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00:00¡Gracias!
00:30¡Gracias!
01:00¡Gracias!
01:30¡Gracias!
01:32¡Gracias!
01:34¡Gracias!
01:36¡Gracias!
01:38¡Gracias!
01:40¡Gracias!
01:42¡Gracias!
01:44¡Gracias!
01:46¡Gracias!
01:48¡Gracias!
01:50¡Gracias!
02:00¡Gracias!
02:30¡Gracias!
03:00¡Gracias!
03:30¡Gracias!
03:32Vianna
03:34¡Vianna!
03:36Joseph Cotner and Orson Welles
03:38What's the name of that bird?
03:40Another
03:42Alida Valley
03:44Was she stabbed?
03:46What a moron
03:48This is all one way traffic
03:50yeah
03:52a british trade delegate
03:54lost his passport in moscow five days ago
03:58¡Gracias!
04:28...and Thomas Darby.
04:30Hello, hello, hello, talking as a third bloody man.
04:34Darby?
04:35Thomas Darby, one of our old Judases.
04:39Ghosts?
04:41You want me to tell you about ghosts, Tavaraj?
04:44What can I say to you that you don't already know?
04:48He has been a Soviet citizen for the past 20 years.
04:52He lives quietly in Moscow.
04:55Inactive?
04:57He's retired.
04:58And no one's seen him for some days.
05:00He's dropped out of sight.
05:02A sick, tired old man.
05:04Our people say he's no longer in Moscow, so where is he?
05:07I've heard nothing.
05:08All I know is that he's ill.
05:10Go on.
05:12All right.
05:13Thomas Darby is dying.
05:15Perhaps he has only a few months left to live.
05:19When it happens, you can read his obituary in Pravda.
05:23He's not in Moscow.
05:24Your agents know more than the KGB, Tavaraj?
05:28It's no job.
05:30Well, if there's nothing else.
05:32Nothing.
05:33Liverpool for the cop.
05:34Duh.
05:35You've taken the pills?
05:36Until the next time, Tavaraj.
05:39It's a washout tonight, sir.
05:40Far from it.
05:41It didn't seem to me like you were getting much.
05:42No, it's all a charade booty.
05:43It's what they don't say that matters.
05:44And, er, what didn't he say this time?
05:45Fornell, McNaught and Tom Darby.
05:46The arch defectors twenty years ago, remember?
05:47Oh, no.
05:48You were still in your nappies.
05:49Fornell is dead.
05:50McNaught's round the loop.
05:51But Tom Darby was always the big one.
05:52Colonel, KGB, undercover since his university days.
05:54Hardcore double agent.
05:55Top man on our own, Section 9.
05:56And, uh...
05:57It's a washout tonight, sir.
05:58Far from it.
05:59It didn't seem to me like you were getting much.
06:00No, it's all a charade booty.
06:01It's what they don't say that matters.
06:03And, er, what didn't he say this time?
06:05Fornell, McNaught and Tom Darby.
06:07The arch defectors twenty years ago, remember?
06:10Oh, no.
06:11You were still in your nappies.
06:13Fornell is dead.
06:14McNaught's round the loop.
06:15But Tom Darby was always the big one.
06:17Colonel, KGB, undercover since his university days.
06:20Hardcore double agent.
06:22Top man on our own, Section 9, SIS.
06:25Defected from Syria and all hell broke loose.
06:28Blew out half a dozen of our major networks.
06:32I had been out of nappies quite some time, sir.
06:34Lives in Moscow.
06:35Nice pension.
06:36From the days of wine and roses, long gone.
06:39I was at school, third form.
06:41Wrong.
06:42I was junior school.
06:441950...
06:45Darby's left Moscow.
06:47A dying man.
06:48But he still hankers after the wine and roses.
06:50Or something.
06:51He's on the run and he's carrying a British passport under the name of Williams.
06:55Lewis, did you hear at all?
06:57Fine.
07:06So where is Darby running to?
07:07Where do you think?
07:08Here.
07:09He's got nowhere else to go.
07:10Did Shinkov tell you all that?
07:12More or less, Bodhi.
07:13More or less.
07:14He brought the subject round to Moscow.
07:16He wanted to make sure I knew about Darby.
07:19Bodhi, get CI to make copies of the latest photo of Thomas Darby they've got on file.
