The Catherine Tate Show (2004) s01e05 Episode Script
Episode 5
1 I think that just about brings us up to date with the woods and Payne contract.
Sandra, do you have anything to add? Not really.
I'm meeting alistair Payne now, so I'll pass on any further information I get.
Of course, without your initial lead, we wouldn't be with woods and Payne in the first place.
Well, now that we've got them, let's keep them.
Absolutely.
Last hit.
Thomas, did you want a Coca-Cola? Do you want a Coca-Cola? - Let me know before I close the cooler door.
- Um It's too late.
You'll have to get it on your own.
- Chloe, do you want one? - No, thanks.
Right.
Darling, what did mummy tell you? Not with a metal spoon.
You'll bruise the dough.
But it's only panini, mummy.
Let's do it properly.
Are you putting olives in yours? - Yes.
- That's fine but there's only one olive fork.
Chloe's using it right now.
Actually, I'm still waiting for my olives to temper.
Hello.
Hello, Jacques.
We're fine.
How are you? Yah.
Yah.
No, I don't want to sit down.
Just tell me what's happened.
Right.
Right.
Um Listen, Jacques, I'll have to call you back.
Yes, they're here with me now.
They'll be fine.
Yes, thank you, I'm fine.
I'll get back to you this afternoon.
And, Jacques Thank you.
I know this wasn't an easy call to make.
Thomas Chloe I've got something to tell you.
You know daddy left for Paris this morning? That was Jacques, daddy's European p.
A.
I've got bad news.
Daddy hasn't been able to find any good brie this trip.
- But, mummy, it's the school picnic tomorrow! - I know, Thomas.
Thomas, I know.
- Has he tried le bon marché? - He'll have tried there first.
We have some wensleydale left over from Ginny's christening.
It's a Parisian picnic.
Do you want people to laugh at you? - No.
- No, of course not.
Come on.
Think! Roquefort eats well with some good bread.
That's good.
Pass mummy the phone book.
Quick sticks! Thomas, get me two nurofen and a glass of pellegrino.
I'm getting one of my heads.
- We certainly have enough here.
- I need the data results by Friday afternoon.
- I trust you can do that? - Why don't we say 1o o'clock Friday morning? No point in waiting till Saturday to start the weekend.
Friday morning it is.
You have my numbers if you need me.
Last hit! What we'll do now is have a short informal test as per clown key stage two.
I'll be working with you one on one, starting with, erJill.
Thanks.
Let's begin with a little test of the basics from the first term.
It's just such a relief to feel normal again! Ok.
So let's push on and look at some of the skills you've learnt so far.
- Do you remember the clown's walk? - Yes.
Let's try that.
Good.
And into the trip.
- Whoops! - Excellent, Jill.
This is how they found me, you know.
Slouched over the steering wheel like this.
Ok, Jill.
What do we do when we've done a trick? How do we present ourselves? - Yes, that's right.
- Yeah? - Good.
Give us some jazz hands, Jill.
- Oh, yes.
- Oh, God! - What's the matter? It's the whiplash.
Don't worry.
Just try and keep your mind on the task in hand.
- Now surprise yourselt by squeezing the horn.
- I love this trick! Let's see that, then.
Ooh! Ooh! If he'd had this, I might have heard him.
Right.
How about uniform? - How's your wig? - It's great.
It's big, it's curly, it's very bright.
If he'd been wearing one of these, I might have seen him.
What about your squirty flower? I've been practising this.
Ooh! Gosh! - They're still there.
A bit withered, but - What are? The flowers tied to a tree.
Ok.
One last thing.
Do you remember the bucket trick? Yes.
That's my favourite! Let's see that.
Good.
Good.
Oh! Excellent, Jill! - Very funny.
- Oh, God! - What now? - It looks like shattered windscreen.
Sorry.
Hello.
ErmI just wondered, have you seen that at all? It's quite Last hit! - Are you still hanging around here? - Yeah.
- You're never out of this hospital, are you? - Not at the moment, no.
You was here all last week, weren't you? My mum's very ill, so I'm here quite a lot at the moment.
- It's a worry, isn't it? - Yeah.
I just had a few days off meselt, and by Christ I needed it! It's difficult trying to fill your time, though.
I watched ''ready steady cook'' for a few tips and I got one - don't watch it, it's shite! Mind you, there was this great hunk of a lad doing the cooking.
James something or other, his name was.
Cockney lad, I think.
I thought to myselt, ''by Christ, I'd like to baste his Turkey for him!'' Know what I mean? He reminded me of Gerald - my Gerald.
