Last Tango in Halifax (2012–…): Season 3, Episode 3 - Episode #3.3 - full transcript

Whilst Gillian considers Robbie's marriage proposal John arrives at the farm with Alan, who tells her that Celia did not attend Caroline's wedding. With Alan asleep John also proposes to Gillian but she knocks him back. Caroline confronts her mother over her absence and they eventually reconcile whilst Celia joins the rest of Alan's family for another meal with Gary and his wife. The celebration is interrupted when Caroline rings to say that Kate has been hit by a car and is in hospital, requiring surgery.

~ I've had a bit of news.
~ What news?

I've got a lad. A son.

~ Before you were married.
~ No.

I'm so excited that we've met, Alan.

~ I've heard the news!
~ Which...?

That you and Robbie's been
at it behind my back.

What's up with Celia and me Grandad?

You see this is what adultery does
to people, it turns them into liars.

Can I tell you how grateful I am
to you for giving me the strength

and the courage to stop hiding.

~ There's a problem with your mum.
~ I'm not going!



Then there's absolutely no point
in pretending that we have

any kind of a relationship.

I'm sorry, love. I
tried to persuade her.

Well, there's no point you
being here, then, is there?

I solemnly declare that I know
not of any lawful impediment

why I, Caroline Elizabeth Dawson...

may not be joined in matrimony
to you, Katherine Abike Mackenzie.

I solemnly declare...

I solemnly declare that I know not
of any lawful impediment why I,

Katherine Abike McKenzie, may not
be joined in matrimony to you,

Caroline Elizabeth Dawson.

I call upon these persons here
present to witness that I,

Caroline Elizabeth Dawson, do take
you, Katherine Abike Mackenzie,

to be my lawfully wedded wife.



Caroline Elizabeth Dawson,

will you have this woman
to be your wedded wife,

to love her, to comfort her,
to honour and keep her

and forsaking all others, for
as long as you both shall live?

I will.

Katherine Abike Mackenzie,

will you have this woman
to be your wedded wife,

to love her, to comfort her,
to honour and keep her,

and forsaking all others, as
long as you both shall live?

I will.

I, Caroline Elizabeth Dawson,

take you, Katherine Abike Mackenzie,
to be my wedded wife.

To have and to hold,

for better for worse,

for richer for poorer,

in sickness and in health,

to love and to cherish...

.. from this day forward.

Caroline and Kate have
given their consent

and made their marriage
vows to each other.

They have declared their marriage
by the joining of hands

and the giving and
receiving of rings.

I now pronounce you spouses for life.

Congratulations.

Oh.

Aren't you at the...?

The wedding? No. I was.

~ Is everything...?
~ Are you busy?
~ Um...

You couldn't give me a lift down
to the railway station, could you,

~ in Harrogate?
~ Sure.
~ If you can give me a minute.

Sure. Is everything...? Where
are you catching the train to?

~ Home.
~ Halifax?
~ Well, Sowerby Bridge.

~ Well, look, why don't
I drive you over there?
~ No, no.

If you could just take me
to the railway station here,

that'd be more than sufficient.

Hello?

What's he doing back so soon?

~ You've been quick.
~ I didn't stop.

Didn't seem much point me
being there without you.

So.

I'm leaving the car with you.

Why, where are you going?

Home. To Halifax.

If that's what you really want.

So... you'll know where I am
if you feel like talking to me.

I think I've said all I can say.

Happen you're right, happen a bit of
distance might focus our thoughts.

Right.

I'm pissed off with
Alan. Where is he?

He's at a dykey lesbian
wedding in Harrogate.

~ And you should have told me an' all.
~ About what?

Our Ellie dropping out of school

~ to do that bloody silly
job in that supermarket.
~ Oh...!

I only found out cos I went
in there just now to buy

some bananas and a four-pack
o'baked beans.

She's 17. I said, I told her,

"You ring your mother, you
talk to her, you tell her".

~ I can't nanny people!
~ What's he doing at a lesbian wedding?

Oh - Caroline.

Aren't you there?

Yes. I am. I'm there right now,
Harry. I am in two places at once.

I don't know why you're
being so snippy,

it's my granddaughter who's chucking
her life down the drain.

Well, I've a lot on, haven't
I? I've lost my job.

~ Why weren't we invited?
~ We were invited.

I told her that we were too busy.

