Collateral (2018): Season 1, Episode 1 - Episode #1.1 - full transcript

In South London a young man, Abdullah Asif (Sam Otto), is shot dead delivering a pizza. The detective in charge, DI Kip Glaspie (Carey Mulligan), quickly discovers that the pizza manager ...

This programme contains
some violent scenes
and some strong language

All right,
there's your margherita.

Caribbean, I'm still waiting on that
Caribbean. Get off the phone
and get moving, please.

Hello? Hello?

All right, done.

PHONE RINGS

HUBBUB

No.

Well, where's it going?
Bramham Gardens. Let Abdullah
take it. Abdullah!

Abdullah!

Bramham Gardens.
But I thought I was taking it.



No. Not this time.
It was Mikey's. And now it's yours.

Can I have a chicken
special, please?

12-inch chicken special. I'm still
waiting on the Caribbean, get off
the phone and get moving, please!

PHONE RINGS

Who is it? Pizza.

DOOR BUZZES

BABY CRIES

I paid on the phone. Wait a mo.

No special topping?

Oh, forget it.

Thanks very much.

BABY CONTINUES CRYING

DOOR BUZZES

GUNSHOTS



BABY CRIES

DOOR OPENS

God, I'm a mess.

PHONE RINGS

Yep.

OK.

Is this a case?

It's a murder.

Are you sure it's a good idea?

Yeah, I want to do this one.

Good luck.

RADIO CHATTER

SIREN SWITCHES ON

Is that it?

Don't say it's still open.

Turn around.

What the hell is this?
You're still serving?!

I've got your margherita
there for you, mate, OK.

What are you doing?
Close the place down.

I've got targets to meet.

Yeah, so do we. Where's my pizza?!
It's coming.

No, you're not! No-one's
getting their pizza, are they?
Cos you're shutting down.

Excuse me. Close the place down.

What? Where's my pizza?

Did you see anything?

He gave us our pizza.

And then I closed the door.

Then we heard gunfire
out in the street.

Maybe, 30 seconds later.

How did you know it was gunfire?

Because I was brought up in Beirut.

OK.

You were alone?

Yeah. With the children.

She fell asleep afterwards.
I think she had a reaction.

Reaction? To what happened.
I think it was fear.

When did you order?

Erm, 9.30pm.
We have a pizza every Monday.

At the same time?

Yep. By phone? What did you order?

Quatro formaggio.
It's her favourite. Elfie.

Isn't that a bit late?
How old is she?

Seven. Elfie's on her own clock.

You said "children".
Yeah, yeah. How many?

Two.
Tell me your second child's name.

Lucy. But she doesn't come into it.
She's a baby.

SIREN WAILS OUTSIDE

SIREN STOPS

You threw it in the corner,
the pizza?

SHE LAUGHS

You live by yourselves?

Apart from the au pair,
who's not here.

You're not married? I don't
understand, I just ordered a pizza,

my marital status has
nothing to do with it.

All right, if you have to know,
the baby's not my husband's.

Are you arresting me for that?
Did the pizza man say anything?

Apart from thank you when I gave
him the tip, no, nothing at all.

Thank you?

Yeah. That's all? Then he went.

Do you have the receipt?
Did you pay cash?

I don't have cash.

I didn't have cash.
I paid over the phone.

SHE CLEARS HER THROAT

SIREN WAILS

We've got to sort this out.

We can't go on like this.

I know.

We've been on three dates.

The first one,
we never even made it to bed,

you had to take
a call from your leader.

Tell me about it.

And then tonight,
like the last time,

I'm sitting in a restaurant,
eating fucking breadsticks.

You don't even call me.

I tried. The reception's terrible.

Look, David, you just have to
decide what you want.

Has it never occurred to you that
Labour may not even get back?

That there might not be another
Labour government?

DOOR CLOSES

I don't understand. You're
going to have to ask me again.

What I'm saying,
I thought there was a rota.

Sort of a rota.
Meaning what exactly?

People take turns.
So it was Mikey's turn?

Yeah.
In fact, you'd already told him,

you go to Bramham Gardens
with a quattro formaggio.

Yeah.

So why did you decide not
to send him?

I changed my mind. I sent Abdullah.
I can do what I want.

I know. I am in charge.

I understand that.
My question is, why did you do it?

Why?

Abdullah was killed
delivering a pizza.

I don't know anything about that.

