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The Twelve Season 2 Episode 5
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Short filmTranscript
00:00Hot gummy.
00:01Some of my clients find it helps with the pain.
00:05The prosecution are probably going to try and push a couple of older women through.
00:09Well, let's hope they're not a narrow-minded, bureaucratic type.
00:13Oh, that washing.
00:15Her hands used to bleed.
00:17How's old Marjorie Moo going?
00:18Well, she's baddier than ever, so you'll have fun with that, won't you?
00:22Excuse me.
00:25I just feel so betrayed by him.
00:27I don't even know how I'm going to see my kids.
00:29I can't up and move to New Zealand.
00:31Is he with Vicky?
00:32Yeah.
00:33Can you bring him next time?
00:34I spoke to your solicitor, and she said there has to be paperwork.
00:38You've got nothing there to give me a little taste.
00:40Pete, nah.
00:41I'm not going to be responsible for getting you back on it, mate.
00:43Don't be a dick.
00:47Pete, mate.
00:48Hey.
00:49Pete?
00:51I'm sorry, Pete.
00:52I'm sorry, mate.
00:59I'm sorry.
01:08I'm sorry.
01:12I'm sorry.
01:13I won't even know.
01:18I don't have to.
01:19Okay.
01:19James Wilson.
01:20Yeah.
01:20I don't know.
01:21Okay.
01:22I don't know.
01:22I don't know.
02:23Hi.
02:23Has she been singing the song again?
02:25Yeah, she's been singing ever since you left.
02:28You sure this isn't going to make things worse for her?
02:31No.
02:32Oh, it's so awful, Ray.
02:34They treated those poor girls at Bell's Heels like garbage.
02:38They say that the childhood trauma, you know, it comes bubbling up.
02:42I really think that talking about it is going to help her.
02:45I just need more to go on.
02:47You know, this only started since you've been on the trial.
02:50Maybe it's got more to do with you being out so much.
02:53Margie, no, no, no.
02:55I've got to go.
02:56I'll see you later, love.
02:57Okay.
02:57See you tonight.
02:58All right.
03:28Hi.
03:29Oh, hi.
03:30You're doing the heritage tour?
03:35Oh, I'm more interested in the history, actually.
03:40We only bought this place last year, turning it into a B&B.
03:49My mum was at Bells Hills in the 70s.
03:52You wouldn't know if there's any old records that are still here?
03:56We found dozens of boxes, took them down to the council.
03:59Which council?
04:00Gully.
04:01Okay, thank you.
04:05See you.
04:26It's game day.
04:27First day of our defence case.
04:28So now we control the narrative, and we have the hometown advantage, local people.
04:33I'm sorry.
04:34Did you organize the visit?
04:35Visit?
04:36My baby.
04:37Yes, I know.
04:38Rana.
04:39Yeah, we've talked about this.
04:40Yeah, so how long is it going to...
04:41Rana, what did they, um...
04:42...requested the hospital?
04:43Yes, I know.
04:44Rana.
04:45Yeah, we've talked about this.
04:46Yeah, so how long is it going to...
04:47Rana, what did they, um...
04:48...requested the forms from the courts?
04:49Sasha, I know it hurts, the separation, but we really need you to focus.
04:54You know, you and Patrick's barrister seem close.
04:55Are you sure you're on my side?
04:56No.
04:57No.
04:58No.
04:59No.
05:00No.
05:01No.
05:02No.
05:03No.
05:04No.
05:05No.
05:06No.
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05:09No.
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05:30No.
05:31No.
05:32No.
05:33No.
05:34No.
05:35No.
05:37Yongu?
05:38No.
05:39No.
05:40No.
05:41No.
05:42No.
05:43Right.
05:45Yes.
05:46Yes.
05:47You sure?
05:48Is that the last case?
05:50No.
05:51You men have no idea how good you've got it with your bladders.
05:57How are you this morning?
06:00Do you remember number three?
06:05Joey.
06:21Hey.
06:31Hi.
06:34What's up?
06:35Yeah.
06:44It's just...
06:46Pete.
06:51They found him this morning.
06:59Joey.
07:01He's...
07:02He's dead.
07:07It's your Pete.
07:18Pete McKernie.
07:20That's his best mate.
07:22McKernie, that's Marty's boy.
07:24Yeah.
07:25Did they say how he died?
07:26Right?
07:26Amen.