07:24Issue them to every member of the squad.
07:26And when you three get yours, study them.
07:28Get to know every line on Darby's face.
07:36If you've finished, sir, do you think I might?
07:38Of course.
07:39Of course.
07:40Thank you.
07:42Missed yours today?
07:44Yes.
07:46Today and quite some days past.
07:50Holiday?
07:51Abroad?
07:52No.
07:55Not a holiday, but I have been abroad.
07:58Working.
08:00Good to behold.
08:02I don't know yet.
08:05It's been a long time.
08:07Passport in the name of George Henry Williams.
08:10That's right.
08:11Did they tag him?
08:13No.
08:15Oh, he won't get within a hundred miles of him, no.
08:18He's in.
08:20Darby came in through Dover at the car ferry.
08:22Press get a hold of it?
08:23No, I'm not going to.
08:24I put a red clothes down on it.
08:26For one tired old spy?
08:27That tired old spy could topple a government, start a fair old massacre and bring a lot of maggots crawling out of the woodwork.
08:33Well, it must be an embarrassment to Yashinkov and the KGB. They'd want him back.
08:37Oh, they'd want him dead.
08:39And there's a handful of ex-SIS men.
08:42Agents he blew up.
08:43People with long, ugly memories.
08:45They'd be after his blood.
08:47And there's the fourth man.
08:49Aye, the fourth man.
08:50Who's he?
08:51The mayor doesn't guess it.
08:52Maybe all wrong.
08:53A lot of speculation.
08:54Nothing positive.
08:56The banker.
08:57The fellow who stayed behind.
08:58The fellow who financed everything.
09:00Thought to be rich.
09:01Influential.
09:02Pillar of the establishment.
09:04Powerful.
09:05Respectable.
09:06Keeping his secret from everyone and still here.
09:09He oiled the cogs for the three of them twenty years ago.
09:12And with good, clean money.
09:13He underwrote every operation, every payoff, every expense to the tune of hundreds of thousands of pounds.
09:18And Darby knows who he is?
09:19Right.
09:20Well, even if Darby wasn't dying, his life wouldn't be worth a bent penny.
09:23Right again.
09:24And personally, I don't care.
09:26But we've still got to find him before anyone else does.
09:29Because I want to know why the hell he's taken it into his head to come back here.
09:32And I want to know who the fourth man is.
09:35And I want to know who the fourth man is.
09:39Sir Howell Mortimer.
09:40Stockbroker.
09:41Chairman of Howell, Hughes and Featherstone.
09:42Retired 1963.
09:43Lives in St. Albans.
09:44Sometimes, you know...
09:45Yes!
09:46Yeah!
09:47Thank you!
09:48Sir Howell Mortimer.
09:52Stockbroker.
09:54Chairman of Howell, Hughes and Featherstone.
09:55Retired 1963.
09:57Lifted n julips in St Albans.
10:01¡Gracias!
10:31¡Gracias!
11:01¡Gracias!
11:10¡Gracias!
11:31...following Derby's defection.
11:34Arthur Pulford, solicitor in a small way.
11:37Saw very little of Derby, but there is a connection.
11:40Pulford was his lawyer, and also the lawyer of Eileen Pierce.
11:44May or may not be significant.
11:47Nothing else known.
11:59He tailed O'Leary from the airport.
12:01Looks like he got too close.
12:10I found this in the jacket pocket.
12:19No London well, sir?
12:22Fairly well.
12:24Live in the country?
12:27Yes.
12:28Which part, sir?
12:30What?
12:31In the country.
12:34Hearts.
12:37Hertfordshire.
12:38Well, I picked you up at Victoria.
12:39Yes, sir.
12:44I've been visiting.
12:46Friends.
12:47Brigadier James Bernard Stadden, known as Brigadier S.
12:55Laterally, controller SIS, head of Section 4.
12:58It was Brigadier Stadden who recruited Tom Derby into the SIS in 1942, remained at his immediate superior up until Derby's defection.
13:08Officially retired, but believed, still active, as consultant to counterintelligence section.
13:14And one of these is the banker, the fourth man.
13:28Probably.
13:29Probably.
13:30Probably.
13:30Probably.
13:35You've included yourself in the list of suspects.
13:38Of course.
13:38Of course.
