• 4 months ago
Transcript
00:00That one, I think it is.
00:15Sounds like it.
00:16That was security. It's a coded warning. We'll have to evacuate the floor.
00:20It's on the wires. There's been an explosion. IED South London.
00:22I know, and it's North London.
00:24Wandsworth. Grid reference MT2051.
00:26No, I was just on the bloody phone to him.
00:29What the hell is going on?
00:30Like I said, explosion, South London.
00:32Would I ask you all please to evacuate the building? We've just received a coded warning.
00:36Danny, use my mobile.
00:38Now, walk. Don't run.
00:40It's ringing. It's bloody ringing.
00:52Danny! Danny, I'm okay. I'll have to talk later.
01:00What happened?
01:05Safe distance, please.
01:07Nice and easy.
01:11All right. Disposal.
01:13Look, I spoke to him. He's alive. That's it. That's all I know.
01:16It's not answering now, Danny.
01:17Tom's okay.
01:18What about the South London blast?
01:19Looks like C4 plastic.
01:20What's the target area?
01:21Residential Street Wandsworth.
01:22Who lives down there?
01:23The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.
01:26We're all clear, sir.
01:27The detonator fell to ignite the explosive.
01:29All you want to know.
01:30Thank you.
01:32Go away.
01:33Fail?
01:3436% of all detonators fail on improvised explosive devices.
01:38Sometimes the detonator goes off on its own. Sometimes nothing happens.
01:41That's very reassuring.
01:43What's going on?
01:44We're all just going to go to the dumpster.
01:46I'm not going to go.
01:47I'm not going.
01:48I'm not going.
01:49I'm not going.
01:50I'm not going.
01:51I'm not going.
01:52I'm not going.
01:53I'm not going.
01:54We're all just going to go to the dumpster now for a check-up.
01:56Tom, I'm fine.
01:57Tom, I need to get out of here.
01:58They're just getting an overnight bag for you.
02:00I need to get out of here now.
02:02We just answered the bloody phone.
02:04Mummy!
02:05We're alive, alright?
02:06Look, I know you're alive, but are you okay?
02:07Yeah.
02:08Yes, thanks to McCann's shot he woke me.
02:10So he clearly can't build a detonator?
02:11You're wrong.
02:12A bomb just killed Michael Purefoy at home.
02:14They think his kids were with him.
02:15McCann's just there, sir.
02:16We know.
02:17Stay on the line.
02:18Stay close to me.
02:19It's Carnage, Tom.
02:20The house was destroyed.
02:21No warning.
02:22Well, how do we know it's McCann?
02:23It's his responsibility.
02:24They're rebranding themselves the War for Irish Unity.
02:26Recommend they double anti-terror units on close protection duty.
02:28Everyone on the blue list, not just cabinet members.
02:30And get Zoe and a full team bringing the shutters down.
02:32There's the customs at the port.
02:33Fence them in and hunt them down.
02:35Are you coming in?
02:36No, I'm with my family.
02:37I'll be on the phone in the pager.
02:49Yeah.
02:50Mr. Crockett?
02:54Davey?
02:57I'm here.
02:58So we are.
02:59Sidestepped our little surprise.
03:01I'm glad to hear it.
03:02Where are you?
03:03Well, to tell you the truth, I'm in a spot of bother right now.
03:05I wondered if you could help me out.
03:07You want me to do you a favour?
03:10I want to come and work for you.
03:14Is this a defection?
03:15You could say that.
03:17I don't believe you.
03:18A little boy told someone about our chats, Davey.
03:21And I need out before someone retires me permanently.
03:25If you think you had a bad morning up to this, it's about to get a hell of a lot worse.
03:28I need more than that.
03:29My branch chief's looking to chase more than just the local, Davey.
03:32He's got big plans and things are going to get pretty nasty.
03:36The war for Irish unity's first national campaign, suffice to say, it just started.
03:42And you've had a change of heart?
03:44The terror games change, Davey.
03:47I'm telling you.
03:49I'm telling you.
03:51It's scary.
03:53Particularly right now, I must admit.
03:55At this present moment, my sphincter was tightening at an alarming rate.
03:59Now, I warned you about the laptop, didn't I?
04:01Use me and you can put a stop to this right now.
04:04Let me send someone.
04:06Is that a yes?
04:07Tell me your location.
04:08Is that a yes?
04:09Yeah.
04:10Underground car park, North Street.
04:13The laptop was a diversion.
04:15McCann's group had presumed that Tom would bring it back here.
04:17Lobby security scans will pick it up immediately.
04:19Precisely.
04:20They even threw in a coded warning, so we had to evacuate the building.
04:22They wanted all resources pointed here.
04:24Meanwhile, they're free to assassinate the real target, Michael Purefoy.
04:27McCann warned Tom about the laptop. He called to warn him about the C4.
04:30Why warn him if you're looking to cause disruption?
04:32I don't know.
04:33I do. It was a sweetener.
04:35McCann just agreed to a defection.
04:37Is he here?
04:38We're fetching him now. Keep him away from me.
04:40We're fetching him now. Keep him away from me.
04:51No sign. Wait.
