Detectorists (2014) s02e07 Episode Script
The Curse of the Gold (Christmas Special)
1 [HE CLEARS THROAT.]
Excuse me.
- Yeah? - Would you mind taking a photo? - Sure.
- I'll just wind it back.
It's an old old camera.
- There we are.
Just press that button there.
- OK.
- Try and get me with the jewel.
- Yeah.
Just a sec.
SHUTTER CLICKS Yeah? It's important that I get the the RETREATING FOOTSTEPS Will you search through the lonely earth for me, Climb through the briar and bramble? I'll be your treasure I'm waiting for you I'm waiting for you.
- Oh! - WASP BUZZES Stripy bas bastard! Ohhh! Why are you even awake at this time of year? BUZZING CONTINUES Mate! - Bloody hell! - ANDY CHUCKLES - Hello, mate! - Ah! - Oh, I won't I spilled a bit of coffee down my front! - Sure.
So what are you doing here, then? I thought you were supposed to be in Botswana.
Yeah, just came back for a week, pick up some stuff.
- Looks like we're going to be staying a bit longer.
- Yeah? - So it's all going well, then? - Mate, it's amazing.
- I've so much to tell you.
- And Becky and Stan? - Yep, they're well.
- They're at home.
- I'll have to come round and say hello.
Oh, no, I meant home, Botswana home.
Bloody hell! Listen to that! Even got a bit of an accent going on there.
- Shut up! I haven't.
- Yeah! - But they're both well? - Yeah, yeah, brilliant.
Thriving.
- How are you doing? - Yeah, all right.
Not bad.
- Sure? - Yeah, yeah.
All good.
BUZZING Apart from this bloody wasp! What's a wasp even doing awake at this time of year? Strange, isn't it? Sent here to hound me.
Oh, tell you what I went to see the jewel this week.
- It's on temporary display at the British Museum.
- No way! Already? How does it look? Well, I'll tell you what it looks like It looks like a wild animal that's been trapped in a cage.
What, you'd prefer it was still under the ground? Oh, I don't know, mate.
I can't explain it.
[HE SIGHS.]
They haven't even given it a name.
It's called R5010ST78.
Catchy(!) It's been prodded and poked and catalogued Can't even remember what it felt like in my own hand.
I'm giving a talk about it on Tuesday at the club.
With slides.
Nice one.
I'll be there.
There's a journalist coming down to write about it for the local rag.
- You've become quite the celebrity! - Oh, yeah.
Thinking of bringing out a perfume range.
- Your reward money? - Oh, it hasn't come through yet, but it's all signed off.
Cheque should be with me in the next few days.
How much? STRANGLED YELL NNNNGGHHH! OHHHH! GAAAAHHHH! UUURGH! NNNNGHHH! Here, you can see an artist's impression of what it would have looked like with the shaft in place.
It was probably cherry or rosewood.
There may have been a leather strap attached, again, long since returned to the earth.
There is talk of replacing the shaft at some point, but this is of course ongoing discussion.
And finally here she is.
- CLICKING - Proudly in her place.
Thank you.
Thank you.
A-Any questions? Who's that? What do you mean? It's It's me! No, behind you.
Dunno! WEIRD ZAPPING ALL EXCLAIM Lights, please, Sheila! - EXTINGUISHER WHOOSHES - Keep away from it! CRIES OF PROTES - No! Russ! - Jesus! - For God's sake, Russell, I'm soaked! - Good work, you fucking idiot! Oh, that's all the thanks I get, is it? - You'd be happier in flames, would you? Honestly! - You all right? - Yeah.
- I don't know why I bother sometimes.
- Look at my jumper! - HUGH: I I didn't see it.
- What did you see, Sheila? - Oh, here he is.
You saw it, didn't you, Lance? - Saw what? - The hooded figure in the back of the picture.
No, didn't see anything like that.
- Well, then why did you go deathly white? - It was looking at you, Lance.
