Rosemary & Thyme (2003–2006): Season 1, Episode 2 - Arabica and the Early Spider - full transcript

Rosemary and Laura are working on restoring the gardens in an estate that has seen better days, but is being brought back to life by a musician and his wife. When the skeleton of a horse is dug up, the theory is that it belongs to a missing race horse (Arabica). When someone is shot and killed at the house, and a woman's skeleton turns up buried on the grounds, gardening takes a back seat to detecting as Rosemary and Laura piece together clues they have dug up.

How's it going? Oh, fine.

There's a lovely selection
of wild flowers here

and some Japanese knotweed.

Is that bad?

Ah, you just have to dig it up.

But Nev wants a wild garden.

Well, it's not really a wild flower.

The Victorians imported
it and it just took over.

Oh, can you spare Nev ten minutes?

Of course, I just want to show
you something I found first.

Right. Look at this.



What is it?

Ophrys sphegodes, the early spider orchid.

Orchid?

That's not wild, then.

Absolutely!

Orchids grow in England? Yes, they do!

All kinds.

But this one is very rare.

Actually, it's a protected species.

So, you should get it registered, really.

Mrs Connolly!

Come and have a look at this!

Oh! Oh.

What's going on?



You know the pond that Frank
was digging for us? Mm-hm.

Well, they found some bones. Oh.

I knew it wasn't human. No doubts?

I may not be the best
doctor in the world...

All right, we can all
go home. It's a horse.

There you are, Mrs Connolly, just a horse.

A horse? Good Lord! What do we
do? Cover it up again? I would.

Why would anyone bury a horse?

Oh, if it was a favourite...
hunter or something.

I've just had a thought. I
suppose it couldn't be Arabica?

I suppose it could. What's Arabica?

Arabica was a racehorse.

Stolen from Belfrage's
stables when I worked there.

Take her up, go on. Steady, steady.

Whoa!

Have you always lived round here?

Yes. As a kid we'd be up here
playing knights and maidens.

And now it's all yours.

Nev used it as the background
for one of his videos.

That's how I met him.
They rented horses from us.

As soon as I saw him it was... You know.

Before the week was out he'd
promised to buy it for me. Aah!

Take her up. Go on. Steady, steady!

I was just telling Rosemary and Laura

how you promised to buy
Compton Lacey for me.

The most expensive promise
I've ever made in my life.

What it cost to refurbish!

My mum used to say, "We may be
common, Nev, but we ain't vulgar."

Do you want some coffee? Oh, yes. Thanks.

(BELL RINGS)

So, what about them bones, then? A horse.

Well, I told you!

You said it was a cow! One of
them country things, anyway.

Yes, sir? Ah, Doris.

Can you get us some coffee
and make it a big pot?

Certainly, sir.

Is this Arabica?

Oh, no!

That's just one of the horses
from that video when Nev and I met.

And who's the pretty girl? That's Joanna.

She used to work at Belfrage's stable, too.

At least we didn't have to
get dressed in silly costumes.

Can we go over these plans
of yours for the grounds?

I start recording next week.

I'd like to get them settled before then.

This is the north side with the
wild garden you've already started.

And this side, Patsy would like
something a bit more formal.

Mm-hm. Yes, that's why
I've done two suggestions.

A parterre, that's one.

Or this one. Ah!

Harry Georgeson's here, Nev.

I don't want to see him
now. Can you get rid of him?

Too late. He's coming in.

Ah, yeah. Could we all go outside
and have a look at it in situ?

It would make more sense, the
real thing. Of course, let's go.

Nev, I hear you've been
having a bit of excitement.

It's just a load of old horse bones.

Yeah, I heard.

We're about finished, Nev,
apart from a few bits and bobs.

The tiling in the yellow bathroom?

Course, Nev, soon as we get the...

(HUGE CLATTER)

Jesus Christ!

Your arm. Just stay still
till we get some help.

You OK, mate?

Yeah, yeah, I think so. The
whole lot just collapsed.

I was hanging there like a bloody monkey.

As long as you're not hurt.
Who set up the scaffolding?

Len Lynch and his boys? Yeah.

Oh, Nev, your lovely window!

It took six bloody months to make this!

They're right, you know, those
people down the village...

..there's a curse on this place.

We've had nothing but
trouble since we started.

The flood...

All those cellars four foot deep in water.

None of these was my boys' fault, Nev.

And arson. Come on, Nev.

Ah, Tommy. Took the slow route
from Bishopsbridge, did you?