05:11Executed for collaboration. Oh, the irony.
05:14Saving Tom's life to try and save his own.
05:16He didn't save anyone. Tom was lucky, that's all.
05:18The bomb didn't go off, and he was just lucky.
05:20I told you McCann was not to be trusted, and I was right.
05:22If he was attempting to defect, we must regrettably take what he told Tom to be the truth.
05:26We cannot presume that this attack is anything but the beginning.
05:29Urgent incident report, sir, but I don't have clearance to read it out.
05:31It's on screen for you now.
05:35Another explosion. Longcross.
05:37Get Tom back here now.
05:39Bloody hell's going on.
05:40Who's in the militia base?
05:41Chief of Defence staff.
05:56Hi. You Sam?
05:57Yeah.
05:58Right. I need you. This way.
06:01You're late.
06:02Someone was supposed to meet me downstairs, but they never came.
06:05A little bit busy, I'm afraid.
06:06Oh, it's all right.
06:07I was trying to get the security guard's home address and passport number.
06:09You know, like in training.
06:10Right. Go down to the registry and pull up these vetting files on Longcross staff.
06:13Some will be dead, others just injured.
06:14We have to cross-check vetting histories.
06:16Oh, and prioritise the living, please.
06:23Special branch.
06:24Not now.
06:25Just delivered these passports.
06:26They were found in a forgery raid near Heathrow this morning.
06:29Run the headshots through airport security feeds, see if face-masking throws anything up.
06:36Looks like a mortar attack at the Longcross military base.
06:38But it's seriously classified, Harry.
06:40Even the local residents think it's an army transport facility.
06:42It's not on any map. It's never been a target before. For anyone.
06:44Whoever's responsible, I smell a leak in the MOD.
06:47Longcross. Harry.
06:48We have an official denial from all Republican splinter organisations,
06:51including the War for Irish Unity.
06:53Claims of responsibility from 11 other groups.
06:55Three possibles, eight nonsensicals.
06:57Get a team onto the possibles. You try Tom again.
07:03Tom.
07:04No, Danny, I'm sorry.
07:05The sky is falling.
07:07My family need me right now.
07:08This is from the top. There is no negotiation on this, mate.
07:11I'm sorry.
07:15Tom.
07:16They're staying with me one way or another, Danny.
07:18You make some space on the third floor.
07:19If I'm coming in, so are they.
07:27You remember Zoe, don't you?
07:28Hello.
07:29Hiya.
07:30We've got a very comfortable room for you up in the medical centre.
07:33It's not the penthouse, but...
07:34Dad.
07:36You OK?
07:37I'm OK.
07:38I'll be back as soon as I can, OK?
07:39I'll get you anything you need.
07:41We need you.
07:45Can you give us a moment alone, please?
07:46Yeah, of course.
07:48Come on.
07:51What are we doing here?
07:52Just give me a chance to clear everything up here and then I'll be with you.
07:55I thought you'd want to feel safe and I thought this was the best option.
07:57I'm not the target, Tom.
07:59You are.
08:00This isn't for me.
08:01It's for you.
08:05Come on.
08:16Fill me in.
08:17You're not going to like it.
08:18Try me.
08:20Cabinet minister and his two daughters assassinated by a Republican splinter group.
08:23Explosion at Longcross.
08:24No, that's Special Forces property.
08:26It's a weapons testing centre.
08:27It's a bloody military base.
08:28Multiple casualties.
08:29Two pieces of two different puzzles.
08:31Could be connected.
08:32The only definite so far is that McCann's old group have claimed responsibility for Michael Purefoy.
08:35They've denied the other explosion completely.
08:37What's McCann saying?
08:38McCann's dead, Tom.
08:40They got to him before we could.
08:44Well, the denial could be a ruse.
08:45Not likely.
08:46Discount nothing to McCann, Zoe, even in death.
08:48Any other candidates for the Longcross attack?
08:50Well, so far only one that merits attention.
08:52Anyone I know?
08:53Oh, yes.
08:54This is now officially the day from hell.
08:56These passports pitched up this morning in a forgery raid near Heathrow.
09:00We ran the pictures through airport security and Miroslav Gradić entered the UK last week.
09:05The other two men are presumably his bodyguards.
09:08The Hague's most wanted.
09:09Bloody hell, I thought he was hiding out in a bunker in Bosnia.
09:11What do you know about Miroslav Gradić?
09:13He's been on the run for six years.
09:15He's a war criminal with a taste for genocide.
09:17During the conflict, Gradić was a major Serb commander.
09:20He holds the UK centrally responsible for NATO attacks on Yugoslavia.
09:23NATO holds him responsible for massacres in Bosnia.
09:25No reason to come here and raise Mary Hale.
09:27I mean, he's angry, but he's putting himself at risk with all this.
09:29His two sons were killed in NATO bombing raids over Belgrade.
09:31There were porters in a hospital the British bombed with a direct hit.
09:34I think he's long past caring about his own safety.
09:36Yeah, but he can't know about Longcross. I mean, I hardly know about that myself.
09:39It's not like you can look up Yellow Pages under secret military installations.