~ Does Harry know about Gary?
~ Who?

~ You. Do you know about Gary?
~ Who's Gary?

I'm wondering about asking him
if he can give me a job, Mum.

Why did you tell Caroline we
were too busy? I'm not too busy.

~ You're not asking Gary for a job.
~ Why not?
~ Which one's Gary?

It's just, like, a Saturday
job, not full-time.

You're not going begging
and scraping at his door.

Nobody's going begging and scraping!
I just thought, like...

tomorrow, when they come round
for Sunday lunch, I could say...

~ Come round? What?
~ Here.
~ Who?
~ Gary!

What you on about, "Come round here"?

~ Do you not remember? You invited 'em.
~ I...

(She was pissed.)

I didn't... Did I?

~ 12.30 for one. They were
thrilled you'd asked 'em.
~ Who is he?

They probably want to see
how the other half live.

He's-he's-he's... He's a millionaire.

He's this multi millionaire,
and I don't have a job,

and now I have to go out and buy
enough food to feed 'em with!

Oh, yeah, that's all I need(!)

Yeah, that's...exactly what
needs to happen next(!)

Who is he?

~ This is all your fault.
~ What is?

I should have been on a
shift at Greenhough's now,

then I'd've had enough money for...

~ Why did you tell Cheryl?
~ It just... It...

I don't know! It just came out.

I thought you said you were happy
to have an excuse to chuck it in.

Yeah, but now the euphoria's
died down the reality is that,

in a few short days,
I'm going to be skint.

OK. Well...

In fact, that's why I'm here.
Is there somewhere we can talk?

Harry and Raff and Calamity are
hogging the sitting room, so...

fire away.

OK. Well...

I've suggested this before,
and you know it's a good idea.

But then things got messy

cos of that John. Twat.

But... look.

I've seen the light. With Cheryl.

I don't want to live in a box
worrying about a new kitchen

and a new bathroom and a new carpet.

I know you're... you.

But...

Look...

Why don't we get married?

You can farm. I've got my salary.

And then a good pension. Good enough.

Then you won't have to worry
about doing anything part-time.

I can help you. Here.

You know I can. I can
turn my hand to owt.

What you thinking?

I don't like being dependent...
on people.

I know that, Gillian.

Well, what would...?
You mean, like...

~ you'd sell your house and
come and live here, and...?
~ Yeah. Married.

It isn't about being dependent.

It's about sharing. Everything.

Pooling our resources and...

yeah, being equal.

Partners.

~ I don't know.
~ Why?

~ You're a nice fella, you're a good man.
~ So...?

You think about it.
If you give the nod

then I can have my house up
on the market within a week.

What shall we do? Granny?

Do you want to go round?

Do you think we should go round?

Do you think we should apologise?

I think I might.

Where the hell were you, penis head?

~ Hi, Granny.
~ I'm...

Right.

What's going on?

John's kindly driven me over.

He was going to get the train but,
you know, with his... Your...

Has something happened?

~ Are you not at the wedding?
~ No.

She just needs time. That's all.

It's been a big shock for her.

For all of us.

And these things just
take time, that's all.

Caroline's going to be, like,
gutted that her mother didn't...

Yes. Yes, I think she was.

You should've gone. You should've
gone to support Caroline, at least.

Yeah. Yeah.

Well, I did go, in fact.

I said to Celia, "I'm going
whether you do or not."

And then when I got there she told
me there was no point me being there

if her mother wasn't. So.

~ She said that?
~ Did she?

~ Caroline did?
~ Yes.

~ In front of everybody?
~ No, outside. Everyone else had gone in.

It were cutting. I was shocked.

~ Right. Bitch.
~ She were upset, obviously.

~ Don't care. She's not
talking to you like that.
~ What you doing?

Sending her a text. "F-off bitch.
I hope you have a shit day".

~ Don't do that!
~ Well, I'm tempted!

None of it'd have happened
if Celia'd...

And then, of course, none of any of
it would've happened if I hadn't...

Sorry, what...? What did happened?

I've got a half brother.

I've got a son.

You...? So...?

He's younger than Gillian.

So...?

And it's all been
a bit of a surprise.

~ Uncle Gary.
~ Ah. Gosh.

OK. So...

They're coming over for Sunday
lunch tomorrow. Him and Felicity.

~ Did you know?
~ Course I knew. I was there
when you arranged it.

