

Shroud for a Nightingale, Part 2
5/1/2025 | 45m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
After the death of another student nurse, Dalgliesh's hunt for the murderer intensifies.
After the death of another student nurse at Nightingale House, Dalgliesh's hunt for the murderer intensifies. A private patient who died at the on-site hospital might hold the answer, but Dalgliesh's curiosity puts his own life in danger.
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Shroud for a Nightingale, Part 2
5/1/2025 | 45m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
After the death of another student nurse at Nightingale House, Dalgliesh's hunt for the murderer intensifies. A private patient who died at the on-site hospital might hold the answer, but Dalgliesh's curiosity puts his own life in danger.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[ Camera shutter clicking ] ♪♪ [ Clicking continues ] -No evidence of strangulation or suffocation, no external marks of violence of any kind, but it's unlikely to be a natural death.
-If it was poison, I'm assuming it wasn't corrosive?
-Correct.
No carbolic acid this time.
Time of death, based on rectal temperature and the degree of rigor in the lower limbs, around eight hours ago.
-So, about midnight, then.
-Taking a common-sense view, of course, she died when she drank that nightcap.
-Well, print man only found her prints on the glass.
-Is there a suicide note?
-Haven't found one yet.
[ Footsteps approach ] -[ Exhales deeply ] -Cover her up, please.
♪♪ ♪♪ -I need my cigarettes.
-Sit down.
♪♪ -Did she look like she'd been murdered?
-Nurse Pardoe!
-I want to know if it looked like murder or suicide.
-She looked horrified, and she looked terrified.
I wish I'd never gone in there.
-Why did you?
-Because her light was on, and I'd got up to use the bathroom.
[ Door opens ] -I'm sorry for the loss of your friend.
DS Masterson will be taking witness statements.
-Was she murdered?
-It's too early to say.
-Maybe someone's picking us off, one by one.
-Please be quiet!
-Which of you was the last to see her alive?
-It might have been me.
She came into the kitchen when I was making a cup of tea, before bed.
I poured some boiled water into a glass for her.
-Well, well.
-It was just boiling water.
[ Breathes shakily ] -Bag the kettle and send it for testing.
-Yes, sir.
-Well-played, Dalgliesh.
They send you here to investigate one murder, you let another one happen right under your nose.
-I don't know yet that it is a murder.
-Surely it's more likely to be suicide.
-I put in a call to the commissioner.
He's hardly likely to trust me with the home's safety, now there's a serial killer on the loose.
-I don't think it's helpful to speak in that way.
-Nor do I. I ought to tell you...
I saw her light on -- Fallon's.
Uh, it must have been around 2:00 a.m.
I was on my way to bed after nursing a patient in the main hospital.
-Thank you.
DS Masterson will take statements from you all.
Please don't leave the hospital site.
-And what are you going to bloody do?!
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Footsteps approach ] ♪♪ ♪♪ -I-I was making a cup of tea, and she came in and -- a-and got her cup.
She cut some lemon, and then I poured the boiled water.
-Did you fill the kettle, before boiling it?
-No, there was enough water in it, so I-I just turned it on.
-Did you have something against Fallon, like you had something against Pearce?
-No!
I didn't have anything against Pearce.
She was trying to help me.
-Oh, is that right?
-Jo was very private.
She was...sophisticated.
She was the best nurse in our year.
-Did that bother you, that she was the best?
-I suppose it did bother me sometimes, but I'll be leaving as soon as I'm qualified.
I'm getting married.
He's a vicar.
There'll be plenty for me to do around the parish.
Anyway, the hospital aren't keen on married women staying on.
-What was her relationship like with Heather Pearce?
-Civil.
Pearce once threatened to complain to Matron about Jo keeping whisky in the kitchen, but I don't think Jo held a grudge.
-And what about her relationship with Nurse Dakers?
-She was generally pretty kind to her.
Kinder than...most of us.
-I must have turned out the light at around midnight.
I woke up at, um, about half past 5:00, when Matron knocked on the door.
-So you didn't go and visit anyone in the middle of the night, didn't go to the nurses' corridor?
-No.
Why on earth would I have done?
-It was Courtney-Briggs that got you this job, wasn't it?
-No!
Well, he was one of my references.
-Still, you're close, are you?
-No.
Well, I-I consider Stephen a friend, but, uh, he's a married man.
Uh, I don't understand, why is this relevant?
