- yesterday
Carl, a former top-rated detective, is wracked with guilt following an attack that left his partner paralysed and another policeman dead. On his return to work, Carl is assigned to a cold case that will consume his life.
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:00The End
00:29Hello?
00:36Merit Lingard
00:38Is that you?
00:40Did you just...
00:41Hello?
00:57Hello?
00:59Hey!
01:06I'm talking to you!
01:07I'm an officer at the court.
01:36Do you know what that means?
01:39It means that...
01:41Every police officer in the country is going to be out there looking for me right now.
01:46Do you have any idea?
01:47I'm out of trouble here!
01:49Where's my brother?
01:51Is my brother here?
01:53Have you got my brother?
01:55I swear to God, if you fucking touch him!
01:59Oh, my God.
02:29A hundred percent it gets under my skin. A hundred percent.
02:44But more than that, you know what? It just... it confuses me.
02:49Tattie buys. What the fuck?
02:50It's just goodbye, Carl.
02:52It's not. No, no, no. Tatties are potatoes.
02:55What the fuck do potatoes have to do with saying goodbye?
02:57Potatoes are fucking foodstuff.
02:59What the fuck do Cheerios have to do with saying goodbye?
03:02Cheerios are a fucking breakfast cereal.
03:04You're being facetious. Yay.
03:06No, I'm just trying to find a plumber.
03:08Do you have any recommendations?
03:10Not my area of expertise.
03:11Mine either.
03:13It's the need to look up an actual expert.
03:16You eat Scotland so much.
03:18Why did you ever move here?
03:19I'm married into it.
03:20Well, now you can leave.
03:22Finally. Give us our fucking independence.
03:24How is it you're supposed to actually be helping me, huh?
03:27If your dishwasher breaks, you call in a plumber.
03:31In this scenario, Carl, I'm your plumber.
03:34Half of my life is spent with gross incompetence left, right and centre.
03:37And the other half is in a very, very ill-tempered, jizzed-up teenager.
03:40He's not even mine.
03:41He's not even mine.
03:42I somehow won him in the great coconut shy of divorce,
03:45along with some silverware,
03:46which frankly needs an awful lot less polishing.
03:53I didn't know you had a son.
03:54Stepson.
03:57You share custody.
03:59Oh, no, no.
03:59Lucky me.
04:00I get Jasper all to myself.
04:03He's not with his mother.
04:06Victoria travels a lot with work,
04:08and she thought it'd be better for Jasper to have her.
04:12Strong male figure in his life
04:15at this, as she puts it,
04:16crucial juncture in his development.
04:20Wow.
04:23I have to say, Carl, I'm surprised.
04:26That?
04:26The reason you haven't left.
04:29That's a massive commitment you signed on for.
04:31Don't worry, I fought her on it.
04:33There he is.
04:34The time came to take him to his grandmother's house,
04:36and I was just like...
04:38Hmm.
04:40And I couldn't.
04:41I couldn't.
04:41I couldn't leave him there.
04:43Couldn't do it.
04:44Because you care about him?
04:45No.
04:46I fucking hate that old bitch.
04:50How old's Jasper?
04:5117.
04:53Fuck you, tuck me in.
04:55Excuse me?
04:57Teenagers.
04:58They need to hate you so they can leave you
05:00when the time comes,
05:01but at the same time,
05:02they don't want to go,
05:03so they drive everybody nuts.
05:04Yeah, I'm pretty sure that Jasper's not that conflicted.
05:07You've got a lot going on in your life right now, Carl.
05:09Yeah, yeah, you could say that, Rachel.
05:11Yeah, yeah.
05:12It's no wonder you went to Lally on live TV.
05:16But that's our time for today.
05:20Wow.
05:22I feel like we made a real breakthrough.
05:24Uh-huh.
05:25It's how to buy you, Carl.
05:26Cheerio, Rachel.
05:34We need to revisit the crime scene
05:36until I walk through.
05:38There must be something we've missed.
05:40And while you're at it,
05:42we have another chat with the neighbours.
05:44We must remember something.
05:45You can't be here.
05:56How long's it been now?
05:57Four months?
05:58You know I can't discuss the case with you.
05:59It's called professional courtesy,
06:00even if only one of us is actually a professional.
06:03And only one of us is actually courteous.
06:06Touché.
06:06I'm going to have more and move the team
06:10to somewhere you can't find us.
06:12Oh, good luck in this fucking Nazi castle.
06:14I tell you what, why don't we actually trade?
06:16You take our primo spot down in the changing dungeon
06:18and we come up here into the light.
06:20Keep it up, Carl,
06:21and one might get the idea
06:22you're trying to sabotage the investigation.
06:24I'm actually trying to help you.
06:26It's just you are too fucking insecure to accept it.
06:29Why not just tell me what you think
06:31instead of being your usual chesty prick?
06:34The shooter was waiting inside for us
06:38when we got there.
06:40Just the other day you told D.C. Wilson
06:42and D.C. Clark
06:43that the shooter had been waiting outside.
06:44I told them someone was waiting outside.
06:46You used the word shooter.
06:48We would have heard or seen someone come inside.
06:51Not if they came in through the back door.
06:53Especially if they came in through the back door.
06:55There were bins piled up in front of it.
06:57Why would anyone do that?
06:59Because most of the people in those flats
07:00use that space as another room.
07:02Inside, there was a chair in front of the door.
07:06Meaning that anyone coming in through the back
07:07would first have to move the bins
07:08and then open the door and then move the chair.
