Hidden (2011–…): Season 1, Episode 2 - Episode #1.2 - full transcript

Despite the warning phone call telling him to get out the insurance company claim the explosion was caused by a gas leak. Venn gets his investigator Frank Hanna to break into Gina's doctor's office and find out more about her from her files but heavies led by Jason Styles,who knew Venn's brother,chase him away. Venn seeks out barrister Sir Nigel Fountain,who says that Gina is his daughter and an espouser of lost causes. Whilst Stevie is murdered in prison Venn and his ex-wife Lauren learn their teenage son Michael has been arrested for drug-dealing. Eventually Venn tracks Gina down in Paris,where she has stumbled upon the corpse of newly released prisoner Tannzir,who was convicted of the random murder of Jennifer Moscati. Venn and Gina are threatened by Hillman,who is shot dead by a mysterious saviour.

I met a woman.

Nice?

Yeah, she's beautiful.

Trouble is, I think she's
trying to set me up.

I'm Gina Hawkes, I have
an 11 o'clock appointment

with Mr. Venn.

- For what?

- The Braddick murder.

She's a solicitor acting
for Stevie Quirke.

- He confessed because
he's terrified.

So terrified in fact, that
he'd rather be in prison.



He has some information that
he's willing to pass on to you.

- Information about what?

- Your brother Mark.

- What do you know about Mark?

Who killed him?

- Mark?

- I saw what I saw,
Harry, Paul Hillman.

- Paul Hillman's dead.

- If Hillman's alive, what
does that say about Mark?

- These allegations
are completely untrue.

- Well, that
was the Prime Minister

talking earlier today.

- Do you honestly think
I would take bribes?

- You know James Morpeth?



- I'm joined by the front runner

to challenge Worsley,
Alexander Wentworth.

- This country cannot continue

to back a morally
bankrupt Prime Minister.

- Who'd have thought
rioting in London would get

to become practically
a daily occurrence?

What's this?

- Just some facts to put
Worsley in his political grave.

- Have you ever hear
of a bloke called Jason Styles?

- No. Why?

- I'm trying to
find out who Gina Hawkes is.

And if she's on his books,
he'll have medical records,

an address, something.

- You can stay out
here if you want,

but I've got work to do.

- This is the
help desk. How can I help?

- Virus update, please.

- Do you have
the virus designation?

- Eight, 22,
11, 13, Foxtrot.

- One moment, please.

- What did you
say this guy does?

- We're in a doctor's
surgery, Kev.

- What kind of doctor?

- Why, are you sick?

You want me to phone him?

- It's just it shouldn't
be this hard to get in.

- But you can get in, right?

- Yeah.

- All we need to do is to
find Gina Hawkes' address.

Nice.

How's it going?

Kev?

What's going on?

You looking at
porn or something?

- This is weird.

- I'm still
checking on the update.

Do you want to hold or
should I call you back?

- I'll hold.

- Is it the police?

- You wish, let's go.

Come on, Kevin,
no time for that.

Come on!

- Shit.

- Thank
you for holding.

It appears the engineers were
not able to isolate the virus.

We're sending new
engineers out today

to resolve the problem.

Keep me informed.

- This country will not
be put on standstill

by these unfounded and
vindictive allegations.

Nor will we let a violent
minority dictate the agenda.

Now, can I please remind you
what we are here for today?

To celebrate the achievements
of our new education policy

and in particular, this new
college here in Allington.

When we came to power,

we pledged a further 1.5
billion pounds to all schools

over the course of Parliament,

a promise we are on course
to deliver on, thank you.'

- So that was the
Prime Minister opening

a new school in Maidstone today.

From the way he was talking,

you could be
forgiven for thinking

it was an ordinary
day at the office.

The pressure on him
to resign appears

to be like water
off a duck's back

as he insists every
new development

is driven by some
unidentified conspiracy.

But whilst the Prime Minister
continues to issue denials,

life continues to be
disrupted across Britain.

With further violent protests

and no resolution

to this political crisis
in sight, what next?

I'm joined now down
the line from Oxford.

- Alex, how are you?

- I've read Elspeth's file.

- And?

- I used to think nothing

in modern politics
could shock me any more.

- Staggering, isn't it?

- Do you think it's
completely reliable?

- Of course, absolutely.

- Why hasn't she published?

Would sell a lot of newspapers.

- Well, that was
her first thought.

And mine, I admit.

But then we talked about it.

The question is, what do we want

to achieve with
this information?

- The end of Brian Worsley.

