Waking the Dead (2000) s05e08 Episode Script

Straw Dog: Part 2

It will be my intent to prove that the conviction of Mr Tony Greene was unsafe.
One day I'll get out and do one just for you I'm Dr Foley.
Dr Grace Foley.
Welcome on board.
Harry, by the way.
Were you and Harry Taylor in love and is that why you're protecting his memory? You're holding something back.
Are you calling me a liar? Who do you debrief with? Gosh, I haven't done that in years.
Maybe you should.
I've had my bag stolen.
Yeah, we know.
It was handed in.
Gherkins? Fingers.
This one was removed from a living hand no longer than a few hours ago.
It's still bleeding.
If the victim is still alive, he's not in good shape.
'My name is Kevin Keogh.
'Dr Grace Foley, you're wrong about Tony Greene.
He is innocent.
'I am with the real killer.
' I'm not one of them.
Them? A killer.
I'm speaking directly to the kidnapper of Kevin Keogh.
You want me to say Tony Greene was beaten in custody.
In my conscience, I do not know whether he was beaten or not.
I'm removing myself from this investigation.
This programme contains some violent scenes.
'My name is Kevin Keogh ' BEEPING 'I am with the real killer.
'I am with the real killer.
' Spence.
Yeah? I think we've got him.
'Henry.
Henry.
' So that's the voice of the kidnapper? Possibly.
Henry? Could be a pet.
Or a kid.
What have we got on Greene's ex-cellmates? All have alibis for the handbag snatch.
No grounds to hold any of them.
Hospice bed list? No hits so far.
I've got uniform doing door-to-door on the entire list.
CCTV, Stella? Working on it.
Working on it! It takes time! OK.
News from PSNI on Kevin's family.
He doesn't have one.
His mother's in a prison detox unit.
She's not fit enough to do a TV appeal.
Here it is.
Shouldn't Grace be here for this? I'm on my way.
KNOCK ON DOOR Yep? No mother for the television appeal.
That's bad.
Yeah, it is.
We need someone who has an emotional connection to the victim.
Yes, you do.
Someone who can translate that pain to the kidnapper.
Don't go there.
Where? You know where.
But you have an emotional connection.
I do NO T.
I am not his mother.
Ask Felix or ask Stella, or YOU do it, because I am off the case.
I don't understand you, Grace! Don't you want to help save the boy's life? No! Yes.
Christ! You have a boy.
You have a boy He's a good boy.
He's his mother's life.
Maureen Keogh, Kevin's mother, is too ill to be here today but she said this.
"I know in my heart that my son Kevin is still alive.
"I know he is still of this world "because he is my world.
"He is my heart, my soul, "he is all that I am because all that I am is in my child.
" All I would ask of you is to remember "that Kevin is just like you.
"Kevin is some mother's son.
"My son.
" Kevin, if you can hear this hold on.
CHIRPING MORE CHIRPING 'Henry.
'Henry.
'Henry.
' I can't believe you didn't buy sugar! I can't do everything.
Have you had the van registration enhanced? I'll have it within the hour.
Ask Grace to come through here.
I've gone over every prisoner who's had contact with Grace and nothing.
Well, that's good, isn't it? How? You've eliminated a connection to Grace.
I might've missed something.
Maybe not.
Though everything has to link directly to Grace, she could be a third party.
Passed a shot of the bag snatcher to all locals.
Just got to wait.
Don't wait.
Phone and hassle them.
If they don't like it, slap 'em! Grace.
Thanks Now, Grace, in February 1980 you were a passenger in a car driven by a drunk driver DS Harry Taylor, yes.
I didn't know he was drunk, but yes.
What else didn't you know about Harry Taylor? Meaning? He had a very high success rate.
I know.
No, I mean a VERY high success rate, getting prisoners to sign confessions.
Are you are you saying he beat confessions out of people? Greene seemed to think so.
Do you know about any other allegations against him, especially where you were involved in giving advice to the investigation? Grace? Dr Foley, thank you for coming in to see us.
Glad to help.
We understand that you and DS Taylor were close? With all due respect, sir, is that a question, a statement of fact or, dare I say, the mongering of a rumour? Assume it is a question.
Then, yes.
DS Taylor and I were close friends.
