I'm Alan Cumming, and this is Masterpiece Mystery!
Call the guinea pigs, would you?
HATHAWAY: College hired out the lodgings
to a pharmaceutical company for a drug trial.
LEWIS: What kind of drug trial?
It's an antidepressant.
It's a Class C drug; it's illegal.
Unless it's prescribed by a doctor, which I am.
LEWIS: That girl died because of his pills.
Strictly speaking, she died because someone killed her.
It must have been someone in this house.
But I don't want to name names.
Yes, you do; go on, knock yourself out.
Any of them could have done it.
I see clearly now.
REPORTER: Do you have any comment on the rumors about your husband?
He's done nothing wrong.
You hated her.
Admit it!
CUMMING: Inspector Lewis,
tonight on Masterpiece Mystery!
Captioning sponsored by VIEWERS LIKE YOU
(thunder)
(whimpering)
Funding for Masterpi If someone could come up with a drug to prevent murder,
then the drug trials with students
currently going on at Oxford University
might make sense to Inspector Robbie Lewis.
But since that's not likely,
Lewis doesn't have much patience for drug testing
or the man who's doing it--
another overeducated Oxford type who Lewis thinks knows too much
about not very much.
The tests involve something called ketamine, which,
as Lewis's in-the-know partner Sergeant Hathaway informs him,
is a horse tranquilizer.
Horse tranquilizer?
These are Oxford undergraduates.
But ketamine, in very small doses,
might lead to a medical breakthrough
for people suffering from depression.
That's why these trials are so important,
why this is such a carefully monitored test.
Everyone insists it's completely safe and under control.
No one is going to get hurt.
Maybe.
Maybe not.
Call the guinea pigs, would you?
Listen, I don't know what you're talking about.
Oh yes, you do.
You've been the same ever since we got here.
Staring at her, like, like, I don't know what.
It's rubbish, yeah?
This whole thing, it's just messing with your head.
BETHAN (operating camera): Alex says it's pill time.
Have you seen Amy?
Amy.
I don't like what they're doing to me.
What are they doing to you?
SHAUNA: I've come for my fix, doctor.
There you go, Shauna.
ADAM: What are you doing in here?
BETHAN: Oh, hello, Adam.
I'm looking for Amy.
Time for the happy pills.
Oh, God.
Yeah, I suppose so.
I want to go out and buy some paint.
GANSA: Can everybody make sure
that they take their pills before they eat.
Okay, there's plenty for everyone.
Dane.
Thanks.
What have you got for me?
Pizza.
Is that all?
A kiss.
Hi.
I ordered a take-away, Hathaway.
Pilau rice, lamb pasanda, chicken vindaloo,
"don't spare the spices."
Perfect.
Who's that?
A colleague.
Here we go.
I've given you free cucumber raita.
Free raita.
Excellent.
Thank you.
Keep the change.
GANSA: So this man
wakes up in a terrible state
and he calls his psychiatrist and says,
"I need to come and see you right away."
When he gets to the psychiatrist's office he said,
"I had the most terrible dream.
"I dreamt that I raped my mother, I killed my wife
"and seduced my daughter.
"And I called you the second I woke up
"and then I had a piece of toast and some coffee
and I came straight here."
And the shrink says, "What?
Call that a breakfast?"
Ah well, I suppose it is a psychiatrist's joke.
Or a Jewish psychiatrist's joke.
Well, I thought it was funny.
In a gentle sort of way.
I'm going to bed.
(sighs)
Can we watch some TV?
(door opens)
BETHAN: What happened?
She was just lying there.
He was here first, I just got here.
Morning, sir.
Morning.
HATHAWAY: Morning, sir.
LEWIS: What have we got?
One deceased damsel, name of Amy Katz,
theology student, Wolsey College.
So what was she doing in the Dean's lodgings
at Beaumont College three weeks before term begins?
I'll get to that.
Amy's body was on the ground two floors below
the room she was sleeping in.
Cause of death is a blow to the skull,
either by a rock hitting the head,
or the head hitting a rock.
Suicide?
Dr. Hobson is consulting the cadaver even now.
You're very chipper this morning, James.
I'm crying inside.
LEWIS: So what was she doing here?
HATHAWAY: College hired out the lodgings
to a pharmaceutical company for a drug trial.
Amy was a participant.
What kind of drug trial?
A new sort of antidepressant.
The trial's being supervised by a Dr. Alex Gansa,
psychiatry professor at the college.
He lives in Summertown.
Where is he now?
HATHAWAY: I'm keeping the rest of the participants in their room,
but the college already want to know
when we're going to let them out.
Yeah, well, let's let the blood dry first, eh?
So, who are the others?
Two students-- well, one now.
Two kids from town, work in a warehouse,
an ex-soldier currently unemployed,
and a dog walker sans dogs.
Strange mix.
Right, you talk to Dr. Gansa, and I'll talk to Dr. Hobson.
What?
No, nothing.
LEWIS: Laura?
Theology student.
Seems rather...
Quaint.
Yes.
Studying God in this city of atheists.
And that was her room?
HOBSON: Yep.
But there are no signs of a struggle there,
no defense wounds to the body,
nothing under the fingernails.
Just the blunt force trauma to the left parietal.
Still, the fall alone would have been enough to...
But don't ask me if it's suicide or murder because I don't know.
Right.
Time of death?
About four hours ago, give or take an hour.
You okay, Laura?
Me?
Here with a lovely young body, cut off in its prime?
Happy as Larry.
What do you know about this Dr. Gansa?
Nothing much.
Supposed to be brilliant.
GANSA: I'm running a trial on a psychotropic drug
called Ketarex.
Plowden Pharmaceuticals provided the funds;
I designed the trial and selected the participants.
Selected them how?
I asked for volunteers
by putting up posters in the local hospitals
and the university psychiatry department.
What's Ketarex supposed to do?
It's an antidepressant,
the active ingredient in which is ketamine.
Ketamine's a class C drug; it's illegal.
Unless it's prescribed by a doctor, one of which I am.
The National Institute of Health ran a trial in the U.S.
that showed spectacular improvements
in terminally depressed patients.
I'm working with Plowden
to see if that success can be replicated.
The people you selected for the trial,
they're suffering from depression?
Some did; some didn't.
How did this trial work?
Apart from not working very well, obviously.
Trialists were paid to stay for a week while they took the drug.
This is day six.
I was here 18 hours a day;
my research assistant, Bethan Vickery, day and night.
We monitored the participants' mental and physical well-being.
They were also encouraged to record their thoughts, feelings,
sensations, direct to a roving camera
and also in a confidential video booth.
Could the Ketarex have contributed to Amy's death?
Sorry, you're an odd policeman.
(scoffs)
I mean, you're odd for a policeman.
Is this a second career perhaps?
We're talking about you.
Could the drug have contributed to her death?
I've no idea.
Then do you know of any reason why
she might have wanted to kill herself?
Did she kill herself?
We don't know.
Well, then, my speculation won't help you.
Laura Hobson was very odd.
She didn't know the dead girl, did she?
HATHAWAY: Gerard Manley Hopkins.