- Of course, all well and good.

But the real issue
is who comes next?

Whoever stands up and makes
these revelations is going

to get a great
deal of attention.

- Good night, James.

- Your call
will be dealt with shortly

In the interests of security,

your conversation
will be monitored.

Your call will be
dealt with shortly.

In the interests of security,

your conversation
will be monitored.

- Yeah?

- Yeah, Stevie.

I won't ask how you're doing.

- Yeah not good,
Harry, not good.

- That's why I wasn't gonna ask.

- You found Joe yet?

- This Hillman thing.

Go over it again.

- So you believe me now?

- Put it this way, I'm
willing to be convinced.

- Look you
got to find Joe for me.

- Well, then you got
to tell me everything.

- All right, come
see me today, yeah.

What time you gonna be here?

- I've got to see
somebody first,

but I'll be with you
sometime this afternoon.

- Right, well afternoon
visits are two till five.

Don't leave it later
than a quarter to

or they won't let you in.

- Yeah, I'll be there.

- Harry.

- What?

- Be careful, yeah.

- Now you tell bloody me.

- What happened to
the office, Dad?

- What, I'm Dad now?

Some kind of an explosion.

- Wow!

- You all right?

- I just wanted to say
sorry for, you know,

the police station and that.

- Michael, keep your
nose clean, all right?

Stay out of trouble, you
won't get sent to prison.

- Could you lend me 50 quid?

- 50 quid?
- Yeah.

- That's a lot of money.

What do you want 50 quid for?
- Mum, buy her a present.

Make up for everything.

- How is mum?

- Dad?

- No, please let me go!

I wasn't there!

Please, stop!

- Braddick is dead!

Two policemen are dead!

- No!

- Dad?

Dad.

- Yeah, 50.

- Yeah, 50.

- You're mum all right?

- Fine.
- Good.

- Shame.

- Yeah, well you know,
I've got insurance so.

- No, no, shame you weren't in
your office when it exploded.

- This is Mr Russell, me and
him go quite a long way back.

He likes his little jokes.

- Actually, no.

When it comes to cop killers,

I have no sense of humor at all.

- Go and get your
mother that present.

- This your lad, Harry?

That's nice.

What's your name, son?

- That's none of your business.

- Who is he?

Is he a cop?

- Yeah, I'm a cop,
inside and out.

- I don't like cops.

- Nobody does.

- Michael, go, go on.

- The investigators are
pretty sure it was a gas leak.

- Yeah well, I
suppose they know their job.

- Probably an accident.

- They do happen.

- Do you have any reason to
believe it wasn't an accident?

- No. You?

- Explosions caused by gas leaks

are almost always accidental.

Except, when it happens
to someone like you.

- You know I'm a solicitor,
an officer of the court.

I think you might be confusing
me for one of my clients.

- I'm not confused
by you at all, Harold.

You're a murdering bastard.

- Have a nice day.

- Two policemen and a man
named Braddick were murdered.

You were involved.

Maybe you've forgotten?

- No, a man doesn't forget

when he's falsely been
accused of murder.

- You have no idea how offensive

that phrase sounds on
a guilty man's lips.

- Well, then you shouldn't
feel offended then.

- Do you know what,
I'm gonna help you.

And if you're smart,
you'll accept it.

- You, help me?

- Now based on 30
years as a copper,

I'd say that someone's
trying to kill you.

There's something about this
don't smell right, does it?

- It's probably the gas.

- I retire
in a couple of years,

looking forward to it.

Bit of gardening,
little bit of golf.

Be a nice change of pace.

But before I pack it in,

I'm gonna clear up the
Braddick case.

- Oui.

- Well, if we're
doing this in French,

it's gonna be a
short conversation.

- I trust you're calling
me to let me know

that you found Joe Collins.

- Yeah, I like it
that you trust me, Gina.

Shows we're getting closer.

- Have you not
found Joe Collins?

- I have not.

I ran into a bit of a problem.

- What problem?

- The explosive kind.

My office blew up.

- What happened?

- Seems there was a gas leak.

Thanks.

That came with a warning.

- A warning, who from?

- A friend. At least I have
to assume it was a friend

as they had the
decency to warn me.

- I'm afraid I've lost you.

- Why don't I jump
on the Eurostar

and you can find me and then
you can tell me to my face

what this is all about.

- I hired you to find
a missing witness.

- Someone tried
to kill me, Gina,

the day after you
walk into my life.

Should I think there's
a connection there?

- Why should there be?