Don't say that, Sheila! Well, I was at the wrong angle, but if Sheila says she saw something Sheila tends to see things.
- What sort of things? - Things that are not of this world.
Oh, brilliant! That's the last thing I need right now -- a ghostly hooded monk following me around.
Are you all right, Lance? I've noticed you've not had anything on the finds table for months.
I haven't found anything since that aestel.
Yeah, but, mate, that jewel is a once-in-a-lifetime.
Nothing is ever going to compare to that, the usual buttons and No, no.
You don't understand.
I have found NOTHING since then.
Not a buckle, not a ring-pull, not even scrap! I get phantom signals, really good, strong signals, and they just disappear as soon as I start to dig.
- It's the curse of the gold.
- Shut up! No such thing.
Don't be so sure.
Remember what happened to Lenny Drinkwater when he found that Viking bracelet? He didn't fill in his hole.
Beryl Cambridge stepped in the hole, breaks an ankle.
- Break goes gangrene.
- Leg comes off below the knee.
Curse of the gold.
Well, it's not only that.
I got hayfever for the first time in my life this summer.
And I've started stumbling over rocks and tripping into nettles and I can't remember birdsong any more.
And then there's this! A wasp.
In December?! You know the exact point it stung me? In the face? When you mentioned the reward money.
SIGHS OF RELIEF AND CHUCKLING - I thought it was him for a moment! - So did I! I nearly shat meself.
- I think you need to reconnect to the land, mate.
- How? I think you need to go back to basics for a while.
- Ditch the CTX, go for something simpler.
Swap with Hugh.
- VK30?! You said it yourself, it's a good solid detector.
I don't mind trying the VK30, but .
.
I'm not sure about Hugh using the CTX.
Now, come on, if this is about karma, you've got to do YOUR bit.
- Fine.
- Lance Slater? - Stater.
- I've been sent down to interview you.
Oh, yeah, we were expecting you earlier on in the Scout Hut.
- Oh.
What's it about? - What's what about? - The article -- what have you done? - Well, don't you know? Well, it'll be in my notes - I've unearthed a gold aestel.
- Hm? It's been acquired by the Oh, that's it, the pirate treasure, got it.
I'm at the bar, yeah? - Don't mention the curse.
- There is no curse.
Yeah, otherwise they'll latch onto it and make that the story.
- "Local man haunted by sinister presence.
" - Yeah.
There is no curse.
So - Remind me what was it you found? - A late-Saxon jewelled aestel It has to be in language a ten-year-old could understand.
- Pardon? - Can't have too many big words.
- Er - Like Saxon.
Oh, er Well, it's a type of jewel - Gold? - Yeah.
- Diamonds? - Garnets and glass.
- I'll put diamonds.
How much is it worth? - Um it's, er - Well, the final valuation hasn't come through yet.
- Roughly.
- They reckon about 50,000.
- You get to keep all that? Half.
It's split with the landowner.
What are you going to buy? - To buy?! - With the money.
Are you going to splash out? - I haven't thought about it yet.
- Could we say holiday? - Um Holiday of a lifetime.
- Oh, OK.
- Where? - Er Dorset.
- I'll put Australia.
OK, that's great, cheers.
JOURNALIST SMACKS HIS LIPS Hm.
ENGINE SPLUTTERS Aaagh! Ohhh! D'oh! Agh! Ohhh! All right, Wayne? Jim about? I need him to look at my car.
Jim's dead.
Dead?! Yeah.
- When? - Couple of weeks back.
- Wh-Why didn't anyone tell me?! - Dunno.
- What did he die of? - Dunno.
There's a new mechanic -- Toni.
- Is he in? - Out there.
Right.
Hello? Tony? WOMAN: Yep, hello! With an I.
- Pardon? - It's Toni with an I.
- You were saying it with a Y.
- I wasn't! - Yes, you were.
- I'm Lance.
- Nice to meet you.
Oh [HE CHUCKLES.]