07:10All of which, what, without us hearing them?
07:13But the chair was moved aside
07:14and the bins were in October.
07:15Yeah, neither of which is the case
07:16when Hardy and I arrived.
07:17I clocked the bins, I clocked the chair.
07:18Why? Because it's part of the fucking job.
07:20Now, the dead man had been in there for a while.
07:22The daughter said she hadn't heard from him
07:24for a few days, yeah?
07:24So, someone sat there in the house overnight
07:28waiting for... what?
07:31I don't know.
07:32I'm merely pointing out that someone went out
07:34not in the back door after the shooting.
07:35Also, CCTV shows a guy in McDonald's
07:38roughly around about 25 minutes
07:39before the shooting starts, yeah?
07:41He obviously left and came back
07:42before you and Hardy arrived.
07:44Why?
07:44According to you, he got thirsty.
07:47The cup was over there,
07:49where the Ford was parked,
07:50indicating that he ate his chips
07:51and drank his McFlurry.
07:52Over there.
07:54So, depending on how fast
07:54he did his eating and drinking,
07:55that's another 10 minutes or so
07:56before he went to the fucking flat, yep?
07:58He could have got back in time
07:59to re-enter the fire
08:00before you and Hardy arrived.
08:01It's a short drive to McDonald's.
08:03Well, it better be a very short drive
08:04because the CCTV puts a guy in a hoodie
08:06dressed in black in the McDonald's
08:08at just after 10.15.
08:09He's in there for 12 minutes,
08:10which takes us to 10.30.
08:12PC Anderson's body cam
08:13puts the shooting
08:13exactly eight minutes later.
08:17So, that's eight minutes
08:18to drive back to Leith Park,
08:20eat, drink,
08:21beat us to the flat,
08:22get into the flat,
08:23and then shoot us.
08:24In fact, it is less than eight minutes
08:26because PC Anderson arrived before that.
08:28If he couldn't have been there in time,
08:29then you negate your argument
08:30that the shooter was already inside
08:31before you and Hardy arrived.
08:32Your witness?
08:36So, she saw someone
08:38get into the Ford
08:39immediately after the shooting
08:41and drive away.
08:42Formal witness, but yes.
08:44Towards which direction
08:45did she say
08:46the car drove away?
08:48Towards the football pitch.
08:49And on which side of the car
08:51did she say
08:52the person got in?
08:57She didn't.
08:58Maybe go back and ask her.
09:00Yeah.
09:15Bloody hell.
09:16There were two of them.
09:26Oh, aye.
09:27Hardy.
09:30I, er,
09:31brought you up.
09:38For fuck's sake, Rose.
09:40Stop your grating.
09:40You make me feel worse.
09:43So, what's going on?
09:45How's Carl treating you?
09:46He barely notices me.
09:48Doubt that.
09:48Gives Akram all the good stuff.
09:50Gives me all the shite work.
09:51Such as?
09:52I'm on my way out to
09:53Moor
09:54to look at William Lingard's attack,
09:56but
09:57I think he just wants to keep me away
09:59from the investigation.
10:00He brought you on.
10:01Why would he want to keep you away?
10:02Because I basically blackmailed him
10:03into bringing me on.
10:04No one can blackmail Carl.
10:05Why not?
10:06Because he doesn't give a shit.
10:08Trust me on this.
10:09If he didn't want you there,
10:10he wouldn't be there.
10:11So, what's your plan for Moor?
10:15I'm, er,
10:15taking the ferry.
10:16Oh, not how you get in there.
10:18What the fuck are you going to do over there?
10:19Yeah, yeah, yeah.
10:20Um, I, er,
10:21thought I'd, er,
10:22first speak to the constable.
10:24Get his perspective.
10:25But his perspective means fuck all.
10:27It's only your perspective that matters.
10:29What's my perspective?
10:30Exactly.
10:31Go see the constable,
10:32but only to tell him
10:33that you're on the job.
10:34And if he can help
10:35with a file or a map,
10:36something you don't really need,
10:37just make him feel like he matters.
10:39That way he leaves you alone.
10:40Okay.
10:41Um,
10:42and then I can go and visit the crime scene.
10:4416 years past.
10:44Waste of time.
10:45What, even to get a feel of it?
10:46A feel?
10:47All you're going to feel is,
10:48okay,
10:49so this is where it happened.
10:51So...
10:51They had somebody right for it,
10:53didn't they?
10:54He died trying to get away.
10:56Henry somebody.
10:56Harry Jennings.
10:58Harry Jennings.
10:59Start there.
11:00With the dead guy.
11:01With the dead guy.
11:01With his family,
11:02with his friends,
11:03with his fucking goldfish.
11:04You're looking for connections.
11:05This was nearly 20 years ago.
11:07It's probably got nothing to do with Harry.
11:08Probably not, but every spoke leads you back to the hub,
11:11so pick one and make it your own.
11:13Carl will tell you that.
11:15Nero Wolf.
11:15Whoever the fuck that is.
11:17And what spoke are you going to follow?
11:19What all happened in the weeks after the disappearance.
11:21We don't know what happened.
11:22Well, we don't know what happened to Merit,
11:24but she existed in the world.
11:26She caused ripples with people,
11:28institutions, things,
11:29and these ripples, in turn,
11:31cause patterns in her life.
11:33It can be useful to see if these patterns change
11:35after one ceases to exist.
11:36Hmm.
11:38Nero Wolf again.
11:39That one was Carl.