He could cook.
My God, he could cook.
Pies, cakes, pastries, anything.
He'd just whip it up.
Just whip it right up, you know what I mean? I shouldn't have let him get away.
It's a bit tricky when they leave you for a man, though.
- Do you go out much at all? - ErNot recently, no.
I went out last night.
I went out with the girls.
Karaoke.
Great crack.
They all wanted a song so I did me Bonnie Tyler, 'cause I'm holding out for a hero as well, know what I mean? God, I was ripe for it last night.
You could have just taken me.
I had all me Pamela Anderson gear on.
Getting loads of male attention as usual.
The girls all said to me, ''God almighty, cover yourselt up.
''You're fat and obnoxious and you make us feel sick.
'' yeah, sick with envy more like, know what I mean? You should come out with us tonight.
I get off at 7.
3o.
You could show me a good time.
- Have you any plans at all? - No, I'm Well, then, that's set.
Halt-past seven outside casualty.
Come along for the ride.
The ride! ErNo.
I'm waiting for my mother to come out of the operating theatre, so Oh, Jesus! I've a head like a sieve today.
It's bad news, I'm afraid.
Your mother passed away ten minutes ago.
I'm very, very sorry, mr Wallace.
I'll send a nurse through and she'll send youShe'll send you in.
- Wait, sorryWallace? My name's Willis.
- What? Your name's Willis? - Not Wallace? - No.
- Are you sure? - Yes.
Willis, Willis course, it'd kill 'em to put these in alphabetical order, wouldn't it? Oh, here you are.
No, yours is alive.
There you go.
Close shave there, wasn't it, eh? Oh, no, hang on.
Hang on a minute.
- Willis.
Is that with the I-s? - Yeah.
Oh, God.
She's dead, too .
.
I think.
Is that on the same line as that? I don't know.
Oh, this is useless.
Look, we've got your number.
We'll ring you this afternoon.
Is that all right? Don't forget what I said, though.
Halt-past seven in casualty.
- Oh, hello.
- Hello.
Last hit! No! No! Get off! Last hit! Last hit! Yeah, ambulance, please.
Don't touch him till the ambulance arrives.
Last hit! Oh, you're here already.
- Can I get you a drink? - No, I'm fine.
- A pint of Armstrong's? - I don't think I'd keep it down, Geoff.
Best not, then.
So, how have you been? How do you think I've been? I won't keep you long.
As I said on the phone, I've got a photocall with the ''echo'' at six.
Oh, yes.
I've heard all about your new majorette, MelanieWhat's-her-name.
Melanie Watkins.
I hear you've made her captain already.
I get chucked out of the Doncaster spinners on a Monday, and Melanie Watkins gets my majorette captain title by the Friday.
My God, I bet she looks like the cat that got the cream! Bunty, she's nine.
Yeah.
Does she realise she'll be on the majorette scrap heap by the time she's 3o? We'll probably bring it up nearer the time.
So, you asked me to come here and here I am.
As usual, someone shouted ''shit!'' And I've jumped on the shovel.
I do appreciate your time.
If this is to talk me into teaching, you're wasting your time.
This is nothing to do with you teaching.
Good, because I haven't got the time these days.
Since the spinners dumped me, I've not stopped.
I'm busy most nights, even busier Saturday mornings.
- Yes, we know you are.
- What's that supposed to mean? - You've been seen.
- I don't know what you're talking about.
Right.
Saturday morning marching practice, you were seen watching us from your car wearing dark glasses, with a blanket on your head.
At the nma awards in Manchester, you were seen on the front row wearing a false nose and a moustache.
Sunday morning, we were a curtain raiser for the rugby and somehow you were a touch judge.
It's not fair what you're doing.
You're frightening the kids.
They're having nightmares.
I tried.
I tried to stay away, Geoff, but I'm a majorette.
It's in me blood.
I know you are, and you're a bloody good one, but we can't have you marching with ten-year-olds.
It looks like we've had you on hormones.
I'm a Doncaster spinner! Do you know what it's like knowing you'll never march ten abreast, spinning a Baton to ''the eye of the tiger'' ever again? Come on, bunty.
There's a big wide world out there.
I mean, you're 31 years old.
Do you not want a family? I had a family, Geoff.
I had a family.
And look what they did to me.
Well, I'll just get on with me life as if the last 25 years never happened.
It can't be that difficult.
You're obviously doing it.
You should be finishing up now, so paints down, please.
Honker, let's have a look at your little man.
- Mee-mee! - Fantastic, honker.