13:38Some of my colleagues thought, still think, it's me.
13:42The files had to be complete.
13:44Do you think it's me, Carly?
13:46No.
13:47No.
13:48No.
13:49No.
13:50Of all the men in London, I'm the one that Derby would keep farthest away from.
13:53When he defected, he left my section in shreds.
13:55He destroyed a lot of good men.
13:57I'd kill him.
13:59But for other reasons.
14:01You must have a favorite among this lot.
14:03Politician, stockbroker, peer of the realm.
14:06Not really.
14:07I need to know, Brigadier.
14:09Derby's floating around somewhere, and if the banker gets to him...
14:13Fool, he should have stayed in Moscow.
14:15Sentimentality is a mortal handicap for spies.
14:20Sentimentality?
14:21Anyway, those files are not up to date.
14:25The last CI check was a month ago.
14:27Eileen Pierce is dead.
14:29She died last Tuesday week.
14:31Natural causes.
14:33I like to keep my finger on the pulse of things.
14:36That was ten days ago.
14:37Derby was still in Moscow.
14:38Now he's here.
14:39Too much of a coincidence.
14:41Derby came back because Eileen Pierce died.
14:45Who was she?
14:46Oh, not the banker.
14:48And not Derby's cousin, either.
14:51His mistress?
14:52A lovely old-fashioned turn of phrase, isn't it?
14:55Oh, well, Derby was human.
14:56She was very attractive.
14:58He knew her husband.
14:59Met him in Spain when Derby was active with the Iberian section.
15:03Politically naive.
15:04Derby wouldn't come back just to mourn at Eileen Pierce's grave.
15:08Sentimentality.
15:09Not enough.
15:10Well, together they compounded an unforeseen mystic.
15:15What the devil does that mean?
15:17They had a child.
15:18It was an occupational hazard for mistresses in the days before the pill.
15:23Eileen Pierce gave birth to a baby girl some twenty years ago.
15:27Name of Helen Pierce.
15:28Derby came back to see his daughter.
15:31Sentimentality.
15:33It's a cardinal sin, especially for traitors.
15:36Find her and we find him.
15:38Not difficult.
15:39She lives in Lewisham somewhere.
15:40Who else knows?
15:42Most of your suspects.
15:44The banker certainly does, and the KGB, of course.
15:48If he goes to her, he's dead.
15:50I'd say so.
15:52But, uh, give Derby his due.
15:55He's a pro.
15:56At least he was.
15:58Maybe senility and sentimentality breed carelessness.
16:02Uh, thank you, Brigadier.
16:04Oh, please.
16:05I'd like to give you new boys all the help I can.
16:09Now, it's just like old times.
16:12With Derby hell-bent on stirring things up again.
16:17Good hunting.
16:19Thank you.
16:22Just like old times.
16:29Hello.
16:30Is that you, Sorensen?
16:31Stanton here.
16:32Yes, Stanton.
16:33I thought you and some of the others might like to know that Derby is back.
16:38Thomas Darby.
16:39That's right.
16:40Probably here in London.
16:41Oh, yes.
16:42Yes, I'll tell them.
16:43Yes, thank you.
16:44Thank you, sir.
16:45Thank you, sir.
16:46Thank you.
16:47Thank you.
16:48Thank you, sir.
16:49Thank you.
16:50Thank you, sir.
16:51Thank you, sir.
16:52Thank you.
16:53Thank you, sir.
16:54Thank you.
16:55Thank you, sir.
16:56Probably here in London.
16:57Oh, yes.
16:59Yes, I'll tell them.
17:03Yes, thank you.
17:05Thank you, sir.
17:26Fortunately, we got a call from C.I. Central to say that Liam O'Leary came in.
17:31O'Leary? The jackal of Dublin.
17:34Yeah, they said they had him safely tabbed and followed by their duty man at the airport, this man, Forrester.
17:39He was recently transferred from military intelligence.
17:42They would have given him a proper brief, only they were a little bit busy, you know.
17:46And about the same time, Pietro Calilari came in from Amsterdam.
17:50Ah, another jackal, like dogs around the boon.
17:53Anyway, Forrester took it on his own initiative to jump O'Leary.
17:56It didn't do much good.
17:58Took two in the chest.
17:59O'Leary took off out the window.
18:01At least he left his gear behind.