[ Pen clicks ] -Did Jo have a boyfriend?
-She didn't tell me she did, but I think there was someone.
She would often go to London whenever she had free time.
-She mentioned some personal letters to me.
I can't find them in her room.
You don't know what those might have been about?
-No, sorry, I don't.
Do you think someone murdered her?
-Is there anything else you'd like to tell me?
-Actually, there is.
-But it's not about Jo, it's about Pearce.
I remember you said no detail's too small.
A couple of days before she died, I went into her room to ask her if she wanted some cake, and I noticed that she was reading.
Apart from her Bible, she never read, not even magazines.
And it could have been a textbook, but it felt like she didn't want me to see it.
She pushed it under the covers.
And I was thinking, perhaps that's what was missing from under her pillow on the morning she died.
-So why don't you tell me where you were last night?
-I was in my room, with the door locked, Sergeant, asleep.
-So, no medical students there, Nurse?
-No.
-No one else came to join you?
-No.
I was alone...all night.
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Indistinct conversations ] [ Conversations stop ] -Do you mind if I join you?
-Oh, please do.
It's funny, one doesn't really think of policemen eating.
I don't know how any of us are managing to eat.
These poor girls, I can't stop thinking about them.
-Think about them, then, and give us all some peace.
[ Door opens ] -[ Giggling ] -May I ask you something?
A letter arrived for Nurse Pearce from her grandmother, posted a few days ago.
-Oh, her poor family.
-It's clear Nurse Pearce had told her she was very upset about the death of a patient, a Mr. Dettinger.
-Pearce was on my ward for the last rotation, and she was assigned to Mr. Dettinger.
He was one of Mr. Courtney-Briggs' patients.
Crohn's disease, severe complications.
So she would have spent a lot of time with this patient?
-Yes.
I'm not surprised she was affected by his death.
In fact, I'm relieved.
My nurses all have to get used to death, but I like to know they also care.
Excuse me.
-Patient of Courtney-Briggs.
Pearce nursed him until he died, aged 59, at the beginning of last week.
She'd clearly grown close to him.
Next of kin, Louise Dettinger, his mother.
She's in London.
I tried calling, but there's no reply.
As soon as you finish with the statements, I want you to go and find her.
I want to know if -- -You are joking.
-Pearce was troubled in the days following Dettinger's death.
I want to know if she said anything to him.
-Yeah, but if I go to London, I'm going to be out of action for the rest of the day.
-You'll be in action, doing what I've asked you to do.
-Look, she's the one we ought to be focusing on.
She's got opportunity for both of them and a clear motive for the first.
If we just dug a little bit deeper... -I haven't ruled her out.
I'm not ruling any of them out.
♪♪ -Josephine Fallon.
I'll check.
Do you have a library card?
-No, actually, it's missing.
-Yes, she is a member.
Would you like me to check if her card's been handed in?
-Does the record say which books were taken out on her card and when?
-Yes, two books in the last few weeks.
Simone de Beauvoir, and...
Yes.
I remember this.
Very unusual request.
I spoke to her myself.
She asked for an account of the Nazi war trials.
We didn't have one, of course, so I had to order one from the County Library.
-When was this?
-Uh, she came to collect it... four days ago?
In fact, she must have returned it yesterday, but not in the correct way.
She left it on a pile of children's books.
Not very responsible.
I still have it, if you'd like to see it.
-Yes.
Can you describe the woman you dealt with?
-Uh, she was medium height.
Long, fair hair, in plaits.
-Heather Pearce.
♪♪ [ Music plays on radio ] ♪♪ [ Music intensifies ] ♪ You stole my heart... ♪ [ Engine revs ] ♪ Hold me, please hold me ♪ ♪ Please don't let... ♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ -Yes.
Nicotine sulphate.
That would be consistent with what I found.
I'll be testing the stomach contents, but... yes, the vomiting, dilated pupils, cyanosis, all evidence of seizure.
She died from respiratory failure, all of which is consistent with nicotine poisoning.
You didn't find anything unusual under her fingernails?
Sand?
-No.
No sand.
Time of death, I can confirm, between midnight and 2:00 a.m., at the latest.
And I'm afraid there's something else.
She was pregnant.
About 13 or 14 weeks.
Cause to take her own life, perhaps?
-She didn't take her own life.