Well done! - Mee-mee! - Cheer up, boo.
It's your turn.
Oh, boo! Well done! Ok, Jill.
Let's see what you've got for us.
Here we go.
You should have been there.
- He's in very good hands.
Don't worry.
- Excuse me, love.
- Last hit.
- Oh, no! - No, no, please! - Calm down.
He'll be all right.
You don't understand! He's getting away.
Please.
Move! Move! No! Stop it! Hi, Jane.
It's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to mark warriner, please? Marky, you bastard! Martin webb.
How goes it? Oh, real good night.
Got completely hammered.
Only had four hours' sleep.
I'm on the train now.
I'm gonna get me head down.
Catch a few zeds before you bastards get your hands on me.
I thought you'd never ask.
We, er We won best regional.
Yeah, yeah, result, yeah.
I think I've still got a bit of blood running through me alcohol vessels well, free beer, weren't it? Yeah, absolutely twatted.
Marky, are you on your own? Yeah, listenI copped off as well.
Hey, shut it, gobshite! That's for me to know and you to find out.
Yeah, yeah mental! No, no, you go.
I'm trying to get me head down.
All right, mate.
I'll speak to you later.
Hey, marky, we can oh.
Hi, Jane, it's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to Richard Bolton? Thank you, my darling.
You're a gentleman and a scholar.
It don't mean anything.
It just means thank you.
It's women like that that give you dicky! How goes it, you bastard? Martin webb.
Oh, stormer, absolute stormer.
Yeah, we won two awards.
Best regional and some other lot.
Probably shit, but I'll take the glory, no probs.
I think the company card's gone into meltdown.
We were on the old champag-nee from seven.
Yeah, mental, yeah.
Listen, I No, you're all right.
I've got to go as well.
I'm trying to get me head down for a bit.
I'll ring you later if I've still got a bit of blood running through me alco hello? Signal! re-redial when the crowd say Bo selecta! hi, Jane, it's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to rob mullett, please? Chas Smith, then.
Kev Marv sorry, who hasn't gone to lunch yet? Richard who? Yeah, I know who you mean.
He'll do, yeah.
Thank you.
Ricardo, you fat bastard! Martin webb, how goes it? Martin webb.
Second floor.
Do you know Barry cheeseman? Exactly.
I'm a big pal of his.
Can you get a message to Perry blenkinsop, please? Can you tell him that we won everything? And can you ask him not to ring me? I'm trying to get me head down for a Well, you can give him the mess Whoa, whoa, pal! Hang on! Do you know who you're talking to? You're talking to a man that spent yesterday afternoon playing golt with Ralph harbin, spent 2oo quid on a new suit from Oxford street - that's in London, slept with a prostitute Well, I didn't know she was a prostitute.
I'd have probably spent that amount of money on her anyway.
Have you got to go? I've got to go first.
Bye! Yes! Hiya.
Are you all right? What you doing? Do you want anything from the thingy? A sandwich or owt? Listen, I might come and sit in smoking with you.
It's a bit dead in here.
All right.
No, I've got me inhaler.
I'll be all right.
All right, mam.
I'll see you in a minute.
Hey, mam, this'll kill you I've got to go as well.
All right.
See you later.
Bye.
Ok.
ThreeTwoOne stop twisting.
Ok.
Honker? Mee-mee! Hey-hey! Ok, boo.
Well done.
Very good.
It's long, isn't it? Like your face? Jill, what have you got for us? That's the fifth headless body this month.
No fingerprints.
Been in the drink too long.
- There's obviously some psycho out there.
- Not necessarily.
The lady who did this may be as sane as you or I.
Why do you think it's a lady? Because statistically, there are more ladies than chaps in London.
Logically, the perpetrator of these crimes is more likely to be a lady than a chap.
It'll be a nightmare identifying the bodies.
No heads, no fingerprints.
- I'd have thought that would make it easier.
- How's that, ma'am? Think about it.
How many people do you know without heads or fingerprints? Anyone like that would stick out a mile.
But when they were alive, they would have had heads and fingerprints.
The cause of death in these cases may not necessarily be decapitation.
So You mean they were killed before they were decapitated? You know, technically, it is possible to live without a head.
You know the phrase about headless chickens running around.
They don't live for long.
They fall over after a few seconds.
You couldn't live a normal life as a chicken without a head.
I couldn't live a normal life as a chicken without a head? Don't be too sure.
No, not you, ma'am, a chicken.
Are you saying that a chicken's life is a normal life? What's normal about having feathers and eating grain? - I'm not sure where you're going with this.