~ So, Celia...
~ Yeah.

~ .. wouldn't like...?
~ No.

So... So, how do you feel

~ about that, Gillian?
~ Well, it's complicated.

Obviously.

~ So you had a...?
~ It...

It should never have
happened but it did. So.

God, that's really...

God.

~ And this Gary, he's...?
~ Well, he's a nice lad.

He's done very well for
himself. He just...

He wanted to get to know us.

~ Are you all right?
~ Me?

Celia said you were
upset about this...

.. baby business.

Oh. Well. Yes. It's been...

Yeah.

And Judith's...?

Gone.

To stay with her sister.

~ In St Albans.
~ So that's...?

Good, yeah.

I think for everyone.

We none of us know what's
just round t'corner, do we?

There's some soup and some bread.

For dinner.

~ If you fancy stopping.
~ Dinner?

Lunch.

Thank you...

Please...

Quiet now, please!

Thank you. Hello.

Hello. I know my mum and Kate
aren't making any speeches,

but I'd just like to say thank
you to everyone for coming.

And I'd like to propose a toast.

To my mum.

To Caroline and...

No, to Kate and Caroline.

Every happiness. Kate and Caroline.

Kate and Caroline.

Thank you, honey, that was lovely.

Thank you, it was lovely.

Welcome to the family.

~ Lawrence is over there.
~ I noticed.
~ Don't make a fuss.

I didn't, I haven't. I'm pleased.

Why don't I pop round to Celia's and
try and persuade her to come round?

No.

~ Shall I take Granny some cake and champagne?
~ No.

'You're not angry with me, are you?'

'No, I'm not angry.

'I don't think I'm anything,
really, I just feel tired.'

'Forgive me.'

~ 'Forgive you for what?'
~ 'For everything.

'For meeting you in the first place.

'For taking a piece of
grit out of your eye.

'For loving you.

'For bringing you so much misery.'

~ Gosh.
~ Yup.
~ So how did she find out, Cheryl,
that you and Robbie had...?

He told her! Robbie did.

Well, I can't say I'm sorry.

A woman like you shouldn't
have to work at a check-out.

There's nothing wrong with
working at a check-out.

If people didn't work at check-outs,

snobby piss heads like you wouldn't
have anyone to buy their rioja off.

~ This is undoubtedly true.
~ In fact, people like you only exist

to keep the check-out assistant
amused. Did you not know that?

Paying £14.99 - lah-di-dah -

for something a French paysan
wouldn't chuck over a casserole.

Ooh, listen to you.

~ I was doing French A level.
~ Yeah?

Yeah, till I had to
drop out. Cos of...

Oh. Yeah.

Not being pregnant and...

Not that...

Not that... Not that what?

Not that it'd have done me any
good finishing my A levels.

You don't know that. You don't
know what you might have done.

I love drinking too
much at lunch time.

Sod it.

I mean, y'know...

I've lost my job, I've no money,

my dad's fallen out with his...
girlfriend, ladies, wife, woman.

My son's... God knows he's
thrown his future away

and chucked his lot in with...
Actually, you know what?

I like Ellie.

But the bigger point...
is why bother pretending?

Just go with the flow.

Just... stop trying to imagine
you can resist the onslaught,

the inevitable. Just...

give in to the gentle whittling
away of anything you imagined

resembling a life or a personality.

Yeah, I know. It's just that

waking-up-feeling-like-shit
thing later.

I've a thousand and one
things I want to ask you.

Oh, gosh! Well, plunge in.

OK.

One.

Did you have no idea

that Caroline wanted to bat for...

.. the other county? Before,
you know, she announced it.

Don't know. It's odd.

Looking back, you do wonder.

What?

How much...

I didn't know her, really.

I was in love with her,
I fell in love with her.

My God, was I in love with her.
I couldn't believe she existed.

She was so, you know... Caroline.

But then you realise all you've
fallen in love with is this face.

This lip, this eye, this nostril.

It took me ten years to
realise that actually...

when you've get beyond the
tantalising exterior...

she's actually pretty boring.

I mean, who the shit reads
chemistry, for God's sake?

I just think that people have
a shelf-life with each other,

and we should just accept
that and learn to move on,

so we can enjoy....

~ What?
~ The next thing.

Marriage vows, they're so ancient,
they're so elderly, they're so...