"The Unhappy Priest."
One poem underlined.
"Though the mind, mind has mountains,
cliffs of fall, hold them cheap may who ne'er hung there."
Sounds like she was suicidal.
My speculation won't help you.
Very funny.
Tell us about the ketamine.
As far as I know, it's either used as a horse anesthetic
or a drug of choice at raves.
And given that Amy wasn't a horse...
She could've been high.
They all could.
Right, you get the statements.
I'll find out about the film.
SHAUNA: Oh no, Amy would never kill herself.
It must have been someone in this house.
One of us.
Do you have any suspicions, Shauna?
I really don't want to speculate.
Yes, you do.
Go on, knock yourself out.
Him with the beard, Dane.
Creepy.
Did you hear anything in the night?
Not till all the sirens-- the cops, you lot.
What about Amy?
Impressions?
I've been through some bad stuff.
I've got a way about me makes people nervous.
But not Amy.
When she talked to you, she looked you in the eye.
Did she seem happy in herself?
Do you mean was she crazy?
No.
No reason to kill herself, then, that you could discern?
Well, she was under quite a bit of pressure.
Work?
Exams?
People.
But I don't want to name names.
Sure you do.
That townie, Jack Collins.
Wouldn't leave her alone.
JACK: I was thirsty.
I came down to get a drink
and that's when I saw Adam Douglas.
What was he doing?
He was outside, all freaked out.
Then he knelt down.
I went to the window and that's when I saw Amy.
Lying there.
Adam was beside her, just touching her.
I went outside, he started shouting at me
that it was all my fault.
What did he mean by that?
I've no idea.
He's cracked.
Did you like Amy?
I didn't really pay her much attention, to be honest.
What woke you, Jack?
I said I was thirsty.
I'd had a long night.
Doing what?
He was doing me all night
until he came downstairs to get me a drink.
So Jack's your boyfriend.
No, I screw anything that moves.
Course he's my boyfriend.
I heard he liked Amy.
Well, that's rubbish.
Did you like her?
She was okay.
I mean, she wanted you to like her, didn't she?
BETHAN: What happened?
She was just lying there.
JACK: He was here first, I just got here.
BETHAN: That's how I found her.
Why were you outside?
I was woken by them shouting.
I grabbed the camera, ran.
It was instinctive.
Dr. Gansa told me to record everything.
I'm sorry, it must seem ghoulish.
I suppose it is a psychiatrist's joke.
Or a Jewish psychiatrist's joke.
Well, I thought it was funny.
In a gentle sort of way.
I'm going to bed.
SHAUNA: Can we watch some TV?
LEWIS: What about the footage from the video booth?
Is that here too?
Yes, but obviously it's confidential.
Only Dr. Gansa can access it.
How long have you been working for him?
Four years now; my post-grad studies.
Long time.
I know.
I'm one of those sad people, the perpetual student.
(knock at door)
BETHAN: Ah, Alex.
Bethan.
We'll take it from here.
What's going on?
Inspector Lewis,
I'm Julius Fisher.
I run the psychiatry department here.
How can I help you?
The film footage, Inspector.
It belongs to Plowden Pharmaceuticals.
It doesn't matter who it belongs to.
It could be relevant to our inquiry.
This is a clinical trial
and its participants have a right to privacy.
Doctor/patient confidentiality, I take it you've heard of that?
Now, I can't allow you to use
what could just be a tragic accident as an excuse
to trample patients' rights.
(whispers): Sir, they think they've found the murder weapon.
No accident, she was murdered.
Right, this room is off-limits.
Anybody tries to come in, arrest them.
BETHAN: Each day's film is filed by date,
each booth recording by name of participant.
It's pretty basic.
Is this computer the only place the footage is stored?
Yes.
Though Dr. Gansa can access it from his office or home.
Okay, I'll do a memory dump.
Have you seen it all?
The footage?
What I shot, yes.
Though it was rather in one eye, out the other,
as it were.
The video booth stuff, no.
That's between doctor and patient.
Private.
Which is how I think it should stay.
Well, Amy's dead.
It can hardly hurt her anymore.
LEWIS: On the film footage,
Amy's last seen alive at 9:00 p.m.
and her body was found at 5:27 the next morning.
So, time of death?
Three or four hours before that.
You find anything?
Adam and Jack were awake suspiciously early.
Both had the hots for Amy, though Jack denies it.
He says he was having sex with Karen all night,
which she was more than happy to confirm.
Dog-walker Shauna thinks that ex-soldier Dane is creepy
and therefore he did it.
And Dane says he was asleep.
Basically any of them could have done it,
even Bethan the filmmaker.
Easiest thing in the world to invite Amy out
for a moonlight walk in the garden, bash her head in,
then go back to bed and wait for the body to be discovered.
And all for a drug.
Take a pill and all your problems disappear.
(grunt, smashing china)
(shouting)
LEWIS: Enough!
You just hit a woman.
And worse, you hit a police officer.
JACK: It was an accident, all right?
That nutcase jumped me.
He's out of control.
He's the one who got assaulted.
You should lock him up.
JACK: It's nothing, all right?
He's a wimp.
HATHAWAY: Get Gansa to take a look at him.
And the rest of you go back to your rooms.
For how long?
JACK: Don't push me!
Stop pushing me!
I'm sick of this place.
LEWIS: We'll get to you as soon as we can.
Please, just stay in your rooms.
(cell phone rings)
Yeah, Lewis.
Right, I'm on my way.
Amy's father, come to identify the body.
There's a fight going on outside your room,
but you don't come out?
I've seen enough fights, thanks.
Adam and Jack, they're young, let them fight.
So you know who it was; do you know what it was about?
Amy, of course.
If I was younger I might've fought over her, too.
But not now.
No.
Not now.
DAVID KATZ: She's my daughter.
LEWIS: I'm sorry.
KATZ: At least this time there's a body.
LEWIS: Sir?
Her brother, Matthew, died this year in Afghanistan.
In his case, I was told that what was left of his body
wasn't worth seeing.
Were he and Amy close?
Yes.
Did you know she was taking part in this drug trial?
No.
No, but I encouraged her to do as much,
explore as many different things as she could,
anything to take her mind off her brother.
Her therapist gave the same advice.
She was in therapy?
Yes.
With a Dr. Gansa.
She was severely depressed by her brother's death.
She needed professional help.
Why on earth didn't Gansa tell us that he was Amy's therapist?
I'm sure he had a good reason.
Yeah, I can think of one:
he shouldn't enter his own patient
in an experimental drug trial.
Or maybe she entered herself.
Maybe he thought it would help her.
LEWIS: Oh yeah, right.
Stuff her with psychotropic drugs, that's a great help.
All right, Robbie, calm down.
Ah, I'm sorry.
I'm just a bit upset.
About what?
Isn't it obvious?
Hope I'm not interrupting anything.
I see.
Well, I'll leave you boys to it.
I just had a call from Amy's college.
Her tutor, Caroline Eagleton, wants to speak
to the officer in charge of the investigation.
Which would be you, sir.
Right.
This way.
Right.
