• 1 hour ago
#thechelseadetective #series #movies #netflix



Related Keywords:
The chelsea detective season 2 watch online free
The chelsea detective season 2 watch online dailymotion
The Chelsea Detective Season 3
The Chelsea Detective Season 2 release date
The Chelsea Detective Season 2 Episode 3 dailymotion
The Chelsea Detective Season 3 release date
Cast of The Chelsea Detective
The chelsea detective season 2 episode 5 watch online free
The chelsea detective season 2 episode 5 watch online
The chelsea detective season 2 episode 5 release date
The Chelsea Detective Season 3
Chelsea Detective Season 2 cast guest stars
The Chelsea Detective Season 2 release date
The Chelsea Detective season 2 episode 3 cast imdb
The Chelsea Detective Season 1
episode 05 watch online free
The chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 watch online
The chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 release date
Watch the chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 free online
Watch the chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 free download
The Chelsea Detective Season 2 Episode 2 dailymotion
Watch the chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 free
Watch the chelsea detective season 02 episode 05 dailymotion
The Chelsea Detective Season 3
The Chelsea Detective episodes
The Chelsea Detective Season 3 release date

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00♪♪
00:10♪♪
00:20♪♪
00:30♪♪
00:40♪♪
00:50Bloody racket!
00:52♪♪
00:57Look, here. You see she's trying not to cry.
01:02I thought they weren't starting until the weekend.
01:05Well, it is the weekend, Ian.
01:07A long one, starting this afternoon,
01:09and you could have booked it off, too.
01:12Yes, well, clients come first, and my list is full at the moment.
01:16Right, now, if you don't mind,
01:19I've got a final session due shortly.
01:22Well, then, see you Tuesday.
01:25♪♪
01:35♪♪
01:39Oh, Tony, there's that weirdo again.
01:44No law against being a weirdo. I'll give you.
01:48Platinus Hispanica, a mighty London plane.
01:52Yeah, there's a lot of them about.
01:54Yeah, and I never tire of tending them.
01:56I'm talking about them.
01:58When you've been around these old-timers as long as I have,
02:01you get to feel in their energy.
02:04This one's weary.
02:06I know how it feels.
02:08So it stands its ground and bears witness to...
02:11Incoming thick mud, southeast corner, my angle.
02:15♪♪
02:25♪♪
02:36♪♪
02:45♪♪
02:53Max, you're on your dinghy.
02:55Good.
02:56I was worried you might be away for the weekend.
02:58No, I'm just here.
03:01What about you?
03:02I'm stuck in Germany, unfortunately.
03:04My mother's carer was off sick,
03:06and I can't get a flight back to London until tomorrow now.
03:09I'm expecting a delivery.
03:11You couldn't go to the flat and wait for it, could you?
03:14Um, bring me back some of that marzipan I like,
03:18and it's a deal.
03:22Winding up and bearing in mind this is your final session,
03:29it might be helpful to reflect on where you are now
03:32as compared to how you were feeling
03:34when we started your therapy.
03:36I feel ready.
03:38Ready to trust and to...
03:42to be loved, I think.
03:49I believe you are, Daisy.
03:52And I'm so very glad.
03:55I hope you're proud.
03:58Bye for now.
04:28Bye.
04:48Good night. See you.
04:58Bye.
05:20You're not going to sit in the whole weekend, are you?
05:23No, I'm... I'm fine.
05:27Let's talk when I'm back from Bath, okay?
05:30Have a good one.
05:43Hey! Hey, hey!
05:45You need to move. You're too close to my car.
05:47Sorry, mate. Braking for lunch.
05:49Lunch? Only 11am.
05:52Some of us start early, sweetheart.
05:56Soup monkeys.
05:58Fancy parking spaces wouldn't exist
06:00if we didn't look after these old beauties.
06:02They don't realise their bad juju
06:05is recorded in every annual growth ring
06:08of these elder statesman's mighty trunks.
06:11I'll look up the van.
06:13Are you in a cab? Yeah. You go on ahead.
06:16I'm going to put some flyers out round the area while we're here
06:19and I'll catch you later.
06:21Here, give us both a laugh.
06:23Key his car while I'm gone.