11:42But that would assume
11:43that it was somebody already in her life that took her.
11:45It's a fucking guess, aye.
11:46But that's what we start with, isn't it, guesses?
11:49We just happen to call them theories.
11:51Hmm.
11:51Oh, my God.
12:21Come on.
12:51So, there the guy is, sitting in the pub, stark naked, pint in front of him, just waiting on me to arrest him.
13:16Oh, God, you must have so many great stories.
13:21Too many, yeah.
13:24Go on.
13:25That's the Royal Regiment of Scotland's 4th Battalion.
13:27Yeah, the Highlanders.
13:29You know military history?
13:30Oh, well, I know that the Highlanders descended from the Seafers, the Camersons and the Gordons.
13:35Oh, well, dear of you all.
13:37Can I?
13:38Aye, of course.
13:40God, they're beautiful.
13:42Where'd you get them?
13:43I made them.
13:45No, you did not.
13:46Aye, I did.
13:47Well, they are beautiful.
13:50Oh, wow.
13:52How does an arsehole like you have for a boss recruit someone as lovely as you, eh?
13:57I'm not so lovely.
13:59I have a dark soul.
14:00Oh, I bet you do.
14:01Multiple personalities.
14:02Even better.
14:04I could use more than one of you.
14:06Unlike the networks I've got here.
14:08That's Colin, my eldest.
14:10Nothing more moving than the love between a father and son.
14:12If you say so.
14:13Uh, so there's eight of you on the force over here.
14:18Aye.
14:18Two of them are part-time, though.
14:20Don't suppose there's much crime?
14:21Yeah, pub fight.
14:23Public intoxication, you know.
14:25I mean, it's an island after all, you know.
14:26You rob the bank.
14:27Where are you going to go?
14:28So, say, someone breaking into a house to steal this or that and beating someone to a pulp.
14:33That would be unusual.
14:35Very.
14:36Not to mention the suspect getting killed, making his escape.
14:38Guess we're talking about the Lingard here.
14:40Well, actually, I'm more interested in the suspect, Harry Jennings, the boy who broke
14:45into their house and almost beat William Lingard to death.
14:47I know who you mean.
14:49The other robberies that month, there was no violence involved.
14:53None.
14:53Did you consider then that Harry wasn't involved in the others?
14:56Of course I did, but there was no one home during the other burglaries.
15:00And, as soon as he was of age, I was pulling that lad off other boys in the pub at least once
15:05a week.
15:06He had what I would call a foul temper.
15:08Harry was easy to piss off then.
15:11That lad was born pissed off.
15:13He came out of his mother pre-enraged.
15:15So, it was just bad luck then that William was home.
15:19Aye.
15:20And that's all it was.
15:21Very bad luck.
15:23And Merritt left right after that.
15:24She got on the heli to hospital with her brother and didn't come back.
15:28She came back one time.
15:30For the funeral.
15:33Aye.
15:34For once you're right, she did come back to the funeral.
15:36Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
15:38She came back for the funeral of the boy who almost beat her own brother to death.
15:42Harry and Merritt were close.
15:44Well, if they were so close, why would he rob her house?
15:46Because the family were desperate.
15:48Clive Jennings' business had gone bust a year before.
15:50Can I talk to Clive?
15:52Aye.
15:52If you're clairvoyant.
15:54He died, what, six years ago?
15:55And the mum, Elsa.
15:57You do do your homework, don't you?
15:58You sure you don't want to come and work for me?
16:00You could train Colin up, eh?
16:02Maybe marry him, set him straight.
16:04No, no.
16:05He's too handsome.
16:07I'd be distracted.
16:10Aye, Elsa's still with us, but she's not a very social person.
16:14Can I just knock on her door?
16:15See what happens.
16:17Colin will show you the way.
16:18I can find it.
16:19All the same.
16:21Colin will take you.
16:22You really ate his lunch in there.
16:24It wasn't that hard.
16:25Your mates, the, you know, the ones that came over last night.
16:28They give you the heads up and the old toy soldiers.
16:30I have no idea what you're talking about.
16:33I just love men in uniform.
16:36You really think I'm handsome, eh?
16:38Uh, yeah.
16:40Yeah, you're like a young gay Ralph Fiennes.
16:44Oh.
16:46Caught the straightening outline, that's good.
16:49Again, it wasn't hard.
16:52One of these days I'm going to leave.
16:54I can't say I blame you.
16:56You may have noticed that talking to the lane guards and the Jennings is a bit of a sort of subject for the constable.
17:02You call your dad the constable?
17:04Yeah, well, sure as fuck don't call him da.
17:06Have you seen the crime scene photos of the breaking?
17:09Uh, yeah, yeah.
17:10Yeah, I've looked at them.
17:12Why?
17:12What about them?
17:13After your boss requested the case files, the constable went and dug them out the archives, and he stayed in the office all night reading them.
17:20Yeah, Carl has a brilliant way of motivating people.
17:22Oh, this was more than motivated.
17:24I mean, he was upset.
17:26So I went and had a re-look at the files myself.
17:30Little devil.
17:33And?
17:34I'd never read them before, because, you know, I was just a kid then, but man, it was, it was brutal.
17:40Like, the crime scene photos made me sick to my stomach.
17:43You know how he pretty much caved in William's skull?
17:45Mm-hmm.
17:46Gave him brain damage.
17:47Oh, so there was this tech photo of the room that they found William in, but someone had, uh, circled something that was lying on the floor with a black marker.