Actually... today, those two -

she's 47, Kate's 43
- maybe that works.

Maybe they will forsake all others
till death do they part.

But come on! You can't say that at
24 and know what you're buying into!

Not when people live to be 90!

It was all right when
you'd drop dead at 27

of plague or smallpox,

there was an built-in exit

to the whole damned pantomime,
but come on!

~ I know what you're saying.
~ You do! Course you do! You're an adventurer,

you're a buccaneer.

You live life, that's why you're
so exciting, you silly bitch!

Yeah. Till the next
thing comes along.

Yeah, but as long as we both
understand that, isn't that...?

You know I've got all this money?

~ They bought out my half of
the house. The lesbians did.
~ Oh, aye?

I think you and me could
be very good for each other.

I think you know that.

You would never have to worry
where the next five quid

was coming from ever
again. I'm serious.

You could farm. I could
commute to the university

and write my novel. I think life
could be... I don't know...

pretty good.

Who's that?

~ Is that you, Dad?
~ Mm?

Oh.

Gillian?

Yes, Father?

Can I borrow t'Landrover for
an hour or so this evening?

So yer in t'dog house?

Who told you?

Your Raff. He wasn't going to.
I had to squeeze it out of him.

And it's true, is it?

Is that why you've been so miserable?

Why did you tell her?

I had to.

Gillian told Caroline,
then Caroline's all,

"If you are not going
to tell her, I will".

Not that I wouldn't have
told her, I just...

.. wanted to do it in my own time.

What's she bothered about?

It's not like you were married
to her, is it, at t'time.

Oh...

They can't let things
lie, women, can they?

I'm going upstairs.

~ I was going to make a
start tidying the kitchen.
~ No, you're not.

~ Leave it.
~ I'm just going to get the dish washer on,

and then I won't be
worrying about it.

Five minutes.

Hello.

Oh, have I not locked up?

Are you speaking to me?

Have I got anything to say to you?

How did it go?

It, erm...

Well, it doesn't really matter
how it went, does it?

Oh, don't be like that.

What do you want?

Just to say I hope it
all went off all right.

It isn't that I don't wish
you both well, I do, I just...

what with Alan and all that
business going on, I just...

I found it difficult.

Everyone asked where you were.

~ Everyone wanted to meet you.
~ Who's everyone?

Our colleagues, my
friends from Oxford.

A few people wanted to
pop round and say hello,

but we didn't know what sort
of a reception they'd get, so...

~ Well, they should have done.
~ We advised them not to.

What did you say?

That you're rather...

.. narrow-minded and you didn't want
to be part of what was going on.

~ Why did you say that?
~ Why?!

~ What did they say?
~ Nothing!

What do you expect people to say
when they hear something like that?

You could've said I was ill.

Yes, I could. But it wouldn't
have been true, would it?

~ You could've said I'd had an upset.
~ Yes. Yes, I could've said that.

Kate's mother wasn't here.

Only because she's
working in New York

and couldn't get away
at such short notice!

She would have liked
to have been here!

I don't want to fall out with you.

I'm going to bed.

He's gone over to Halifax. Alan.

I'm not really interested.

He said he didn't want
to take the Lexus,

so he must have gone on the train.

Kate's waiting for me in bed, so...

I don't know if he's coming back.

I don't have an opinion on that.

I do love you, you know.

'Your mother's car's gone.'

~ She'll have gone to get the Mail on Sunday.
~ Bit early.

She's the sort that sits outside
in her car till they open.

OK. She's your mother.

What's up?

"Piss off, you mad old..."

That's a bit...

Maybe it's a joke. Maybe she thinks
she's being funny. Ironic.

You know, maybe in Halifax that's
how they say congratulations...

kind of thing...

Oh, shit. No.

Shit. No!

Oh, I did not send that!

Oh! Ah! Oh!

Oh, Christ, you...

WANKER!

Ah. Morning.

How do?

Morning.

Should I - can I put the kettle on?

Aye, you can do when I've
made up baby's bottles.

Ah.

Where's Gillian?

Out in t'fields.

This obviously must seem rather
odd to you, me, erm...

~ But obviously it's...
~ She does what she wants.

~ I wouldn't want you to think...
~ I don't think anything.

No. No. No, OK.

~ I'm very fond of Gillian.
~ Good.