- Yes, er, it's about my car.
TR7? - Is that yours? - Yeah.
I love that car.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Yeah, er - I normally do all the work on it myself.
- What's the problem? - She keeps misfiring.
It's got me stumped.
- I can have a look now.
- There's no hurry for this.
- Cheers! - Haven't seen you around here before.
- I usually do nights.
- I'm at college during the day.
- Oh! What are you studying? Agricultural college -- farming.
- You want to be a farmer? - That's the idea.
I spend quite a lot of time on farmland myself.
That sounds a bit creepy.
- I'm a metal detectorist.
- Oh, that's weird! - What? - I have no idea what one of those is.
- Oh - I thought you were going to say you were one too! - I know! That's what I wanted you to think I was going to say.
It It only happens now and then and then it mysteriously clears itself up.
I was going to talk to Jim about it, but I just discovered he's checked out on us, which is bloody inconvenient.
He has ceased to be.
He's expired and gone to meet his maker.
He is an ex-mechanic.
He was your dad, wasn't he? Yes.
Yes I can see that now.
You've got the same .
.
hands - Sorry about that.
- It's probably one of your carburettors.
- You reckon? Probably.
I'll have a look.
- Want a cup of tea? - No, thanks.
Yeah, I'll HE MUMBLES I almost wish I'd never found that jewel.
I wish I could go back to the days before I found gold.
Come on, you don't really believe there is a curse, do you? Well, something's going on.
I just want to find SOMETHING.
Small, the usual.
Buttons and buckles, the occasional coin.
Here's Hugh.
- So you're really going to do this? Hand over the CTX? - I'm up for it.
Anything that gets me out from under this cloud.
Probably do me good to downgrade for a bit.
Prove it's not all about the equipment.
Says Captain Equipment from the 25th century! Here he is, with his VK30.
- All right? - Ready to try this baby? - Yeah.
All right, you've got to make sure you get a good grip on it, all right? Have you got it? - Yeah.
- Don't pull it, don't pull it, don't pull it.
And always use the bungee for support.
All right? Have you got it? - Yeah.
- Yeah, cos it's heavier than what you're used to, you see? - So, have you got it? - Yeah.
All right, I'm going to hand it over to you now.
Right, just just use the factory default settings.
Don't touch any of the buttons, cos I've got all my specialist settings stored in there.
All right, mates, he knows how to use a detector.
- Let him get on with it.
- Yeah, all right.
- Lunch at 12? - OK, then.
- See ya.
Hugh? Take care of her, mate.
OK.
CLICK Whoo-hoo! Hey, mate! Come and see what he's found! LAUGHTER - Come and have a look, mate.
You won't believe it.
- What have you got? It's my first hammered! Eddie II.
Long Cross.
Congratulations.
- Sorry, Lance.
Seems a bit rude.
- No, it's not your fault, mate.
It's the curse of the gold.
Come on, you're not really swallowing that crud, are you? How else do you explain it? Proves it's me, not the detector.
- Like the curse of Tutankhamen.
- Exactly! That's well documented.
I can't believe what I'm hearing.
The Egyptian gods were angry that they were making money from the treasures.
The curse only ended when they returned his mummy to the tomb.
Right, well, we don't have a mummy or a tomb to return it to, so Have to get it back.
What's that? Nothing.
- Right, pub? - Yeah.
- Good.
First hammered deserves a pint.
Are you planning on springing it from its glass case? What? No! - I'm joking! - Oh! Wait, you were, weren't you? No! I'm joking.
Twice! - I'm Alan Chub.
I was supposed to meet you last week.
- Oh, right, yes! Forgot all about it.
You came quite a long way, didn't you? - Quite a long way, yeah.
- Yeah, good.
Well, there it bloody well is, then! - Yes.
- After 1,000 years, Mother Earth's secret unearthed.
- Feels pretty good, doesn't it? - Not really.
It just feels like she's got one less secret.