-[ Pleasurable moaning ] [ Lighter clicks ] [ Lighter clicks ] -[ Chuckles ] -What would your boss say, if he could see you now?
-He'd fire me.
He's not into human frailty.
He thinks he's a saint, but he's not.
-You don't like him?
-He's an arrogant son of a bitch.
-Sexy, though.
-He's old enough to be your grandad!
-He's not.
Anyway, it's not about age.
It's about power.
-Oh, yeah?
-Is that why you like me, then?
-Sex isn't frailty.
Sex is power.
It's one of the only powers women can match men for.
Blow for blow.
-[ Scoffs ] -And I'm very good at exercising it.
-Then why do you bother with medical students, then?
-That wasn't a student in my room.
It was Stephen Courtney-Briggs.
If you're going to pick a dog... [Whispers] ...pick the top dog.
-Christ!
-What, too old?
-I just don't like the thought of him having been where I've just been.
-We could have any of them in that place.
Even the females.
They're all so bloody lonely and desperate.
-You haven't, have you?
-Gearing and her smudgy mascara.
Brumfett yapping and sniffing round Matron's heels.
I don't know how Matron stands it.
I'm a good nurse, but I'm crap at exams.
Courtney-Briggs will make sure I pass.
And now...
I have power over you...Sergeant.
-Yeah, right.
-Oh... One word from me, and you're sacked.
[ Car door opens ] -Well, one word from me, and you're off the course.
-Mm.
Sexy...isn't it?
♪♪ -Any of you recognize this?
-Yes.
It's my rose spray.
I bought it last year.
She didn't.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
But how did she know about it?
I -- I keep it in here, right at the back.
It's -- It's -- It's hidden from sight.
Look, you can see the mark where it was.
-Where did you find it?
-Why would she even look in here?
♪♪ No, I-I didn't hurt her.
-No one's saying you did.
-But it's what you're thinking.
I-I hardly knew her.
I've only spoken to her a few times.
-Would anyone else in Nightingale House know about the rose spray?
-I can't think why they would.
-Yes.
Morag Smith, the cleaning girl.
I asked her to, uh, clean that cupboard out.
It must have been, uh, in November?
She would certainly have seen it.
You should talk to her.
I mean, she's odd.
In fact -- -Sister.
-I -- I didn't go anywhere near Fallon or Pearce.
I haven't done anything wrong.
-I need to get back to my ward.
-Actually, Sister Brumfett, I need to speak to you.
-Me?
Uh, I can speak to you after I finish my -- -It'll have to be now.
[ Door opens ] [ Door closes ] -I want you to know I object to the way you speak to me, to all of us.
I suppose it's 'cause we're women.
You're taking advantage of Matron's good nature.
She's allowing you far too much freedom, license.
-Remind me, Sister, did you serve in the war?
-No, I was still training.
-You say you were called to the hospital last night by Mr. Courtney-Briggs.
When you arrived, was he there?
-No, he'd gone.
-Gone?
-Well, home, I assume.
Or to one of the, uh, restrooms.
-And coming back at around 2:00 a.m., you heard someone moving on the nurses' corridor and you went to investigate.
-Well, I thought someone, at least, ought to be vigilant.
-And you saw the Burt twins.
-Yes.
They couldn't sleep.
I noticed Fallon's light was still on, but I didn't think anything of it.
-She discharged herself yesterday, didn't she?
Against your advice.
You didn't think to knock on her door, to check if she was all right?
-If she needed anything, it was sleep.
I certainly wasn't going to disturb her in the middle of the night.
-Which entrance to Nightingale House would you normally use when coming back late at night?
-Yes, I would normally use the back entrance to Mary's -- to Matron's staircase, but your constable was at the front door and the weather was so dreadful, so I went in that way and up the main stairs.
I'm not sure whether you know this by now, and I-I don't normally break confidentiality, but Nurse Fallon was pregnant.
-Yes.
Did she confide in you about it?
-No, but I've been nursing for too many years not to spot something like that.
Perhaps she couldn't live with the shame.
She wouldn't be the first.
Or perhaps it's true what everyone's saying, that she did kill Pearce and she couldn't live with that, either.
Perhaps Pearce found out about the pregnancy and threatened to tell.
Have you thought of that?
From what I hear, Pearce was adept at blackmail.
-Thank you for your thoughts, Sister.
You can go now.
[ Vehicles passing, horn honks ] [ Siren wailing in distance ] [ Music playing in distance ] [ Doorbell rings ] -You're late.