07:31I love you.
07:35I love you.
07:37What do you mean?
07:37Yeah, I want to go.
07:39I love you.
07:40I don't know.
07:41I love you.
07:42I love you.
07:44I love you.
07:47I love you.
07:48I don't know.
08:18Dr. Hadid, you were Mrs. Price's GP?
08:32Yes, for just over a year.
08:34Now, during this time, did my client attend any of her mother's appointments?
08:39Yes, often.
08:41She was very attentive to her mother's well-being.
08:44What kind of patient was Bernie's Price?
08:47A reluctant one.
08:49Reluctant? That's one of the kinder adjectives that we've had to describe Mrs. Price in the court.
08:54Could you expand on that?
08:56She didn't like me very much.
08:58What made you think that she didn't like you?
09:00I fell off a tractor. What else do you need to know?
09:03Why you fainted for a start. The blood pressure is worryingly low.
09:06It always has been.
09:07Just give me some of what Dr. Franklin gave me last time and I'm out of here.
09:12Will you be able to drive her to Perth?
09:13Yeah, absolutely.
09:14To hell she is.
09:15Mum, come on.
09:16I'm as fit as a Mally ball. There's nothing wrong with me.
09:22Have you had any issues with dizziness and fainting before?
09:24Yes, she has. You've nearly fainted a couple of times, haven't you?
09:29The hospital will x-ray your ankle, but you need a cardiologist to get to the bottom of this, Mrs. Price.
09:34I understand you're still learning on the job, Dr., um...
09:39I did.
09:40Well, I'm not going to be a guinea pig for some doctor fresh off the boat.
09:45In my opinion, Mrs. Price was racist.
09:48What diagnosis, if any, did you give in relation to Mrs. Price?
09:53Well, after the tractor incident, I diagnosed her with orthostatic hypertension.
09:57Orthostatic hypertension. Now, could you please tell the court exactly what that is?
10:01Put simply, it means that when Mrs. Price stood up too quickly, her blood pressure dropped, leading to dizziness and fainting.
10:07It's a common condition for women of her age.
10:09Oh, well, that's something to look forward to.
10:12What medication did you prescribe for this condition?
10:15Ten milligrams of Mitadrine every day to help stabilise her blood pressure.
10:19So, now, in the autopsy report, Mitadrine was not found in Mrs. Price's blood. Could you comment on that?
10:25Well, she wasn't taking the medication regularly.
10:27I checked with the pharmacy when I heard about the accident.
10:30Her repeat had been dispensed the morning of her death, but she should have run out two months before.
10:34So, if Mrs. Price was unmedicated at the time of her death, could rigorous activity bring on dizziness and fainting?
10:40Yes, certainly.
10:42And at Mrs. Price's age, would climbing down a well ladder qualify for rigorous activity?
10:47At her age?
10:49Most definitely.
10:50As a GP in rural Australia, do you have any specialist training in neurology?
10:58No.
10:59Do you have any specialist training in cardiology?
11:02No.
11:03And what about in neurocardiology?
11:04Your Honour, the state is badgering the witness.
11:07Yes, Mr. Peres, I'm getting to the point.
11:08Would you agree, Dr. Hadid, that orthostatic hypertension is actually a complex physiological condition?
11:16As I said, it's fairly straightforward.
11:19Well, a lot of your learned colleagues around the world would beg to differ.
11:22In the February 2022 edition in circulation of Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology,
11:28orthostatic hypertension is described as a complex physiological condition.
11:35Do you disagree with this assessment?
11:36Well, the condition may be complex, but the symptoms are easily addressed.
11:39So, it's your opinion that a rural GP knows better than specialists in the field?
11:43Your Honour, a lot of my specialist colleagues have never performed an emergency appendectomy in a GP's clinic
11:48with a supervising surgeon from Perth on Zoom.
11:51We may not have the resources of a city hospital, Mr. Persan, but we may do just fine.
11:56I shouldn't have thought it too wise, Mr. Prosecutor, to denigrate the rural medical system.
12:02Not while I was still in town, at any rate.
12:09Dr. Hadid, did Mrs. Price have a tilt table test confirming her diagnosis?
12:14No, we don't have the facilities here.
12:17Then I put to you that without the appropriate diagnostic test to ascertain the cause of Mrs. Price's faint,
12:22you were merely speculating.
12:26Yes.
