• last year
Hathaway has been promoted to inspector after an extended break, and Lewis is enjoying retired life until he's asked to team up with his old colleague again.

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Transcript
00:00I
00:28would love to tell you that it gets better. It doesn't. Thirty years in and I see...
00:39You started already. What? You will always feel afraid. You should always feel afraid.
00:45Well, they haven't heard it before. My point is that surgery is violent and the day that
00:53stops frightening you is the day you should give up the job.
01:00This one? I'm coming, sweetie. It's all right. I've got you. It's all right, darling. There
01:23you go. There, there. All right, sweetie. I've got you, darling.
01:37Am I courageous because I'm willing to open her skull or am I reckless? It all depends
01:49on the outcome. So, near end of the lesson. Knife, please.
01:56What are they doing? Oi, hippies, get a job.
02:16They're students. Leave them alone. I hate my job. No, you don't. You hate your boss.
02:24Come on. Chris, can you please pick up? Yeah, I'm still on the QX. I'll get there as soon
02:39as I can. All right, we'll hurry up, Chris. Sorry, Lesley. Fag break's cancelled.
02:46What? Sorry. We'll be back. We will be back.
02:53Chris, where the hell are you?
03:40Sergeant Maddox. Oh, you're a star. Try and liaise with the fire service.
03:52He wants to do it himself. Of course he does. You know his last sergeant only lasted a fortnight?
03:57Yep. I think I might be going the same way myself. He won't even let me handle a break-in
04:01at a swimming pool on my own. Good luck.
04:22Well, have a go at the canoe today. Get it ready for Jack's half-term.
04:26Good at swimming, is he? It's going to float. It is.
04:33Well, good luck to her and all who sail in her. Some of us have got jobs to go to.
04:40I'll see you tonight. Try and enjoy your work.
04:57Right, then. My husband came up here last summer for a stag do.
05:03Never shot a gun in his life, right? And then comes home with this pheasant.
05:07I can't even eat a fish with its head on. And he gets it out and I'm like,
05:10I can't pluck that as if I'm going to dig it. It's a private shooting then, I got it.
05:14Yeah, so they do game shooting and rough shooting, clay pigeon,
05:18although it did used to be a farm. Until it was sold,
05:22in March 2009 to Alice Stoke and Thomas Marston.
05:34I've reported graffiti, slashed tyres, vandalised fences,
05:37but my lodge has to be burnt to the ground before you take it seriously.
05:41I'm sorry, I know you're stressed. I'm Tom Marston.
05:43Yeah, hi, Hathaway, Oxford, please.
05:45So you think this fire is part of a wider pattern?
05:48Put claybournefarm.org in there, see what comes up.
05:57Hang on a second, it's just a redirect into hunted.org.uk. Oh.
06:04That's my business partner, Alistair Stoke.
06:06I get stuff like that in the mail every day.
06:13Do you have any idea who's behind this?
06:16Do you have any idea who's behind this?
06:18It's the Animal Rights Brigade, isn't it?
06:20They don't appreciate us selling shoots as entertainment.
06:22Anyone specific?
06:23Well, the university lot are particularly vocal, but it's Oxford, isn't it?
06:27No shortage of people who, like an ill-informed rant...
06:31Oh, no!
06:32Look, I've told you before, keep it under control or put it on a leave.
06:39Is that your attempt to say thank you? It needs some work.
06:43The whole wood could have come down if she hadn't woken me.
06:46This is Mrs Furnsby. She rents a cottage from us.
06:48Oh, really? We rent it, do we?
06:52Come on.
06:54We're going to need you to give us a say there.
06:57Should have evicted her when we bought the place.
06:59Mrs Furnsby, you're not here.
07:02These threatening images, did you hang on to them at all?
07:04No. Alistair may have done. He finds them funny for some reason.
07:07Easier to find these things funny when this is only a sideline.
07:11Oh.
07:15What regiment?
07:16Medical Corps.
07:18That's Tom there at the back, see?