18:03Our nurse came in after Central made their second report.
18:07And we got in before C.I.D. and found that in O'Leary's jacket, sir.
18:10Target photo. Anyone else see it?
18:11No, sir.
18:13Thank God for small mercies.
18:16The banker's bringing them in.
18:18He's the only one who could afford the most expensive hitmen in Europe.
18:22So where is Calinari?
18:23Last.
18:24He gave the C.I.M.A.N. the slip in Topnicott Road.
18:26Damn.
18:28All this for Derby.
18:29It has to be more than just sentimentality.
18:31Got Helen Pearce's address.
18:34Yeah.
18:34Low rental area.
18:35She must be pretty hard up.
18:36I've got somebody watching the place.
18:37Is she there?
18:37No.
18:38I want you too watching the place.
18:40I want to know when Helen Pearce gets back, the moment she gets back.
18:44I want to know the instant Derby shows up, or O'Leary, or Calinari, or Yashinkov's heavies.
18:47And Uncle Tom Cobbley.
18:48Or anyone.
18:50You said something about dust, Bodie.
18:52Well, that's right.
18:52Twenty-year-old dust, but it's lethal.
18:54It can still choke you to death.
18:57Ask him.
18:57Was it Forrester?
19:00I knew him.
19:02And you knew a bloody fool.
19:17Not a very pleasant place to drop you, sir.
19:19Still, we've all got to go sometime.
19:22Thank you for a pleasant journey.
19:25You changed, sir.
19:25You keep it.
19:29Oh, thank you, sir.
19:30Good luck, sir.
19:31Good luck, sir.
19:55Good luck, sir.
20:25Good luck, sir.
20:28Good luck, sir.
20:33Good luck, sir.
20:43¿Puedo traducir?
20:53¿Puedo traducir?
20:55¿Por qué traducir cuando puedes escribir tu propio?
20:58¿Qué de la Secretaría de Secretería?
21:00¿Puedo cambiar los nombres para proteger los inocentes?
21:05Si te hubiera de reminiscer, me gustaría no.
21:08¿Better recuerdos?
21:10¿Betteras?
21:13We have a visitor.
21:16Tom Darby.
21:19¿Voy a ir?
21:20Sí.
21:23¿Mata de honor, creo?
21:27Hello, hello.
21:31I'm sorry.
21:33¿Do I know you?
21:38You.
21:40A prodigal father.
21:41Keep looking at your mother's grave.
21:47Please.
21:47Please try to act normally.
21:50I'm sorry if I gave you a shock.
21:53Normally.
21:56There wasn't any easy way of getting in touch with you.
21:59There wasn't any way of warning you.
22:00You appear from nowhere after 20 years and say, act normally.
22:12How did you get here?
22:13Oh, tricks and good luck.
22:18Did the authorities know you're back?
22:20Probably.
22:21You're in danger.
22:22No, it doesn't really matter.
22:23Yes, it does.
22:24I'm all right.
22:26I still have an instinct to do these things.
22:30I've been very careful.
22:31I can still make myself invisible.
22:35Oh.
22:36It's a knack.
22:37Father.
22:40An old talent.
22:41Yes.
22:41I wonder just how good they were.
22:59Who?
22:59The old brigade.
23:02The spies that came in from the cold.
23:04Brigadier Stadden's mob.
23:06It was all dark corners.
23:08Back alleys.
23:09Grey dust.
23:11Cowley reckons they were good.
23:12He was just starving then.
23:14Never send a boy in a man's errand, they'll pinch his bike.
23:17George Cowley, Words of Wisdom, Chapter One.
23:20You know, Cowley came in just after Derby went missing.
23:23Which means Derby pinched his bike.
23:26You know, I wish Cowley had stayed right where he was.
23:29He knows this general surveillance gets right up my nose.
23:33Relax.
23:35I'll lift my mind onto a higher transcendental plane.
23:38Yeah.
23:40I could run the 230 at Haydox.
23:43I've just had a very nasty thought.
23:45Forgot to phone your bookie.
23:46Somebody ought to go and check that place.
23:48Oh, the pierce place?
23:50She's not in.
23:51Lewis said.
23:52I know she's not in, but it doesn't mean to say there's not somebody waiting for her inside.
23:56Well, Cowley said nothing about turning the place over.
