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First broadcast 30th March/6th April 1984.

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00:00so you noticed a light in the summer house from your room yes do you have to be told everything
00:18twice we went through all this last night and you went down to investigate yes and you're still
00:23quite sure you didn't recognize the person in the summer house no impression at all not even
00:27male or female oh really how many more times i saw a light by the time i got there whoever it was had
00:33gone leaving this behind yes it's from the norwich central library i know there are no fingerprints
00:41on it except your own i think you were trying to hide it sister rolfe there was no light no unknown
00:49person just yourself then me returning later than you expected no no this book was stolen from nurse
00:54pierce's room we know that she borrowed fallon's library ticket in order to get it how old are
01:00you what does that matter just answer the question 57 of course a senior tutor you were aware that
01:11pierce was working on the private ward just before she died yes several of the regular staff were down
01:16with flu and as usual our sets were disrupted you were even present when her particular patient was
01:21admitted and mr dettinger was i i don't remember that courtney briggs operated on him twice but
01:27failed to save his life well i'm sure you're right you always are aren't you do you remember seeing mr
01:32dettinger now not especially no patients are always being admitted it isn't my job to register every
01:38single one then you can't answer the next question can you did he see you no i can't i'm sorry i see
01:45well thank you for your help sister rolfe please keep yourself available is that a request or an
01:51order request just so i know
02:00i'm sorry superintendent i know i've been difficult but you don't live here when you're off duty you can
02:06relax you don't have to put up with your colleagues right around the clock live on top of students who get
02:12more stupid and selfish with every intake you can just come back fresh to the job and say what
02:17were you doing in the summer house sister rolfe how long had you been in the summer house how long
02:21did you intend staying there you haven't lain awake half the night worried sick wondering who you are
02:27where you are and what you're doing here at the door what was all that about no idea i reckon is you asking
02:37her age perhaps uh this book's no real help it's not detailed enough hasn't even got an index well
02:43does it mention the felsenheim war trials in passing john would you ring that place up
02:51well you don't want me to go there do you just find out if nurse pierce ever got in touch with
02:55them or sent them a donation right the official war trial records are on their way are they once they
02:59can find them in the archives of the imperial war museum
03:10hey miss oh len what is it someone's put it back the rose spray the one you had made up for me
03:19what do you see there don't touch it oh who'd do that who'd do such a thing the police have searched
03:28everywhere when did you find it just now just this minute i needed my secateurs i've been doing
03:35the watering and oh len what do i do nothing we just keep quiet about it don't tell them no we
03:44can't go through all their questioning again it was bad enough last time won't hurt if we just leave
03:50it will it well they ought to know it's been found mavis think you never looked in that cupboard did you
04:02i don't like it no well neither do i but it's the best
04:07you've never asked why i needed to see you well i was so surprised len you don't think it was put
04:16there to make the police think that i did it yes i do and that's why we won't say anything all right
04:22that way we prevent anyone making anything of it
04:24that's so awful so calculated i phoned you because well i've told her last night
04:43you were right should have told her before
04:48what did she say she's taken the two youngest to her mother's
04:54i thought you'd be glad
05:01oh len
05:04i just wondered if during denton's last hours he'd said anything to you
05:08he never regained consciousness well he was conscious for about eight minutes according to
05:13the war report we handed to the police that must have been while you were fetching me from nightingale
05:19the hospital house ah possibly he certainly didn't speak to me poor soul
05:25well his wife gave me to understand that he'd suddenly become rather concerned about
05:30an aspect from his past but she was rather hysterical of course and resentful she complained
05:36to you did she i was puzzled by it why i thought i'd have a word see if he'd said anything to
05:42you're one of the nurses you mean nurse pierce i suppose yes yes it might have been pierce
05:52do you think this is something the police should know about
05:56or have we had enough unnecessary trouble as it is
06:00that's up to you isn't it since the woman confided in you i can't say
06:05i think keep it to ourselves agreed sister is there something you're trying to tell me
06:14i think i'll keep you out of it best for you not to be involved since you clearly
06:19know nothing about it have you ever been to germany sister no never in my life
06:35so
06:49yes sir
06:54thank you
07:05official record of war crimes trial Felsenheim November 45. no need a lamp
07:17for this John it's been photocopied in ghostly gray.