- You're still learning, aren't you? I like to think I do a good professional job.
I went to embroidery classes when I was a child.
I learnt more about being a detective from those embroidery classes than I ever did at .
.
That place where I learned to be a detective.
- I don't understand, ma'am.
- One day you will, Whittaker.
One day you will.
I'm sorry you've been waiting so long.
It really should only be family.
I just want a minute.
- One second, then you'll have to leave.
- Yes, of course.
Anthony, it's Sandra Graham from fullston's.
I don't know if you can hear me, but I just want to say I'm so sorry.
This is all my fault.
If you can hear me, please give me a sign, just to let me know you're You're all right! You're all right! Last hit! - It's a lot of rubbish! - It's a pound shop, nan.
What a load of old shit! Nan! - I wouldn't give you a thank you for any of it! - Well, let's go.
Hang on.
What's this? It's a bust-o-matic.
''Increases bust size in only five minutes a day.
'' what a load of old shit! How much is it? - It's a pound.
- How much is this? - A pound.
- I'm talking.
- Everything's a pound.
- Everything's a pound? Well, that ain't bad, is it? That's very reasonable.
I don't know where I'd put it all, but I'd take it off your hands for a pound.
No, nan, it's a pound per item.
What, each? Yeah, every single thing is a pound.
It's a pound shop.
What, 2o shillings? That's scandalous money, that is.
- How much is that? - It's a pound.
- What is it? - It's a garden gnome.
- What's it do? - Sits in your garden.
I'll take a couple of them.
They don't eat nothing, do they? - Come on, nan.
We've got to go.
- What's this? Jam jars.
You don't want them.
- How much are they? - A pound.
- For all three? - Yeah.
You get three for a pound.
What do you want them for? We've got to go.
- 'Ere, I ain't told you! - What? - She's dead, then.
- Who? - That Jackson woman.
Flat above me.
Dead.
- What? Terrible, innit? It frightens the life out of me.
- Mrs Jackson's dead? - Yeah.
- Well, how did she die? - She had .
.
Didn't she? - What are you talking about? - She's dead.
- I know.
- Well, shut up, then.
- Oh, my God.
- That's what I'm trying to tell ya.
I can't talk about it, it frightens me so much.
You don't know what to do to be right.
Those poor children.
- I can't believe it.
- Yeah, well, it's true.
She's dead.
- I didn't even know she was ill.
- Well, she ain't no more! That's it.
Gone.
Finished.
Dead.
Done.
Com.
That's your lot.
Obsolete.
Ta-ta.
- Who told you she was dead? - What? - Who told you? - Oh, leave off.
- Who told you? - No one.
I don't need telling.
I know.
Oh, my God.
The woman's dead, so let her rest in peace.
Little dog.
Mrs Jackson's not dead, is she? - I'll have a couple of them, I think.
- Nan? - Jam jars.
- Nan - Can't have too many, can you? - Nan! - What? - Mrs Jackson's not dead, is she? - Well, I ain't seen her for four days.
- For God's sake! Are they all in threes? All in threes, are they? I could do with four.
- These are a pound, love.
- Do you need a bag? - What? - Do you need a carrier bag? Course I do.
Where do you think I'm gonna carry 'em, on me head? - That's a pound and a penny, please.
- What? They charge for carriers because everything's a pound.
A pound for a carrier? The jam jars are a pound, carriers are a penny.
- You've got to pay for the carriers? - I've got some money.
- Don't you dare! I've never taken money off you! - Do you want the carrier? Oh, fucking chill out! Let's have a look at these.
There's a queue.
If you want to look at them, can you stand over there, please? I haven't got time to be standing anywhere! I have an appointment.
People have better things to do than sift through old tat in 'ere! Come on, you! You're making me late! What a load of old shit! Thank you for coming.
Not at all.
If there's anything at all the company can do? Thank you.
That means so much.
I know he was only with you for a year, but Tony said he loved working at fullston's.
He had such a great future with us.
Such a tragic loss.
This is Sandra Graham, by the way.
She was Tony's manager.
You're Sandra Graham! - He must have meant you.
- I'm sorry? The last night at the hospital, Tony managed to say a few words.
He had a message for you.
It didn't make much sense to us, but it might to you.
What did he say? He said to do this and say, ''last hit''.
Sandra, are you all right? Yeah, um No! No! No, last hit! Last hit! Last hit! Last hit! Last hit! I once met a man with a sense of adventure he was dressed to thrill wherever he went he said, ''let's make love on a Mountain top ''under the stars on a big, hard rock'' I said, ''in these shoes? ''I don't think so'' 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406
Sandra, do you have anything to add? Not really.