EAGLETON: I only got to know Amy last term, really.
She was pretty independent before that.
But, well, losing her brother rather sobered her up.
Do you know of any reason
why someone might want to kill her?
Killed?
Not suicide?
Killed.
Murdered.
That's a relief, I suppose.
For her family at least.
A relief?
Students kill themselves.
Late teens, early 20s, their first glimpse into the void.
And then it's me,
with their fathers and mothers gaping like goldfish,
saying, "But why?
Why?"
And all I can do is gape back and say,
"I don't know, I don't know."
Oh, bother.
Perhaps you didn't lock it.
Of course.
Do come in.
HATHAWAY: Anyway, Dr. Eagleton,
you called us.
Do you have any information about Amy's death?
Unfortunately I do.
Then what is it?
Hold your horses, sonny, I've got it all written down.
Could you just tell us, please?
Well, five months ago,
Amy reported that she was being harassed
by one of the other students at Wolsey.
The usual stuff-- following her from lectures,
sending ardent angry texts, e-mail, other electronica.
Who's the student?
We spoke to him.
He promised to desist.
He did not.
We were about to suspend him, but...
well, his family's quite wealthy.
Don't tell me, money talked.
No, no.
They put pressure, certainly, but it was Amy, she talked.
She said she could control him, that she wasn't scared.
So we did nothing.
Well, if it turns out to be him,
may God forgive me, because I'll never forgive myself.
Here.
Proctors' report, statements.
The boy's name...
Adam Douglas.
You know him?
Yeah.
And don't be too quick to forgive yourself.
Dr. Gansa.
I want to talk to you.
Well, I'm at your disposal.
I'll go get Adam Douglas.
This is my wife, Claire.
Claire, this is the inspector I was telling you about.
Yes.
I'll see you later, darling.
What's eating you, Inspector?
Why didn't you tell us Amy Katz was your patient?
Well, why should I?
It wasn't relevant.
Well, any information about her state of mind
is entirely relevant.
You had that information by the bucketful.
He's gone.
Went out the window and across the garden.
Congratulations, Baynes.
Get back up there.
Try not to lose anyone else.
Sir.
Sorry, sir.
HATHAWAY: I'm on to it.
I'll check train and bus stations.
Were you aware of Adam Douglas's threatening behavior
towards Amy?
She told me, yes.
And yet you let him in on the trial?
A week in a room right next door to her.
A highly supervised week.
You solve psychological problems by addressing them,
not by running away from them.
She ended up dead.
Was that part of the solution?
Is there anything else?
If Amy was severely depressed by her brother's death,
why did you enter her into an experimental drug trial?
Sorry, who diagnosed this severe depression?
Her father.
Well, is he a psychologist?
A psychiatrist?
He's her father.
And therefore a profoundly unreliable source
of psychological data.
Now I have teaching duties, patients.
I live ten minutes away.
You have all my numbers.
Can I go now?
Pretty please.
You can't be too careful.
(siren wailing)
ADAM: Look, I'm telling you, Amy was dead
when I found her.
I never hurt her.
HATHAWAY: Then why did you try to run away?
ADAM: Well, because I knew you'd dig up that stupid report
on me and her, and I knew you'd completely misread it.
HATHAWAY: Trying to break into her room, harassing her with phone calls.
How do you expect me to read it?
As proof of love.
Which is what it was.
Which is what Amy knew it was.
Then why run?
And where were you planning on going with 30 quid
and an out-of-date passport?
As far as master plans go,
it's pretty stupid.
I'm the one studying classics at Oxford,
and you're the one working in this toilet,
so just watch who you're calling stupid.
We're both in the toilet, Adam.
But I can leave.
INNOCENT: He's a possible, you know.
That temper.
And he tried to run.
Hang on to him.
Deserves a night in the cells anyway,
being rude about your nice police station.
INNOCENT: What about the others?
The college is asking how much longer
we're going to be camped on their grounds.
Why?
The drug trial wasn't due to finish till tomorrow anyway.
A discreet drug trial
wasn't getting in their way like we are.
No, it was just wasting time and money.
You not a fan of these drugs, Lewis?
Not a fan of shrinks generally, ma'am.
You should talk some sense into him, Hathaway.
Unless, of course, I agree with him, ma'am.
You're supposed to drag Lewis out of the Dark Ages,
not join him there.
Anyway, how much longer
do you need to hold these people at the college?
(sighs)
Get their addresses,
tell them not to leave Oxford
without informing us and let them go.
Sir.
I'm off home.
Good night.
What's the matter with him?
Not our lovely Laura, I hope.
Honestly, sometimes I just want to bang their heads together.
Two grown-up single people, who obviously like each other.
Don't you think, Hathaway?
I try not to, ma'am.
Oh, you're hopeless.
AMY: I'm going to say how I feel.
Exactly how I feel.
I feel like I'm up to here.
I'm brimming over.
I didn't know I could feel so full.
You'll say it's the drugs, but it's not.
It's love.
I'm alight with love, light with love.
I'm here on this height because of you.
Your mind, your words.
God, why did I listen?
She's all over the place.
Has to be those bloody pills.
This was when?
Two nights before she died.
Last recording.
She's in love, but with who?
Well, who's watching the tapes?
Gansa-- we talk to him.
Hang on, sir, why don't we talk to Adam Douglas?
He's just down the corridor.
And that's a reason to talk to him?
Well, if Amy's in love with Gansa,
as the video suggests, then Adam has no chance.
If she rejected him that night,
then what better motive than to bash her head in?
I think the one with the motive is Gansa.
This comes out, an affair with his patient, it'd ruin him.
If he was having an affair.
We've only got her side of the story.
Sounds pretty convincing to me.
Yeah, but you don't like Gansa.
Well, neither do you.
True.
Well, why don't I speak to Adam Douglas and you speak to Gansa,
and we'll see who's right.
No, I'll talk to Gansa's boss,
see what this trial was actually about.
You go on through the footage,
see if you can find any more confessions.
(groans)
It's all right, you can thank me later.
AMY: I'm not going back.
I won't live down there anymore,
in the dull, in the gray.
It's this or nothing.
This or nothing!
FISHER: Well, that's the point of the trial-- any trial--
to check for side effects of the drug,
both individual and interactive.
LEWIS: So who initiated it?
The Plowden Company or Dr. Gansa?
Dr. Gansa, but with Plowden's full support.
And what's in it for Gansa?
Oh, he gets to spend a week
closeted with some nubile females.
Joke.
Sorry, bad taste.
Is there a non-joke answer?
Well, Dr. Gansa's written papers
on the potential uses of ketamine as an antidepressant,
and the trial was a chance for him
to put his theory into practice.
But you didn't like it.
LEWIS: Was that because of the potential side effects?
Well, all psychotropic medications carry risk.
How much depends on the patient,
and that, I fear,
is where Dr. Gansa was sailing a little too close to the wind,
and not for the first time.
What does that mean?
He selected highly susceptible participants for the trial.
Like Amy Katz, Adam Douglas.
But why do that?
Because he's a risk taker.
The more labile the patient, the more impressive the end result.
And it's worth it, that sort of risk?