07:30what did that refugee place in Suffolk have to say? well they've never heard of
07:35nurse Pearce. they may get lots of anonymous donations apparently.
07:39especially from Germany. conscience money from ex-nazis they say. I don't think
07:43Pearce would have remained anonymous somehow. we are martin dettinger. polish
07:48cavalry captain. secondment. king's own light infantry. appointed to the Felsenheim
07:52court the 13th of November 1945. the military court special army order.
07:57president was a brigadier. four army officers of whom dettinger was one and a
08:01judge advocate. they tried five people four men and one woman. whom dettinger
08:07thought he recognized here as a sister. what were they charged with? that between
08:14the third and the fourth of September acting jointly and in pursuance of a
08:17common intent and acting for and on behalf of the German Reich they did
08:21willfully deliberately and wrongfully aid abet and participate in the killing of
08:24thirty-one human beings of Polish and Russian nationality. they were a Jewish
08:30slave workers suffering from TB. the place was called the Steinhof Institute
08:34previously devoted to the care of the mentally ill. but these victims weren't
08:38mentally ill? no. however the court makes the point that from 1940 many
08:44thousands of so-called mentally ill Germans were put to death with perfect
08:48legality by order of Hitler in places such as the Steinhof. and the woman whom got
08:55Grobel? yes. well she can't have been much more than the girl at the time.
09:01no she was 17 at a trial and she was found not guilty. because she was a minor?
09:07no because she wasn't present when the 31 slave workers were injected with lethal
09:11doses of Evipan. she was on leave. well she isn't a war criminal at all.
09:16Warren not in that particular instance. no. she wasn't on trial for killing German nationals.
09:23no the judge advocate makes a point of that. technically she was innocent.
09:29well she still is. i wonder how much pierce learned of this from dettinger.
09:34most of it i would think. she tried to verify it in this library book but of course it wasn't detailed enough.
09:46yes it's a record. yes thank you. yes i'll tell him. thank you.
10:04good going sir.
10:10feel right?
10:13yes. sir. um guard Grobel married a sergeant in the royal army service corps.
10:20she came with him to london when he was demobbed in 1946.
10:24the sergeant's name was alan taylor. whom guard Grobel was is the matron.
10:30mary taylor. we're there sir. home and dry. except for one thing.
10:36she wasn't here when either of the two nurses died.
10:39what? she was in amsterdam and in london john.
10:42even so. now shut up will you?
10:50i could have been reached in israel. and i take full responsibility for not contacting you.
10:55for not disrupting your visit. i could have flown back at once. i would have.
10:59i persuaded the committee we could cope without our chairman's presence.
11:03i knew how much your trip meant to you.
11:06it was something of a pilgrimage.
11:08the police have been very tactful. and with respect sir marcus your presence wouldn't have
11:13made any significant difference. if i was wrong forgive me.
11:17i understand mary of course. and there's one other thing i should mention.
11:21yours wasn't the only phone call i got last night.
11:24you're to be invited to apply for the post of director of nursing services.
11:30i was asked to convey the good news to you. oh.
11:32you're not pleased. it's no more than you deserve. the john carpenter's loss will be areas gain.
11:41and we shan't lose touch. we'll still be in your care.
11:45well i shall have to think about it.
11:48surely not. why should you hesitate. it's a logical promotion and as i say thoroughly deserved.
11:54the truth is sir marcus i've been seriously considering resignation.
11:58well courtney briggs should be back from germany now.
12:01he's coming back.
12:02one of your hunches john.