~ I would hope so...
~ Yeah.
~ .. given that you're....
~ Sure.

Sleeping in her bedroom.

And I'm serious, too.

I've made that very clear to her.

Is Ellie having a lie in?

~ No, she's at work.
~ Gosh.

I might pop outside. Get some...

See where Gillian is.

Hello.

I drove Alan over here. Yesterday.

He asked me to drive him to the railway
station, but what with his...

I thought...

~ Is he inside?
~ Yes.

~ Is he about?
~ Yes.

~ Hello.
~ Hello.

Look, I'm sorry about yesterday.

Do you want to come through?

~ Hi, Celia.
~ Hello, love.

Hello... Hello...

~ I'll just take her upstairs and change her.
~ Right.

~ You don't have to run off because of me.
~ It's nice to see you.

Do you want to...?

I've not slept. Again.

Well, yes, I thought when I saw
you, you must've set up early.

I wonder if, looking back...

I was more bothered that you went
and met him without telling me,

than the thing itself.

I don't know. I've no idea.

That and... going on about
how wonderful he is

when you could see I was
struggling with it all.

He's a nice fella. I'd be
lying if I said otherwise.

Do you want me to go away again?

How's Caroline?

~ Oh, she's not speaking to me.
~ No.

And do you wonder?

I would have been at that wedding
if none of this'd happened.

~ You were wrong to take it out on Caroline.
~ I was upset.

Yes, I think we all got that,
Celia. Loud and clear.

I want to move on.

And I don't want to
fall out with you.

You're your own worst enemy.

I can't help how I am.

You should never have taken
it out on Caroline.

~ I went round last night to apologise
and she wouldn't listen.
~ Did you?

And now you've fallen out with me.

I don't want to fall out with you.

It's the last thing I want.

Is it?

You know it is.

I'm sorry.

I am sorry.

I'm just...

It takes time sometimes
to deal with something.

I know that.

They're due round for
Sunday dinner today.

Him and his wife. I can put him off.

No, don't do that.

I think perhaps it's time I met him.

Are you sure?

I'm sure.

Interestingly...

oddly, when we went round
there for tea t'other night,

as the evening wore on...

well, our Gillian drank
too much, like she does,

and his wife, Felicity, she were
knocking it back as well...

I sensed an undercurrent. I don't
think it was to do with us

being there. She seemed
perfectly happy with us.

I sensed it was more... between them.

Some...

I don't know, so...

He probably isn't perfect.

Hi.

~ How pissed were we yesterday?
~ Oh...

I've done something really stupid.

~ I sent Caroline a text.
~ Oh! Yeah.

~ Jesus.
~ She won't care.
~ I care!

Oh...

~ Why didn't you stop me?
~ Well, I did. Try to.

I said, "Probably best not to", but
you called me a limp wristed twat.

I've got to stop drinking. I really
have got to stop drinking.

~ Celia's turned up.
~ Has she?

Looks like you're going to
have a full house for lunch.

Did...? Are you...?

~ Did I invite you to stay
for lunch. I did, didn't I?
~ Yeah.

OK. Well, the thing is, you can't.

Cos yesterday, I invited
Robbie as well.

You...? When?

Before you turned up. He came over.

And, look, whatever the hell

we were talking about yesterday,

when we'd had a few,

it's not going to work.

It's not ever going to
be a good idea, is it?

~ OK? So...
~ Why isn't it? Why not?

Thank you for driving my dad over.

I meant what I said. About
helping out. Financially.

~ I didn't just say it because we'd had a few.
~ I know. I know. I know that.

But in the sober light of day,
it's not what I want. All right?

~ Why? Why not?
~ We can be friends.

~ But that's got to be it.
~ No. Why?
~ You're...!

You turn up,

you go out and buy a load of wine!

At lunch time! I didn't get anything
done yesterday afternoon.

~ Well, it's nice, occasionally, to...
~ I can't be getting into all that.

~ I didn't physically pour it down your neck.
~ I know.

I did. I'm not blaming you -

beyond the point of bringing
the stuff in - it's me.

I'm ridiculous, I'm rubbish,

I can't be trusted.

But what I don't need is someone
who's no better than I am.

~ We're very alike, you and me.
~ No. I mean, yeah. In a bad way.

No, Gillian. You know...

You've just got to
like yourself more.

I don't even know what that means.

If I liked myself more, I wouldn't
drink so bloody much.