Well, for him, certainly.
He's got a share in the drug patent.
If Ketarex ever gets a commercial release,
he stands to make a fortune.
An absolute fortune.
Unless it blows up in his face.
So what was the other time Gansa sailed too close to the wind?
Oh, just a figure of speech.
Now, if you'll excuse me.
DANE: Slept well,
got up, had a bowel movement, hot shower.
Then I went outside, like I saw stuff
for the first time in months.
Trees, sky, vapor trails.
Beautiful.
Good morning, Dr. Gansa.
It's me, Shauna.
But you probably realize that already.
Anyway, I had the strangest dream last night.
Right, I was in... (knock on door)
Excuse me, Sarge.
I was running a diagnostic on the hard drive
and I found data fragments.
From deleted files?
Yeah, they got a pretty high-end software scrubber, but...
But you can reconstitute it.
Might be too corrupted,
but if you can authorize overtime I can...
(cell phone rings)
Whatever you need, Gurdip.
Hello?
LEWIS (on phone): What you doing?
HATHAWAY: What you told me to do.
Listening to people describe their bowel movements.
You lucky man.
Listen, if you can drag yourself away,
do some background on Gansa,
where he was before Oxford and so on.
Are you looking for anything in particular?
Yeah.
Sailing close to the wind.
HATHAWAY: Gansa did sail close to the wind.
One day you'll have to tell me what that means.
It's initially a nautical term
used to describe the seaworthiness of a ship.
I said one day, clever clogs.
What you got?
Six years ago, Gansa had a clinical practice in Edinburgh.
He was investigated by the British Psychiatric Association
following complaints from a young female patient's father.
Complaints about what?
"Inappropriate therapeutic relationship."
The woman refused to cooperate with the investigation;
the case was dropped.
Was Gansa married at the time?
Yep.
Did you get the name of the woman?
No, withheld.
Let's go and ask him.
AMY: Hi, Bethan.
BETHAN: Are you looking for Alex?
AMY: Yeah.
What are you doing, love?
I was just looking at your videotapes.
What there is of them.
PC Plod confiscated the rest.
Speak of the devil.
Well, then?
Two nights before she died,
Amy went into the video room
and declared her love for somebody.
I know.
I saw it when I checked the video booth in the morning.
Do you know who she was in love with?
Me.
You were having an affair with her?
What, you think this is funny?
No, it's more
the leaden predictability of your mind.
I'm a happily married man.
Then why was Amy in love you?
It's called transference, Inspector.
Where the analysand, Amy, transfers their feelings
onto the analyst, me.
You encouraged this?
"Encouraged" is a bit strong,
but Amy was in a dark place.
I wanted her to realize
there could still be love and joy in her life.
She would have got over it.
It's a process.
So is counter-transference,
where the analyst falls in love with the patient.
You're a clever policeman.
Yes, I am.
It's not the first time you've done it.
You've lied and cheated before on another wife,
with another patient.
Edinburgh, six years ago.
You've been doing your homework.
Were you trying to put
some love and joy into that young woman's life too?
Yes, I was, actually.
But it's more that she was putting it in mine.
Is that how she would see it?
I don't know.
Let's ask her.
Claire?
Can you come here a minute?
You were his patient?
Yes.
I fell in love.
Clear a case of counter-transference
as you could wish.
Luckily for me, she reciprocated.
I divorced my wife and I married Claire.
Now leave us alone.
(sighs)
What a mess.
And it's all Gansa's fault.
That girl died because of his pills.
Strictly speaking, she died because someone killed her.
Yeah, after Gansa had shut a whole bunch
of disturbed strangers together for a week,
fed them on pills based on a drug from raves and...
what else did you say?
Horse anesthetic.
Horse anesthetic.
Unbelievable.
They did volunteer for the trial.
They knew what they were doing.
Did they know what the drug was doing?
Amy out of her mind,
Adam so wound up he nearly knocked Jack's head off,
Dane lurking around behind doors like a, like a...
Yeti?
No, not like a yeti.
More like that Russian priest, you know,
the one they couldn't kill.
Rasputin.
Rasputin.
Scary bloke.
Hang on.
Dane was in the army, wasn't he?
What are the chances he knew Amy's brother?
Approaching nil; it's a big army.
Let's find out.
I mean, how did all these people come together?
Karen and Jack, for example.
How did they even know about the trial?
Yeah, we talk to them again.
Now they're off the drug
maybe they'll remember something useful.
I'll do Jack and Karen.
You do the dog-walker.
And Rasputin.
I'm glad you came looking for me, Sergeant Hathaway,
because I was going to come looking for you.
HATHAWAY: Good.
I've been thinking.
Do you want to know
what I've been thinking?
I'm all ears.
You have three plausible suspects:
Adam Douglas, Jack Collins and Dane the weirdo.
All three of them were like dogs on heat round Amy.
No offense, my darlings.
Did she mind?
Dane creeped her out-- creeped me out.
But the other two, she didn't care.
She only had eyes for Dr. Gansa, poor lamb.
And you noticed that.
I'm very sensitive to people.
And you, my darlings.
Come on, Chase, come on, up.
Why are you so sure it's one of the men?
Statistics.
Over 90% of homicides are committed by men.
Which means there's only a 10% chance Bethan did it,
or Karen, or even little old me.
Besides, we liked her.
No, wrong.
One of us didn't.
Karen.
Didn't like the way Jack looked at Amy, not at all.
That's the one thing that would drive us to violence: jealousy.
That's in the statistics, too.
LEWIS: Well, that's what I don't understand.
If you got on so well with everyone in the house,
why did Adam attack you?
I told you, he was out of control.
What does that mean?
Was he high?
No.
I don't know, maybe he was just upset, okay?
About Amy?
You and Amy?
There was no "me and Amy."
Oh, come on, I've seen the films.
You're watching her all the time.
She was gorgeous.
Who wouldn't watch her?
KAREN: What's going on?
Just asking Jack a few questions.
We've already told you everything we know.
All right, just tell me this.
Why did the two of you do the trial?
Money.
Nearly 200 quid a day each.
Take a month to earn that in this place.
For money?
We're saving for a deposit on a flat.
Two-and-a-half grand for popping a few pills.
Why not?
Have you remembered anything else?
Was Amy close to anyone, for example?
The only people that I saw her with
was Adam and the soldier.
Dane?
Mm-hmm.
I mean, talk about a natural-born psycho.
Wouldn't talk to anyone except Amy,
bored her to death with his war stories.
But that's all, just talking?
Why don't you go and bother Dane?
I mean, he's the one that had the hard-on for poor little Amy.
Thanks for your help.
Thieving bastard!
(groans)
Police.
Move and I'll break your arm.
Sorry, I thought you were breaking in.
No, just a social call.
Where'd you get this, Dane?
She gave it to me, Amy did.
Really?
A picture of her with her brother.
Why would she do that?
That's between me and her.
It's between you and the police now she's dead.
Tell me.
Because she said I'd given him back to her.
How did you do that?
I told her what it was like.
For him, Matthew.
You knew him from the army?
No.
