New Blood (2016–…): Season 1, Episode 3 - Episode #1.3 - full transcript

With two assassins on their trail and a war breaking out between two big pharmaceutical companies, Rash and Stefan are forced to work together to try to uncover the truth.

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Stefan.

Rash.

Henry!

RASH: This is Mark Henson...

Laura Jones...and this is Steve Mullen.

AlI three have been killed
in the last four weeks.

SANDS: You used the three of them
in some sort of

medicaI experiment in India.
That's what connects them.

DEAKIN: Lipocite has now become
UK Remicon's most successfuI product ever.

STEFAN: I went there as David Leese.

They knew I was coming.



They were expecting me.

So, this is the smoking gun.

This is what links David Leese
to UK Remicon.

BLAKE: UK Remicon's

our number one competitor
in the European market.

If they were to be put out of the way,

that could be very advantageous to us.

- CAROLINE: Coleman!
- I have another assignment.

Police!

Henry, STOP!

Stop!

(BRAKES SCREECH, HORN BLARES)

- What the helI are you doing?!
- What are you doing?!

- Get out the way, he's my suspect!
- Get out of my way!



Whoa! Whoa, whoa!

(STEFAN AND RASH PANT)

Don't hurt me. Please, just don't hurt me.

- It's OK
- No-one 's going to hurt you, Henry.

AlI right?

You just...stay there.

What are you doing here?

I came looking for him.

Why?

I can't telI you that.

Yes, you can.

It's about money.

It's about fraud.

- It's my job. OK?
- What's happening?

We'lI be with you in a minute.

- You can't talk to him.
- Why not?

Because I'm about to arrest him.

Look, my boss is here, alI right?
He can't see you.

I'm taking him in,

and we can sort this out tomorrow.
I'lI meet you.

But I was the one who caught him.

Well, that's not true!

AlI right, we both caught him.

I was the one who saw him!

- That's not relevant.
- What are you doing in my life?

(SIREN APPROACHES)

(# RAG'N'BONE MAN.' Wolves)

# Don't want to drown no more

# Sick of the same old people

# The kind that'lI selI your soul

# Trade it for a shinin' stone

# Ain't nothin' in this life for free

# Running from the greatest evil

# It finally dawned on me

# A man's got to fight temptation

# Keep the wolves from the door

# I hear them scratching
like I don't know better

# Won't you keep
the wolves from the door?

# It won't be long before
I cave in and open up the door. #

Why are you interested in Henry Williams?

I told you...

I can't talk about my work.

Oh, that's ridiculous. Look, you were
at that hoteI because of a man called

David Leese.

Can't you see we're both
investigating the same thing?

How can you eat alI that?

- What?
- That crap.

It's breakfast!

Fine. I'lI telI you what I know

- if you telI me what you know.
- OK.

You go first.

No. I invited you here.

And I paid!

If you telI my bosses...

I told you anything,

I'lI get killed.

Same.

AlI right, but this is just
between you and me.

- AlI right?
- Right.

The...

SFO are investigating
a company called UK Remicon.

It's huge.
It makes pharmaceuticaI products.

And...?

Well, it's bribing doctors and pharmacists
to promote their products,

selling to the NHS at overinflated prices.

One of those doctors is David Leese,

and David Leese is somehow
linked to Henry Williams.

Now it's your turn.

(CLEARS HIS THROAT)

Henry is, er...

He's connected to the murder
of three people -

two teachers and a guy who worked
at a gardening centre.

They alI took part in some sort of
experiment in India.

Was that for a company called Greenfern?

- Yes!
- Well, do you know what drug?

- Er, an antidepressant.
- Name?

We don't know.

- David Leese was CEO of Greenfern!
- I know.

And Greenfern paid everyone
who took part...

- £600.
- Yes!

Your sister, Leila.
Does she have a boyfriend?

That's...not a question.
That's got nothing to do with this.

Sorry.

Don't even go there!

OK.

What about Henry Williams?