I'm not saying you do.
I'm not accusing you of murder.

However, the murderer was waiting.
Why didn't you send Mikey?

I'm asking, is the system random?

How could a gunman know
who he was going to kill?

And if he wanted to kill
anyone in particular,

was it just chance that you
changed your mind?

Well?

I don't know.

Did you see anyone outside?
Anyone following him?

No. Was there a reason? Was there
a reason that you sent Abdullah?

He hadn't had a run all night.

Abdullah hadn't had a run all night.
So you felt sorry for him?

Yeah. You sent him
out of the goodness of your heart?

Who owns this place?

I manage it.

I know that.

The owner changed. When?

Last month.
I've never even spoken to him.

They're in Boca Raton.

Right. So this is a south London
pizza parlour

owned by a man in Boca Raton?

Yeah.

This is Mikey Gowans.

Yeah, we met.

Mikey's just realised
it might have been him.

Mikey, you're going to
have to tell us

why anyone might want to kill you.

Look, it doesn't make any sense.

Are you sure about that?

Did you know Abdullah?

Not really.

Did you know his second name?

He'd just started.

I think, erm...

I think he was Syrian or something.

Syrian?

Mm, that's what he said.

How do you get paid?

By the delivery.

Cash?

Yeah. Any paperwork?

It's not a paperwork kind of place.

What did you do before?

I was a bouncer.

In a night-club.

Till I got hit.

Which night-club?

The Turbine.

Then I'm not surprised you got hit.

Rakhee,
take Mr Gowans back to the station?

I'm going to the scene.

Can I say something?

Yeah, you can say whatever you like.

The system is the system.

Disliking it isn't going
to change it.

It carries on, regardless
of what you feel about it.

And what has that got to do
with my being late for a date?

You know,

you're a really nice man, David,

but you are so lost in things
that you can't do anything about.

You no longer have any idea
who you actually are.

Where are you going? Just stay.

No.

I can't stay here.

Come on, you'll feel
differently in the morning.

I don't think so.

Well, at least let me
order you a cab.

Oh, for fuck's sake.

Look, if the Labour Party
makes you angry, what do
you think it does to me?

It makes you boring.

DOOR OPENS

DOOR CLOSES

SIREN WAILS

SIREN WAILS IN THE DISTANCE

SHE CLEARS HER THROAT

Nathan, OK?

Are you making any sense of this?
I don't get it.

There's no way a gunman can know
which delivery person's coming.

What do you think it is?
Random shooter?

Does it for the hell of it?
I don't think so. What, then?

Why would anyone kill
a pizza-delivery man?

Well, have you ever
eaten their pizza?

Amusing.
Something else odd. What?

So, you know I spoke to Karen Mars,
the woman who ordered the pizza?

Well? She talked about her baby.

She said "Oh, she doesn't
come into it." So?

"She doesn't come into it" -
what does she mean by that?

What did she mean by it?

Probably like how
a pizza delivery man was
just murdered outside her door,

and, as a mother,
she feels her baby was not involved.

That's probably what she meant.

"She doesn't come into it" -
it's an odd way to put it.

Evening Standard.
Yeah, we know that.

I got here before you.

Congratulations.
Can I get past the tape, then?

What, so the Evening Standard
can fuck up the scene?

It's a Muslim killing, right?
No, it's a killing.

But the victim was a Muslim?

I know what the press
want to make of this.

What, a mind-reader, are you?
No, a newspaper reader.

Why didn't they kill him
on the way in?

Why did they wait
till he was on his way out?

I'm just saying, they could've
killed him five minutes earlier.

You need to go on
a communications course.

Why? That's not how to
handle public relations.

They write what they want.
Do you think being nice to
them makes any difference?

It's true what he's saying, though.
Why wait?

It means we've got a calm killer.

Semi-automatic. Two rounds of two.

Each time with perfect accuracy
at 20 yards.

We're thinking a professional?

Maybe a robbery gone wrong.
Robbing what?

Pizza drivers are the most-robbed
people in London, do you know that?

What about drugs? You tell me.

There was a witness in the street
but a long way away.

Is that her?

Hanh Giang.
Make of her what you can.

She was in a K-hole.

Where had she been?
She says taking a walk.

We asked her to turn out
her pockets.

Is that all she had? It's enough.
Does she have a description?

Thin. Average height.

She only saw him for a second,
she said his face was obscured.