Then how did you know?
Because I'd been there, all right, so I knew.
I didn't pretend to know him, I just told her what it was like,
and she said it helped.
She said it made him come alive.
(cell phone ringing)
Look, I didn't kill her.
I'd die sooner than hurt that girl.
Hathaway.
LEWIS: Do you know how he did it yet?
HOBSON: That was the easy bit.
These were in his pocket.
It's the trial drug, Ketarex.
Blood tox shows he's taken enough to knock out an elephant.
Where was he getting the pills from?
Gansa was hardly chucking them around.
Wasn't he?
He must have been saving them up.
Or he got extra.
Search his college rooms, search the video archive.
I'm going to talk to Gansa, see what his defense is this time.
Robbie, can I have a minute?
I don't want there to be any misunderstanding between us.
Me neither.
Is there one?
Don't make this any more difficult than it already is.
I know Hathaway has said something.
Well, he hasn't, actually.
But he has been...
He's an old boyfriend.
Hathaway?
No.
Franco.
He lives abroad.
He was in Oxford because there's a chance
his firm might send him back here and we had dinner together.
And it was... well, we were...
Franco?
like the dictator.
Yes.
Only this Franco is German.
Don't ask.
I won't.
Thanks for telling me.
(indistinct voices coming from video)
GANSA (on video): Can everybody make sure
that they take their pills before they eat?
What do I get?
Pizza.
Is that all?
A kiss.
KAREN: I don't know what you're talking about.
HATHAWAY: You're both on film.
You don't swallow the pills, you pocket them.
JACK: So we didn't take the bloody things; it's not a crime.
HATHAWAY: You have a contract with Plowden.
They paid you good money.
You sabotaged their test.
They've every right to sue you for breach of that contract.
You could go to prison.
He's bluffing; Plowden wouldn't waste their time.
They will when I tell them.
No, you can't.
But I will,
unless you tell me what you did with the pills.
Look, all we were doing...
Just shut up, Jack.
You shut up!
This was your stupid idea.
We sold them.
Who to?
To Adam.
Is this what you two were fighting about?
He wanted more, said he'd paid for more.
He was cracked.
Listen, don't look down your nose at us.
He was loaded and we didn't do any harm.
You did.
You killed him.
HATHAWAY: Jack's giving his statement,
but other than dealing in prescription drugs,
I don't know what we're going to charge them with.
On another matter...
Is there something you should have, or could have, told me?
Involving Laura Hobson?
Just to make it easier, she already thinks you have told me.
So spill.
I saw her having dinner with someone--
a man, a bit older than her, but not much,
good-looking...
maybe foreign.
They were friendly.
And you decided not to tell me.
I didn't know how to tell you.
Didn't even know if it was my business.
Right.
Which it isn't, actually.
Right.
Look, I hope that you and Dr. Hobson work it out,
whatever it is.
But you've got to admit, it's a bit of a mystery.
And none of your business.
Ah, the whole thing's ridiculous.
Got me acting like some silly, jealous...
You hated her, didn't you?
Amy.
You couldn't stand her.
I couldn't care less about her.
She just had to crook her finger
and your boyfriend would've come running.
Rubbish.
Jack was happy with me.
It's all on film, Karen, hours of it.
Jack watching Amy.
And there's you saving every penny
towards your first home together,
and suddenly you realize you could lose him in a second.
Shut your mouth.
Amy's cleverer than you.
She's kinder, she's prettier... gorgeous.
That's what Jack called her, gorgeous.
And she's not in some warehouse,
she's going places.
(laughs)
Going places, right.
Into a bloody grave.
Yeah, and aren't you glad about that?
Because you hated her.
You hated her, Karen.
Admit it.
Admit you hated her!
Yes, I hated her!
And I'm glad she's dead.
But who's the pretty one now, eh?
Me or her?
Did you kill her, Karen?
No.
But I wanted to.
I wanted to cut her face off.
Sorry.
(door opens)
I've got it.
Got what?
The file.
I've reconstituted it.
It's from the video booth, very rough.
It's Amy Katz.
I see clearly now.
Maybe it's the stuff working, I don't know,
but I see you and you're just words.
You don't care about me, or anyone.
Adam's going crazy, getting extra drugs from Jack.
But I'm speaking out.
When was this?
The night she died, about 1:00.
I don't care if it damages you, because you don't care.
You've hurt me too much.
Words don't work anymore.
She was going to destroy Gansa's reputation, marriage...
And his fortune.
Dr. Fisher said Gansa stood to make a mint
if his drug hit the market.
He asks Amy to back off.
She refuses.
He kills her.
I'll see you at the station.
BAYNES: Sir.
Why are you here?
You got him at last.
You're not helping yourself, Mr. Katz.
Or Amy.
Go home, now.
Statement by Jack Collins.
Statement by Karen Wilde.
They both sold their drug doses to Adam Douglas.
Adam Douglas stored it all up and used it to kill himself.
Do you know who killed Amy yet?
We're talking about who killed Adam.
Adam killed Adam.
With your help.
Suicides don't need help.
Well, Amy disagreed.
Amy tried to help him.
She tried to warn you.
AMY (in recording): I see clearly now.
Maybe it's the stuff working, I don't know,
but I see you and you're just words.
You don't care about me, or anyone.
Adam's going crazy, getting extra drugs off Jack.
I don't care if it damages you because you don't care.
You've hurt me too much.
Words don't work anymore.
(clicks off)
HATHAWAY: Have you heard that before?
No.
I thought all the files were copied to your home.
I haven't heard it before.
Where did it come from?
Video booth, 1:15 the night Amy died.
It was erased.
Who erased it?
Who could have erased it?
Well, me... or Amy.
LEWIS: Did you?
No.
Did you ask Amy to erase it?
Why would I?
Because she was threatening to expose you.
So I erased the message
or I asked Amy to erase it,
and then, what, I killed her?
Did you?
Well, I only live ten minutes away.
I suppose I could have come around,
asked Amy to step outside...
but I didn't.
I was... in bed with my wife.
Ask her.
CLAIRE: Yes...
He was with me all night.
At least until that girl's body was found.
Amy's body.
Mrs. Gansa, it's clear from the tapes
that Amy was in love with your husband.
Do you know if he reciprocated?
She was his patient, for Christ's sake.
He's more than 20 years older.
Well, he'd fallen for a younger woman before, a patient--
you.
Do you enjoy doing this, Inspector,
Sergeant, whatever you are,
picking at people's miseries?
I don't enjoy it, no.
Then why can't you leave us alone?
Because crimes have been committed
and people have died.
My husband hasn't killed anyone.
He was with me all that night.
And that's the truth?
Why would I lie?
If you want to start harassing us,
you're going to have to join the queue.
What do you mean?
Phone calls, um...
obscene notes, car scratched, bins overturned.
What sort of notes?
"Your husband is a lying cheat" sort of notes.
Phone calls ditto.
Did you report this to the police?
We could have traced those calls.
No, we didn't want to cause a fuss.
Alex hired a private investigator.
What did he find?
The phone calls were from phone boxes,
most from the Junior Common Room at Wolsey.