- Stop playing
games with me, Gina,

unless you're trying
to get me killed?

- That's ridiculous.

- Is it?

Well, you answer me this,

have our paths met
sometime somewhere

that I don't know about?

- If they did, I
don't know about it either.

- Then why are you
so interested in me?

- I can assure you, Mr. Venn,

I have no interest in
you other than as someone

who my client tells me
can find Joe Collins.

And, may I remind you, you
took the money I offered

to do exactly that.

- There's an email.

A Blackberry I swiped
at the doctor's surgery.

- Just one?

"We'll raise a glass of
Cockburn's on the 10th of July."

What does that mean?

I have to tell you, Frank,
I'm mildly disappointed.

I wanted her medical
records, an address.

- You told me I was breaking
into a doctor's office.

Did I tell you about the people
who chased us out of there?

- What people?

- Special Forces
types, neck snappers.

Just after your
office gets blown up?

I don't mean to put
the wind up you, H,

but it's possible someone
wants to hurt you.

- You know, this woman's
got a file on me.

She's got a load of stuff
about the Braddick case.

- What's her interest?

Is she Braddick's daughter?

Bounty hunter?

She writing a book?

- Or, maybe she's
the one in trouble?

- Well, if she is, you
take my advice, H, run.

You look like you
could use a holiday.

Why don't you fly somewhere.

Find a beach, lie on a towel
till all this goes away.

- What if she knows
something about Mark?

- Mark's dead, remember?

You can look them
up on the internet.

They're a big firm.

Cement, construction.

- Never heard of them.

- Maybe 'cause you're
not in the market

for a hydro-electric dam.

If you were, Morpeth Allison
would build it for you.

And any motorways,
nuclear power stations

and skyscrapers you
might also need.

- Spitfire, Spitfire two?

- He's a Battle
of Britain freak.

Harry just leave it.

- I can't leave it, Frank.

Something big is
going on here Frank,

somebody tried to kill me!

Now back in the day,

did you ever come across a
bloke called Jason Styles?

- Styles?

No, was he a face?

- He set up the Braddick
job for Mark and Hillman.

- When you say "set up,"

you think he might
have killed Mark?

- Let's put it this way,

you know, I had my
suspicions, yeah.

Do you think you
could find Joe for me?

- Sorry, H, what
you're mixed up in,

I don't want to be mixed up in.

- No, no.

- If you need a
new office suite,

I've got a stunner over here.

Real mahogany veneer.

- No, you're all right.

- My client
appears to be innocent.

He told me he was innocent.

I believe him.

I'm thinking of sending the
brief to Nigel Fountain.

- May I help you?

- That would be nice.

My name is Harry Venn.

I'm a solicitor.

I'd like to see Nigel Fountain.

- Sir Nigel.

Do you have an
appointment, Mr. Venn?

- Yes, I do.

- I don't see an appointment.

- Well, that is unusual.

See, my assistant
spent most of yesterday

on the phone trying to
arrange an appointment.

Obviously didn't get one.

Maybe I should fire him?

No, seriously.

I would like to see Sir Nigel?

- I'm afraid that
won't be possible.

- It is important.

In fact, it's very important.

- You can leave a contact
number if you wish,

on your way out.

- It'll only take a few minutes.

No, I'm fine, I'll wait.

- If you wish, but you'll
have to wait outside.

- I'm sorry I
got you into this, kid.

- Your brother, Mark.

- I'm sorry I got
you into this, kid.

- These
gentlemen will show you out.

- Picture of my
office in the paper.

- You
can't go in there!

- Sir Nigel,
my name is Harry Venn.

I really need to speak to you.
- I'm so sorry.

He just barged past me.

I'll call the police.

- A solicitor named Gina Hawkes
hired me to find a witness.

- Wait a minute, wait a
minute, it's all right.

Sorry, what were you saying?

- It's regarding
the Quirke case?

She told me that she'd
spokes to you about it.

- I see.

Thank you, I'll handle this.

How can I help you?

- Well, since Gina, Miss
Hawkes, the solicitor--

- Yes, I know who she is.

- Well, since she first came
to me a couple of days ago,

certain things have happened.

- What things?

- Well, for starters
my office blew up.

- What are you doing for lunch?

- Oui.

- Oui.

- Oui.

- Sir Nigel, I need to know

why you're acting
for Stevie Quirke?

You're one of the
most expensive lawyers

in the country and Stevie
doesn't have a bean to his name.

- How much do you
know about Gina?