If I liked myself more,

I'd be able to be more grown-up
about everything like Caroline is.

I can't cope with you and Robbie.

Not with every-bloody-body
else I've got coming today.

And then there's this...

stupid text I've gone and sent!

You sent that text because
she'd upset your dad,

that wasn't very grown up, was it?

Yeah, but I didn't have to
be childish back, did I?

She wouldn't have been. Would she?

She goes "Thank you - kiss".

Like she thinks I'm...

Do you think she thinks I was joking?

Do you think she thinks it's a joke?

Do you think she thinks
it's just my daft way

~ of saying congratulations?
~ Let me read it again.

I think you see Caroline through
rose-tinted glasses sometimes.

I don't know why you give
a toss what she thinks.

She's not perfect,
you know. Far from it.

Yeah, she may have
thought it was a joke.

She still upset Alan.

Yeah, well.

Maybe Alan's asked for it
a bit. Y'know? I mean...

he was unfaithful to my
mother, lest we forget.

And for once - for once -

I don't blame Celia for
being pissed off with him.

I suppose nobody's taken
your feelings into account

in all this, have they? Not properly.

It's all been about him and her.

You're a nice fella.

But I really don't want you and
Robbie at the same dinner party.

~ Well, tell him not to come, then.
~ I can't do that.
~ Why?

Because...

yesterday morning, before
you turned up...

.. he asked me to marry him.

And then, God knows how many hours
later, I'm in bed with you.

Because I'm stupid and flaky

and I'm fed up of being those things!

~ You don't want to marry him.
~ Don't I?

I asked you to marry me.

More or less.

Well, what if I did
want to marry him?

~ What if I do?
~ You don't.

I do.

I do, actually.

I need you to leave, John.

I need you to go.

Just go. And stop coming here.

~ Stop thinking you can come here.
~ I brought your dad!
~ My dad...

asked for a lift to the
station in Harrogate.

He told me.

~ Are you sure about this?
~ Course! You can get on with your work.

I'll only be half
an hour, 40 minutes.

~ Are you going to the station?
~ Yeah.

~ Can you drop me and Angus off
round at his? It's on the way.
~ Sure.

Hang on a minute.

~ I've not got any homework.
~ That's just not true.

It's only maths.

And history and science. I
can do it tonight after tea,

~ if you come and pick me up at seven.
~ Five.

~ Half six.
~ Five.

Right, five, whatever.

Thank you for coming to the
wedding yesterday, Angus.

'Twas an honour and a privilege.

Right, come on, I haven't got
all day. I'll take the Jeep.

~ I'll never squeeze all this lot in my car.
~ Sure.

It's been lovely to see you.

Are you not going on
any sort of honeymoon?

After the baby's born we might
do something nice. We might...

pop down to Oxford for
the weekend and see you.

~ Give my love to Roxy. Tell her
I'm sorry she couldn't be here.
~ I will.

It's nice to see you so happy.

Well, it'd have been better if your
granny'd been here but... yeah.

Yeah, I am happy.

I'm very happy.

See you.

~ Yeah, sure!
~ Yes!

I told you not to ask!

He's not got a driving licence.

That's all right! We'll
sort something for you.

~ Is it just a Saturday job?
~ At the moment.

It is. He's not leaving school.

You want to learn to drive,
though, irrespective of...

Tell her, she won't pay for lessons.

He doesn't need lessons! He's been
driving a tractor since he was 13,

I'm damned sure he can drive a car.

~ Have you heard her?
~ I could teach you.
~ Can you teach me?

She has these Medieval
ideas about everything.

~ We can sort you out with driving lessons.
~ How?

~ When's your birthday?
~ Oh!

You're not, Gary, I'm not having
you going down that route.

He'll take over your whole
life for you if you let him.

Shut up, Mum.

Stop it.

Celia, let me top you up.

Oh! I'll be getting squiffy.

Tell me about your family.

Oh. Well, erm...

there's William. He's in his first
year at Oxford, he's my grandson,

my eldest grandson.

And he's studying English literature
and he's doing very well.

And your daughter, Caroline, she's
the one that got married yesterday.

Harry was telling me.

~ Er, yes.
~ To another woman.

Really? Good. Wow.

Good for her! That's a good idea.

I think I'll do that next time.

Can you pass the erm...?

So... she was married to a man.