He's our number one suspect.

He was there when one of the teachers
felI to their death.

I actually saw him at the station.

Do you know he was being paid
£20,000 a year?

No, but that makes sense.

He was definitely getting money
from somewhere.

- Who was paying it?
- Greenfern.

SANDS: Why did you go to the station,
Henry?

I didn't.

We have you on CCTV. Why were you there?

I went to meet someone.

Laura Jones.

No.

Then who?

Caroline.

Who's Caroline?

Who is she?

She's my friend.

The one you talk to on the computer?

We've looked at your computer, Henry.

You were using an encrypted
communication platform.

But we couldn't find an account

at the other end, which means
either they deleted it

or they didn't exist in the first place.

I think Caroline's
a figment of your imagination.

She's real.

So, you met her at the station?

Well...

...she said she was going to come, but...

she didn't.

No, Henry. Why don't you admit it?

You went there to meet Laura.

MAUREEN: Henry didn't used to
be like this.

He was a sweet little boy.

He did welI at school.

Then his father walked out,

and...it alI started to go wrong.

I couldn't controI him.

He felI in with the wrong crowd -
drugs, drinking alI the time.

I just watched him.
There was nothing I could do.

So, er, what happened in India?

There was some sort of test.

I never wanted him to go to India.

I knew it was a bad idea!

So, what happened?

I don't know very much about it,
only what Henry told me.

There was a... There was a hospital.

That's where they alI met.

Most of us won't even get the reaI stuff.

They just give you an injection,
then you lie down for a few hours.

It was something to do with depression.

It was meant to make them all
feeI cheerful.

Are you saying that this drug,
this - whatever they injected into him -

- made him ill?
- He was already ill!

He was an addict!

But it made him worse.

Put it down!

Greenfern looked after him.

That was the name of the company...

...but they didn't allow him
to leave India for a while,

and when he did come home,
he couldn't look after himself.

He moved back in to live with me.

You've tried to look after him.

I have looked after him!

Whatever you think, whatever
you're saying, you're wrong.

SANDS: You went and found them
one by one, didn't you?

You pushed Mark Henson off a roof...

- ...Laura Jones down the escalators...
- No.

...you ran over Steve Mullen in your car.

- No.
- Yes,

Henry. Why?

Was it something they did in India?
Is that why you wanted to kilI them?

I didn't!

You...

You, er...

I didn't, I didn't, I didn't...

I didn't, I didn't, I didn't,

I didn't... I didn't...

I didn't, I didn't, I didn't, I didn't...

Don't worry. Don't worry, Henry.

You're gonna be alI right.

SANDS: It's not going to be
alI right for Henry, is it?

Henry's going to jail.
Or maybe to Broadmoor.

And what exactly do you think
you were doing,

putting your hand on him?!

Don't you know anything about
physicaI contact during an interrogation?

He had his brief in there!

He could do you for assault!

Wanker!

ELEANOR." UK Remicon had a subsidiary
in India called Greenfern,

and Greenfern was run by David Leese?

- Yes.
- It's the link we've been looking for.

It connects him 100% with UK Remicon.

- And what does Greenfern do?
- It was a clinic

primarily involved in developing
and testing of new drugs.

And one of the volunteers, Henry Williams,
has just been arrested by the police

following how many murders?

- Three.
- Three!

Henry is stilI being paid by Greenfern.

They don't want anyone
to know what happened.

AlI right. Let's stop there.

We cannot...

move forward with this case while
it's a subject of police investigation.

But we've put in months of work.

I know, and if you recall, I had my doubts

about pursuing Leese in the first place,
and now we're involved in

a murder investigation, for God's sake!

But Leese can stilI get us
into UK Remicon.

No, Stefan. Right now you can't
go anywhere near David Leese.

It is a police matter.

You're off the case. Both of you!

REPORTER: William Ashton,

chairman of pharmaceuticaI giant
UK Remicon,

was today forced to issue a statement

following the police arrest
of 30-year-old Henry Williams

on suspicion of murder.