06:29I should have known I couldn't do it.
06:31I should have tried.
06:33Take a breath.
06:35Scan your body.
06:37Where you're feeling tension.
06:41I thought this session was going to be about my big achievement.
06:44Instead it's just a massive step backwards.
06:47A couple of controlled breaths.
06:50Then tell me about it.
06:54Sorry, can you excuse me for a moment, Khalid?
06:58Keep breathing.
07:23What?
07:48Yeah.
07:50Uh-huh.
07:52What?
07:54I think it's a loose connection.
07:57Because the lights are flickering
07:59and my piano shorted last night.
08:04I know it's a public holiday
08:06but I need an electrician.
08:12Mm-hm.
08:14Well, my flight's on time
08:16so we should be well on the way to Wicklow before any mad traffic.
08:20Oh, hold on.
08:24I better take this.
08:26How much?
08:28Oh!
08:30You have got to be joking.
08:34It's a houseboat, not Wembley Stadium.
08:37Uh, no, no, no, yeah.
08:40Yeah, no, that's all right.
08:42Yeah.
08:44Book me in.
08:45Understood.
08:47Yeah.
08:51Leila?
08:54Right, I'm on my way.
09:00Astrid?
09:01Max.
09:03You at home?
09:04Yes, I was going to call and thank you for stepping in for me.
09:08Oh.
09:10Maybe you could return the favour.
09:18MUSIC CONTINUES
09:37Ian Franklin, 51, psychotherapist.
09:40Bludgeoned to death, it looks like.
09:43Well, most certainly with his own lamp.
09:46Effective.
09:48Victim was in the middle of an online therapy session.
09:51The client called it in.
09:53So we have an eyewitness.
09:55Didn't see the assailant, seemingly.
09:57Franklin muted the session and it all happened off-camera.
10:00Good thing is, he says, Franklin recorded it.
10:03It's the type of therapy they do.
10:05We need to see that footage now.
10:09Right away.
10:11The back door has been jimmied and there's a blood smear going out that way.
10:15The victim's blood?
10:17I'm not speculating.
10:19Well, it looks like a panicked escape, anyway.
10:22Robbery gone wrong, perhaps?
10:24The drawers were rifled, but nothing obvious taken.
10:27Victim's wallet was in his pocket, cash and cards.
10:30Could have been disturbed.
10:32There's no CCTV in the building,
10:34but the victim would have had to buzz anyone in himself.
10:36Cleaner? Other offices?
10:38He shares these rooms with another therapist, Charlotte Twist,
10:42but she was off for the weekend.
10:44Mr Franklin was alone?
10:47Apparently not.
11:05That's me trying to get the kids to school every morning.
11:11You want it outside?
11:14I left him working yesterday afternoon.
11:19He was determined to come in today because he had a client.
11:22Khalid Hassan.
11:24We've seen the footage.
11:26Is it normal to tape your clients?
11:29Yeah.
11:30It's part of the process in ISTDP.
11:33We only keep them long enough to study with the clients
11:36as part of their treatment.
11:38And the tapes are confidential.
11:40Not when a murder occurs in the middle of recording.
11:43You'll want to see this.
11:45It's yesterday's post.
11:47A couple of estate agents' details.
11:49And this.
11:51Oh, my God.
11:53I know who sent that.
11:55Well, I don't know, but it's got to be him.
11:59There was a client last year, Nathan...
12:02Nathan Dix.
12:04He initially presented with depression,
12:06history of personality disorders, ADHD on top,
12:10deteriorated when he came off his meds.
12:12This was Mr Franklin's client or yours?
12:14Ian's.
12:15Although we...
12:17we consult each other as part of the process.
12:19It's peer supervision.
12:21Anyway, Nathan stopped recognising boundaries.
12:24He started inundating Ian with emails, voicemails, texts.
12:29I'll check for them.
12:30And then he was arrested
12:32for trying to enter the offices uninvited.
12:35Well, if he was arrested, we'll have a custody image on file.
12:38Oh, it's all on record.
12:40Our regulatory body was helping Ian with legal advice
12:44and a restraining order.
12:46You know, it happens.
12:48Idealisation of the therapist.
12:50I imagine you'll have an address for Mr Dix.
12:53Ah...