Obscured by?
She says a diving suit.

How stoned was she?
More likely some sort of balaclava.

What she saw was the hood.
Round his face.

Have a look at this gate.

Good chance our killer
went over there.

Any footprints?
No, nothing. Who's the SIO?

Kip Glaspie.

I'm the new area forensic manager.

My name's Gupta.
People call me Fuzz.

I don't think this scene's going
to make you happy.

Really? Why not?
The witness saw something.

Sounds like the guy may have
been wearing rubber.

He's a professional, then?

Never mind.
Every contact leaves a trace.

Can I ask you a question? Sure.
Weren't you an athlete? Didn't
you do pole vault or something?

Yeah. I jumped for a while.

Wasn't there some
kind of famous incident?

Yeah. She landed badly.

Still. Kip Glaspie.
Pretty impressive.

You're Hanh Giang?

Yeah. Where did you get this?

Er, I went to a club.

Do you have any ID?

Er, not on me, no.
Do you have any at home?

Yeah. Where's home?
Er...Stockwell Park Road.

OK, someone's going to take you
down there in a few moments, OK?

As far as we can tell,
you're the sole witness to a murder.

When your brain is
functioning again, think back.

Think about if there's anything
that you might have overlooked.

Can you do that? Yeah. OK.

Come in first thing
tomorrow morning.

Thank you.

Abdullah's phone.

Tell me.

I went into "frequent locations".

I'm thinking if that's work,
that's home.

Let's go.

"Dear David...

"I think it's easier for me to write
an old-fashioned, proper letter,

"because when I'm with you I never
seem able to say what I mean.

"It comes out cruel,
and that's not what I want.

"You've had so many failed
relationships, you don't believe

"that anyone could possibly
find you worth the effort.

"But believe it or not, I do.

"That's why I get so angry.

"Because if you just stopped
for five minutes,

"there's something
I can see and you can't -

"the truth is,
you're a very good soul."

David!

What are you doing here?

Well, it's my constituency, Rob.

Is that the only reason?
What do you know?

They're saying it's a hate crime.
Immigrant shot in the street.

I'd love a quote
if you can give me one.

David Mars.

Is everything all right?
What happened?

Sorry. I didn't mean to call.
I got frightened, that's all.

I don't understand.

Well, I won't say it again.
It was me who ordered the pizza.

Did you hear the shot?
Of course I heard it.
Quite like old times.

You were the last person
to speak to him?

Well, I suppose.

I don't get it,
you don't seem very upset.

I thought I had a bottle of wine.

I must have drunk it.

Is that a new shirt?

You called me to come over here.

Sorry if that was a drag!
I'm sure you're busy.

Don't worry about it.

Too busy for the mother
of your child.

Karen, you know that is not fair.

I know what you're thinking -

I was only married to her
for three months,

am I going to have to look
after her for the rest of my life?

Four. Four months.

Well, the answer is yes.

Yes, for the rest of your life.
Get used to it.

HE SIGHS

What's that?

This is a letter
somebody wrote to me.

You mean, as in the 19th century,
that kind of letter?

Don't politicians have e-mail?

Well, you seem in good shape.
All things considered.

You've had a shock.

Well, that's why I called you,
David.

Do you mind staying over?
For Elfie's sake?

Don't look at me like that.
You chose this job.

You could have done anything. I was
a teacher. I gave it up, remember?

Why?

Too violent.

HE CHUCKLES

Home?

Do you want me to do it?
No. I'm good.

We're from the police.

Can you tell me your names?

Do either of you speak English?

We were just called to a situation
not far from here.

Do either of you know Abdullah Asif?

I'm going to assume
you understand a little,

while we get someone here to help.

As I said, we were just called to
an incident nearby,

where a male has been
shot in the chest.

We believe it to be Abdullah Asif.

You shared a space with him
so we're going to need to see your

paperwork, whatever you've got,
any documents you happen to have -

it doesn't matter what they are,
what language.

I'm going to get an interpreter

and we're going to ask you
some questions.

We're here to help.

For now, all I can say is sorry.

That's how it ends up, is it?

Escape war, make your way to England
and start your new life in a garage?

That's the best we can offer, is it?

Well, we've seen it before.

Yeah, we've seen it before - doesn't
make it better, though, does it?

No views?

Oh, yeah, I've got a view,
two hours in

and things are already out
of control.

What are you getting?

At first glance, absolutely nothing.