I'm meeting alistair Payne now, so I'll pass on any further information I get.
Of course, without your initial lead, we wouldn't be with woods and Payne in the first place.
Well, now that we've got them, let's keep them.
Absolutely.
Last hit.
Thomas, did you want a Coca-Cola? Do you want a Coca-Cola? - Let me know before I close the cooler door.
- Um It's too late.
You'll have to get it on your own.
- Chloe, do you want one? - No, thanks.
Right.
Darling, what did mummy tell you? Not with a metal spoon.
You'll bruise the dough.
But it's only panini, mummy.
Let's do it properly.
Are you putting olives in yours? - Yes.
- That's fine but there's only one olive fork.
Chloe's using it right now.
Actually, I'm still waiting for my olives to temper.
Hello.
Hello, Jacques.
We're fine.
How are you? Yah.
Yah.
No, I don't want to sit down.
Just tell me what's happened.
Right.
Right.
Um Listen, Jacques, I'll have to call you back.
Yes, they're here with me now.
They'll be fine.
Yes, thank you, I'm fine.
I'll get back to you this afternoon.
And, Jacques Thank you.
I know this wasn't an easy call to make.
Thomas Chloe I've got something to tell you.
You know daddy left for Paris this morning? That was Jacques, daddy's European p.
A.
I've got bad news.
Daddy hasn't been able to find any good brie this trip.
- But, mummy, it's the school picnic tomorrow! - I know, Thomas.
Thomas, I know.
- Has he tried le bon marché? - He'll have tried there first.
We have some wensleydale left over from Ginny's christening.
It's a Parisian picnic.
Do you want people to laugh at you? - No.
- No, of course not.
Come on.
Think! Roquefort eats well with some good bread.
That's good.
Pass mummy the phone book.
Quick sticks! Thomas, get me two nurofen and a glass of pellegrino.
I'm getting one of my heads.
- We certainly have enough here.
- I need the data results by Friday afternoon.
- I trust you can do that? - Why don't we say 1o o'clock Friday morning? No point in waiting till Saturday to start the weekend.
Friday morning it is.
You have my numbers if you need me.
Last hit! What we'll do now is have a short informal test as per clown key stage two.
I'll be working with you one on one, starting with, erJill.
Thanks.
Let's begin with a little test of the basics from the first term.
It's just such a relief to feel normal again! Ok.
So let's push on and look at some of the skills you've learnt so far.
- Do you remember the clown's walk? - Yes.
Let's try that.
Good.
And into the trip.
- Whoops! - Excellent, Jill.
This is how they found me, you know.
Slouched over the steering wheel like this.
Ok, Jill.
What do we do when we've done a trick? How do we present ourselves? - Yes, that's right.
- Yeah? - Good.
Give us some jazz hands, Jill.
- Oh, yes.
- Oh, God! - What's the matter? It's the whiplash.
Don't worry.
Just try and keep your mind on the task in hand.
- Now surprise yourselt by squeezing the horn.
- I love this trick! Let's see that, then.
Ooh! Ooh! If he'd had this, I might have heard him.
Right.
How about uniform? - How's your wig? - It's great.
It's big, it's curly, it's very bright.
If he'd been wearing one of these, I might have seen him.
What about your squirty flower? I've been practising this.
Ooh! Gosh! - They're still there.
A bit withered, but - What are? The flowers tied to a tree.
Ok.
One last thing.
Do you remember the bucket trick? Yes.
That's my favourite! Let's see that.
Good.
Good.
Oh! Excellent, Jill! - Very funny.
- Oh, God! - What now? - It looks like shattered windscreen.
Sorry.
Hello.
ErmI just wondered, have you seen that at all? It's quite Last hit! - Are you still hanging around here? - Yeah.
- You're never out of this hospital, are you? - Not at the moment, no.
You was here all last week, weren't you? My mum's very ill, so I'm here quite a lot at the moment.
- It's a worry, isn't it? - Yeah.
I just had a few days off meselt, and by Christ I needed it! It's difficult trying to fill your time, though.
I watched ''ready steady cook'' for a few tips and I got one - don't watch it, it's shite! Mind you, there was this great hunk of a lad doing the cooking.
James something or other, his name was.
Cockney lad, I think.
I thought to myselt, ''by Christ, I'd like to baste his Turkey for him!'' Know what I mean? He reminded me of Gerald - my Gerald.
He could cook.
My God, he could cook.
Pies, cakes, pastries, anything.
