-
I can't think why you don't
teach it in police colleges.
-
So you think it's Rusk, do you?
You think he's our man?
-
Well, of course. Anyone can see that.
-
He knew both: Mrs Blaney...
-
...and that Barbara what's-her-name.
- Yes.
-
Well, there you are.
-
You told me the man's a sexual pervert.
-
That's why he kept the clothes
and put them in Mr Blaney's case.
-
We have no proof of that.
-
It stands to reason.
-
Don't you mean intuition?
-
What does your intuition tell you
I want for dinner tonight?
-
Steak and a baked potato.
-
But you're getting
pied de porc a la mode de Caens.
-
- It looks like a pig's foot.
- That's what it is.
-
I put it in the same sauce
the French use for tripe.
-
That's comforting.
-
Well, when are you going to arrest...
-
...this Mr Robinson, or Rusk,
or whatever he's called?
-
When I have the proof I need.
-
It takes longer than intuition.
- When will you have it?
-
In a few minutes I hope, dear.
-
Really?
-
You old slyboots. Tell.
-
Well...
-
...we know that if Rusk is the murderer,
-
he traveled up in a potato truck
with his victim.
-
How do we know that?
-
Did you ever hear of a corpse
that cut itself out of a tied sack?
-
What would he want to take
the corpse out of the sack for?
-
Obviously he was looking for something.
-
How do we know that?
-
The corpse was deep in rigor mortis.
-
He had to break the fingers of the
right hand to obtain what they held.
-
(Cracking)
-
It would be so nice to get back
to plain bread in this house.
-
What do you think they held?
-
A locket? A broach? A cross.
-
It had to be something
that would incriminate him.
-
Something that he missed
when he put the body on the truck.
-
A monogrammed handkerchief, perhaps.
-
Not a cross, I think.
-
Well...
-
I don't see why not.
-
Religious and sexual
mania are closely linked.
-
Anyway, whatever it was, he found it,
-
which was unlucky for us.
-
But we did have one piece of good fortune.
-
The truck driver told us that he
stopped at one place on his journey,
-
and that was at a pull-in
somewhere out of London.
-
A pull-in?
- Hmm.
-
It's a... cafe frequented
by truck drivers, dear.
-
They serve humble foods
like bacon and egg sandwiches,
-
sausages and mashed potatoes
and cups of tea and coffee.
-
How is it so fortunate
that this driver stopped there?
-
It's not so much that he stopped,
-
but that he stopped
only once that is important.
-
The only place our man coulďve
got out of the truck was at that cafe.
-
I sent Sergeant Spearman to see...
-
...if he could find anyone who
could remember Rusk being there.
-
I'm expecting him back at any minute.
-
Well, eat up, dear. You'll want
to be finished by the time he arrives.
-
Tasty, very tasty.
-
Not a lot of meat on it, mind.
-
No sense in gorging, dear.
-
I'll take mine and eat it while I'm
beating my eggs for the soufflé.
-
(Doorbell Rings)...
-
Good evening, Sergeant.
- Good evening, sir.
-
- Am I interrupting your dinner?
- No, not at all. Come in.
-
Thank you, sir.
- Put your hat and coat on the sofa.
-
Good evening, Sergeant Spearman.
What would you like to drink?
-
Good evening, madam. I don't know that I...
-
Oh, that's alright. You're off duty.
-
How about a Margarita? It's delicious.
-
Tequila, triple sec,
-
fresh lemon juice and... salt
pressed 'round the rim of the glass.
-
You'll love it.
- Thank you, madam.
-
Sergeant Spearman, you are positively
glutinous with self-approbation.
-
You might as well speak out.
- Yes, sir.
-
The woman behind the
counter at the cafe...
-
...positively identified Rusk
from the photo I showed her...
-
...as being a man who was at the cafe
the night the body was discovered.
-
And that's not all.
-
Are you waiting for a drumroll?
- No, sir. Sorry, sir.
-
The woman also said that Rusk was
dishevelled and very dusty,
-
and asked to borrow a clothes brush.
-
This is the brush she lent him, sir.
-
You see there?
- (Sniffs)
-
What do you say, Spearman? Potato dust?
-
Here you are, Sergeant.
-
Cheers.
-
Cheers, madam.
- Did you hear all that?
-
Yes, I told you. I knew all the time.
- (Oxford) Quite.
-
Get this down to the lab quickly.
- Very good, sir.
-
It rather looks like we put
the wrong man away this time.
-
What do you mean 'we'? You put him away.
-
All right, Spearman, you can go.
- Good night, madam.
-
You haven't finished your drink.
-
I'm sorry. I have to get
down to the lab in a hurry.
-
Good night, Spearman. Good work.
-
Very good work.
- Thank you, sir.
-
Poor Mr Blaney. You've got
to get him out, Tim, immediately.
-
He's in hospital at the moment.
-
I'll talk to the assistant
commissioner in the morning...
-
...and get the case reopened.
-
He won't like it, but there's
quite enough evidence for a pardon.
-
Will they give him any compensation?
-
I expect they'll give him some money,
-
but there's no real way
to compensate in cases like these.
-
Poor man.
-
I think the least you can do is ask
him 'round for a really good dinner.
-
Let's see.
-
It will obviously have
to be something substantial.
-
I think a Caneton aux cerises.
-
What's that?
- Duckling...
-
...with heavy sweet cherry sauce.
-
After that jail food he's been having,
I expect he'll eat anything.