17:59Circled what?
18:00A necklace.
18:04Any idea why it was circled?
18:06No.
18:07And you'd think your dad was the one who circled it?
18:09Well, I couldn't possibly say.
18:15Could you, um, could you scan the hotel?
18:20Uh, yeah, I could.
18:22Might make the constable look bad.
18:26Or maybe that's the idea.
18:28Yeah.
18:28Oh, my God.
18:58Exactly what kind of hazardous waste am I talking about?
19:02Oh, um, asbestos?
19:05Uranium, maybe?
19:07I never really thought about it.
19:10I don't have to worry about.
19:11Yeah.
19:16This place used to be full of men, 24-7.
19:20What was Jennings' business?
19:22You name it, Clive Jennings fixed it.
19:24Or painted it.
19:25Or scrapped it.
19:28It's the old Jennings' abode over there.
19:37How did it burn down?
19:39Well, like the constable likes to say,
19:42it all started when a bolt of lightning struck the insurance policy.
19:47Mrs. Jennings, it's Colin Cunningham.
19:50Er, I'm coming in.
19:53Hello?
19:56Ilsa?
20:00It's Colin.
20:01That explains the dead birds.
20:07Ilsa, where are you?
20:08She's probably at church.
20:19It's Tuesday?
20:20Yeah, I know, but she has, like, a part-time job there as a bookkeeper.
20:23And you're just remembering this now?
20:25Your dad's right.
20:28You are a nitwit.
20:31Father Cutty?
20:33You know, it's, uh, it's not that far from here if you want to drive over.
20:37No, I can't miss a ferry.
20:38You know, in a way, I'm relieved.
20:45I mean, what was I supposed to ask her?
20:48What was it like losing your son?
20:50No offence, but what a place to grow up.
20:54No wonder Merit ran away.
20:56Everything dies here.
20:58Well, it's not that easy to get away from here.
21:02Merit did.
21:02No, she only thought she did.
21:04In the end, she died in the same water as Harry.
21:10Yeah?
21:10Paradise on Earth.
21:11Mm-hmm.
21:12You've got to go.
21:13You've got to go there.
21:14So, those spices, June, squats down the line, it does us, does the business.
21:19And we, although it's him, ruined the place.
21:21It's a new dog, wasn't it?
21:23Spaniel?
21:24We blamed on the Spaniel.
21:27And we're like, there's no way something that big comes out of Spaniel.
21:30The thing was bigger than the Spaniel.
21:32Evening, Carl.
21:34Evening, Victoria.
21:36So, love, what happened to my snow globe collection?
21:40Burgled by someone with no taste.
21:42He threw them all in the bin.
21:44But don't worry, I managed to shield your lovely prince from his evil clutches.
21:48Oh, thank you, Martin.
21:50The place looks just as I left it, Carl.
21:52Mm-hmm.
21:53Like a mausoleum.
21:54Mm.
21:56Well, I haven't got long.
21:57I'm back out in the Frankfurt flight.
21:59You let yourself in, it's your meeting.
22:02I let it in.
22:03And you know the way out.
22:05Charming as always.
22:06Bye, babe.
22:10You look rough.
22:12I nearly died.
22:13What?
22:13This morning.
22:15Hmm.
22:15How's what's his name in duty-free?
22:18He's a fucking pilot.
22:19He's a fucking dick.
22:20Mm.
22:21Okay.
22:22Jasper left.
22:23He's staying with your mum.
22:24I assume she phoned you, hence this lovely surprise.
22:26Yeah, she phoned me.
22:27What happened?
22:28What happened is you paid him that fucking voicemail.
22:31No, that's not the reason you left.
22:32He and I made a deal.
22:34A pact.
22:34Things were getting better.
22:35Oh, you made a deal.
22:36Yeah, he needs a father, not a fucking car salesman.
22:38And then you poke your nose in and balls it up.
22:40It's like you want to sabotage things.
22:42Fucking amazes me.
22:43And why would I want to do that?
22:44Why would you play him the voicemail?
22:46Because I want him to know it wasn't his fault.
22:48What wasn't his fault?
22:48The way you are with him.
22:49Oh, fuck.
22:50With everyone, really.
22:51I want him to know it's not about him.
22:53It's about you.
22:54What?
22:55He idolizes you and you just push him away.
22:57Idolizes me?
22:58He barely grunts at me.
22:59Oh, he's 17.
23:00He's not exactly going to recite poetry, is he?
23:02But when you were rushed into hospital, he was there.
23:05And he never left until you were out of surgery, out of...
23:07danger.
23:10How do you know that?
23:12Mum told me.
23:16Never said anything to me.
23:18Did you ever ask him?
23:20Did you ever think how scared he must have been?
23:23It wasn't exactly a picnic for me either.
23:25Did you ever explain that to him?
23:27It's not the easiest thing to drop in a conversation, Vic.
23:30I'm not saying it's easy, Carl.
23:32He's angry, but you're a stepdad.
23:34Oh, maybe he's angry because his mother fucked off to parts unknown.
23:38We're having another conversation.
23:39Oh, I beg to differ.
23:41He needs you.
23:42So when you shut him out, it feels like a punishment.
23:44I don't shut him out, for fuck's sake.
23:46Shall I play that voicemail for you?
23:48Oh, I think maybe I'm better off alone.
23:50That's not about him!
23:51That's my point.
23:52Jasper needs to know that the problem is whatever goes on inside of that head of yours.
23:56Not him.