07:20I was attached to his unit.
07:23There we are.
07:26It was, what, one a month for the last six months?
07:29I hardly look at them now.
07:31Mr Marston thinks whoever's sending these also burned down the lot.
07:34Oh, Tom.
07:35It's a commercial hunting ground.
07:37I have to budget for a bit of opposition.
07:40You're insured, then?
07:41We'll be fine.
07:47It's a fine line, isn't it?
07:49What?
07:50If someone takes a drill to a stranger's head, you arrest them.
07:53I do it. I get paid.
07:56I've put his name through the system. Nothing.
07:58What about the website? How are you getting along?
08:00Not too bad.
08:01I've tracked down the animal rights group to the university.
08:04Apparently the girl who runs it's outside the Radcliffe camera, Jessica Tallison.
08:08I'll meet you there.
08:09I'm happy to do it on my own. I'm already here, so...
08:12No, don't worry. I'll get it done.
08:14I'll get it done.
08:15I'll get it done.
08:16I'll get it done.
08:17I'll get it done.
08:18I'll get it done.
08:19I'll get it done.
08:20I'll get it done.
08:21I'll get it done.
08:22I'll get it done.
08:24I'm happy to do it on my own. I'm already here, so...
08:26No, don't worry about it. I'm ten minutes away. I'll see you in a minute.
08:30Right.
08:31Cheers.
08:42Simon!
08:45It says I'm on annual leave.
08:47To be clear,
08:48I'm not on leave.
08:49That sounds...
08:50frustrating.
08:51Stoke I can't work like this no don't suppose you can
09:21hello oh hello mum
09:42second cow on the left talk about the animal sir I'm all right thanks
09:52Jessica Tullison I'm filming you this is an attempt to disrupt the peaceful
09:56protest no it's not tell me about Claiborne farm we haven't done anything
10:00illegal we just monitor their shoots were you aware there was an arson
10:03attack there last night no come on what is this I'll pick an activist any
10:08activist we're interested in a website called hunted Donald UK you familiar
10:12with it yeah it's pretty embarrassing do you know who runs it it could be anyone
10:18hasn't he got something better to do seriously a nonviolent protest and a
10:24fire at a hunting lodge that's his priority I didn't say the fires at the
10:28hunting lodge
11:18I
11:48one-year contract flexible hours you can't dismiss that out of hand yes I can
12:12that's the whole point of retirement besides I'd be treading on people's toes
12:18well if by people you mean James then he's the one asking for this we're
12:22desperate for experienced manpower really he's already driven himself into
12:26the ground and as of an hour ago he's got his first murder
12:31I don't know listen what are your plans for this afternoon after this I'm going
12:48the hardware store I need some waterproof glue exciting
12:54alternatively you could figure out why a neurosurgeon has a bullet in his head
13:02oh sir they're not gonna let us near him dodgy heart apparently he collapsed
13:20on the phone to the operator well has anyone spoken to him at all yeah he told
13:24uniform that you heard the shot but that's it that's all we've got and we've
13:27taken his guns off him yeah yeah they're on the way to ballistics now and I've
13:29also got the key to his gun cabinet in town good full search the entire area
13:33please it's over 400 acres but yeah okay
13:39Oh sir CS Innocents trying to get a hold of you
14:01there he is what happened to you on Friday I tried to make last orders but
14:07work got in the way did you let it he was looking forward to a catch-up how is
14:12he a man of leisure it seems to be in his element have a look then
14:22DI Hathaway congratulations you'd be back once a copper always a copper yes
14:30well right from the hypostasis I'd say it's not been dead much more than
14:37two hours bullets enter the side of the skull here but it's not exited so it was
14:41traveling at a low velocity by the time it hit sniper at long-range possibly
14:47chance of the post-mortem results this afternoon I need the bullet intact if
14:53possible I give all my DI's three strikes try not to use them all up on
14:57your first investigation that's interesting
15:07you
15:13uniform of spoken to the old lady from that cottage says she was watching TV
15:18all morning how close were you before you could see me when just just then