12:54Well, I don't know, because it all peaked a few months ago
12:57and then Nathan's living situation became chaotic.
13:00But we should have a GP's number in the office,
13:03cos Ian was liaising with them when things started to spiral.
13:06And perhaps you could show me where.
13:25You're telling me that someone has killed my husband?
13:31Yes, I am.
13:33We're trying to find out who it was.
13:37He's dead.
13:39I'm so sorry.
13:41But we need to know your whereabouts this morning,
13:44between 11 and 12.
13:47Mine?
13:50I've been here all day, cooking for the weekend.
13:53And your daughter?
13:55Emma, too.
13:57She got up late and then she went out for a run, I think.
14:00But...
14:03You can't think...
14:05I mean...
14:08This just can't be happening.
14:13I'd like you to look at this photo, Mrs Franklin.
14:17Do you recognise this man?
14:21Did your husband ever talk to you about a problem client?
14:25Nathan Dix?
14:27Yes.
14:30The one they caught trespassing at the practice.
14:34I didn't know his name.
14:37Ian's very diligent about keeping his professional life confidential.
14:54Oh, my God.
14:56Yes.
15:02Has he been in this house as well?
15:04Could he have found this photo elsewhere?
15:07On social media, perhaps?
15:09It's my profile picture.
15:12I'm going to need permission to access your account.
15:16Are we being stalked?
15:18Are we in danger?
15:20Because...
15:23My daughter and I are alone now.
15:26Emma?
15:31Where's Dad?
15:42Anything?
15:43GP surgery's closed for the weekend.
15:45I'm chasing.
15:46Last known address was a hostel in Shepherds Bush.
15:49No phone or online presence, not in his own name, at least.
15:52OK, listen up.
15:55Ian Franklin practised intensive short dyna... short...
16:00Int...
16:03Intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy.
16:05That's ISTDP for short.
16:07Specialising in patients with anxiety, depression,
16:10trauma and behavioural disorders.
16:13We can place the time of death between 11.20
16:16when the assault itself was recorded
16:18and 11.55 when the police arrived.
16:21Now, Ian had practised for 20 years,
16:24married to wife Martha for nearly as long,
16:27daughter Emma, 19, still living at home.
16:30The assailant broke in through the back door
16:32but left no fingerprints at the scene.
16:34No known witnesses apart from Khalid Hassan,
16:37the online client who called it in.
16:39There's a tree surgery outfit working on the street outside,
16:43Picards.
16:44They were on a break at the time of the murder
16:47but they noted a man matching Nathan Dix's description
16:50hanging around the day before.
16:52That, combined with the statement from Charlotte Twist,
16:57Ian Franklin's business partner of two years,
17:00means that tracing Nathan is our top priority.
17:03Leila and I are going to talk to the eyewitness.
17:06Meantime, I need a list of all of Franklin's clients and contacts,
17:10especially those he's seen most recently.
17:12Yep.
17:19I'll try to take a couple of days leave when I can.
17:22I'm just sore. I'll miss the gang.
17:27Yeah.
17:28Well, try not to pine for me too much.
17:31Er, Helen's not a happy camper either.
17:34Oh, John's literally a happy camper.
17:36There are six of us hiking the Wicklow Way,
17:38so he's going on without me, just to ice my cake.
17:41You know?
17:42Well, Helen hasn't got a choice.
17:44We've got my parents and her mum and stepdad visiting
17:47and it's too late to cancel.
17:49Oh, there are advantages to dating an older man.
17:52One parent in a home.
17:55And I didn't say that.
17:57And there are advantages to being stuck at work.
18:00I didn't say that either.
18:04Let's go.
18:06The witness has OCD, apparently,
18:09so maybe no shaking hands.
18:18I want to. I swear.
18:21I'm not trying to be obstructive.
18:23It's the risk factor, the germs.
18:26We could wear masks, if you like.
18:28You don't understand.
18:39I have a phobia.
18:42I was making progress.
18:43All this with Ian.
18:45I can't get it out of my head.
18:47No wonder.
18:49It must have been an awful shock.
18:52We do understand, Mr Hassan.
18:55But we really need to talk to you.
18:57Then talk.
18:59I'm here.
19:01You could video call me, if that helps.