-Mrs. Louise Dettinger?
-Who are you?
-Detective Sergeant Masterson.
I'm with the Metropolitan Police.
I'd like to ask some questions about your son, Martin, and his time at the John Carpenter Hospital.
-Would you?
-Yes, I would, actually.
I've come a long way.
Heatheringfield.
Is there something wrong with your phone?
Oh, for...sake.
[ Sighs ] -He should at least have telephoned me.
-Who?
-Tony, my partner.
Got a competition tomorrow.
-All right, look, I need to ask you some questions about your son's stay at the hospital, all right?
Particularly about a nurse called Pearce.
She was assigned to him.
♪♪ -Leave that!
-Did you ever meet Nurse Pearce?
Did you ever visit your son?
-I visited every day.
He died, you know... -You don't say.
-My only one.
♪♪ Do you dance, Mr. Big Policeman?
-No, thanks.
Now, look, I've got to ask you -- -You can go away, then... ...and you'll never hear what I've got to tell you.
♪♪ [ Door closes ] -Masterson and I will stay here tonight.
-Good.
I won't pretend I'm not relieved.
Fallon was murdered, wasn't she?
-Yes.
Courtney-Briggs, he looked, um... stricken when he saw her body this morning.
Was there a connection between them?
-There were rumors about some sort of relationship.
He has been known to stray.
Perhaps I should have told you.
It -- It really was just a rumor.
What Sister Gearing said about Morag Smith, I hope you won't...
It's like Dakers.
She's an easy scapegoat.
Have you spoken to her yet?
-I'm going to find her.
I think I know where she'll be.
Does Courtney-Briggs ever talk about the war?
I mean, specific incidents or people?
-Not really.
I know he served.
Occasionally, he speaks about it in terms of surgical practice.
Why?
[ Door closes ] ♪♪ -What is it you've got to tell me?
-Spin.
♪♪ Something odd did happen when Martin was in that hospital.
-What?
Oi!
What?!
-Too rough!
Naughty!
He thought he was good when I taught him.
He thought he was very good.
-Who did?
-Stephen Courtney-Briggs.
♪♪ ♪♪ -[ Groans ] ♪♪ -Help!
Somebody help me!
Help!
Somebody!
-What happened?
-Someone hit him over the 'ead.
-Lock all the doors.
-That's a deep cut.
-Lock them.
Check who's missing.
-Call Mr. Courtney-Briggs.
Use my office.
-Yes, Matron.
-He'll be with Sister Brumfett, on her ward.
-Not Courtney-Brig-- Not Courtney-Briggs.
-It's all right.
-Not Courtney-Briggs.
-It's all right.
You're all right.
♪♪ ♪♪ You're all right.
Stay still, now.
-You were hit very hard.
Remember anything?
Did you see who hit you?
-He was probably hit from behind.
-Well, the wound will need stitches.
We'll need anesthetic -- I'll do it in outpatients theater.
-No anesthetic.
-It'll need stitching immediately.
You're losing a lot of blood.
-No... ♪♪ -Martin served in the Army -- Intelligence Corps.
Clever.
He came all the way through without a scratch.
And then, afterwards, they sent him to Germany -- Felsenheim.
-Felsenheim?
-One of the war trials.
The Nazis, in the dock.
It went on and on and on.
I wanted him home.
Days and days, staring at those...barbarians.
Watching them, listening to them.
And then, there he is, lying in a bed in the John Carpenter.
And who does he see?
Who does he see?
♪♪ -No!
-What the hell?!
What's the matter?
-I said no.
-As you wish.
Let's see if you're still saying that after the first stitch.
They do say that a needle pushing through damaged flesh is as painful as being run through with a sword, and you need 12, 13 stitches.
If I were a sadist, it would be my lucky day.
-Tell me about your relationship with Josephine Fallon.
-You think I killed Jo?
That's right, you don't trust me.
-Did you?
-No, I did not.
We did see each other, for about a year.
I don't expect you to believe me, but I was extremely fond of her.
It was her who called it off.
I've never fought for a woman before, but for her, I did.
-Why did she call it off?
-Said it had run its course.
I'm certain there was nobody else.
She wasn't like that.
-When was this?
-About three months ago.
I had no reason at all to want to hurt her.
She was discreet.
She wouldn't have talked.