23:58What, Calinari and O'Leary are pros, mate.
24:00They're not just going to walk up and down in broad daylight, are they?
24:04Somebody's got to go and check.
24:13Cool.
24:14Heads.
24:17Tails.
24:18Oh, well, I bet flirty gut wasn't even placed.
24:23Ready?
24:242.30, Haydox, Paul.
24:30Two bleeps if anyone shows, okay?
24:34For God's sake, try and stay awake, will he?
24:41Oil.
24:41Oil.
24:43Yeah.
24:44Flirty gut.
24:4525 to 1.
24:48I've got a tip.
24:49It would be cool.
25:19It would be quite understandable if you despise me, haven't you?
25:23How can I despise you?
25:25I don't understand what you did or why you did it.
25:28But I couldn't hate you for it.
25:31And nothing else matters.
25:32I hope your mother understood.
25:36My mother loved you up until the moment she died.
25:48Did she have the pain?
25:50No.
25:51She died in her sleep.
25:58Did she ever speak to you about a solicitor?
26:01Someone who looked after her affairs?
26:03Yes.
26:04It was the same person?
26:07Yes, I suppose so.
26:08There wasn't much for him to do ever, but he looked after things for over 20 years.
26:14Good.
26:18You're not well, are you?
26:21No, I'm afraid not.
26:22Well, I'm afraid not.
26:23You're not well.
26:25I'm afraid not.
26:27I'm afraid not.
26:28You're not well.
26:29I'm afraid not.
26:32¡Gracias!
27:02¡Gracias!
27:32¡Gracias!
27:34¡Gracias!
27:51Thomas Darby is dying.
27:54Perhaps he has only a few more months to live.
27:58When it happens, you can read his obituary in Pravda.
28:04He's playing it pretty close to his chest.
28:06He's really only giving you the bare bones.
28:07I know that.
28:08He's saying that if a bullet doesn't finish Darby soon enough, his heart will.
28:12So, he's come home to die, prompted by the death of his mistress
28:15and the need to see his forgotten love child.
28:18It's more than that.
28:20Taste a pint of bitter again, see an oak tree and leaf walk a country lane.
28:24More.
28:25Does it matter?
28:26Yes.
28:28Maybe you're right.
28:29I know damn well I'm right.
28:31You read this, I suppose.
28:34Thomas Darby's book.
28:35I read Spy at Night.
28:37Yes, I've read it.
28:38You know how much people have.
28:39It was a bestseller.
28:41It doesn't tell us anything we don't know already.
28:42That's right.
28:43It's supposed to be a big expose.
28:45It turned out to be a damp squid.
28:47Some people say it was written by a bunch of trapped journalists.
28:50Still, it sold a few million.
28:53Enough to make Darby a fortune.
28:55But it didn't.
28:57Royalties, those they'd bother to collect, would all have gone to the state.
29:00So?
29:01Enough to make a man sour.
29:04Still not reasoning enough.
29:05The book's written, that's history.
29:06Yes.
29:07It's not the book he could have written.
29:08Probably it did write.
29:10What do you mean?
29:11His own records, his diaries, his own story, the truth, the whole chronicle.
29:17Naming real names, real places, real proof.
29:20Enough to blow every facet of the establishment sky high.
29:25That's the book Red Spy at night should have been.
29:27A second book.
29:29Somewhere, naming real names like that of the banker.
29:32It'd be worth a fortune.
29:34Oh, he'd never get it published.
29:35Not here.
29:37But foreign publishers would jump with it.
29:40Swiss, French, Dutch, dynamite.
29:42They'd be a fortune for it.
29:44Anything he'd care to ask.
29:45Enough to keep Helen Pearson comfort for the rest of her life.
29:48I need to watch, Cal.
29:52This'll tell us when someone gets worried.
29:54How do we get out?
29:55Look, don't worry.
29:56Too many clothes shaves.
29:57I had the clothes shave, me lad.
29:59And for the money we're getting, we'll take on anything they throw.
30:02Maybe he hasn't contacted her.
30:03And she knows nothing.
30:04Look, don't worry.
30:06I'll get something out of her now.
30:07Don't worry about it.
30:18Yes, that would bring Derby back, a bequest to his daughter.
30:27Sell it to a foreign publisher, deed the royalties to her, then die in peace.