Sammy.

I thought I told you not to use the
Lynch brothers for any more scaffolding.

You know, I could always
find another foreman.

I can't be everywhere, Harry.

It must be nice to have your
own little house in the grounds

where you can put guests up.

Mm. Nice to be rich, altogether.

Mm. Nice to be rich.

Shall I put the light out?

Mmm.

Nev's not at all like you expect, is he?

My Matt had all his records
when he was about 15.

I used to listen with him.

I had them, too.

I was a little more than 15.

Sad, isn't it?

Mm. Tragic.

* MELLOW TECHNO ROCK

(STOPS MUSIC)

(CLATTER FROM OUTSIDE)

Hey!

(GUNSHOT)

(SNORING)

Laura!

Nev? Nev!

What's happening?

Nev's been shot. He's dead.

What's going on?

(POLICE RADIO MESSAGES)

This car, can you describe it?

Erm... Well, I only saw it for a second.

Colour? I don't know. Erm... Dark.

And er... what about
your... your... friend?

Did she see it any more clearly?

She didn't see it at all.

The shot woke me up. It didn't wake her.

But you were in the same room?

She sleeps more soundly than I do.

Not married, are you, Ms Boxer?

What's that got to do with it?

But you and... live together, yeah?

No.

Can I get you something?

I don't want anything.

You know the police think I shot Nev?

Oh, I'm sure they don't.

They have to eliminate
you from their enquiries.

I'm sorry we won't be finishing the
gardens. I really liked those plans.

I want you to. This place is Nev's baby.

I'll finish it the way he wanted.

That's wonderful.

How could they think I'd kill Nev?

Well, since we're not going to
get the digger to dig it for us...

Oh, well, one spit turned in
September's worth three in December.

What does that mean?

The more the early frosts
get at the soil, the better.

Is that your father again? Ahh.

Did they find anything out here?

Well, a couple of empty
cartridges, the policeman said.

Well, that'll be useful
if they ever find a gun.

Why would anyone want to kill Nev Connolly?

We don't know that much
about his private life.

What was he doing out here in
the middle of the night anyway?

In the dark! Do you think
he was meeting someone?

Maybe he saw someone. I mean,
an intruder or a poacher?

Poacher?

They can be quite a problem, you know.

Come across many poachers
in the police force?

Not in North Kensington, no.

Oh, look at this. What?

That's a bit odd. Somebody's
been using a spade here already.

Just one cut.

Mmm. Do you think they were
trying to bury something?

Maybe.

Not another horse! I hope not.

Perhaps they were trying
to dig something up.

What, buried treasure?

Or... Nev might have heard
them, come out and seen them.

Oh, come on, Rosemary!

You never know.

Oh, my God.

(GASPS) That is not a horse.

I think you'd better tell the police.

Why did you see fit to start digging there?

I did not "see fit".

I saw the mark of a spade where someone
had been digging and I wondered why.

Oh, yeah? Also trained
in detective work, are we?

No, of course not.

Was your uh... friend with you?

Excuse me, what do you
mean my "uh... friend"?

Oh, you're being
over-sensitive, Miss Boxer.

I am not being the
slightest bit oversensitive!

Oh, it's the foreman at last.

Early as usual.

They're making you earn
your money, Mr Trelawney.

Hello, Tommy.

Go and see Mrs Connolly, Sammy.

See if there's anything we can do to help.

Hey, she your driver?

She has been the last six months,
ever since I lost my licence.

Eh? Nah, Sammy's my missus. I
like to give her something to do.

Where's your boss today?
Harry? He's over Bishopsbridge.

We're starting a new job there next week.

He's er... very upset about Nev, though.

So, what do we know about the skeleton?

Female, 18 to 24 years of age,

been in the ground
approximately five years.

And what has she got to do with the horse?

Why should she have anything
to do with the horse?

You don't think it's a bit of a
coincidence, a horse and a woman

being buried at the same
time in the same place?

The place has been empty for 40 years.

The locals used the
grounds as a dumping pit.

Oh, and a burial ground, too?

Look, this is nothing to do with us.

Suppose the woman was the
trainer's daughter, or his wife.

And she's riding the horse in
the grounds of Compton Lacey.

There's an accident and the horse dies

and then rather than
admitting it to her husband...

Or her father. Or her
father ... she buries it.

And then, OVERCOME with
guilt, she commits suicide.

Then, overcome with
tidiness, she buries herself.