19:04We have your number, Mr Hassan.
19:07Ending 0-2-2-1, yes?
19:10That's me.
19:18Call me Khalid.
19:20I want to help, any way I can.
19:22Tell us about what you saw.
19:24Did it seem that Mr Franklin was expecting someone?
19:27No, nobody has ever interrupted before.
19:30Therapy is sacrosanct.
19:33Ian wouldn't answer the door, not unless it was an emergency.
19:38I'm passing you a photo through the letterbox.
19:42Can you tell us if it's someone you recognise?
19:56Mr Hassan?
19:58Khalid?
20:00I...
20:02I don't know.
20:04Maybe.
20:06There's something...
20:09Is it just the power of suggestion?
20:11He used to be a client of Ian Franklin's.
20:14Why, you have seen him at the practice?
20:18I've, um...
20:20never actually been to the practice.
20:23I see Ian remotely.
20:30Jess, what have you got for me?
20:32Nathan's GP got back.
20:34We've got an address.
20:36A grandmother in Belgravia.
20:56We're Chelsea CID.
20:59Detective Inspector Arnold
21:02and Detective Sergeant Walsh.
21:06Thank you, Ferguson.
21:12My grandson has been staying here for a while.
21:15He's not been quite well.
21:17We need to question Nathan urgently, Mrs Dix.
21:20I understand.
21:22But it would be best if I renew my appointment.
21:26And it would be best if I remained
21:29for reassurance, if you see.
21:32We've been getting back on track with Nathan's medicine
21:35and establishing a healthy routine.
21:37He needs a little support, but he's getting there.
21:43Do sit down.
21:47You've injured yourself, Nathan.
21:50I told you.
21:52Cutting is a symptom of a more turbulent inner climate.
21:56But as I say, we're on the mend.
21:59Yeah.
22:01You're here because of the texts and emails, aren't you?
22:04But I've not broken any rules
22:06and it's not a crime to walk down the street.
22:08But it is illegal to stalk people, Nathan.
22:11And to send hate mail.
22:13What hate mail? I just...
22:15I only wanted to see him again.
22:17Calm, Nathan.
22:19Is this from you, Mr Dix?
22:21I never sent that.
22:23Nothing like that. I wouldn't...
22:26Did Ian say I did?
22:29No, he didn't.
22:31We found it in his office.
22:33Just let me speak to him, please.
22:35I don't want him to think I'd do something like that.
22:37Sit down, Nathan.
22:39You can't speak to Ian Franklin because he's dead.
22:43Where were you this morning at 11.20, Nathan?
22:47No!
22:55I can assure you, I was with Nathan all day.
23:00We have a routine.
23:02It's what the doctor advised after his recent breakdown.
23:06We have our pills, then breakfast,
23:09then a good walk to the gym in Mayfair.
23:12We cut through the park.
23:14Which gym was this? We'll need to check.
23:16Of course. I hope you do.
23:19It's a private club.
23:21Bannerman Health.
23:23Nothing significant in his room.
23:26Except a freshly laundered gym kit back in its bag.
23:29From this morning?
23:31In this house, we wash our sweaty clothes after exercise.
23:35You do understand this is a murder investigation, Mrs Dix?
23:39We want to help, Detective.
23:41It's a tragedy.
23:44What will I do now, Grandma?
23:47I know you're sad. It is sad.
23:50But we'll find someone else to help you.
23:53That's what we've been building to, you see.
23:56Getting well enough to have face-to-face therapy again.
23:59It's no use if you're not feeling yourself.
24:02I wasn't feeling myself when I went to see Ian.
24:06I know I shouldn't have gone, but...
24:09I just wanted to say sorry for making him feel cross.
24:13And I wanted to let him know it wouldn't happen again
24:17and that it was OK to come back.
24:20This was when?
24:22When he was arrested for harassment.
24:24Last summer.
24:26Went to visit Mr Franklin, uninvited, as it were.
24:30How did you get into the practice, Nathan?
24:33Well, I... I just waited.
24:37Till someone else came out and then I just walked in
24:40and hid in the toilet till the end of session was over.
24:43You never interrupt a session!
24:48It might be a good idea to have a lie-down, Natie.
24:53You've had a bit of a shock.