ASHTON: Henry Williams volunteered
for one of the test programmes.

Unfortunately,
he was a habituaI drug user.

He'd lied on his application form.

Due to a combination of different
elements in his bloodstream,

he...he did suffer
some sort of...episode.

REPORTER: What was the drug being tested?

It was called Stenokoritin.
It's an antidepressant.

For reasons unconnected with the test,
it never went into commerciaI production.

Thank you very much.
That's alI I have time for.

REPORTER: Police have yet to comment
on the triple murder investigation,

but with shares in UK Remicon falling,

CEO William Ashton
wilI need to move quickly

to reassure investors.

Ah, Bruce, come in.

- You wanted to see me.
- That's right.

I was concerned about you, Bruce.

Is everything alI right?

Yes, it is. Why wouldn't it be?

You telI me.

Well, sir, if I can be honest with you...

Please.

...this business with Henry Williams...

I think that I'm being drawn into
something that's way above my head,

and I'm not sure if I want
to be part of it.

Well, I'd say it's a little late
for that now.

You started this.

You came to us. And...we have shown

- our gratitude.
- Three people are dead!

They were killed by Henry.

You know, it's a...

sad story, but he's the victim
in alI this.

UK Remicon screwed with his head,

and now they're paying the price.

You saw what happened in India.
You saw it with your own eyes.

That was just the start.

Why would he go after the other
volunteers? That makes no sense.

Well, he's a very disturbed young man.
I don't think

sense has got anything to do with it.

You know...

you're lucky he didn't come after you.

RASH: He didn't do it.

Henry Williams is confused, alI right?

He's not well, but I don't think
he's got it in him

to kilI anyone.

Then who did?

I don't know!

Obviously, I don't know that yet!

Yeah, but I thought you said
you had a load of evidence.

Well, alI the evidence
points to Henry Williams.

TelI me.

OK.

There was a rolI of adhesive tape
in his room.

- Well, well, well.
- It matches the tape

that we found on the roof that was used
when Mark Henson was killed.

- That's not conclusive.
- No.

But that's not all.
We've got fibres from his clothes

that place him at both crime scenes -

Mark Henson and Laura Jones.

And we found strands of Laura's hair
on one of his jackets.

There was also bloodstains
on his mother's car.

AB, the same blood type as Steve Mullen.

And we know he drove up the M1
to Luton the day Mullen died.

- Is that where he lived?
- Yeah.

It might have been
someone else in the car.

I wish it was.

We got a faciaI image
from one of the cameras.

And he used his phone less than a mile
away from the place Mullen worked.

Anything else?

I already told you.

I saw him at the station when Laura
was killed. He was definitely there.

So he did it.

- What?
- Well, it's obvious.

I just said he didn't do it. What“?

Well, you just proved that he did.
How much evidence do you need?

- The evidence could have been planted.
- Who by? What planet are you on?!

The same planet that spikes your drink

and almost has you under a truck.

This is big...

...and I'm going to prove it,
even if I have to do it on my own.

Go on, then, convince me.

OK. First of all, someone turned off
the cameras at the tube station

at the exact same time
Laura Jones was killed.

There were two women there.
Contract workers.

Who were they? What were they doing?

And then there's the question of Henry
Williams and the money he was being paid.

How does he afford alI this stuff?

- He's getting paid 20 grand a year.
- Yeah, but why?

I mean, why are Greenfern
stilI paying him?

Look, this has got something to do
with what happened in India.

AlI the people that took part
in that experiment

are being killed,
and Henry's getting the blame.

Is that what your bosses think?

No, of course not. They won't
listen to me. How about you?

I'm off the case.

- Why?
- We can't investigate

David Leese while you're
investigating Henry Williams.

So what are you doing?

I'm not doing anything.

(RASH SIGHS)

Bruce Lockwood.

Who's he?

He's the one who led us to Henry Williams.

He was in India.