However, that was over a year ago.
You understand this committee is not a hearing in a court, Doctor? I'm aware of the difference.
It saddens me that you are adopting a defensive posture.
On the contrary, "Cautious" might be a better interpretation of my posture.
Well then, for the record, do you know of any allegations of prisoner abuse made against DS Harry Taylor during the time you worked with him? For the record, I know of only one allegation that was made by Tony Greene last year and this was discounted as a false allegation by the trial jury.
MAN WHISPERS Mmm.
That will be all.
Thank you for your time.
I never found out who made the other allegations.
Harry was killed in a car crash a week later and the inquiry was discontinued.
Spence!.
.
We've got to find out who made those complaints.
Spence, check all prison releases in the last five years against Harry's arresting officer file.
I'll request his personnel files.
No, I've got that here.
I'm way ahead of you.
Come on, catch up! Why hadn't you had contact with Harry for over a year? .
.
That's personal, Boyd.
There's nothing personal! Now, come on, tell me.
I'm a colleague, for God's sake! You told me to investigate you.
You said you were the first link in the chain of evidence.
You're right.
So, why hadn't you spoken to Harry? Listen, Grace.
I can't do dinner tonight.
I'm sorry Fine.
Are you OK? Yeah, I'm fine, fine.
What is it you wanted to talk about? Oh, it can wait.
You sure? Yeah.
OK.
We can do it tomorrow night.
Mm-hm.
You sure you're all right? Yes! Right.
Now I know something's wrong.
What is it? I didn't want to tell you here, like this.
Tell me what? I'm pregnant.
Grace Don't be angry.
I'm not angry.
Then what? Grace, I'm I'm married.
Sorry.
How could you?! Well, I Children? Three.
Grace, I'm sorry.
Just go away, please.
Just go.
Go! Does that answer your question? Grace? Yes? Do you recognise this signature? It's Harry's.
Thought as much? What is it? It's a statement from a prisoner taken by Harry.
Who's the prisoner? Terry Healy.
Terry Healy?! But Harry wasn't his arresting officer so he wasn't on Healy's file.
However, it was on Harry's score sheet as an assist Because he was the officer who got the confession out of Healy.
So they kept it off the file? To protect him from any allegations.
Just a minute.
Who was the arresting officer? DCI Goddard.
Well, I know him.
I've worked with him.
He was Vice Squad.
Harry was FLYING Squad.
Was he on loan? Not that I know of Did you advise on Healy? No! Think! Did you advise on Healy? No.
I've kept a record of everybody I've ever worked with.
You've got all my files! There's no way Healy's in there.
I wouldn't have missed that.
Have you got Healy's address? Yeah.
OK.
Let's go.
Stella! All right! All right! hang on! Do you work here? Yeah.
I'm the supervisor.
We're looking for Terry Healy.
What's he done? Just tell me where he is.
What's this all about? What's going on? Where is he? Number nine up the stairs at the back.
Thanks.
Bring him up.
I know nothing about him.
I thought you were the supervisor.
They come and go, I can't HEALY! When d'you see him last? Yesterday.
Was he in this morning? No.
He's supposed to be in every night.
But he was lifted yesterday and questioned.
He came back, got his stuff and bolted.
Spence.
Oh, man! Keep the gloves on.
All right.
Yeah.
Keep it for the dogs.
What has he done? Someone must be keeping him.
You don't come out after a life stretch and fit in just like that.
What about this guy? Huh? What do I do with the guy? Oh, leave him.
CHIRPING LOUD CHIRPING Oh HE SOBS AND GASPS So you think this is all linked to Terry Healy? We think he may have had a grievance against DS Harry Taylor.
And you.
Me?! Yes.
He's been talking to you about me? You and Harry Taylor.
In what context? He believes he is an innocent man who was wrongly convicted and blames Harry Taylor and you for his imprisonment.
Are you OK with hearing this? Yes.
When Harry interviewed Healy, he had a lot of psychological information on him.
Information which he told him had come from you.
But I never met Healy.
I certainly didn't advise on him.
He believed that you and Harry were a team.
Why would he think that? Tony Greene? Greene told him that you softened him up, then you went out and sent Harry in to Well, you know the rest.