23:57I need to go.
24:05What do you want me to do?
24:05Go and pick him up?
24:06Nah, leave him.
24:08Mum will be driving him mad.
24:09He'll be home soon enough.
24:11But you need to think about what it is he's coming home to.
24:15Ah.
24:15Oh, sorry.
24:31Not at all.
24:33I was waiting for you to hear about more.
24:38It was interesting.
24:40How so?
24:41Where did you get this?
24:47The Lingard robbery and assault file.
24:50My pal Colin sent it.
24:52Colin?
24:54Cunningham's deputy and son, in that order.
24:57Also my future gay husband.
25:00It's listed as diamond pendant on platinum chain belonging to Lyla Lingard.
25:05Listed where?
25:06On the insurance claim.
25:07But it was in stone.
25:09Not then, it wasn't.
25:09Merrick came back for it.
25:12When?
25:13On the day of Harry Jennings' funeral.
25:15Oh.
25:15Oh.
25:17Oh.
25:17Oh.
25:18Oh.
25:19Oh.
25:20Oh.
25:21Oh.
25:22Oh.
25:23Oh.
25:24Oh.
25:25Oh.
25:26Oh.
25:27Oh.
25:28Oh.
25:29Oh.
25:30Oh.
25:31Oh.
25:32Oh.
25:33Oh.
25:34Oh.
25:35Oh.
25:36Oh.
25:37Oh.
25:38Oh.
25:39Oh.
25:39Oh.
25:39Oh.
26:09You sick, you sick fuck.
26:12Is this what you want?
26:14Yeah, you want me like this?
26:16Well, here you are, Crick, here you are!
26:22Hello?
26:25Continue.
26:36Jasper?
26:39Oh, what?
26:40Oh, what?
26:41Oh, what?
26:42Oh, what?
26:43Oh, what?
26:44If we can't try to stay, don't keep it young to me,
26:46and I don't know why.
26:47Would've done it, would've done it,
26:48need to deserve this shit.
26:49I'm all gone, poor guy.
26:51Jesus fuck.
26:52Just get the shit out of me, Carl.
26:54I thought you hated the kids' music.
26:56I do.
26:57I love it.
26:58So I decided to study it.
26:59See what the kids are drawn into,
27:00like any good archaeologist.
27:01You getting your doctorate in philosophy?
27:03Or have you changed your mind again?
27:05A philosopher, Carl, is very much an archaeologist of the mind.
27:08Don't you think?
27:09I honestly don't give a fuck.
27:10What is all this?
27:11Well, I thought you and I could have had a nice dinner and a talk.
27:14Oh, yeah, because you know how much I love talking to you.
27:16Because you need to talk to somebody.
27:20Who's your favourite?
27:21Liver.
27:22Who told you my favourite was Liver?
27:24Jasper.
27:26He was fucking with you.
27:28It's actually quite funny.
27:30Dare I ask what it is that you want to talk about?
27:32Leith Park.
27:34Leith Park.
27:37What the fuck for?
27:38Well, because, as my favourite philosopher likes to say,
27:40healing yourself is connected to with healing others.
27:43Yoko Ono.
27:44Yoko.
27:45Not John.
27:46Yoko.
27:47A dream you dream alone is only a dream.
27:49A dream you dream together is reality.
27:51He was the tweeter, her sincere.
27:52My therapist thinks that I can heal myself by talking about Leith Park with her.
27:56You see a therapist?
27:58Voluntarily?
27:59Fuck no, it's department mandated.
28:00Thank God.
28:01The world remains as I know it.
28:02What, you think I can heal myself talking about it with you?
28:05Good luck, friend-o.
28:07Not with me.
28:08Not even with the therapist.
28:10With Jasper.
28:12Were you listening to our conversation?
28:14Well, it was kinda hard not to.
28:15It's actually easy.
28:16You just mind your own fucking business.
28:23Look.
28:24Victoria's not wrong.
28:27Okay.
28:28The bullet went in here, and it came out here.
28:33You can see that.
28:36Give me fucking strength.
28:41The bullet went in here, and it came out here after, after it went through Hardy's spine.
28:55Oh.
28:56Yeah.
28:57Oh.
29:07Hardy slowed it down, which no doubt saved my life.
29:09He, meanwhile, is paralyzed from the waist down with one good arm and one with half mobility, and as we all know, PC Anderson wasn't quite that fucking lucky.
29:18I mean, Victoria said he was scared when he saw me in the hospital.
29:21How's he gonna feel when he hears all of that?
29:23How's he gonna feel when I tell him that even if we were armed, it would have come out the same?
29:27Probably worse.
29:28And you know why that is, Martin?
29:29I'll tell you.
29:31Because no matter how many fucking platitudes you find on the internet, the world is a seriously dangerous place to be, where no one is ever safe from one bad surprise ruining their entire fucking life.
29:40And do you know why that is, Martin? Because the most dangerous fucking creatures on this planet are us.
29:45Now I'm gonna take a shower. I'm gonna come back, and we're gonna sit down, and we're gonna eat that fucking liver.
30:00Preferably in silence.
30:01Well, I can assume that William didn't see his father on the ferry or home.
30:20Why can we assume that?
30:22Because we can also assume that William could recognize his own fucking father.
30:26Even after 12 years?
30:28All right, Rose, come on. Share with us your theory. Share with the class on why you think that Jamie Lingard is involved with his own daughter's disappearance.
30:35Come on, I can't wait. Let's go.