I don't think I was supposed to find it.
All those years under the earth, end up in a hermetically sealed glass box.
Well, who's to say this is the end? This could be just another chapter in its story.
It's got a fair few millennia left to go yet.
Oh, I spoke to the landowner this morning.
He said he's received his half of the reward.
- I'm assuming you've got the same.
- What? No.
I don't I don't know.
- I left before the post arrived.
- Ah.
- Well, Mr Roach got a cheque through the post for - Don't Don't say! - Oh! Why not? - Because something bad will happen.
I'll get an electric shock or something will fall on us.
What do you mean? Every time anyone mentions the money, something bad happens.
Ah! You mean the curse of the gold.
You believe in that? Look, if you're feeling bad about taking the money, we're always open to charitable donations here.
I mean, we're far too busy to worry about curses.
Probably half the things in here are cursed anyway.
That's why we keep them hermetically sealed in glass cases -- to keep the curses in and stop you from stealing things.
- Oh, I wasn't going to - I'm joking! - Three times! - Oh! Seriously, though, if you did want to give something back You mean - like like a gift? - A gift, exactly.
Yes! Yes! Thank you! - Call my office any time.
- Thank you.
COINS CHINK EERIE WIND SPRINGS UP BIRDSONG Blackbird.
Hello? Hey! - All right? - Yeah, it's all done.
- It was your head gasket.
- Ah, brilliant! Thanks a lot.
Listen, er - About the other day Sorry, I wasn't thinking.
- Why? What happened? About your dad.
What about him? I called him an ex-mechanic.
Oh Yeah.
He wasn't really my dad.
- What? - The old mechanic who died -- Jim, was it? - Yeah.
He wasn't really my dad.
I never met him.
I was joking.
Joking?! But I've been kicking myself all week about that! I actually, literally, kicked myself at one point.
Not hard enough to leave a bruise but quite hard! It was you who said it was my dad, I just didn't deny it.
You confirmed it! I asked if he was your dad and you said yes.
Did I? Yes.
Sorry.
I couldn't resist.
It's unbelievable! I fixed your car.
- Thanks a lot.
How-How much do I owe you? - It's fine.
You can have that one.
Because of the joke.
Do you want a cup of tea? Go on, then.
- Sugar? - One, please.
- So, flying out tomorrow? - Yep, in the evening.
- When are you back? Probably not till next Christmas if the dig gets more funding.
But I tell you what, mate, you should come out.
- Yeah, I could do, couldn't I? - Absolutely! You should definitely come out.
Stan would like to see you.
And Becky.
- I might just do that.
- Use some of your reward money, splash out.
Fly first class.
Er No, I That's all gone.
- Already? What did you spend it on? - Well Not spent so much as invested.
Long-term investment.
- BEEPING - Ah! Here we go! Oh, there! There! - Bloody hell! - What have you got? - Hammered! - No! - A big 'un! Half groat.
- There you go, then, mate, the curse is lifted! - It's one of the Henrys! - Which one? - Stand by.
Henry VI, 1453.
Long Cross.
No marks on obverse.
Two extra pellets on reverse! Boom! Check your hole.
- All clear! - Replace plug.
- Check! - Pub? Go on, then.
So There's this bloke at work wants to ask this girl out.
- He's been asking me for advice.
- Oh, yeah? - Yeah, he's he's worried in case she says no and he feels stupid.
What did you advise him? Well I told him he should just go for it.
What's he got to lose? Absolutely.
Just go for it.
- You think that was good advice I gave him? - Yeah.
If she says no, no big deal.
At least he asked her.
So then he was asking If she said yes where he should take her.
Oh, right.
What did you say? Well I said probably just down the pub, first date.
Less formal than dinner.
- Sounds like good advice you gave him.
- Yeah? - Yeah, I reckon.
I told him, he should just try and be himself.
Relax.
Yeah, spot-on.
When is he going to ask her out? - This Wednesday, I reckon.