This is Healy's view, you understand.
KNOCK ON DOOR Boyd.
This is Dr Charles Hoyle.
He's from Newgrange Prison.
The psychologist.
Thanks for coming in.
He's come to help us.
Pleasure.
Glad to help.
You carry on.
I'll catch up.
OK.
So if Healy is saying that Harry beat him No, no.
Harry didn't beat him.
He broke him down mentally.
He was abused by his father in infancy and taken into care.
Confronting him with this in interview caused him to have a nervous breakdown.
So he'd have signed anything? But he blames you, Grace, for telling Harry his secrets.
But I've never met him.
If Healy'd been abused and was in care, his name'd be on the social services register.
Yes.
So Harry could have got his information from that.
Tell me, what was Healy's mental state like when he got out of prison? My job was to help him accept that which he couldn't change and to get control back over his life.
And did he? I believed so.
But you say you've linked trophy body parts to the Greene murders? Y - yes.
I suppose you know they shared the same cell for six years.
Yes.
We know.
So Greene could have groomed Healy and told him where the body parts were.
Then when Healy got out he copied Greene's MO to prove Greene was innocent and then he took his revenge on Grace.
Do you really think that Healy's capable of doing all that? If we suffer a trauma and don't deal with it, then it is resurrected by another trauma, it's out of the box, bigger than us.
Once mental illness takes hold, we're capable of anything.
Did Healy have any family? No.
Friends? Not that I'm aware of.
Well, I'm afraid I have to get going.
It's good to meet you.
And you.
Bye.
You look drained, Grace.
How are you coping? When it's all over, I'll just check that everything's back in its right position.
My door is always open.
Sorry, I didn't mean to No, no.
It wasn't you.
Sorry, Charles.
It wasn't you.
Call me if you need me.
OK.
So you're going to name him? I want him not to be able to move.
He's been inside for 20 years.
Someone must be helping him.
SPENCE! I'm getting every letter sent to Healy in prison, phone calls, visitors We've got a hit on the bag snatcher.
It's not Healy.
Address? Yeah.
Nothing on the board.
Come on! Petty criminal, nickname Taz.
A known drug user.
Nothing involving mutilation? Bring him in! Boyd! I don't wanna hear it, Grace.
I can sleep when I get my boy back.
Oh, shit! You know what I mean.
Just leave me alone, Grace, will you?! You'll need that.
Oi! Behave.
Spence.
Yep.
I'll take the interview.
Take it easy! This IS easy.
.
.
Nine.
Argh! Hello? Hello?.
.
Come on.
Please! DOOR OPENS Now Taz.
Taz.
Thank you.
Taz.
I don't have much time so I'll get straight to the point.
You were caught on camera taking a woman's handbag.
OK.
I put my hand up for it.
Can I get bail now? No.
I see you're starting to get the rattles.
Haven't had a chance to shoot up today.
There are no rules in this room, Taz.
Here's the deal.
You tell me what I want to know and you get this.
Otherwise, you can go cold turkey and I don't care how much you scream because I'm trying to save a boy's life.
Do you understand that? What d'you wanna know? The handbag.
When? Two days ago outside the courts.
Right.
It was weird but it was good money, yeah? I'm listening.
I'm coming out of the courts.
I'd just got bail And you needed to score? Yeah.
I've got the shakes and stuff.
This dude pulls up and tells me he'll give me a hundred quid to nick a bag.
So I'm, like, "Where is it?" So you did it and then what? I ran to the street he told me to meet him on, handed it over to him, he gave me the cash, took the bag, and went off in his van.
Argh! No! Argh! Argh! Argh! You little shit.
A-a-argh! What sort of van was it? A white one.
A transit.
And no.
I don't know the reg, make, model or anything about it apart from it's white.
The picture.
I need that score, man! Was this him? Uh, uh I don't know.
What do you mean, you don't know?! Was this him? What did he look like? The guy had a monkey hat over his ears.
Do you want it to be him? Huh? You give me that score and I'll pick out the Pope.
I'm going to put you in a room with a colleague and they're going to help you remember what he looked like.
Remember what he looks like? I don't even remember what I look like! No! Hey! I'll get you sorted with some methadone Stella.
OK, let's look at the eyes.