15:22yeah a few meters come here long-distance shot then no line of sight
15:29it was my husband's farm I tried to keep it going on my own but things look
15:35difficult and my daughter came home from work saying Alistair was looking
15:40for some land you're out hunting this morning oh I get it the old lady must
15:47have had an accident well not this old lady if I shoot someone I guarantee it
15:52will be on purpose
15:59Alistair's dead they reckon it was a shooting accident well that's just one
16:03theory God it's Chris isn't it yeah yeah Chris
16:10Farnsbury sorry I've been a night you work at the hospital is that right yeah
16:14something regular one just gets me a few shifts and what time did you get in this
16:19morning nine ish what was Alistair's relationship like with Tom I wasn't very
16:26enamored of him this morning I thought you said you didn't see anything I only
16:31saw them for a second out of the living room window would you mind showing me
16:38Alistair kept jabbing his finger at him and then Tom stormed off what time was
16:43this around 10 I was just putting my gun away before my program started we'll
16:49need any firearms for testing actually
17:01oh
17:13good morning detective inspector
17:18so what do we got
17:24I thought you had lots of plans for your
17:30retirement did I do you're not enjoying it of course I just taking a bit of a
17:38break you're taking a break from your retirement yeah that's the one anyway
17:47look I remember the transition from sergeant to inspector it's not easy I'm
17:52glad you asked for me help wasn't aware I had Jean innocent made I've been
17:59asking for more manpower we all have but not asking for me well you're
18:03retired right okay well it's your investigation so I'll just help out
18:13where I can I'd be all right with that are you yeah yeah don't worry we should
18:22go for a pint later you can bore me with tales of you traveling I wasn't really
18:26traveling I went for a walk to Spain long walk sergeant Maddox and this is
18:34DI Lewis will you bring him up to speed please sorry yeah he's joining the
18:38investigation well just helping out with a legwork right well the family liaison
18:44officers been in touch and the victim's wife's asked him to leave want me to
18:49have a word with her Oh whatever's most useful I await your
18:53instruction that'd be great thank you right then they're coming to be home
19:00with us mm-hmm there's more inside
19:11have you worked with DI Hathaway before once or twice I was his DI so any
19:19TV problems now probably my fault bad parenting
19:33James I'm gonna do my best. He hasn't told you has he? Sorry who?
19:40Once a copper, eh?
20:10Cross-check these against his certificate okay? Thomas Marston. Will do.
20:40DI Lewis. Simon Eastwood. I'm a friend of Erica's. She's this way. I can't get her to stop.
21:11Erica? Erica?
21:33Sorry. No, please. Don't apologize.
21:40How long were you married?
21:4718 months.
21:49Things OK?
21:55Alistair was receiving threats from an animal rights organisation.
21:58Did he ever talk to you about that?
22:00What?
22:01No.
22:02You think that...
22:03You have to consider all possibilities.
22:06So I'm afraid I do need to ask you where you were between 9.30 and 11 this morning.
22:11Is this actually happening?
22:12She was with me.
22:13I had the day off work, so I came over here.
22:14I don't feel well.
22:15Probably best to leave her a minute.
22:16Look.
22:17Someone's about to tell you this.
22:18Alistair wasn't my friend.
22:38We had a disagreement and he's been destroying my career ever since.
22:42What happened?
22:43A night shift from hell.
22:47Constant referrals from A&E, then this teenage kid, Nabil, started to deteriorate, so I phoned
22:54Alistair.
22:55And he refused to help?
22:56No, no, no.
22:57He agreed to come in.
22:58And I was so relieved, until I was standing next to him in theatre and smelt alcohol on
23:03his breath.
23:04He operated after a drink.
23:06I tried to stop him, but he'd already decided he was going to be this kid's saviour.
23:11Then he made a mistake.
23:13He wrecked him.
23:14Wrecked?
23:16It's brain-surgeon-speak for a quality of life utterly ruined, unable to walk, think
23:22or communicate.