That is so unnecessary!

Just because I haven't worked
out ALL the details yet.

And how does poor Nev
Connolly fit into all this?

Well, I don't know.

But you know Patsy used to work
in Belfrage's stable, remember.

Right. Let's go and have
a talk with Mr Belfrage.

No, no, not now, it's lunch time.

You're all talk, you are.
Right, I'll go on my own.

See you in the pub.

Excuse me? What?

Is Mr Belfrage around?

Down the road half a mile, turn
left opposite the Flag And Cat.

After about a mile it's on the right
... Adam's Farm. You can't miss it.

He's a chicken farmer now.

Oh.

(KNOCKING)

Mr Belfrage?

What do you want?

They found the body of a woman,
a skeleton, buried up there.

Oh, yes?

She's about 20.

They found a horse, too.

Yes, I heard.

I just wondered if the two
were connected, you know.

Oh, that's it, is it?

Do you think I go around killing horses?

And women?

What with Nev Connolly being murdered...

The pop star fellow?

What? You didn't know? No.

He was shot. Up near
where they found the girl.

He was a nice chap.

It's all over the TV and radio.

Good God.

But that horse ... that was
a horse you trained, wasn't it?

Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.

Do they know what horse it was? No. Erm...

They can soon find out,

if Georgeson is prepared
to stump up for a DNA test.

Georgeson the builder?
What's he got to do with it?

We are talking about Arabica, yes?

Well, Arabica was his horse.

Lovely two-year-old.
Far too good for him.

Look, just clear off, will you?

Any idea who that girl
might be? No, not at all.

I am not interested in
Harry or his bloody horse...

All right. Calm down. I'm going.

Or anything else he thinks
he might own round here!

It's all getting a bit cosy.
The builder owning the horse?

Well, why didn't he say anything to Nev?

It seems the obvious thing to do.

"Might that be my racehorse?"

Maybe.

I'm beginning to wonder if
all the disasters that happened

while Nev was doing the
house aren't connected.

I don't know.

I wouldn't trust Tommy Matthews
as far as I could throw him

and he's the foreman.

And what's he got to gain?

Is he the one with the weird wife,
who drives him around all the time?

Mm. Tis the inbreeding,
I reckon. Want another?

Mm.

Erm, half a lager and a
slimline tonic, please.

A bottle of Becks, please,
and... I'll have a double...

Thank you very much.

You'll never guess who's
having lunch through there.

Robert De Niro?

Harry Georgeson.

Are you thinking what I'm thinking?

Mr Georgeson. Oh. Hello, erm...

Rosemary Boxer, and this is Laura Thyme.

We met yesterday with poor Mr Connolly.

Yes! The gardeners.

Yes. Oh, it's terrible,
Mr Connolly being murdered.

Terrible. Terrible.

Shocking.

You can sit down, if you want.

Thank you. Thank you. How do you do?

Oh, this is Mrs Georgeson. Hello.

We heard you were in Bishopsbridge.

We were. Weren't we, Fiona?

Yes, it's gorgeous there this time of year.

You know the skeleton of
the horse that was found?

What, the one they found buried? Mm-hm.

We wondered if it might be Arabica.

Arabica? Could be, I suppose.

It didn't occur to you?

Frankly, I don't much care.

They found a woman's
skeleton, too. Yeah, I heard.

Well, that's rather peculiar, isn't it?

You wouldn't have any idea
who that might be, I suppose?

Not an idea in the world.

Oh, erm... I want to show you something.

This is the tip of an
antler made into a button.

It's from a very expensive
coat, I would think, because...

Where did you get that?

It was found... With the dead woman.

Anyway, I wondered if either of
you knew anyone who wore a coat

with that type of button?

Never seen one like it.

It was by her hand, as
if she'd been holding it.

Loo.

You had no right to remove
it, let alone keep it.

It's contaminating the scene of crime!

I know. I was going to
give it to the police,

but that inspector was
so unpleasant. No excuse!

Well, anyway, did you see the
way Mrs Georgeson reacted, though?

(GEARS GRIND) Oh, God!

Bloody thing!

This is a beautiful wagon,
don't you be rude to her!

That car's been behind us for
at least the last five minutes.

What sort of car? It's difficult to tell.

Red. Oh, it's gone now, anyway.

(REPORTERS CLAMOUR)

Here! Are you anybody? What?

Are you going to see Mrs Connolly? Yes.

Are you famous? No, we're just gardeners.