25:00Thank you, Ferguson.
25:03I think I should share some of the background with you,
25:08if I may.
25:13Was that actual Downton Abbey?
25:16More like Bleak House.
25:26Nathan's parents used to lock him in the cellar for days at a time.
25:32As punishment for bad behaviour, they called it house arrest.
25:37He was six years old.
25:39That's literally torture.
25:42Nathan was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult,
25:45but who knows how bad his symptoms were made or even caused by the abuse.
25:49He was finally taken into care
25:51until his maternal grandmother applied for custody.
25:55And she's done her best to atone ever since.
25:58Obviously, we'll want to check all that against Franklin's own notes,
26:01but Charlotte Twist confirmed he believed it to be a safe relationship.
26:05So did Nathan's GP.
26:07Mrs Dix has been focused on trying to get Nathan's mental health
26:11back on track and some sort of independent living.
26:15But buying him a flat on his own was a mistake, apparently.
26:18Unsupervised, he stopped taking his meds and things went downhill.
26:23But he definitely has a solid alibi for the murder.
26:27Well, the gym confirms Nathan and his gran checked in and out
26:30with facial recognition security.
26:32We've got the CCTV recording.
26:36And who killed Ian Franklin?
26:39We have the full list of Ian's clients.
26:41Khalid Hassan was his only one today,
26:43but these are the people he saw most recently.
26:46Only two people actually came into the practice yesterday.
26:49One of them was a client of Charlotte's
26:52that she and her parents flew to Mallorca yesterday evening.
26:55And the other was a Daisy Phillips.
26:57I've called, so has Charlotte, but there's been no answer so far.
27:00She may be away.
27:02I've drawn a blank so far on Franklin's phone, emails, bank account,
27:05but it's early days.
27:07PHONE RINGS
27:13I want to know who sent that.
27:16Could still be Nathan, even if he's not the killer.
27:19Max, it's Charlotte Twist.
27:21She wants permission to fetch some files from the crime scene.
27:24Tell her I'll meet her there.
27:28You were just calling on this Daisy Phillips.
27:31Let's try and track her down.
27:39You can check these,
27:41but I do need to start making arrangements.
27:45How well do you know Ian's family?
27:49Would you know if there were problems?
27:52Oh, he wouldn't have talked to me.
27:56I mean, the daughter sounds like a bit of a handful,
28:00but that's just what I gleaned from his telephone conversations with his wife.
28:05What about his wife, Martha?
28:08Ah, well, I met her a couple of times.
28:11I liked her.
28:13She seemed very quiet, but Ian's...
28:16Ian was quite alpha, so it probably worked for them.
28:21When you say alpha...
28:24Well, very...
28:27very sure of himself.
28:30I mean, I don't think Martha could say boo to a goose,
28:33but I suppose everyone has their breaking point.
28:37So it would seem.
28:42PHONE BUZZES
28:43Phone's going straight to voicemail.
28:51Do you know a Daisy Phillips?
28:53I'm Letitia, her flatmate.
28:55Why?
28:57I've been trying to call her, too.
28:59Tell her I was coming home early.
29:02Had a fight with my boyfriend.
29:08Jess?
29:16Daisy, can you hear me?
29:21Ambulance to flat 2, 27 St Thomas' Road.
29:24Red 1, adult female, mid-30s, suspected overdose.
29:44It doesn't make sense.
29:46She really wanted to get well.
29:50She's unresponsive, but breathing will just...
29:54She saved all her money to get the best treatment.
29:58Like, every penny.
30:00What was she suffering from, Letitia?
30:03Anxiety, depression.
30:06She grew up in care, fostering.
30:10There was some...
30:12bad stuff happened.
30:14Like...
30:16It is complicated.
30:18Is there any next of kin that we could call?
30:21Even distant?
30:22No-one.
30:24Not that I know of, anyway.
30:26Had anything changed recently?
30:28Only for the better.
30:30She was finishing her therapy.
30:32I think she might have even met someone.
30:35Spike?
30:37I don't know.
30:39I do know she wanted to get out there.
30:42She was optimistic.
30:45Till last night.
30:47I think something had happened, but...
30:50I was in a hurry to leave, and...
30:53It's OK.