Footprints?

I knew the moment I came.
You can always tell.

It's a set up.

Look... Perfect place to hide,
perfect darkness,

giving him a perfect view across
the street, perfect getaway.

They want it to look random
but it isn't -

there's nothing random about it.

First thing tomorrow.

Yeah. Thank you.

Where have you been?

I was out.

It's three o'clock in the morning.

Were you with someone else?

I want you to tell me.

Honestly. I...
I'd rather know the truth.

I wasn't with anyone!
Then what were you doing?

I'm not gonna tell you if
you're going to get angry.
I won't get angry. Even if...

Look, you're free.

You can do what you want.
Of course you can.

I wanted to get high.

And did you?

Yeah. I needed some air.

I need some space.

You can be so clingy.

Linh, you're much the best
thing in my life.

SHE SIGHS HEAVILY

Something's happened.
Just tell me what's happened.

I went to a club. Which club?

I can guess.

And then I walk home
and I felt quite weird.

So I sit down on the pavement and
I don't know how long I'm there.

And?

Someone got shot dead,

across the street.

A pizza man.

Fuck!

And then the police arrive.

I was frightened, I panicked and...

You spoke to them? Yeah.

They emptied my pocket.

And what did they find?

Ketamine. MDMA.

I was scared.

I panicked.

But I didn't give them
my real name.

You made up a name?
Yeah, and address.

Why did you do that?

Why do you think? If they know
who I am, I'm in trouble.

I panic.

I was terrified.

I don't want to go home.

I want to live in England.

I know.

People do.

Also, there's something else.

Something I didn't dare tell them,
cos...

Cos I was off my head.

I told them
the killer had a hood on.

And that was true? Yeah.

But what I didn't say is, er...

..I thought it was a woman.

They're terrified.

I'm sorry to ask this but how
do we know they're his sisters?

They've got no papers.
They're paperless.

Why would they lie?

All right,
why would they lie about that?

They must have money.

They did.

Abdullah Asif had
a driving licence, remember?

Well, he must have paid for that.

Syrian refugee. English driving
licence. That's not cheap.

Provisional.

How long have they been here?

She doesn't want to say.

Well, she's going to have to.

SHE SPEAKS ARABIC

THEY SPEAK ARABIC

She doesn't know.

Of course you know.

Think of it her way.
Her brother's just been killed.

She doesn't know who to trust.

Look, can you tell her
we understand she's in grief,

but she has to stop fucking about
and tell us the truth?

Whatever that is in Arabic.

TRANSLATOR SPEAKS ARABIC

WOMAN RESPONDS IN ARABIC

Maybe weeks.

Do you have a job?

THEY SPEAK ARABIC

She works in a hotel.

Where?
TRANSLATOR SPEAKS ARABIC

SHE RESPONDS IN ARABIC

She can't say.
It's dangerous for her.

What, they don't pay
the National Minimum Wage?

Tell her there's a reason
for what happened and we
need to find that reason.

If this woman is remotely serious,
she has to help us. Has to.

SHE SPEAKS ARABIC

She says she fears this is
going to have a bad outcome.

How can it have a worse outcome?
Her brother is dead.

So, did it work? Women only.

Stuff pour out of them, did it?

Not much.
In the all-female environment?

What we did discover -
turns out they lived in Aleppo.

They worked in a tourist hotel.

In Aleppo? Well, that's a triumph.

Sure. Before it was destroyed.

Abdullah was on reception.

They feared for their lives
in Syria.

The war is never going to end.

Assad's a ruthless dictator
who'd rather see his country

destroyed than yield power.

That's their view, is it?

It's Fatima's.
Mona's not speaking.

Nothing? Not a word.

They're what our leaders call
genuine asylum seekers.

They had to get out
or they'd be killed.

So she'll give us
her political views, but she won't
actually give us any names,

like who got her here, how her
brother found his job. Why not?

Because they're frightened.
What, frightened of us?

No.

More like one of them's been killed
and they're asking who's next.

They don't feel safe.

You should go back to
the station with them. We're
going to need you later. OK.

What do you want to do now?

Can we just think
this thing through?

Please. Can we?

Like normally how you have
a body and then you work out

who they are and who might
want to kill them.

Yeah? That's the procedure?
If you say so.

Only as I understand it - let me
know if I'm going too fast for you -

this time we don't know
who's meant to have been killed.