09:43I'm still not convinced McCann isn't linked to Longcross.
09:46We both have personal issues with this matter.
09:48Too bloody right, Andy.
09:49Which is why this Irish matter is now the concern of Section C.
09:53For my sake as well as yours, we need our attentions here.
09:56Just because McCann's denying the blast, it doesn't mean he's not involved.
09:59Tom, Republican terror groups take credit for whatever they can.
10:02They've said nothing in this case.
10:04We have to presume this has nothing to do with them.
10:06The Longcross incident constitutes a military attack on the security of this nation.
10:10Finding whoever is responsible is now officially job number one.
10:13It was definitely a mortar around a barrack block, and Gradic is a big fan of mortars.
10:17He's used them on Muslim hospitals and schools, mosques, houses.
10:21Zoe?
10:22Gradic will have a fan base in the Serbian mafia over here.
10:24Last time I looked, we were running five different Serbian surveillance operations.
10:27You review current Serb surveillance.
10:29You source all Serbian contacts in non-mafia operations.
10:32Pencil moving.
10:33Tom?
10:35Yeah?
10:37Are you sure you want to be here?
10:39I don't think I have a choice, Zoe.
10:44Police and neighbours were greeted by scenes of destruction following the blast,
10:48which damaged several houses.
10:50Michael Puirfoy had only recently taken up the position of Secretary of State for Northern Ireland,
10:54following a period as Secretary of State for the Department of Trade and Industry.
10:58The War for Irish Unity has issued a statement apologising for what it called
11:01the regrettable involvement of innocent bystanders,
11:04but defended its actions, asserting that the Secretary of State
11:07was what they termed a legitimate target.
11:10Mr Puirfoy, who has worked in peril over 23 years,
11:13is still in a critical position in a London hospital.
11:15She is yet to be told about the death of her husband and of her daughter.
11:19Holly and Sarah, aged 8 and 13.
11:43About ten minutes ago, sir.
11:50Oh, I just got a package from Six.
11:52Greta checked three narrow escapes from Cape Hoard troops,
11:54and you only do that with a tip-off.
11:56You got those tip-offs from somewhere.
11:59Tom?
12:00Well, presumably sympathisers in the Serbian authorities on the ground.
12:02Yeah, and who tips them off?
12:04Exactly.
12:05So, guess who came to work at the Serbian embassy three months ago?
12:07This is Sam, by the way. She's just joined the team.
12:10First day?
12:11Yeah.
12:12Right, right.
12:13Radovan.
12:14Rado, for short.
12:15He worked in Belgrade for the then Yugoslav government in signals intelligence.
12:18He's a known Gradic sympathiser.
12:20Well, the Serbs are anti-Gradic now.
12:22They'd hardly sanction a supporter in-house.
12:23Some people find lying quite easy, I'm told.
12:25You think there's a link between Gradic and Rado?
12:27Yeah.
12:28If you're going to make an approach, do it quickly.
12:29Get a full profile now.
12:30I can do that for you, if you like.
12:32I did TC10. I'm good, honest.
12:34All right, call me at home.
12:36If I don't get some sleep soon, I'm going to pass out.
12:39Oh, the Hotpoint guy.
12:41Oh.
12:42I need to marry a plumber.
12:43Are you two married?
12:46Flatmates.
12:47All the downsides of marriage and none of the benefits.
12:49Who ever said there was benefits?
13:08It is you, isn't it?
13:11Zoe!
13:13Oh, my God, that is so mad!
13:16Sarah.
13:17So what's been up with you?
13:18I've not seen you for years.
13:20So come on, fill me in.
13:22Last I heard, you were at Oxford or something?
13:25Yeah.
13:26Married? Sprogs?
13:27No.
13:28No, just single, two cats.
13:31Pushing paperclips, mostly.
13:34Civil service.
13:35Oh, good for you.
13:38I'm still with Paul. You remember Paul.
13:41Yeah, worked for Challenham Partners, law firm.
13:43Don't know how that happened.
13:50I think this is me, actually.
13:52Oh, this is my stop too!
13:56Excuse me.
14:02Listen, Sarah, I'd love to go for a drink,
14:04but to tell you the truth, I've had a bit of a day
14:06and I feel like I'm coming down with something, actually, so...
14:09Oh, well, see you soon.
14:11All right.
14:13Oh!
14:14We should swap numbers!
14:39You have no messages.
14:46Hello?
14:47Danny, I need you to get a number for me. Unlisted. Sorry.
14:50Sure. Who?
14:51Jane Simm. Ellie's mum.
14:59Hello?
15:00Hello?
15:01Hello?
15:02Hello?
15:03Hello?
15:04Hello?
15:05Hello?
15:06Hello?
15:07Hello?
15:08Hello?
15:15Excuse me, is anyone sitting here?
15:18Uh, no, please, sit away.
15:20Sitting.
15:30Well, Sat?
15:34Nice bag.
15:36Yeah, isn't it? I'm very proud of that.
15:38You should be. It's magnificent.
15:48Hi there. Sorry to call so late.
15:50I was just wondering if Ellie was there.
15:52It's a friend.
15:54Matthew.