12:27The only person who reported Mrs. Price had dizzy spells was the co-accused Sasha.
12:32Is that correct?
12:33She was in a position to observe her mother.
12:36She was helping her.
12:38What a load of crap.
12:40Sasha wanted an alibi from that doctor, not a diagnosis.
12:44Dragging her mum off to appointments.
12:46I guess you've never had to tell your mum that she's getting too old to do something.
12:49She's with my sisters, actually.
12:50Down your way, in Gully.
12:52Always the daughter's job.
12:53Sasha mentions her mum's condition eight times.
12:57Nine.
12:58Nine.
12:58In her first police interview.
13:00I never trusted that Dr. Hadid, and it's not a racist thing.
13:03I'm just talking about levels of experience.
13:06Dr. Franklin, now, he knew what he was talking about.
13:08He sorted your knee out, didn't he?
13:10Dr. Franklin was a piece of shit.
13:13Some doctors actually like to help people.
13:15Others just prescribe.
13:17You know, I'm just kind of, like, getting mad.
13:28I'm just offering you questions.
13:31Hi, Mike.
13:37I'm really sorry.
13:38You're about right.
13:40Thanks.
13:40Mate, I was, um, I was thinking that maybe we should, um, go to the pub and, uh, gather
13:47a few friends, family.
13:49Okay?
13:50Yeah, sure.
13:50Yeah?
13:51Yep.
13:51I'd appreciate it.
13:52Yeah, as a nurse, do you think she could have fainted?
13:55I mean, Occam's razor means she probably did.
13:58It's more likely it was an accident than the daughter who took her to doctor's appointments,
14:02killing her in cold blood.
14:04Yeah, but if you always go for the obvious answer, then why bother having trials?
14:07If Bernie was really having dizzy spells, would she risk going down the well by herself?
14:12Oh, that would be Hanlon's razor.
14:14Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
14:22Miss Sulkis, how long have you known Sasha Price?
14:25I've been cutting Sasha's hair for about seven years now.
14:29She's a loyal customer.
14:30Was Sasha on time for her hair appointment the day her mother died?
14:33Yeah.
14:34What time did she arrive?
14:35So, she arrived at 5.26.
14:38I checked the security camera just to be accurate.
14:41Oh, and did Sasha speak at all during her hair appointment?
14:43Yeah, so I asked her what she did that day, and she said that her and Patrick...
14:48Oh, I went to the Falls.
14:49Oh, God, I haven't been to the Falls for ages.
14:52Nadine just went.
14:53She said the path from the back car park is a bit overgrown, though.
14:55Oh.
14:56But you know, Nadine, only does his work to be done.
14:59Oh.
15:01You all right, Sasha?
15:02She said that they went to the waterfall together.
15:10And then she threw up.
15:14You okay, ma'am?
15:15And that's when she told me she was pregnant.
15:31And did Sasha seem happy about the pregnancy?
15:33Oh, fully.
15:33Yeah.
15:34I wanted to tell you in person, but I just, I can't wait a second longer.
15:38Um, I'm pregnant.
15:42You're going to be a dad again.
15:47Listen, call me back, all right?
15:53I bet he was happy.
15:55Who?
15:56Liam Bevan.
15:58He got his money at last.
15:59Yeah, yeah, he was happy.
16:00I'll leave the ute over there, and you can fill it up, and I'll take it to the burn pit later.
16:06Yeah, righto.
16:07Listen, Mum, I haven't got time to yap.
16:10I've got things to do.
16:17Did Sasha appear to have any issue with her mother that day?
16:20Jackson, Your Honor.
16:22The witness can't testify to this.
16:23She's a hairdresser, not a psychologist.
16:26Okay, then.
16:27Ms. Wilson Moore, rephrase, please.
16:29I will rephrase, Your Honor.
16:31During the hair appointment, did Sasha talk about her mother?
16:36Yeah.
16:37What did she say?
16:38Well, she booked an appointment for Bernie to get a haircut.
16:41What time was that?
16:42Um, that was when she was paying, so 6.45.
16:46So at 6.45, Sasha made a hair appointment for her mother,
16:50even though the state has proven that Mrs. Price had been deceased for up to three hours at that point.
16:56That's weird, right?
16:57Not if she thought her mother was still alive.
17:01No further questions, Your Honor.
17:03Ms. Sulkers, had Mrs. Price ever attended your salon in the past?