30:36Right, I don't know why, Carl. I just know that according to William himself, he saw someone wearing a cap, both on the ferry and at the house, with the name of Jamie's boat on it.
30:45No, he saw someone wearing a cap with the image of a fucking bird, but you, amateur ornithologist that you are, have decided it's the same fucking bird as the name of Jamie's boat.
30:54Have I got that right? Is that right?
30:55You're doing that thing you do.
30:56What thing?
30:57The thing where you disagree, just to be disagreeable.
30:59I'm disagreeing with you because you haven't thought it through enough to make me agree.
31:04What about the necklace? Huh? The mother's? The one that Jamie said that Merritt took?
31:10What about it?
31:11Maybe Jamie was trying to get it back.
31:13Let me get this straight. He was stalking his own daughter, then he kidnapped and or killed her in an effort to get the necklace back. Yeah? Is that right?
31:20Okay, that's ridiculous.
31:23Yeah.
31:24Fuck.
31:25Akron, what are those?
31:27Came from the Crown Office.
31:28You going through them, huh?
31:29Most of them.
31:30Anything good?
31:32The woman seemed to have no life. There's nothing in her diaries.
31:36Throne records?
31:38All two and from home and two and from the office. It's like she went straight home every night. No dinner with the hires up. No drinks at the pub with colleagues.
31:51I miss you already. Look forward to the next time. Same room. I believe that bed brings good luck. Signed, S.
32:03So she didn't always go straight home. Who the fuck is this? There's the name of the florist, but no date.
32:10Yeah, meaning she could have gotten this any time before she disappeared. I doubt they still have a record of that order.
32:15Maybe someone remembers the card?
32:17From when? Again. Who knows when she got this?
32:20Yeah, but she saved the card for some reason.
32:24Same room. A hotel.
32:27But which one?
32:28This lot came from her office, yeah? Who packed it up?
32:32Her P.A.
32:34Um...
32:35Sabrina Pereira.
32:39Sabrina.
32:42Was this a loo or something?
32:44Shower quarters.
32:45Ah, of course.
32:47Merit had a reputation for being aggressive.
32:49That's one way to put it.
32:51Why, how would you put it?
32:52She provoked people. Went straight at them. Tested them.
32:55Merit didn't really care what people thought about her.
32:57Long as they thought she was good at her job.
32:59And did they think that?
33:00They had to, because she was.
33:02Stephen Burns said that she didn't fit in.
33:05Neither of us did.
33:06I think that's why she took me with her.
33:08So she'd have an ally.
33:09Against the rugby boys from the posh schools.
33:11We used to joke about them.
33:12Good teeth and bad attitudes.
33:15Was us against them.
33:16Yeah, I know the feeling.
33:18They tried to intimidate you.
33:19Make you feel like a wee cog in their big boys machine.
33:26What?
33:27Are you finished?
33:29Sorry.
33:30So...
33:31Merit was strong.
33:33A survivor.
33:34A survivor?
33:35Are you kidding?
33:36She absolutely thrived on that stuff.
33:39So she could survive, say, in difficult situations.
33:46You think she could be alive?
33:48It's possible.
33:49It's been four years.
33:50And I don't think she'd just up and abandon her brother or me like that.
33:55If she was alive, I would just know.
33:58Because you were that close?
33:59We just always had a connection.
34:01Oh, yeah.
34:02That was never gonna happen.
34:03Why not?
34:04Because we weren't batting for the same team.
34:05Speaking of, do you remember this?
34:06No.
34:07You packed it up with the rest of our office stuff.
34:08If you say so.
34:09Any idea who S might be?
34:10You think that's me?
34:11I think it's someone whose name begins with S.
34:12The word someone starts with S.
34:13Could be fucking anybody.
34:14Call the fucking florist.
34:15Ask them.
34:16Oh, we did.
34:17They're out of business.
34:18Could be fucking anybody.
34:19Call the fucking florist.
34:20Ask them.
34:21Oh, we did.
34:22They're out of business.
34:23Could it be someone from work?
34:24Christ.
34:25I hope not.
34:26Is this really all you've got?
34:27Is this really all you've got?
34:28No.
34:29No.
34:30No.
34:31No.
34:32No.
34:33No.
34:34No.
34:35No.
34:36No.
34:37No.
34:38No.
34:39No.
34:40No.
34:41No.
34:42No.
34:43No.
34:44No.
34:45No.
34:46No.
34:47No.
34:48No.
34:49No.
34:50But…
34:55So this is just what it looks like?
34:57A publicity stunt and a waste of time.
34:59He wants to find it.
35:00Sort of the last guy.
35:01Look how far he got.
35:02The last guy fucked up.
35:05At least he wasn't work out of a fucking loo.
35:07In the ass end of the station with what looks to me like a pair of temporaries from a PA crawl.
35:13No wonder you were so well liked.
35:15Just tell me why you think you're going to do any better.
35:17Cause I'm doing it.
35:18doing it. Shit. You actually sound like her. If Merritt was seeing someone, I would have known.
35:27All those alpha males and none of them ever tried their luck? Of course they tried. They all fancied
35:32her. They were probably running a sweepstake. But she wasn't interested. When she talked about
35:38them, it was like they were beneath her. She wasn't friendly with any of them. I don't know.
35:43Maybe Liam. But only because they worked the Finch case together and that was more cordial
35:49than friendly. Liam Taylor? Aye. He was a good prosecutor. And happily married. So he wasn't
35:56always panting after her like the others. Why did you say good? That was how Merritt rated
36:01him. Did she ever express any interest in it? I asked her about him once. She said she saw
36:06Liam more as a challenge. But she knew he was happily married. She would never go there.