We should talk to him.

You and me?

Why not?

just take it seriously, OK?

(ENGINE RATTLES)

So, where did you get this van?

From a guy I live with.

He's a builder.

Yeah, I'd never have guessed.

What are you doing?

I need coffee.

- Are you mad? We're an hour late!
- What? I can't drive without coffee.

Wait!

(RASH SIGHS)

Should have taken the train.

RASH: Bruce Lockwood was in India.
And what's interesting is

he also works for
a pharmaceuticaI company.

Ruhn Laboratories.

- They're bastards.
- What, you know them?

Yeah, I've read about them.

And...?

They're an American
pharmaceuticaI company...

and they're bastards.

RASH: Can '2' this thing go any faster?

I'm touching the floor.

I'm through the floor.

- This is rubbish.
- WilI you just relax?

OK?

It wilI get us there.

RASH: Bruce...

...I'm afraid we're gonna be late.

Something's come up with the case.

A couple of hours?

You are so annoying.

Idiot.

OK, that's better.

Let's go.

Hurry UP-

We haven't got alI day!

Alison? Do you know where Stefan is?

Er, he didn't come in today.

He said he was going to Bristol
with a friend.

OK.

STEFAN: So, telI me, why are we interested

in Bruce Lockwood?

Look...

why was he at Laura jones's funeral?

He hasn't seen her in, what,
like, six years?

Suddenly he turns up.

He's the one that led us
to Henry Williams.

I don't know, it almost feels...

Deliberate.

Exactly.

Thank you for looking in, William.

I saw you on the television.

Yes.

Not my naturaI habitat.

Mm.

Did you know...

about Greenfern?

Is that why you asked me here?

Well, I just wondered.

I only came to UK Remicon
two years ago, Peter.

Greenfern had already been wound down.

What exactly happened in India?

- I'm making it my business to find out.
- You may be running out of time.

We're under attack.
You do know that, don't you?

- This has alI been orchestrated.
- Who would do that?

Anyone with an interest
in a billion pounds' worth of business.

Ruhn Laboratories?

I wouldn't put it past them.
When it comes to business,

the Americans lead the world
in ruthlessness.

Have you heard anything more
from the SFO?

They seem to be retreating.

They've pulled out one of their teams.

Well, that's something.

If they went public right now,
it could be the end of us.

We wouldn't want that.

Precisely.

STEFAN: How are we gonna do this?

What do you mean?

I've never done an interrogation.

Um... (CLEARS HIS THROAT) It's easy.

AlI right?
We'lI just do good cop, bad cop.

But...

I'm not a cop.

Yeah, but he...

...he doesn't need to know that.

Yeah!

OK.

I wilI be bad cop.

- No! I'm the bad cop.
- Why?

Because I've done lots of interviews.

And it was my idea.

Come on, Rash, this is gonna be fun.

He's just through there.

- Do you remember me?
- Of course.

But I don't understand
why you've come back.

I'lI telI you why, Bruce.

Because you've been telling us
a pack of lies. That's why.

I'm sorry. Who's he?

He's, er, an investigator working with me.

I didn't lie to you.

You went to Laura's funeral,
even though you haven't seen her

in six years.

- Why'd you do that?
- Could you just, um...

...just wait a minute?

- What do you think you're doing?
- What?

I was going to ask him that.

Go on, then.

Why did you go?

I don't know. It was an impulse.

That's another lie!

You knew Laura for one week.

You don't see her in six years
and now suddenly you're at her funeral.

That...doesn't make any sense.

Unless you had another agenda.

And then there was Henry Williams.
When did you see him?

I haven't seen him.

Really?

The sixth was a man called Henry Williams.

He's living in London.

Then how did you know
he was living in London?

- I-I don't know. Someone told me.
- Who?

Well, I don't remember. One of the others.

He's lying-

You told us because
you wanted us to know.

It was the same with David Leese.

It was run by a guy called David Leese.

He works for the NHS.