17:07Yeah, um, she got her hair done for a wedding.
17:10Her niece's.
17:11But never apart from that?
17:13She cut her hair at home.
17:14Liked to save money.
17:16Hm, of course.
17:17So did you not think it was odd for Sasha to make an appointment for her mother on that particular day?
17:24Well, I suppose so.
17:26You suppose so.
17:28No further questions, Your Honor.
17:30Dad?
17:48Dad?
17:56Dad?
17:56Wendy. Hello. You didn't say you were coming over?
18:01Yeah, I thought I'd drop off some groceries.
18:04Hi, I'm Winston's daughter.
18:06I'm Teddy.
18:07The nurse I told you about, I'm teaching him to play my job.
18:10I'm chowing and ponging.
18:13He's learning the hands. Hey, join us.
18:16Wendy always used to cheat during the Twittering of the sparrows.
18:19Put the groceries away.
18:21Two rows of 17. One, two, three, yeah.
18:46You parted ways with Pete when you guys left the pub at ten years ago.
18:50Is that correct?
18:52Yeah, yeah. I went home.
18:54Yep.
18:55Yep.
19:01You mind me asking why you're questioning people?
19:04I asked to speak with you, actually.
19:08You don't remember me, do you?
19:13Damo Scullin. I was in resis for a few years.
19:17Ruck off back. Nothing special.
19:19Yeah, yeah, yeah.
19:20No, no, no. I remember you.
19:21Damo, yeah.
19:22Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
19:23Of course, mate.
19:24Your set shot, mate.
19:25It's...
19:26It's legendary.
19:27It was.
19:28Yeah.
19:29Once a legend, you're always a legend.
19:35What's with the grilling, Damo?
19:37Yeah, um, look, he OD'd, but there was someone at the house there with him.
19:45We didn't find any of the drugs and the paraphernalia was missing.
19:49His parents say he's been off the junk for a few years.
19:51Yeah.
19:52Do you know who he was using again?
19:54Ah.
19:55Yeah.
19:56No, I didn't.
19:57Yeah.
19:58Do you know anyone who could've, er, given him the drugs?
20:01Like an old drug dealer with his, er, an ex-girlfriend, something like that.
20:05Ah, well, sorry.
20:07Yeah.
20:09You can, er, you can verify the big man was at home with you last night at, er, ten?
20:17Yeah.
20:18Yeah, of course.
20:20Right.
20:23Brilliant.
20:35Yeah.
20:36Yeah.
20:44Yeah.
20:45Yeah.
20:54Oh, oh, oh.
20:57Yeah.
21:00Oh my god.
21:30Right, let me do the dishes. It's my turn.
21:36Hey, Alice, you know the book doesn't clean?
21:44Did you give Pete heroin?
21:47What? No, no.
21:48He just happened upon some while you were hanging out together.
21:53Well, okay.
21:55I didn't give it to him.
22:01He pinched it.
22:06He must have got it out of my pouch when I was in the dunny.
22:10Joey, I don't know what time you got in, but I was asleep by midnight and you weren't home then.
22:15Well, no, because I went to the office. I had to sort some paperwork for the truck.
22:19At ten at night?
22:21Yeah, I left the pub. I went to the office to do some insurance stuff, but Pete went home.
22:27Why'd you lie to the cop then?
22:29No one would have seen me at the office, Alice.
22:34It's just easier to say I came home, isn't it?
22:44Fuck's sake, Alice, why are you giving me that, Don?
22:46Babe, I left the pub. I went to the office. I came home, and that's it.
22:57And now Pete's dead.
23:01And Mary's dead.
23:06My best mate's dead.
23:08What if they don't ask me about her questions?
23:28Then just work what you need to say into your answers anyway.
23:30Sasha's relying on you.
23:32Okay.
23:33I'll come give you Mara's support as soon as I've dropped her mouth.
23:35I think he's going to be all right.
23:37I mean, you know, he's been handed around from person to person.
23:40I'm just...
23:41I'm rabbiting, aren't I?
23:44Don't be nervous. You're going to be fine.
23:47Yeah, just answer the questions, Vicky.
23:49And tell the truth, no matter how hard it is in front of Sash.
23:52I will.
23:53You need to make them understand.
23:55Oh, my God, sorry.
23:55Sorry.
23:55Sorry.
23:57Sorry.