He'd just whip it up.
Just whip it right up, you know what I mean? I shouldn't have let him get away.
It's a bit tricky when they leave you for a man, though.
- Do you go out much at all? - ErNot recently, no.
I went out last night.
I went out with the girls.
Karaoke.
Great crack.
They all wanted a song so I did me Bonnie Tyler, 'cause I'm holding out for a hero as well, know what I mean? God, I was ripe for it last night.
You could have just taken me.
I had all me Pamela Anderson gear on.
Getting loads of male attention as usual.
The girls all said to me, ''God almighty, cover yourselt up.
''You're fat and obnoxious and you make us feel sick.
'' yeah, sick with envy more like, know what I mean? You should come out with us tonight.
I get off at 7.
3o.
You could show me a good time.
- Have you any plans at all? - No, I'm Well, then, that's set.
Halt-past seven outside casualty.
Come along for the ride.
The ride! ErNo.
I'm waiting for my mother to come out of the operating theatre, so Oh, Jesus! I've a head like a sieve today.
It's bad news, I'm afraid.
Your mother passed away ten minutes ago.
I'm very, very sorry, mr Wallace.
I'll send a nurse through and she'll send youShe'll send you in.
- Wait, sorryWallace? My name's Willis.
- What? Your name's Willis? - Not Wallace? - No.
- Are you sure? - Yes.
Willis, Willis course, it'd kill 'em to put these in alphabetical order, wouldn't it? Oh, here you are.
No, yours is alive.
There you go.
Close shave there, wasn't it, eh? Oh, no, hang on.
Hang on a minute.
- Willis.
Is that with the I-s? - Yeah.
Oh, God.
She's dead, too .
.
I think.
Is that on the same line as that? I don't know.
Oh, this is useless.
Look, we've got your number.
We'll ring you this afternoon.
Is that all right? Don't forget what I said, though.
Halt-past seven in casualty.
- Oh, hello.
- Hello.
Last hit! No! No! Get off! Last hit! Last hit! Yeah, ambulance, please.
Don't touch him till the ambulance arrives.
Last hit! Oh, you're here already.
- Can I get you a drink? - No, I'm fine.
- A pint of Armstrong's? - I don't think I'd keep it down, Geoff.
Best not, then.
So, how have you been? How do you think I've been? I won't keep you long.
As I said on the phone, I've got a photocall with the ''echo'' at six.
Oh, yes.
I've heard all about your new majorette, MelanieWhat's-her-name.
Melanie Watkins.
I hear you've made her captain already.
I get chucked out of the Doncaster spinners on a Monday, and Melanie Watkins gets my majorette captain title by the Friday.
My God, I bet she looks like the cat that got the cream! Bunty, she's nine.
Yeah.
Does she realise she'll be on the majorette scrap heap by the time she's 3o? We'll probably bring it up nearer the time.
So, you asked me to come here and here I am.
As usual, someone shouted ''shit!'' And I've jumped on the shovel.
I do appreciate your time.
If this is to talk me into teaching, you're wasting your time.
This is nothing to do with you teaching.
Good, because I haven't got the time these days.
Since the spinners dumped me, I've not stopped.
I'm busy most nights, even busier Saturday mornings.
- Yes, we know you are.
- What's that supposed to mean? - You've been seen.
- I don't know what you're talking about.
Right.
Saturday morning marching practice, you were seen watching us from your car wearing dark glasses, with a blanket on your head.
At the nma awards in Manchester, you were seen on the front row wearing a false nose and a moustache.
Sunday morning, we were a curtain raiser for the rugby and somehow you were a touch judge.
It's not fair what you're doing.
You're frightening the kids.
They're having nightmares.
I tried.
I tried to stay away, Geoff, but I'm a majorette.
It's in me blood.
I know you are, and you're a bloody good one, but we can't have you marching with ten-year-olds.
It looks like we've had you on hormones.
I'm a Doncaster spinner! Do you know what it's like knowing you'll never march ten abreast, spinning a Baton to ''the eye of the tiger'' ever again? Come on, bunty.
There's a big wide world out there.
I mean, you're 31 years old.
Do you not want a family? I had a family, Geoff.
I had a family.
And look what they did to me.
Well, I'll just get on with me life as if the last 25 years never happened.
It can't be that difficult.
You're obviously doing it.
You should be finishing up now, so paints down, please.
Honker, let's have a look at your little man.
- Mee-mee! - Fantastic, honker.
Well done! - Mee-mee! - Cheer up, boo.
It's your turn.