12:03i just don't see why it's so essential to speak to him before we see the matron.
12:07well we've got nothing to say to her. it's history. a piece of a past we can't use because
12:11she wasn't here when the murders were done. i said of course there's something else to it.
12:15now the fact is. dettinger told his wife he recognized one of the sisters not the matron.
12:19well he could have mistaken her for a sister. he was sedated. a pump full of painkillers.
12:24i know it's not very tidy but. oh for heaven's sake i don't care whether it's tidy just as long as it's true.
12:28good evening gentlemen. you must be uh chief superintendent doug leach.
12:38and uh inspector massingham. my name is cohen. i'm chairman of the district management team.
12:43matron's manager. i just had a word with her. she spoke to me yesterday on my return from israel
12:47so i'm fully informed of the double tragedy that has occurred here.
12:51she speaks very highly of you doug leach. are you anywhere near solving the case? we're close.
13:02i uh mustn't ask if it's one of our own people. i'm sorry sir marcus. of course i understand. you
13:06must forgive me. my association with this hospital goes back to the war. so do our inquiries. as far
13:14back is that? some aspects of history never die. no my trip to israel made me very aware of that. not
13:19that i needed reminding. as ye sow ye shall reap. by the way you can have every confidence in matron.
13:26she can cope with any crisis. we're more than fortunate to have her. in fact i've lived in fear
13:31of the day when we would lose her to one of the great london hospitals. several have invited her to
13:35apply in the past. but she refused. always. luckily for us. well gentlemen i won't keep you. if i can be of
13:45any further help don't hesitate to contact me. thank you sir marcus. good night. good night.
13:55well we'll have to disillusion him about mary taylor. and how.
14:05in guard grebel mary taylor was found not guilty. on that one charge. are you telling me she had
14:12nothing to do with the deaths of all those mentally ill patients at the steinhardt? that's
14:15condemnation by smear. even so. you're doing exactly what heather pierce did. what anybody would do sir.
14:20matron is tarred with the same brush. i'm sorry but she is. you're being too scrupulous by half.
14:25and what's more i detect bias to put it politely. the matron mary taylor. yes.
14:29oh i'm glad you're still here. may i come in? of course. thank you.
14:39i have some information. it's highly confidential. but i think it may be relevant.
14:44mrs dettinger told me her husband recognized one of the senior staff here.
14:49a german woman now naturalized. who used to work in a nazi concentration camp. i've since confirmed this.
14:59it was out of love wasn't it? you hoped to shield me didn't you? please.
15:13i didn't do it mary. whatever you say i didn't. i thought and thought brum.
15:19only you know of my past.
15:22nurse pierce came to you and mentioned my former name didn't she?
15:25she didn't come to me. i'm certain she did. because i saw mr dettinger recognize me just
15:32as i recognized him. and i'm sure he remembered my name. it haunted me all through the conference
15:39that he might confide in someone. but i told myself it'd probably be you that he spoke to. and that was
15:43a sort of comfort because you know already. and my secret was safe with you. but when i realized
15:50that pierce nursed him before her death. pierce of all people. the teller of tales a blackmailer.
16:00then i knew. i'm right. i know i am. so please tell me the truth brum. for both our sakes you must.
16:12you've imagined it all mary. don't you feel any guilt at all? i'm not guilty.
16:19just as you weren't guilty at felsenheim. i was officially innocent.
16:28you were only a girl. you always take my side. of course. of course i do.
16:34what actually did nurse pierce say to you? nothing. not a thing.
16:44you managed to do it so as not to involve me at all, didn't you? twice.
16:49and poor joe fallon's only fault was to have seen you the first time.
16:53and she was pregnant too. must have hurt you dreadfully to know that you had to poison her and
16:59the baby. fallon. who might have become as good a nurse as you. only the deepest kind of caring
17:06could have led you to such a terrible solution. oh brum.