23:58Legend has it that your witness, Vicky Kowlowski, is one of the very few supporters of Sasha's relationship with Patrick.
24:17Hmm, to whence springs this legend.
24:19Nina, apparently in the witness interview, she's very pro-Patrick.
24:24I'm very happy that Sasha has snared a good bloke, etc.
24:27Catch some good dick, etc.
24:29Etc.
24:31And since my client doesn't get me, you know, character witnesses, I thought that perhaps you could...
24:37Encourage her to speak about your client in a favourable light.
24:40Well, provide an opportunity.
24:42Yeah, I can do that.
24:44Period.
24:44So, are you enjoying putting your feet up while I do all the talking?
24:48Positively luxuriating, isn't it?
24:50Ms. Kowlowski, how long have you known my client?
24:53We've been best friends since we both didn't make the primary school netball team in grade three.
24:58Ah, it must have been a very competitive team then.
25:01Not really.
25:02I think they decided they'd rather be a player down than have either of us in the team.
25:08So it's safe to say that you know my client well.
25:12What sort of person is Sasha?
25:15She's the best.
25:18Sasha would do anything for her friends.
25:20I trust her with my life.
25:21Have you ever seen her be violent towards her mother?
25:24No.
25:25Sasha doesn't have a violent bone in her body.
25:27She looks after everyone.
25:29She's a nurturer, always has been.
25:30Well, you must have been very happy then when you found out that your best friend was pregnant with her first child.
25:36You are fucking not.
25:39What?
25:44What are you going to do?
25:45Are you going to keep it?
25:46Yes.
25:46My God.
25:47Good.
25:47Yes, of course.
25:49I love him.
25:51Yes.
25:56I was super happy.
25:58She always wanted to be a mum.
26:00And she thought she might have left it too late.
26:02What are your observations of Sasha as a mum?
26:07I don't have any.
26:10I've never seen her be a mum.
26:12A bit of contraction there.
26:17Push down with it.
26:19Push down.
26:21Good girl, Sasha.
26:23Good girl.
26:23Keep breathing it through.
26:25Let it build up and a big push.
26:27Okay?
26:27Right down into your bottom.
26:28That's the way.
26:29Good girl.
26:29Good girl.
26:59Good girl.
27:00Good girl.
27:00Mom!
27:02Mom!
27:30Mom!
27:34Sasha said she was so out of her mind during labour that she tried to run.
27:40And those animals cuffed her to the bed.
27:45When they took the baby away, she cried for three days straight.
27:50She had to pump milk for hours in jail and hand it over to the wardens,
27:54and that's supposed to be a privilege?
28:00Everyone abandoned her.
28:14Thank you for that.
28:17I want to talk now about Patrick Harrow's.
28:20Would you say that he had a positive influence on Sasha?
28:24Absolutely not.
28:26Miss Kowlowski, during an interview with my learned colleague's solicitor March 13th of this year,
28:38you told her that Patrick was Sasha's rock, a genuine bloke who made her happy.
28:45Do you not recall what those were?
28:46But I've learned a whole lot more about him since then.
28:49And I take it all back, everything good I said.
28:51Sit down.
28:54No further questions, everyone.
28:58Miss Kowlowski, had Sasha ever had a boyfriend until Patrick Harrow's entered her life at the age of 42?
29:04She'd been with men.
29:05She'd been with men.
29:06I asked if Sasha ever had a boyfriend.
29:10Not really.
29:11Did Sasha tell you her mother disapproved of the relationship?
29:14Yes.
29:15And what was the nature of Mrs. Price's objection towards Patrick Harrow's?
29:19She thought he was a gold digger and he is.
29:21Objection, Your Honour.
29:22Sasha didn't do this.
29:23Your Honour.
29:24Everything went to shit when he came along.
29:25Well, stop now or we'll be charged with contempt.
29:35Thank you, Miss Kowlowski.
29:39I mean, all that stuff about taking her baby away.
29:42Who does that?
29:44And imagine if she's innocent, like how unfair that is.
29:46She seems trustworthy to me.
29:49Sasha?
29:50Vicky.
29:51Like she was looking after her best friend.
29:53Yeah.
29:54But she said she liked Patrick before.
29:56So they were all mates.
29:57And you don't top it a mate.
29:58An honest person doesn't think that way.
30:02Ah, fuck.
30:03Shit.