23:23I blew the whistle, but he got some mate to lie for him.
23:28Swore Alistair hadn't touched a drop all day, so in the end it came down to his word against
23:33mine.
23:34And they believed him.
23:35Don't be such a bloody diva.
23:44He's been brought in to assist everyone.
23:46He just happens to be with you first, because you've got a dead brain surgeon on your hands.
23:49How's that going, by the way?
23:51Well, there's something weird with ballistics.
23:53It was definitely a close-range shot, but the bullet didn't leave the skull.
23:56Hmm.
23:57I see what the lab says, but bullets aren't always consistent.
24:00If it's consistency you want, I refer you to Exhibit A, feared extinct, now back in
24:05its natural habitat.
24:06A little respect for the elderly.
24:08Not likely.
24:09What's all this?
24:11It's the summary of Alistair Stoke's negligence hearing from last month.
24:14One of his juniors claims he left a young lad disabled after he operated under the influence.
24:19And he was still working.
24:20A little medical counsel said that there was no case to answer.
24:23But we've got a whole stack of angry letters from the parents, apparently.
24:27Can we get a full minute to this unredacted, please?
24:29Yeah, already on it.
24:30I've also got something else.
24:35Look at this.
24:37For years of loyal service, Al.
24:43It was with his solicitor.
24:44The wife's the main beneficiary, but Alistair had left that for his theatre nurse, Lorraine
24:48Furnsby, along with 50 grand.
24:51The Furnsbys are the people that sold him the farm.
24:55There was also a message from Dr Hobson.
24:57I didn't quite understand it, but she said that your dinner was in the canoe.
25:01I suggest you buy some flowers on the way home.
25:04Yeah, thanks.
25:06James.
25:07Mum.
25:09Did you delegate those college issues to the break-in at Rougemont Pool?
25:13No, I dealt with them myself.
25:15James.
25:19She's good.
25:21Hang on to this one, OK?
25:35Is there a specific reaction you're expecting to see?
25:38Oh, Riz.
25:39Now come on, they're here to see how we respond.
25:41We're not accusing you, Mr Naran.
25:43But we do need to know where you were between 9.30 and 11.
25:46Yeah, giving Nabil his breakfast.
25:48Both of you.
25:49Yes.
25:51What happened to your son?
25:55He'd been on this protest, live animal exports.
25:59The tailgate of a lorry came down on him.
26:02They removed a blood clot from his brain, but he bled again during the night.
26:05And that's when Mr Stoke decided to play God.
26:09You think he'd been drinking before he operated?
26:11Why would anybody make that up?
26:14Didn't Nabil ever mention an animal rights website called hunted.org.uk?
26:19He wasn't actually into all of that.
26:21He was there to impress a girl.
26:23One of Aisha's students was the head of the society.
26:26I think I've come across her.
26:28Blue hair, big mouth.
26:30That's her.
26:31She's around here all the time.
26:32She's a friend of mine and she helps look after your son.
26:38What else did you do this morning?
26:40What do you mean?
26:41Well, you said you gave Nabil his breakfast, but we need to account for the whole time up to 11.
26:46Come with me.
26:53My son is doubly incontinent.
26:56He has no swallowing reflex and he takes food through a tube in his stomach.
27:01Every milliliter of fluid has to be recorded on a chart if I start to get him ready by 9.
27:08I'm relieved if we're done by 11.
27:11I'm sorry, I didn't realise.
27:31She was just letting off steam.
27:33Don't let it get to you.
27:34I'm not.
27:35Do you mind if I skip that pint?
27:37Still got a bit to do.
27:39Can I give you a piece of advice?
27:40Yeah, if I can ignore it.
27:42Don't push yourself so hard.
27:44Let Maddox help you.
27:46And make sure you get some sleep.
27:48That's three pieces of advice.
27:50OK.
27:51Prioritise the sleep thing.
28:00OK.
29:01Chapter 8 already?
29:03I thought we were supposed to be learning this Italian together.