17:13you loved me enough to murder for me. and now because i care for you after all our years together
17:20i beg you tell me the truth. it's too late for anything else isn't it? your visit to germany.
17:29why i wonder did you feel you had to do our work for us instead of coming to us straight away?
17:34frankly i was reluctant to tell you. i debated with myself because if it became public knowledge
17:40this woman's career would be ruined. the invaluable work she does here. her whole life wasted.
17:47surely you can be discreet about it. this hospital needs her. and i'm convinced that she is entirely
17:54innocent and in no way connected with your investigation. mr courtney briggs you've come
18:01to me now because you've had a telephone call from mrs dettinger telling you that i know about
18:05felsenheim. and moreover the cheat found out and told me about your trip to germany.
18:10what i still don't understand but what i mean to find out is why you hope to keep it a secret from me.
18:20i wasn't gonna have it. i wasn't gonna have pierce coming to me like that without a secret.
18:26i wasn't having nurse pierce knowing about that. it was out of the question.
18:31but nurse pierce got it wrong you said. yes. stupid girl. she thought i was you mary.
18:37god grobel. mind you i didn't disillusion her. oh no.
18:46what did she say exactly? she asked to see me in private in my office.
18:51so self-righteous. she said she had certain information that i'd been a war criminal in
18:57germany. worked in a concentration camp. she'd verified it all from a library book.
19:02i said you're quite wrong nurse. she said she'd keep it secret if i made regular donations to some
19:11refugee place in suffolk.
19:13i told her to get on with her work. i told her to get on with her work. mind her own business and
19:17stop listening to silly gossip. and then she kept hinting. looking.
19:23and i knew that if she did tell anyone else then the real truth would come out.
19:29and it would hurt you dear. worse. ruin your life.
19:37so then i...
19:40well... something had to be done. that was obvious. pierce had brought it on herself.
19:47i got the potassium cyanide from the workshop. put 10 milligrams into my own bottle of milk.
19:58i had to be very careful with the top. turning it round and round to loosen it so that it wouldn't
20:05look tampered with. you wore gloves?
20:09it was easy to think of everything as a nurse once trained to. i put the bottle in my bag.
20:20but nurse fallon saw you come out of the demonstration.
20:23yeah. i was furious with her. she was meant to be in the sick bay.
20:28and on top of that when i got back to the ward the police were there to interview mr dettinger.
20:32i don't know how i managed to keep going at all. i kept saying to myself be sensible. don't worry.
20:39it's done now. thank goodness she's away. you did this for mary. remember for mary. pierce deserved
20:45to die. and the police everywhere all the time all over the place. i couldn't even put the rose
20:51spray back when i wanted to. after i poisoned fallon's whiskey i cried all night. i
21:02kept wanting to go down to save her. order a stomach wash. nurse her. hold her hand till she was better.
21:12i understand my dear. i had to keep that rose spray in my bag till today. all this time.
21:21the only thing that helped me really was knowing that it was all for you dearest.
21:28and you weren't ever to know. i made up my mind about that. that's why i kept saying it wasn't me just now.
21:37because you weren't supposed to know. that was my plan.
21:42mind you. i don't think the police know do they? we fooled them mary. police.
21:58i think they may find out. but why? they haven't so far.
22:09it's been such a burden to me. you want to tell the very people you know you can't. i nearly went to
22:15that awful superintendent twice this last week. the only thing that held me back was knowing that i'd
22:22done it to protect you.
22:28that our secret's safe now. isn't it?
22:31i don't know.