30:04You want another one, mate?
30:05No, I'm good.
30:06I'm a mess.
30:07All right, folks.
30:08You're good to go.
30:09See you on Monday.
30:10Um, yeah.
30:11Drinks at the pub tonight for Pete McKearney.
30:14Um, if anybody knew him and want to join Joey and me.
30:18Um, anyway, you're all welcome.
30:25Hey, it's, uh, it's mum again.
30:31Um, you're probably still in the air.
30:35Um, I just, um, I really want to speak to you and your brother.
30:39Uh, can you just call me, um, when you get this?
30:52How's the vet prep going for next week?
31:06Oh, you know, I know so much more about bovine diseases than I have ever cared.
31:09Oh, good.
31:10I know that's not what you wanted from Vicky.
31:13I just, I really didn't see it coming.
31:15Well, it's my fault.
31:17I, I asked for it, Mayor Calvert.
31:20What?
31:21Should I have sat down sooner?
31:24Not press the point?
31:25Is that what that look is?
31:26Meredith, I know you were trying to salvage the situation.
31:29But, um, if you'd been on your toes, you could have seen it coming.
31:34But you didn't.
31:35You missed it.
31:36It must be so hard being so fucking perfect.
31:39And everyone else around you is just human.
31:41Oh, trust me, it is.
31:47Anyway, shall we take a rain check for tonight?
31:52Um, yeah.
31:54Good.
31:55All right.
31:56Oh.
32:05Meredith?
32:08Um, I know Colby's dead against it, but did you want me to lodge this visit form for Sasha's baby or not?
32:16No.
32:17No.
32:25Roger.
32:26I'll deal with Colby later.
32:28Well, it's obviously a very sad time for me and Sue.
32:45Tonight, let's remember the best times with Pete.
32:50To Pete!
32:51To Pete!
32:52To Pete!
32:53To Pete!
32:54To Pete!
32:55To Pete!
32:58Oh, Babe, come here.
33:00Hey.
33:05I'm so sorry.
33:10i thought he'd gotten over the whole smack bullshit i'm just glad he was with you before
33:22sue said she saw you two walking back up to pete's from the pub you're pissing yourselves
33:33and reminded her of when you were kids there's nothing you could have done mate
33:38as far as i'm concerned you were the best thing that happened to us
33:43you know pete well no not really but um he and joey were a few years above me in school
33:56i always seem like a dickhead
34:01maybe but he was harmless you know
34:07did you think there's going to be a report from the coroner look at you on one jury and you're
34:14already up with all the lingo you should be one of those lawyers down in perth
34:17it's one thing to lie to the police to get me to lie to the police but don't you lie to me
34:42okay
34:43at least i had to walk him home
34:47didn't i use off his face i couldn't just let him go by himself
34:51i just had one beer with that's it and then i went home
34:57i thought you went to the office
35:00alice
35:03winston hang
35:25marlene john southwest region health care
35:28um mayor okay thank you all right do you want to um do the business here or um in a bathroom
35:39is teddy sick who's teddy lovey
35:41uh all right uh here it is then why don't you um just drop your dax and uh we'll get started
35:50he was already gone
36:04i mean he wasn't breathing he's stone cold i checked his pulse
36:21there's nothing i could do
36:29you could have called an ambulance
36:37for what
36:43jesus he was dead alice he was already dead
36:47i had to get out of here if i didn't know i'll be in a lot of shit right now won't i
37:00i had to get out of here
37:17an olive branch if you'll take it we are going to visit the 33rd best waterfall in all of west
37:26australia i called the clinic they said you told them to change my nurse yeah um we thought you
37:39could just do with a more traditional style of care what made you think you could do that
37:42dad i found the weed gummies that that malnurse gave you so so they're drugs do you know how many
37:49drugs i take every day yeah but you don't have a script for them i'm dying do you think they're
37:54going to put me in prison for a few gummies okay and what would you have done if millie or arlo
37:57had taken well a little chance of that since you never bring my grandchildren around to visit me
38:01i mean i wouldn't need help from a stranger if someone in my own family would genuinely care for
38:06me am i invisible teddy has shown more care in the past month than both you and your brother put
38:10together teddy doesn't care about you people they get sick and they lose their faculties and people