Have you met him?

No.

Do you know what he looks like?

No!

Then why did you telI us his name?

Look, I don't know
what you're talking about.

You ask me questions, I give you answers.

He did that very well, didn't he?

I thought so.

Look, I don't have to telI you anything.

This has got nothing to do with me.

And now he's getting nervous.

Look, Bruce...

you, Mark Henson, Laura Jones,
Steve Mullen and Henry Williams

alI took part in a drugs test
and something went wrong.

Now three of those people are dead.
What do you think about that?

You could be next.

It's got nothing to do with me.

It's got everything to do with you.

You know the truth.

And whoever you're protecting,
they know that, too.

I wouldn't go near any tube stations.

- That's ridiculous.
- I bet they already know

you've talked to us today.

And the question is,
are they gonna trust you?

I wouldn't.

(CLEARS HIS THROAT) Well, um...

...here's my number, if you want to talk.

Oh, but I'lI give you some advice.

Don't leave it too late.

(CHUCKLES)

That went well!

Look, I thought I was supposed to be

bad cop.

What? You were.
I thought you were good.

Yes. But I was supposed to be bad.

You were bad!

But you were bad cop, too!

I-It doesn't matter.

Yeah? We got what we wanted!

He's scared. He'lI come back to us.

(SIGHS)

Now...

I want you to do the same thing
to David Leese.

Why?

I helped you,

you help me.

LEESE: You were here before.

- Yes, sir.
- Where's your...

senior officer?

He sent me.

Why?

Further information
has come to light, sir.

You told us that you'd never
heard of Henry Williams,

who's now the chief suspect
in a murder inquiry.

Yet it turns out a company,

Greenfern Consultancy Services,

has been paying him nearly £2,000 a month.

You are the chief executive.

Who told you that?

It's possible he's being paid.

But what I told you was true...

I never met him.

Can you telI me why he's being paid?

Wasn't my decision.

I imagine someone decided
that we owed him a duty of care.

As a matter of fact,

I'm quite surprised
he was given anything at all...

considering what happened.

And what did happen exactly?

He was part of a medicaI trial.
I told you the last time you were here.

But he lied on his application.

There was a whole cocktaiI of drugs
in his blood.

As a result, he had a minor episode.
We cared for him,

sent him home as soon as he was ready.

What was the name
of the drug being tested?

Stenokoritin.

It was an antidepressant.

OK. Well, er, if you have
any further thoughts,

- you know how to reach me.
- Of course.

There is one other thing.

We've had a complaint
from a secretariaI assistant

working in this building.

What sort of complaint?

I'm afraid to say it's...

not very pleasant, sir.

It's of a sexuaI nature.

Who?

His name's Stefan Kowolski.

The complaint's against you.

What? That's...that's outrageous.

That's ridiculous.

You deny that you touched him
in an inappropriate way in this office?

Of course I deny it. I'm married!

And it's his word against mine.

Yes, sir.

But he may not be the only one.

He says that there are other employees
who are also willing to make statements.

Who?

Er, we don't know yet.

But, um...we'lI let you know.

Thank you for your time.

(DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES)

- (RASH EXHALES)
- Did he buy it?

He almost had a heart attack.

That's great!

Yeah, if we scare him enough...

- he'lI talk.
- (ENGINE STARTS)

Yeah.

But who to?

This is your place, right?

Yeah.

Don't you like living here?

(SIGHS) I do.

You don't sound too happy to be back.

You know what it's like,
living with two women.

There are no women where I live.

I wish there were.

We could swap.

No, we couldn't.

just a thought.

Sometimes I think it's time to move on.

If I could afford to move out,

I'd go tomorrow.

OK, well, see ya.

You'lI hear from Bruce. He's worried.

I'lI calI if he does.

(ENGINE STARTS)

Rash?

We make a good team.

Missing you already!

(EXHALES DEEPLY)

It's Coleman.

We may have a problem.