22:37the key has got to be that initial mistake. dettinger half conscious thinking that the matron mary taylor
22:42was one of the sisters and telling us pierce. the pamphlet for the german refugee home clearly
22:48indicates that pierce knew about imgad gudervo. and of all the secrets which he held that's got to be
22:54the strongest motive for murder. now if we assume that it was the motive then the prime suspect has got
22:59to be mary taylor. except we know she couldn't have done it because she wasn't here. so who else
23:05might have murdered pierce because of that secret? we've ruled out corny briggs. there's no possible
23:11motive. in any case his trip to germany to verify the facts clearly indicates he didn't know matron's
23:17real identity. so we're left with brumfitt, rolf and gearing. we can discount gearing. i don't think
23:25she's involved in this at all. rolf? when we found her with a library book and she became a prime
23:31suspect had she known about matron's real identity she would have surely told us about it and therefore
23:35cleared herself. so once again we're left with brumfitt. who trained with mary taylor who's worked with
23:42her ever since. her closest friend. the person of all others are most likely to have known and killed
23:47to protect her. what about courtney briggs and joe fallon's death? i almost wanted to believe it but
23:56no. fallon died because she saw or heard pierce's murderer. went up from fallon's statement that she
24:02hid in the corridor downstairs and heard the murderer's footsteps. when the coast was clear i.e. when the
24:09murderer had gone into the demonstration room fallon went up to a room coming down a minute or two later
24:15and meeting brumfitt coming out of the demonstration room. in time she'd have made the connection.
24:22and brumfitt couldn't risk it.
24:29have you finished your tea? yes. are you feeling better? hmm i think we could both do with a breath of air.
24:59it's dark outside. there's a moon.
25:09i do feel calmer. didn't i say you would?
25:29i do feel calmer. there's a moon. i do feel calmer.
25:34there. just a walk round the garden.
25:39there. just a walk round the garden.
25:47it's 10 to 11. yes it's just another job sir there's no way of keeping her out of it
26:08the whole past regurgitated in the newspapers and on television
26:13who will she be a witness for prosecution or the defense
26:43yes what we'll be there that was sister roth there's a fire in the summer house
27:10there's a fire in the summer house i've run the fire brigade i know so did i
27:31where's the fire brigade for god's sake
27:39you saw it from my window
27:52there you are matron do we know how to study
28:04do we know how to study what are these are the sirens julia said she smelt petrol i did
28:18it can't be accidental can it
28:48do you think it's us of course it is what a damn forecast
28:51i think it must be sister thank heaven there was nothing of value in there
28:56is
28:58is
29:02is
29:06is
29:10Shall I move everybody back that way?
29:29What?
29:30There.
29:31What?
29:32No, Stuart.
29:33But...
29:34No, for God's sake, get back.
29:36If you insist, Superintendent.
29:38Hi, John.
29:42Get them away now.
29:43Get screens around this place, and we'll
29:45Bill Bailey and the pathologist.
29:46Yes, sir.
29:53Sir, but I...
29:54Yes, I know, Sergeant.
29:59What are the screens for the summer house on your vantage?
30:03OK, that's it.
30:04Good night.
30:05Thank you, sir.
30:08You can still feel the heat for your shoes.
30:24Oh, my God.
30:25Did you get through with them, John?
30:26Sir.
30:27Right, Sergeant.
30:29Tell your governor gets here you're in charge.
30:31Put the screens up there.
30:32Move all that stuff back with them.
30:33Tell the firemen no more water.
30:34I rang the ward.
30:35Then I went to her room.
30:36There's a note on the mantelpiece.
30:38Get it, would you, John?
30:39I'll go.
30:40Get it.
30:41What's your name?
30:42I'll go.
30:43I'll go.
30:44I'll go.
30:45I'll go.
30:46Let's go.
30:47I'll go.
30:48I'll go.
30:49Let's go.
30:51I'll go.
30:52Let's go.