36:11So if Merritt had a fella, it was someone outside the office.
36:27What are you doing? You're not a tourist. It's good luck. Not for the dog. He said his nose
36:32plays twice. Come on. Ladies and gentlemen, I'll keep this short being a man of few words.
36:44All right, all right. You should be proud of yourselves. I know how hard you've worked
36:51and I know how little recognition you'll get. But I would like to say thank you and well done.
36:58And it feels fucking good to win.
37:06It's the wee one's birthday. It's bright and early.
37:13Carl fucking Mork.
37:14Liam Taylor. In the flesh. Liam Taylor. I'm Akra.
37:21I heard you were dead. Only on the inside. It's funny. We were just talking about you.
37:24Can you, um, hang around for a bit after I speak to your boss?
37:28Um, it's Kelly's 10th birthday. We're having a family dinner, so.
37:30Oh, okay. Do you still do that weird polar bear routine?
37:33Every morning. Keeps me young.
37:35Yeah, right up until your fucking heart explodes.
37:38I'm glad you're still alive.
37:39Yeah, I'll find you.
37:44You celebrating?
37:45Three convictions and a big money laundering case.
37:48It's not gonna go down well at the golf club.
37:50Who has time for golf?
37:53I don't think we've met.
37:54I am Akra. He holds my umbrella.
37:57There's something I can do for you DCI Mork aside from listening to your tired old routines about the weather.
38:02I miss you already.
38:05Excuse me.
38:06I can't wait for next time.
38:08Same room.
38:10Same bed.
38:11Blah, blah, blah, blah.
38:12Sorry you've lost me.
38:13It was a note that was attached to some flowers that were sent to Merit.
38:16Sent from whom?
38:17Under Myra.
38:18With the initial S.
38:23I see.
38:24Any idea who that might be, Stephen?
38:26None.
38:27And to be clear, Merit and I never discussed her personal life.
38:31Yeah, but you were her supervisor, her mentor.
38:32Yeah, all the more reason.
38:34I had no idea what she got up to outside the office.
38:36What about inside the office? People have white relationships all the time.
38:39And I'd still expect them to behave professionally.
38:42Yeah, when people did what we expected of them, you and I would be out of a job.
38:46Oh, that wouldn't be such a bad thing, would it?
38:50Anything else? Or would you like to risk another question?
38:58Not today.
39:01Very nice meeting you, Lord Advocate.
39:05Oh, fuck off.
39:14Cup of tea?
39:16You should be sleeping.
39:17And wait for the water to boil this time.
39:19What?
39:23Maybe if you can find me a wee biscuit.
39:25Go to sleep!
39:35Well done, Merit.
39:49Well done, Merit.
39:50Water looks delightful.
40:14I've got a shriveled knob just watching you.
40:16You should try it.
40:18Great way to wake yourself up.
40:19Assuming one wants to wake up.
40:21Yeah.
40:22I remember you in those early morning case conferences.
40:25A real ray of sunshine.
40:27Well, speaking of cold and cases.
40:30Aye, okay.
40:32You and Merit Lingard worked the Graham Finch case together, yeah?
40:35We did.
40:36How'd you find her?
40:37Ambitious.
40:39Annoying.
40:39She's very focused.
40:43Not much of a team player.
40:45Didn't think much of her colleagues.
40:47She did not.
40:49But I never had a problem with her.
40:51My former PA said that Merit thought of you as a challenge.
40:56Challenge?
40:56Yeah, you know, a test.
41:00A prize to be won.
41:04Flattered, I guess.
41:05Everyone keeps telling me that Merit loved the challenges.
41:07She passed all the tests.
41:08She won all the prizes.
41:09And I'm wondering, well, if she thought of you as a challenge,
41:13did she act on it?
41:14And as she usually got what she wanted, if she did act on it...
41:21I'm asking, did you...
41:22Did I fuck Merit?
41:24Or vice versa, yeah.
41:25For fuck's sake, Carl.
41:26Change my mind, Liam.
41:28Tell me nothing happened between the two of you.
41:30Tell me you didn't go there.
41:31I don't know what to say.
41:32You say it didn't happen.
41:33It didn't happen.
41:40Fucking hell, Liam.
41:41Carl.
41:45Does Martha know?
41:47Of course not.
41:49Of course not.
41:49At the start, it was like you said, Merit got me in her sights for some reason.
42:06Then we went for a drink after work.
42:09We both got a bit pissed.
42:10Then she kissed me and one thing led to another.
42:13It lasted a month.
42:14Took you a month to come to your senses.
42:16It was Merit.
42:17She ended it.
42:19Why?
42:22She just did it.
42:22No warning, no explanation, no big fight.
42:25Just, thanks, I'll see you around.
42:29I kept my distance after that.
42:32So you're married.
42:33She never brought people back.
42:34Where did you meet up?
42:36Hotel.
42:37Witch.
42:38Princess Garden.
42:39Did you ever send her flowers?
42:41She'd hated that.
42:42Do you remember any dates?
42:44No, but she always paid.
42:46Oh, I'm looking out for you.
42:48It'll almost likely be a record.
42:50It was a while ago.
42:52Over a year before she disappeared.
42:55None of this has anything to do with your investigation.
42:57The only way Martha finds out is if you tell her.