John, yeah.

~ For years.
~ John. Then...

God. That's really brave,
that's really exciting.

And she's a head teacher?

Well, it's something.

It's a damned good idea,
that's what it is.

~ But you're not comfortable with that?
~ Oh, yes. I am.

I, um...

In some ways. In lots of ways.

And she's a very nice woman,
the woman she's, erm...

~ Yeah, Kate.
~ Kate.

~ She's obviously very intelligent.
~ Oh, yes, she's very intelligent.

It's the way forward,
it's the future.

Well, technically, it
wouldn't be, would it?

No, yes, it is. Technically.

Women could do without men.

Men couldn't reproduce without
women. Look at chickens,

~ the way chickens are farmed.
~ Chickens?

They gas them at birth.

Then they just keep one or
two to do the necessary.

It's t'same wi' sheep. And cattle.
Only we don't gas the boys, we...

~ We eat them.
~ Can you stop waving that
carving knife around

when you've had so much to drink?

I don't know what men are
for. Do you, Gillian?

It's... They're...

I don't mind them.

On the other hand, if you
gassed us all at birth,

who'd deal with a puncture?

Oh! Not that old chestnut.

Well said, Harry!

I know you'd know what to do cos
you like getting your hands mucky.

Anything technical,
women - normal women -

they just stand there holding
their handbags going...

"Can you do it?"

You're going to have
to leave the room.

Sorry, you're going to have
to go and stand outside.

He just said you're not normal,
Mum, did you hear him?

Yeah, I was here.

I've dealt with more punctures than
you've had hot dinners, Harry.

~ You get the picture, though?
~ No.

How would Caroline deal
with a puncture, Celia?

Caroline? She'd just buy a new car.

~ Gary, what was I saying?
~ Your dad.

Oh, my dad! You wouldn't believe...

He's a district judge.

~ Three weeks... Three weeks ago?
~ Yeah.
~ He sits in Halifax.

There's this little
old man in his 70s.

This little old man managed,
God knows how,

somehow to get his narrow boat,
a 60-70 foot narrow boat,

wedged at a 90 degree
angle. 90 degrees!

~ Not quite 90 degrees.
~ Oh, nearly 90 degrees, as good as.

Wedged in a lock!

The boat was a write-off!
It was trashed, wrecked!

£60,000 worth of narrow boat!

They had to hire two cranes, two huge, enormous
ridiculous cranes for something like...

Four or five days?

It was awful, actually,

cos the waterways had brought
the action, it's a civil action.

~ And the insurance is out
the window cos he's drunk.
~ Hm.

But the point is, my dad
has to make a decision.

Costs were involved,
horrendous costs.

And the point I'm making

is that everybody's feeling
sorry for this little old man

cos he had to sell his
house to pay the costs.

Does he ever have a drink, your dad?

Of course he does.

I see you like a drink.

Yeah, but I'm not driving
a narrow boat, Harry.

He's drinking. How
are you getting home?

Well, we've got... I've got a driver.

When, obviously... And
I'm not drinking, Harry.

Happened he'd have had
a driver, this chap

if he were living in
them sort of circles.

Yeah, but he didn't. So,
the point is... The point...

Oh, God!

Is he a friend of yours?

Yeah, we know him.

Oh!

Hello?

Hi, it's me, Mum.

Did you get your train all right?

~ Yep.
~ OK.

Did Kate say she was
going anywhere after?

It's just she's not come back and
she's not answering her phone.

And it's been nearly
an hour and a half.

Erm... I think she said something
about stopping to get some milk.

Oh, OK.

'You all right?'

Oh, yeah. I... I just thought
she'd be back by now.

~ I've got to go, love, there's
someone at the door.
~ 'OK.'

~ Bye.
~ 'Bye.'
~ Bye-bye.

I was having a senior moment,
she was having a blonde moment,

between us we were hopeless.

~ Oh, she sounds larger than life.
~ Oh, she can be.

But between you and me, she's not actually
speaking to me at the moment.

Oh, no. Why?

I didn't go to the wedding.

~ Why not?
~ I don't think she's speaking to me either.

Why?

Why?

Eh, lady.

You and me need to have a
conversation about school.

Yeah, we don't.

It's happened, I've left.
It were the right choice.

~ Have you spoken to your mother?
~ Hm. I've had her on t'phone.