Yes, I was hurt when she finished it but not that hurt.
Ready?
♪♪ ♪♪ -Oh, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on.
Oh... [ Receiver clicks ] [ Door opens ] [ Door closes ] ♪♪ -[ Sniffs ] Jo Fallon was pregnant.
You didn't know?
-No.
-13 or 14 weeks.
What would you have done if she'd told you?
-I'd have helped her.
-To get rid of it?
-No.
You don't think she killed herself bec-- My wife and I -- It hasn't, uh... ...happened for us.
Her fault, not mine.
I was trying to make peace with it, never becoming a father.
-Where did you serve in the war?
-What?
-Where exactly did you serve?
-Is this the Gearing thing again?
-Christ's sake!
Cairo.
You know I don't have to answer any of your questions.
-I've checked.
Everyone who's supposed to be in Nightingale House is here.
-Thanks.
-I'm done here.
I'll be in the hospital, unless you want to arrest me.
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Book slams shut ] [ Door opens ] -Are you all right?
They told me you got hit.
-Someone attacked me in the woods.
I'm fine.
-You look terrible.
You didn't get a look at 'em?
-No.
-Well, I think I've got something that's going to make you feel a whole lot better.
You were right.
Dettinger.
Something did happen while he was on the ward.
He recognized someone.
-Who?
-This is going to sound insane.
So he was at the Nazi war trials, right?
Germany.
A place called Felsenheim.
"Funny sort of hospital, this, Ma.
They've got Grobel working here, as a sister."
-A sister?
-He was on Brumfett's ward, wasn't he?
And there's more.
When his mother told Courtney-Briggs what he'd said, he gave her a discount off her bill, halved it, and told them not to mention it to anyone.
So, Dettinger recognizes Brumfett working in this English hospital, bold as brass.
He says something to Pearce.
Now, there's nothing that Pearce likes more than a bit of blackmail, so she confronts Brumfett.
And Brumfett takes the first opportunity to kill her.
She had time, just between breakfast and going to her ward.
-Felsenheim.
-Where the hell did you get that?
-It was borrowed from the library by Heather Pearce, on Fallon's library card.
Read it to me.
-Yeah, Felsenheim.
Here she is.
Irmgard Grobel.
Jesus Christ!
Uh, one of eight working at a medical facility, accused of murdering 122 Polish prisoners by lethal injection.
Bloody hell.
Uh, found guilty.
Sentenced to... 12 years.
Leniency exercised because of her age -- 19.
Well, that's her, then.
Brumfett's this Grobel.
Though it does seem incredible that he'd recognize that mousy little bint after, what, 30 years?
I guess he did.
-But he didn't say her name -- Brumfett.
-What?
No.
Well, not according to his mother, but... it's got to be her, hasn't it?
Why would he have seen another sister?
♪♪ -It was nonsense.
Dettinger was an extremely sick man, delirious a lot of the time.
But I didn't want her running to the press and linking my name with some insane scandal, or the hospital's.
So I gave her what she wanted and reduced her bill to shut her up.
-And you didn't think to tell us this?
-I wanted to close it down.
I didn't think it was relevant.
-We decide what's relevant.
-Would Dettinger have seen any other sisters on the ward, apart from Brumfett?
-Probably.
Sister Gearing is often conducting prac-- What's going on?
You're not saying he was right?
-Fetch Brumfett from her ward.
I'll find Gearing.
-Sister Brumfett's not on her ward.
She finished at 4:00 this afternoon.
-But I thought -- What?
Matron said -- She said she was on her ward.
♪♪ -What's happening?
-Do you know where Brumfett is or Sister Gearing?
-No, I've been in my office.
-Sir!
Sir!
They're not up there.
-Brumfett finished her shift at 4:00.
-Did she?
I'm sure she wasn't supposed to.
-Fire!
Fire!
-Wait here, girls.
♪♪ -I-I think it's the gardener's hut!
It could spread!
-Go back, all of you!
♪♪ -Call the fire brigade.
Where's Morag?
Is she up there?
-I didn't see her.
-Where is she?
You're here.
-Of course.
Locked in, ain't I?
-What about Sister Brumfett?
-Keep the girls upstairs.
♪♪ There won't be anyone in there.
♪♪ -You don't think...?
-Morag, get back!
Get back!
-Get right back!
-We need to do something!
-No!
No!
[ Glass shatters ] ♪♪ ♪♪ -Oh...me!