30:31And blow another hundred skyline.
30:34A second manuscript.
30:36Stirring it up even from the grave.
30:38His mistress, Eileen Pierce.
30:40She'd be the only one he could trust it with.
30:42And she's dead.
30:43And she's dead.
31:13And she's dead.
31:43One squeak, one twitch.
32:00You know something, Helen Pierce?
32:02There's a couple of dozen places in the human body where a bullet can hurt and mate.
32:06It won't kill.
32:08It's seen like you've never dreamed.
32:10I know them all.
32:11What do you want?
32:12You know what I want, Helen?
32:14Just two scraps of information.
32:16I don't know what you want.
32:18I've no time for messing, Helen.
32:20No time at all.
32:22Now look, where's your father at this moment?
32:24Go on, now tell me.
32:25And where's his papers hidden?
32:27Because they're not here.
32:28They've searched the place.
32:29Now where are they?
32:30Come on, Helen.
32:31Oh, God.
32:32Now look.
32:34Where is Thomas Dyer?
32:35Oh, my God.
32:36I can't.
32:37You can and you will.
32:39Oh, why can't you leave him alone?
32:41He's an old man.
32:43He's ill.
32:44He's ill.
32:44Where are you?
32:44Oh, God.
32:46Oh, my God.
32:47He's...
32:47We're at the back, so where he's waiting for me to sting Bill Hill.
32:52Do you hear that, Helen Arnie?
32:54Yes.
32:54Hurry it up, will you?
32:56I want to know how we get out of here.
32:58Have you got the manuscript with him?
32:59I don't know anything about any manuscript.
33:02It's honest to God I don't.
33:03Oh, God.
33:04Oh, God.
33:35Cover the back.
33:45Oh, Leary's around here somewhere.
33:47He's got a girl.
33:49Darby's at the back.
33:50How about the Italian?
33:50He's out of it for the time being.
33:53Now, easy, lads, easy.
33:55They don't have nothing to lose.
33:56You'll get about a hundred yards.
33:57You're in the middle of London.
33:58A hundred yards, you say?
34:00We'll have to see, won't we?
34:01It's all over, chum.
34:03Oh, not by a long chalk, it isn't.
34:05Come on.
34:07Now, keep your distance or I'll blow her head off, all right?
34:10Lewis?
34:11Yeah?
34:12Darby's out of the back somewhere.
34:13Okay.
34:14Come on.
34:15Come on.
34:24Come on.
34:25I don't want to understand.
34:29Come on.
34:34Come on.
34:36Come on.
34:37Come on.
34:38Come on.
34:38¡Gracias!
35:08¡Gracias!
35:10¡Gracias!
35:12¡Gracias!
35:14Hello, Tom.
35:18Sorenson.
35:20Nice of you to remember.
35:22I think of you too.
35:24Every time there's a bloody chill in the air.
35:28You know the routine.
35:30Get in.
35:38Nope.
35:40No...
35:42No.
35:56No!
35:58No!
36:00¡Gracias!
36:30Whisky 4 from Whisky 2, good for. Could you meet this with my brother, I have a car, bud?
36:33Beautiful. Beautiful, isn't it?
36:36The whole operation turned from a viable proposition into an utter shambles in the space of a few hours.
36:43What sort of story do you think I'm going to concoct for the police?
36:45How do I keep this out of the damn newspapers, eh?
36:47I thought a full clampdown.
36:48Thought? What bloody thought? You've never had a decent thought between you.
36:52Half the streets are nearly dragging Helen Pierce away.
36:56Well, we've got Calinari.
36:58As long as we've got him, the shrinks will get something out of him, won't we?
37:00When he went through that window door, the glass made a fair job in his throat.
37:04He won't be doing any talking for months if he happens to live.
37:06That hadn't been for Yashinkov's hatchet, man.
37:09I mean, we didn't expect...
37:10Then you should have done. Yashinkov had to protect the banker.
37:14For all we know, Yashinkov probably set up the whole thing.
37:16He would be somewhere on the sidelines, had to be.
37:18Well, we could have tailed O'Leary.
37:20And then what? He's not going to blaze a trail for us.
37:23Or did you expect him to lead you by the hand right up to the banker's front door?
37:25And what about Darby? Where the devil is he now?
37:27And his blasted manuscript, a shambles, a complete and utter shambles.