Oh, boo! Well done! Ok, Jill.
Let's see what you've got for us.
Here we go.
You should have been there.
- He's in very good hands.
Don't worry.
- Excuse me, love.
- Last hit.
- Oh, no! - No, no, please! - Calm down.
He'll be all right.
You don't understand! He's getting away.
Please.
Move! Move! No! Stop it! Hi, Jane.
It's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to mark warriner, please? Marky, you bastard! Martin webb.
How goes it? Oh, real good night.
Got completely hammered.
Only had four hours' sleep.
I'm on the train now.
I'm gonna get me head down.
Catch a few zeds before you bastards get your hands on me.
I thought you'd never ask.
We, er We won best regional.
Yeah, yeah, result, yeah.
I think I've still got a bit of blood running through me alcohol vessels well, free beer, weren't it? Yeah, absolutely twatted.
Marky, are you on your own? Yeah, listenI copped off as well.
Hey, shut it, gobshite! That's for me to know and you to find out.
Yeah, yeah mental! No, no, you go.
I'm trying to get me head down.
All right, mate.
I'll speak to you later.
Hey, marky, we can oh.
Hi, Jane, it's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to Richard Bolton? Thank you, my darling.
You're a gentleman and a scholar.
It don't mean anything.
It just means thank you.
It's women like that that give you dicky! How goes it, you bastard? Martin webb.
Oh, stormer, absolute stormer.
Yeah, we won two awards.
Best regional and some other lot.
Probably shit, but I'll take the glory, no probs.
I think the company card's gone into meltdown.
We were on the old champag-nee from seven.
Yeah, mental, yeah.
Listen, I No, you're all right.
I've got to go as well.
I'm trying to get me head down for a bit.
I'll ring you later if I've still got a bit of blood running through me alco hello? Signal! re-redial when the crowd say Bo selecta! hi, Jane, it's Martin webb.
Can you put me through to rob mullett, please? Chas Smith, then.
Kev Marv sorry, who hasn't gone to lunch yet? Richard who? Yeah, I know who you mean.
He'll do, yeah.
Thank you.
Ricardo, you fat bastard! Martin webb, how goes it? Martin webb.
Second floor.
Do you know Barry cheeseman? Exactly.
I'm a big pal of his.
Can you get a message to Perry blenkinsop, please? Can you tell him that we won everything? And can you ask him not to ring me? I'm trying to get me head down for a Well, you can give him the mess Whoa, whoa, pal! Hang on! Do you know who you're talking to? You're talking to a man that spent yesterday afternoon playing golt with Ralph harbin, spent 2oo quid on a new suit from Oxford street - that's in London, slept with a prostitute Well, I didn't know she was a prostitute.
I'd have probably spent that amount of money on her anyway.
Have you got to go? I've got to go first.
Bye! Yes! Hiya.
Are you all right? What you doing? Do you want anything from the thingy? A sandwich or owt? Listen, I might come and sit in smoking with you.
It's a bit dead in here.
All right.
No, I've got me inhaler.
I'll be all right.
All right, mam.
I'll see you in a minute.
Hey, mam, this'll kill you I've got to go as well.
All right.
See you later.
Bye.
Ok.
ThreeTwoOne stop twisting.
Ok.
Honker? Mee-mee! Hey-hey! Ok, boo.
Well done.
Very good.
It's long, isn't it? Like your face? Jill, what have you got for us? That's the fifth headless body this month.
No fingerprints.
Been in the drink too long.
- There's obviously some psycho out there.
- Not necessarily.
The lady who did this may be as sane as you or I.
Why do you think it's a lady? Because statistically, there are more ladies than chaps in London.
Logically, the perpetrator of these crimes is more likely to be a lady than a chap.
It'll be a nightmare identifying the bodies.
No heads, no fingerprints.
- I'd have thought that would make it easier.
- How's that, ma'am? Think about it.
How many people do you know without heads or fingerprints? Anyone like that would stick out a mile.
But when they were alive, they would have had heads and fingerprints.
The cause of death in these cases may not necessarily be decapitation.
So You mean they were killed before they were decapitated? You know, technically, it is possible to live without a head.
You know the phrase about headless chickens running around.
They don't live for long.
They fall over after a few seconds.
You couldn't live a normal life as a chicken without a head.
I couldn't live a normal life as a chicken without a head? Don't be too sure.
No, not you, ma'am, a chicken.
Are you saying that a chicken's life is a normal life? What's normal about having feathers and eating grain? - I'm not sure where you're going with this.
- You're still learning, aren't you? I like to think I do a good professional job.