Did Nev like gardening? What?

What was Nev like? Why did
he have women gardeners?

Did you know Nev?

How old are you, love?

I was talking to Ethel
Croft up the shop earlier.

Who's Ethel Croft?

Her daughter Julie
works for the police. Oh.

Just typing and stuff. You know, filing.

Anyway, apparently Julie
told her that the skeleton

was Joanna Brannigan.

It can't be.

Joanna Brannigan?

You saw the picture of her.

Her that disappeared.

That's what the police think, anyhow.

Well, that's another
mystery solved, as they say.

I always said ... Will you excuse me?

I... I'm not feeling all that great.

You lock up, Doris, will you?

Yeah, I'll lock up, don't you worry.

(DOOR SLAMS)

(GUN IS COCKED)

Laura, we're being shot at!

What do you think you're doing?
You've broken the bloody window!

Oh, I don't know what came over me.

Sheer bloody lunacy, that's what.

Here, drink this.

Come on, down in one.

Oh! That's very nice.

You're in shock.

I think I need two more.

I want you to calm down, not fall
over. I'm going to ring the police.

No, no! Why not?

It's not necessary! You're
scared they'll find that button.

No, no, it's not that.

I'm going to visit Mrs
Georgeson in the morning.

The builder's wife? What for?

I found this on the Internet.

What is it?

Oh, that's Fiona Georgeson
with Dennis Belfrage,

looking a bit smarter than he does now.

No, look at Mrs Georgeson's coat.

It's THE coat! It's got those buttons!

Apparently, it was quite
a big story in its day.

When... when was this?

About seven years ago and Georgeson
only had one horse, Arabica.

Belfrage was training it for him.

The horse was doing quite
well and then one night

somebody broke into the stable
yard and stole it. Was it that easy?

Oh, no, it shouldn't be,
according to Georgeson.

He was really pissed off and sued Belfrage

for half a million,
saying he was negligent.

Well, he was, I suppose.

What the bloody hell are you doing?!

So, Harry Georgeson kept doing things
to keep the story in the papers,

so even before they came to court
people were taking the horses away.

That's not fair, is it?

When it finally did get to
court, about two years later,

Belfrage was broke, he lost the case

and had to sell everything
up to pay for the legal fees.

Bloody lawyers. Slow down!
Yes, I am slowing down!

Oh, dear.

Are you all right?

That's a bloody stupid question.

Hasn't affected your charm.
It's Belfrage the chicken farmer.

Yes, all right. Just get
me out of here, will you?

And mind this arm, it's broken.

Of course I know who it was!

Who? Pat Bazeley.

She used to work for me.
She married that pop singer.

Patsy Connolly?

No! What do you mean, no?

Are you calling me a liar?
Why would she do that?

I don't know. Full moon or
something? Mind my blasted arm!

I have to change gear occasionally (!)

(GEARS GRIND)

(POLICE RADIO)

What do you hope to find?

Mrs Connolly's in the lounge.

They're searching the house now.

What are they looking for?

I don't know. I don't think they do.

We've just come from the hospital.

We took Mr Belfrage there. Oh.

He says you ran him off the road.

It's the least I could do.

Couldn't keep his hands to himself.

He got more than he bargained
for with Fiona Georgeson.

But that's nothing to what
he's going to get for Joanna.

Wait a minute.

What has this got to
do with Fiona Georgeson?

You don't know?

No. No. Tell us.

You don't know she ran off with him?

With Dennis Belfrage?

She lived with him, until
he lost all his money.

Then scurried back to her
husband pretty sharpish.

What a lovely couple!

And Joanna?

She was my friend.

When I was working at the stables.

She was only a kid.

Until one day she just disappeared.

Belfrage made her life a misery
when she was working there.

He'd get you in a corner
and say these vile things.

Then one day she just...
wasn't there any more.

Not a word from her.

Just after Arabica went missing.

But now they've found her.

I always knew he'd done it.

Mrs Connolly? Yes?

Can you account for this?

What is it?

It's a gun, Mrs Connolly,

the same calibre as the bullets
that killed your husband.

We found it in the back of
a cupboard in the kitchen.

I'm afraid I'm going to have to
ask you to come down to the station.

They arresting Patsy, then?

Er... I don't know Mr Matthews.

What have they got on her?

They don't know what they're
doing nowadays, these coppers.

Oh, you're right there.

Come on, lads, back to work.

Patsy didn't kill Nev!

You're probably right but we don't...