Tell me if any of these look familiar.
Look, is there any more of that meth? No.
Just concentrate on the screen, shall we? 'Police want to speak with this man, Terry Healy, in connection with the abduction of Kevin Keogh.
'Anyone with information as to his whereabouts should contact police immediately.
' I need help, people.
What have you got? All the stuff - phone calls, visits 20 years' worth.
Not you, Stella.
Why not? Where are we with an ID from Taz on the van driver? Felix is with Taz now.
Well, tell her to pull her finger out.
OK.
Can we get some more coffees? Stella, coffee.
I'm going to the lab.
He told me to.
You've got a phone? Yeah.
Pick it up, put it between your head and shoulders and your hands are free! You're the one who wanted us to drink the bloody French coffee in the first place! It's called multi-tasking, Stella.
All right? The ability to do more than one thing at the same time.
Yes? Yes, sir! BASHING ON KEYPAD Wasn't unreasonable, was it? No.
Felix? TONY SOBS Ow! GROANING We've got the registration of the van.
Still logged with a second-hand car dealer.
A Mr Qureshi.
Got an address? Lives above the shop.
Great.
Bring him in.
Yes! Spence.
What?! Address.
I need you here.
You run Healy's visitor list against the hospice bed list.
This is delicious, by the way.
Hey.
Hey.
What's up? Just stretching my legs.
OK.
I can't get out of this damn building.
Yeah, I know the feeling.
Why not? Boyd.
It's like he is keeping me prisoner.
Every time that I find a reason to get out he gets a reason to keep me in.
Really? I swear! It's like he's doing it expressly.
You know, on purpose.
Why would he do that? I don't know.
To teach me a lesson? What lesson? Well, if I knew that, I wouldn't be stuck here going through hospital bed list.
Well, maybe he's seen something in you he needs to iron out.
Like what? I don't know.
A propensity for slapping witnesses? Well, that's different.
He deserved that.
He was a little shit.
Boyd would have done exactly the same thing.
I thought he was going to knock that junkie's head through the table.
That's it then.
What's it? You're too alike.
Boyd sees some of himself in you and he's trying to stop you from making the same mistakes he's made.
You think? It's a possibility.
Look, I know what all this is about.
I'm behind on the paperwork, that's all.
Really? I've been meaning to send these in.
Look.
Look, I'm sorry about this but That's not why you're here.
No? No.
You know the kid that's all over the news? The kidnapped one? Yeah.
He was abducted in a van registered to you.
I haven't got round to sending in all the paperwork Mr Qureshi, I don't care about your fiddle.
I want a lead on the man you sold the van to.
Now, is this him? I don't remember.
I sell a lot of vehicles.
It's a white transit van, P reg.
I really don't remember.
But hold on.
I have all the paperwork here.
Come on, come on, come on! I've photocopied all driving licences as required by law.
All in order.
Just late, that's all.
It's him.
So, Healy definitely bought the van? Yes.
Which means I've got a match on the bed list.
Name? Sarah Houghton.
Prison Visitors' List.
Volunteer worker at the prison.
Got an address? Yeah.
Write it down.
She's been visiting him for the last ten months.
Do you want backup? No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
Think about the boy.
Fast and light.
Let's go.
Armed police! Police.
Police.
Kevin! If you can hear me, stay where you are! Armed police! Nobody move! Show yourself! Sir! Sarah Houghton? Where is he? Are you in there, Kevin? Where? Tell me where the boy is.
Sir! Look around for tablets.
See if she's on something.
I don't take tablets.
Sit down.
Come on.
Sarah, we're going to need your help now.
I don't take tablets.
I know.
Do you know where Kevin is? This is a disabled room.
Shit! What's a rucksack doing in a disabled room? Get forensics in here.
Where have you moved him to, Sarah?! I'm running out of patience! Terry Healy.
This is his stuff, isn't it? His clothes, his shirts.
Jackets.
Where is he? You've been sleeping with him.
What has he done with the boy? I'm not stupid.
He told me what goes on.
I know you lot beat up prisoners.
He wasn't beaten.
He's a liar.
Sit down! There are plenty of ways to beat a person.