~ She's livid.
~ Yeah, well, she needs to wake up.

I've moved on.

I need an income.

Especially since you...

You dozy old sod!

Writing your boat off and
having to sell your house!

Coffee's ready.

You all right?

~ I might go home.
~ OK.

~ I might slip out.
~ OK.

Here.

~ We'll see you.
~ Yeah. Ta-ta, lad.

~ Me dad'll... ring you.
~ Yeah.

Ohh!

Have you had time to give any thought

to what I said yesterday morning?

Are you serious?

Do you really want to marry me?

Gillian... I've wanted to
marry you since I was 16!

You know I'm...

I try not to be mad.

OK.

And I really do want to
stop drinking so much.

Well, that's up to you.

What if I'm...

disappointing?

We'll muddle through.
We always seem to.

Raff would like it.

So...

is that a yes, then?

Yeah.

Yeah, OK.

That's my phone.

Oh, shit!

~ It's Caroline!
~ Oh, what's wrong with Caroline again?
~ Nothing. Just...

Caroline!

How was yesterday?

Erm... did you...?

You got my text? Yeah, it was
just meant to be a bit of fun.

It was just meant to be a laugh.

'Only I realised afterwards,

'you might think I
was being serious.'

No, it's fine, forget it.

Listen, is my mother there?

'Yeah. Yeah, yeah.'

So, did you have a
nice day... yesterday?

Erm... yeah.

But... now Kate's in hospital.

Oh, my God! Has she
gone into labour?! Oh!

No, no, no, no.

~ 'She's unconscious.'
~ Has Kate gone into labour?

~ Is she in labour?
~ 'She's been hit by a car.'

She's in an operating
theatre. She's er...

'I don't know... I don't
know, but it's not good.'

I need to speak to my mother.

~ Oh, my God! Are you all right?
~ 'Yeah.'

I don't know. Is my...
my mother there?

Oh, yeah. Yeah, hold on.

~ What?
~ It's...

Celia, Caroline wants to talk to you.

Oh, is she speaking to me?

You might be better
coming through here.

Why?

Kate's been in an accident.

Caroline?

M-Mum!

What's happened?

I don't know. Er...

Kate's been hit by a car.
I don't know what happened.

~ Are
~ YOU
~ all right?

No.

Why, what's happened?

I don't know. I just... had the
police knocking on the door.

She'd gone, she'd taken the boys.

She'd taken William to the station

so I could stay at
home and do some work.

Are the boys all right?

Yeah, they... they weren't
there, no-one was there.

She'd already dropped
them off and erm...

And, er...

And I don't know, she got
knocked down apparently...

coming out of a shop.

~ And she wasn't conscious
when they brought her in.
~ Oh, God!

What about the baby?

I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know anything.

Well, I'm at Gillian's, do
you want us to come over?

Well, I don't know,
you can't do anything,

she's in an operating theatre.

I think they're trying
to work out what...

How...

'Right, well, we're coming over.'

'Which hospital is it?'

St Mary's.

~ Where's
~ A & E? Just over there.

Oh, thank you.

Caroline.

Has there been any developments?

They've delivered the baby.
They've taken the baby out

and they're still operating on her.

Where is it?

She's in an incubator.

A little girl!

Yeah.

~ We knew that.
~ Are you all right, love?

Alan, I am so sorry that I
said that stupid thing to you.

~ Oh, it's forgotten.
~ And I don't even know why I did.

It's forgotten. Come on!

Oh!

What about Kate?

Oh, they're still... She's still...

God knows. I think... I think...

It's amazing what they
can do these days.

Do you watch any of those
medical programmes?

~ No.
~ Well, we do.

It's marvellous what they can do.

It's wonderful, they
can do all sorts.

She'll be all right, love.

She was so excited at the
idea of giving birth.

She'd got it all planned and
now it's just been ripped out

Oh, this is Gary.

He drove us over here. We thought we'd get
here quicker with someone else driving.

Hi.

~ Hello.
~ You all right? What's happened?
~ Caroline?
~ Yeah.

Hi. I'm Jessell Malik.

I'm the Senior Consultant
Surgeon here at St Mary's.

Do you want to... come through
here and we'll have a chat.

Yeah.

Is this your mum and dad?

Hm.

~ Yeah.
~ Do you want them to come through as well?

Come on.

Hey... I-I'll stay here.

No.