Of course she didn't!

And anybody could have planted that gun.

People are in and out of
that house all the time.

And what about all that ...
that stuff that she told us!

If Belfrage did have an
affair with Mrs Georgeson...

But, Rosemary ... No, no, the
point is, did it happen before

or after the horse was stolen?

And, and what has the body of
Joanna Brannigan got to do with it?

And, and, and, and how is all
this connected with Nev being shot?

Rosemary! This is nothing to do with us.

Well, if you're going
to take that attitude...

I am taking you to the police station

to hand in that button and
hope they don't put you away

for withholding evidence.

Now get in the car!

You say you were woken up
by the sound of a shot? Yes.

But the gardening women
said it was some minutes

before you appeared on the scene. Was it?

I don't know.

Look, arrest Belfrage, he's
the one who killed Joanna.

Never mind about that.

Didn't you wake up when Mr
Connolly got out of the bed?

He didn't get out of the bed.
He'd stayed up late, working.

Oh? Did that happen
often? Quite often, yes.

I see.

Were you and your husband having
marital difficulties, Mrs Connolly?

No.

Oh!

You two, eh?

Actually...

We were shot at last night.

Oh. I'm sorry.

Huh! I'm afraid you get a lot
of that sort of intolerance

in a place like this. What do you mean?

Well, the way you two,
you know, lead your lives.

I mean, it's none of my business.

I might find it... distasteful,
but that's my problem, not yours.

Yeah, we had a bloke from
London down talking about it.

Homophobia ... Myth Or Reality?

It opened my eyes, I can tell you.

It's the way I was brought up.

I was always brought up to think of
that sort of thing as... disgusting.

Excuse me, what are you talking about?

Well, actually, the reason we are here...

No!

We're going.

Why didn't you let me give him the button?

You're joking! I could barely
stop myself hitting him.

"He's got a job to do, you know."

What's the matter?

Oh, this whole thing has the feel

of someone fighting a
desperate rearguard action.

The arson, the floods,
the collapsing scaffolding.

It's as if someone
didn't want Patsy and Nev

to move into that house. But why not?

Because the skeletons
would be found? Precisely.

When the horse was found,
they got really worried.

They had to come and dig
up the girl and move her.

And then Nev disturbs
them and they kill him.

We poke our noses in and they
try to frighten us off. Come on.

(BELL RINGS)

(DOOR LOCK RELEASES)

Mrs Georgeson?

Are you going to be amusing?

Not particularly, no.

Why is nobody amusing any more?

Well, maybe you don't find
people as amusing as you used to.

That's true, God knows.

Do you want a drink?

No, thank you.

Do you remember we showed you a button?

Button? No.

Oh, the toggle. Do get
it right, ducky. Yes.

I asked if you knew anyone who had
a coat with that kind of... toggle.

Did you, now? Yes, she did.

Yes, I did.

Oh, yes.

Yes, it must have slipped my mind.

Or you were deliberately
trying to conceal the truth.

Or I was deliberately
trying to conceal the truth.

Probably the latter. I'm
not famous for my veracity.

May we sit down?

No, I don't think so. You're not amusing.

Why didn't you admit you
had owned such a coat?

I suppose you've heard the village gossip?

About me running off with Denny? Yes.

Poor Denny.

Denny gave me the coat.

And... ?

Well, mucho surpriso, ducky,
I didn't want to bring it up

in front of my pig of a husband.

He has swinish jealous
rages from time to time.

Oinks away in the most alarming
manner, waving his trotters about.

That's why I gave the coat away.

You gave it away? Who to?

My char, Mrs Deeping.

But ... Mrs Deeping out at Compton Lacey?

They took her on as a housekeeper!

Just goes to show you, doesn't it?

Right.

Oh, Mrs Georgeson...

..why did you come back to your husband?

Oh, when the chips are
down, I can't be trusted.

I haven't the courage of a gnat.

Right.

Oh, I remember Mrs Georgeson giving it me.

Beautiful coat, it was.

Nearly brand-new. What
they call a loden coat.

But you can't remember what happened to it?

Well, it's a long time ago.

Wait a minute, though.

I sold it to Mrs Matthews.

Matthews? The foreman's wife?

That's right, dear. He
works for Harry Georgeson.

£20 she give me for it.

I think I've got it. What?

I've been working out
the chronological order

of what happened, more or
less. Not another theory!

Now, listen, listen, listen.

Mrs Georgeson is having an
affair with Dennis Belfrage

and she goes off to live with him, OK?