Terry Healy is wanted in connection with the kidnapping of a young boy and if you obstruct my investigation LOOK AT ME! If you obstruct my investigation in any way, I can assure you, you will be in deep shit.
Look, we're not monsters, Sarah.
Speak for yourself! Back off! I am a monster.
CLEAR? Where is he? Where is he? WHERE IS HE? SARAH SOBS Is he armed? Spence! Terry Healy, we know you're up there, so come down now.
Stella! Easy now.
I didn't do it.
Where's the boy? I haven't got him.
Move, you scumbag, piece of shit! Stella! OK? All clear.
Great.
Thanks.
And don't forget the woman! Sir? Sir?! Five little fingers.
Five dead boys.
Can't really quantify the loss of their lives, can you? No.
To lose a child Does it ever put you off having children, doing this job? I've never really thought about it in those terms.
I remember once when I was young I got lost in a supermarket.
I was taken to the manager's office.
I didn't even realise I was lost.
I was quite enjoying all the attention.
And they did the announcement thing, "Would the parents of a little girl " And I'll never forget my mother's face as she came in to collect me.
The look on her face.
At the time, obviously, I had no idea what was going on in her mind or why she was so upset, then years later I realised that for a few moments anything was possible.
I suppose what I'm trying to say is when she knew I was gone, all her demons were there.
Demons that, you know, although I do this for a living, I can't even begin to imagine because Because you're not a parent.
Mmm.
Exactly.
It's a bit scary, actually, the idea of being a parent.
Fear of the unknown.
But I hope if the time comes I won't let it get in the way.
Take my advice .
.
don't let it.
Felix.
Great.
He's very calm.
That's bad.
Why? Maybe he knows it's all over.
Maybe he knows Kevin's is already dead.
We don't know that.
Don't we? No.
Good She wouldn't harm a fly.
He looks like a man with a clear conscience.
Not the look of a guilty man? I can't do this any more.
I'm sorry Come on, Grace.
I'm sorry.
I'm just no use to you like this.
I'm so sorry.
Is Grace OK? She thinks Kevin is dead and that it's her fault.
Terry Healy.
.
.
I've got nothing to say.
I want a brief.
I want to speak to Sarah.
I'm not looking for a conviction.
I'm looking for a boy called Kevin.
KEVIN! So if he's dead, just tell me now and I'll leave.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Terry, it's all over the news.
I didn't mean that.
I meant, I have nothing to do with it.
HIM.
He's a human being.
Or is that something else you don't know anything about? What? Humanity? I know nothing about the kid.
You must know something about him? I don't.
You know his name.
I heard it on the telly.
So you lied? No.
You know his name, so you know something.
I didn't mean that.
Oh, I see Did you know he was kidnapped? Yeah.
There! You know quite a lot about him, Terry.
Look, I'm just using this as an example.
I'm just showing you, if we wanted to, how easily we could stitch you up.
Yeah? Stitch you up.
You know quite a lot about being stitched up, don't you? Yeah.
Yeah Yeah.
Yeah.
I know that you were abused Really?! In infancy.
Oh, that game - getting inside my head, making me ill.
That worked once.
But never again.
I want you to listen to me very carefully.
Harry Taylor lied to you all those years ago.
The information he got about you being abused and being put in care? He got that from social services.
Dr Grace Foley had nothing to do with it.
She didn't tell him.
All right? You're lying.
Dr Grace Foley, did you ever meet her? Think about it, man.
Did you? Why would he lie? To push you over the edge so you'd sign a confession.
That's what he did.
It was wrong, but that's what he did.
I looked into your files, Terry.
You were innocent of murder.
It's the guy from the telly, right? Yes.
But is he the one who paid you to take the handbag? He looks like a nonce.
Is he? Just answer the question.
You want me to say it's him? I want you to tell the truth.
The truth? I don't know.
DOOR BELL RINGS Grace! Is this a bad time, Charles? Of course not.
Come in.
Thanks.
Let me take your coat.
All right.
Thank you.
HE SOBS OK.
Come on.
I want to show you something.
I don't care.
You don't care.
They all say that.
"I don't care" Show him.
Kevin's Christening.
First Birthday.
Holy Communion.
Are you a religious man, Terry? A Catholic, or what? No.
Do you believe in God? Or a god? I'm a Taoist.