Yeah, I'm onto that.

So working out why seems
more than normally difficult.

That's very good. You've got your
speech ready for the superintendent.

Anything to add?

Nothing. You?

Yeah.

There's nobody here.
Nobody except us.

Why would there be?
Because these people are Syrian.

So? They're Syrian.

What I'm asking - where's MI5?
Where's counter-terrorism?

Where are they? Yeah. Anything
of this nature from the region,

they're like flies round dead meat.
Why aren't they here?

My guess is they're still in bed.

OK, it seems we're finished
with you. Do you want to go?

I can't sleep here?

It's not a hotel.

I'm just a bit shaky, that's all.

I'd got to know Abdullah a bit.

And?

He was a decent bloke, I liked him.

And?

That's what I wanted to say.

DOOR BUZZES

Well, you've said it.

Yeah, I guess I have.

We're privileged to have
the Leader of the Opposition,

Deborah Clifford,
here in the studio.

Good morning, Suki.

Obviously, you're aware that
seven immigration bills

in the last eight years,

45,000 changes to those
immigration rules since 2010.

That's right. And Labour has
opposed many of those changes.

We support control of our borders
and we always have.

We've been very clear about that.

Well, nevertheless, these days,

you seem to be taking
a different approach.

Well, sometimes, in the past,
Labour's given an impression

of caring more for newcomers
than for the resident population.

That was wrong.

You regret that?

Look, Suki,

my grandparents were immigrants,

immigrants have done
this country a lot of good.

But we also believe in a proper
control of numbers.

This seems to be part of a whole
shift from Labour, though,

on all sorts of things -

nuclear weapons,
human rights, prisons.

On Thursday, the Labour party's
got a big vote,

in support of the government's
new surveillance measures

which many people see
as a real threat to freedom.

That's an exaggeration,
if you don't mind me saying so.

Oh, for fuck's sake!

Hi, Dad.

Hello, beautiful.

Where's your mother? Is she getting
up? Isn't she going to work?

She lost her job.

OK. How did she lose it? Was
she fired? When did that happen?

Last week.

Come on,
let's get you something to eat.

Mum says you run the country.

Well, that's not quite true,
actually.

I'm in something called Opposition.

Which means moaning about
the people who run the country.

I'm with Mum all the time.

I know you are.

She's really difficult.

Well, your mother's a difficult
woman, that's just a fact.

I think she doesn't like me.

She loves you, sweetpea,
we both do. Come here.

There.

Well...

So, tell me, what's the view
from the cheap seats?

We're just putting it together.

How long's that going to take?

We're just gathering facts.

If you see something we're missing,
give us a shout.

Not on the face of it.
Do you want coffee? It's proper.

No, thank you.

You on an all-nighter?
Well, you know the drill.

Detention's been out-sourced,

it's now in the hands
of our privatised colleagues.

I've had to report the
Asif family as illegals.

They've only just begun to tell us
what they know.

Yeah, well, look at it
from their point of view.

There's not much profit in going
into detail about how they got here.

Why take the risk?
We're finding that already.

The younger one doesn't talk at all.

I'm wondering if she's pregnant.

Really?

Well, you'd know.

Have you asked?

Anything we get has to be
dragged out of them. They
just don't want to talk.

That's it, isn't it?
We don't have any leverage.

How do we get some?

I've already had a morning
call from Millbank.

I was wondering
when that was coming.

Rubber balaclava, professional
marksman, asylum seeker.

It's MI5 country, isn't it?

No doubt they'll turn up and
give us some professional advice.

MI5'll come and patronise
the country cousins,

tell us how useless we are.

That's how it usually works
with the security services.

Do they know Abdullah Asif already?

If they do, they're not telling us.

With MI5, it's always one way.

They want your information, but they
don't want to give up any of theirs.

Yeah, I've met people like that.

Karen!

Karen!

What's happening? You said you were
taking Elfie to school!

I am. Well, you're late.

What day is it?

Tuesday. To take her to school,
you have to get up!

Where's David?

He's gone. Now you still have
to get up to look after Lucy.

Oh, fuck off!

Grrr!

Who's taking me to school?

I don't know.
Mind your own business.

Now get down and get dressed
and get a move on.

I don't have to do everything, do I?

Is Mummy getting up?

I have no idea.

KNOCK AT DOOR

This had better be important.

It is important.

I've had a hell of a night.

Me too.