15:55Oh, yes. Tom, one minute.
15:59Ellie means Tom.
16:02Oh, she doesn't want to speak to you. I'm sorry.
16:16Thanks.
16:18Are you, um, with anyone?
16:20I mean, here.
16:22Uh, I'm waiting for a friend, actually.
16:25He's just finishing up at work, so...
16:28Oh, and here he is.
16:30Jamie, what took you so long?
16:32Sorry, boss made me work late.
16:34Sorry, I just got a round of drinks in.
16:36Oh, don't worry.
16:38Hey, boyfriend of six months, you work in the city, I'm the legal secretary.
16:43So, Jamie, you work in the city?
16:45Yeah, trainer.
16:47You?
16:48Corporate finance.
16:50Oh, got a call.
16:53Got a call.
16:56I have to take it. Um, excuse me.
16:59It was nice chatting to you.
17:00Yeah, I knew.
17:02Hey, um, thanks for the drink.
17:04Pronto.
17:07Come on. Let's bail.
17:13So, what put you off exactly?
17:15I mean, his looks, his charm, his money.
17:19Too single, was he?
17:20I don't know.
17:22It gets to me sometimes, Danny.
17:25Look at Tom and Ellie.
17:27They were perfect for each other, and this job's made me want to meet out with them.
17:30They can't make it.
17:31What chance have the rest of us got?
17:33What chance have I got?
17:36Danny, I didn't leave those on.
17:53Sorry, let myself in.
17:56No problem, Tom.
17:59Any progress on our Serbian op?
18:01They've all been saying the same thing.
18:03That community's medically sealed.
18:04Yeah, and all our best contacts were run by Tessa.
18:08Tessa's no longer someone we talk about.
18:14Is she being kicked out?
18:16Only drink in this flat.
18:19One minute they're innocent, and they're just innocent and safe.
18:23And you open your mouth, a few words come out,
18:25I'm a spy, and suddenly they're a target.
18:29They're a liability for life.
18:31And it's all your fault.
18:33They've been branded.
18:35It's like a hex.
18:37It's no one's fault, Tom.
18:38It's just the job, and we chose it.
18:40And then we got them killed, say.
18:42Their lives are being ruined, and it's all because of me.
18:44That's not true.
18:47Where is she now?
18:49Her mother's.
18:51I want to be there for them.
18:54I want to be there, and I can't.
19:02Look, that's what they said.
19:04When the dust cleared at Long Cross, they did an inventory,
19:06and there is a massive shortfall in one of the munition stores.
19:09The explosion was a diversion. It's got to be.
19:12I mean, they cleaned the place out.
19:13Light arms, mortars, explosives, and some cutting-edge automatic weapons.
19:16It wasn't an attack. It was a smash and grab raid.
19:18Selling on or using?
19:19I don't know.
19:20That's what I'm afraid of.
19:21He's got to store it all.
19:23Presumably close to home.
19:24The cellar community's brought colours down, Tom.
19:26All sources are drawing blanks.
19:28Other people don't know anything or are just not talking.
19:30If we start locking on doors, they're going to be 50 miles away
19:32before we've even finished the street.
19:33Registry's come up with something.
19:35This was taken in a UN safe house just after Graditch's unit occupied it.
19:38This is the tail end of a diatribe against Britain.
19:41He holds us particularly responsible,
19:43as we're always agreeing with the Americans on NATO matters.
19:45Along with everything else.
19:47Why the tears?
19:49He'd just been told of the death of his sons.
19:52What's he saying? Zoe?
19:55Um...
19:58They bombed trains and hospitals with innocent civilians inside
20:01and talked to us of war crimes.
20:03The role of Britain in NATO.
20:05Not a big fan, it would appear.
20:07Surprise, surprise.
20:08He's vowed to strike back at the heart of the enemy.
20:10That's us, by the way.
20:12Um, I will only strike military targets,
20:15as I've always done.
20:17Only legitimate military targets.
20:21All this from a man who's butchered innocent civilians for the last ten years.
20:26You wanted a full profile on Rado. Look at this.
20:29MI6 had him under surveillance in Belgrade,
20:31and luckily for us, captured up when he came over here to work for the embassy.
20:34If Rado is in contact with Graditch, he's going to do it in code,
20:37and my guess is direct from the embassy.
20:39What's the way in?
20:40He's a film buff.
20:41And he gets off the bus four stops early every day to go to the video shop.
20:44He's new in town.
20:45He's got a lot of money.
20:46He's got a lot of money.
20:47He's got a lot of money.
20:48He's got a lot of money.
20:49He's got a lot of money.
20:50He's got a lot of money.
20:51He's got a lot of money.
20:52He's got a lot of money.
20:53He's got a lot of money.
20:54He's new in town. He's lonely.
20:56That happens.
20:57You're going to be his new best friend.
21:00I guess I am.
21:25I guess I am.
21:29It's coffee, boss.
21:55I don't want to hear another word from you.
21:58Got it?
21:59Got it?
22:14Okay.
22:15Rado's taking the bait.
22:16You're on, Zoe.
22:25How long have you been open?
22:27Very long.
22:32Hey.