43:00Doesn't have to go in a file.
43:01So you messed around, she dumped you, you felt played.
43:05No more, I waited a year to kill her.
43:07I don't know if anyone killed her.
43:09You have to be thinking it.
43:11It's an investigation which usually presumes a crime.
43:14The real crime are those fucking Speedos.
43:20Don't worry, I won't put you in the file.
43:24She used a different name.
43:28She checked in as Lila Graham.
43:29Are you sure?
43:34She had a credit card in that name.
43:37I remember because I made some gag about prosecutors commit fraud.
43:40Oh, I bet she laughed her ass off.
43:44She just said,
43:46now you're safe, you have something on me.
43:56You see, I'm Mark.
44:16This is Marcus, the assistant manager of the hotel.
44:19How are you doing, Marcus?
44:21Detective, as I've said to your associates, I can't help you.
44:25I'm sorry you came out here, but I'm afraid-
44:27Shut up, Marcus.
44:28How long do you keep your guest's records for?
44:31Five years, but again-
44:32Shut up, Marcus.
44:33We're currently investigating the disappearance of a woman who may have stayed at this hotel
44:37before she went missing.
44:38We know for certain that she stayed here a year or so before that.
44:42So that's four years, two Olympics, one World Cup and four Prime Ministers ago, if you please.
44:47You need a warrant.
44:49It's just confirmation. It's not 50 kilos of cocaine.
44:52Be that as it may, I'm not allowed to release personal information.
44:56That data is all protected by law now.
44:58Data Protection Act 2018.
45:02Thank you, Akram.
45:02Helpful.
45:03As I told your associates, I could lose my job.
45:06Well, you could lose your job if I tell your higher-ups that you're procuring prostitutes for your guests.
45:11I do no such thing.
45:12That you've got a fucking maid who deals oxy off her cleaning trolley.
45:16That is absolutely not true.
45:17I know, it's shit, isn't it?
45:20This is harassment.
45:21Call the police.
45:27Same room six times in the two months before she disappeared.
45:30So all this time, they could have been tracking financial history for Lila Graham.
45:34Yeah, we're doing that now.
45:36What type of person uses the name of her dead mother?
45:41What is an authorized guest?
45:44Someone authorized to sign for room service, bar tab, whatever.
45:48Why would she do that?
45:50Because she was never here.
45:53She's on the computer.
45:54No, it's Lila Graham's name on the computer.
45:56It's Liam Taylor's signature on any evidence that puts merit in the room.
45:59Fucking paranoid bitch.
46:02Except that I'm looking at the record of the last time she was here.
46:05And that is not Liam Taylor's name.
46:12Who the fuck is Sam Haig?
46:16Well, today's the day, man.
46:19You've had enough time to think.
46:20Now's your chance to answer the question.
46:23Why are you here?
46:27Might they say the truth will set you free,
46:29if you don't answer right?
46:32We'll give you another month to think about it.
46:35And try again.
46:59We'll give you another month to think about it.
47:02You okay in there?
47:09First guess.
47:12Make it a good one.
47:30Sam Haig.
47:32What did you do to Sam?
47:35I'd love to take you to Benny Beg one day.
47:38That's a great wee crag to get you started climbing.
47:41You said I wanted to learn how to climb.
47:46You're dressed.
47:48Yeah, I have to go.
47:51Everything okay?
47:52Yeah, something's come up.
47:53Well, I'll only forgive you if you tell me when I can see you again.
47:57Well, I'll be gone for a while.
47:59Gone where?
48:00Moor, for a bit.
48:01Moor.
48:02What is on Moor?
48:04It's an island.
48:05Yeah, I know that.
48:07But what's on Moor for you?
48:09My father.
48:12So how long you be gone?
48:13Who knows?
48:15Who knows is code for forever.
48:17Please, I'm not going home to live with my father.
48:20I need to see him.
48:22And then...
48:22And then what?
48:24I'll bring you when I get back.
48:26Which is when?
48:27I don't know.
48:27When I get back.
48:29You're right, font of information.
48:30Can't we just fuck without sharing?
48:33Is that what we're doing though, is it?
48:35Just fucking?
48:38Who did you think this was?
48:43I have to go.
48:45But you can stay.
48:46Order some room service.
48:47Make a day of it.
48:51Merit.
48:51What did you do to Sam?
49:15I used him.
49:16That's all.
49:23I was unkind.
49:29Is this about Sam?
49:30Sam?
49:37No.
49:40But Sam Hague is dead because of you.
49:47Sam's dead.
49:48And every time you give a wrong answer, we're gonna make things just a bit more uncomfortable.
49:57So from now on, you might want to really think.
50:02Before you speak.
50:18The hyperbaric chamber will begin to heat up as pressure increases at five atmospheres, or 15 inches
50:27then, the temperature inside the chamber will be around 32 Celsius, or 90 degrees Fahrenheit.
50:35The rule of thumb is, the deeper, the hotter.
50:39Oxygen will become denser, and it will become tougher to breathe.
50:43A person may start to experience hyperoxia, or high levels of CO2 in their breathing.
50:51These symptoms include trembling, sweating, confusion, headaches, and brain vision.
51:13If you want to then, the decreasing, it will all be through.
51:16So if you want to
51:27to run away the races, we'll have to move the precursor into your neckh групп.
Recommended
1:23:25
|
Up next
1:48:30
1:37:05
1:02:08
1:22:19
18:49
56:34
59:32
53:59
1:42:51
1:39:31
1:30:48