- Yeah, well, tell him good luck from me.
You don't know him.
Excuse me.
- Yeah? - Would you mind taking a photo? - Sure.
- I'll just wind it back.
It's an old old camera.
- There we are.
Just press that button there.
- OK.
- Try and get me with the jewel.
- Yeah.
Just a sec.
SHUTTER CLICKS Yeah? It's important that I get the the RETREATING FOOTSTEPS Will you search through the lonely earth for me, Climb through the briar and bramble? I'll be your treasure I'm waiting for you I'm waiting for you.
- Oh! - WASP BUZZES Stripy bas bastard! Ohhh! Why are you even awake at this time of year? BUZZING CONTINUES Mate! - Bloody hell! - ANDY CHUCKLES - Hello, mate! - Ah! - Oh, I won't I spilled a bit of coffee down my front! - Sure.
So what are you doing here, then? I thought you were supposed to be in Botswana.
Yeah, just came back for a week, pick up some stuff.
- Looks like we're going to be staying a bit longer.
- Yeah? - So it's all going well, then? - Mate, it's amazing.
- I've so much to tell you.
- And Becky and Stan? - Yep, they're well.
- They're at home.
- I'll have to come round and say hello.
Oh, no, I meant home, Botswana home.
Bloody hell! Listen to that! Even got a bit of an accent going on there.
- Shut up! I haven't.
- Yeah! - But they're both well? - Yeah, yeah, brilliant.
Thriving.
- How are you doing? - Yeah, all right.
Not bad.
- Sure? - Yeah, yeah.
All good.
BUZZING Apart from this bloody wasp! What's a wasp even doing awake at this time of year? Strange, isn't it? Sent here to hound me.
Oh, tell you what I went to see the jewel this week.
- It's on temporary display at the British Museum.
- No way! Already? How does it look? Well, I'll tell you what it looks like It looks like a wild animal that's been trapped in a cage.
What, you'd prefer it was still under the ground? Oh, I don't know, mate.
I can't explain it.
[HE SIGHS.]
They haven't even given it a name.
It's called R5010ST78.
Catchy(!) It's been prodded and poked and catalogued Can't even remember what it felt like in my own hand.
I'm giving a talk about it on Tuesday at the club.
With slides.
Nice one.
I'll be there.
There's a journalist coming down to write about it for the local rag.
- You've become quite the celebrity! - Oh, yeah.
Thinking of bringing out a perfume range.
- Your reward money? - Oh, it hasn't come through yet, but it's all signed off.
Cheque should be with me in the next few days.
How much? STRANGLED YELL NNNNGGHHH! OHHHH! GAAAAHHHH! UUURGH! NNNNGHHH! Here, you can see an artist's impression of what it would have looked like with the shaft in place.
It was probably cherry or rosewood.
There may have been a leather strap attached, again, long since returned to the earth.
There is talk of replacing the shaft at some point, but this is of course ongoing discussion.
And finally here she is.
- CLICKING - Proudly in her place.
Thank you.
Thank you.
A-Any questions? Who's that? What do you mean? It's It's me! No, behind you.
Dunno! WEIRD ZAPPING ALL EXCLAIM Lights, please, Sheila! - EXTINGUISHER WHOOSHES - Keep away from it! CRIES OF PROTES - No! Russ! - Jesus! - For God's sake, Russell, I'm soaked! - Good work, you fucking idiot! Oh, that's all the thanks I get, is it? - You'd be happier in flames, would you? Honestly! - You all right? - Yeah.
- I don't know why I bother sometimes.
- Look at my jumper! - HUGH: I I didn't see it.
- What did you see, Sheila? - Oh, here he is.
You saw it, didn't you, Lance? - Saw what? - The hooded figure in the back of the picture.
No, didn't see anything like that.
- Well, then why did you go deathly white? - It was looking at you, Lance.
Don't say that, Sheila! Well, I was at the wrong angle, but if Sheila says she saw something Sheila tends to see things.