I went to embroidery classes when I was a child.
I learnt more about being a detective from those embroidery classes than I ever did at .
.
That place where I learned to be a detective.
- I don't understand, ma'am.
- One day you will, Whittaker.
One day you will.
I'm sorry you've been waiting so long.
It really should only be family.
I just want a minute.
- One second, then you'll have to leave.
- Yes, of course.
Anthony, it's Sandra Graham from fullston's.
I don't know if you can hear me, but I just want to say I'm so sorry.
This is all my fault.
If you can hear me, please give me a sign, just to let me know you're You're all right! You're all right! Last hit! - It's a lot of rubbish! - It's a pound shop, nan.
What a load of old shit! Nan! - I wouldn't give you a thank you for any of it! - Well, let's go.
Hang on.
What's this? It's a bust-o-matic.
''Increases bust size in only five minutes a day.
'' what a load of old shit! How much is it? - It's a pound.
- How much is this? - A pound.
- I'm talking.
- Everything's a pound.
- Everything's a pound? Well, that ain't bad, is it? That's very reasonable.
I don't know where I'd put it all, but I'd take it off your hands for a pound.
No, nan, it's a pound per item.
What, each? Yeah, every single thing is a pound.
It's a pound shop.
What, 2o shillings? That's scandalous money, that is.
- How much is that? - It's a pound.
- What is it? - It's a garden gnome.
- What's it do? - Sits in your garden.
I'll take a couple of them.
They don't eat nothing, do they? - Come on, nan.
We've got to go.
- What's this? Jam jars.
You don't want them.
- How much are they? - A pound.
- For all three? - Yeah.
You get three for a pound.
What do you want them for? We've got to go.
- 'Ere, I ain't told you! - What? - She's dead, then.
- Who? - That Jackson woman.
Flat above me.
Dead.
- What? Terrible, innit? It frightens the life out of me.
- Mrs Jackson's dead? - Yeah.
- Well, how did she die? - She had .
.
Didn't she? - What are you talking about? - She's dead.
- I know.
- Well, shut up, then.
- Oh, my God.
- That's what I'm trying to tell ya.
I can't talk about it, it frightens me so much.
You don't know what to do to be right.
Those poor children.
- I can't believe it.
- Yeah, well, it's true.
She's dead.
- I didn't even know she was ill.
- Well, she ain't no more! That's it.
Gone.
Finished.
Dead.
Done.
Com.
That's your lot.
Obsolete.
Ta-ta.
- Who told you she was dead? - What? - Who told you? - Oh, leave off.
- Who told you? - No one.
I don't need telling.
I know.
Oh, my God.
The woman's dead, so let her rest in peace.
Little dog.
Mrs Jackson's not dead, is she? - I'll have a couple of them, I think.
- Nan? - Jam jars.
- Nan - Can't have too many, can you? - Nan! - What? - Mrs Jackson's not dead, is she? - Well, I ain't seen her for four days.
- For God's sake! Are they all in threes? All in threes, are they? I could do with four.
- These are a pound, love.
- Do you need a bag? - What? - Do you need a carrier bag? Course I do.
Where do you think I'm gonna carry 'em, on me head? - That's a pound and a penny, please.
- What? They charge for carriers because everything's a pound.
A pound for a carrier? The jam jars are a pound, carriers are a penny.
- You've got to pay for the carriers? - I've got some money.
- Don't you dare! I've never taken money off you! - Do you want the carrier? Oh, fucking chill out! Let's have a look at these.
There's a queue.
If you want to look at them, can you stand over there, please? I haven't got time to be standing anywhere! I have an appointment.
People have better things to do than sift through old tat in 'ere! Come on, you! You're making me late! What a load of old shit! Thank you for coming.
Not at all.
If there's anything at all the company can do? Thank you.
That means so much.
I know he was only with you for a year, but Tony said he loved working at fullston's.
He had such a great future with us.
Such a tragic loss.
This is Sandra Graham, by the way.
She was Tony's manager.
You're Sandra Graham! - He must have meant you.
- I'm sorry? The last night at the hospital, Tony managed to say a few words.
He had a message for you.
It didn't make much sense to us, but it might to you.
What did he say? He said to do this and say, ''last hit''.
Sandra, are you all right? Yeah, um No! No! No, last hit! Last hit! Last hit! Last hit! Last hit! I once met a man with a sense of adventure he was dressed to thrill wherever he went he said, ''let's make love on a Mountain top ''under the stars on a big, hard rock'' I said, ''in these shoes? ''I don't think so'' 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406