- Well, a lot less
than I'd like to.

I mean professionally speaking.

- She's my daughter.

She seems to believe
Mr. Quirke is innocent.

Though personally I doubt it,

but that's a defending
solicitor's prerogative,

as I'm sure you'd agree.

- Yeah, I suppose so.

- You said Gina asked
you to find a witness?

- Yeah, a man called
Joseph Collins.

- How is Collins
connected to this?

- I'm not sure.

Quirke says Collins has got
something that will help him.

- Did he say what?

- No, I was sort of
hoping you might know.

- I haven't even met Quirke yet.

After you.

- Thank you.

I go on first
impressions, Mr. Venn.

Some people say that's
foolish, but I'm rarely wrong.

I suspect it's
probably the last thing

you'd want anyone
to think about you,

but I'd say you
were an honest man.

- How dare you!

- Gina is vulnerable.

- That's not how she strikes me.

- I know, she's tough,

but the two things
aren't incompatible.

For personal reasons,
things in her past,

she's, well, she has a
susceptibility to lost causes.

She's always looking for dragons

where there are none to slay.

The wrong type of
person could take

considerable advantage
of that quality.

- Are you talking
about Quirke or me?

- I don't think Quirke
is in a position

to take advantage of anyone.

- Hang on, you just
said I was honest?

- That's what I'm counting on.

Right.

- Are we not gonna get the bill?

- It's all done.

Thank you, Charles.

Are you a Wentworth man?

- Bloody politicians these days!

Do you think they clone them?

They seem to come
in batches of 20!

- So you don't think
he's a second Churchill,

come to rescue our country
in our hour of need?

- I don't pay much
attention to politics.

- Wise man!

Look if you find anything
about Quirke that can help us,

I'd be very grateful.

A father likes to shine
in his daughter's eyes.

- I'll let you know.

In fact, I'm on my way
to see him right now.

- My mobile's on this.

- Great, thank you, Sir Nigel.

- No, please, just Nigel.

- Sure I'm glad you said that.

I'm not too
comfortable saying sir.

- I'm not too
comfortable hearing it.

Goodbye.

- Thanks for lunch.

- What?

- What are you doing?

- I think I've got PTSD, why?

- There's a bloke
called Dean Stubbs.

He works out at that boxing
club behind Talbot Road.

He's in there pretty
much every day.

I want you to follow
him, wherever he goes.

- Why?

- 'Cause I
haven't got time,

I've got to go see
Stevie Quirke in prison.

Now listen.

Dean's a friend of Joe Collins

and if Joe's gone into hiding,

chances are, Dean is
gonna know where he is.

So get yourself to the gym.

- Harry, I'm seriously unfit.
- It'll do you good then.

Listen, Matt,
one word of warning.

Don't get too close to him.

He's got this bad habit
of punching people

when they're not looking.

I've got to go.

Lauren, hi.

- Michael's been arrested.

- What again?

What's he done now?

- He was caught on
Sandringham Road with drugs.

I'm at Stoke Newington
police station.

Can you get here?

- Yeah, yeah, I'm on my way.

- Jones,
Bassett, Khan, visits.

- Have you seen him?

- They wouldn't let me.

- Blake,
Brodie, Wesson, visits.

- Oi, you got one for me?

Oi, hold up, hold up, you
got a visit for me, Quirke?

- Hello, Harry?

- Hi.

- It's not good news.

They're gonna charge him.

- What, for buying
a bit of dope?

- He wasn't buying
and it wasn't dope.

- What was it then?

- They're saying he
bought 50 quid's worth

of crack and was
trying to sell it.

- What's he doing selling crack?

- Harry?

- Lauren, Michael's
not the type of kid

that goes around selling crack!

- The police
are gonna oppose bail.

- Can they do that?

- It's because he
was already on bail.

We'll apply again.

Leave it with me,
I'm working on it.

- Thanks, Lisa.

- Jesus.

- I don't understand.

How did he get 50 quid?

- I gave it to him.

He said he wanted to
buy you a present.

I'm sorry, Lauren.

You know, he asked me for
it, I couldn't say no.

I was trying to
make it up to him.

- That's not the way to do it.

- Put your fucking foot down!

Jesus!

- Cook, Hussain,
Campbell, visits.

- Hi, I'm here to
see Stephen Quirke.

- Name?
- Harry Venn, solicitor.

- Take a seat in there.

- Help desk, may
I have your customer ID?

- W, B, zero,
eight, 20, 19, 19.