Amy Katz's college.
Did either of you talk to her?
Hard to talk to someone
who just says, "I screwed your husband last night,"
then hangs up.
But the calls have stopped now?
Yes.
Now that she's dead.
(birds chirping)
TV REPORTER: And yet more fallout
from the Plowden Pharmaceuticals drug trial.
Julius Fisher,
head of the University Psychiatry Department,
announced this morning
that Dr. Alex Gansa had been suspended
from all teaching duties,
pending an inquiry by the British Psychiatric Association.
Dr. Gansa, do you have any comment on your suspension?
MALE REPORTER: Can you tell us why the university fired you?
Do you have any comment on the rumors about your husband?
Was your husband having an affair?
He's done nothing wrong, nothing.
Don't... touch me.
Private investigator.
He's an ex-copper, actually-- DS, like me.
Good for him.
The stalker story was real enough.
Ten obscene phone calls-- six from Wolsey College,
the other four from phone boxes near Gansa's house--
so the phone records confirm Gansa's version of the story.
Did he record these calls?
No, he didn't want to.
Doctor-patient confidentiality, you know.
Yeah, I know.
What about the notes?
Three, apparently.
"Alex is cheating on you."
"Your husband is screwing another woman."
Anything else?
Well, he confirmed that the Gansa car was vandalized
and there was some weirdness with the bins.
Emptied out in the front drive
every night, three nights in a row.
Did Amy's name ever come up?
No, but he got the feeling that Gansa knew very well
who was doing it, but didn't want Claire to know.
Yeah, he just wanted it all to disappear...
and it did.
I'm going to talk to him.
What, about the notes?
No, about computers.
He's not here.
Disciplinary hearing.
Are you okay?
Oh, I'm dandy, yeah.
Boss has been fired and disgraced.
I've lost my job.
You'll get another one.
You're young, bright.
Not so young, but thanks anyway.
Actually, it was you I wanted to see.
Oh, if I'd known, I would have worn my party dress.
Okay, not a social call.
No.
Sorry.
It's about the computer system.
Who had access to video booth files?
I mean, who could open them?
I told you before-- Dr. Gansa.
Could you access them?
I don't have the password.
What about deleting files?
Ah, is that what's happened?
Stuff's been deleted?
He really is finished.
No, Amy and Adam are finished, Bethan.
Gansa's alive, married, in good health.
He should count his blessings.
Don't include his marriage among them.
Toxic isn't the word for it.
What, you don't like Claire?
I'm sorry, I shouldn't have said anything.
I'm overwrought.
No, you're okay.
If you think of anything else you shouldn't say,
I hope you'll say it to me.
jThat's my number.
GANSA: All right.
It's all right.
All right, I'll...
I'll come.
Uh, I'm going out.
I'm taking the car.
Who was that on the phone?
Fisher.
He wants to see me about something.
(door closes)
(cell phone rings)
Hello?
Hello?
Who is this?
CLAIRE: It's Claire Gansa.
Mrs. Gansa?
How can I help you?
I need to talk to you.
I need to see you.
In person.
Okay.
I'll come over.
Um, no, no.
I'll come to you.
He might come back.
Your husband doesn't know about this?
No.
He's gone out.
Okay.
Why don't you come down to the police station?
That's quite near you.
I'll be there.
15 minutes.
Fine.
(cell phone rings)
Hello, what's up?
Accident on the Woodstock Road.
Hit and run.
A cyclist.
LEWIS: Oh no.
Who is it?
Just went straight into her.
They're pulling the CCTV now.
She was unconscious when they got here.
They think her back's broken.
She was coming to see me.
Said she had something to tell me.
She sounded scared.
Where is Gansa?
Not here, not answering his mobile.
Let's get him found.
(low, indistinct voice on radio)
Sir.
All right, all right.
Where's my wife?
They won't tell me.
She's at the hospital.
She's been in an accident.
I'm going to see her.
Not yet.
You want to calm down.
You let me see my wife.
Tell me where you were last night.
I...
I was at Bethan Vickery's.
What, all night?
I was exhausted.
I must have fallen asleep.
Why were you there?
Because she called me.
Why?
None of your business.
And she'll back you upon that?
Yes.
Now please let me see my wife.
(bell rings)
I heard about Claire.
It was on the radio.
How's Alex?
Better than Claire.
Dr. Gansa says he was with you all last night.
Here.
Is that true?
Yes.
He came round about 10:00.
Left early, I'm not sure when.
I was still half asleep, but it was getting light.
No.
He slept there.
We're not having an affair, Inspector.
I'm not his type, nor he mine.
Then why did he come round last night?
Because I called him.
Why?
Why, Bethan?
(sighs)
Because I was hysterical.
I blamed him for losing me my job, probably my degree.
I demanded to know how he'd repair the damage.
Well, I was hysterical, I'm ashamed to say.
So he came round...?
He calmed me down.
We had a drink.
He said he'd help any way he could.
I apologized, said he should get back to Claire.
But he was clearly exhausted,
said he'd lie down for a couple of minutes.
He went out like a light.
Can I see your bedroom?
Sorry.
Haven't tidied up yet.
Okay.
Thanks.
Do you mind if we take a look at your phone records?
Just to dot the "i".
Of course.
Got to dot those "i"s.
(monitors clicking and beeping)
(sighs)
She's in an induced coma.
Severe spinal damage, unlikely to walk again.
Brain damage?
Too early to tell, but the initial...
I'm staying.
So if you have any questions.
Do you know why your wife called me?
No.
I didn't know she did.
It's why she was out so late.
She was coming down to the police station,
said she had something to tell me.
No, I didn't know.
Who did this?
That's what we're trying to find out.
Who would want to hurt her?
Hurt you?
I have no idea.
HATHAWAY: We've pulled all the CCTV from the local area,
and this is the only clear footage we found.
LEWIS: Okay, that's Claire, but we're looking
for a car, an accident.
Hang on.
We know it's Claire,
but it could be anyone, including Gansa.
LEWIS: What am I looking at now?
HATHAWAY: The news footage from Gansa's place yesterday morning.
That car.
Recognize it?
David Katz.
He's been stalking Gansa.
He thinks he sees the doctor leaving his house late at night.
He follows him and bang.
This is the bit where you say,
"Well done, Hathaway," and I shrug modestly.
Bring him in.
HATHAWAY: Mr. Katz.
DS Hathaway, Oxford Police.
Would you come with us, please?
Find his car, bring it in, get forensics working on it.
Sir.
KATZ: What?
What's going on?
LEWIS: Where were you last night, Mr. Katz?
In my hotel.
Can anyone back you upon that?
Room service, phone calls you made,
Internet access, pay-per-view movie?
No.
Did you go for a drive?
I didn't go out.
I sat and remembered my daughter.
What she was like, the things she used to say.
Her face.
Then why were you hanging around
outside Dr. Gansa's office, outside his house?
I was watching you not doing your job.
I saw you let him go.
We had no evidence.
It's the law.
It may be a pain, but without it,
people just go round maiming and killing each other.
Which is what happened to Dr. Gansa's wife:
run over last night, will never walk, maybe never talk again.