37:32We're not the only ones who've lost Darby.
37:34O'Leary's lost him, too.
37:36All he can go after now is the manuscript.
37:38The car they took Darby away in.
37:43Did you get a line on it?
37:44Yes, sir.
37:45It's registered owner of someone called Sorensen.
37:47Martin Sorensen.
37:48Retired civil servant.
37:49Sorensen?
37:50Yes, sir.
37:51And I've got his address.
37:52He lives in Pulum.
37:53Gray Mouse, you wee man.
37:55Yes.
37:56Do you know him, sir?
37:56Yes, I know him.
37:58More of your dust, Bodie.
38:00Martin Sorensen's an ex-SIS man.
38:03One of Brigadier Stadden's old mob.
38:05One of the many agents Tom Darby put the finger on when he defected.
38:09The KGB rounding him up gave him hell.
38:12We exchanged him at the Berlin Wall 15 years ago.
38:15He was in hospital for 18 months afterwards.
38:17You can imagine how he feels about Thomas Darby.
38:20Where are you taking me?
38:22Somewhere quiet.
38:23To kill me.
38:26Are you under the impression you don't deserve a bullet, Darby?
38:31I was only doing my job.
38:34Just like you.
38:35That's right.
38:36I...
38:37I entered the service when I was 19.
38:45I've been a serving officer of the KGB all my adult life.
38:51But you carry no wounds, Darby.
38:53Do you recognize our driver?
38:59No, I don't suppose, sir.
39:02She looked very different when you were her controller.
39:06Long blonde hair.
39:09Slim.
39:11Lovely.
39:12And now she aches.
39:17Just like me.
39:21Who is she?
39:23Just another name.
39:25Just another victim.
39:28Picked her up in East Germany.
39:30She was at a safe house.
39:32She and two others.
39:34When they came for her.
39:35A house you had organized.
39:38A house you had organized.
39:41Ah, my God.
39:45Elsa.
39:47Elsa, God.
39:48That's right.
39:50The other two were executed.
39:52In camera.
39:53She spent two years in the Dresden Interrogation Center.
40:00She never talks about what they did to her.
40:02We're an exclusive little club.
40:06Those of us who survived.
40:09We always think of you as our founder.
40:14We might never hear of Thomas Darby again.
40:16Never.
40:17Sorensen could bury him deeper than a coal mine.
40:20Not even Yashenkov and an army of Ivans.
40:22Or O'Leary and a battalion of hitmen would ever find him.
40:24And that would be awkward.
40:26Execution.
40:27Well, Sorensen's not going to be playing tiddlywinks with him, is he?
40:30So for the moment we concentrate on finding O'Leary and Helen Pierce.
40:33Where do we begin?
40:35In the office of Arthur Pulford's solicitor.
40:39He's the only other connection between Darby and Helen's dead mother, Eileen Pierce.
40:44They were both clients of Pulford's.
40:46So it's logical to assume that Pulford is handling Eileen Pierce's estate.
40:51It's possible that he would have all her papers and documents,
40:55including anything Darby may have left with her for safekeeping.
40:59The daughter probably knows all about Pulford.
41:02Sooner or later, O'Leary would get his name and address out of her.
41:16Are you, uh, fond of a bed, Helen?
41:42Well, I like a wager when the odds are right.
41:44And I'll bet there's a fortune in that box.
41:48And I'm not in currency, you understand,
41:50but, uh, it's worth a devil of a lot to someone.
42:00Ah, let's have a look in here.
42:02Ah, bless your dear dead mother, Helen.
42:08She's not let us down, eh?
42:12You know, it's a great gift,
42:16being able to write.
42:20Maybe he hasn't arrived yet.
42:21That's what we said last time.
42:23Yeah.
42:24You know, it's going to be tight in there, don't you?
42:25Like a spinster's girdle, mate.
42:27You know, it's going to be tight in there.
42:57You know, it's going to be tight in there.
43:27No, it's going to be tight.
43:29¡Gracias!
43:59That's Helen Pearce. She's pretty shaken.
44:01You've got a knack for stating that.
44:03Yeah, well, if you read through that, she'll find the name of your banker.
44:05No need for that. He'll not be far away.
44:07Eh?
44:08He'll want to get his hands on this as quickly as possible.