30:53I rang the ward then I went to her room as a note on the mantelpiece get it
31:05would you John you look tired superintendent
31:15was she dead when you put her in the fire we went for a walk then she said she
31:27wanted to go to her ward for an hour and I came back here but she didn't go to a
31:30ward only for ten minutes they said that's why I looked in her room yes well
31:35that would be logical to whom it may concern I killed Heather Pierce and
31:53Josephine Fallon Pierce had discovered something about my past which was no
31:58concern of hers and was threatening to blackmail me the police know how I did it
32:02on both occasions I'm sure it was easy to poison the feed with ten milligrams of
32:07potassium cyanide but Fallon saw me outside the demo room after poisoning her
32:11I had to keep the rose spray in my bag because mr. Courtney Briggs was waiting to
32:15take me across to the ward I kept it by me all the time which rather preyed on my
32:19mind so in the end I just put it back there is nothing else to say except I am
32:23sorry no one else knew what I was doing and no one helped me your sincerely Ethel
32:30Bromford SRM did you know how she did it yes and why we both of us know Heather
32:42Pierce was a potential blackmailer I wonder what she raked up from Paul Brom's past
32:46do you know that she tried out about Felsenheim so have you evidently of course
32:52she told me about it when we were students together in Newcastle she lived
32:57most of her childhood in Germany but her grandmother was English after the trial
33:02she naturally went free after our training together we went to the local
33:06maternity hospital to learn midwifery and then came here I've known her all
33:12those years superintendent I've watched her pay over and over for what happened at
33:18the Steinhoff Institute when she was a girl remember 16 as a woman I know what
33:26she did for this hospital and for her patients the past has no relevance if only
33:32that were true it hasn't believe me I understand why you're lying to me oh come
33:38on this letter is a fake it was dictated by you matron to her and we know that you
33:46are Irmgard Grobel so stop play acting sister Bromford didn't souse herself in petrol and
33:52set light to herself either so let's start there shall we with you killing her after she
33:57confessed to you and God knows you had enough time John thank you I wish it
34:14wasn't necessary for you to lie to me you have her note your subordinate assumed
34:18too much no John wouldn't do that he's a good policeman and it is true I didn't
34:23like what I was finding out about you so what can you do now try and prove that you killed
34:32Bromford what evidence have you none so far there won't be any I wouldn't count on that if
34:39you're certain you can tell me how I did it can't you you begged her to confess and she did I
34:46can't say how you persuaded her to write the letter that must have been difficult I
34:52imagine you told her there ought to be something in writing in case anything
34:56happened to either of you final proof if proof were needed and then I suppose you
35:00gave her a sedative it would be natural enough and took her for a walk a breath of
35:04fresh air just as far as the summer house then when she became drowsy or worse
35:08he used the petrol stored there for the motor mower a match to all that junk and you slipped away
35:15let me smell your hands you wash them so how will you prove all this by patience and hard work to
35:29redeem your reputation at the expense of mine yes it won't be easy the coroner will accept that note for
35:38what it is I must warn you that if your hope in murdering Bromford was to protect yourself from
35:55the past then first Courtney Briggs knows about it and second the coroner of what will be a resumed
36:00inquest to include all three deaths may choose to sit with the jury and not attempt to inhibit their
36:05questions to witnesses such as Courtney Briggs and myself so it all come out anyway if by that
36:12time I haven't proved the case I shall nevertheless as officer in charge press for a verdict of murder
36:16by personal persons unknown so the investigation can continue until I finally proved you killed
36:22Bromford you are of course officially innocent I'm used to being that superintendent yes such a pity
36:33isn't it yes
37:03do I gather you've been unable to prove anything against Mary yes I failed and I've given up saying
37:09so far the file remains open of course but it seems unlikely we should get any new evidence now
37:14after such a long time you mustn't blame yourself Doug Dish but I do well I mustn't take up any more of your