So, we're all just straw dogs to you, are we? No.
We're all just straw dogs to God.
How else could he let bad things happen to the innocent? So how did you get into this Taoism thing? Dr Hoyle He was my psychiatrist in the nick.
Helped me to accept what was done to me and move on.
But you weren't able to move on, were you? He was beautiful, wasn't he? Was? When he was a baby.
The tattoo on your back.
Yeah? Quite a work of art.
It's amazing what you can do with a bottle of tailor's ink and a sewing needle.
Took him three years to finish it.
"Him"? My cellmate.
That's the man? That's what I'm asking you.
It's the man from the picture in the driving licence, yes? Yes.
But I'm not asking you that.
I'm asking you if it's the man you sold the van to? I sell a lot of vans.
I don't remember the people.
I photocopied the licence of the guy who bought the van, but the picture is You don't remember his face, do you? He had a monkey hat on that comes down.
Pulled down over his ears? Yeah.
Felix, can you look at something for me? Terry Healy.
Licence number 761285.
Yeah.
OK.
Sending it now.
Who died in the back room? My mother.
Where's Terry? Don't worry about him.
When did she die? Two years ago.
Sorry to hear that.
Thanks.
Was she ill for a long time? I know what it's like.
I lost my twin brother to leukaemia when I was 12.
Yeah It was long.
I'm glad you came by.
I can see the effect that all this has had on you.
It's ironic really.
I feel as if I'm suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.
Well, let's just let that feeling settle.
You've broken the ice now.
CHIRPING Oh, hello! He has the run of the place.
He's cheeky, too! He belonged to my father.
When did your father pass away? Last year.
Oh, that's very recent.
I'm sorry, Charles.
Yes.
Still, not here to talk about me.
Let me go and fetch that tea.
Thanks.
How did you meet? I- I got into volunteer work after my mum passed away.
What made you do volunteering with prisoners? A friend.
I met him at the hospice.
His father was a patient there.
He suggested that I volunteer with some of his prisoners.
"His" prisoners?! Yeah.
He's a prison psychologist.
Dr Hoyle? You know him? Did Dr Hoyle know that you and Terry were getting married? Yeah.
He's going to be Terry's best man.
He's been stitched up! It's a false licence.
I know.
Get SO19 round to Hoyle's house.
Tell them we're en route and to hold on until I get there.
Stella! I suppose it was just a matter of time before it all erupted.
You bury things, feel you're safe.
Then one day you look over your shoulder and there they all are.
All your ghosts where they've always been.
I just I just knew today I was going to have to deal with it.
And do you feel guilty about Terry Healy? About Healy?! Why would I do that? Your insight into his illness was used to push him into a nervous breakdown and put him in a prison when he should have been in a hospital.
I told you, Charles, I never met Healy.
I never advised on him.
LOUD CHIRPING Quiet, Henry! Yes, but once you realised that you Henry?! Yes.
Silly name.
My father named him.
Henry, come on! Come on in.
In.
In.
In.
Come on! Henry.
Come on.
Charles, could I use? Oh, yes.
Of course.
First on the landing.
Henry! Here boy! Kevin! LOUD CHIRPING Henry! Come back! Stop right there! Please, open the door! Open the door! Open the door, Grace! Kevin? It's OK.
It's OK.
Open the door! I won't harm you, Grace.
I like you.
It's over.
OK.
OPEN IT! OK.
You're all right.
You're OK.
SO19's on their way.
Why can't you get hold of Grace? It keeps going to voicemail.
Keep calling.
WOOD SPLINTERS You shouldn't have done this, Grace.
It's OK.
It's all over now.
No, it's not, Charles.
it's not all over.
he's still alive.
He's still alive.
I'm going to have to kill you both now.
No, you don't, Charles.
Just get an ambulance.
Sssh.
It's going to be fine.
Are you listening to me? PHONE RINGS PHONE KEEPS RINGING CAR HORN BLARES Grace? She can't come to the phone right now.
Doctor Hoyle.
Can I speak to Grace? I'm armed.
Don't come running in here like the cavalry.
Tell me what you want.
Come and find out.
He didn't want to talk.
Uh! Let the boy go, Charles.