HEYWOOD: Could you telI me

who gave you the authority
to go back and interview David Leese?

I didn't think I needed authority.

David Leese is the chief pharmacist

of the London Health Trust

and you are a TDC.

You need authority to sneeze!

What was the point, anyway?

We've already made an arrest.

Leese is not a suspect

in this investigation.

A company he once ran

has been paying Henry Williams
nearly £2,000 a month!

Who told you that?

ELEANOR: Remind me, Marcus. Didn't I
ask you to close down this operation?

He took a day off.
I didn't know what he was doing.

He's your responsibility.

Strolling around Ruhn Laboratories,

pretending to be a police officer;
for God's sake!

He didn't say he was a police officer,
he said he was an investigator.

He's not even that.

Who's that from?

Their legaI department.
Who do you think? Threatening us

- with alI sorts of unpleasantness.
- I'm sorry.

Sony's not good enough, actually.

It really isn't.

We're up against corporations
50 times bigger than us.

More resources, more money, more time.

And then, when we make mistakes,
we have the press,

the politicians, the AGO
breathing down our backs.

And...we get sued.

Somebody has got to answer for this,
Marcus.

David Leese has made a formaI complaint.
So, as far as I'm concerned,

that's it.

I've got enough on my plate without
having to answer for you. You're out!

If I'm pissing people off, maybe
it's because they're covering it up.

Covering up what?

I don't think
Henry Williams killed anyone.

TelI him.

Henry Williams has confessed.

When?

What does it matter?
We've got it alI on tape.

Case closed.

Look, you're not stupid, but you've
overreached yourself. So get out.

Go on, clear your desk. Go.

I've spoken to Sergeant Short.
He's expecting you.

Thank you for the opportunity.

Yeah, well, I'm sorry.

You brought this on yourself.

Are you sure about this, guv?

What?

He had his uses.

Yeah.

But he blew it, Derek. That's it.

ELEANOR: He's got to go.

- Stefan?
- I'm sorry, I know you like him,

but that's how it is.

But this proves he's getting somewhere.

Lose him.

Stefan? I'm sorry,

- I need to have a word.
- Yeah, of course.

Well, that didn't last long.

Sarge...it's not what it looks like.

It doesn't look very good,
if you want the honest truth.

I stumbled onto something.
AlI right? It just happened.

You know, the chances of you
getting another TD(I posting after this

are pretty slim.

Yeah.

AlI right.

I'm sorry, Sayyad-

Better get to work.

(KNOCK ON DOOR)

You're not going to get me
into trouble, are you?

Only be a few minutes.

Mrs Williams. Er...

I wonder if we could have a word.

(CLEARS HIS THROAT)

How is Henry?

They wouldn't let me see him today.
I don't know.

They told me he confessed.

Yes, he did.

I don't understand -
the last time you came here,

you weren't dressed like that.

He's...

been promoted.

They asked him alI these questions. Half
the time, he doesn't know what's going on.

He just...told them
what they wanted to hear.

RASH: I'm sorry.

It's her fault.

- That girI he's been seeing.
- Who's that?

On the computer.

She's my friend. She's real!

They're always talking
to each other, day and night.

- The middle of the night, sometimes.
- What, you heard her?

- So she was real?
- Course she was real!

She was the one leading him on!

I went to meet someone. Caroline.

But they won't listen to me, your lot.

They're just...

picking on Henry because of how he is.

LOUISE: I feeI sorry for her.

And I think she was telling the truth.

Maybe that's it.

The girI on the computer.

- What about her?
- Maybe Henry was being used.

Who by?

They want us to know about India.

- They want us to know what happened.
- (PHONE RINGS)

Yes?

This is Bruce Lockwood.

El", yes?

I'd like to see you again.
I'm coming down to London tonight.

OK.

I'm staying at the Lambton Hotel.
Do you know where that is?

- I'lI find it.
- Eight 0 'clock.

I'lI see you there.

(CLEARS HIS THROAT)

How are things?