22:34I've been trying to get this at Blockbuster for months.
22:38Well.
22:42So.
22:43How's business?
22:46Kate.
22:48You know.
22:49Quiet.
22:51Yeah, I'll tell her.
22:52Yeah, I'll take it.
23:22Oh, my God.
23:53First an army base, now a munitions transport,
23:55First an army base, now a munitions transport,
23:57both in highly classified locations.
23:59They're not on any maps.
24:00I've ordered a trawl of the MOD vetting files,
24:02plus the personnel records.
24:03If this is coming from the inside,
24:04then someone is getting paid for it big time.
24:06All military sites now on maximum alert.
24:08All military sites now on maximum alert.
24:09All military sites now on maximum alert.
24:10Any word from Rado-Lan?
24:11Any word from Rado-Lan?
24:12No.
24:13No.
24:14No.
24:15No.
24:16No.
24:17No.
24:18No.
24:19No.
24:20No.
24:21Any word from Rado-Lan?
24:22No, nothing yet.
24:25Let me know when SNX communication arrives.
24:27Not a moment later.
24:28Not a moment later.
24:29But we have enough weapons to start that war.
24:30But we have enough weapons to start that war.
24:37Who said we were starting a war?
24:42Thank you very much.
24:45Hello, there.
24:47How was the film last night?
24:48That was very good.
24:50Good day at work, I trust?
24:52Not bad. Not bad at all.
24:55What was it you said you did again?
24:58I never told you what I do.
25:01Too much too soon, sir.
25:04I thought you said you were in banking, no?
25:08No.
25:10I didn't.
25:12Sorry, I'm just, er, just trying to get to know customers, you know.
25:16And then you...
25:20Well, that's all right. I understand.
25:25I'm a journalist, actually.
25:27Right.
25:30Nicely done, mate.
25:33So, can't you work from home, then, if you just sit in front of a computer all day?
25:37Well, I don't have a computer at home.
25:39Anyway, for my work, I sometimes need...
25:42Right, it's a very special computer.
25:44Oh, yeah? Or sounds very flashy?
25:48Well, I'm not a fan of spy stories.
25:51They always make espionage seem so exciting.
25:54And if you ask me, it's probably quite the opposite.
25:57The actual job, I mean.
25:59Can't be any more boring than this one.
26:01Well, I don't understand you, Kate.
26:03You talk of changing your direction, but you clearly also do nothing about it.
26:07And one day you will quit this job, get another one, well paid.
26:10You have a CV?
26:12Not really.
26:14You're kidding? Well, here I am talking to you and all the time you're cleanly insane.
26:18You don't have a CV?
26:20No, sorry.
26:22Well, then we must change that at once.
26:30You wanted black, didn't you?
26:32Yeah, it's his favourite colour.
26:34You sure he's gonna wear that?
26:36If a girl gave you something to wear, would you put it on the next day?
26:39Yes. She wasn't asking you.
26:45Kate!
26:46Hey!
26:47Well, you're running late, I think.
26:49Don't tell anyone, but I've been trying to get another job.
26:52I just nipped out on my break to get the details and stuff.
26:54You make me so proud.
26:56Shh, shh, shh. I'm sorry.
26:58I'm very proud.
27:00What do you think?
27:02Oh. Well, it's...
27:04It's...
27:06It's...
27:08It's...
27:10It's...
27:12Oh. Well, it's...
27:14It's a good CV.
27:16But, I mean, your presentation is just...
27:18I'm not very good at the layout and all that kind of stuff, but...
27:21I could redo this for you at work, if you like.
27:24Would they let you do that?
27:26Well...
27:28In fact, I have a better idea.
27:31Sorry for being so late.
27:41What the hell's going on?
27:43Old school friend, 12 o'clock.
27:53What's going on?
27:55That girl. The girl who just came in.
27:57She's going out with my ex-boyfriend.
27:59She's got it into her head that I'm, like, the devil or something.
28:02The last time I saw her, she tried to throttle me.
28:05She sees me, I'm gonna be here all night.
28:07All right, Sam. Sam.
28:09Come out front and be the manager.
28:11Listen, listen. This is a better idea.
28:13Well, I was thinking...
28:15We can have a drink back at my flat,
28:17and I could go over your CV with you.
28:19I mean, what do you say?
28:21Right.
28:23Were you looking for anything in particular?
28:25Have you got Pretty Woman?
28:27We don't really do romantic comedies.
28:29Um, I'd try one of the larger chains.
28:32Oh, well, thanks anyway.
28:34Don't do that.
28:37It's all clear.
28:40Sam, I'll pick you up later, OK?
28:42OK.
28:45Bye. Bye.
28:53OK, Danny, what's the position there?
28:55Rado and Zoe are in. Where are you?
28:57Driving down to Ellie's parents' place. She won't speak to me on the phone.
29:00What makes you think she'll speak to you in person?
29:02Oh, reckless optimism.
29:04Can you see the flat?
29:06Yep. Light is on and all is well.
29:08We're under control here.
29:12Hang on a sec. Can I help you?
29:14Yeah.
29:16What do you want?
29:17Your phone.
29:19Oi, what are you doing?