- Smith, Cooper, Samuel
and Quirke, visits.

- May I have
characters two, seven

and eight only of your protocol?

- Hotel, November, Tango.

- You are verified,
one moment whilst I secure.

- Which one's Quirke?

You're Quirke, aren't you?

- Yeah, what's up?

- He's got to stay here.

- What do you mean
I've got to stay here?

- Right, the
rest of you, with me.

- So what am I staying here for?

- You got to wait, all right.

If you don't like it,
you go back to the wing.

- You got too much
of that, cabin boy.

Yeah, I'll have
your badge, yeah?

- Relax, you'll get your visit.

- You're
secured, how can we help?

- Virus update, please.'

- Do you have
the virus designation?

- 19, 17, 11, 30, foxtrot.

- One moment.

I'm still checking
on the update,

do you want to hold or
should I call you back?

- I'll hold.

- Oi, someone, yeah?

I have got a visit!

All right, mate?

What do you want?

No, no!

- Excuse me, what's the delay?

- I'll see
what's keeping him.

Yeah, where's Quirke?

I got a solicitor
here waiting for him.

Here, have a look, will you?

- Thank
you for waiting.

We've just had confirmation

that virus has been
successfully cleansed.

- Thank you.

- The decent hard working
people of this country,

I know because I talk
to them every day,

want order, they want peace
and they want stability

and they have a right

to expect their government
to deliver those things.

Now, Brian Worsley and
his pick and mix coalition

have delivered one thing
so far and that's chaos.

Fiscal meltdown, civil meltdown.

And he wants a chance
to do it again,

he wants a second chance.

Who in their right mind
would give it to him?

Not the people I'm talking to!

- Well, that
was Alexander Wentworth,

again piling the pressure
on the coalition government

and there is little sign that
the slow moving developments

at Westminster are calming
the chaos on the streets.

The protests in the
center of London today

have seen rising casualties

and for the first time
the police strategy

of kettling has backfired
with small groups

of protestors breaking
off from the main crowds

and trouble breaking
out in isolated pockets

throughout the city.

- What's happening?

- Demonstrators.

- What?

Drive!

- Are you
all right, ma'am?

- Yes.

- Simon, how
nice to see you.

- Elspeth, you look wonderful.

- Thank you, James.

- Thank you all so
much for coming.

The entire country
seems to be collapsing

and there are rioters
on the streets,

but you haven't let them
stop you, se well done you.

And I'd like to make a
special thanks to Elspeth.

As some of you may
have already heard,

she was attacked in her
car on her way here.

But she didn't let it stop her.

Well done, Elspeth.

- Now, there are only four
paintings left, only four.

- Well?

- So please,
please buy them.

- He's through here.

- But buy them at
hideously expensive prices.

Not only because
they're worth it,

but because you will not
find a worthier cause

than the Cancel
Cancer Foundation.

Thank you very much.

- Here, here.

- I don't think
you two have met.

General Sir Adrian
Henderson, Elspeth Verney.

- Pleased to meet you, General.

- Adrian, please.

- Adrian has read
the Worsley material.

- It's staggering,
it's appalling.

He'll go to prison of course,

unless he takes
the Roman way out.

- Alex feels the same way

and has agreed to make the
revelations personally.

- In the House?

- We're thinking
a press conference

will have a greater impact.

- In front of the world's media,

it will be the perfect
launching pad for Alex.

- Is he up to it?

He's very young.

- He's young, vigorous, clever,

principled, charismatic,
he's perfect.

- When?

- The day after tomorrow.

- Good.

- Adrian is famously a
man of very few words.

- It's important that
things are seen to be done

with a minimum
amount of display.

The more ostentation, the harder
it will be for us to sell.

- Low key.

- With the option of a
higher key if necessary.

- What kind of
numbers can we expect

from the Wentworth team?

- Alex is being
cagey about that.

- It will help with my people

if the numbers are larger
rather than smaller.

- Alex labors under
particular restraints.

But once we get going,

the facts on the ground
and his prestige--

- Which RDO Media
has greatly enhanced.

- And with Tigger's support.

- Are we there yet with Tigger?

- We are this close.

- Oui?

- I'll call you back.

- Hello.

- Stevie Quirke was
murdered this afternoon.

- What happened?

- He was stabbed.

Not only that, two men followed
me when I left Belmarsh,

one of them was Jason Styles.

Did you hear what
I just said, Gina?

Jason Styles was at the prison.

He followed me.

- I don't know who that is.