Um...

I've been fired.

So have I.

I have to say, it's been
a reaI experience meeting you.

Oh, yeah.

The same.

Look, I'm...

...I'm glad you came, OK?

Maybe you're right.

Maybe we are a team.

Yeah.

I had nothing else to do.

Come on.

RECEPTIONIST: Mr Lockwood 's
expecting you, gentlemen.

Room 927.

Thank you.

Did they really fire you?

Yeah. It was David Leese.

- He called my boss.
- I said he'd talk.

Oh, it was a great idea, yeah(!)

Oh, he, um, he talked...

to someone who took away my job.

I talked to you...

and the same thing happened to me.

So, what wilI you do?

I don't know.

How about you?

Get the truth.

And get our jobs back.

Come on, Rash!

(KNOCK ON DOOR)

Thanks for coming.

This is a nice place!

AlI right for some.

Um... What do you want?

I... I want to telI the truth.

Look, I never meant
for any of this to happen.

I was just trying to...

I was thinking of my career. But they've
manipulated me, and I don't know what...

Does your, er, company pay for the, er,

minibar?

Go ahead.

Look, I went to Laura 's funeral
because I was told to.

They said the police would be there

- and I was told to approach them.
- Yeah, told.

Who by?

Coleman Blake.

He's the UK vice-president

for Ruhn Laboratories.
He's the one behind alI of this.

Ruhn Laboratories want us
to know what happened

- in India.
- Yeah.

- Why?
- Because they're...

using it to bring down the competition.

UK Remicon.

That's what this is alI about!

What was the drug you tested in Mumbai?

You said it was an antidepressant.

David Leese said it was
something called Stenokoritin.

That's what UK Remicon said.

But they were crazy about security.
It was just another smokescreen.

It was actually an anti-obesity drug.
It suppresses...

- hunger by acting on the brain.
- Lipocite!

It's one of the biggest sellers
for UK Remicon. It's worth millions.

So, what happened in India?

How did you find out?

There were six of us.

We were alI given injections.

They said it would make us drowsy.

But I woke up just in time to see
one of the volunteers leaving.

I don't know why, but it seemed to me

that he was behaving strangely,
so I decided to follow him.

Put it down!

There was mayhem after that.

I headed back to the ward,
but on the way...

I had an idea.

I wanted to know what it was

that they'd injected into us,

so...I stole that.

I hung on to it and then, of course,

I got a job at Ruhn Laboratories.

And, later on, you told your bosses.

And they've been using Henry.

They've been deliberately
screwing with his mind

and he gets the blame for the murders.

Lipocite gets withdrawn
and they corner the market.

They'd kilI three innocent people
for that?

The NHS spends

£1 billion a year on anti-obesity drugs.
Three people dead is...

(KNOCK ON DOOR)

Are you expecting anyone?

- No.
- (KNOCKING)

EAST EUROPEAN ACCENT:
Turn-down service.

Beds and towels?

Actually, this isn't a good moment.

- Do you mind?
- Not at all.

We wilI come back. Sorry to disturb you.

Like I was saying, how many people would
you kilI for a billion pounds a year?

Three people dead is nothing.

You're right. Ruhn has got a product

similar to Lipocite. It's cheaper and
we've been trying to selI it to the NHS,

but UK Remicon is in the way.

We've got to get out of here.

What?

Those two women.

They were downstairs.

And they were in the train station.

Go! Go.

Go, go...

Go]

(TIMER BLEEPS)

(ALARM BLARES)

Up or down? Up or down?

Down!

- Up!
- Right.

(BOTH PANT)

OK...

We...

Or...

No, no, no. No.

We don't need to do this.

- No? If they come through that door...
- They won't.

...we've got nowhere to hide!

They killed Bruce.
That's what they wanted.

- They don't need us.
- The bomb was for alI of us.

We've got no choice. We have to jump.

- They won't come!
- They might!

Oh...

- OK“
- OK?

OK!

OK.

On three.