29:21Danny.
29:24Danny!
29:26Danny!
29:32Malcolm, get a paramedic crew down to the following location.
29:3412 Winton Terrace. That's lovely 9.
29:36Yeah, OK, but I need to speak to you urgently.
29:38Just get the ambulance, Malcolm, and another sentry to Danny's old position.
29:41On their way.
29:42What's the problem?
29:43It's not good, Tom. It's not good.
29:54Slivovice.
29:56Same to you.
29:58It's Serbian brandy made from plants.
30:00Try it.
30:02Ziveli.
30:04To life.
30:10It's good stuff.
30:12You can't buy it anywhere.
30:14His brother's first wife had a son, OK?
30:16Rado is Gradić's nephew.
30:18He's not just a sympathiser, Tom, he's family.
30:20He was a foot soldier for the Red Army.
30:22He was a foot soldier for him in Croatia in the early 90s.
30:24He's killed for him.
30:26We need to tell Zoe before she goes anywhere with that man.
30:29I mean, if he finds out who she is, Tom...
30:31Get someone down there now.
30:33A few more of these and I'll be singing folk songs.
30:36Well, that's what usually happens.
30:39Oh, this country.
30:41Always the same story.
30:44You have this need to demonise.
30:49Look at this.
30:51Don't you read the papers?
30:53Yeah.
30:55Either we Serbs are monsters
30:57or everyone in the Balkans is a bastard.
30:59I don't care.
31:01I don't care.
31:03I don't care.
31:05I don't care.
31:07I don't care if everyone in the Balkans is as bad as each other.
31:12Do I look like a monster to you?
31:18Look into my eyes.
31:21Do I?
31:24Of course not.
31:26Well, you're wrong.
31:29I am a monster.
31:32We're all monsters.
31:34So am I.
31:37But we're no worse or better than anyone else.
31:41We're human beings.
31:44We contain multitudes.
31:50I'm sorry.
31:56Oh, now.
31:58Before too many, let's get your CV.
32:00And?
32:02What?
32:03Well, I was going to wait, but...
32:05You drink so nice.
32:16It's not just for the CV.
32:18You know, it's for everything, really.
32:23You're the first person that's given me any confidence in myself.
32:25You're the first person that's made me think
32:27I could actually do something with my life.
32:31Sorry, this is so embarrassing.
32:33Well...
32:35I don't know what to say.
32:39They're fabulous.
32:42I will wear them every day.
32:44They're right. You hate them.
32:46No.
32:48I love them.
32:51Right. Well, um...
32:54I'd better be off.
32:56So soon?
32:58Well, my sister's staying with me, you see, so she'll be wondering.
33:00You never told me you had a sister.
33:02Well, there's lots of things you don't know about me.
33:04You're wrong again.
33:08I know a lot about you.
33:11Kate.
33:13Really?
33:15How's that?
33:17Because I have your CV.
33:20I know everything about you.
33:24Well, don't know about that.
33:26Most CVs are full of lies.
33:28Only the good ones.
33:31I'll have this for you tomorrow, I promise.
33:33Right.
33:39They really were kids, Tom.
33:41Nothing to do with Radha, I'm sure of it.
33:44OK.
33:46Mr Palmer?
33:48You may have broken a rib.
33:49You're the boyfriend, are you?
33:51No.
33:52Well, there is a God.
33:54May I have a look, please?
33:57Ah.
34:01Expecting anyone else?
34:03Yeah, Queen of Sheba.
34:04Yeah, she's always in here.
34:06Gammy leg.
34:08I'm going to do some X-rays, get you checked out, all right?
34:10A tough guy like you shouldn't get hurt like this.
34:13Big lads, were they?
34:14Huge.
34:16What do you do? Just go around in a big T-shirt that says,
34:18''Please mug me.''
34:21The cufflinks should pick up all the keystrokes as he's typing.
34:24How's he going to understand them?
34:26Because he's typing something that we know.
34:28Zoe's CV. That's our control document.
34:31Her CV's got every letter on a quirky keyboard covered, plus symbols.
34:35We had to give you a fairly colourful pass, by the way.
34:38It's nothing personal, it's just, you know, the alphabet.
34:44I'm sorry.
34:46You know, the alphabet.
34:50He's doing it.
35:05When we know what the keystrokes sound like on his computer,
35:07we can decode and read everything he types.
35:09Simple, really.
35:17The PM's flying back from France.
35:19He wants to convene Cobra away from Whitehall and prying eyes.
35:22Why's he convening now?
35:23Any sooner would have been an overreaction.
35:25Any more would be avoiding the issue.
35:27Fact is, two attacks have been made on military bases and vehicles.
35:30That's enough to convene in anyone's book.
35:32I'd agree with that.
35:33So do the Cabinet. I need some good news to tell them, Tom.
35:36Tell them we're working on it.
35:38Danny, where's the M.O.D.?
35:40I don't know.
35:42Tell them we're working on it.
35:44Danny, where's the M.O.D.?
35:46Overworked and underpaid.
35:47There's a lot of records, Tom.
35:48If there is a mole, they'll be hiding under a ton of paperwork.