- What sort of things? - Things that are not of this world.
Oh, brilliant! That's the last thing I need right now -- a ghostly hooded monk following me around.
Are you all right, Lance? I've noticed you've not had anything on the finds table for months.
I haven't found anything since that aestel.
Yeah, but, mate, that jewel is a once-in-a-lifetime.
Nothing is ever going to compare to that, the usual buttons and No, no.
You don't understand.
I have found NOTHING since then.
Not a buckle, not a ring-pull, not even scrap! I get phantom signals, really good, strong signals, and they just disappear as soon as I start to dig.
- It's the curse of the gold.
- Shut up! No such thing.
Don't be so sure.
Remember what happened to Lenny Drinkwater when he found that Viking bracelet? He didn't fill in his hole.
Beryl Cambridge stepped in the hole, breaks an ankle.
- Break goes gangrene.
- Leg comes off below the knee.
Curse of the gold.
Well, it's not only that.
I got hayfever for the first time in my life this summer.
And I've started stumbling over rocks and tripping into nettles and I can't remember birdsong any more.
And then there's this! A wasp.
In December?! You know the exact point it stung me? In the face? When you mentioned the reward money.
SIGHS OF RELIEF AND CHUCKLING - I thought it was him for a moment! - So did I! I nearly shat meself.
- I think you need to reconnect to the land, mate.
- How? I think you need to go back to basics for a while.
- Ditch the CTX, go for something simpler.
Swap with Hugh.
- VK30?! You said it yourself, it's a good solid detector.
I don't mind trying the VK30, but .
.
I'm not sure about Hugh using the CTX.
Now, come on, if this is about karma, you've got to do YOUR bit.
- Fine.
- Lance Slater? - Stater.
- I've been sent down to interview you.
Oh, yeah, we were expecting you earlier on in the Scout Hut.
- Oh.
What's it about? - What's what about? - The article -- what have you done? - Well, don't you know? Well, it'll be in my notes - I've unearthed a gold aestel.
- Hm? It's been acquired by the Oh, that's it, the pirate treasure, got it.
I'm at the bar, yeah? - Don't mention the curse.
- There is no curse.
Yeah, otherwise they'll latch onto it and make that the story.
- "Local man haunted by sinister presence.
" - Yeah.
There is no curse.
So - Remind me what was it you found? - A late-Saxon jewelled aestel It has to be in language a ten-year-old could understand.
- Pardon? - Can't have too many big words.
- Er - Like Saxon.
Oh, er Well, it's a type of jewel - Gold? - Yeah.
- Diamonds? - Garnets and glass.
- I'll put diamonds.
How much is it worth? - Um it's, er - Well, the final valuation hasn't come through yet.
- Roughly.
- They reckon about 50,000.
- You get to keep all that? Half.
It's split with the landowner.
What are you going to buy? - To buy?! - With the money.
Are you going to splash out? - I haven't thought about it yet.
- Could we say holiday? - Um Holiday of a lifetime.
- Oh, OK.
- Where? - Er Dorset.
- I'll put Australia.
OK, that's great, cheers.
JOURNALIST SMACKS HIS LIPS Hm.
ENGINE SPLUTTERS Aaagh! Ohhh! D'oh! Agh! Ohhh! All right, Wayne? Jim about? I need him to look at my car.
Jim's dead.
Dead?! Yeah.
- When? - Couple of weeks back.
- Wh-Why didn't anyone tell me?! - Dunno.
- What did he die of? - Dunno.
There's a new mechanic -- Toni.
- Is he in? - Out there.
Right.
Hello? Tony? WOMAN: Yep, hello! With an I.
- Pardon? - It's Toni with an I.
- You were saying it with a Y.
- I wasn't! - Yes, you were.
- I'm Lance.
- Nice to meet you.
Oh [HE CHUCKLES.]
- Yes, er, it's about my car.