- Stop fucking
lying to me, Gina.

I'm on the Eurostar.

You better get
your answers ready.

- No, don't come
to Paris, Mr. Venn.

- My train gets in at
8:05 at the Gare du Nord.

You be there to meet me.

- Oui.

- Oui.

- Gina, it's me, Harry.

I'm at the Gare du Nord.

You're supposed to meet me here.

Where are you?

Call me.

- The
grapevine is buzzing here

at Westminster today
with rumors emerging

that billionaire
industrialist James Morpeth

has thrown his political
and financial weight

behind Alexander Wentworth,

who has today been
upping the pressure

on the Prime Minister.

- It's high time this country
had a government based

on principle with a big P and
not politics with a small one.

We need rigor, we need
clarity, we need courage.

We know what the problems are.

The country is crying
out for clear leadership.

It's time for some conviction.

- Hello?

- Sir Nigel,
it's Harry Venn.

- What can I do for you, Harry?

- I'm supposed to be meeting
Gina but she hasn't showed up.

And her phone's going straight
through to voice mail.

- But if she arranged to meet
you I'm sure she'll show.

Harry?

- Yeah, Stevie Quirke
was murdered this
afternoon in prison.

- My God.

- Yeah, I don't want this
to worry you or anything,

it's probably nothing, but.

- Where are you?

- I'm in Paris.

- Paris?

- Yeah, do you know

where Gina stays
when she's here?

- Yes, you could try the Hotel
des Academies et des Arts.

- Hang on a sec, say that
again, the hotel what?

- Des Academies et des
Arts, that's A-R-T-S.

It's in the Sixth.

- Okay, I'll give
them a call. Thanks, bye.

- Bye.

- Hello?

- You were
supposed to meet me.

- Mr. Venn, I explicitly
told you not to come.

- Where are you?

- I'm on my way to a meeting.

- Where?

Gina, where are you?

- I'll text you the address.

- You be there this time.'

Monsieur.
- Oui?

- This
is the help desk,

may I have your client ID?

- Whiskey, bravo,
zero, eight, two,

zero, one, nine, one, nine.

- For verification
may I have values one,

four and eight of your protocol.

- Sierra, Yankee, Bravo.

- Mr. Tanzir?

- You are verified.

How may we help?

- Status report
on virus, seven,

eight, 11, six, Foxtrot.

- Please hold.

- Hello?

- The virus
has been quarantined

and our engineers are on site.

We await further updates.

- Thank you.

- Monsieur, we need
to go faster, quicker.

- Okay.
- Oui, merci, bon.

- Mr. Tanzir?

Mr. Tanzir?

- Gina!

- Hello, Harry.

- Hillman.

Little Stevie told me you'd
come back from the dead, Paul.

Do you want to
show me that trick?

- Yeah, I could see how
you could use it just now.

- Well, whatever it
is, it's bloody good,

because you fooled my old man.

- You just need a good doctor.

- You obviously you went
to a lot of trouble, yeah.

- I'm a clean skin, Harry,

worth the effort
for them and for me.

It's good money.

- What, regular?

- As clockwork.

Goes into my bank account
every month, get the travel.

Expenses are generous.

- Nice, what do you have
to do for that then?

- You know, this and that.

- This and that?

Does that include
killing people?

- Someone's got to do it, Harry.

- Did you kill Stevie?

- No, not personally.

It was a help desk job.

- What's the help desk?

- They pay the cheques.

- It was the help desk,

they helped blow up
my office, did they?

- Yeah, that was us.

How did you get
out of that, Harry?

- What about Mark?

He back from the dead and all?

- It's been nice
talking to you, Harry.

- Now you listen to me
Paul, you listen to me.

You let the girl go.

- You're not getting it, Harry.

She's the one they want dead.

You, you're just
collateral damage.

- No, Paul.
- Now get out the way, Harry.

Get out of the way, Harry!

- Shit.

I saw Hillman, I talked to him.

It was Paul bloody Hillman.

- It was a cock-up, Nigel.

- Since when does the
help desk make cock-ups?

- How do you know Jason Styles?

- The engineers weren't
expecting Venn in Paris.

- Find Gina Hawkes
and Harry Venn.

Kill them.

- The stakes for this
country could not be higher.

We have to be fearless.

- How about if you
stayed here with me?

Can you get me a gun?

- What's
going on, Harry?

- Don't come back
till you hear from me.

If you don't hear from me,
you don't come back at all.

- I want to talk.
- Jesus.

- What would you
like to talk about?