35:51I'll be in the meeting room.
35:56You have to understand something.
35:58I can and I will do anything to put things right.
36:02Ellie, I love you. I just...
36:05I love you.
36:07Tom.
36:08Tom!
36:13Macy's been having dreams, Tom.
36:16Bad dreams.
36:17Meet me.
36:20I don't know.
36:22I'm begging you.
36:28OK.
36:31OK.
36:38What have we got?
36:39This is the most likely message.
36:40Rowdy typed it first thing this morning.
36:42Chocolate wanted by a non-smoker in the flat, house share area,
36:45NW10 preferred, £180 a week.
36:47Rowdy's communicating with the gratitude through newspapers, classified ads.
36:49The message has to be some sort of a code.
36:51If a new message is going out today, we have to presume an attack is not far behind.
36:54What do you make a year?
36:56Scale D, 32,000.
36:58Not quite enough to afford a £300,000 mortgage with a Halifax.
37:01Danny, M.O.D. vetting files, OK?
37:03There's a lad here, Jim North, same pay scale as you,
37:06but if you look at his private banking, he's getting a lot of washing done.
37:09Cash, lump sums, very amateur.
37:12He works in defence logistics.
37:13Munition support.
37:14My thinking exactly.
37:15You look back further and the guy is in serious debt.
37:18No family money either.
37:19So, this cash is coming from somewhere.
37:22I think I've found our lead.
37:37They just wanted low-level stuff, really.
37:40I work in the admin department of defence logistics,
37:43so it's pretty easy to get your hands on the paperwork.
37:45Who wanted them?
37:46Freedom of information's important.
37:48These guys are putting together a map of secret Britain,
37:51and I'm sort of with them, actually.
37:53It's got to get published, so there's nothing you can do about it.
37:56That's what they told you, is it?
37:58You just blithely handed over government secrets
38:00without giving a thought as to who you were handing them to.
38:02I didn't think there was anything wrong in what they wanted.
38:05Oh, shit.
38:06How did they make the first approach?
38:08Through my friend.
38:09Who's he?
38:10Serbian dude in Hammersmith.
38:11His name's Radovan.
38:12How did they make the exchanges?
38:14Debt drops.
38:15We never met in person.
38:16We agreed on a code.
38:18They put classified ads in the evening newspaper.
38:20It included a fake phone number that we'd agreed upon,
38:22and I knew the ad was for me, so then I decoded the ad.
38:25First letter in each word, you write down a number,
38:27put all the numbers together,
38:28you've got a page number on the A to Z and a map reference.
38:30That was the time and place of the debt drop,
38:32usually at the public lab.
38:34I'd leave the papers on the day, get the cash in the next.
38:36Simple, but it worked.
38:37What papers exactly?
38:38Admin paperwork, like I said.
38:40Army maps, arm shipments, transport, white-wall itineraries.
38:43Are you aware of any other people using this method?
38:45No.
38:48What's going to happen to me?
38:49Bad things.
38:50I want a solicitor.
38:51Shut up.
39:05Somewhere in these evening standard ads are coded messages.
39:07Some of them have been used to communicate the locations of debt drops
39:10with a mole in the MOD,
39:11but we think there are other messages, in particular,
39:13between a Serbian contact and Miroslav Gradić.
39:15Now, we're probably looking for a grid reference,
39:17a place and a time,
39:18anything that could be used to communicate a location on a map.
39:21OK?
39:22Ignore any ad that does not conform to the template we've given you.
39:24That's all you work on to Sam here.
39:25Quickly now, please.
39:34OK.
39:59Apologies for the delay.
40:02Let's get started, shall we?
40:04Let's go.
40:14Bloody Nora!
40:18Assuming they use the same code for Gradić as they did for Jim North, correct?
40:21Yes.
40:22But what if they're not debt drops?
40:23What if they're targets?
40:25Three of the ads decode to a grid system,
40:26in addition to the ones you've indicated,
40:28but they're not A to Z,
40:29they're not Ordnance Survey,
40:30they're military.
40:31Two letters, ten digits.
40:32Two of them decode to the exact locations of the attacks.
40:34What about the third?
40:35It's today's.
40:37It's the site of the Cobra meeting.
40:38All along, it's been building to this.
40:41Strike enough military targets in the British Isles
40:42and I'm guaranteed there's one group of people who'll get together.
40:44Cobra.
40:45Prime Minister, Chief of Defence Staff,
40:46heads of all armed forces.
40:47Secretary of State, heads of five and six.
40:49It's not just a National Emergencies Committee,
40:51it's practically a war cabinet.
40:52Striking at the heart of the country,
40:54isn't that what he said on the surveillance video?
40:56He's taking them all out.
40:58Car! I need a car!
41:03If we could all quickly proceed to Agenda 1,
41:06to the item marked Eyes Alpha 7, page 12.
41:14Tom.
41:15Tom, is your GPS working?
41:16I can't get a trace on you.
41:17Hang on, this'll take a minute.
41:19Out.
41:24Hello.
41:25I stayed as long as I could.
41:26Longer than I should.
41:27Ellie.