TR7? - Is that yours? - Yeah.
I love that car.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Yeah, er - I normally do all the work on it myself.
- What's the problem? - She keeps misfiring.
It's got me stumped.
- I can have a look now.
- There's no hurry for this.
- Cheers! - Haven't seen you around here before.
- I usually do nights.
- I'm at college during the day.
- Oh! What are you studying? Agricultural college -- farming.
- You want to be a farmer? - That's the idea.
I spend quite a lot of time on farmland myself.
That sounds a bit creepy.
- I'm a metal detectorist.
- Oh, that's weird! - What? - I have no idea what one of those is.
- Oh - I thought you were going to say you were one too! - I know! That's what I wanted you to think I was going to say.
It It only happens now and then and then it mysteriously clears itself up.
I was going to talk to Jim about it, but I just discovered he's checked out on us, which is bloody inconvenient.
He has ceased to be.
He's expired and gone to meet his maker.
He is an ex-mechanic.
He was your dad, wasn't he? Yes.
Yes I can see that now.
You've got the same .
.
hands - Sorry about that.
- It's probably one of your carburettors.
- You reckon? Probably.
I'll have a look.
- Want a cup of tea? - No, thanks.
Yeah, I'll HE MUMBLES I almost wish I'd never found that jewel.
I wish I could go back to the days before I found gold.
Come on, you don't really believe there is a curse, do you? Well, something's going on.
I just want to find SOMETHING.
Small, the usual.
Buttons and buckles, the occasional coin.
Here's Hugh.
- So you're really going to do this? Hand over the CTX? - I'm up for it.
Anything that gets me out from under this cloud.
Probably do me good to downgrade for a bit.
Prove it's not all about the equipment.
Says Captain Equipment from the 25th century! Here he is, with his VK30.
- All right? - Ready to try this baby? - Yeah.
All right, you've got to make sure you get a good grip on it, all right? Have you got it? - Yeah.
- Don't pull it, don't pull it, don't pull it.
And always use the bungee for support.
All right? Have you got it? - Yeah.
- Yeah, cos it's heavier than what you're used to, you see? - So, have you got it? - Yeah.
All right, I'm going to hand it over to you now.
Right, just just use the factory default settings.
Don't touch any of the buttons, cos I've got all my specialist settings stored in there.
All right, mates, he knows how to use a detector.
- Let him get on with it.
- Yeah, all right.
- Lunch at 12? - OK, then.
- See ya.
Hugh? Take care of her, mate.
OK.
CLICK Whoo-hoo! Hey, mate! Come and see what he's found! LAUGHTER - Come and have a look, mate.
You won't believe it.
- What have you got? It's my first hammered! Eddie II.
Long Cross.
Congratulations.
- Sorry, Lance.
Seems a bit rude.
- No, it's not your fault, mate.
It's the curse of the gold.
Come on, you're not really swallowing that crud, are you? How else do you explain it? Proves it's me, not the detector.
- Like the curse of Tutankhamen.
- Exactly! That's well documented.
I can't believe what I'm hearing.
The Egyptian gods were angry that they were making money from the treasures.
The curse only ended when they returned his mummy to the tomb.
Right, well, we don't have a mummy or a tomb to return it to, so Have to get it back.
What's that? Nothing.
- Right, pub? - Yeah.
- Good.
First hammered deserves a pint.
Are you planning on springing it from its glass case? What? No! - I'm joking! - Oh! Wait, you were, weren't you? No! I'm joking.
Twice! - I'm Alan Chub.
I was supposed to meet you last week.
- Oh, right, yes! Forgot all about it.
You came quite a long way, didn't you? - Quite a long way, yeah.
- Yeah, good.
Well, there it bloody well is, then! - Yes.
- After 1,000 years, Mother Earth's secret unearthed.
- Feels pretty good, doesn't it? - Not really.
It just feels like she's got one less secret.
I don't think I was supposed to find it.
All those years under the earth, end up in a hermetically sealed glass box.
