any publicity about any of this? The Press will be all over the dig site.
One heck of a story.
The book is in shops all over the country.
When was the book published? Six weeks ago.
No, we're not going to publicise anything.
PHONE BUTTONS BLEEP Mel, can you work out the dates for the sessions that Tanner had with the therapist? Yeah.
I don't understand any of this.
Listen, it'll be OK.
I'm sorry at how it's turned out.
'Stands there looking down at him for ages' DOOR CLOSES Boyd 'And then he does what he always does' A minute, please? Listen to the language that Tanner uses when he's talking about his so-called recovered memories.
'.
.
And he stands at the end of Terry's bed.
'Terry starts to cry.
'And he just' What about it? Well VIDEO OFF Poole thinks this is evidence of dissociation - Tanner shutting down his consciousness in the face of trauma and recovering his memories in the third person.
What do YOU think? I think it always WAS in the third person.
Meaning? Meaning I think he's talking about somebody else.
His twin? Almost certainly.
He witnessed the abuse of his twin? Hmmthat's not possible to say.
He may have constructed the memory.
Ah.
So now we're back with constructing memories? We ALL construct memories.
The death of a twin is a terrible trauma.
Twins so readily project into each other.
So he's in a state of trauma.
I would say so.
I think we can look at the contents of his flat as him living two lives.
Splitting himself down the middle to keep his brother alive.
This supposed breakthrough.
Do you think it was triggered by the publication of the book with the picture on the front? No, because he was already in therapy then.
But if he'd seen the picture since, it would have a powerful effect.
He'sgot no records, he has enough money to pay a private therapist - and we don't know who he is.
I think the twins were in care, and that's how they know Kevin Pearce.
OK! The DNA from hairs in Terry's hairbrush and elsewhere in the flat match the skeleton of the Barnabas Boy.
So I'm confirming that the Tanners were identical twins.
Good, good.
He was found in the cellars of a warehouse converted in 1970.
Converted to what? A residence.
Psychiatric care home.
Hmm! What was it called? The Arjana Centre.
Dr Hugh Cullen, later Professor.
Grace? .
.
Let me know when you get a trace.
Grace? Gra-ace, speak to me.
Ohcould you give me an hour or so? CLOCK BELL STRIKES KNOCK AT DOOR Come in.
Grace What a surprise.
I need to talk to you about something.
Oh, yes? Thanks.
Alan, I want you to trust me on this.
Trust you? With what? Is Hugh Cullen still alive? Hugh Cullen? Yes, he's still alive.
Why do you want to know? I want to know because Well, it's complicated, it's it's not easy.
I see.
You're here because the police, for some reason you haven't told me, want to know.
Yes.
Are you telling me there's trouble? I need to speak to him.
Well, he'skept himself to himself for a very long time now.
What do you need to speak to him about? I need to speak to him about allegations of sexual abuse.
Sexual abuse? Yes.
Grace, he's old.
He's unwell.
He's been through a lot.
And y Sexual abuse? That's why I thought it would be better if you and I went to talk to him.
Better than what? Just trust me, will you? And I've called the guy from the original investigation, Oliver Gill.
Yeah, he'll come in tomorrow.
The Arjana Centre took kids in care with severe mental problems.
Cullen's big thing was schizophrenia as a misunderstood protest against an irrational environment.
Kids had free rein? Self-expression and no chemical straitjackets.
That's a long hour! THAT'S A VERY LONG HOUR! Sorry.
I apologise.
However, I do have some information about Hugh Cullen.
He has a drink problem which started after the psychiatric establishment denounced his work as liberal propaganda.
What does he do now? I don't know, but a friend's trying to make contact.
Excuse me? Grace - a friend of yours(!) I just don't think we should go rushing into this.
I'm not rushing into anything.
Let me clarify this.
I am waiting for a friend of YOURS to contact someone who I want to interview? Yes.
I don't want him prepared! He won't prepare him.
I didn't even know Hugh Cullen was alive! Grace The way it works, Grace, is very, very simple.
I like to be consulted before the event rather than after the event(!) Yes? Yes.
Who is this friend of yours? He's a psychiatrist.
I'm not going to apologise.
I'm a consultant, I'm not a gofer.
It's a question of trust.
It's got nothing to do with trust.
This "friend" as you put it.
I?! As YOU put it.
Well, actually, he's a little more than just a friend.
We've been having disagreements about the nature of my work.
Well, far be it from me to pry into your personal Hugh Cullen is his mentor.
Hmm.
I just thought if we went out and brought Cullen in It would have done what, exactly? I just think it would be in all our interests if we got to Cullen through someone who could just ease the way.
OK.
OK.
No, I-I understand.
I do.
OK.
So - regarding Hugh Cullen.
It's a sensitive issue for Grace, so we go through her from now on, OK(?) OK.
All right? Yes, thank you.
OK.
DOOR CLOSES CHATTER IN STREET Do you ever see him? What do you mean? Inside your head.
All the time.
I seen him.
In your head or for real? For real.
You don't mean in your head?! You mean you've seen him for real? Where have you seen him? On the street, looking for kids.
Then we can find him.
Yeah.
Find him.
Maybe.
No, not maybe! Oi! Oi - we can find him! There's no point.
What d'you mean, no point? eh?! Why did you come to round with the picture? I see it.
And I knew.
And I knew what it meant! We're gonna do something about it, all right? They dug him up.
THIS is where they dug him up! I KNOW Gun! Gun! Gun! .
.
where they dug him up, OK? GUN-GUN-GUN! GU-U-UN! Stop it! Stop it HE WHIMPERS DOG BARKS No, no, no-o-o! HE SOBS I don't want to! I don't want to, please, please, please! I don't want to do it.
All right.
Stand still! What we DO? DOG GROWLS TWO SHOTS .
.
Find him and kill him.

Previous EpisodeNext Episode