41:28You know, even if you'd turned up,
41:29I would have had to do it.
41:30You know, even if you'd turned up,
41:31I would have asked you this.
41:32Ellie, something really big is going down right now.
41:34Well, I would say so.
41:35OK, Tom.
41:36Switching red channel tetra.
41:38Frequency Bravo 5.
41:39Yeah, give me a second here, mate.
41:41Listen, Ellie.
41:42I'll have to call you tomorrow.
41:44And I need you to choose.
41:47Now.
41:49Are you driving?
41:50You shouldn't be talking and driving.
41:52The job or us, Tom.
41:54It's the only way it can work.
41:56Look, I know you're upset.
41:57I am well past upset.
42:01But I love you, Tom.
42:04Maisie and I love you.
42:08And we need you to choose.
42:10To give us Ellie a chance.
42:12Ellie.
42:13Now, please.
42:14I can't do that this second.
42:16Then you've made your choice.
42:20I'm sorry.
42:28Tom, are you all right?
42:29Are you all right?
42:31There are omissions in this report.
42:33Events considered too sensitive even for Eyes Alpha.
42:35But I want you all in full possession of the facts.
42:43Tom, what the hell's going on?
42:45No shame.
42:46Have you found me yet?
42:47Yeah, the turn off's three junctions from now.
42:49Did you call up ahead?
42:50Yeah, I spoke to Harry.
42:51He says to put your foot down.
43:00Tom.
43:19Whilst I agree with you, sir,
43:20there is an urgent matter which takes precedence.
43:30Tom.
43:52Kill him.
44:00Sit down.
44:02Apologies again for the last-minute changes in plan.
44:05They were unavoidable.
44:06And I hope you didn't find the new venue
44:08completely disagreeable.
44:16My son's died.
44:18I'm sorry.
44:20I'm sorry.
44:22I'm sorry.
44:24I'm sorry.
44:26I'm sorry.
44:28My son's died in their workplace.
44:31From a bomb that knew its targets were innocents.
44:34I remember being there.
44:37Flesh smells so bad when it's burned, you know.
44:40Very strong.
44:42It never leaves you.
44:43Yes, I know.
44:47So...
44:50Tell me this.
44:53How can you sit there and talk of war crimes?
44:58I kill only my enemies.
45:01I am an honest man.
45:03The British soldiers you killed weren't your enemies.
45:05Neither were the women and children you bulldozed alive into mass graves.
45:10They were collaborators.
45:12They would have killed me when I turned my back.
45:14Women?
45:16And children?
45:18A woman or a child.
45:20They are all the same to me if they are guilty.
45:23If they are my enemy.
45:24Then they deserve to die.
45:31Sir, they're waiting for you outside, sir.
45:32Give me your weapon.
45:34Your weapon.
45:35I heard you, sir.
45:36Give it to me, please.
45:37I don't think I can do that.
45:38Hand over your weapon!
45:55There's no justice anymore, Tom.
45:57Not the way the world plays it.
45:59Nuremberg, truth and reconciliation.
46:02There's not been a single, unified, successful prosecution of international law.
46:06Do you know how much that one Libyan Lockerbie suspect cost this country?
46:10An enormous amount of money.
46:11An enormous amount of money.
46:13They're sending Gradich to The Hague.
46:15Hmm.
46:17The way the tribunal's going, he could die of old age before he's killed.
46:21The way the tribunal's going, he could die of old age before his case comes up.
46:24The cells are like a hotel, you know.
46:26Cable TV, table tennis.
46:30I heard about what happened in there.
46:35You're concerned about my emotional state?
46:37Couldn't care less about your emotional state.
46:38I care very much about whether you're able to do your job.
46:40I am.
46:41Well then, that's good news.
46:46What about McCann's group?
46:48Still no word from Section C.
46:49And no news is bad news where they're concerned.
46:52We're going to have to brace ourselves for the long game on that one, Tom.
46:56Their petty little Irish war games will always be with us.
47:05Have we still got Gradich's passport?
47:13How long's the flight to Holland?
47:14He's not going to The Hague.
47:15Where's he going?
47:16Egypt, by RAF Shoreham.
47:18In the interests of justice, we told them he was a paedophile on a British passport.
47:22You know what the Egyptians do with sex offenders?
47:25What we want to know.
47:47THE HAGUE
48:10Can you check again, please?
48:12The number is 0-7-0-9-0-0-2.
48:16That number is not valid on the network, sir.
48:19But I've called it. I've spoken to someone on it.
48:22I'm afraid you must be mistaken, sir. That number's yet to be allocated.
48:25Kate.
48:28Her name is Kate.
48:30Goodbye, sir. I'm sorry.
48:42I'm sorry.
48:43I'm sorry.
49:11I just want to see her.
49:13Do you know what time it is?
49:16This is so unfair of you.
49:18Please.
49:19Tom, don't do this.
49:21You'd do it.
49:22Come on, you would.
49:24One last time.
49:27She's in bed.
49:28She's asleep.
49:32What are you going to tell her?
49:38I'll tell her that you fell asleep too.
49:43I'm sorry.
50:13THE HAGUE
50:43THE HAGUE

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