Well, who's to say this is the end? This could be just another chapter in its story.
It's got a fair few millennia left to go yet.
Oh, I spoke to the landowner this morning.
He said he's received his half of the reward.
- I'm assuming you've got the same.
- What? No.
I don't I don't know.
- I left before the post arrived.
- Ah.
- Well, Mr Roach got a cheque through the post for - Don't Don't say! - Oh! Why not? - Because something bad will happen.
I'll get an electric shock or something will fall on us.
What do you mean? Every time anyone mentions the money, something bad happens.
Ah! You mean the curse of the gold.
You believe in that? Look, if you're feeling bad about taking the money, we're always open to charitable donations here.
I mean, we're far too busy to worry about curses.
Probably half the things in here are cursed anyway.
That's why we keep them hermetically sealed in glass cases -- to keep the curses in and stop you from stealing things.
- Oh, I wasn't going to - I'm joking! - Three times! - Oh! Seriously, though, if you did want to give something back You mean - like like a gift? - A gift, exactly.
Yes! Yes! Thank you! - Call my office any time.
- Thank you.
COINS CHINK EERIE WIND SPRINGS UP BIRDSONG Blackbird.
Hello? Hey! - All right? - Yeah, it's all done.
- It was your head gasket.
- Ah, brilliant! Thanks a lot.
Listen, er - About the other day Sorry, I wasn't thinking.
- Why? What happened? About your dad.
What about him? I called him an ex-mechanic.
Oh Yeah.
He wasn't really my dad.
- What? - The old mechanic who died -- Jim, was it? - Yeah.
He wasn't really my dad.
I never met him.
I was joking.
Joking?! But I've been kicking myself all week about that! I actually, literally, kicked myself at one point.
Not hard enough to leave a bruise but quite hard! It was you who said it was my dad, I just didn't deny it.
You confirmed it! I asked if he was your dad and you said yes.
Did I? Yes.
Sorry.
I couldn't resist.
It's unbelievable! I fixed your car.
- Thanks a lot.
How-How much do I owe you? - It's fine.
You can have that one.
Because of the joke.
Do you want a cup of tea? Go on, then.
- Sugar? - One, please.
- So, flying out tomorrow? - Yep, in the evening.
- When are you back? Probably not till next Christmas if the dig gets more funding.
But I tell you what, mate, you should come out.
- Yeah, I could do, couldn't I? - Absolutely! You should definitely come out.
Stan would like to see you.
And Becky.
- I might just do that.
- Use some of your reward money, splash out.
Fly first class.
Er No, I That's all gone.
- Already? What did you spend it on? - Well Not spent so much as invested.
Long-term investment.
- BEEPING - Ah! Here we go! Oh, there! There! - Bloody hell! - What have you got? - Hammered! - No! - A big 'un! Half groat.
- There you go, then, mate, the curse is lifted! - It's one of the Henrys! - Which one? - Stand by.
Henry VI, 1453.
Long Cross.
No marks on obverse.
Two extra pellets on reverse! Boom! Check your hole.
- All clear! - Replace plug.
- Check! - Pub? Go on, then.
So There's this bloke at work wants to ask this girl out.
- He's been asking me for advice.
- Oh, yeah? - Yeah, he's he's worried in case she says no and he feels stupid.
What did you advise him? Well I told him he should just go for it.
What's he got to lose? Absolutely.
Just go for it.
- You think that was good advice I gave him? - Yeah.
If she says no, no big deal.
At least he asked her.
So then he was asking If she said yes where he should take her.
Oh, right.
What did you say? Well I said probably just down the pub, first date.
Less formal than dinner.
- Sounds like good advice you gave him.
- Yeah? - Yeah, I reckon.
I told him, he should just try and be himself.
Relax.
Yeah, spot-on.
When is he going to ask her out? - This Wednesday, I reckon.
- Yeah, well, tell him good luck from me.
You don't know him.