38:17like teddy they take advantage you're worried that he's going to get some of your inheritance i care
38:22about you dad i don't care about the money i give up what is wrong with you nothing apart from the
38:29fact that i'm dying i know we know you're dying
38:32you can stop hitting us over the head with it
38:37wendy wendy
38:43do you ever miss your exes no i get home from work i pour myself a big whiskey i sit in my
39:03favorite chair i smoke a filthy great human cigar and then i smell my head off perfectly content
39:11you snore of course i snore
39:17why don't i know that
39:20no you're absolutely right after seven years we've never technically slept together never
39:28worked up in the same bed i suppose
39:30well chris snored and i won't miss that
39:35he's an idiot for the record
39:37i don't know why but i find it easier being a good barrister than a good wife
39:42no i wouldn't say good barrister
39:45i'd say brilliant barrister
39:48thanks i think we both know i didn't have a brilliant week
39:53um i'm truly sorry for yesterday
39:56oh forget about it i was just being a supercilious ass
40:00yeah i think we can agree on that
40:03so what do you think
40:18uh 33rd best waterfall in southwest australia seems
40:22tad generous
40:24so is this where sasha and patrick parked
40:31no they'd come by the back row they'd park where we did
40:34cross there and
40:37secret meeting place just there
40:40well it's really strange seeing the actual places that we talk about in court
40:46it's like my brain won't let me think that it's real that it's just a story that i'm telling
40:53where are you going
41:01something else real we need to seek
41:04come on
41:05chop chop
41:07wait
41:07oh
41:17what did you
41:19sasha just back up and move in
41:20back up and move in
41:21hey
41:24hey
41:26hey
41:29hey
41:29hey
41:30hey
41:32okay runner
41:34you've got 30 minutes
41:35thanks
41:36my beautiful boy
41:44hey
41:45beautiful boy
41:48oh thank you so much
41:49mama's here
41:50mama's here now
41:52i've already called the vet
41:59counselor
42:00i don't need to pay someone to tell me something i already know
42:03it's three day sickness
42:04come on
42:05150 bucks isn't much for a steer that's worth a thousand
42:09he'll either get up or die
42:10make sure he's warded
42:12you're too soft-hearted
42:13it'll be your downfall
42:15we need to go
42:20we need to go
42:30yeah
42:31All right.
42:59All right.
43:01Easy to trip and fall, even in the afternoon with the door shut.
43:27No windows, no light.
43:28It's impressive that Bernice used to go down there.
43:50You know, this was tough, old Bert.
43:54Reminds me of my great aunt.
43:56I used to get sent to a farm in Gippsland every Easter when I was a boy.
43:59She was terrifying.
44:09What?
44:10What is it?
44:24Aha.
44:29And then there was light.
44:31What do you mean?
44:32What do you mean?
44:33What do you mean?
44:34I don't know.
44:36I don't know.
44:37I don't know.
44:37We need to go.
44:56We gotta go.
45:00No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
45:04Please.
45:06Please don't take it.
45:08Just five more minutes, please.
45:11Don't have to go.
45:13Just five more minutes.
45:16Honestly, five more minutes, please.
45:19I'm sorry.
45:22I'm sorry.
45:24I'm sorry.
45:26I'm sorry.
45:28Oh, God.
45:31Oh, God.
45:36Okay, time's up.
45:38Time to go.
45:39Oh, baby.
45:40Oh, God.
45:41I'm sorry.
45:42Oh, God.
45:44Oh, God.
45:45Oh, God.
45:47Oh, God.
45:50Oh, God.
45:55Oh, God.
45:56Oh, God.
45:58Oh, God.
45:59Sorry for snoring.
46:29I don't know what to do.
46:59Washing in the morning
47:28Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, it's okay
47:30Oh, she
47:31Oh, Mom
47:49They're nothing but trouble, those people
48:09Who are you trying to kid?
48:11Who's your mob?
48:29Denise Myers
48:30Where are you going?
48:38I've got the court case, remember?
48:40The murder trial, Bernice Price
48:41Bernice Myers
48:43She married the elder boy, Price
48:47Hi, Clara
49:01I've got the court case, remember?
49:31They've got the court case, remember?
49:51They've got the court case, but the court case
49:54I need to speak to Colby.
50:19You're going to have to wait until mornings, don't you?
50:21Can't pack him right until morning.
50:22You think he's going to want to see you at 1.30 a.m. on a Sunday morning?
50:28Listen!
50:35I want to change my place.
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