31:02OK, thanks, Leila.
31:04No, keep me posted.
31:07Can it be a coincidence
31:09that one of Ian's last clients, Daisy Phillips,
31:12just attempted suicide?
31:14Well, suicidal ideation is not unusual in our business,
31:19but...
31:20I'd be surprised if Ian stopped her treatment
31:23if he thought she was in a bad place.
31:25In fact, no.
31:26No, he was really pleased with her progress.
31:29We discussed it.
31:31And who is Spike?
31:33Er, I don't know.
31:35But I can check her tapes, if you'd like.
31:38Oh, er...
31:39I'll take the tapes.
31:41All the recent ones.
31:43Wait.
31:44This is different to Khalid's tape.
31:47Daisy can't consent,
31:48and the attack didn't take place during her therapy.
31:51No, but she tried to kill herself shortly after,
31:54and I want to know why.
31:56Are you suggesting she had something to do with it?
31:59Anyone who visited the practice in the last few days
32:03is of interest to us.
32:05You and your own clients included.
32:13Your fight-or-flight response is malfunctioning for good reason, Daisy.
32:17You're very brave.
32:19I want you to recognise that.
32:21I do.
32:23I mean, I'm not afraid any more, I don't think.
32:26But when I am, I understand it.
32:29It doesn't feel, you know...
32:32disastrous.
32:35She's in intensive care.
32:37Still unconscious.
32:40She doesn't look strong enough to bludgeon anyone.
32:43If she caught him unawares...
32:45Yeah, but what's the motive?
32:49Maybe she didn't want to end her therapy.
32:52Maybe he insisted and she couldn't handle being cut loose.
32:56I haven't found anything that even hints at that yet.
32:59Oh.
33:01I hope you're proud.
33:05Bye for now.
33:10We've got her last two sessions.
33:12They're 90 minutes long, so there's a lot to trawl through.
33:15But so far, there's no mention of any spike.
33:18She seems just like her flatmate described her.
33:21Optimistic.
33:23Maybe her ODing is just coincidence.
33:26Check this out.
33:28Check this out.
33:37Where's your father in all this?
33:40I mean, you talk about your mother and not...
33:42Wait for it.
33:44The picture behind her.
33:47Oh, my God, the tree surgeon.
33:51He took a statement.
33:53I don't suppose he mentioned he was a peeping Tom?
33:55At the very least.
33:57We might be able to catch them before they clock off.
34:13Where's the gaffer?
34:15At the caf, round the corner.
34:19You take interns going up?
34:21Ross, mostly. He's got more experience with pruning.
34:24Oh, yeah?
34:26How long have you been working for Ross, then?
34:29About a year. Why?
34:31We're just filling in some gaps I forgot to ask this morning.
34:48You lot are like buses.
34:50Never around when you need one,
34:52but when you're after a quiet bite to eat.
34:57Who was up the tree this morning when the therapist was attacked?
35:01We were on lunch.
35:03I said... I said, didn't I?
35:05Before you broke for lunch, then.
35:08Ross was...
35:11What is all this?
35:13We in some kind of trouble?
35:15Not that I know of.
35:17Yet.
35:27So, I have to take a chainsaw up a tree with a blindfold on?
35:32Oh, well, here comes another boss.
35:34Charmer.
35:35Does it look like Mr Pickard here
35:37is craning his neck to see through the window?
35:39Oh, it's got to be said, it does look a bit like voyeurism.
35:42What do I want to voy in a shrink's office?
35:45You tell us, Ross, cos it's looking a bit wrong.
35:48Look, I'm a tree surgeon, not a pervert.
35:51I didn't do anything dark, man.
35:56And I never saw any murder.
35:59But...
36:01I did see a bit of a to and fro between her and the dead guy.
36:05Oh, yeah, the therapist.
36:07They were having words.
36:09I could hear her shouting at him.
36:11Lying bastard. Words to that effect.
36:13When was this?
36:14Yesterday. About an hour before that.
36:27Is this absolutely necessary?
36:29Your assistance is duly appreciated.
36:32Because I'm really quite up against it
36:35rescheduling Ian's client list for the next few weeks, at least.
36:39You can't just cancel?
36:41Well...
36:43These are real people with real trauma.