37:23time we've closed Nightingale house did you know because of what happened partly it was always
37:29inconvenient old-fashioned not really suitable to the nurses training school we've had great wrangles
37:33about it in my view it should be demolished and a new place built well I expect you'll get your way
37:41we'll see funding's a problem of course poor Mary I wonder what she does all day it's my belief
37:51she killed for the hospital sake as much as for her own or am I being sentimental I don't know most motifs
38:04are mixed don't they goodbye God bless you and her
38:21like you
38:48yes good morning I believe you have a mrs. Taylor staying here I tried I'd like
39:05to speak to her about me well you better come in thank you
39:18I tell you you're here you can wait in the TV lounge through the dining room there what name don't these
39:48some days I expect you others I don't I didn't today Sir Marcus Cohen thought I ought to know
40:00that you'd send him a postcard I suppose postcards are for general consumption why here it's a long
40:11way from Nightingale house I used to come here as a student are you about to face me with evidence
40:20of what you suspect superintendent they're quite right I haven't found any and you're no good
40:27reason for coming here that depends on what you I have nothing to confess if that's what you were
40:37hoping for shall we sit down what do you do all day I read a lot are you working no I live on my
40:53savings you've given up district nursing you knew about that yes they found out about the case they
41:02you're quite polite about it really British how is Sir Marcus he loved me you know so I suspected you
41:13can't shake off your profession can you no I think Sir Marcus suffered even more than I did at the
41:20inquest after all he was hearing it all for the first time he's not an Orthodox Jew but even so
41:27Brumford blackmailed you didn't she I'm not sure what you mean superintendent
41:36presumably you told her quite early on perhaps when you were student nurses that you were
41:44em guard Grobel and have been on trial for crimes against humanity Brumford made you pay didn't she it was
41:52quite a subtle pleasure for her really no financial demand just the pressure of her continual friendship she
41:59didn't ask much a room next to her idol and the secret knowledge that the idol was totally flawed so for years you
42:07endured that closeness work beside Brumford holidays with Brumford and then when she killed for you
42:14well I can understand why you killed her you're pressing me to confess aren't you in a sense yes
42:23but a confession alone unsupported by evidence wouldn't satisfy a court your case might even
42:30be dismissed if your defense was up to the job and that wouldn't help your career would it superintendent
42:35will you be coming here again do you think I require us continue yes if I have anything to add oh by the
43:00way did you know they're likely to demolish nightingale house soon no I expect its history is against it yes I expect
43:09so goodbye yes I'm sorry I couldn't help you any further
43:22so am I
43:30so
43:39so
43:43so
43:51I don't know.
44:21I don't know.
44:51I don't know.
45:21I don't know.
45:51I don't know.
46:21I don't know.
46:51I don't know.
47:51I don't know.
47:52I don't know.
47:53I don't know.
47:54I don't know.
47:56I don't know.
47:57I don't know.
47:58I don't know.
47:59I don't know.
48:00I don't know.
48:01I did leave a letter for him.
48:03I don't know.
48:04I don't know.
48:05I don't know.
48:06I don't know.
48:07I don't know.
48:08I don't know.
48:13I don't know.
48:14I don't know.
48:15I don't know.
48:16I don't know.
48:17I don't know.
48:18I don't know.
48:19I don't know.
48:20I don't know.
48:21I don't know.
48:22I don't know.
48:23I don't know.
48:24I don't know.
48:25I don't know.
48:26I don't know.
48:27I don't know.
48:28I don't know.
48:30Well.
48:31I'll leave you with them.
48:45I'll walk with you.
48:54Just a minute, then.
49:00She wanted both of us to know that killing Sister Brunford was the first time she'd ever killed,
49:04and I'm certain she wrote the truth.
49:06I suppose that's a comfort?
49:08Yes.
49:16She also said that since then she'd hoped to make a useful life for herself,
49:19but it'd have proved impossible.
49:21Nothing else.
49:24No.
49:25I think you were telling me.
49:27Right. I'd better go and tell Superintendent Bailey.
49:36Well, that's all really, isn't it?
49:38Yes, that's all.
49:54No.
49:55No.
49:56No.
49:57No.
49:58No.
49:59No.
50:00No.
50:01No, no.
50:02No.
50:04No.
50:05No.
50:06VIOLIN PLAYS
50:36VIOLIN PLAYS
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