44:10He wouldn't risk O'Leary having to carry it halfway around London.
44:16Miss Pearce.
44:20Where's my father?
44:21I don't know.
44:23Not for sure. I can make a guess, but that's all it would be.
44:25He's very ill.
44:27He's dying.
44:28Yes, I know that.
44:30Look, all he wanted was...
44:32And I know exactly what he wanted.
44:34But we'll get to all that soon enough.
44:36He's paid for all he's done.
44:38There's something I must know, Miss Pearce, that's desperately important, believe me.
44:43Did he make a phone call after he found the manuscript?
44:47What?
44:48Did O'Leary make a phone call?
44:52Yes.
44:53Did he mention the person's name he was calling?
44:55No, I don't think so.
44:56Well, did you hear anything he said?
45:00I can't remember.
45:01Try, try hard, please.
45:03He said...
45:05He said he'd got it.
45:07Yes.
45:08And whoever it was he was talking to should come and get it.
45:12He'd meet him outside.
45:14I...
45:15I...
45:19I can't remember anymore.
45:22That's enough.
45:23Is it?
45:24The banker is no more than a stone's throw away, waiting for O'Leary to deliver that manuscript into his hands.
45:31We're looking for a big expensive car with a VIP sitting in it.
45:35The Right Honourable Paul Cantwell, I believe.
45:48I have a message for you from Lyam O'Leary.
45:50I'm afraid he can't make it.
45:52Neither can Pietro Calinari otherwise detain you.
45:55Don't worry though, the manuscript is safe.
45:59I've got it.
46:00All right, you know where to take him.
46:02I'm sorry I can't come with you, sir.
46:05I have to go and look for Thomas Darby.
46:07We didn't kill him, Cowley.
46:35We didn't kill him, Cowley.
46:36His heart.
46:38You would have killed him.
46:40I don't know.
46:42I suppose we intended to.
46:44He was such a pathetic wreck.
46:47And it all happened a long time ago, eh?
46:49Ask Sorensen here, or Elsa Coren, or any of the others.
46:55I'll have him taken away.
46:57Thank you.
46:59No need for me to ask for your silence?
47:01None at all.
47:06Uh, was there a manuscript, Cowley?
47:10Yes.
47:12Where is it?
47:14What do you think?
47:19No use asking if I could read it, I suppose.
47:21None at all.
47:23Makes you a very powerful man, Cowley.
47:28Guardian of a thousand secrets.
47:30Aye.
47:32And don't you forget it, Brigadier.
47:33Hello, Comrade.
47:34Hello, Tovaric.
47:35A lot has happened since we last met.
47:36It would seem so.
47:37There's the body of a dead man in this box.
47:39Colonel Thomas Darby perhaps?
47:40Yes.
47:41There is no record in this box.
47:42Colonel Thomas Darby, perhaps.
47:43Yes.
47:44¡Gracias!
48:14It can be arranged.
48:16The news of Comrade Colonel Thomas Darby's death will be released sometime next week by Pravda.
48:22I imagine so.
48:24I think you will find that he died next Monday.
48:28I look forward to reading his obituary.
48:32Were there any papers or documents?
48:36None.
48:38I understand.
48:40I hope so, Grigol.
48:42Is there any more business, sir?
48:45Yes, I'm delivering someone to your embassy tomorrow morning.
48:48A passenger for the next available aeroflot flight to Moscow.
48:52Who is that?
48:53Comrade the Right Honorable Paul Cantwell.
48:57He is never to return to the United Kingdom.
49:01Very well.
49:02He's not very keen on going, but I'm sure you'll make him feel comfortable and at home.
49:07I understand the food at Lublienka has improved considerably in the last few years.
49:14You should come over sometime, товарищ, and try it.
49:18Oh, I doubt if I'll get the opportunity, Grigol.
49:21Pity.
49:22Will that be all?
49:23That's all.
49:24All right.
49:25Next time we ram your bloody car.
49:26Up the Moscow Dynamos.
49:27Until the next time, товарищ.
49:29촉akov Dynamos.
49:35Up the Moscow Dynamos.
49:36Up the Moscow Dynamos.
49:37Up the Moscow Dynamos.
49:38Up the Moscow Dynamos.
49:39Until the next time, товарищ.
49:41¡Suscríbete al canal!