29:05Funny, I thought you were going to be at home.
29:08So we both had a day of surprises.
29:23You wish to complain about my level of service?
29:3150 grand.
29:34I had no idea.
29:37I used to get at him about nurses' pay, but I never expected this.
29:40Did he ever mention...
29:44How long did you work together?
29:46Over 20 years.
29:48People always ask me how I put up with him for so long, but...
29:51you just had to know how to handle him.
29:53And what about this negligence hearing a few weeks ago? Were you involved?
29:56Not in the operation, no.
29:58But I do voluntary support work for the boy's parents,
30:01so I see the impact.
30:03How did the family react to his going back to surgery?
30:06Oh, come on, they're angry, but not like that.
30:12What about his colleagues? Was he welcomed back?
30:15By most of them, yeah.
30:17I gave him what for about Simon, though.
30:19Simon Eastwood.
30:21Now, I don't know what went on in that operation, but right or wrong,
30:25juniors have to be allowed to voice their concerns.
30:27You can't take it out on them afterwards.
30:29Did you argue with him about that?
30:31I argued with Alistair about everything.
30:33He called me his work wife.
30:35But his real wife works here, doesn't she?
30:37She did.
30:39But she quit last year.
30:41Turns out you don't need a nurse's salary
30:43if you've bagged yourself a brain surgeon.
30:45Sorry.
30:47Being unkind.
30:49He'd been widowed for a long time when he met her.
30:51I'm glad he found someone.
30:53Even if she did make him look foolish.
30:55What, you mean the age difference?
30:57No.
30:59I mean the fact that she was so obviously having an affair with Simon.
31:02I mean the fact that she was so obviously having an affair with Simon.
31:32Ah.
31:52Brain food.
31:56Laura usually does a fry-up on a Saturday,
31:58but I didn't like Alaska this morning.
32:00Trouble in paradise?
32:02Nah, she's all right.
32:04Maybe you put that out,
32:06but that's probably fair enough.
32:12You all right?
32:14Well, it all goes back to that negligence hearing, doesn't it?
32:16I'd want to know about that website.
32:18Yeah, but that's what I'm saying.
32:20The website was started two weeks after Nabil's accident.
32:22The website was started two weeks after Nabil's accident.
32:24It all goes back to the operation.
32:26Parents using animal rights as a cover for revenge?
32:28Don't buy it.
32:30No, I'm...
32:32Anyway, look, I've booked to see Ayshan around this morning.
32:34Anyway, look, I've booked to see Ayshan around this morning.
32:36I think she's holding something back with you.
32:38Maybe.
32:40We also need to know a lot more about that farm.
32:42Maddox reckons Tom Marston's got money problems.
32:44Maddox reckons Tom Marston's got money problems.
32:46Yeah, I'm on to it.
32:48She's on to it.
32:50You should take her with you.
32:52But he's our most important witness.
32:54Exactly. Good experience.
32:56What do you think you've learned?
33:00Point taken.
33:08You think you're meeting that?
33:10Yeah, in my own time.
33:14Bet you missed all this.
33:16When you were travelling.
33:18Or walking.
33:20Whatever it was.
33:22What was it?
33:24Ah, the cathedral.
33:26My old neighbour went on a pilgrimage there.
33:28Wasn't a pilgrimage.
33:32OK.
33:34Let's leave it there for today, shall we?
33:36Thank you.
33:50Create all the happiness
33:52you're able to create.
33:54Remove all the misery you're able to remove.
33:56A fellow Bentham fan.
33:58I wouldn't go that far.
34:00Well, I shall miss teaching him
34:02when I have to give all this up.
34:04But one of us has to stay at home full time now.
34:06I'm sorry if I offended you
34:08or your husband yesterday.
34:10He's not my husband.
34:12Well, technically.
34:14We were in the middle of the divorce
34:16when Nabil had his accident
34:18and we simply can't afford to live separately.
34:20You have to find the surgeon guilty for that.
34:22Right.