Go on. OK. Now, Mr Georgeson

wants his revenge, so what does he do?

He steals his own horse
from Belfrage's stable.

What, and kills his own
horse? Yes, and it worked.

He bankrupted Belfrage
and got his wife back.

And the girl? I don't know.
She worked at the stable.

Maybe she saw something
when the horse was taken.

Mmm. And how did Mrs
Georgeson's coat come into it?

That depends whether it was given
away before or after the murder.

Here, you drive.

Oh!

Now, if it was given away after,
then she must have been implicated.

But if it was given away before,

maybe Georgeson didn't want
to do his own dirty work

and he got the Matthews to do it for him.

That's an awful lot of maybes.

(GEARS GRIND)

Oh! Oh, God!

I really don't see why we
can't have a proper car.

Why? We need this one for work.

But a newer model, at least.

Well, no, no, after this
one they put in girly things

like comfortable seats and power steering

and rubbish like that.

(GEARS GRIND)

Leave the talking to
me. All right, all right!

Wait a minute. What is it?

Look at this.

It's part of the orchid I
found, the early spider orchid.

So? So, this car

must have been up there where
the skeletons were found.

They were working there. No, not up there.

That path doesn't lead anywhere.

So, this must have got caught in the bumper

when they reversed to turn
around the night they shot Nev.

Right. Come on.

(BELL RINGS)

Mrs Matthews?

Mrs Matthews?

Who are you? What are you doing here?

We've been speaking to Mrs Georgeson.

You're in my garden! And Mrs Deeping.

Get out before I call the police!

Mrs Deeping said she sold you a coat.

I haven't even heard of her!

Mrs Georgeson's cleaning
woman. She sold you a coat.

No!

A coat with horn buttons. Toggles.

Why would I buy a coat from a cleaner?

This coat.

Get out of my garden!

A button was found with the
dead girl up at Compton Lacey.

I don't know anything about no
coat, I tell you! Now, then...

Whoever murdered Joanna Brannigan
was wearing that coat ... Get out!

There was a struggle and
the button was torn off.

You can't prove I had
that coat! What's going on?

What's all the shouting?

They're accusing us, Tommy,
accusing us of murder!

Shut up!

You.

All right. It's er... it's quite
a simple matter, Mr Matthews,

it's about this coat. Coat?

Awwww!

Keys!

Where did you learn that? What?

With your knee. Oh, school of hard knocks.

I always wanted to do that.

Where are we going?

Bishopsbridge police station. Can't
we go any faster? We're doing 50!

Where are your glasses? Oh.

Oh!

He's behind us!

Oh!

(TYRES SQUEAL)

Oh!

He's going to overtake
us! Do you want to bet?

(TYRES SQUEAL)

Oh, so that's his game, is it?

(SIREN WAILS)

We can't go on like this for...

He won't be any cop against this baby!

Japanese tin versus British steel!

Come on.

Come on!

Perish all enemies of Rosemary and Thyme!

Yeah! Woo!

Yes! Yes! Yes!

Can you be a little freer, Laura?

Freer?

Well, you're doing it terribly regularly.

That's the proper way to sow seeds.

No, it isn't. Yes, it is.

Anyway, it seems Matthews
is talking nonstop.

He's singing like a canary!

It appears that Georgeson did want
to steal his own horse, Arabica.

The Matthewses paid your friend
Joanna £100 pounds to help them.

So, Georgeson killed her?

No, Georgeson knew nothing about Joanna.

She got pangs of conscience
when she found out

they were trying to ruin Dennis Belfrage,

so she was going to go to the police.

And the Matthews killed
her to save their own necks.

And now he's trying to
lay it all on his wife

in the same way that he tried
to frame you for Nev's murder

by planting the gun.

None of this had anything to do with Nev.

I want the gardens just like he planned.

And that's what you shall have.

Come on, Laura.

Now, then, this is supposed
to be a wild garden, remember.

It's no good piddling around.

You're supposed to sow the seeds as
if they've been blown by the wind.

Like that.

Oh, blown by the wind.

Why, you should have said! You mean...

* Nymphs and shepherds,
come away, come away

* Come, come, come

I'm very much in demand for
weddings and Bar Mitzvahs, you know.

* For this is Flora's holiday

* This is Flora's holiday

* This is Flora's
ho-ho-ho-ho-holiday

* Nymphs and shepherds... *

ITFC Subtitles NEAL RATTEE