Is Linh still with you?

Why wouldn't she be?

Is the bishop going to get
rid of you?

He's going to try.

Isn't he a bit of an LGBT himself?

He has a boyfriend who runs a sauna
in Brixton, if that's what you mean.

But the difference is
he's not out and I am.

ON TV: Perhaps we should
ask ourselves

whether the vicious rhetoric
that's used against people

who come here legitimately
to seek asylum

encourages exactly
this kind of violence.

There are too many people
who believe that hate speech

doesn't have... Do you know you
come across as a bit of a tosser?

Now we...
SHE SWITCHES TV OFF

Are you doing any work on that?

What did you need me for?

I've got a dilemma.

Linh was witness to the murder.

Linh was? Yes. The only witness.

I'm assuming
she talked to the police?

Sure. But the problem is
she was high.

And they found the gear on her.

That's more serious.

They've asked her to go to
the police station this morning.

Well, I hope she's going to.
She's scared.

Last night she gave a false name.

Well, that was a pretty
stupid thing to do.

She was trying to protect me, David.
I'm out on a limb here.

Also, ah, you'd better speak to her
in person.

Because you helped her.

You signed her application
for a student visa.

I was happy to. She respects you.

Jane, there's something
you're not telling me.

Because I... I don't know
how to say this.

Say it.

I love this girl
and I don't want to lose her.

Christ.
Please don't use that word.

I love swearing, I hate blasphemy.
I really hate it.

If that makes me
a fucking hypocrite, so be it.

Do you love her more than me?

You were an episode.

She's a whole chapter.

Or she was going to be.

David.

Linh.

Er, Jane thought you might have
a minute for a chat.

Er, yeah.

Jane told me what happened.

You've got no choice,
you have to go into the station.

Not going in will only make
matters worse.

Yeah, I know.

And Jane says you have
vital evidence.

You thought it was a woman.
You've got to tell them that.

There is one other thing, David.

Tell me.

Well, you remember
you signed her application?

To renew her student visa. I do.

Are you still at that stupid
college?

Sometimes. Oh, only sometimes?

It's a legitimate
place of education, David,

it's approved by the DoE.

Oh, well, in that case,
that's a stamp of excellence.

What's it called, Kennington Poly?

But what we didn't tell you,
er, when I asked you to sign...

Her first student visa
had already expired.

What? Hang on.
I didn't think to mention it.

You mean she's here illegally?
It's a grey area.

Jane, I'm a fucking MP. I signed.

You didn't sign it knowingly.
No! Because you didn't tell me!

Well, we're telling you now.
Oh, thank you VERY much!

Fuck! Jane!

How could you do that!?

You see, that's why it's difficult.

You see why she doesn't want to
talk to the police?

Ugh.

Give that a look over, will you?

Do you want to slip home?

I can take over for a while.

Bit late for that, isn't it?

Where are you off to?

I thought, one more word
with our friends.

Look, I don't have
any say in the matter.

You may well be detained.

After that, you may be sent home.

You should take the chance to talk,
right now, today.

TRANSLATOR SPEAKS ARABIC

I'm interested, for instance,
about your transport,

through Turkey from Syria,

a boat to Greece,

a lorry through Europe,
then through the tunnel.

How long did it take?

TRANSLATOR REPEATS IN ARABIC

SHE REPLIES

Under a month.

That's impressively quick.

What are we dealing with,
club class?

TRANSLATOR SPEAKS ARABIC

WOMAN RESPONDS

She says that's all she knows.

Murder cases can get bogged down.

Bogged down in bureaucracy
as much as anything.

That's just a fact.

TRANSLATOR SPEAKS

People lose sight of the victims.

And in this case,
you're among the victims.

You should make use of a sympathetic
ear whilst you've got it.

TRANSLATOR SPEAKS

Well?

Mikey, haven't seen you for a while.

No.

But I wanted to warn you, yeah?
The... The police are all over us.

Yeah, but have you got what we want?

Not yet.

Why don't we go round the back?

I don't want to go round the back.

Come on.

Please.

Come on. Come on.

I have to go out for a bit, Mum.

I'm leaving you water.

The council'll be around in an hour.

Mum. Mm.

You are a good girl.

Yeah, I wish.

I wouldn't be alive without you!

I'll see you later, all right?

Bye, love.

Hut!

MAN SHOUTS OUT COMMANDS

Right...turn!

Left...turn!