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ -Go and secure the house, make sure nobody leaves.
♪♪ ♪♪ -I haven't touched anything.
[ Light switch clicks ] It's on the bed.
-"I killed Heather Pearce.
She had found out something she had no business to know.
I killed Josephine Fallon because I knew she was bound to discover the nature of that secret and reveal it to the authorities.
I am filled with remorse for the pain I have caused.
I can no longer live.
Please forget I ever existed.
Ethel Brumfett."
-We don't want to stay.
We don't like this place.
-We don't want to stay in this...place.
-Well, go, then.
Run back to the farm.
It's not like you'll be missed much.
-It's not places which are evil.
It's people.
I feel sorry for you.
I'd rather be me than you.
I'd rather be me than have to live with a heart that's hard and corrupted... and graceless.
-Wow.
Whole sentences.
-Ethel Brumfett -- that wasn't who she really was.
She was born in Germany.
Her real name was -- -Irmgard Grobel.
-You know.
She told me years ago.
So long ago, when we first started training.
I think she really needed to tell someone.
Just one person.
She was horrified by what she'd been involved in.
She never told me exactly what, but she did say that she was very young and that she was only doing what she was told to do.
After a while, I stopped thinking about it.
Sometimes, I'd even wonder if I'd imagined the whole thing.
And she'd served her sentence.
Every day, she was atoning for what she'd done.
She was a brilliant, brilliant nurse.
When did you find out?
-Not long ago.
But I did manage to get the Yard to raise someone from Records just now.
They've located her file.
The courier's on his way with it.
You see, she didn't serve her sentence.
Not all of it.
She absconded after 14 months with one of the British soldiers who was supposed to be guarding her.
So her case is open.
She's wanted.
It wasn't just her reputation and her vocation she risked losing, it was... her freedom.
Extraordinary, really, that she should be... recognized after all these years.
She must have changed a lot.
There was nothing remarkable about her, was there?
Extraordinary that one of her guards would fall in love with her and risk his freedom to run away with her.
There was nothing romantic about her.
Nothing inspiring or...irresistible.
Or perhaps there was.
There'll be a photograph in her record, so we'll soon see.
-Stop it.
-It was you Dettinger recognized, wasn't it, that face across a room.
Easy mistake to make, to think you were a sister.
That uniform, it's very like the ones sisters wore during the war.
-I didn't kill those girls.
She did.
I wasn't even here when she killed Pearce.
I was horrified, incensed when she told me what she'd done.
And to kill Fallon... All I said was that Fallon was bound to find out about the book.
I didn't mean for her to... She was obsessed.
She was obsessed with me.
She couldn't bear the thought of losing me.
-It must have been very hard for you, all those years, knowing the power she had over you.
-She loved it.
She never, ever left me alone.
Everywhere I went, every job I took, every holiday, every Christmas, she was there.
I hated her.
-So you killed her?
-No.
-Or did you simply persuade her that she had to do this one... heroic thing for you?
I will find out the truth.
It would be better if you told me.
-Where were you when you were 19?
University?
Cozy rooms, toast by the fire?
I was being made to work for people who terrified me.
I didn't want to kill those men, those poor, trusting men.
They thought I was inoculating them against TB.
They'd file in, one by one, smile at me... thank me for being kind.
Some of them would try to touch me but not many.
They'd lean close, breathe in as I pushed poison into their veins.
I can still feel it, their breath against my face.
♪♪ You're like me.
You don't just see the every day, the banal, human beings running about this little planet, thinking everything they do matters and has meaning.
You... you see the underneath... ...our souls.
You know me.
I've served my time -- a higher justice.
-Human beings do matter, and... every human being has a right to justice.
[ Door opens ] -Let me go.
-Yes, Sergeant?
-Well, we found drag marks, sir.
Most of them have been pretty much washed away, but... well, there's one definite track where it looks like a body could have been dragged.
-Good.
Start a search in Sister Brumfett's room.
Then start in here.
♪♪ Don't.
♪♪ Irmgard Grobel, I'm arresting you on suspicion of absconding from jail and on suspicion of the murder of Ethel Brumfett.
You do not have to say anything unless you wish to, but anything you do say will be taken down in writing and may be used in evidence.
Do you understand?
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Car door closes ] [ Car door opens, closes ] [ Engine starts ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Door closes ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Engine starts ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
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