One...

two...

...three!

(BOTH GASP)

(SIRENS WAIL)

(BOTH EXHALE DEEPLY)

OK... We...

Did we really just do that?

Let's do it again!

You're not serious.

No. I'm not serious.

No.

Never again.

None of this.

That's it.

- Do you want chocolate?
- Oh, for God's sake!

(STEFAN LAUGHS)

(BOTH LAUGH)

REPORTER: In a statement that shocked
the pharmaceuticaI industry,

the US justice Department today announced
that they have frozen the assets

of major corporation Ruhn Laboratories
pending a joint investigation

with the British police.

RASH: It was a frame-up.

They knew Henry was ill
and they were manipulating him

through his computer and mobile phone.

The woman he knew as Caroline
got him to come to the station.

Because it's romantic, Henry!

Come down the escalator
and meet me on the platform.

She also persuaded him to drive to Luton

and stole the car while he was there
and used it to kilI Steve Mullen.

They planted the tape in his room
and alI the other evidence.

Well, well, well.

- They wanted us to arrest him.
- Yeah, alI right. AlI right.

I get it.

I've never come across

anything like it, but it seems...

you were right, Sayyad.

What about the American,

Coleman Blake?

RASH: Bruce Lockwood implicated him
before he died.

HEYWOOD: Yeah, well, we can't
arrest him. Not yet.

But we're stilI gathering evidence on him

and there's nowhere he can go.

We want him, the Americans want him.

He knows who was giving the orders
for alI this

and he wilI talk.

(PHONE RINGS AND VIBRATES)

MARCUS: William Ashton has resigned
as CEO of UK Remicon.

And Lipocite has been withdrawn
from the market.

What about David Leese?

He's been arrested for his part
in the Greenfern cover-up...

...for concealing the results
of the medicaI tests.

STEFAN: What about taking bribes?

Leese was getting his commission
from Greenfern Consultancy Services.

We've managed to track down payments.

We know we've got him
squirming on the hook.

He's telling us
everything we want to know,

everything about
UK Remicon's business practices.

Which is what we wanted
in the first place.

Right.

I suppose you expect me
to give you your job back.

Um... yeah.

And I want a pay rise.

Don't push your luck.
You can have your job -

same pay, same conditions -
but may I remind you,

this is a serious organisation,
this is not Man From U.N.C.L.E.

- And...what about the two women?
- Oh, the mysterious

Caroline and her friend.

Well, we may never know.

I've spoken to SpeciaI Branch,
Counter-terrorism, Interpol.

The best guess is they've almost certainly

already left the country.

Do you mind?!

Henry! ($055)

It's alI over now.

I'lI look after you. Don't worry.

It's alI gonna be alI right.

Here you are.

So, how are you?

I'm good.

I got my job back.

Me too.

So, why did you want to meet here?

Well, I...I just thought
you might be interested.

What?

- I'm looking at a flat.
- What, to rent?

To buy.

Why would I be interested in that?

I can only afford half the mortgage.

It's been on the market a while.

They've dropped the price.

Looks alI right.

Yeah.

- Two bedrooms.
- Yeah.

AlI right,

I'lI take a look.

Why not?

(# FOALS: Mountain At My Gates)

# I see a mountain at my gates... #

Oi, your face jumping off
the building. Scared!

What are you talking about?
I wasn't scared.

I'd do it again right now.

- Your face!
- (CONVERSATION FADES)

# Whether I'm going or when I stay

# I see a mountain at my gates

# I see it more and more each day

# I see a fire out by the lake

# I'lI drive my car without the brakes

# Oh, gimme some time

# Show me the foothold
from which I can climb... #

You know...

ever since I met you...

my life has taken a serious...turn...

...downhill!

# Oh, when I come to climb

# Show me the mountain so far behind

# Yeah, it's further away

# Its shadow gets smaller
day after day

# Yeah, you give me my way

# You give me my love

# You give me my choice
You keep me coming round... #