36:48And now their therapist has been murdered, I have a duty of care.
36:53Don't they get to say who sees them?
36:56Well, sure, yes, eventually, but there's a mechanism in place.
37:00It's like a safety net.
37:02We will designate someone who will inherit our clients
37:05in the event of our death.
37:07Mine was Ian, Ian's was me.
37:09Good thing you'll be able to squeeze them all in.
37:14I've seen your client list, it's only half as full as Ian's.
37:17There's a natural ebb and flow.
37:20Natural ebb and flow?
37:22And Ian charged more.
37:24My rates are client variable.
37:27But you'll be keeping Ian's clients on the higher rate, I assume.
37:31For now.
37:33One could say it's worked out rather well for you.
37:37I don't like the insinuation, Detective Inspector.
37:40Can you please remind me why you had me come here?
37:43Oh.
37:45I want to ask you about a row you had with Ian yesterday.
37:49You were overheard shouting.
37:54I lost my temper, that's all.
37:57Ian had once again taken the referral that was intended for me.
38:01He made some excuse, saying he was better suited to the brief,
38:04but it was underhand.
38:08Ian was very competitive.
38:11Alpha, I think you said this morning.
38:15Yeah.
38:18And I felt sorry for his wife and daughter, if you must know.
38:21Yes, I must.
38:24Well, then.
38:26He was a greedy, egotistical bully.
38:30And I told him, if he insisted on taking the lion's share of the referrals,
38:35then he should be paying the lion's share of the rent.
38:38He told me to up my game.
38:42I think he had a bit of a God complex going on.
38:46It wasn't just about vocation for Ian.
38:48It was about being seen to be the best.
38:52It was about his ego.
38:56I have to ask you again, Charlotte.
38:59Where were you this morning when Ian Franklin was murdered?
39:03I was home, alone, browsing estate agents,
39:07because if Ian hadn't died, I was planning to leave.
39:16MUSIC
39:28Emma?
39:41Are you OK, darling?
39:44We can talk, if you want to.
39:48I want to be left alone.
40:14MUSIC
40:30Hey. Thank you.
40:34All sorted.
40:36But it took longer than expected.
40:38Because he charges by the hour.
40:41She?
40:43It was a woman.
40:45Can I get you a drink to say thank you?
40:47I helped myself.
40:49And I don't want to be here when you see the bill.
40:53I take it you've already looked.
40:55No comment.
40:57I brought that marzipan to sweeten the bill.
41:02I'm out of here.
41:11Stop that!
41:27I used to count happy times on my hand.
41:31Like, save them up for when I needed one.
41:37I even used to rate them.
41:39I was number one.
41:41I used to change.
41:43But then there was that summer at the caravan,
41:47and we ran away from Peter's Hill.
41:49I told you about it.
41:51Yeah, you and your friend, yeah?
41:53Just me and Spike.
41:56Just a rusty old caravan.
42:00Nobody wanted.
42:02But it was like a...
42:05sanctuary.
42:08Nobody bothering us.
42:11Nobody trying to get in my room at night.
42:16I felt safe.
42:19I stopped rating them after that.
42:22Nothing could top it.
42:25You want to know the worst time?
42:27If you want to tell me.
42:29When they caught us.
42:31They accused Spike of coercing me.
42:34The only guy I ever really trusted.
42:39Apart from you.
42:41And they kicked him out.
42:43Locked me back in with my abusers.
42:48Oh, shit.
42:49Hope died for me that day.
43:05Hi, Ashley.
43:08Max?
43:10What are you doing sitting in the dark?
43:12Cursing my electrician.
43:14And be quick, my laptop's running out of charge.
43:18So it's a yes on the lamp, as suspected.
43:22A murder weapon.
43:24Which does make it look opportunistic rather than planned.
43:28That's our theory so far.
43:30Max, lips.
43:33I also found a small area of foreign blood on the head wound.
43:39Foreign?
43:41It could have been there before, but unlikely at that precise location.
43:45I'll know more when the lab can clean up my sample.
43:48Everything's taking longer, thanks to the bank holiday.
43:50Thanks, Ashley.
43:52Let me know when you have something.
44:03Okay.
44:33Thanks, Ashley.

Recommended