And you think I did that?
Did you?
No.
No, I wouldn't.
You seemed pretty certain he was guilty.
I am certain.
When did you get this?
About a month after she started therapy.
I spoke to Amy.
She denied it, insisted that Gansa was good for her,
that she wasn't leaving him.
But why didn't you tell us?
Because I was embarrassed.
Ashamed.
Because I was an idiot.
If I'd made it public months ago,
then Amy would have had to stop seeing him and...
she'd still be alive.
HATHAWAY: Bloody hell.
Who sent it?
Amy wouldn't write to her own father.
Has to be Claire.
She obviously expected Katz to do something.
That would've stopped Gansa giving his "therapy" to Amy
and removed a rival.
It gives Katz a motive.
Forensics disagree.
Katz's car did not hit Claire Gansa.
Not him, sir.
(sighs)
Mr. Katz.
I'm keeping this letter, but letting you go.
But for the last time, sir, go home.
Please.
HATHAWAY: Someone really doesn't like Gansa.
Or really does like Gansa.
But we're running out of suspects.
Not necessarily.
I pulled her phone records.
As Gansa said,
Bethan called him last night at about 10:00.
She then calls his home again, at 11:15,
by which time, presumably, he wasn't there.
Did she tell you that?
No.
And 30 minutes later, Claire calls me to say
she's got something to tell me,
but she doesn't make it.
LEWIS: Did you make a second call
to the Gansa home last night?
Yes.
I called Claire to say Alex had collapsed on the sofa.
I didn't want her to worry.
Is there a problem?
Did you write these?
Uh... no, I didn't write them.
How could you think I...?
Well, they're disgusting.
Horrid.
Why would anyone?
Someone close to Gansa wrote them.
To his home, to Amy.
Someone also called his home, making the same accusations.
But why?
Because she's jealous.
She wants to keep Gansa to herself.
That's why she killed Amy,
and she tried to kill his wife.
"She"?
So you think it's me?
HATHAWAY: Is it?
No!
You have to believe me.
I'm not jealous of Alex-- I'm just not.
HATHAWAY: Oh, come on, you worship him.
Of course you're jealous--
of him and of the women who had him.
Just tell us the truth.
Please.
I am telling the truth.
I didn't have to be jealous because I already had him.
I'm in love with him and he is with me.
Has been for years.
So you are having an affair.
No.
We both wanted to,
but we also wanted it to be open and honorable.
He's been trying to extricate himself from the marriage,
but Claire would rather see him destroyed than with anyone else,
and she'd crush anyone she saw as a threat.
So how come she's the one in the coma?
I don't know.
All I can say is, it can't have been Alex,
because he was here with me.
GANSA: Bethan is in love with me...
LEWIS: And you with her.
Is it true?
No, I'm not in love with her.
I have never been,
I have never, ever given any evidence of being...
Did you have any idea that she had these feelings towards you?
Yeah, I knew she liked me, was loyal,
like a kind of annoying dog.
I have to say you must be a pretty crap shrink.
To work so closely with a woman for so long
and have no idea?
But she's still delusional.
Was she delusional about you being at her flat last night?
No, I was there for the reason I told you.
She asked me to come round.
Well, if there's so little between you, why stay over?
Why not go home?
Well, I wish I had.
But I'd had a few drinks, I was exhausted.
The next thing I know, I wake up on the sofa,
it's 5:00 in the morning.
What, why?
I suppose she says we made passionate love all night.
LEWIS:She says
you fell asleep on her sofa.
Julie, what you got?
Bethan Vickery.
She was found about half a mile from the hospital
at 3:30 this morning.
She'd been beaten up.
Maybe assaulted.
Did she say who did it?
She won't.
She said she tripped and fell.
LOCKHART: 3:04 last night,
Bethan Vickery comes to the ICU ward, finds Alex Gansa.
They talk, they argue.
Bethan leaves.
Gansa goes back to the ICU ward.
3:10, the front of the hospital.
LEWIS: Bethan leaves unharmed.
Is that it?
LOCKHART: Three minutes later...
HATHAWAY: He follows her.
When did he come back?
Not for three hours.
LEWIS: Good work, Julie.
LEWIS: You and Gansa argued.
You were on the CCTV.
He was angry.
He told me to stay away.
Said I'd ruin everything.
I told him all I wanted was for him to be happy.
I left.
Sorry.
No, it's okay.
I can come back.
No, I want to get this over with.
I was walking home, I heard footsteps.
It was him.
He slammed me against the wall and I fell.
He started kicking me, stamping.
He said if I didn't keep my mouth shut, he'd destroy me.
He said who would people believe, a delusional spinster,
a crazy woman, or him?
He could pin whatever disorder he likes on me
and make it stick.
I've been in therapy with him for years.
God knows what he could spin from that wealth of material.
Okay.
Let's just concentrate on what actually happened.
Did he stay the night?
Yes.
All night?
On your sofa?
Tell me, Bethan.
I got up in the night.
I went through to him.
I wanted to...
I wanted him to hold me.
He wasn't there.
What time was this?
About 12:30.
I'm sorry I lied.
Bethan Vickery was brutally attacked last night,
bruises to the chest, back, stomach.
We also have CCTV of you arguing with Ms. Vickery
in the hospital last night.
You followed her when she left.
I went home to have a shower and a couple of hours sleep.
I didn't follow her.
I didn't lay a finger on her.
Or a foot.
We have Ms. Vickery's statement
withdrawing her previous statement
that you were in her flat until 5:00 a.m.
the night your wife was run down.
What does her new statement say?
That you left sometime between 12:00 and 1:00.
Forensics report confirming a match between paint fragments
on the bumper of your car and your wife's bicycle.
I bet they found paint fragments from the bike
all over the car, not just on the bumper.
Car and the bike shared a driveway for years.
We will be charging you
with the assault on Bethan Vickery
and the attempted murder of your wife, Claire.
We will continue to investigate you for the murder of Amy Katz.
We suggest you speak to a lawyer.
You know Bethan is stark, raving mad.
Is that your professional diagnosis as her therapist?
No, I was never her therapist,
but if you want a diagnosis, fine.
She has De Clerambault's Syndrome,
a delusional sexual obsession
in which the sufferer believes they are in love
with someone, and that their love is returned.
And that's what Bethan has: De Cleram...
De Clerambault's Syndrome.
Named after an eminent French psychologist.
So how does this... syndrome work?
The sufferer believes
that their loved one is communicating with them
in a unique and secret way.
Are you making this up?
The obsession can get violent.
Often the initial target is the person perceived to be standing
in the way of the desired object.
In this case, your wife.
No, first Amy Katz.
Then my wife.
All right, so Bethan killed Amy Katz?
Well, what other explanation makes sense?
I refused to reciprocate her love.
She turned her violence on me.
Except that she was the one that got beaten up.
So that doesn't quite fit, does it?
Well, the case histories show
that the De Clerambault sufferer turns their rage
on the person they once idealized.
Is that it?
Isn't that enough?
She's seriously ill.
She's pathological.