34:24But, um,
34:26you didn't come here to show me sympathy,
34:28so what is it?
34:30No, I felt yesterday that there was more
34:32that you wanted to say.
34:34Oh, goodness. Am I that transparent?
34:36Oh, well.
34:38I just wanted to scream at Rizvan because
34:40rather than helping me,
34:42he spends all day in the garage
34:44with that bloody car.
34:46You've been taking care of your son by yourself?
34:48Pretty much.
34:50And that's where he was
34:52yesterday morning, in the garage.
34:54Did you actually have eyes on him
34:56between the hours of 9.30
34:58and 11 yesterday morning?
35:00Did she go as far
35:02as accusing him?
35:04No, but we need to speak to him again.
35:06She's withdrawn her alibi.
35:08It turns out he works with computers.
35:10Well, someone's giving our tech team the run around.
35:12Oh, did you have a chance to have a look
35:14at that email from Maddox?
35:16He's done some great work on Tom Marston's
35:18finances. Chaotic.
35:20The only thing he's never missed
35:22a payment on is the life insurance
35:24premium for Alastair.
35:26Right, I'll meet you at the farm.
35:28I'm leaving now.
35:36Are you OK?
35:46You've done the right thing.
36:12Mr Marston,
36:14how are you feeling?
36:16Angry. Angry that nobody
36:18listened to me and scared that I'm going to be next.
36:20No, I mean your health. We've been keen to speak to you.
36:22This is so obvious. These people have moved
36:24from vandalism to arson to murder.
36:26We can't be certain that he's linked to the website.
36:28No? OK.
36:30I'm 100% certain.
36:34Sorry.
36:36Yep.
36:38All this vandalism must be
36:40bad for business.
36:42You ought to pay yourself a salary.
36:44You clearly know the answer to that already.
36:46Can you show me any small
36:48business that isn't suffering at the moment?
36:50Given those pressures, I'm surprised
36:52you decided to increase the insurance for both
36:54partners. It was Alastair's
36:56idea. Had to have major surgery
36:58recently. Made him think. Sir?
37:00Can it wait? No.
37:08Yes? Who's actually
37:10in charge here?
37:12He is. He's wasting his time.
37:14There must be something more constructive you can do than come around here accusing me.
37:16Nobody's accusing you.
37:18Thomas Marston.
37:20I'm arresting you for the murder of Alastair Stoke.
37:22You don't have to say his name. What?
37:24If you fail to mention something you later rely on.
37:26I'll cooperate. What evidence have you got?
37:28The bullet that killed your business partner came from
37:30your rifle.
37:32It can't be. It's rubbish. I have the rifle
37:34with me all the time. This is rubbish.
37:40No.
37:52Nobody's disputing the concept of
37:54ballistic evidence.
37:56We're just disputing the accuracy of yours.
37:58The ballistics aren't wrong. Your rifle was used
38:00to kill Alastair Stoke, a man you'd been seen
38:02arguing with an hour prior to his death. Who's
38:04I was arguing? Gillian Furnsby?
38:06The woman is a fantasist.
38:08In addition, the rifle was never out of your sight.
38:10The only fingerprints on it were yours.
38:12How do you explain that?
38:14I can't explain it. Your evidence is wrong.
38:16Or...
38:18I don't know. Someone's setting me up.
38:20The evidence isn't wrong.
38:22So what was it about?
38:24Money?
38:26I mean, you'd rather work seven days a week than hire a gamekeeper.
38:28You're selling all your furniture.
38:30Hang on. Being poor is not a crime.
38:32I'm not saying that it is, but all the time
38:34there's this life insurance policy.
38:38So, what was the plan?
38:40To create a campaign of intimidation
38:42and then blame it all on that?
38:44The website? Was that you? The fire?
38:46No. None of those things.
38:48Look, I've no family. I've never been married.
38:50Alastair's the closest
38:52thing I ever had to a friend.
38:54I didn't kill him.
38:56Oh, no.
38:58Spraying is a spray.
39:04OK.