Strange how when you work on a plan for years years and then it goes wrong, all of a sudden, you have to come up with a new plan, quick.
And guess what? The new plan's better than the one you thought of in the first place.
That's crisis thinking, Charles.
Yes, that's right, isn't it? That's what it's for, the old grey sponge.
How will this end, I wonder? That's up to you, Charles.
But it will end.
Yes.
It will be over.
I smothered him like an infant right there in that bed.
Please! I'm trying to help you.
At the end, his eyelids were barely fluttering.
You loved him.
Yes.
Charles? I have them.
I have them point blank! I want you to watch.
Charles, here I am.
Stop! Stop walking! Stay in the doorway.
Stay.
Don't move.
Are Grace and Kevin alive? Yes.
Grace?! Boyd! But that could all change.
.
.
Let's talk about what you want then, shall we Charles? Please, let's not play the silly negotiation games of finding my emotional hot spots to get me talking.
OK? You're right.
Waste of time.
You're a psychopath.
An intelligent psychopath, but nevertheless a psychopath.
Good.
Push me and I might fold.
Very good! Take me home.
I'll take you home.
It's between you and me.
We'll go home.
Man to man! I have watched this legal system put innocent men in prison my whole career.
That's nothing to do with Grace and Kevin.
So I sent you one that would blow up in your face and you fell for it.
Oh, no, we didn't fall for it.
The police have surrounded your house.
I'm afraid you failed, Charles.
Oh, no! I call the shots now.
When did you fall in love with Tony Greene? Mmm? Was it love at first sight? Or was it a slow burner? Five, ten years? Was it a two-way love? I don't think it was.
I think it was a one-way love.
Unrequited love.
A love that became an obsession with a man that wasn't available.
Not even when his lover got out of prison.
You keep talking and you're going to die.
When did this neurosis turn into insanity? Ssssh.
Let me show you something, Charles.
Look at this.
This is a picture of Terry Healy's back.
The tattoo on his back.
You can't tattoo your own back.
Look at it.
It's not just a work of art, it's a work of love created by Tony Greene on the back of the man that he fell in Shut up! NOW! GUNSHOTS Grace! Grace! Boyd! The door! Get the medics in here! Unlock the door, Grace.
I am! Boyd, he's dying, Check Hoyle for the cuff keys! Stella, come on! It's going to be OK now.
All right? Could we make some space, please? Kevin, stay with me.
Stay with us.
Oh, my God! Stay with me.
No pulse.
We're losing him.
Bag him.
OK, clear out the way! We'll look after him now.
Diamorphine! I'll draw up some Narcan.
OK.
Charging 200.
Stand clear.
Shock him now.
Charging 200.
Stand clear.
Shock him now.
Still in VF.
Charging 360.
Stand clear.
Shock him now.
OK, I've got a rhythm.
GRACE SOBS OK.
We have him.
Let's get him to hospital.
HENRY CHIRPS What d'you think makes someone like Hoyle lose it? It's a thin line, Spence.
I didn't know about your twin brother.
I never had a twin brother.
Grace! How are you doing? I'm OK, thank you.
How's Kevin? He's gonna be fine.
Can we have a word, please? Yes, sure.
OK? Let's do it out here.
Thanks, by the way.
For? Saving our lives Oh, right.
What would have happened if he'd fired before you ducked? I'd have been killed.
Mmm, that's what I thought.
I've left you something on your desk that I think you should look at.
What? Harry's personnel file.
Oh.
The day that he was killed in the car crash, Grace he was drunk.
His colleagues covered it up so that his family would get the insurance money.
He was on his way to an incident.
No, he'd been kicked out of the police force.
The tribunal had found him guilty.
That's OK.
You don't have to go there.
I know.
Thanks.
OK.
Hey! Grace.
Hey! Grace! Hey! I thought you went home.
You thought wrong.
What's that? That is a bottle of warm champagne which I found at the back of one of the filing cabinets.
And what's it for? Oh, I like to keep at least one knocking around in case we close a case in the middle of the night and the off-licence isn't open.
What do you mean? Greene signed a full confession.
We did it, Grace.
You did it.
Then that's it, then? Yeah.
That's it.
Come here.
THEY LAUGH Conversion by reirei.

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