Funny, that's exactly what she said you'd do--
find a psychological disorder and slap it on her.
Why don't you have a think about it overnight?
See if you can come up with something better.
HATHAWAY: He's not going to confess, is he?
No.
He'll do what he can to discredit Bethan,
and he can do a lot.
So what are we going to do about it?
Well, we've got reasons, explanations,
for most things except Adam Douglas.
Can we connect him to Gansa?
Amy warned Gansa
that Adam was getting extra doses of the drug,
but other than that...
Did you check Adam's phone records when he was released?
No, I'll do it in the morning.
All right.
I'll talk to Bethan.
About what?
Well, Claire Gansa was going
to tell me something that night.
I want to see if Bethan has any idea what it was.
Here's a thought.
Why don't I talk to Bethan and you check the phone records?
No, that technical stuff goes way over my head,
and anyway, you're so good at it.
Oh, thank you, sir.
Any time.
See you in the morning.
(sighs)
There we are.
Ms. Vickery was moved to ward 17.
I'll just put a call through.
Bethan?
Where on earth are you going?
Home.
Doctor's not too pleased about it,
but I really want to.
Give you a lift.
Thanks.
I have an ulterior motive.
More questions.
Is Alex...?
He's locked up.
Adam Douglas's phone records.
Two calls: first to Gansa's mobile, two seconds,
probably just got voice mail and hung up.
The next, Gansa's office, a ten-minute conversation.
You wanted to know if he spoke to him.
And yes, he did.
No, he didn't.
Second call was 4:25, right?
Mmm.
4:25 Gansa was in his house being interviewed by us.
Then who else works in the office?
BETHAN: That's the only thing I can think of:
that she wanted to tell you about me.
Me and Alex, our passionate affair.
Ow...
Thank you.
Sorry I'm so feeble.
When you called Claire to tell her her husband was staying,
what did she say?
Nothing.
She just hung up.
She was uniformly hostile to any woman Alex worked with.
At least with me I suppose there was a reason.
Are you okay?
Just coming.
Not great with hangers.
You've got time for a cuppa, though, don't you?
How many tablets of Ketarex
did it take to kill Adam Douglas?
Morning.
Pills were only 100 mgs.
Adam's blood work was off the chart.
So a lot-- at least 20.
And that doesn't include the four that were left over.
(sighs)
It doesn't add up.
The trial ends on day five.
Maximum number
that Jack and Karen could have sold him is eight,
plus his own four is 12.
Where did he get the rest from?
Just so you know, I didn't tell Lewis about your "date."
I thought it was something for the two of you to work out.
Which is what I still think.
Why don't you?
Sir, are you with Bethan?
LEWIS (on phone): I am, yes.
HATHAWAY: I'm pretty sure she was the last person to talk to Adam
before he killed himself.
I'm also pretty sure
that she helped him get the drugs to do it.
But how?
I'm waiting for a call back from Plowden now.
They controlled the supply.
Okay, let me know if you get anything.
BETHAN: Your Sergeant?
You've got to go?
I'll have my tea first.
He's lucky to have someone like you to learn from.
Quite often I learn from him.
You're sweet.
But I've been watching him.
He seems a little out of his depth, especially when it comes
to dealing with people.
It's a gift, I suppose.
I'm sure he'll learn.
You said you were in therapy with Gansa.
I was, God help me.
Why?
He said you weren't.
Well, I'm sure he said a lot of things.
Our therapy sessions.
Four years of them.
Oh, you took notes.
Well, I am supposed to be doing a post-grad in psychology.
Look, I'm going to change.
I've been in these clothes long enough.
There's more tea in the pot.
And cake, have some cake.
My notes.
They're private, you know.
It's all right, I trust you.
Bethan, these aren't notes.
You weren't in therapy with Gansa.
Yes, I was.
That's how I learned.
No, these are scraps.
Rubbish.
You stole them from Gansa's bins.
The phone calls, the obscene notes, that was all you.
Stop.
You're making me sound like a mad person.
You've got some of his old clothes in your cupboard,
his shoes.
You probably used them to beat yourself up.
Please, please, don't... don't talk like that.
I'm sorry.
You're going to have to come with me.
Liar!
Get your clo...
(Lewis yells)
Enough!
(knife clatters on floor)
(siren wailing)
INNOCENT: Can you connect her to Adam Douglas's death too?
HATHAWAY: Yeah.
Plowden confirmed that an extra box of Ketarex
was delivered to Gansa's office the afternoon Adam was released.
It was signed for by Bethan.
So she gave the drugs to Adam?
Why?
Because he was a threat to Gansa, therefore to her.
That's why she killed Amy, tried to kill Claire.
She took the keys out of his pocket when he was sleeping
and tried to run her down.
Have we got any idea
what Claire Gansa was coming to tell you that night?
Probably that something was going on
between her husband and Bethan.
INNOCENT: And she's confessed to it all?
Oh, no, she thinks she's doing what Gansa told her.
Yeah, she's got files full of notes giving her instructions.
All nicked from Gansa's bins, all rubbish.
INNOCENT: Did Gansa tell her to beat herself up?
LEWIS: Well, she only did that
when she realized he wasn't going to join in her fantasy.
And then she went after him.
HATHAWAY: Nearly got him.
Nearly got you too.
Mmm, I suppose I should be flattered.
GANSA: "They went to sea in a Sieve, they did,
"In a Sieve they went to sea:
"In spite of all their friends could say,
On a winter's morn, on a stormy day..."
The Jumblies.
She said she loved them as a child.
The Jumblies.
Went to sea in a sieve.
That's them.
Did you hear?
What, that my diagnosis of Bethan was correct?
Small comfort.
I was blind for so long.
I'm getting my punishment now.
There was a man in Belgium, woke up last year
after being in a coma for 23 years.
He said he'd been conscious all the time.
All the time.
For 23 years.
He'd been screaming and shouting at people, but nobody heard him.
So I'm going to be here.
For as long as it takes.
So that she doesn't have to scream.
You ready?
"And when the Sieve turned round and round,
"And everyone cried, 'You'll all be drowned!
"They called aloud, 'Our Sieve ain't big,
"'But we don't care a button!
We don't care a fig!
"In a Sieve we'll go to sea!'
"Far and few,
"Far and few
"Are the lands where the Jumblies live;
"Their heads are green, And their hands are blue,
And they went to sea in a Sieve."
LEWIS: "Went to sea in a Sieve."
HOBSON: What's that?
I went to visit Dr. Gansa.
He was reading to his wife.
What's he going to do?
Go on reading.
He's staying with her.
I spoke to her surgeon.
There's no chance of recovery.
Absolutely none.
I know.
And he knows.
But he's staying.
Out of guilt?
Maybe.
More out of love, I think.
I'm sorry, Robbie.
(whispering): You don't have to be.
It's not as if we...
Yeah.
Gansa really proves it, doesn't he?
Proves what?
You don't get many chances.
Don't want to waste them.
Can I buy you a coffee, Laura?
Coffee?
Maybe something stronger?
Sounds a bit more like it.
Captioned by Media Access Group at WGBH access.wgbh.org