39:06I've got to sort this and get him some medical attention.
39:08This interview is terminated.
39:10Custody nurse, please!
39:36It'll be all right.
39:38Thank you.
39:44Erica?
39:48Erica?
39:50I just wanted to say how sorry I am.
39:52I know you said it.
39:54Excuse me.
40:06SIGHS
40:20They're taking him back to St Chad's to check him over.
40:22I'm going with him.
40:24I wouldn't do that.
40:26Can you see what he's doing here?
40:28You get in the ambulance with him,
40:30you hand his defence team an argument on a plate.
40:32They'll say you harassed him.
40:34No, he's right.
40:38You've got your man.
40:40Your job now is to make sure it stands up in court.
40:42Go home.
40:44See you in the morning.
40:54SIGHS
40:56What?
40:58He's not a stupid man.
41:00If he'd killed for the insurance,
41:02surely he wouldn't use his own rifle.
41:06We've got the wrong man.
41:10It's not him.
41:18SIREN BLARES
41:32SIREN BLARES
41:42Anything?
41:44No, not yet.
41:46Hospital CCTV picked him up stealing that three hours ago.
41:48The engine's cold. He could be anywhere.
41:50Why wasn't he in handcuffs?
41:52Because they didn't think it was appropriate and I wasn't there.
41:54He's not going to get far on his own foot, is he?
41:56Not in that state.
41:58It's assuming it was a state, not an act.
42:00Here's a bit out of that cottage.
42:02Thank you.
42:04No, it's just a precaution. We don't know what he's got hidden out there.
42:06I promised Laura this job was mainly paperwork.
42:14Any news?
42:16No.
42:18I've left two officers at the flat, just in case he goes back.
42:20He's not going to go back to his flat. He's going to be out there,
42:22where he has the advantage.
42:24400 acres that he knows and we don't.
42:30Is this necessary?
42:32For your own protection.
42:34Give me my own bloody guns back and I'll protect myself.
42:36You know the land here.
42:38Any idea where he might be hiding?
42:40The woods, perhaps?
42:42Yeah, but anywhere specific.
42:44I don't know, animal shelters or gullies?
42:46Not around here.
42:48They've found something.
42:50Right. Change of plan.
42:52Stay here, please.
43:00Dog's picked up on something.
43:02Seems to be some sort of drain the camera's in.
43:04Sir?
43:10James?
43:16Oh, God.
43:18Okay, we've got drag marks here.
43:20Can we clear the area, please?
43:22Stand by.
43:24Stand by.
43:26Stand by.
43:28Stand by.
43:50They went straight through him
43:52and then they dislodged him when he was dragged.
43:54Get that off to the lab, please, straight away.
44:20Sir?
44:22Sir?
44:26Ballistics have come back with a match,
44:28but I don't understand it.
44:30No, that's not right.
44:32They reckon it's 100%.
44:34What?
44:36Ballistics are saying the bullets are a match
44:38to the one that shot Alastair Stoke
44:40and the one that shot Tom Marston,
44:42fired from the same rifle.
44:44Tom's rifle?
44:46The rifle we've had in police custody
44:48for the last 48 hours?
44:53The marks on our test bullets
44:55match the marks
44:57on your crime scene bullet.
44:59So we know
45:01that rifle shot your dead guy.
45:03He and his mate
45:05destroyed their family.
45:07Under the circumstances, I do need to know your whereabouts
45:09between last night and early this morning.
45:11I've had enough!
45:13If you think I've done something, arrest me.
45:19And Lewis and the team will be back on the case here
45:21next Friday at 9.
45:23Well, it's Downton Abbey here on ITV on Sunday night
45:25at the slightly later time of 9.15
45:27when the Dowager reveals a surprise past.
45:29And then on Monday night,
45:31the case takes a twist
45:33while Sydney has his own problems to deal with
45:35in Grantchester at 9.
45:37Over on ITV Encore next,
45:39the WWII code-breaking team regroup
45:41to help one of their own in the Bletchley Circle.